"Dick, Philip K - Cantata 141" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dick Phillip K)
Cantata-104 by Philip K. Dick
CANTATA-141
by Philip K. Dick
Also by Philip K. Dick
Solar Lottery (1955)
The World Jones Made (1956)
The Man Who Japed (1956)
The Cosmic Puppets (1957)
Eye in the Sky (1957)
Dr. Futurity (1959)
Time Out of Joint (1959)
Vulcan's Hammer (1960)
The Man in the High Castle (1962)
The Game-Players of Titan (1963)
The Penultimate Truth (1964)
The Simulacra (1964)
Martian Time Slip (1964)
Clans of the Alphane Moon (1964)
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965)
Dr. Bloodmoney or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965)
The Ganymede Takeover (with Ray F. Nelson) (1967)
Now Wait for Last Year (1966)
The Zap Gun (1967)
Counter-Clock World (1967)
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep ? (1968)
Galactic Pot-Healer (1969)
Ubik (1969)
Our Friends from Frolix 8 (1970)
A Maze of Death (1970)
We Can Build You (1972)
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said (1974)
Confessions of a Crap Artist (1975)
Deus Irae (with Roger Zelazny) (1976)
A Scanner Darkly (1977)
The Divine Invasion (1981)
Valis (1981)
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982)
Lies, Inc (1984)
The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1984)
Puttering About in a Small Land (1985)
In Milton Lumky Territory (1985)
Radio Free Albemuth (1985)
Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1986)
Mary and the Giant (1987)
The Broken Bubble (1988)
SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS
The Variable Man (1957)
A Handful of Darkness (1966)
The Turning Wheel (1977)
The Best of Philip K. Dick (1977)
The Golden Man (1980)
Minority Report (2002)
THE COLLECTED STORIES OF PHILIP K. DICK
Beyond Lies the Wub (1987)
Second Variety (1987)
The Father Thing (1987)
Minority Report (1987)
We Can Remember It For You Wholesale (1987)
Printed in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives pic
1
The young couple, black-haired, dark-skinned, probably Mexican or Puerto
Rican, stood nervously at Herb Lackmore's counter and the boy, the husband,
said in a low voice, 'Sir, we want to be put to sleep. We want to become bibs.'
Rising from his desk, Lackmore walked to the counter and although he did not
like Cols - there seemed to be more of them every month, coming into his
Oakland branch office of the U.S. Department on Special Public Welfare - he
said in a pleasant tone of voice designed to reassure the two of them, 'Have
you thought it over carefully, folks ? It's a big step. You might be out for, say,
a few hundred years. Have you shopped for any professional advice about
this ?'
The boy, glancing at his wife, swallowed and murmured, 'No, sir. We just
decided between us. Neither of us can get a job and we're about to be evicted
from our dorm. We don't even own a wheel, and what can you do without a wheel ?
You can't go anywhere. You can't even look for work.' He was not a bad-looking
boy, Lackmore noticed. Possibly eighteen, he still wore the coat and trousers
which were army-separation issue. The girl had long hair; she was quite small,
with black, bright eyes and a delicately-formed almost doll-like face. She
never ceased watching her husband.
'I'm going to have a baby,' the girl blurted.
'Aw, the heck with both of you,' Lackmore said in disgust, drawing his
breath in sharply. 'You both get right out of here.'
Ducking their heads guiltily the boy and his wife turned and started from
Lackmore's office, back outside onto the busy downtown early-morning Oakland,
California street.
'Go see an abort-consultant!' Lackmore called after them irritably. He
resented having to help them, but obviously someone had to; look at the spot
they had gotten themselves into. Because no doubt they were living on a
government military pension, and if the girl was pregnant the pension would
automatically be withdrawn.
Plucking hesitantly at the sleeve of his wrinkled coat the Col boy said,
'Sir, how do we find an abort-consultant ?'
The ignorance of the dark-skinned strata, despite the government's ceaseless
educational campaigns. No wonder their women were often preg. 'Look in the
phone book,' Lackmore said. 'Under abortionists, therapeutic. Then the
subsection advisors. Got it ?'
'Yes, sir. Thank you.' The boy nodded rapidly.
'Can you read ?'
'Yes. I stayed in school until I was thirteen.' On the boy's face fierce
pride showed; his black eyes gleamed.
Lackmore returned to reading his homeopape; he did not have any more time to
offer gratis. No wonder they wanted to become bibs. Preserved, unchanged, in a
government warehouse, year after year, until - would the labor market ever
improve ? Lackmore personally doubted it, and he had been around a long time;
he was ninety-five years old, a jerry. In his time he had put to sleep
thousands of people, almost all of them, like this couple, young. And - dark.
The door of the office shut. The young couple had gone again as quietly as
they had come.
Sighing, Lackmore began to read once more the pape's article on the divorce
trial of Lurton D. Sands, Jr, the most sensational event now taking place; as
always, he read every word of it avidly.
This day began for Darius Pethel with vidphone calls from irate customers
wanting to know why their Jiffi-scuttlers hadn't been fixed. Any time now, he
told them soothingly, and hoped that Erickson was already at work in the
service department of Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service.
As soon as he was off the vidphone Pethel searched among the litter on his
desk for the day's copy of U.S. Business Report; he of course kept
abreast of all the economic developments on the planet. This alone set him
above his employees; this, his wealth, and his advanced age.
'What's it say ?' his salesman, Stu Hadley, asked, standing in the office
doorway, robant magnetic broom in hand, pausing in his activity.
Silently, Pethel read the major headline.
EFFECTS ON THE NATION'S BUSINESS
COMMUNITY OF A NEGRO PRESIDENT
And there, in 3-D, animated, was a pic of James Briskin; the pic came to
life, Candidate Briskin smiled in miniature, as Pethel pressed the tab beneath it.
The Negro's mustache-obscured lips moved and above his head a balloon appeared,
filled with the words he was saying. My first task will be to find an equitable disposition of the tens of
millions of sleeping.
'And dump every last bib back on the labor market,' Pethel murmured,
releasing the word tab. 'If this guy gets in, the nation's ruined.' But it was
inevitable. Sooner or later, there would be a Negro president; after all, since
the Event of 1993 there had been more Cols than Caucs.
Gloomily, he turned to page-two for the latest on the Lurton Sands scandal;
maybe that would cheer him up, the political news being so bad. The famous
org-trans surgeon had become involved in a sensational contested divorce suit
with his equally famous wife Myra, the abort-consultant. All sorts of juicy
details were beginning to filter out, charges on both sides. Dr Sands,
according to the homeopapes, had a mistress; that was why Myra had stomped out,
and rightly so. Not like the old days, Pethel thought, recalling his youth in
the late decades of the twentieth century. Now it was 2080 and public - and
private - morality had worsened.
Why would Dr Sands want a mistress anyhow, Pethel wondered, when there's
that Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite passing overhead every day ? They
say there're five thousand girls to choose from.
He, himself, had never visited Thisbe Olt's satellite; he did not approve of
it, nor did very many jerries - it was too radical a solution to the
overpopulation problem, and seniors, by letter and telegram, had fought its
passage in Congress back in '72. But the bill had gone through anyhow ...
probably, he reflected, because most Congressmen had the idea of taking a
jet'ab up there themselves. And no doubt regularly did, now.
'If we whites stick together - ' Hadley began.
'Listen,' Pethel said, 'that time has passed. If Briskin can dispose of the
bibs, more power to him; personally, it keeps me awake at night, thinking of
all those people, most of them just kids, lying in those gov warehouses year after
year. Look at the talent going to waste. It's - bureaucratic! Only a swollen
socialist government would have dreamed up a solution like that.' He eyed his
salesman harshly. 'If you hadn't gotten this job with me, even you might - '
Hadley interrupted quietly, 'But I'm white.'
Reading on further, Pethel saw that Thisbe Olt's satellite had grossed a
billion U.S. dollars in 2079. Wow, he said to himself. That's big business,
Before him was a pic of Thisbe; with cadmium-white hair and little high conical
breasts she was a superb sight, an aesthetic as well as a sexual treat. The pic
showed her serving male guests of her satellite a tequila sour - an added
fillip because tequila, being derived from the mescal plant, had long been
illegal on Earth proper.
Pethel touched the word tab of Thisbe's pic and at once Thisbe's eyes
sparkled, her head turned, her stable, dense breasts vibrated subtly, and in
the balloon above her head the proper words formed. Embarrassing personal urgency, Mr. American businessman ? Do as many
doctors recommend: visit my Golden Door!
It was an ad, Pethel discovered. Not an informative article.
'Excuse me.' A customer had entered the store and Hadley moved in his
direction.
Oh lord, Darius Pethel thought as he recognized the customer. Don't we have
his 'scuttler fixed yet ? He rose to his feet, knowing that he would be
personally needed to appease the man; this was Dr Lurton Sands, and because of
his recent domestic troubles he had become, of late, demanding and hot-tempered.
'Yes, Doctor,' Pethel said, walking toward him. 'What can I do for you today
?' As if he didn't know. Trying to fight off Myra as well as keep his mistress,
Cally Vale, Dr Sands had enough problems; he really needed the use of his
Jiffi-scuttler. Unlike other customers it was not going to be possible to put
this man off.
Plucking by reflex at his great handlebar mustache, presidential candidate
Jim Briskin said tentatively, 'We're in a rut, Sal. I ought to fire you. You're
trying to make me out the epitome of the Cols and yet you know I've spent
twenty years playing up to the white power structure. Frankly, I think we'd
have better luck trying to get the white vote, not the dark. I'm used to them;
I can appeal to them.'
'You're wrong,' his campaign manager, Salisbury Heim, said. 'Your appeal -
listen and understand this, Jim - is to the dark kid and his wife scared to
death their only prospect is winding up bibs in some gov warehouse.
"Bottled in bond," as they say. In you these people see...'
'But I feel guilty.'
'Why ?' Sal Heim demanded.
'Because I'm a fake. I can't close the Dept of SPW warehouses; you know
that. You got me to promise, and ever since I've been sweating my life away
trying to conceive how it could be done. And there isn't any way.' He examined
his wristwatch; one quarter-hour remained before he had to give his speech.
'Have you read the speech Phil Danville wrote for me ?' He reached into his
disorganized, lumpy coat-pouch.
'Danville!' Heim's face convulsed. 'I thought you got rid of him; give me
that.' He grabbed the folded sheets and began going over them. 'Danville is a
nut. Look.' He waved the first sheet in Jim Briskin's face. 'According to him,
you're going to ban traffic from the U.S. to Thisbe's satellite.
That's insane! If the Golden Door is closed, the birth rate will jump back
up again where it was - what then ? How does Danville manage to counter that ?'
After a pause Briskin said, 'The Golden Door is immoral.'
Spluttering, Heim said, 'Sure. And animals should wear pants.'
'There's just got to be a better solution than that satellite.'
Heim lapsed into silence as he read further into title speech. 'And he has
you advocate this outmoded, thoroughly discredited planet-wetting technique of
Bruno Mini.' He tossed the papers into Jim Briskin's lap. 'So what do you wind
up with ? You back a planetary colonization scheme tried twenty years ago and
abandoned; you advocate closing the Golden Door satellite - you'll be popular,
Jim, after tonight. But popular with whom, though ? Just answer me; who is this
aimed at ?’ He waited.
There was silence.
'You know what I think ?' Heim said presently. 'I think this is your
elaborate way of giving up. Of saying to hell with the whole thing. It's how
you shed responsibility; I saw you start to do the same thing at the convention
in that crazy doomsday speech you gave, that morbid curiosity which still has
everyone baffled. But fortunately you'd already been nominated. It was too late
for the convention to repudiate you.'
Briskin said, 'I expressed my real convictions in that speech.'
'What, that civilization is now doomed because of this overpopulation biz ?
Some convictions for the first Col President to have.' Heim got to his feet and
walked to the window; he stood looking out at downtown Philadelphia, at tide
jet-copters landing, the runnels of autocars and ramps of footers coming and
going, into and out of every high-rise building in sight. 'I once in a while
think,' Heim said in a low voice, 'that you feel it's doomed because it's
nominated a Negro and may elect him; it's a way of putting yourself down.'
'No,' Briskin said, with calm; his long face remained unruffled.
'I'll tell you what to say in your speech for tonight,' Heim said, his back
to Briskin. 'First, you once more describe your relationship with Frank
Woodbine, because people go for space explorers; Woodbine is a hero, much more
so than you or what's-his-name. You know; the man you're running against. The
SRCD incumbent.'
'William Schwarz.'
Heim nodded exaggeratedly. 'Yes, you're right. Then after you gas about
Woodbine - and we show a few shots of you and him standing together on various
planets - then you make a joke about Dr Sands.'
'No,' Briskin said.
'Why not ? Is Sands a sacred cow ? You ain't touch him ?'
Jim Briskin said slowly, painstakingly, 'Because Sands is a great doctor and
shouldn't be ridiculed in the media the way he is right now.'
'He saved your brother's life. By finding him a wet new liver just in the
nick of time. Or he saved your mother just when...'
'Sands has preserved hundreds, thousands, of people. Including plenty of
Cols. Whether they were able to pay or not.' Briskin was silent a moment and
then he added, 'Also I met his wife Myra and I didn't like her. Years ago I
went to her; I had made a girl preg and we wanted abort advice.'
'Good!' Heim said violently. 'We can use that. You made a girl pregnant -
that, when Nonovulid is free for the asking; that shows you're a provident
type, Jim.' He tapped his forehead. 'You think ahead.'
'I now have five minutes,' Briskin said woodenly. He gathered up the pages
of Phil Danville's speech and returned them to his inside coat pouch; he still
wore a formal dark suit even in hot weather. That, and a flaming red wig, had
been his trademark back in the days when he had telecast as a TV newsclown.
'Give that speech,' Heim said, 'and you're politically dead. And if
you're...' He broke off. The door to the room had opened and his wife Patricia
stood there.
'Sorry to bother you,' Pat said. 'But everyone out here can hear you
yelling.' Heim caught a glimpse, then, of the big outside room full of teen-age
Briskinettes, uniformed young volunteers who had come from all over the country
to help elect the Republican Liberal candidate.
'Sorry,' Heim murmured.
Pat entered the room and shut the door after her. 'I think Jim’s right,
Sal.' Small, gracefully-built - she had once been a dancer - Pat lithely seated
herself and lit a cigar. 'The more naive Jim appears, the better.' She blew
gray smoke from between her luminous, pale lifts. 'He still has a lingering
reputation for being cynical. Whereas he should be another Wendell Wilkie.'
'Wilkie lost,' Heim pointed out.
'And Jim may lose,' Pat said; she tossed her head, brushing back her long
hair from her eyes. 'But if he does, he can run again and win next time. The
important thing is for him to appear sensitive and innocent, a sweet person who
takes the world's suffering on his own shoulders because he's made that way. He
can't help it; he has to suffer. You see ?'
'Amateurs,' Heim said, and groaned.
The TV cameras stood inert, as the seconds passed, but they were ready to
begin; the time for the speech lay just ahead as Jim Briskin sat at the small
desk which he employed when addressing the people. Before him, near at hand,
rested Phil Danville's speech. And he sat meditating as the TV technicians
prepared for the recording.
The speech would be beamed to the Republican-Liberal Party's satellite relay
station and from it telecast repeatedly until saturation point had been achieved.
States Rights Conservative Democrat attempts to jam it would probably fail,
because of the enormous signal-strength of the R-L satellite. The message would
get through despite Tompkins Act, which permitted jamming of political
material. And, simultaneously, Schwarz' speech would be jammed in return; it
was scheduled for release at the same time.
Across from him sat Patricia Heim, lost in a cloud of nervous introspection.
And, in the control room, he caught a glimpse of Sal, busy with the TV engineers,
making certain that the image recorded would be flattering.
And, off in a corner by himself, sat Phil Danville. No one talked to
Danville; the party bigwigs, passing in and out of the studio, astutely ignored
his existence.
A technician nodded to Jim. Time to begin his speech.
'It's very popular these days,' Jim Briskin said to the TV camera, 'to make
fun of the old dreams and schemes for planetary colonization. How could people
have been so nutty ? Trying to live in completely inhuman environments ... on
worlds never designed for Homo sapiens. And it's amusing that they tried for
decades to alter these hostile environments to meet human needs - and naturally
failed.' He spoke slowly, almost drawlingly; he took his time. He had the
attention of the nation, and he meant to make thorough use of it. 'So now we're
looking for a planet ready-made, another "Venus", or more accurately
what Venus specifically never was. What we had hoped it would be: lush,
moist and verdant and productive, a Garden of Eden just waiting for us to show
up.'
Reflectively, Patricia Heim smoked her El Producto alta cigar, never taking
her eyes from him.
'Well,' Jim Briskin said, 'we'll never find it. And if we do, it'll be too
late. Too small, too late, too far away. If we want another Venus, a planet we
can colonize, we'll have to manufacture it ourselves. We can laugh
ourselves sick at Bruno Mini, but the fact is, he was right.'
In the control room Sal Heim stared at him in gross anguish. He had done it.
Sanctioned Mini's abandoned scheme of recasting the ecology of another world.
Madness revisited.
The camera clicked off.
Turning his head, Jim Briskin saw the expression on Sal Heim's face. He had
been cut off there in the control room; Sal had given the order.
'You're not going to let me finish ?' Jim said.
Sal's voice, amplified, boomed, 'No, goddam it. No!'
Standing up, Pat called back, 'You have to. He's the candidate. If he wants
to hang himself, let him.'
Also on his feet, Danville said hoarsely, 'If you cut him off again I'll
spill it publicly. I'll leak the entire thing how you're working him like a
puppet!' He started at once toward the door of the studio; he was leaving.
Evidently he meant what he had said.
Jim Briskin said, 'You better turn it back on, Sal. They' re right; you have
to let me talk.' He did not feel angry, only impatient. His desire was to
continue, nothing else. 'Come on, Sal,' he said quietly. 'I'm waiting.'
The party brass and Sal Heim, in the control room, conferred.
'He'll give in,' Pat said to Jim Briskin. 'I know Sal.' Her face was
expressionless; she did not enjoy this, but she intended to endure it.
'Right,' Jim agreed, nodding.
'But will you watch a playback of the speech, Jim ?' She said, 'For Sal's
sake. Just to be sure you intend what you say.'
'Sure,' he said. He had meant to anyhow.
Sal Heim's voice boomed from the wall speaker. 'Damn your black Col hide,
Jim!'
Grinning, Jim Briskin waited, seated at his desk, his arms folded.
The read light of the central camera clicked back on.
2
After the speech Jim Briskin’s press secretary, Dorothy Gill, collared him
in the corridor. 'Mr. Briskin, you asked me yesterday to find out if Bruno Mini
is still alive. He is, after a fashion.' Miss Gill examined her notes. 'He's a
buyer for a dried fruit company in Sacramento, California, now. Evidently
Mini's entirely given up his planet-wetting career, but your speech just now
will probably bring him back to his old grazing ground.'
'Possibly not,' Briskin said. 'Mini may not like the idea of a Col taking up
his ideas and propagandizing them. Thanks, Dorothy.'
Coming up beside him, Sal Heim shook his head and said, 'Jim, you just don't
have political instinct.'
Shrugging, Jim Briskin said, 'Possibly you're right.' He was in that sort of
mood, now he felt passive and depressed. In any case the damage had been done;
the speech was on tape and already being relayed to the R-L satellite. His
review of it had been cursory at best.
'I heard what Dotty said,' Sal said. 'That Mini character will be showing up
here now; we'll have him to contend with, along with all our other problems.
Anyhow, how about a drink ?'
'Okay,' Jim Briskin agreed. 'Wherever you say. Lead the way.'
'May I join you ?' Patricia said, appearing beside her husband.
'Sure, 'Sal said. He put his arm around her and hugged her. 'A good big tall
one, full of curiously-refreshing tiny little bubbles that last all through the
drink. Just what women like.'
As they stepped out onto the sidewalk, Jim Briskin saw a picket - two of
them, in fact - carrying signs.
KEEP THE
WHITE HOUSE WHITE
LET'S KEEP AMERICA CLEAN!
The two pickets, both young Caucs, stared at him and he and Sal and Patricia
stared at them. No one spoke. Several homeopape camera men snapped picks; their
flashbulbs lit the static scene starkly for an instant, and then Sal and
Patricia, with Jim Briskin following, started on. The two pickets continued to
pace back and forth along their little routes.
'The bastards,' Pat said as the three of them sealed themselves at a booth
in the cocktail lounge across the street from the TV studio.
Jim Briskin said, 'It's their job. God evidently meant them to do that.' It
did not particularly bother him; in one form or another it had been a part of
his life as long as he could remember.
'But Schwarz agreed to keep race and religion out of the election,' Pat
said.
'Bill Schwarz did,' Jim Briskin said, 'but Verne Engel didn't. And it's
Engel who runs CLEAN, not the SRCD Party.'
'I know darn well the SRCD pays the money to keep CLEAN solvent,' Sal
murmured. 'Without their support it’d fold in a day.'
'I don't agree with you,' Briskin said. 'I think there'll always be a hate
organization like CLEAN, and there'll always be people to support it.' After
all, CLEAN had a point; they did not want to see a Negro President, and wasn't
it their right to feel like that ? Some people did, some people didn't; that
was perfectly natural. And, he thought, why should we pretend that race is not
the issue ? It is, really. I am a Negro. Verne Engel is factually correct. The
real question was: how large a percentage of the electorate supported CLEAN'S
views ? Certainly, CLEAN did not hurt his feelings; he could not be wounded; he
had experienced too much already in his years as a newsclown. In my years, he
thought to himself acidly, as an American Negro.
A small boy, white, appeared at the booth with a pen and tablet of paper.
'Mr. Briskin, can I get your autograph ?'
Jim signed and the boy darted off to join his parents at the door of the
tavern. The couple, well-dressed, young, and obviously upper stratum, waved at
him cheerily. 'We're with you!' the man called.
'Thanks,' Jim said, nodding to them and trying - but not successfully - to
sound cheery in return.
'You're in a mood,' Pat commented.
He nodded. Mutely.
'Think of all those people with lily-white skins,' Sal said, 'who're going
to vote for a Col. My, my. It's encouraging. Proves not all of us Whites are
bad down underneath.'
'Did I ever say you were ?' Jim asked.
'No, but you really think that. You don't really trust any of us.'
'Where'd you drag that up from ?' Jim demanded, angry now.
'What're you going to do ?' Sal said. 'Slash me with your electro-graphic
magnetic razor ?'
Pat said sharply, 'What are you doing, Sal ? Why are you talking to Jim like
that ?' She peered about nervously. 'Suppose someone overheard.'
'I'm trying to jerk him out of his depression,' Sal said. 'I don't like to
see him give in to them. Those CLEAN pickets upset him, but he doesn't
recognize it or feel it consciously.' He eyed Jim. 'I've heard you say it many
times. "I can't be hurt." Hell, you sure can. You were hurt just now.
You want everyone to love you, White and Col both. I don't know how you ever
got into politics in the first place. You should have stayed a newsclown,
delighting young and old. Especially the very young.'
Jim said, 'I want to help the human race.'
'By changing the ecology of the planets ? Are you serious ?'
'If I'm voted into office I actually intend to appoint Bruno Mini, without
even having met him, director of the space program; I'm going to give him the
chance they never let him have, even when they - '
'If you get elected, ' Pat said, 'you can pardon Dr Sands.'
'Pardon him ?' He glanced at her, disconcerted … 'He's not being tried; he's
being divorced.'
'You haven't heard the rumes ?' Pat said. 'His wife is going to dig up
something criminal he's done so she can dispatch him and obtain their total
property. No one knows what it is yet but she's hinted - '
'I don't want to hear,' Jim Briskin said.
'You may be right,' Pat said thoughtfully. 'The Sands divorce is turning
nasty; it might backfire if you mentioned it, as Sal wants you to. The
mistress, Cally Vale, has disappeared, possibly murdered. Maybe you do have an
instinct, Jim. Maybe you don't need us after all.'
'I need you,' Jim said, 'but not to embroil me in Dr Sands' marital
problems.' He sipped his drink.
Rick Erickson, repairman for Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service, lit
a cigarette, tipped his stool back by pushing with his bony knees against his
work bench. Before him rested the master turret of a defective jiffi-scuttler.
The one, in fact, which belonged to Dr Lurton Sands.
There had always been bugs in the 'scuttlers. This first one put in use had
broken down; years ago, that had been, but the 'scuttlers remained basically
the same now as then.
Historically, the original defective 'scuttler had belonged to an employee
of Terran Development named Henry Ellis. After the fashion of humans Ellis had
not reported the defect to his employers ... or so Rick recalled. It had been
before his time but myth persisted, an incredible legend, still current among
'scuttler repairmen, that through the defect in his 'scuttler Ellis had - it
was hard to believe - composed the Holy Bible.
The principle underlying the operation of the 'scuttlers was a limited form
of time travel. Along the tube of his 'scuttler - it was said - Ellis had found
a weak point, a shimmer at which another continuum completely had been visible.
He had stooped down and witnessed a gathering of tiny persons who yammered in
speeded-up voices and scampered about in their world just beyond the wall of
the tube.
Who were these people ? Initially, Ellis had not known, but even so he had
engaged in commerce with them; he had accepted sheets - astonishingly thin and
tiny - of questions, taken the questions to language-decoding equipment at TD,
then, once the foreign script of the tiny people had been translated, taking
the questions to one of the corporation's big computers to get them answered.
Then back to the Linguistics Department and at last at the end of the day, back
up the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler to hand to the tiny people the answers - in
their own language - to their questions.
Evidently, if you believed this, Ellis had been a charitable man.
However, Ellis had supposed that this was a non-Terran race dwelling on a
miniature planet in some other system entirely. He was wrong. According to the
legend, the tiny people were from Earth's own past; the script, of course, had
been ancient Hebrew. Whether this had really happened Rick did not pretend to
know, but, in any case, for some breach of company rules Ellis had been fired
by TD and had long since disappeared. Perhaps he had emigrated; who knew ? Who
cared ? TD's job was to patch the thin spot in the tube and see that the defect
did not reoccur in subsequent 'scuttlers.
All at once the intercom at the end of Rick's workbench blared. 'Hey,
Erickson.' It was Pethel's voice. 'Dr Sands is up here asking about his
'scuttler. When'll it be ready ?'
With the handle of a screwdriver Rick Erickson savagely tapped the master
turret of Dr Sands' 'scuttler. I better go upstairs and talk to Sands, he
reflected. I mean, this is driving me crazy. It can't malfunction the
way he claims.
Two steps at a time, Rick Erickson ascended to the main floor. There, at the
front door, a man was just leaving; it was Sands - Erickson recognized him from
the homeopape pics. He hurried, reached him outside on the sidewalk.
'Listen, doc - how come you say your 'scuttler dumps you off in Portland,
Oregon and places like that ? It just can't; it isn't built that way!'
They stood facing each other. Dr Sands, well-dressed, lean and slightly
balding, with deeply tanned skin and a thin, tapered nose, regarded him
complexly, cautious about answering. He looked smart, very smart.
So this is the man they're all writing about, Erickson said to himself.
Carries himself better than the rest of us and has a suit made from Martian
mole cricket hide. But - he felt irritation. Dr Sands in general had a helpless
manner; good-looking, in his mid-forties, he had an easy-going, bewildered
geniality about him, as if unable to deal with or comprehend the forces which
had overtaken him. Erickson could see that; Dr Sands had a crushed quality,
still stunned.
And yet Sands remained a gentleman. In a quiet, reasonable tone he said,
'But that's what it seems to do I wish I could tell you more, but I'm not
mechanically inclined.' He smiled, a thoroughly disarming smile that made
Erickson ashamed of his own gruffness.
'Aw, hell,' Erickson said, backtracking. 'It's the fault of TD - they could
have ironed the bugs out of the 'scuttlers years ago. Too bad you got a lemon.'
You look like a not too bad guy, he reflected.
' "A lemon,"'Dr. Sands echoed. 'Yes, that sums it up.' His face
twisted; he seemed amused. 'Well, that's my luck. Everything has been running
like this for me, lately.'
'Maybe I could get TD to take it back,' Erickson said. 'And swap you another
one for it.'
'No.' Dr Sands shook his head vigorously. 'I want that particular one.' His
tone had become firm; he meant what he said.
'Why ?' Who would want to keep an admitted lemon ? It didn't make sense. In
fact, the entire business had a wrong ring to it, and Erickson's keen faculties
detected this - he had seen many, many customers in his time.
'Because it's mine,' Sands said. 'I picked it out originally.' He started
on, then, down the sidewalk.
'Don't give me that,' Erickson said, half to himself.
Pausing, Sands said, 'What ?' He moved a step back, his face dark, now. The
geniality had departed.
'Sorry. No offense.' Erickson eyed Dr Sands acutely. And did not like what
he saw. Beneath the doctor's suavity there lay a coldness, something fixed and
hard. This was no ordinary person, and Erickson felt uneasy.
Dr Sands said in a crisp voice, 'Get it fixed and soon.' He turned and
strode on down the sidewalk, leaving Erickson standing there.
Jeez, Erickson said to himself, and whistled. My busted back. I wouldn't
want to tangle with him, he thought as he walked into the store.
Going downstairs a step at a time, hands thrust deep in his pockets, he
thought: Maybe I'll stick it all back together and take a trip through it. He
was again thinking of old Henry Ellis, the first man to receive a defective
'scuttler; he was recalling that Ellis had not wanted to give up his particular
one, either. And for good reason.
Back in the service department basement once more, Rick seated himself at
the work bench, picked up Dr Sands' 'scuttler-turret and began to reassemble
it. Presently, he had expertly restored it to its place and had hooked it back
into the circuit.
Now, he said to himself as he switched on the power field. Let's see where
it gets us. He entered the big gleaming circular hoop which was the entrance of
the 'scuttler, found himself - as usual - within a gray, formless tube which
stretched in both directions. Framed in the opening behind him lay his work
bench, And in front of him ?
New York City. An unstable view of an industriously-active street corner
which bordered Dr Sands' office. And a wedge, beyond it, of the vast building
itself, the high rise skyscraper of plastic - rexeroid compounds from Jupiter
-with its infinitude of floors, endless windows .,.. and, past that, monojets
rising and descending from the ramps, along which the footers scurried in
swarms so dense as to seem self-destructive. The largest city in the world,
four-fifths of which lay subsurface; what he saw was only a meager fraction, a
trace of its visible projections. No one in his lifetime, even a jerry,
could view it all; the city was simply too extensive.
See ? Erickson grumbled to himself. Your 'scuttler's working okay; this
isn't Portland, Oregon - it's exactly what it's supposed to be.
Crouching down, Erickson ran an expert hand over tide surface of the tube.
Seeking - what ? He didn't know. But something which would justify the doctor's
insistence on retaining this particular 'scuttler.
He took his time. He was not in a hurry. And he intended to find what he was
searching for.
3
The planet-wetting speech which Jim Briskin delivered that night - taped
earlier during the day and then beamed from the R-L satellite - was too painful
for Salisbury Heim to endure. Therefore, he took an hour off and sought relief
as many men did: he boarded a jet'ab and shortly was on his way to the Golden
Door Moments of Bliss satellite. Let Jim blab away about Bruno Mini's crackpot
engineering program, he said to himself as he rested in the rear seat of the
rising 'ab, grateful for this interval of relaxation. Let him cut his own
throat. But at least I don't have to be dragged down to defeat along with him;
I'm tempted, sometime before election day, to cut myself loose and go over to
the SRCD party.
Beyond doubt, Bill Schwarz would take him on. By an intricate route Heim had
already sounded the opposition out. Schwarz had, through this careful, indirect
linkage, expressed pleasure at the idea of Heim joining forces with him.
However, Heim was not really ready to make his move; he had not pursued the
topic further.
At least, not until today. This new, painful bombshell. And at a time when
the party had troubles enough already.
The fact of the matter was - and he knew this from the latest polls - that
Jim Briskin was trailing Schwarz. Despite the fact that he had all the Col
vote, and that included non-Negro dark races such as Puerto Ricans on the East
Coast and the Mexicans on the West. It was not a shoo-in by any means. And why
was Briskin trailing ? Because all the Whites would be going to the polls,
whereas only about sixty per cent of the Cols would show up on election day.
Incredibly, they were apathetic toward Jim. Perhaps they believed - and he had
heard this said - that Jim had sold out to the White power structure. That he
was not authentically a leader of the Col people as such. And in a sense this
was true.
Because Jim Briskin represented Whites and Cols alike.
'We're there, sir,' the 'ab driver, a Col, informed him. The 'ab slowed,
came to rest on the breast-shaped vehicle port of the satellite, a dozen yards
from the pink nipple which served as a location-signal device. 'You're Jim
Briskin's campaign manager ?' the driver said, turning to face him.; 'Yeah, I
recognize you. Listen, Mr. Heim; he's not a sell-out, is he ? I heard a lot of
folk argue that, but he wouldn't do it; I know that.'
'Jim Briskin,' Heim said as he dug for his wallet 'has sold out nobody. And
never will. You can tell your buddies that because it's the truth.' He paid his
fare, feeling grumpy. Grumpy as hell.
'But is it true that ?'
'He's working with Whites, yes. He's working with me and I'm White. So what
? Are the Whites supposed to disappear when Briskin is elected ? Is that what
you want ? Because if it is, you're not going to get it.'
'I see what you mean, I guess,' the driver said, nodding slowly. 'You infer
he's for all the people, right ? He's got the interest of the White minority at
heart just like tie has the Col majority. He's going to protect everybody, even
including you Whites.'
'That's right,' Salisbury Heim said, as he opened the 'ab’s door. 'As you
put it, "even including you Whites".' He stepped out on the pavement.
Yes, even us, he said to himself. Because we merit it.
'Hello there, Mr. Heim.' A woman's melodious voice. Heim turned -
'Thisbe,' he said, pleased. 'How are you ?'
I'm glad to see that you haven't stayed below just because your candidate
disapproves of us,' Thisbe Olt said. Archly, she raised her green-painted,
shining eyebrows. Her narrow, harlequin-like face glinted with countless dots
of pure light embedded within her skin; it gave her eerie, nimbus-like
countenance the appearance of constantly-renewed beauty. And she had renewed herself,
over a number of decades. Willowy, almost frail, she fiddled with a tassel of
stone-impregnated fabric draped about her bare arms; she had put on gay clothes
in order to come out and greet him and he was gratified. He liked her very much
- had for some time now.
Guardedly, Sal Heim said, 'What makes you think Jim Briskin has any bones to
pick with the Golden Door, Thisbe ? Has he ever actually said anything to that
effect ?' As far as he knew, Jim's opinions on that topic had not been made
public; at least he had tried to keep them under wraps.
'We know these things, Sal,' Thisbe said, 'I think you'd better go inside
and talk with George Walt about it; they're down on level C, in their office.
They have a few things to say to you, Sal. I know because they've been
discussing it.'
Annoyed, Sal said, 'I didn't come here - ' But what was the use ? If the
owners of the Golden Door satellite wanted to see him, it was undoubtedly
advisable for him to come around. 'Okay,' he said, and followed Thisbe in the direction
of the elevator.
It always distressed him - despite his efforts to the contrary - to find
himself engaged in conversation with George Walt. They were a mutation of a
special sort; he had never seen anything quite like them. Nonetheless, although
handicapped, George Walt had risen to great economic power in this society. The
Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, it was rumored, was only one of their
holdings; they were spread extensively over the financial map of the modern
world. They were a form of mutated twinning, joined at the base of the skull so
that a single cephalic structure served both separate bodies. Evidently the
personality George inhabited one hemisphere of the brain, made use of
one eye: the right, as he recalled. And the personality Walt existed on
the other side, distinct with its own idiosyncrasies, views and drives - and
its own eye from which to view the outside universe.
A uniformed attendant, a sort of cop, stopped Sid, as the elevator doors
opened on level C.
'Mr. George Walt wanted to see me,' Sal said. 'Or so Miss Olt tells me, at
least.'
'This way, Mr. Heim,' the uniformed attendant said, touching his cap
respectfully and leading Sal down the carpeted, silent hall.
He was let into a large chamber - and there, on a couch, sat George Walt.
Both bodies at once rose to their feet, supporting between them the common
head. The head, containing the unmingled entities of tide brothers, nodded in
greeting and the mouth smiled. One eye - the left - regarded him steadily,
while the other wandered vaguely off, as if preoccupied.
The two necks joined the head in such a way that the head and face were
tilted slightly back. George Walt tended to look slightly over whomever they
were talking to, and this added to the unique impression; it made them seem
formidable, as if their attention could not really be engaged. The head was
normal size, however, as were both bodies. The body to the left - Sal did not
recall which of them it was - wore informal clothing, a cotton shirt and
slacks, with sandals on the feet. The right hand body, however, was formally
dressed in a single-breasted suit, tie and buttoned gray cape. And the hands of
the right body were jammed deep into the trouser pockets, a stance which gave
to it an aura of authority if not age; it seemed distinctly older than its
twin.
'This is George,' the head said, pleasantly. 'How are you, Sal Heim ? Good
to see you.' The left body extended its hand. Sal walked toward the two of them
and gingerly shook hands. The right hand body, Walt, did not want to shake with
him; its hands remained in its pockets.
'This is Walt,' the head said, less pleasantly, then. We wanted to discuss
your candidate with you, Heim. Sit down and have a drink. Here, what can we fix
for you ?' Together, the two bodies managed to walk to the sideboard, where an
elaborate bar could be seen. Walt's hands opened a bottle of Bourbon while
George's expertly fixed an old fashioned, mixed sugar and water and bitters
together in the bottom of a glass. Together, George Walt made the drink and
carried it back to Sal.
'Thanks,' Sal Heim said, accepting the drink.
'This is Walt,' the common head said to him. 'We know that if Jim Briskin is
elected he'll instruct his Attorney General to find ways to shut the satellite
down. Isn't that a fact ?' The two eyes, together now, fixed themselves on him
in an intense, astute gaze.
'I don't know where you heard that,' Sal said, evasively.
"This is Walt,' the head said. "There's a leak in your
organization; that's where we heard it. You realize what this means. We'll have
to throw our support behind Schwarz. And you know how many transmissions we
make to Earth in a single day.'
Sal sighed. The Golden Door kept a perpetual stream of junk, honky-tonk
stag-type shows, pouring down over a variety of channels, available to and
widely watched by almost everyone in the country. The shows - especially the
climactic orgy in which Thisbe herself, with her famous display of expanding
and contracting muscles working in twenty directions simultaneously and in four
colors, appeared - were a come-on for the activity of the satellite. But it
would be duck soup to work in an anti-Briskin bias; the satellite's announcers
were slick prose.
Downing his drink he rose and started toward the door. 'Go ahead and stick
your stag shows on Jim; we'll win the election anyhow and then you can be sure
he'll shut you. In fact, I personally guarantee it right now.'
The head looked uneasy. 'Dirty p-pool,' it stammered.
Sal shrugged. 'I'm just protecting the interests of my client; you've been
making threats toward him. You started it, both of you.'
'This is George,' the head said rapidly. 'Here's what I think we ought to
have. Listen to this, Walt. We want Jim Briskin to come up here to the Golden Door
and be photographed publicly.' It added, in applause for itself, 'Good idea.
Get it, Sal ? Briskin arrives here, covered by all the media, and visits one of
the girls; it'll be good for his image because it'll show he's a normal guy -
and not some creep. So you benefit from this. And, while he's here, Briskin
compliments us.' It added, 'A good final touch but optional. For instance, he
says the national interest has - '
'He'll never do it,' Sal said. 'He'll lose the election first.'
The head said, plaintively, 'We'll give him any girl he wants; my lord, we
have five thousand to choose from!'
'No luck,' Sal Heim said. 'Now if you were to make that offer to me I'd take
you up on it in a second. But not Jim. He's - old-fashioned.' That was as good
a way to put it as any. 'He's a Puritan. You can call him a remnant of the
twentieth century, if you want.'
'Or nineteenth,' the head said, venomously.
'Say anything you want,' Sal said, nodding. 'Jim won't care. He knows what
he believes in; he thinks the satellite is undignified. The way it's all
handled up here, boom, boom, boom - mechanically, with no personal touch, no
meeting of humans on a human basis. You run an autofac; I don't object and most
people don't object, because it saves times. But Jim does, because he's
sentimental.'
Two right arms gestured at Sal menacingly as the head said loudly, 'The hell
with that! We're as sentimental up here as you can get! We play background
music in every room - the girls always learn the customer's first name and
they're required to call him by that and nothing else! How sentimental
can you get, for chrissakes ? 'What do you want ?' In a higher-pitched
voice it roared on, 'A marriage ceremony before and then a divorce procedure
afterward, so it constitutes a legal marriage, is that it ? Or do you want us
to teach the girls to sew mother hubbards and bloomers, and you pay to see
their ankles, and that's it ? Listen, Sal.' Its voice dropped a tone, became
ominous and deadly 'Listen, Sal Heim,' it repeated. 'We know our business;
don't tell us our business and we won't tell you yours. Starting tonight our TV
announcers are going to insert a plug for Schwarz in every telecast to Earth,
right in the middle of the glorious chef-d'oeuvre you-know-what where the
girls... well, you know. Yes, I mean that part. And we're going to make
a campaign out of this, really put it over. We're going to insure Bill Schwarz'
reelection.' It added, 'And insure that Col fink's thorough, total defeat.'
Sal said nothing. The great carpeted office was silent.
'No response from you, Sal ? You're going to sit idly by ?'
'I came up here to visit a girl I like,' Sal said. 'Sparky Rivers, her name
is. I'd like to see her now.' He felt weary. 'She's different from all the
others ... at least, all I've tried.' Rubbing his forehead he murmured, 'No,
I'm too tired, now. I've changed my mind. I'll just leave.'
'If she's as good as you say,' the head said, 'it won't require any energy
from you.' It laughed in appreciation of its wit. 'Send a fray named Sparky Rivers
down here,' it instructed, pressing a button on its desk.
Sal Heim nodded dully. There was something to that. And after all, this was
what he had come here for, this ancient, appreciated remedy.
'You're working too hard,' the head said acutely. 'What's the matter, Sal ? Are
you losing ? Obviously, you need our help. Very badly, in fact.'
'Help, schmelp,' Sal said. 'What I need is a six-week rest, and not up here.
I ought to take an 'ab to Africa and hunt spiders or whatever the craze is
right now.' With all his problems, he had lost touch.
Those big trench-digging spiders are out, now,' the head informed him. 'Now
it's nocturnal moths, again.' Walt's right arm pointed at the wall and Sal saw,
behind glass, three enormous iridescent cadavers, displayed under an
ultraviolet lamp which brought out all their many colors. 'Caught them myself,'
the head said, and then chided itself. 'No, you didn't; I did, You saw them but
I popped them into the killing jar.'
Sal Heim sat silently waiting for Sparky Rivers, as the two inhabitants of
the head argued with each other as to which of them had brought back the
African moths.
The top-notch and expensive - and dark-skinned - private investigator, Tito
Cravelli, operating out of N'York, handed the woman seated across from him the
findings which his Altac 3-60 computer had derived from the data provided it.
It was a good machine.
'Forty hospitals,' Tito said. 'Forty transplant operations within last year.
Statistically, it's unlikely that the UN Vital Organ Fund Reserve would
have had that many organs available in so limited a time, but it is possible.
In other words, we've got nothing."
Mrs. Myra Sands smoothed her skirt thoughtfully, then lit a cigarette.
'We'll select at random from among the forty; I want you to follow at least
five or six up. How long will it take for you to do that ?'
Tito calculated silently. 'Say two days. If I have to go there and see
people. Of course, if I can do some of it on the phone-' He liked to work
through the Vidphone Corporation of America's product; it meant he could stick
near the Altac 3-60. And, when anything came up, he could feed the data on the
spot, get an opinion without delay. He respected the 3-60; it had set him back
a great deal, a year ago when he had purchased it. And he did not intend to
permit it to lie idle, not if he could help it. But sometimes -
This was a difficult situation. Myra Sands was; not the sort who could
endure uncertainty; for her things had to be either this or that, either A or
not-A - Myra made use of Aristotle's Law of the Excluded Middle like no one
else he knew. He admired her. Myra was a handsome, extremely well-educated
woman, light-haired, in her middle forties; across from him she sat erect and
trim in her yellow Lunar squeak-frog suit, her legs long and without defect.
Her sharp chin alone let on - to Tito at least - the grimness, the no-nonsense
aspect, of her personality. Myra was a businesswoman first, before anything
else; as one of the nation's foremost authorities in the field of therapeutic
abortions, she was highly paid and highly honored... and she was well aware of
this. After all, she had been at it for years. And Tito respected anyone who
lived as an independent business person; after all, he, too, was his own boss,
beholden to no one, to no subsidizing organization or economic entity. He and
Myra had something in common. Although, of course, Myra would have denied it,
Myra Sands was a terrible goddam snob; to her, Tito Cravelli was an employee
whom she had hired to find out - or rather to establish as fact -certain
information about her husband.
He could not imagine why Lurton Sands had married her. Surely it had been
conflict - psychological, social, sexual, professional - from the start.
However, there was no explaining the chemistry which joined men and women,
locked them in embraces of hate and mutual suffering sometimes for ninety years
on end. In his line, Tito had seen plenty of it, enough to last him even a jerry
lifetime.
'Call Lattimore Hospital in San Francisco,' Myra instructed in her crisp,
vigilantly authoritative voice. 'In August, Lurton transplanted a spleen for an
army major, there; I think his name was Walleck or some such quiddity as that.
I recall, at the time ... Lurton had had, what shall I say ? A little too much
to drink. It was evening and we were having dinner. Lurton blurted out some
darn thing or other. About "paying heavily" for the spleen. You know,
Tito, that VOFR prices are rigidly set by the UN and they're not high; in fact
they're too low ... that's the cardinal reason the fund runs out of certain
vital organs so often. Not from a lack of supply so much as the existence of
too darn many takers.'
'Hmm,' Tito said, jotting notes.
'Lurton always said that if the VOFR only were to raise its rates...'
'You're positive it was a spleen ?' Tito broke in.
'Yes.' Myra nodded curtly, exhaling streamers of gray smoke that swirled
toward the lamp behind her, a cloud that drifted in the artificial light of the
office. It was dark outside, now; the time was seven-thirty.
'A spleen,' Tito recapitulated. 'In August of this year. At Lattimore
General Hospital in San Francisco. An army major named - '
'Now I'm beginning to think it was Wozzeck,' Myra put in. 'Or is that an
opera composer ?'
'It's an opera,' Tito said. 'By Berg. Seldom performed, now.' He lifted the
receiver of the vidphone. 'I'll get hold of the business office at Lattimore;
it's only four-thirty out there on the Coast.'
Myra rose to her feet and roamed restlessly about the office, rubbing her
gloved hands together in a motion that irritated Tito and made it difficult for
him to concentrate on his call.
'Have you had dinner ?' he asked her, as he waited on the line.
'No. But I never eat until eight-thirty or nine; it's barbaric to eat any
earlier.'
Tito said, 'Can I take you to dinner, Mrs. Sands ? I know an awfully good
little Armenian place in the Village. The food's actually prepared by humans.'
'Humans ? As compared to what ?'
'Automatic food-processing systems,' Tito murmured. 'Or don't you ever eat
in autoprep restaurants ?' After all, the Sands were wealthy; possibly they
normally enjoyed human-prepared food. 'Personally, I can't stand autopreps. The
food's always so predictable. Never burned, never ...' He broke off; on the
vidscreen the miniature features of an employee at Lattimore had formed. 'Miss,
this is Life-factors Research Consultants of N'York calling. I'd like to
inquire about an operation performed on a Major Wozzeck or Walleck last August,
a spleen transplant.'
'Wait,' Myra said suddenly. 'Now I remember; it wasn't a spleen - it was an
islands of Langerhans; you know, that part of the pancreas which controls sugar
production in the body. I remember because Lurton got to talking about it
because he saw me putting two teaspoonfuls of sugar in my coffee.'
'I'll look that up,' the girl at Lattimore said, overhearing Myra. She
turned to her files.
'What I want to find out,' Tito said to her, 'is the exact date at which the
organ was obtained from the UN's VOFR.
If you can give me that datum, please.' He waited, accustomed to having to
be patient. His line of work absolutely required that virtue, above all others,
including intelligence.
The girl presently said, 'A Colonel Weiswasser received an organ transplant
on August twelve of this year. Islands of Langerhans, obtained from the VOFR
the day before, August eleven. Dr Lurton Sands performed the operation and of
course certified the organ.'
'Thanks, miss,' Tito said, and broke the connection. "The VOFR office
is closed,' Myra said, as he began once more to dial. 'You'll have to wait
until tomorrow.'
'I know somebody there,' Tito said and continued dialing.
At last he had Gus Anderton, his contact at the UN's vital organ bank. 'Gus,
this is Tito. Check August eleven this year for me. Islands of Langerhans; okay
? See if the org-trans surgeon we previously had reference to picked up one
there on that date.'
His contact was back almost at once with the information. 'Correct, Tito; it
all checks out. Aug eleven, Islands of Langerhans. Transferred by jet-hopper to
Lattimore in San Francisco. Routine in every way.'
Tito Cravelli cut the circuit, exasperated.
After a pause Myra Sands, still pacing restlessly about his office,
exclaimed, 'But I know he's been obtaining organs illegally. He never turned
anybody down, and you know there never have been that many organs in the bank
reserve - he had to get them somewhere else. He still is; I know it.'
'Knowing this and proving this are two ...'
Turning to him, Myra snapped, 'And outside of the UN bank there's only one
other place he would or could go.'
'Agreed,' Tito said, nodding. 'But as your attorney said, you better have
proof before you make the charge; otherwise he'll sue you for slander, libel,
defamation of character, the entire biz. He'd have to. You'd give him no
choice.'
'You don't like this,' Myra said.
Tito shrugged. 'I don't have to like it. That doesn't matter.'
'But you think I'm treading on dangerous ground.'
'I know you are. Even if it's true that Lurton Sands ...'
'Don't say "even if". He's a fanatic and you know it; he
identifies so fully with his public image as a savior of lives that he's simply
had to make a psychological break with reality. Probably he started in a small
way, with what he told himself was a unique situation, an exception; he had to
have a particular organ and he took it. And the next time...' She shrugged. 'It
was easier. And so on.'
'I see, 'Tito said.
'I think I see what we're going to have to do,' Myra said. 'What you're
going to have to do. Get started on-this. Find out from your contact at the UN
exactly what organ the bank lacks at this time. Then deliberately set up
another emergency situation; have someone in a hospital somewhere apply to Lurton
for that particular transplant. I realize that it'll cost one hell of a lot of
money, but I'm willing to underwrite the expense. Do you see ?'
'I see,' Tito said. In other words, trap Lurton Sands. Play on the man's
determination to save the life of a dying person ... make his humanitarianism
the instrument of his destruction. What a way to earn a living, Tito thought to
himself. Another day, another dollar ... it's hardly that. Not when you get
involved in something like this.
'I know you can arrange it,' Myra said to him fervently. 'You're good;
you're experienced. Aren't you ?'
'Yes, Mrs. Sands,' Tito said. I'm experienced. Yes, possibly I can trap the
guy. Lead him by the nose. It shouldn't be too hard.'
'Make sure your "patient" offers him plenty,' Myra said in a
bitter, taut voice. 'Lurton will bite if he senses a good financial return;
that's what interests him - in spite of what you and the darn public may or may
not imagine. I ought to know; I've lived with him a good many years, shared his
most intimate thoughts.' She smiled, briefly. 'It seems a shame I have to tell
you how to go about your business, but obviously I have to.' Her smile
returned, cold and exceedingly hard.
'I appreciate your assistance,' Tito said woodenly.
'No you don't. You think I'm trying to do something wicked. Something out of
mere spite.'
Tito said, 'I don't think anything; I'm just hungry. Maybe you don't eat
until eight-thirty or nine, but I have pyloric spasms and I have to eat by
seven. Will you excuse me ?' He rose to his feet, pushing his desk chair back.
'I want to close up shop.' He did not renew his offer to take her out to
dinner.
Gathering up her coat and purse, Myra Sands said, 'Have you located Cally
Vale and if so where ?'
'No luck,' Tito said, and felt uncomfortable.
Staring at him, Myra said, 'But why can't you locate her ? She must be somewhere
! She looked as if she could not believe her ears.
'The court process servers can't find her either,' Tito pointed out. 'But
I'm sure she'll turn up by trial time.' He, too, had been wondering why his
staff had been unable to locate Lurton Sands' mistress; after all, there were
only a limited number of places a person could hide, and detection and tracing
devices, especially during the last two decades, had improved to an almost
supernatural accuracy.
Myra said, 'I'm beginning to think you're just not any good. I wonder if I
shouldn't put my business in somebody else's hands.'
'That's your privilege,' Tito said. His stomach ached, a series of spasms of
his pyloric valve. He wondered if he was ever going to get an opportunity to
eat tonight.
'You must find Miss Vale,' Myra said. 'She knows all the details of his
activity; that's why he's got her hidden - in fact she's pumping blood with a
heart he procured for her.'
'Okay, Mrs. Sands,' Tito agreed, and inwardly winced at the growing pain ...
4
The black-haired, extremely dark youth said shyly, 'We came to you, Mrs.
Sands, because we read about you in the homeopape. It said you were very good
and also you take people without too much money.' He added, 'We don't have any
money at all right now, but maybe we can pay you later.'
Brusquely, Myra Sands said, 'Don't worry about that now.' She surveyed the
boy and girl. 'Let's see. Your names are Art and Rachael Chaffy. Sit down, both
of you, and let's talk, all right ?' She smiled at them, her professional smile
of greeting and warmth; it was reserved for her clients, given to no one else,
not even to her husband - or, as she thought of Lurton now, her former husband.
In a soft voice the girl, Rachael, said 'We tried to get them to let us
become bibs but they said we should consult an advisor first.' She explained,
'I'm - well, you see, somehow I got to be preg. I'm sorry.' She ducked her head
fearfully, with shame, her cheeks flushing deep scarlet. 'It's too bad they
don't just let you kill yourself, like they did a few years ago,' she murmured.
'Because that would solve it."
'That law,' Myra said firmly, 'was a bad idea. However imperfect deep-sleep
is, it's certainly preferable to the old form of self-destruction undertaken on
an individual basis. How far advanced is your pregnancy, dear ?'
'About a month and a half,' Rachael Chaffy said, lifting her head a trifle.
She managed to meet Myra's gaze; for a moment, at least.
'Then abort-processing presents no difficulty,' Myra said. 'It's routine. We
can arrange for it by noon today and have it done by six tonight. At any one of
several free government abort clinics here in the area. Just a moment.' Her
secretary had opened the door to the office and was trying to catch her
attention. 'What is it, Tina ?'
'An urgent phone call for you, Mrs. Sands.'
Myra clicked on her desk vidphone. On the screen Tito Cravelli's features
formed in replica, puffy with agitation.
'Mrs. Sands,' Tito said, 'sorry to bother you at your office so early this
morning. But a number of tracking devices we've been employing here have wound
up their term of service and have come home. I thought you'd want to know. Cally
Vale is nowhere on Earth. That's absolutely been determined; that's definite.'
He was silent, then, waiting for her to say something.
'Then she emigrated,' Myra said, trying to picture the dainty and rather
nauseatingly fragile Miss Vale in the rugged environment of Mars or Ganymede.
'No,' Tito Cravelli said emphatically, shaking his head. 'We've checked on
that, of course. Cally Vale did not emigrate. It doesn't make sense, but
there it is. No wonder we're making no headway; we're faced with an impossible
situation.' He did not appear very happy about it. His features sagged glumly.
Myra said, 'She's not on Earth and she didn't emigrate. Then she must...' It
was obvious to her; why hadn't they thought of it right away, when Cally
originally vanished from sight ? 'She's entered a government warehouse. Cally's
a bib.' It was the only possibility left.
'We're looking into that,' Tito said, but without enthusiasm. 'I admit it's
possible but frankly I just don't buy it. Personally, I think they've thought up
something new, something original; I'd stake my job on it, everything I have.'
Tito's tone was insistent, now. No longer hesitant. 'But we'll check all the
Dept. of SPW warehouses, all ninety-four of them. That'll take a couple of days
at least. Meanwhile ?' He caught sight of the young couple, the Chaffys,
waiting silently. 'Perhaps; I'd better discuss it with you later; there's no
urgency.'
Maybe what the homeopapes are hinting at actually did take place, Myra
thought to herself. Perhaps Lurton has actually killed her. So she can't be
subpoenaed by Frank Fenner at the trial.
'Do you believe Cally Vale is dead ?' Myra said to Tito bluntly. She ignored
the young couple seated opposite her; they did not at the moment matter; this
was far too important.
'I'm in no position ...' Tito began. Myra cut him off; she broke the
connection, and the screen faded. I'm in no position to say, she finished for
him. But who is ? Lurton ? Maybe even he doesn't know where Cally is. She might
have run out on him. Gone to the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite and
joined the army of girls there, under an assumed name. With relish, Myra
pondered that, picturing her former husband's mistress as one of Thisbe's
creatures, sexless and mechanical and automatic. Which will it be, Cally ? One,
two, three or four ? Only, the choice isn't yours. It's theirs. Every time.
Myra laughed. It's where you ought to be, Cally, she thought. For the rest of
your life, for the next two hundred years.
'Please forgive the interruption,' Myra said to the young couple seated
opposite her. 'And do go on.'
'Well,' the girl Rachael said awkwardly, 'Art and I felt that - we thought
over the abortion and we just don't want to do it. I don't know why, Mrs.
Sands. I know we should. But we can't.'
There was silence, then.
'I don't see what you came to me for,' Myra said. 'If you've made up your
minds against it already. Obviously, from a practical standpoint you should go
through with it; you're probably frightened... after all, you are very young.
But I'm not trying to talk you into it. A decision of this sort has to be your
own.'
In a low voice Art said, 'We're not scared, Mrs. Sands. That's not it. We -
well, we'd like to have the baby. That's all.'
Myra Sands did not know what to say. She had never, in her practice, run
into anything quite like this; it baffled her.
She could see already that this was going to be a bad day.
Between this and Tito's phone call - it was too much. And so early. It was
not yet even nine a.m.
In the basement of Pethel Jiff-scuttler Sales & Service, the repairman
Rick Erickson prepared, for the second day in a row, to enter the defective
'scuttler of Dr Lurton Sands, Jr. He still had not found what he was searching
for.
However, he did not intend to give up. He felt, on an intuitive level, that
he was very close. It would not be long now.
From behind him a voice said, 'What are you doing, Rick ?'
Startled, Erickson jumped, glanced around. At the door of the repair
department stood his employer, Darius Pethel, heavy-set in the wrinkled
dark-brown old-fashioned /i>jerry -type wool suit which he customarily wore.
'Listen,' Erickson said. 'This is Dr Sands' 'scuttler. You can laugh, but I
think he's got his mistress in here, somewhere.'
'What ?' Pethel laughed.
'I mean it. I don't think she's dead, even though I talked to Sands long
enough to know he could do it if he felt it was necessary - he's that kind of
guy. Anyhow nobody's found her, even Mrs. Sands. Naturally they can't find her,
because Lurton's got his 'scuttler in here with us, out of sight. He knows it's
here, but they don't. And he doesn't want it back, no matter what he
says; he wants it stuck down here, right in this basement.'
Staring at him Pethel said, 'Great fud. Is this what you've been doing on my
time ? Working out detective theories ?'
Erickson said, 'This is important! Even if it doesn't mean any money for
you. Hell, maybe it does; if I'm lucky and find her, maybe you can sell her
back to Mrs. Sands.'
After a pause Darius Pethel shrugged in a philosophical way. 'Okay. So look.
If you do find her ?'
Beside Pethel the salesman of the firm, Stuart Hadley, appeared. He said
breezily, 'What's up, Dar ?' As always cheerful and interested.
'Rick's searching for Dr Sands' mistress.' Pethel said. He jerked his thumb
at the 'scuttler.
'Is she pretty ?' Hadley asked. 'Well started ?' He looked hungry.
'You've seen her pics in the homeopapes,' Pethel said. 'She's cute.
Otherwise why do you suppose the doctor risked his marriage, if she wasn't something
exceptional ? Come on, Hadley; I need you upstairs on the floor. We can't all
three be down here - someone'll walk away with the register.' He started up the
stairs.
'And she's in there ?' Hadley said, looking puzzled as he bent to peer into
the 'scuttler. 'I don't see her, Dar.'
Darius Pethel guffawed. 'Neither do I. Neither does Rick, but he's still
searching - and on my time, goddam it! Listen, Rick; if you find her she's my
mistress, because you're on my time, working for me.'
All three of them laughed at that.
'Okay,' Rick agreed, on his hands and knees, scraping the surface of the
'scuttler tube with the blade of a screwdriver. 'You can laugh and I admit it's
funny. But I'm not stopping. Obviously, the rent isn't visible; if it was, Doc
Sands wouldn't have dared leave it here. He may think I'm dumb, but not that
dumb - he's got it concealed and real well.'
' "Rent,"'Pethel echoed. He frowned, startling back a few steps
down the stairs and into the basement once more. 'You mean like Henry Ellis
found, years ago ? That rupture in the tube-wall that led to ancient Israel ?'
'Israel is right,' Rick said briefly, as he scraped. His keen,
thoroughly-trained eye saw all at once in the surface near at hand a slight
irregularity, a distortion. Leaning forward, he reached out his hand...
His groping fingers passed through the wall of the tube and disappeared.
'Jesus,' Rick said. He raised his invisible fingers, felt nothing at first,
and then touched the upper edge of the rent. 'I found it,' he said. He looked
around, but Pethel had gone. 'Darius!' he yelled, but there was no answer.
'Damn him!' he said in fury to Hadley.
'You found what ?' Hadley asked, starting cautiously into the tube. 'You
mean you found the Vale woman ? Cally Vale ?'
Headfirst, Rick Erickson crept into the rent.
He sprawled, snatching for support; falling, he struck hard ground and
cursed. Opening his eyes, he saw, above, a pale blue sky with a few meager
clouds. And, around him, a meadow. Bees, or what looked something more or less
like bees, buzzed in tall-stemmed white flowers as large as saucers. The air
smelled of sweetness, as if the flowers had impregnated the atmosphere itself.
I'm there, he said to himself. I got through; this is where Doc Sands hid
his mistress to keep her from testifying for Mrs. Sands at the trial or hearing
or whatever it's called. He stood up, cautiously. Behind him he made out a hazy
shimmer: the nexus with the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler back in the store's
basement in Kansas City. I want to keep my bearings, he said to himself warily.
If I get lost, I may not be able to get back again and that might be bad. Where is this ? he asked himself. Must work that out - now.
Gravity like Earth's. Must be Earth, then, he decided. Long time ago ? Long
time in the future ? Think what this is worth; the hell with the man's
mistress, the hell with him and his personal problems - that's nothing. He
looked wildly around for some sign of habitation, for something animal-like, or
human; something to tell him what epoch this was, past or future, Saber-tooth
tiger, maybe. Or trilobite. No, too late for the trilobite already; look at
those bees. This is the break Terran Development has been trying to uncover for
thirty years now, he said to himself. And the rat that found it used it for his
own sneaky goings-on, as a place merely to hide his doxie. What a world!
Erickson began slowly to walk, step by step...
Far off, a figure moved.
Shading his eyes against the glare of the sky, Rick-Erickson tried to make
out what it was. Primitive man ? Cro-Magnon or some such thing ? Big-domed
inhabitant of the future, perhaps ? He squinted - it was a woman; he could tell
by her hair. She wore slacks and she was running toward him. Cally, he thought.
Doc Sands' mistress, hurrying toward me. Must think I'm Sands. In panic, he
halted; what'll I do ? He wondered. Maybe I better go back, think this out. He
started to turn in the direction he had come.
Out of the corner of his eye he saw the girl's arm come up swiftly.
No, he thought. Don't.
He stumbled as he snatched at the hazy, small loop which connected the two
environments, entrance to the 'scuttler tube.
The red glow of an aimed laser-beam passed over his head.
You missed me, he thought in terror. But - he clawed! for the entrance,
found it, began to struggle back through. But next time. Next time!
'Stop,' he shouted at her without looking at heir. His voice echoed in the
bee-zooming plain of flowers.
The second laser-beam caught him in the back.
He put his hand out, saw it pass through the haze and disappear beyond. It
was safe, but he was not. She had killed him; it was too late, now, too late to
get away from her. Why didn't she wait ? he asked himself. Find out who I was ?
Must have been afraid.
Again the laser-beam nicked. It touched the back of his head and that was
that. There was no returning for him, no reentry into the safety of the tube.
Rick Erickson was dead.
Standing on the far side, in the tube of Dr Sands' Jiffi-scuttler, Stuart Hadley
waited nervously, then saw Rick Erickson's fingers jerk through the wall near
the floor; the fingers writhed, and Hadley stooped down and grabbed Erickson by
the wrist. Trying to get back, he realized, and pulled Erickson by the arm with
all his strength. It was a corpse that he drew into the tube beside him.
Horrified, Hadley rose unsteadily to his feet; he saw the two clean holes
and knew that Erickson had been killed with a laser rifle, probably from a
distance. Stumbling down the tube, Hadley reached the controls of the 'scuttler
and cut the power off; the shimmer of the entrance hoop at once vanished, and
he knew or hoped - that now they, whoever they were who had murdered Rick
Erickson, could not follow him through.
'Pethel!' he shouted. 'Come down here!' He ran to Erickson's work bench and
the intercom. 'Mr. Pethel,' he said, 'come back down here to the basement right
away. Erickson's dead.'
The next he knew, Darius Pethel stood beside him, examining the body of the
repairman. 'He must have found it,' Pethel muttered, ashen-faced and trembling.
'Well, he got paid for his nosiness; he sure got paid.'
'We better get the police,' Hadley said.
'Yes.' Pethel nodded vacantly. 'Of course. I see you turned it off. Good
thing. We better leave it strictly alone. The poor guy, the poor goddam guy;
look at what he got for being smart enough to figure it all out. Look, he's got
something in his hand.' He bent down, opening Erickson's fingers.
The dead hand held a wad of grass.
'No org-trans operation can help him, either,' Pethel said. 'Because the
beam caught him in the head. Got his brain. Too bad.' He glanced at Stuart
Hadley. 'Anyhow the best org-trans surgeon is Sands and he isn't going to do
anything to help Erickson. You can make book on that.'
'A place where there's grass,' Hadley murmured, touching the contents of the
dead man's hand. 'Where can it be ? Not on Earth. Not now, anyway.'
'Must be the past,' Pethel said. 'So we've got time-travel. Isn't it great
?' His face twisted with grief. 'Terrific beginning, one good man dead. How
many left to go ? Imagine a guy's reputation meaning that much to him, that
he'd let this happen. Or maybe Sands doesn't know; maybe she was just given the
laser gun to protect herself. In case his wife's private cops got to her. And
anyhow, we don't know for sure if she did it; it could have been someone else
entirely, not Cally Vale at all. What do we know about it ? All we know is that
Erickson is dead. And there was something basically wrong with the theory he
was going on.'
'You can give Sands the benefit of the doubt, if you want,' Hadley said,
'but I'm not going to.' He stood up, then, taking a deep shuddering breath.
'Can we get the police, now ? You call them; I can't talk well enough to. You
do it, Pethel, okay ?'
Unsteadily, Darius Pethel moved toward the phone on Erickson's work bench,
his hand extended gropingly, as if his perception of touch had begun to
disintegrate. He picked up the receiver, and then he turned to Stuart Hadley
and said, 'Wait. This is a mistake. You know who we've got to call ? The
factory. We have to tell Terran Development about this; it's what they're
after. They come first.'
Hadley, staring at him, said, 'I - don't agree.'
This is more important than what you think or I think, more important than
Sands and Cally Vale, any of us.' Dar Pethel began to dial. 'Even if one of us
is dead. That still doesn't matter. You know what I'm thinking about ?
Emigration. You saw the grass in Erickson's hand. You know what it means. It
means the hell with that girl on the far side, or whoever it is over there who
shot Erickson. It means the hell with any of us and all of us, our sentiments
and opinions.' He gestured. 'All our lives put together.'
Dimly, Stuart Hadley understood. Or thought he did. 'But she'll probably
kill the next person who ...'
'Let TD worry about that,' Pethel said savagely. 'That's their problem.
They've got company police, armed guards they use for patrol purposes; let them
send them over, first.' His voice was low and harsh. 'Let them lose a few men,
so what. The lives of millions of people are involved in this, now. You get
that, Hadley ? Do you ?'
'Y-yes,' Hadley said, nodding.
'Anyhow,' Pethel said, more calmly, now, 'it's legitimately within the
jurisdiction of TD because it look place within one of their 'scuttlers. Call
it an accident; think of it that way. Unavoidable and awful. Between an
entrance and an exit hoop. Naturally the company has to know.' He turned his
back to Hadley, then, concentrating on the vidphone, calling Leon Turpin, the
chief of TD.
'I think,' Salisbury Heim said to his presidential candidate James Briskin,
'I have something cooking you won't like. I've been talking to George Walt...'
At once Jim Briskin said, 'No deal. Not with them. I know what they want and
that's out, Sal.'
'If you don't do business with George Walt,' Heim said steadily, 'I'm going
to have to resign as your campaign manager. I just can't take any more, not
after that planet-wetting speech of yours. Things are breaking too badly for us
as it is, we can't take George Walt on in addition to everything else.'
'There's something even worse,' Jim Briskin said, after a pause. 'Which you
haven't heard. A wire came from Bruno Mini. He was delighted with my speech and
he's on his way here to - as he puts it - "join forces with me." '
Heim said, 'But you can still...'
'Mini's already spoken to homeopape reporters. So it's too late to head him
off media-wise. Sorry.'
'You're going to lose.'
'Okay, I'll have to lose.'
'What gets me,' Heim said bitterly, 'what really gets me is that even if you
did win the election you couldn't have it all your way; one man just can't
alter things that much. The Golden Door Movements of Bliss satellite is going
to remain; the bibs are going to remain; so are Nonovulid and the
abort-consultants you can chip away a little here and there but not...'
He ceased, because Dorothy Gill had come up to Jim Briskin. 'A phone call
for you, Mr. Briskin. The gentleman says it's urgent and he won't be wasting
your time. You don't know him, he says, so he didn't give his name.' She added,
'He's a Col. If that helps you identify him.'
'It doesn't,' Jim said. 'But I'll talk to him anyhow.' Obviously, he was
glad to break off the conversation with Sal; relief showed on his face. 'Bring
the phone here, Dotty.'
'Yes, Mr. Briskin.' She disappeared and presently was back, carrying the
extension vidphone.
'Thanks.' Jim Briskin pressed the hold button, releasing it, and the
vidscreen glowed. A face formed, swarthy and handsome, a keen-eyed man,
well-dressed and evidently agitated. Who is he ? Sal Heim asked himself. I know
him. I've seen a pic of him somewhere.
Then he identified the man. It was the big-time N'York investigator who was
working for Myra Sands; it was a man named Tito Cravelli, and he was a tough
individual indeed. What did he want with Jim ?
The image of Tito Cravelli said, 'Mr. Briskin, I'd like to have lunch with
you. In private. I have something to discuss with you, just you and me; it's
vitally important to you, I assure you.' He added, with a glance toward Sal
Heim, 'So vital I don't want anybody else around.'
Maybe this is going to be an assassination attempt, Sal Heim thought.
Someone, a fanatic from CLEAN, sent by Verne Engel and his crowd of nuts. 'You
better not go, Jim,' he said aloud.
'Probably not,' Jim said. 'But I am anyhow.' To the image on the vidscreen
he said, 'What time and where ?'
Tito Cravelli said, There's a little restaurant in the N'York slum area, in
the five hundred block of Fifth Avenue; I always eat there when I'm in N'York -
the food's prepared by hand. It's called Scotty's Place. Will that be
satisfactory ? Say at one p.m., N'York time.'
'All right,' Jim Briskin agreed. 'At Scotty's Place at one o'clock. I've
been there.' He added tartly, They're willing to serve Cols.'
'Everyone serves Cols,' Tito said, 'when I'm along.' He broke the
connection; the screen faded and died.
'I don't like this,' Sal Heim said.
'We're ruined anyhow,' Jim reminded him. 'Didn't you say, just a minute ago
?' He smiled laconically. 'I think the time has arrived for me to clutch at
straws, Sal. Any straw I can reach. Even this.'
'What shall I tell George Walt ? They're waiting. I'm supposed to set up a
visit by you to the satellite within twenty-four hours; that would be by six
o'clock tonight.' Getting out his handkerchief, Sal Heim mopped his forehead.
'After that ...'
'After that,' Jim said, 'they begin systematically campaigning against me.'
Sal nodded.
'You can tell George Walt,' Jim said, 'that in my Chicago speech today I'm
going to come out and advocate the shutting of the satellite. And if I'm
elected ...'
'They know already,' Sal Heim said. 'There was a leak.'
'There's always a leak ...' Jim did not seem perturbed.
Reaching into his coat pocket, Sal brought out a sealed envelope. 'Here's my
resignation.' He had been carrying it for some time.
Jim Briskin accepted the envelope; without opening it he put it in his
coat-pouch. 'I hope you'll be watching my Chicago speech, Sal. It's going to be
an important one.' He grinned sorrowfully at his ex-campaign manager; his pain
at this breakdown of their relationship showed in the deep lines of his face.
The break had been long in coming; it had hung there in the atmosphere between
them in their former discussions.
But Jim intended to go on anyhow. And do what had to be done.
5
As he flew by Jet'ab to Scotty's Place, Jim Briskin thought: At least now I
don't have to come out for Lurton Sands; I don't have to follow Sal's advice
any more on any topic because if he's not my campaign manager he can't tell me
what to do. To some extent it was a relief. But on a deeper level Jim Briskin
felt acutely unhappy. I'm going to have trouble getting along without Sal, he realized.
I don't want to get along without him.
But it was already done. Sal, with his wife Patricia, had gone on to his
home in Cleveland, for a much-delayed rest. And Jim Briskin, with his
speechwriter Phil Danville and his press secretary Dorothy Gill, was on his way
in the opposite direction, toward downtown N'York, its tiny shops and
restaurants and old, decaying apartment buildings, and all the microscopic,
outdated business offices where peculiar and occult transactions continually
took place. It was a world which intrigued Jim Briskin, but it was also a world
he knew little about; he had been shielded from it most of his life.
Seated beside him, Phil Danville said, 'He may come back, Jim. You know Sal
when he gets overburdened; he blows up, falls into fragments. But after a week
of lazing around...'
'Not this time,' Jim said. The split was too basic.
'By the way,' Dorothy said, 'before he left, Sal told me who this man you're
meeting is. Sal recognized him; did he tell you ? It's Tito Cravelli, Sal says.
You know, Myra Sands' investigator.'
'No,' Jim said. 'I didn't know.' Sal had said nothing to him; the period in
which Sal Heim gave him the benefit of his experience was over, had ended there
on the spot.
At Republican-Liberal campaign headquarters in N'York he stopped briefly to
let off Phil Danville and Dorothy Grill, and then he went on, alone, to meet
with Tito Cravelli at Scotty's Place.
Cravelli, looking nervous and keyed-up, was already in a booth in the rear
of the restaurant, waiting for him, when he arrived.
'Thanks, Mr. Briskin,' Tito Cravelli said, as Jim seated himself across from
him. Hurriedly, Cravelli sipped what remained of his cup of coffee. 'This won't
take long. What I want for my information is a great deal. I want a promise
from you that when you're elected - and you will be, because of this - you'll
bring me in at cabinet rank." He was silent, then.
'Good god,' Jim said mildly. 'Is that all you want ?'
'I'm entitled to it,' Cravelli said. ‘For getting this information to you. I
came across it because I have someone working for me in ...' He broke off
abruptly. 'I want the post of Attorney General; I think I can handle the job
... I think I'd be a good Attorney General. If I'm not, you can fire me. But
you have to let me in for a chance at it'
'Tell me what your information is. I can't make that promise until I hear
it.'
Cravelli hesitated. 'Once I tell you - but you're honest, Briskin. Everyone
knows that. There's a way you can get rid of the bibs. You can bring them back
to activity, full activity.'
'Where ?'
'Not here,' Cravelli said. 'Obviously. Not on Earth. The man I have working
for me who picked this up is an employee of Terran Development. What does that
suggest to you ?'
After a pause Jim Briskin said, 'They've made a breakthrough.'
'A little firm has. A retailer in Kansas City, repairing a defective
Jiffi-scuttler. They did it - or rather found it. Discovered it. The
'scuttler's at TD, now, being gone over by factory engineers. It was moved east
two hours ago; they acted immediately, as soon as the retailer contacted them.
They knew what it meant.' He added, 'Just as you and I do, and my man working
for them.'
'Where's the break-through to ? What time period ?'
'No time period, evidently. The conversion seems to have taken place in
spacial terms, as near as they can determine. A planet with about the same mass
as Earth, similar atmosphere, well-developed fauna and flora, but not Earth -
they managed to snap a sky-chart, get a stellar reading. Within another few
hours they'll probably have plotted lit exactly, know which star-system it lies
in. Apparently it's a long, long way from here. Too far for direct deeps-ace
ships to probe - at least for some time to come. This break-through, this
direct shorted-out route, will have to be utilized for at least the next few
decades.'
The waitress, came for Jim's order.
'Perkin's Syn-Cof,' he murmured absently.
The waitress departed.
'Cally Gale's there,' Tito Cravelli said.
'What!'
'Doctor put her across. That's why my man got in touch with me; as you may
know, I've been retained to search for Cally, trying to produce her on demand
for the trial. It's a mess; she lasered an employee of this Kansas City
retailer, its one and only tried and true 'scuttler repairman. He had gone
across, exploring. Too bad for him. But in the great scheme of all things...'
'Yes,' Jim Briskin agreed. Cravelli was right; it was small cost indeed.
With so many millions of lives - and, potentially, billions - involved.
'Naturally TD has declared this top-secret. They've thrown up an enormous
security screen; I was lucky to get hold of the poop at all. If I hadn't
already had a man in there ...' Cravelli gestured.
'I'll name you to the cabinet,' Jim Briskin said. 'As Attorney General. The
arrangement doesn't please me, but I think it's in order.' It's worth it, he
said to himself. A hundred times over. To me and to everyone else on Earth,
bibs and non-bibs alike. To all of us.
Sagging with relief and exultation,, Tito Cravelli burbled, 'Wow. I can't
believe it; this is great!' He held out his hand, but Jim ignored it; he had
too much else on his mind at the moment to want to congratulate Tito Cravelli.
Jim thought, Sal Heim got out a little too soon. He should have stuck
around. So much for Sal's political intuition; at the crucial moment it had
failed to materialize for him.
Seated in her office, abort-consultant Myra Sands once more leafed through
Tito's brief report. But already, outside her window, a news machine for one of
the major homeopapes was screeching out the news that Cally Vale had been
found; it had been made public by the police.
I didn't think you could do it, Tito, Myra said to herself. Well, I was
wrong. You were worth your fee, large as it is.
It will be quite a trial, she said to herself with relish.
From a nearby office, probably the brokerage firm next door, the amplified
sound of a man's voice rose up and then was turned down to a more reasonable
level. Someone had tuned in the TV, was watching the Republican-Liberal
presidential candidate giving his latest speech. Perhaps I should listen, too,
she decided, and reached to turn on the TV set at her desk.
The set warmed, and there, on the screen, appeared the dark, intense
features of Jim Briskin. She swiveled her chair toward the set and momentarily
put aside Tito's report. After all, anything James Briskin said had become
important; he might easily be their next president.
'... an initial action on my part,' Briskin was saying, 'and one which many
may disapprove of, but one dear to my heart, will be to initiate legal action
against the so-called Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. I've thought
about this topic for some time; this is not a snap decision on my part. But,
much more vital than that, I think we will see the Golden Door satellite become
thoroughly obsolete. That would be best of all. The role of sexuality in our
society could return to its biological norm: as a means to childbirth rather
than an end in itself.'
Oh, really ? Myra thought archly. Exactly how ?
'I am about to give you a piece of news which none of you have heard,'
Briskin continued. 'It will make a vast difference in all our lives ... so
great, in fact, that no one could possibly foresee its full extent at this
time, A new possibility for emigration is about to open up at last. At Terran
Development...'
On Myra's desk the vidphone rang. Cursing in irritation, she turned down the
sound of the television set and took the receiver from its support. 'This is
Mrs. Sands,' she said. 'Could you please call back in a few moments, thank you
? I'm extremely busy right now.'
It was the dark-haired boy, Art Chaffy. 'We were just wondering what you'd
decided,' he mumbled apologetically. But he did not ring off. 'It means a lot
to us, Mrs. Sands.'
'I know it does, Art,' Myra Sands said, 'but if you'll just give me a few
more minutes, possibly half an hour ...' She strained to hear what James
Briskin was saying on the television; almost, she could make out the low murmur
of words. What was his new news ? Where were they going to emigrate to ? A
virgin environment ? Well, obviously; it would have to be. But precisely where
is it ? Myra wondered. Are you about to pull this virgin world out of your
sleeve, Mr. Briskin ? Because if you are, I would like to see it done; that
would be worth watching.
'Okay,' Art Chaffy said. 'I'll call you later, Mrs. Sands. And I'm sorry to
pester you.' He rang off, then.
'You ought to be listening to Briskin's speech,' Myra murmured aloud as she
swung her chair back to face the television set; bending, she turned the audio
knob and the sound of Briskin's voice rose once more to clear audibility. You
of all people, she said to herself.
'... and according to reports reaching me,' Briskin said slowly and gravely,
'it has an atmosphere nearly identical to that of earth, and a similar mass as
well.'
Good grief, Myra Sands said to herself. If that's the case then I'm out of a
job. Her heart labored painfully. No one would need abort brokers any more. But
frankly I'm just as glad, she decided. It's a task I'd like to see end -
forever.
Hands pressed together tautly, she listened to the remainder of Jim
Briskin's momentous Chicago speech.
My god, she thought. This is a piece of history being made, this discovery.
If it's true. If this isn't just a campaign stunt.
Somewhere inside her she knew that it was true. Because Jim Briskin was not
the kind of person who would make this up.
At the Oakland, California, branch of the U.S. Government Department of
Special Public Welfare, Herbert Lackmore also sat listening to presidential
candidate Jim Briskin's Chicago speech, being carried on all channels of the TV
as it was beamed from the R-L satellite above. He'll be elected now, Lackmore realized. We'll have a Col president
at last, just what I was afraid of.
And, if what he's saying is so, this business about a new possibility of
emigration to an untouched world with fauna and flora like Earth's, it means
the bibs will be awakened. In fact, he realized with a thrill of fright, it
means there won't be any more bibs. At all.
That would mean that Herb Lackmore's job would come to an end. And right
away.
Because of him, Lackmore said to himself, I'm going to be out of work; I'll
be in the same spot as all the Cols who come by here in a steady stream, day in
day out - I'll be like some nineteen-year-old Mexican or Puerto Rican or Negro
kid, without prospects or hope. All I've established over the years - wiped out
by this. Completely.
With shaking fingers, Herb Lackmore opened the local phone book and turned
the pages.
It was time to get hold of - and join - the organization of Verne Engel's
which called itself CLEAN. Because CLEAN would not sit idly by and let this
happen, not if CLEAN believed as Herb Lackmore did.
Now was the time for CLEAN to do something. And not necessarily of a
non-violent nature; it was too late for non-violence to work. Something more
was required, now. Much more. The situation had taken a dreadful turn and it
would have to be rectified, by direct and quick action.
And if they won't do it, Lackmore said to himself, I will. I'm not afraid
to; I know it has to be done.
On the TV screen Jim Briskin's face was stern as he said. '... will provide
a natural outlet for the biological pressures at work on everyone in our society.
We will be free at last to ...'
'You know what this means ?' George of George Walt said to his brother Walt.
'I know,' Walt answered. 'It means that nurf Sal Heim got nothing for us,
nothing at all. You watch Briskin; I'm going to call Verne Engel and make some
kind of arrangements. Him we can work with.'
'Okay,' George said, nodding their shared head. He kept his eye on the TV
screen, while his brother dialed the vidphone.
'All that gabble with Sal Heim,' Walt grumbled, and then became silent as his
brother stuck him with his elbow, signaling that he wanted to listen to the
Chicago speech. 'Sorry,' Walt said, turning his eye to the vidscreen of the
phone.
At the door of their office Thisbe Olt appeared, wearing a fawnskin gown
with alternating stripes of magnifying transparency. 'Mr. Heim is back,' she
informed them. 'To see you. He looks - dejected.'
'We've got no business to conduct with Sal Heim,' George said, with anger.
Tell him to go back to Earth,' Walt added. 'And from now on the satellite is
closed to him; he can't visit any of our girls - at any price. Let him die a
miserable, lingering death of frustration; it'll serve him right.'
George reminded him acidly, 'Heim won't need us any more, if Briskin is
telling the truth.'
'He is,' Walt said. 'He's too simple a horse's ass to lie; Briskin doesn't
have the ability.' His call had been put through on the private circuit, now.
On the vidscreen appeared the miniature image of one of Verne Engel's
gaudily-uniformed personal praetorian flunkies, the green and silver outfit of
the CLEAN people. 'Let me talk directly to Verne,' Walt said, making use of
their common mouth just as George was about to address a few more remarks to
Thisbe. 'Tell him this is Walt, on the satellite.'
'Run along,' George said to Thisbe, when Walt had finished. 'We're busy.'
Thisbe eyed him momentarily and then shut the office door after her.
On the screen Verne Engel's pinched, wabble-like face materialized. 'I see
you - at least half of you - are following Briskin's rabble-rousing,' Engel
said. 'How did you decide which half was to call me and which half was to
listen to the Col ?' Engel's distorted features twisted in a leer of derision.
'Watch it - that's enough,' George Walt retorted simultaneously.
'Sorry. I don't mean to offend you,' Engel said, but his expression remained
unchanged. 'Well, what can I do for you ? Please make it brief; I'd like to
follow Briskin's harangue too.'
'You're going to require help,' Walt said to Engel. 'If you're going
to stop Briskin now; this speech will put him across, and I don't think even
concerted transmissions from our satellite - as we discussed - will be
sufficient. It's just too damn clever the speech he's making. Isn't it, George
?'
'It certainly is,' George said, eye fixed on the TV screen. 'And getting
better each second as he goes along. He's barely getting; started; it's a
genuine spellbinder. Whacking fine.' His eye on the vidscreen, Walt continued, 'You heard Briskin come out
against us; you must have heard that part - everyone else in the country
certainly did. Planet-wetting with Bruno Mini isn't enough, he's also got to
take us on. Big plans for a Col, but evidently he and his advisors feel he can
handle it. We'll see. What do you plan to do, Engel ? At this very crucial
point ?'
'I've got plans, I've got plans,' Engel assured him.
'Still no-violence stuff ?'
There was no audible answer, but Engel's face contorted oddly.
'Come up here to the Golden Door,' Walt said, 'and let's talk. I think my
brother and I can see our way clear to make a donation to CLEAN, say in the
neighborhood of ten or eleven mil. Would that help ? You ought to be able to
buy what you need with money like that.'
Engel, white with shock, stammered, 'S-sure, George or Walt, whichever you
are.'
'Get up here as soon as you can, then,' Walt instructed him, and rang off.
'I think he'll do it for us,' he said to his brother.
'A gorp like that can't handle anything;,' George said sourly.
"Then for pop's sake, what do we do ?' Walt demanded.
'We do what we can. We help out Engel, we prompt him, shove him if
necessary. But we don't pin our hopes on him, at least not entirely. We go
ahead with something on our own, just to be certain. And we have to be certain;
this is too serious. That Col actually means to shut us down.'
Both their eyes, now, turned toward the TV screen, and both George and Walt
sat back in their special wide couch to listen to the speech.
In the luxurious apartment which he maintained in Reno, Dr Lurton Sands sat
raptly listening to the television set, the Col candidate James Briskin
delivering his Chicago speech. He knew what it meant. There was only one place
that Briskin could have happened across a 'lush, virgin world'. Obviously Cally
had been found.
Going to his desk drawer, Lurton Sands got out the small laser pistol which
he kept there and thrust it into his coat pocket. I'm amazed he'd do it, Sands
thought. Capitalize off my problems - evidently I misjudged him.
Now so many lives which I could have saved will be forfeited, Sands
realized. Due to this. And Briskin is responsible ... he's taken the healing
power out of my hands, darkened the force working for the good of man.
At the vidphone Sands dialed the local jet'ab company. 'I want an 'ab to
Chicago. As soon as possible.' He gave his address, then hurried from his
apartment to the elevator. Those that are hounding Cally and me to our deaths,
he thought, Myra and her detectives and the homeopapes ... now they've been
joined by Jim Briskin. How could he align himself with them ? Haven't I made
clear to everyone what I can do in the service of human need ? Briskin must
be aware; this ain't be merely ignorance on his part.
Frantically Sands thought. Could it possibly be that Briskin wants
the sick to die ? All those waiting for me, needing my help ... help which no
one else, after I've been pushed to my death, can possibly provide.
Touching the laser pistol in his pocket, Sands said aloud, glumly, 'It
certainly is easy to be mistaken about another person.' They can take you in so
easily, he thought. Deliberately mislead you. Yes, deliberately!
The jet'ab swept up to the curb and slid open its door.
6
When he had finished his speech Jim Briskin sat back and knew that this time
he had done, at last, a damn good job. It had been the best speech of his
political career, in some respects the only really decent one.
And now what ? he asked himself. Sal is gone, and along with him Patricia.
I've offended the powerful and immensely wealthy unicephalic brothers George
Walt, not to mention Thisbe herself ... and Terran Development, which is no
small potatoes, will be furious that its break-through has been made public.
But none of this matters. Nor does the fact that I'm now committed to naming a
well-known private operator as my Attorney General; even that isn't important.
My job was to make that speech as soon as Tito Cavelli brought me that
information. And - that's exactly what I did. To the letter. No matter what the
consequences.
Coming up to him, Phil Danville slapped him warmly on the back. 'A hell of a
good fuss, Jim. You really outdid yourself.'
'Thanks, Phil,' Jim Briskin murmured. He felt tired. He nodded to the TV
camera men and then, with Phil Danville, walked over to join the knot of party brass
waiting at the rear of the studio.
'I need a drink,' Jim said to them as several of them extended their hands,
wanting to shake with him. 'After that.' I wonder what the opposition will do
now, he said to himself. What can Bill Schwarz say ? Nothing, actually. I've
taken the lid off the whole thing, and there's no putting it back. Now that
everyone knows there's a place we can emigrate to, the rush will be on. By the
multitudes. The warehouses will be emptied, thank god. As they should have been
long ago.
I wish I had known about this, he thought abruptly, before I began publicly
advocating Bruno Mini's planet-wetting technique. I could have avoided that -
and the break with Sal as well.
But anyhow, he said to himself, I'll be elected.
Dorothy Gill said quietly to him, 'Jim, I think you're in.'
'I know he is,' Phil Danville agreed, grinning with pure delight. 'How about
it, Dotty ? It's not like it was a little while ago. How'd you get hold of that
info about TD, Jim ? It must have cost you ...'
'It did,' Jim Briskin said shortly. 'It cost me too much. But I'd pay it two
times over.'
'Now for the drink,' Phil said. 'There's a bar around the corner; I noticed
it when we were coming in here. Let's go.' He started for the door and Jim
Briskin followed, hands deep in his overcoat pockets.
The sidewalk, he discovered, was crowded with people, a mob which waved at
him, cheered him; he waved back, noticing that many of them were Whites as well
as Cols. A good sign, he reflected as his party moved step by step through the
dense mass of people, uniformed Chicago city police clearing a path for them to
the bar which Phil Danville had picked out.
From the crowd a red-headed girl, very small, wearing dazzling wubfur
lounging pajamas, the kind fashionable with the girls on the Golden Door
Moments of Bliss satellite, came hurrying, gliding and ducking toward him
breathlessly. 'Mr. Briskin ...'
He paused unwillingly, wondering who she was; and what she wanted. One of
Thisbe Olt's girls, evidently. 'Yes,' he said, and smiled at her.
'Mr. Briskin,' the little red-haired girl gasped, 'there's a rume going
around the satellite - George Walt's doing something with Verne Engel, the man
from CLEAN.' She caught hold of him anxiously by the arm, stopping him.
'They're going to assassinate you or something. Please be careful.' Her face
was stark with alarm.
'What's your name ?' Jim asked.
"Sparky Rivers. I - work there, Mr. Briskin.'
'Thanks, Sparky,' he said. 'I'll remember you. Maybe sometime I can give you
a cabinet post.' He continued to smile at her, but she did not smile back. I'm
just joking,' he said. 'Don't be downcast.'
'I think they're going to kill you,' Sparky said.
'Maybe so.' He shrugged. It was certainly possible. He leaned forward,
briefly, and kissed her on the forehead. Take care of yourself, too,' he said,
and then walked away with Phil Danville and Dorothy Gill.
After a time Phil said, 'What are you going to do, Jim ?'
'Nothing. What can I do ? Wait, I guess. Get my drink.'
'You'll have to protect yourself,' Dorothy Gill said. If anything happens to
you - what'll we do then ? The rest of us;.'
Jim Briskin said, 'Emigration will still exist, even without me. You can
still wake the sleepers. As it says in Bach's Cantata 140, "Wachet
auf". Sleepers, awake. That'll have to be your watchword, from now
on.'
'Here's the bar,' Phil Danville said. Ahead of them, a Chicago policeman
held the door open for them, and they entered one at a time.
'It was darn nice of that girl to warn me,' Jim Briskin said.
A man's voice, close to him, said, 'Mr. Briskin ? I'm Lurton Sands, Jr.
Perhaps you've been reading about me in the homeopapes, lately.'
'Oh, yes,' Jim said, surprised to see him; he held out his hand in greeting.
I'm glad to meet you, Dr Sands, I want to ...'
'May I talk, please ?' Sands said. 'I have something to say to you. Because
of you, my life and the humanitarian work of two decades is wrecked. Don't
answer; I'm not going to get into an argument with you. I'm simply telling you,
so you'll understand why.' Sands reached into his coat pocket. Now he held a
laser pistol, pointed directly at Jim Briskin's chest. 'I don't quite
understand what it is about my dedication to the sick that offended you and
made you turn against me, but everybody else has, so why not you ? After all,
Mr. Briskin, what better life-task could you set yourself than wrecking mine ?'
He squeezed the trigger of the pistol The pistol did not fire, and Lurton Sands
stared down at it in disbelief. 'Myra, my wife.' He sounded almost apologetic.
'She removed the energy cartridge, obviously. Evidently, she thought I'd try to
use it on her.' He tossed the pistol away.
After a pause Jim Briskin said huskily, 'Well, now what, Doctor ?'
'Nothing, Briskin. Nothing. If I had had more time I would have checked the
gun out, but I had to hurry to get here before you left. That was quite a
heroic speech you made; it'll certainly give most people the impression that
you're seeking to alleviate man's problems ... although of course you and I
know better. By the way - you do realize you won't be able to awaken all
the bibs; you can't fulfill that promise because some are dead. I'm responsible
for that. Roughly four hundred of them.'
Jim Briskin stared at him.
'That's right,' Sands said. 'I've had access to Department of Special Public
Welfare warehouses. Do you know what that means ? Every organ I've taken has
created a dead human - when the time comes for them to be revived, whenever
that may be. But I suppose the trump has to be played sooner or later. doesn't
it ?'
'You'd do that ?' Jim Briskin said.
'I did that,' Sands corrected. 'But remember this: I killed only
potentially. Whereas, in exchange, I saved someone right now, someone
conscious and alive in the present someone completely dependent on my skill.'
Two Chicago policemen shoved their way up to him; Dr Sands jerked irritably
away but they continued to hold onto him, pinning him between them.
Pale, Phil Danville said, 'That - was almost it, Jim. Wasn't it ?' He
deliberately stepped between Jim Briskin and Dr Sands, shielding Briskin.
'History revisited.'
'Yes,' Jim managed to say. He nodded, his mouth dry. Basically he felt
resigned. If Lurton Sands did not manage to carry it off then, certainly
someone else would, given time. It was just too easy. Weapons technology had
improved too much in the last hundred years; everyone knew that, and now the
assassin did not even have to be in his vicinity. Like an act of evil magic it
could be done from a distance. And the instruments were cheap and available to
virtually anyone - even, as history had shown, some ignorant, worthless
smallfry, without friends, funds, or even a fanatical purpose, an overriding
political cause.
This incident with Lurton Sands was a vile harbinger.
'Well,' Phil Danville said, and sighed, 'I guess we have to go on. What do
you want to drink ?'
'A Black Russian,’ Jim decided, after a pause. 'Vodka and ...'
'I know,' Phil interrupted. His face still ragged with fear and gloom, he
made his way unsteadily over to the bar to order.
To Dotty, Jim said, 'Even if they get me, I've done my job. I keep telling
myself that over and over again, anyhow. I broke the news about TD's
break-through and that's enough.'
'Do you actually mean that ?' she demanded. 'You're that fatalistic about
it, about your chances ?' She stared un-wincingly up into his face.
'Yes,' he said, finally. And well he might be.
I have a feeling, he thought to himself, that this is not the time a Negro
is going to make it to the presidency.
His contact within CLEAN came via an individual named Dave DeWinter.
DeWinter had joined the movement at its inception and had reported to Tito
Cravelli throughout. Now, hurriedly, DeWinter told his employer the most recent
- and urgent - news.
'They'll try it late tonight. The man actually doing it is not a member. His
name is Herb Lackmore or Luckmore. and with the equipment they're providing him
he doesn't need to be an accurate shot.' DeWinter added, 'The equipment, what
they call a boulder, was paid for by George Walt, those two mutants who
own the Golden Door.'
Tito Cravelli said, 'I see.' There goes my post as Attorney General, he said
to himself. 'Where can I find this Lackmore right now ?'
'In his con apt in Oakland, California. Probably eating dinner; it's about
six, there.'
From the locked closet of his office, Tito Cravelli got a collapsible
high-powered scope-sight laser rifle, he folded it up and stuffed it into his
pocket, out of sight. Such a rifle was strictly illegal, but that hardly
mattered right now; what Cravelli intended to do was against the law with any
kind of weapon.
But it was already too late to get Lackmore or Luckmore or whatever his name
was. By the time he reached the West Coast Lackmore would certainly be gone, on
his way east to intercept Jim Briskin; their flights would cross, his and
Lackmore's. Better to locate Briskin and stick close to him, get Lackmore when
he showed up. But Herb Lackmore would not have to show up, in the strict sense,
not with the variety of weapon which the mutant brothers had provided him. He
could be as far away as ten miles - and still reach Briskin.
George Walt will have to call him off, Cravelli decided. It's the only sure
way - and even that is merely relatively sure.
I'll have to go to the satellite, he said to himself. Now, if I expect to
accomplish anything at all. The mutants George Walt would not be expecting him;
they had no knowledge of his ties with Jim Briskin - or so he hoped. And also,
he had three individuals working for him on the satellite, three of the girls.
That gave him three separate places to stay - or hide - while he was up there.
Afterwards, after he took care of George Walt, it might well mean the
difference in saving his life.
That, of course, would be if George Walt wouldn't do business with him, if
they chose to fight it out. In a fight, they would lose; Tito Cravelli was a
crack shot. And in addition the initiative would be with him.
Where was the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite right now ? Getting the
evening homeopape, he turned to the entertainment page. If it was, say, over
India, he had no chance; he would not be able to reach the brothers in time.
The Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, according to the time-schedule
shown in the paper, was right now over Utah. By jet'ab he could reach it within
three quarters of an hour.
That was soon enough.
'Thanks a lot,' he said to Dave De Winter, who stood awkwardly in the middle
of the office, wearing his splendid green and silver CLEAN uniform. 'You trot
on back to Engel I'll keep in touch with you.' He left the office on a dead
run, then, racing down the stairs to the ground floor.
Presently, he was on his way to the satellite.
When the jet'ab had landed at the field, Cravelli hurried down the ramp,
purchased a ticket from the nude, golden-haired attendant, and then rushed
through gate five, searching for Francy's door. 705, it was - or so he
recalled, but under so much tension he felt rattled. With five thousand doors
spread out in corridor after corridor - and all around him, on every side, the
animated pics of the girls twisted and chirped, trying to snare his attention
and entice him to the joys inside.
I'll have to consult the satellite's directory, he decided. That would waste
precious time, but what alternative did he have ? Feverishly, he loped down the
corridor until he arrived at the immensely extensive, cross-indexed,
illuminated directory board, with all its names winking on and off as rooms
emptied and refilled, as customers hurried in and out.
It was 507, and it was empty of customers.
When he opened the door Francy said, 'Hello!' and sat up, then,
blinking in surprise to see him. 'Mr. Cravelli,' she said uncertainly. 'Is
everything all right ?' She slid from the bed, wearing a pale smock of some
cheap thin material, and came hesitantly up to him, her body bare and smooth.
'What can I do for you ? Are you here for...'
'Not for pleasure,' Tito Cravelli informed her. 'Button up your damn smock
and listen to me. Is there any way you can get George Walt up here ?'
Fancy pondered. "They never visit a crib, normally. I...'
'Suppose there was trouble. A customer refusing to pay.'
'No. A bouncer would show up then. But George Walt would come here if they
thought the FBI or some other police agency had moved in here and was
officially arresting us girls.' She pointed to an obscure button on the wall.
'For such an emergency. They have a regular neurosis about the police; they
think it's bound to come, sooner or later - they must have a guilty conscience
about it. The button, connects to that great big office of theirs.'
'Ring the button,' Cravelli said, and got out his laser rifle seating
himself on Francy's bed, he began to assemble it.
Minutes passed.
Standing uneasily at the door, listening, Francy said 'What's going to
happen in here Mr. Cravelli ? I hope there's no ..."
'Be quiet,' he said sharply.
The door of the room opened.
The mutants George Walt stood in the entrance, one hand on the knob, the
other three gripping short lengths of metal piping.
Tito Cravelli leveled the laser rifle and said, 'My intention is not to kill
both of you but merely one of you. That'll leave the other with half a dead
brain, one dead eye, and a deteriorating body attached to him. I don't think
you'd appreciate that. Can you threaten me with anything equally dreadful ? I
seriously doubt it.'
After a pause one of them - he did not know which - said, 'What - do you
want ?' The face was twisting and livid, the two eyes, not in unison, staring,
one of them at Tito, the other at his laser rifle.
'Come in and close the door,' Tito Cravelli said.
'Why ?' George Walt demanded. 'What's this all about, anyhow ?'
'Just come on in,' Tito said, and waited.
The mutants entered. The door shut after them and they stood facing him,
still gripping the three lengths of metal piping. 'This is George,' the head
said presently. 'Who are you ? Let's be reasonable; if you're dissatisfied with
the service you've received from this woman - no, can't you see this is a
strong-arm robbery ?' the head interrupted itself as the other brother took
control of the vocal apparatus. 'He's here to rob us; he brought that weapon
with him, didn't he ?'
'You're going to get in touch with Verne Engel,' Tito said. 'And he's going
to get in touch with his gunsel, Herbert Lackmore. Together you're going to
call this Lackmore back in. We'll do it from your office; obviously we can't
call from this woman's crib.' To Francy he said, 'You go ahead of them, lead
the way. Start now, please. There's no excess of time.' Within him his pyloric
valve began to writhe in spasms; he gritted his teeth and for an instant shut
his eyes.
A length of piping whistled past his head.
Tito Cravelli fired the laser rifle at George Walt. One of the two bodies
sagged, hit in the shoulder; it was wounded but not dead. 'You see ?' Cravelli
said. 'It would be terrible for the one of you that survived.'
'Yes,' the head said, bobbing up and down in a grotesque pumpkin-like fit of
nodding. 'We'll work with you, whoever you are. We'll call Engel; we can get
this all straightened out. Please.' Both eyes, each fixed on a different spot,
bulged in glazed fear. The right one, on the same side as the laser-wound, had
become opaque with pain.
'Good enough,' Tito Cravelli said. He thought, I may be Attorney General
yet. Herding them with his laser rifle, be moved George Walt toward the door.
7
The weapon which Herb Lackmore had been provided with contained a costly
replica of the encephalic wave-pattern of James Briskin. He needed merely to
place it within a few miles of Briskin, screw in the handle and then, with a
switch, detonate it.
It was a mechanism, he decided, which supplied little, if any, personal
satisfaction. However, at least it would do the job and that, in the long run,
was all that counted. And certainly it insured his personal escape, or at least
greatly aided it.
At this moment, nine o'clock at night, Jim Briskin sat upstairs in a room at
the Galton Plaza Hotel, in Chicago, conferring with aides and idea-men; pickets
of CLEAN, parading before the notably first class hotel, had seen him enter and
had conveyed the word to Lackmore.
I'll do it at exactly nine-fifteen, Lackmore decided. He sat in the back of
a rented wheel, the mechanism assembled beside him; it was no larger than a
football but rather heavy. It hummed faintly, off-key.
I wonder where the funds for this apparatus appeared from, he wondered.
Because these items cost a hell of a lot, or so I've read.
He was, a few minutes later, just making the final preparatory adjustments
when two dark, massive, upright shapes materialized along the nocturnal
sidewalk close beside the wheel. The shapes appeared to be wearing green and
silver uniforms which sparkled faintly, like moonlight.
Cautiously, with a near-Psionic sense of suspicions, Lackmore rolled down
the wheel window. 'What do you want ?' he asked the two CLEAN members.
'Get out,' one of them said brusquely.
'Why ?' Lackmore froze, did not budge. Could not.
There's been an alteration of plans. Engel just now buzzed us on the
portable seek-com. You're to give that boulder back to us.'
'No,' Lackmore said. Obviously, the CLEAN movement had at the last moment
sold out; he did not know exactly why, but there it was. The assassination
would not take place as planned - that was all he knew, all he cared about.
Rapidly, he began to screw the handle in.
'Engel says to forget it!' the other CLEAN man shouted. 'Don't you
understand ?'
'I understand,' Lackmore said, and groped for the detonating switch.
The door of his wheel popped open. One of the CLEAN men grabbed him by the
collar, yanked him from the back seat and dragged him kicking and thrashing
from the wheel and out onto the sidewalk. The other snatched up the boulder,
the expensive weapon, from him and swiftly, expertly, unscrewed the detonating
handle.
Lackmore bit and fought. He did not give up.
It did him no good. The CLEAN man with the boulder had already
disappeared into the night darkness; along with the weapon he had vanished -
the boulder, and all of Lackmore's tireless, busy, brooding plans, had
gone.
'I'll kill you,' Lackmore panted futilely, struggling with the fat, powerful
CLEAN man who had hold of him.
'You'll kill nobody, fella,' the CLEAN man answered, and increased his
pressure on Lackmore's throat.
It was not an even fight; Herb Lackmore had no chance. He had sat at a
government desk, stood idly behind a counter too many years.
Calmly, with clear enjoyment, the CLEAN man made mincemeat out of him.
For someone supposedly devoted to the cult of non-violence, it was amazing
how good he was at it.
From the two mutants' plush, Titan elk-beetle fuzz; carpeted office, Tito
Cravelli vidphoned Jim Briskin at the Gallon Plaza Hotel in Chicago.
'Are you all right ?' he inquired.
One of the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite's nurses was engaged in
attempting futilely to bind up the injured brother with a dermofax pack; she
worked silently, as Cravelli held the laser rifle and Francy stood by the
office door with a pistol which Tito had located in the brothers' desk.
'I'm all right,' Briskin said, puzzled. He evidently could see around Tito,
past him to George Walt.
Tito said. 'I've got a. snake by the tail here, and I can't let go. You have
any suggestions ? I've prevented your assassination, but how the heck am I
going to get out of here ?' He was beginning to become really worried.
After meditating, Briskin said, 'I could ask the Chicago police ...'
'Niddy,' Cravelli said, in derision. 'They wouldn't come.' He knew that for
a certainty. "They have no jurisdiction up here; that's been tested
countless times - this isn't part of the United States, even, let alone
Chicago.'
Briskin said, 'All right. I can send some party volunteers up to help you.
They'll go where I say. We have a few who've clashed on the streets with
Engel's organization; they might know exactly what to do.'
"That's more like it,' Cravelli said., relieved. But his stomach was
still killing him; he could scarcely stand the pain and he wondered if there
were any way he could obtain a glass of milk. 'The tension's getting me down,
he said. 'And I haven't had my dinner. They'll have to get up here pretty soon,
or frankly I'm going to fold up. I thought of taking George Walt off the
satellite entirely, but I'm afraid I'd never get them to the launch field. We'd
have to pass too many Golden Door employees on the way.'
'You're directly over N'York now,' Jim Briskin said. 'So it won't take too
long to get a few people there. How many do you want ?'
'Certainly at least a hopper-load. Actually, all you can spare. You don't
want to lose your future Attorney General, do you ?'
'Not especially.' Briskin seemed calm, but his dark eyes were bright. He
plucked at his great handlebar mustache, then, pondering. 'Maybe I'll come
along,' he decided.
'Why ?'
'To make sure you get away.'
'It's up to you,' Cravelli said. 'But I don't recommend it. Things are
somewhat hot, up here. Do you know any girls at the satellite who could lead
you through to George Walt's office ?'
'No,' Jim Briskin said. And then a peculiar expression appeared on his face.
'Wait. I know one. She was down here in Chicago today but perhaps she's gone
back up again.'
'Probably has,' Cravelli said. 'They flit back and forth like lightning
bugs. Take a chance on it, anyhow. I'll see you. And watch your step.' He rang
off at that point.
As he started to board the big jet-bus, which was filled with R-L
volunteers, Jim Briskin found himself facing two familiar figures.
'You can't go to the satellite,' Sal Heim said, stopping him. Beside him
Patricia stood somberly in her long coat, severing in the evening wind that
drew in off the lakes. 'It's too dangerous ... I know George Walt better than
you do - remember ? After all, I had you figured for a business deal with them;
that was to be my contribution.'
Pat said, 'If you go there, Jim, you'll never come back. I know if. Stay
here with me.' She caught hold of his arm, but he tugged loose.
'I have to go,' he told her. 'My gunsel is there and I have to get him away;
he's done too much for me just to leave him there.'
'I'll go instead of you,' Sal Heim said.
'Thanks.' It was a good offer, well meant. But - he had to repay Tito
Cravelli for what he'd done; obviously he had to see that Tito got safely away
from the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. It was as simple as that. 'The
best I can offer you,' he said, 'is the opportunity to ride along.' He meant it
ironically.
'All right.' Sal said, nodding. 'I'll come with you.' To Pat he said, 'but
you stay down below here. If we get back, we should be showing up right away -
or not at all. Come on, Jim.' He climbed the steps into the jet-bus, joining
the others already there.
'Take care of yourself,' Pat said to Jim Briskin.
'What did you think of my speech ?' he asked her.
'I was in the tub; I only heard part of it. But I think it was the
best you ever made. Sal said so, too, and he heard it all. Now he knows he made
a terrific mistake; he should have stuck with you.'
'Too bad he didn't,' Jim said.
'You wouldn't say something along the lines of "better late
than..."
'Okay,' he said. 'Better late than never.' Turning, he followed Sal Heim
onto the jet-bus. He had said it, but it was not true. Too much had happened;
too late was too late. He and Sal had split forever. And both of them knew it
... or rather, feared it. And sought instinctively for a new rapprochement
without having any idea how it could be done.
As the jet-bus whirled upward in brisk ascent, Sal leaned over and said,
'You've accomplished a lot since I saw you last, Jim. I want to congratulate
you. And I'm not being ironic. Hardly that.'
'Thanks,' Jim Briskin said, briefly.
'But you'll never forgive me for handing you my resignation when I did, will
you ? Well, I can't really blame you.' Sal was silent, then.
'You could have been Secretary of State,' Jim said.
Sal nodded. 'But that's the way the fifty yarrow stalks fall. Anyhow, I hope
you win, Jim. I know you will, after that speech; that certainly was a
masterpiece of promising everything to everybody - a billion gold chickens in a
billion gold pots. Needless to say I think you'll make a superb president. One
we all can be proud of.' He grinned warmly. 'Or am I making you sick ?'
The Moments of Bliss satellite lay directly ahead of them; in the center of
the breast-shaped landing field the winking pink nipple guided their vehicle to
its landing, a mammary invitation beckoning to all. The principle of Yin, out
in space, inflated to cosmic proportions.
'It's a wonder George Walt can perambulate,' Jim said. 'Joined at the base
of the skull, the way they are. Must be damned awkward.'
'What's your point ?' Sal sounded tense and irritable now.
Jim Briskin said, 'No particular point. But you'd think one would have
sacrificed the other long ago, for purpose of utility.'
'Have you ever actually seen them ?'
'No.' He had never even been to the satellite.
"They're fond of each other,' Sal Heim said.
The jet-bus began to settle on to the landing field of the satellite; the
spin of the satellite provided its constant magnetic flux, sufficient to hold
smaller objects to it, and Jim Briskin thought, That's where we made our
mistake. We should never have allowed this place to become attractive -in any
sense whatsoever. It was feeble wit, but the best he could manage under the
circumstances. Maybe Pat's right, he realized. Maybe I - and Sal Heim - will
never return from this place. It was not the kind of thought he enjoyed
thinking; the Golden Door satellite was not at all the kind of place he wanted
to wind up. Ironic that I should be going here now, for the first time, under
these circumstances, he said to himself.
The doors of the jet-bus slid back as the bus rolled to a halt.
'Here we are,' Sal Heim said, and got quickly to his feet. 'And here we go.'
Along with the party volunteers he moved towards the nearest exit. Jim Briskin,
after a moment, followed.
At the entrance gate the pretty, dark-haired, unclad attendant on duty
smiled a white-tooth smile at them and said, 'Your tickets, please.'
'We're all new here,' Sal Heim said to her, getting out his wallet. 'We'll
pay in cash.'
'Are there any girls you wish to visit in particular ?' the attendant asked,
as she rang the money up on her register.
Jim Briskin said, 'A girl named Sparky Rivers.'
'ALL OF YOU ?' The attendant blinked, then shrugged her bare shoulders
urbanely. 'All right, gentlemen. De gustibus non disputandum est. Gate
three. Watch your step and don't jostle, please. She's in room 395.' She
pointed toward gate three and the group moved in that direction.
Ahead, beyond gate three, Jim Briskin saw rows of gilded, shining doors;
over some lights glowed and he understood that those were empty at the moment
of customers. And, on each door, he saw the curious animated pic of the girl
within; the pics called, enticed, whined at them as they approached each in
turn, searching for room 395.
'Hi there!'
'Hello, big fellow.'
'Could you hurry ? I'm waiting ..."
'Well, how are you ?'
Sal Heim said, 'It's down this way. But you don't need her, Jim; I can take
you to their office.'
Can I trust you ? Jim Briskin asked himself silently. 'All right,' he said.
And hoped it was a wise choice.
'This elevator,' Sal said. Press the button marked C.' He entered the
elevator; the rest of the group followed, crowding in after him, as many as
could make it. More than half the group remained outside in the corridor. 'You
follow us,' Sal instructed them. 'As soon as you can.'
Jim touched the C button and the elevator door shut soundlessly. 'I'm
depressed,' he said to Sal. 'I don't know why.'
'It's this place,' Sal said. 'It isn't your style at all, Jim. Now, if you
were a necktie or a flatware or a poriferous vobile salesman, you'd like it.
You'd be up here every day, health permitting.'
'I don't believe so,' Jim said. 'No matter what line of work I was in.' It
went against everything ethical - and esthetic - in his makeup.
The elevator door slid back.
'Here we are,' Sal said. 'This is George Walt's private office.' He spoke
matter of factly. 'Hello, George Walt,' he said, and stepped out of the
elevator.
The two mutants sat at their big cherrywood desk in their specially
constructed wide couch. One of the bodies sagged like a limp sack and one eye
had become fused-over and empty, lolling as it focused on nothing.
In a shrill voice the head said, 'He's dying. I think he's even dead; you
know he's dead.' The active eye fixed malignantly on Tito Cravelli, who stood
with his laser rifle, on the far side of the office. In despair, one of the
living hands poked at the dangling, inert arm of his companion body. 'Say
something!' the head screeched. With immense difficulty the living body
struggled to its feet; now its silent companion flopped against it and in
horror it pushed the burdening lifeless sack away.
A faint spasm of life stirred the dangling sack; it was not quite dead. And,
on the face of the uninjured brother, wild hope appeared. At once it tottered
grotesquely toward the door.
'Run!' the head bleated, and clumsily groped for escape. 'You can make it!'
it urged its still-living companion. The four-legged, scrambling joint creature
bowled over the surprised volunteers at the door; together they all went down
in a floundering heap, the mutant among them, squealing in panic as the injured
body buried the other beneath it, struggling to rise.
Jim Briskin, as George Walt lurched upright, dived at them. He caught hold
of an arm and hung on.
The arm came off.
He held onto it as George Walt stumbled up to their four feet and out the
office door, into the corridor beyond.
Staring down at it, he said, 'The thing's artificial.' He handed it to Sal
Heim.
'So it is,' Sal agreed, stonily. Tossing the arm aside he hastily ran after
George Walt; Jim accompanied him and together they followed the mutants along
the thick-carpeted corridor. The three-armed organism moved badly, crashing
into itself as its twin bodies swung first wide apart and then stunningly
together. It sprawled, then, and Sal Heim seized the right hand body around the
waist.
The entire body came loose, arm and legs and trunk. But without the head.
The other body - and single head - managed, incredibly, to get up and continue
on.
George Walt was not a mutant at all. It - he - was an ordinarily-constituted
individual. Jim Briskin and Sal watched him go, his two legs pumping
vigorously, arms swinging.
After a long time Jim said, 'Let's - get out of here.'
'Right.' Nodding in agreement, Sal turned to the party volunteers who had
trickled out into the corridor behind them. Tito Cravelli emerged from the
office, rifle in hand; he saw the severed one-armed trunk which had been half
of the two mutants, glanced up swiftly with perceptive understanding as the
remaining portion disappeared from view past a corner of the corridor.
'We'll never catch them now,' Tito said.
'Him,' Sal Heim corrected bitingly. 'I wonder which one of them was
synthetic, George or Walt. And why did he do it ? I don't understand.'
Tito said, 'A long time ago one must have died.'
They both stared at him.
'Sure,' Tito said calmly. 'What happened here today must have happened
before. They were mutants, all right, joined from birth, and then the one body
perished and the surviving one quickly had this synthetic section built. It
couldn't have gone on alone without the symbiotic arrangement because the brain
- ' He broke off. 'You saw what it did to the surviving one just now; he
suffered terribly. Imagine how it must have been the first time, when ...'
'But he survived it,' Sal pointed out.
'Good for him,' Tito said, without irony. 'I'm frankly glad he did; he
deserved to.' Kneeling down, he inspected the trunk. 'It looks to me as if this
is George. I hope he can get it restored. In time.' He rose, then. 'Let's get
upstairs and back to the field; I want to get out of here.' He shivered. 'Then
I want a glass of warm, non-fat milk. A big one.' The three of them, with the
party volunteers struggling behind, made their way silently back to the
elevator. No one stopped them. The corridor, mercifully, was empty. Without
even a pic to leer and cajole at them.
When they arrived back in Chicago, Patricia Heim met them and at once said,
'Thank God.' She put her arms around her husband, and he hugged her tight.
'What happened ? It seemed to take so long, and yet it actually wasn't long at
all; you've only been gone an hour.'
'I'll tell you later,' Sal said shortly. 'Right now I just want to take it
easy.'
'Maybe I'll cease advocating shutting the Golden Door satellite down,' Jim
said suddenly.
'What ?' Sal said, astonished.
'I may have been too hard. Too puritanical. I'd prefer not to take away his
livelihood; it seems to me he's earned it.' He felt numb right now, unable
really to think about it. But what had shocked him the most, changed him, had
not been the sight of George Walt coming apart into two entities, one
artificial, one genuine. It had been Lurton Sands' disclosure about the mass of
maimed bibs.
He had been thinking about this, trying to see a way out. Obviously, if the
maimed bibs were to be awakened at all they would have to be last in sequence.
And by then perhaps replacement organs would be available in supply from the
UN's organ bank. But there was another possibility, and he had come onto it
only just now. George Walt's corporate existence proved the workability of
wholly mechanical organs. And in this Jim Briskin saw hope for Lurton
Sands' victims. Possibly a deal could be made with George Walt; he - or they -
would be left alone if they would reveal the manufacture of their highly
sophisticated and successful artificial components. It was, most likely, a West
German firm; the cartels were most advanced in such experimentation. But it
could of course be engineers under contract to the satellite alone, in
permanent residence there. In any case, four hundred lives represented a great
number, worth any effort at saving. Worth any deal, he decided, with George
Walt, which could be brought off.
'Let's get something warm to drink,' Pat said. 'I'm freezing.' She started
toward the front door of Republican-Liberal party headquarters, key in hand.
'We can fix some synthetic non- toxic coffee inside.'
As they stood around the coffee pot waiting for it to heat, Tito said, 'Why
not let the satellite decline naturally ? As emigration begins it can serve a
steadily dwindling market. You implied something along those lines in your
Chicago speech anyhow.'
'I've been up there before,' Sal said, 'as you know. And it didn't kill me.
Tito's been there before, too, and it didn't warp or kill him.'
'Okay, okay,' Jim said. 'If George Walt leaves me alone, I'll leave them
alone. But if they keep after me, or if they won't make a deal regarding
artif-org construction - then it'll be necessary to do something. In any case
the welfare of those four hundred bibs comes first.'
'Coffee's ready.' Pat said, and began pouring.
Sipping, Sal Heim said, 'Tastes good.'
'Yes,' Jim Briskin agreed. In fact the cup of hot coffee, synthetic and
non-toxic as it had to be (only low-stratum dorm-housed Cols drank the genuine
thing) was exactly what he needed. It made him feel a lot better.
Although the time was dreadfully late at night, Myra Sands had made up her
mind to call Art and Rachael Chaffy at their dorm. She had reached a decision
regarding their case, and the moment had arrived to tell them.
When the vidphone connection had been made to their public hall booth, Mrs.
Sands said, 'I'm sorry to bother you so late, Mr. Chaffy.'
"That's all right,' Art said, sleepily. Obviously, he and his wife had
gone to bed. 'What is it ?'
'I think you should go ahead and have your baby,' Myra said.
'You do ? But...'
'If you had listened to Jim Briskin's Chicago speech, you would know why,'
Myra said. 'There'll soon be a need for new families; everything has changed.
My advice to you and your wife is to apply to Terran Development for permission
to emigrate by means of their new system. You might as well be among the first.
You deserve to be.'
Bewildered, Art Chaffy said, 'Emigrate ? You mean they finally found a place
? We don't have to stay here ?'
'Buy a homeopape,' Myra said patiently. 'Go out now and get it; find a
vending machine, read about the speech. It'll be on the front page. And then
start packing your things.' TD will have to accept you, she knew. Because of
Jim Briskin's speech. They've been deprived of a choice.
'Gee, thanks, Mrs. Sands,' Art Chaffy mumbled, dazed. 'I'll tell Rachael
right away; I'll wake her up. And - thanks for calling.'
'Good night, Mr. Chaffy,' Myra said. 'And good luck.' She hung up, then,
satisfied.
Too bad, she thought, that there's no way I can celebrate. Unfortunately no
one else is up this late. Because that's what this calls for: some kind of a
party.
But at least she could go to bed tonight with a clear conscience.
For perhaps the first time in years.
8
For seventy years Leon Turpin had ruled the great industrial syndrome which
comprised the enterprise Terran Development. A jerry , Turpin was now
one hundred and two years old and still vigorous mentally, although physically
frail. The problem for a man of his age lay in the area of the unforeseen
accident; a broken hip would never mend and would put him permanently in bed.
However, no such accident had yet occurred to him, and, as was his custom,
he arrived at the central administrative offices of TD, located in Washington,
D.C., at eight in the morning. His chauffeur let him off at his own entrance,
and from there he was raised by special lift to his floor of the building and
his constellation of offices, through which he moved during the working day by three-wheeled
electric cart.
Today the elderly chief of TD twitched with ill-concealed nervousness as his
lift raised him to floor twenty. Last night he had heard someone, a political
candidate of some sort, discussing what up to then Turpin had imagined to be
his corporation's top secret. Now TD's hand was tipped. Anxiously, Leon Turpin
tried to picture to himself the possible means by which the news had leaked
out. Politics is the enemy of a sound economic entity, he mused. New laws,
harsher tax rates, meddling ... and now this. When, as a matter of fact, he
himself had not even had an opportunity to inspect this new development.
Today he would visit the scene of the technological breakthrough. Possibly,
if it was safe, he would pass over to the other side.
Turpin liked to see these things with his own eyes. Otherwise he could not
quite grasp what was happening.
As he stepped cautiously from the lift, he made out the sight of his
administrative assistant, Don Stanley, coming toward him. 'Can we go over ?' he
asked Don Stanley. 'Is it safe ? I want to see it.' He felt eager desire rising
up inside him.
Stanley, a portly man, bald with heavy-rimmed glasses, said, 'Before we do
that, Mr. Turpin, I'd like to show you the stellar shots they took over there.'
He took hold of Leon Turpin's arm, supporting him. 'Let's sit down, sir, and
discuss this.'
Disappointed, Turpin said, 'I don't want to see any charts; I want to go
there.' However, he seated himself with Stanley beside him opening a large
manila envelope.
The stellar charts show,' Stanley said, 'that our initial appraisal of the
situation was incorrect.'
'It's Earth,' Leon Turpin said. He felt keenly discouraged.
'Yes,' Stanley said.
'Past or future ?'
Stanley, rubbing his lower lip, said, 'Neither. If you’d look at the star
chart, which...'
'Just tell me,' Turpin said. He could not decipher the star chart; his eyes
were not that good any more.
'Suppose we go over there now,' Stanley said, 'and I'll do my best to show
you. It's perfectly safe; our engineers have shored up the nexus, expanded and
reinforced it, and we're experimenting with the idea of a broader power
supply.'
'You're really sure we'll get back ?' Turpin asked querulously. 'I
understand there's a girl over there who killed somebody.'
Don Stanley said, 'We've caught her. A group of company police went across;
she didn't try to fight it out with them, fortunately. She's in N'York now.
Hold by the New York state police.' He assisted Turpin in rising to his feet.
'Now, as to the stellar chart: I feel like a Babylonian when I start talking
about "celestial bodies" and their positions, but ...' He glanced at
Turpin, 'There's nothing to distinguish it from a sky-shot taken on this side
of the tube.'
What that signified, Leon Turpin could not tell. However, he said, 'I see,'
and nodded soberly. Eventually, he knew, his vice presidents; and executive
staff, including Stanley, would explain it to him.
'I'll tell you who we've got to conduct you across,' Don Stanley said. To be
entirely on the safe side we've hired Frank Woodbine.'
Impressed, Leon Turpin said, 'Good idea. He's that famous deep-space
explorer, isn't he ? The one who's been to Alpha Centaurus and Proxima and ...'
He could not recall the third star-system which Woodbine had visited; his
memory was just not what it once had been. 'He's an expert,' Turpin finished
lamely, 'in visiting other planets.'
'You'll be in good hands,' Stanley agreed. 'And I think you'll like
Woodbine. He's competent, integrated, although you never know what he's going
to say. Woodbine sees the world in his own creative way.'
'I like that,' Turpin said. 'You've notified our PR people that we have
Woodbine on the payroll, of course.'
'Absolutely,' Stanley said. 'There'll be teams from all the media along,
catching everything you and Woodbine do and say. Don't worry, Mr. Turpin; your
trip across will be well-covered.'
Tickled, Leon Turpin giggled in glee. 'Terrific!' he exclaimed. 'I think
you've done a good job, Don. It'll be an adventure, going over there to ...' He
broke off, again puzzled. 'Where do you say it is ? It's Earth; I understand
that. But...'
'It'll be easier to show you than to tell you,' Stanley said 'So let's wait
until we're actually there.'
'Yes, of course,' Leon Turpin said. He had always found that it paid to do
what Don Stanley told him; he trusted Stanley's judgment completely. And, as he
aged, he trusted Don more and more.
On the second subsurface level of TD's Washington plant, Leon Turpin met the
deep-space explorer Frank Woodbine, about whom he had heard so much. To his
vast surprise, he found Woodbine to be dainty and slight. The man was dapper,
with a tiny waxed mustache and rapidly blinking eyes. When they shook,
Woodbine's hand was soft and a little damp.
'How'd you ever get to be an explorer ?' Turpin asked bluntly; he was too
old, too experienced, to beat around the bush.
Stammering slightly, Woodbine said, 'Bad blood.'
Turpin, amused, laughed. 'But you're good. Everybody knows that. What do you
know about this place we're going to ?' He had spied the Jiffi-scuttler within
which the breakthrough had occurred; it was surrounded by TD researchers and
engineers - and armed company guards.
'I know very little,' Woodbine said. 'I've studied the star charts that have
been taken, and I don't argue the fact that it's Earth on the other side;
that's certain.' Woodbine had on his heavy trouble-suit, with helmet, supply of
oxygen, propulsion jets, meters and atmosphere analysis gear, and, of course,
two-way com system. Always he was pictured gotten up this way; everyone
expected it of him. 'It's not my job to make a decision in this matter; that's
up to your company geologists.'
Puzzled, Turpin turned to Don Stanley. 'I didn't know we had any
geologists.'
Ten of them,' Stanley said.
'Your astrophysicists have done all they can,' Woodbine said. 'Now that the
observation satellite has been launched.' Seeing that Turpin did not
understand, he amplified. 'Earlier this morning, a Queen Bee satellite and
launcher were taken through to the other side, and the satellite was
successfully put into orbit; it's already sending back TV reports of what it
sees.'
"That's correct,' Don Stanley added. 'So far it's functioning
perfectly. From that vantage point we can learn more about this other world in
an hour than fifty surface teams can learn in a year. But of course we're going
to augment the TB's data with geological analysis; that's what Woodbine was
referring to. And we've borrowed a botanist from Georgetown University; he's
over there right now, inspecting plants. And there's a zoologist on the way
from Harvard; he should arrive any time now.' After a pause, Stanley said
thoughtfully, 'And we've contacted the sociology and anthropology departments
at the University of Chicago to stand by in case, we need them.'
'Hmm,' Turpin said. What did that mean, for heaven's sake ? He was
lost. Anyhow, Stanley and Frank Woodbine appeared to have the situation well in
hand; evidently there was nothing to worry about. Even if he did not quite
comprehend the situation, they did.
'I'm anxious; to go over,' Woodbine said. 'I haven't been there yet, Turpin;
they asked me to wait for you.'
'Then let's get started,' Turpin said eagerly. 'Lead the way.' He started
toward the 'scuttler.
Frank Woodbine lit a cigar. 'Good enough. But don't be too disappointed,
Turpin, if it leads us right back here. This break-through may be nothing but a
doorway to our own world, a connection with some remote spot, say the extreme
northern part of India where I understand native trees and grasses are still
allowed to grow wild. Or it may turn out to be an African bird sanctuary.' He
grinned. 'That will upset my good friend Mr. Briskin, if it's so.'
'Briskin ?' Leon Turpin echoed. 'I've heard of him. Oh yes; he's that
political fellow.'
'He's the one who made the speech,' Don Stanley said, accompanying the two
of them through the small mob of engineers and researchers, up to the hooped
entrant of the 'scuttler.
Puffing out clouds of gray cigar smoke, Woodbine stepped through the hoop
and into the tube. Assisting Leon Turpin, Stanley followed. The three of them
were at once followed by a gang of TV cameramen and homeopape autonomic
recording machines as well as human reporters. Already the data-gathering
extensors of the media were busily at work, collecting, recording, transmitting
all. Woodbine did not seem to be bothered, but Leon Turpin felt slightly
irritable. Publicity was of course necessary, but why did they have to push so
close ? I guess they're just interested, he decided. Doing their job. Can't blame
them; this is important, especially with Woodbine here. He wouldn't have come
if this wasn't something big. And they know it.
Halfway down the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler Frank Woodbine conferred with a
TD engineer and then stooped down. His cigar jutting stiffly ahead of him, he
crept headfirst through the wall of the tube and disappeared.
'I'll be darned!' Turpin said, amazed. 'Can I get through there, Don ? I
mean, it's all been tested, like you said; it's safe ?'
With the assistance of three TD engineers Turpin managed to kneel down and
crawl tremulously after Woodbine. Felt like a kid again, Turpin said, to
himself, experiencing both fear and delight. Haven't done anything like this in
ninety years. The wall of the tube shimmered before him. 'You in there
somewhere, Frank ?' he called as he gingerly made his way forward. The shimmer
passed over him, and now he saw blue sky and a horizontal procession of great
trees.
Taking hold of him by the shoulders, Woodbine lifted Turpin to his feet and
set him upright on the grass-covered soil. The air smelled of weird things.
Leon Turpin inhaled, perplexed; the scents were old and familiar, but he could
not place them. I've experienced this before, in my childhood, sometime, he
said to himself. Back in the twentieth century. Yes, this certainly is Earth;
nothing else could smell this way. This is no alien, foreign planet. But was
that good or bad ? He did not know.
Bending, Woodbine picked a meager white flower. 'Have a morning glory,' he
said to Turpin.
Ahead of them, TD space engineers sat at mobile high-frequency receiving
equipment; they were no doubt accepting communications from the Queen Bee
satellite somewhere overhead. The 'scope of the central van revolved slowly, a
peculiar presence on this pastoral landscape.
'We're particularly interested in what it obtains from the dark side,' Don
Stanley said. 'That's where it is, now.'
Glancing at him, Woodbine said, 'Lights, you mean.'
'Yes.' Stanley nodded.
'Lights of what ?' Turpin asked.
'If there are lights,' Stanley said patiently, 'anywhere, in any quantity,
it means that this place is inhabited by a sentient race.' He added, 'It's
found roads, already, on the sun side. Or at least what appear to be roads. The
QB isn't by any means the best observation satellite; actually it was selected
because it's the easiest and quickest to launch. We'd follow it up in a few
days with more sophisticated equipment, of course,'
'If a developed society exists here,' Woodbine said, 'it'll be of enormous
importance anthropologically. But it'll hurt Jim Briskin. His whole speech took
as its premise the unestablished fact that this planet is vacant and available
for colonization. I don't know which to hope for; I'd personally like to see
the bibs revived and conveyed here, but...'
'Yes,' Turpin agreed. 'We put a fortune into those language translating
machines, decades ago, and never got anything back. Woodbine, where do you
think we are ?
'You figure it out, Turpin,' Woodbine said with a spasmodic grimace. 'After
all, you people built the 'scuttler. In fact, you invented it. I don't work by
a priori theory; I'm a data type. I have to gather a good deal of information
before I can figure out what's going on.' He gestured. 'Like those people who
followed us over here.' Behind them the media reporters had appeared, still
hard at work at their job of scrutinizing everything in sight. They did not
appear very awed by what they had found so far.
'I don't care about the bibs,' Turpin said candidly. He saw no need to
obscure his personal convictions. 'And I certainly don't care about what
happens to that politician,, whatever his name is. Briskett or Briskman - you
know, the one who made the speech. That's not my problem; I've got other things
to worry about. For instance ...' He broke off, because a communications
systems engineer was coming toward them, temporarily leaving the gear which
monitored the satellite. 'Maybe this man can tell us something,' Turpin said.
'But I'll say one thing more: when I look around here all I see is grass and trees,
so if it's inhabited, its tenants certainly don't have full control of the
environment. That might leave room for limited colonization.'
The com-sys engineer said respectfully, 'Mr. Turpin, you don't know me but
I'm Bascolm Howard; I work for you and have been for years. It's a great honor
for me to give you the news that the QB satellite has picked up sequences and
arrangements of lights on the dark side of this body. There's absolutely no
doubt about it; they're assemblages of habitation. In other words, towns.'
'Well, that's that,' Stanley said.
'Not at all,' Woodbine said sharply. To Howard he said, 'Where are these
conglomerations of lights ? Where they're supposed to be ?'
Frowning, Howard said, 'I don't quite...'
'At London ?' Woodbine said. 'Paris ? Berlin ? Warsaw ? Moscow ? All the big
centers ?'
'Some are in the right places,' Howard said. 'But some aren't. For instance,
we're picking up no lights from the British Isles, and there should be colossal
numbers, there. And, oddly, the image transmitted from above Africa shows many
lights. Many more than there ought to be. But overall there are distinctly
fewer lights than we're accustomed to; we noticed it right away. Perhaps only
one third or one fourth as many as anticipated.'
'As anticipated where ?' Woodbine said. 'Back home ? But we're not back
home, are we ? Or don't you believe that ? What is your operating theory ? Just
where do you imagine you are ?'
Flushing, Howard said, 'It's not my job to figure out where I am; I was told
to come here and set up monitoring systems for a QB satellite, and that’s what
I've done. We've had sufficient rotations already to assure us that we're on
Terra; we've seen all the normal land-mass outlines, all the familiar
continents and islands. Personally, I'm content simply to accept the obvious
fact that this is our own world, although somehow altered; as, for example, the
reformation of light-clusters. And, in addition, we've not been able to pick up
transmissions from any satellite except the QB launched earlier today. The air
is dead.'
'On what frequencies ?' Woodbine said.
'On every frequency we've tried. Starting with the thirty-meter band and
working on up.'
'Nothing ?' Woodbine persisted. 'Nothing at all ? That's impossible. Unless
we're back before the days of radio.' He glanced at Stanley and Turpin. 'Back
before 1900. But even so the U.K. should be lit up; it's one of the most
densely populated areas in the world and was such back in the 1900s ... back
for centuries. I don't understand.'
'Cloud layers ?' Stanley asked Howard. 'Masking the surface ?'
'Possibly,' Howard said. 'But that wouldn't explain the concentration of
lights on the African Continent. Nothing explains that.'
'We must have gone ahead into the future,' Stanley said.
"Then why no radio transmissions on any frequency ?' Woodbine said.
'Maybe they don't need to use the airwaves any more,' Stanley said. 'Maybe
they communicate by direct mind-to-mind telepathy or something on that order
which we know nothing about.'
'But the sky map,' Woodbine said. 'The stellar charts which your
astrophysicists developed distinctly set the time as being identical with ours.
We're coeval with this world, whether we like it - or can make up a theory
about it - or not. Let's face this fact and not try to weasel around it. But
why waste time theorizing ? All we really have to do is make physical contact
with one of these illuminated settlements and we'll know the answers.' He
looked extremely impatient. 'Haul some sort of vehicle over here, a jet-hopper
perhaps, and let’s get started.'
Stanley said, 'There is a 'hopper over here already. From the beginning, we
intended to provide Mr. Turpin with an aerial view. After all, this entire
place, whatever it is, belongs to him.'
Snorting, Woodbine said, "The government may have something to say
about that. Especially if Briskin is elected, which I understand is certain
now.'
'We'll fight it in the courts,' Turpin said. 'Typical socialism,
bureaucratic governmental interference in the free enterprise system; we've had
enough of that. Anyhow, TD and TD alone has the means of getting over here. Or
does the fedgov plan to seize the 'scuttler ?'
'Very probably it does,' Woodbine said. 'Or will, after Briskin is in. Even
Bill Schwarz may want to; he's not that stupid.'
Bristling, Turpin said, 'Look here, Woodbine, you're working for TD, now.
Our opinion is your opinion, whether you like it or not. This place is company
property, and no one can come here without TD's permission. And that includes
you,' Turpin said, turning toward the news media people. 'So watch your step.'
'Just a moment,' Howard said. "The boys want me back.' He hurried over
to his post at the monitoring gear. Presently he returned, a perplexed
expression on his face. 'They're picking up no lights from Australia,' he said.
'But a tremendous concentration from Southeast Asia and from the region of the
Gobi Desert. The greatest concentrations yet. And all throughout China. But
none in Japan.'
'Where are we on the planet's surface ?' Woodbine asked. 'According to the
QB ?'
'In North America on the East Coast. Near the Potomac. Where the TD central
complex is located - or at least in that vicinity, give or take ten miles.'
'There's no TD here,' Woodbine said. 'And no Washington D.C. So that's that.
We haven't gone through a circular doorway and found ourselves led back to a
remote area of our own world. This may be Earth, but it's obvious that it isn't
our Earth. In that case, whose is it ? And how many Earths are there ?'
'I thought there was only one,' Turpin said.
'And they used to think that one was flat,' Woodbine reminded him. 'You
learn as you go along. I'd like to get into that jet-hopper right now, if no
one objects, and get started surveying. Is that agreeable, Turpin ?'
'Yes, it is,' Turpin said eagerly. 'What do you think we'll find, Frank ? Is
this more or less exciting than exploring planets in other star systems ?' He
chuckled knowingly. 'I can see you're all steamed up, Frank; this situation has
got you hooked.'
Shrugging, Woodbine said, 'Why not ?' He started toward the jet-hopper; Leon
Turpin and Stanley followed. 'I never implied I was jaded; I certainly am not
about to fall asleep over this.'
'I know what this is!' Leon Turpin bleated excitedly. 'Listen, this is a
parallel Earth, in another universe; do you get it ? Maybe there are hundreds
of them, all alike physically but you know, branching off and evolving
differently.'
Sourly, Woodbine said, 'Let's not go up in the 'hopper; let's just stand
here in one spot with our eyes shut and theorize.'
But I know I'm right, Leon Turpin said to himself. I've got a sure instinct,
sometimes; that's how I rose to be chairman of the board of directors of TD.
Frank Woodbine will find out, pretty soon, and he'll have to apologize to me.
I'll wait for that and not say anything more.
Together, Woodbine and Stanley assisted the old man in entering the 'hopper.
The hatch slid shut; the 'hopper rose in the air and headed out across the
meadow and over the nearby great trees.
If that's true, Turpin realized suddenly, then TD owns an entire Earth. And,
since I control TD, what Don Stanley said is true; Earth belongs to me. This
particular Earth, anyhow. But isn't one as good as another ? They're all
equally real.
Rubbing his hands together with excitement, Turpin said, 'Isn't this a
lovely virgin place ? Look at that forest down below; look at all that timber!'
And mines, he realized. Maybe there's never been any coal mined here or oil
wells sunk. All the metals, all the ores, may still be buried, on this
particular Earth - unlike our own, where everything valuable has been brought
up long ago.
I'd rather possess this one than our own, Turpin said to himself. Any day.
Who wants a worn-out world, thoroughly exploited over tens of centuries ?
'I'll carry it to the Supreme Court,' he said aloud, 'with the finest legal
minds in the world. I'll put all the financial resources of TD into this, even
if it breaks the company's back. It'll be worth it.'
Both Stanley and Woodbine glanced at him sourly.
Below them, directly ahead, lay an ocean. Evidently it was the Atlantic,
Turpin decided. It looked like the Atlantic, at least. Gazing down at
the shoreline, he saw only trees. No roads, no towns - in fact no sign of human
habitation of any variety whatsoever. Like it was before the damn Pilgrims
showed up here, he said to himself. But he also saw no Indians, either.
Strange. Assuming he was correct, assuming this was an Earth parallel to their
own, why was it so underpopulated ? For instance, what had become of the racial
groups which had lived in North America before the whites arrived ?
Could parallel Earths differ that much and still be considered authentically
parallel ? Unparallel is more like it, Turpin decided.
All at once in a hoarse voice, Don Stanley said, 'Woodbine, something is following
us.'
Turpin looked back, but his eyes were not good enough; he made out nothing
in the bright blue mid-morning sky. Woodbine, however, seemed able to see it;
he grunted, rose from the controls of the 'hopper and stood peering. By
autopilot, the 'hopper continued on.
'It's losing ground,' Stanley said. 'We're leaving it behind. Want to turn
around and approach it ?'
'What's it seem to be ?' Turpin asked apprehensively. 'We better not get too
close; it may shoot us down.' He cringed from the idea of an emergency crash:
he was well aware of the brittleness of his bones. Any sort of unsafe landing
would end his life. And he did not want it ended, just now. This was the worst
possible time.
'I'll swing back that way,' Woodbine said, returning to the controls. A
moment later the 'hopper had reversed its direction.
And, at last, Turpin could perceive the other object in the sky. It was
clearly not a bird; no wings flapped, and anyhow it was too large. He knew, saw
with his own eyes, that it was an artificial construct, a man-made vehicle.
The vehicle was hurrying off as rapidly as possible.
Woodbine said, 'It won't be long; it's very slow. You know what it looks
like ? A boat, a goddam boat. It's got a hull and sails. It's a flying boat.'
Hi; laughed tautly. 'It's absurd!'
Yes, Turpin thought. It does look grotesque. It's a wonder it can stay up.
And now, sure enough, the boat-shaped airborne vehicle was dipping down in
increasingly narrowing spirals, its sails hanging limply. The vehicle held one
single person who, they could now see, was working frantically with the
controls of his craft. Was he trying to land it or keep it in the air ? Turpin
did not know, but in any case the vehicle was about to land - or crash.
It landed. In an open pasture, away from trees.
As the 'hopper began to descend after it, the figure within leaped from the
vehicle and scampered off to disappear into the closest stand of trees.
'We frightened him,' Woodbine said, as he brought the 'hopper expertly down
beside the parked, abandoned craft. 'But anyhow we get to examine his ship;
that ought to tell us a lot, practically everything we want to know.'
Immediately he slammed the cabin hatch back and scrambled out, to drop to the
ground. Without waiting for Stanley or Turpin, he sprinted toward the parked
alien vehicle.
As he, too, clambered out of the 'hopper Don Stanley murmured, 'It looks
like it's made out of wood.' He dropped to the ground and walked over to stand
beside Woodbine.
I'd better stay here, Leon Turpin decided. Too risky for me to try to get
out; I might break a leg. And anyhow it's their job to inspect this flying
machine. That's what I hired them for.
'It's wood, all right,' Stanley said, his voice filtering to Leon Turpin,
mixing with the rushing of wind through the nearby trees. 'And a cloth sail; I
guess it's canvas.'
'But what makes it go ?' Woodbine said, walking all around it. 'Is it just a
glider ? No power supply ?'
'That was certainly a timid individual in it,' Stanley said.
'How do you think a jet-hopper would look to the innocent eye ?' Woodbine
said severely. 'Pretty horrible. But he had the courage to follow us for a
time.' He had climbed up on the vehicle and was peering inside. 'It's laminated
wood,' he said suddenly. 'Very thin layers. Looks to be extremely strong.' He
banged on the hull with his fist.
Stanley, examining the rear of the craft, straightened up and said, 'It has
a power supply. Looks like a turbine of some kind. Or possibly a compressor.
Take a look at it.'
Together, as Leon Turpin watched, Frank Woodbine and Stanley studied the
machinery which propelled the craft.
'What is it ?' Turpin yelled. His voice, in the open like this, sounded
feeble.
Neither man paid any attention to him. He felt agitated and peeved, and he
shifted about irritably, wishing they'd come back.
'Apparently,' Woodbine said, 'the turbine or whatever it is gives it an
initial thrust which launches it. Then it glides for a while. Then the operator
starts up the turbine once more and it receives an additional thrust. Thrust,
coast, thrust, coast and so on. Odd damn way to get from, one place to another.
My god, it may have to land at the end of each glide. Could that be ? It
doesn't seem likely.'
Stanley said, 'Like a flying squirrel.' He turned to Woodbine. 'You know
what ?' he said. 'The turbine is made out of wood, too.'
'It can't be,' Woodbine said. 'It’ll incinerate.'
'You can scrape the paint off,' Stanley said. He had a pocket knife open and
was working with it. 'I'd guess this is asbestos paint; anyhow it's heat
resistant. And underneath it, more laminated wood. I wonder what the fuel is.'
He left the turbine, began walking all around the craft. 'I smell oil,' he
said. 'I guess it could burn oil. The late twentieth century turbines and
diesel engines all burned low-grade oil, so that's not too impossible.'
'Did you notice anything peculiar about the man piloting this ship ?'
Woodbine said.
'No,' Stanley said. 'We were too far off. I could just barely make him out.'
Woodbine said, thoughtfully, 'He was hunched. I noticed it when he ran. He
loped along decidedly bent over.'
9
Late at night, Tito Cravelli sat in his conapt, before a genuine fire,
sipping Scotch and milk and reading over the written report which his contact
at Terran Development had a little earlier in the evening submitted to him.
Softly, his tape deck played one of the cloud chamber pieces by the great
mid-twentieth century composer, Harry Parch. The instrument, called by Parch
'the spoils of war', consisted of cloud chambers, a rasper, a modernized
musical saw, and artillery shell casings suspended so as to resonate, each at a
different frequency. And, as a ground bass accompanying the spoils of war
instrument, one of Parch's hollow bamboo marimba-like inventions tapped out an
intricate rhythm. It was a piece very popular these days with the public.
But Cravelli was not listening. His attention was fixed on the report of
TD's activities.
The old man, Leon Turpin himself, had crossed over via the defective
Jiffi-scuttler, along with various company personnel and media people. Turpin
had managed to shake the reporters off and had made a sortie by jet-hopper.
Something had been found on that sortie and had been carefully brought back to
TD; it was now in their labs being examined. Cravelli's contact did not know
precisely what it was.
However, one fact was clear. The object brought, back was an artifact. It
was manmade.
Apparently Jim Briskin went off half-cocked, Cravelli said to himself. We're
going to emigrate - compel the bibs to emigrate - into a region already
occupied. Too bad Jim didn't think of that. Too bad I didn't think of it, for
that matter.
We were fooled, it appeared, by the initial visual impression of the place.
It seemed deserted, seemed susceptible to immigration.
Well, it can't be helped now, he realized. Jim made his speech; we're
committed. We'll have to go on, hoping that we can still pull it off anyhow.
But damn it, he thought. If only we had waited one more day!
Maybe we can kill them off, he thought. Maybe they'll catch some plague from
us, die like flies.
He hated himself for having such thoughts. But there it was, clear in his
mind. We need the room so badly, he realized. We've got to have it, no matter
what. No matter how we have to go about it.
But will Jim agree ? He's so damn soft-hearted.
He's got to agree, Cravelli said to himself. Or it's the end -politically,
for us, and in every way for the bibs.
While he was rereading the rather meager report, his door number was all at
once tapped out; someone stood at the entrance to the conapt building, wanting
permission to enter and visit him. Cravelli put the report away and crossed the
room to the audio-video circuit which connected his apt with the front door.
'Who is it ?' he said, guardedly. As always, he was somewhat wary of
nocturnal visitors.
'It's me... Earl,' the speaker informed him. There was no video image,
however; the man was standing deliberately out of range. 'Are you alone ?'
Instantly Cravelli said, 'Entirely.' He pressed the release button; fifteen
stories below him the door automatically opened to admit Earl Bohegian, his
contact at TD. 'You'll have to get by the doorman,' Cravelli told him. 'The key
word for the building today is "potato." '
Several minutes later Bohegian, a dark, somber-looking man in his late
fifties, entered the apartment. With a sigh, he seated himself facing Tito
Cravelli. 'How about a beer ?' Cravelli asked him. 'You look tired.'
'Fine.' Bohegian nodded. 'I am tired. I just left TD; I came directly here.
We're all on emergency double-shift. Frankly, I was lucky to get away at all; I
told them I had a migraine headache and had to leave. So the company guards
finally let me out.'
'What's up ?' Cravelli said, getting the beer from the refrigerator in the
kitchen.
"The thing they hauled back here,' Earl Bohegian said. 'What I
mentioned in my written report. The artifact they've been going over it, and
it's apparently the damnedest junk you ever heard of. It's a vehicle of some
kind; I finally managed to find that out by hanging around in the executives'
washroom, drinking "Coke", and listening to stray colloquies. It's
made out of wood, but it's not primitive. It's the turbine, though, that's
really throwing the engineers on Level One.' Gratefully, he accepted the beer
and gulped at it. "It works by compressing gases. I'm not an engineer -
you know that - so I can't help you out on technical details. But anyhow, by
compressing gases it manages to freeze a trapped chamber of water. So help me,
Cravelli, the rumor going around TD is that the damn thing is run by ...' He
laughed. 'Excuse-me, but it's funny. It runs by expansion of the ice. The water
freezes, expands as ice, and drives a piston upward with enormous force, then
the ice is melted - all this happens extremely fast - and the gases expand
again, which gives another thrust to the piston, driving it back down in the
cylinder again. Ice! Did you ever hear of such a sources of power ?
'It's funnier than steam, is it ?' Cravelli said.
Laughing until tears filled his eyes, Bohegian nodded. 'Yes, a lot funnier
than steam. Because it's so darn cumbersome. And so utterly ineffective. You
should see it. It's incredibly complicated, especially in view of the meager
thrust it ultimately manages to deliver. The vehicle coasts forward on runners,
not wheels, and finally gets tip into the air, but just for a very few moments.
Then it glides back down. It's a kind of wooden rocketship with a sail. That's
what they're building on the other side of the defective 'scuttler. That's
their technology. What kind of a civilization is that ?' He finished his beer,
set the glass down. "The story going around TD is that one of the better
engineers got into it, cranked it up, literally, and manage to fly around the
lab for fifteen or sixteen seconds, at a height of about four feet,
approximately waist level.'
'Your report,' Cravelli said, once more getting it out, 'says that the
stellar charts made by TD's astro-physicists prove that the planet, beyond any
reasonable doubt, is Earth ?'
Earl Bohegian became serious, then. 'Yes, and right here in the present.
There's been no time-travel at all, not even so much as a fraction of a second.
Don't ask me to explain it; they can't explain it, and they're supposed
to know about these things. I know what the old man believes, though. According
to him - and evidently he hatched this out on his own - it's an Earth that
started out like ours and then split off and took a different course; at least
its evolution did, its development at the level of human society. Say, ten
thousand years back. Maybe even further, even as far back as the Pleistocene
Period. The flowers and plants seem to be identical with ours, anyhow. And the
continental configurations show no deviation from ours. All the land masses are
congruent with ours, so the split-off can't be too long ago. For instance San
Francisco Bay. And the Gulf of Mexico. They don't differ from ours, and I
understand they formed as they are now in quasi-historical tunes.'
'How great is the population, do they think ?'
'Not great, certainly not like ours. By the number of lights on the dark
side they assume that it lies in the millions - at most. And certainly not in
the billions. For instance, whole areas don't appear to be inhabited at all, at
least if you accept the lights as an index.'
'Maybe there's a war on,' Cravelli said, 'and they're blacked out.'
'But as the light side moves,' Bohegian said, 'there's little indication of
cities, only what appear to be roads and some sort of small, town-like
structures ... they'll know more about that in a day or so. The whole business
is bizarre, to say the least. Because of the total lack of radio signals, TD is
beginning to speculate that, although they have developed a turbine of sorts,
they for some reason haven't ran onto electricity. And the use of wood,
laminated and then coated with asbestos paint; it's possible - although
virtually incredible -that they don't work with metal. At least not in
industry.'
'What language do they speak ?'
'TD doesn't even pretend to know. They're in the process of hauling a number
of linguistic decoders over from the linguistics department, so when they
finally manage to nab one of the citizens over there, they'll be able to
converse with him or her. That should happen any time. In fact it may already
have occurred after I left TD and came here. I tell you, this is going to be
the apologia pro sua vita of every sociologist, ethnologist, and
anthropologist in the world. They're going to be migrating from here to there
in droves. And I don't blame them. God knows what they'll find. Is it actually
possible that a culture could develop a turbine-powered, airborne craft and not
have, say, a written language ? Because, according to the scuttlebutt at TD,
there were no letters, signs or figures anywhere on the craft, and they
certainly scrutinized it thoroughly for that.'
Half to himself, Cravelli said, "I frankly don't care what they have
and have not developed. As long as there's room on their planet for immigration.
Mass immigration, in terms of millions of people.'
They each had a second beer, he and Earl Bohegian, and then Bohegian
departed.
You're lucky, Jim Briskin, Cravelli thought as he shut the door after
Bohegian. You took a chance when you made that speech, but evidently you're
going to be able to swing it after all. Unless you balk at sharing this
alter-Earth with its natives ... or unless they happen to possess some
mechanism by which they can halt us.
God, I'd like to go there, Cravelli realized. See this civilization with my
own eyes. Before we smear it up, as we inevitably will. What an experience it
would be! They may have developed into areas which we've never even imagined.
Scientifically, philosophically, even technically, in terms of machinery and
industrial techniques, sources of power, medicines - in fact in every area,
from contraceptive devices to visions of God. From books and cathedrals, if
any, to children's toys.
We'll probably initiate events, he reflected, by murdering a few of them, just
to be on the safe side. Too bad this isn't in the hands of the government; it's
damn bad luck that so far it's entirely the personal property of a private
business corporation. Of course, when Jim is elected, all that will change. But
Schwarz. He won't do anything; he'll just sit. And TD will be permitted to go
ahead in any way it chooses.
To himself Sal Heim said: I've got to arrange a meeting between Leon Turpin,
head of Terran Development, and Jim Briskin. Jim had to be photographed over
there in that new world - not just talking about it, but actually standing on
it.
And the way to make the contact, Heim realized, is through Frank Woodbine,
because Jim and Frank are old-time friends. I'll get hold of Woodbine and fix
it all up, and that will be that. We'll have Jim over there and maybe Frank
with him, and what a boost to our campaign that'll be. We've just got to have
it, that's all.
'Get on the vidphone,' he instructed his wife Pat. 'Start them searching
down Frank Woodbine; you know, the deep space explorer, the hero.'
'I know,' Pat said. She lifted the receiver and asked for information.
'A hero is a good thing to have around,' Sal said meditatively as he waited.
'It always was my hope to get Jim involved with Woodbine during this campaign.
Now I think we've got the exact tie-in we want.' He felt pleased with himself;
he had a good idea, and he knew it. All his professional instincts told him
that he was onto something, a two-birds-with-one-stone item.
On TV he had seen the media's excursion across into tine other world. Along
with the rest of the nation, he had witnessed scenes of blissful trees and
grass and clear sky, and he had reacted vigorously. This was it, all right. As
soon as he had viewed it for himself, he had realized how profound Jim's
insight had been. A new epoch in human history had begun, and his candidate had
called the shots right from the start. Now, if they could just get Jim over
there along with Woodbine, this one last essential act...
'I have him,' Pat said, breaking into his thoughts. 'Here.' She held the
vidphone receiver toward him. 'He knows who you are. Because of Jim, he
accepted the call.'
'Mr. Woodbine,' Sal said, seating himself at the vidphone. 'It's darn nice
of you to take a minute or so off from your busy schedule to hear me out. Jim
Briskin would like very much to visit this other world. "Can you arrange
it with Turpin at TD ?' He explained, then, why it was vital, just in case
Woodbine was ignorant of Jim's Chicago speech. But Woodbine was not ignorant of
it; he understood immediately what the situation was.
'I think,' Woodbine said thoughtfully, 'that you'd better have Jim drop by
my conapt. Tonight, if possible. I want to discuss with him the material we've
uncovered on the far side. Before he goes across, he should know about it. I'm
sure TD won't mind; they're going to release it to the media sometime tomorrow
anyhow.'
'Fine,' Sal said, immensely pleased. 'I'll have him shoot right over to your
place.' He thanked Woodbine profusely and then rang off.
Now let's see if I can light the proper fire under Jim, he said to himself
as he dialed. Get him to do this. What if he won't ?
'Maybe I can help,' Pat said, from behind him. 'I can usually persuade Jim
when it's genuinely in his interest. and this certainly is, beyond a doubt.'
'I'm glad you see it this way,' Sal said, 'because I'm very anxious about
this.' He wondered what material TD had uncovered in the new world; evidently,
it was important. And the way Woodbine had talked, he was obviously concerned.
Hmm, Sal thought. He felt a little worried. Just a little: the first
stirrings.
Frank Woodbine answered the knock on his conapt door, and there on the
threshold stood his tall and very dark friend Jim Briskin, looking gloomy as
always.
'It's been a hell of a long time,' Woodbine said, ushering Jim in. 'Come
over here; I want to show you right away what we've turned up on the other
side.' He led Jim to the long table in the living room. 'Their compressor.' He
pointed to the photograph. 'There are a hundred better ways to build a
compressor than this. Why'd they choose the most cumbersome way possible ? You
can't call a culture primitive if it's got such artifacts in it as piston
engines and gas compressors. In fact, their ability to construct a power glider
alone puts them out of that class automatically. And yet, something's obviously
wrong. Tomorrow, of course, we'll know what it is, but I'd like to know
tonight, before we establish contact with them.'
Picking up the photo of the compressor, Jim Briskin studied it. 'The
homeopapes thought you'd found something like this, when you hauled that object
back. According to the rumor, you've actually ...'
'Yes,' Woodbine said. "The rumor's correct. Here's a pic of it.' He
showed Jim the photograph of the power glider. 'It's in TD's basement. They're
smart, and yet they're dumb - the people on the other side, I mean. Come on
along with me tomorrow; we're going to set down exactly here.' He laid out a
sequence of shots taken by the QB satellite. 'Recognize the terrain ? It's the
coast of France. Over here ...' He pointed.'... Normandy. A town of theirs. You
can't call it a city, because it's simply not that large. But it's the largest
one the QB has been able to detect. So we're going there .To confront them in
their own bailiwick. By doing so, we get a direct confrontation vis-а-vis their
culture, the totality of what they've managed to develop. TD is supplying
linguistics machines; we've got anthropologists, sociologists ...' He broke off.
"Why are you looking at me like that, Jim ?'
Jim Briskin said, 'I thought it was a planet in another star system. Then
the hints in the media were right, after all. But I'll come with you; I'm glad
to. Thanks for letting me.'
'Don't take it so hard, 'Woodbine said.
'But it's inhabited,' Jim said.
'Not entirely. My god, look on the bright side. This is a tremendous event,
an encounter with another civilization entirely, what I've been searching for
over three star-systems and a time-period of four decades. You're not going to
begrudge us that, are you ?'
After a pause Jim said, 'You're right, of course. I'm just having trouble
adjusting to this. Give me a little time.'
'Are you sorry now that you made that Chicago speech ?'
'No,' Jim said.
'I hope your attitude doesn't have to change. There's one more thing we
found: no one at TD has so far been able to make out what it signifies. Look at
this pic.' He placed the glossy print before Jim. 'It was in the glider, poked
down out of sight, obviously deliberately concealed. In a little leather bag.'
'Rocks ?' Jim said, scrutinizing the pic.
'Diamonds. Rough, not cut. Just as they come out of the ground. The
inference is that these people prize precious stones but don't know how to cut
or polish them. So, in this one respect at least, they're some four or five
thousand years behind us. What would you say about a culture that can build a
power glider, including piston engine and compressor, but hasn't learned to cut
and polish gems ?'
Jim said, 'I - don't know."
'We're taking some cut stones with us tomorrow. Couple of diamonds, opals, a
gold ring set with a nice fat ruby donated by the wife of one of TD's vice
presidents. And we're also taking this.' He tossed a sheet of rolled-up paper
before Jim. 'A schematic of a very simple, efficient turbine. And this.' He
bounced another tube of paper onto the table. 'A schematic of a medium-size
steam engine, circa 1880, used as a donkey engine in mine work. But, of course,
our main effort will be directed toward finding a few of their technological
experts, if there are any, over here. Turpin wants to show them around TD, for
example. And after that, probably N'York City.'
'Has the government made an effort to get involved in this ?'
'Schwarz, I understand, has asked Turpin if a mixed bag of specialists from
various bureaus can accompany us tomorrow. I don't know what the old man has
decided; it's up to him. After all, TD can shut down the nexus any time it so
desires. Schwarz knows that.'
Jim said, 'Would you hazard any kind of estimate as to the level of their
culture in terms of chronology relative to ours ?'
'Sure,' Frank Woodbine said. 'Somewhere between 3000 B.C. and A.D. 1920.
Does that answer your question ?'
'So it can't be graded on a time-scale which compares it to us.'
'We'll know tomorrow,' Frank said. 'Or rather - and I fully expect this, Jim
- we'll know that they're so damn different from us that they might as well
live on a planet in some other star system, as you'd like them to be. A
non-terrestrial race entirely.'
'With six legs and an exoskeleton,' Jim murmured.
'If not worse. Something that would make George Walt look perfectly
ordinary. You know, that's what we ought to do: take George Walt over with us
tomorrow. Tell the people on the other side that George Walt is our god, that
we worship him and they'd better, too, or he'll make the bad atoms rain down on
them and cause them to die of leukemia.'
'Probably,' Jim said, 'they've not reached the level of developing atomic power.
Either for industry or warfare.'
'For all I know,' Frank said quietly, 'they've got an atomic tactical bomb
made out of wood.'
'That's impossible. It's a joke. You're kidding.'
'I'm not kidding - I'm just terribly upset. Nobody in our world ever knew
that you could build complex modem machinery out of wood, as these people have.
If they can manage to do that, although God knows how long it took them to do
it, they can do anything. At least, that's the way it strikes me. I'm going to
set the jet-hopper down in Normandy tomorrow with my heart in my mouth, and
I've been to more star-systems than any other human being; don't forget that.
I've seen a lot of alien worlds.'
Somberly, Jim Briskin picked up the photo of the wooden engine and once more
studied it.
'Of course,' Frank added, 'I keep saying to myself, "Look what we can
learn." And look what they can learn from us.'
'Yes,' Jim agreed, 'we have to look on this as an opportunity,' His tone,
however, was grave.
'You know, just as I know, that something is awfully wrong.'
Jim Briskin nodded.
In the middle of the night Don Stanley, administrative assistant to Leon
Turpin, was awakened by the ringing of his vidphone.
Sitting up groggily, he managed to locate the receiver in the dark. 'Yes ?'
he said, switching on the light. In the bed, his wife slept on.
On the vidscreen the physiognomy of a top-level TD researcher came into
view. 'Mr. Stanley, we're calling you instead of Mr. Turpin. Somebody at policy
has to know this.' The researcher's voice was jumpy with tension. 'The
QB is down.'
'Down what ?' Stanley could not focus his faculties.
"They shot it down. God knows how. Just now, not ten minutes ago. We
don't know whether we should try to put up another one to replace it or just
wait.'
Stanley said, 'Maybe the QB merely malfunctioned. Maybe it's up there
coasting around dead.'
'It's not up there at all; we've got a number of instruments capable of
registering that. You know, bringing down an orbiting satellite requires a
pretty exact science of weapons development; it's not easy to do.'
Still half-asleep, Don Stanley had a momentary hypnogogic vision of an
enormous crossbow with a cord capable of being stretched back a mile. He shook
the vision off and said, 'Maybe we shouldn't send Woodbine over there tomorrow.
We don't want to lose him.'
'Whatever you and Mr. Turpin decide,' the researcher said. 'But sooner or
later we have to make formal contact with them, don't we ? So why not right
away ? It seems to me that, in view of their maneuver against the QB, we can't
afford to wait. We've got to know what they possess.'
'We'll go ahead,' Stanley decided, 'but we'll see that Woodbine is
accompanied by company police. And we'll keep in constant radio contact with
him all the time he's there.'
' "Company police,"' the researcher said in disgust. 'What
Woodbine needs is the United States Army.'
'We don't want the government meddling into this,' Stanley said sharply. 'If
TD can't handle this, we'll shut down the 'scuttler and abolish the nexus.
Forget the entire matter.' He felt irritable. This puts an entirely new light
on everything, this about the QB, he realized. In no way - or at least in no
important way - are these people lagging behind as. We're not going to be able
to get away with trading them a basketful of glass beads in exchange for North
America. He recalled the leather bag of uncut diamonds found in this glider.
They may not be able to finish up stones, he though , but at least they know
what's really valuable. There's a crucial difference between carrying around a
bagful of rough diamonds and, say, a bagful of seashells.
'You've still got a team on the other side, don't you' Stanley said. 'You
didn't pull them back over here.'
'They're there,' the researcher said, 'but they're just standing by, waiting
for dawn and the party of university professors and the linguistics machines,
all that stuff that's been promised.
'We don't want to get into a brawl with these people,,' Stanley said, 'even
if they did get to our satellite. TD wants industrial techniques from them,
wants their know-how hardwarewise. Let's not spoil that. Okay ?'
'Okay,' the researcher agreed, 'and lots of luck.'
Don Stanley hung up, sat for a time, then rose and walked to the kitchen of
his conapt to fix himself something to eat.
Tomorrow's going to be quite a day, he said to himself. I wish I was going
along, but, in view of this, I think I'll stay on this side. After all, I'm a
desk man, not a leg man; let somebody else do it. Somebody like Woodbine who's
paid to take risks. This is exactly why we hired him.
He did not envy Woodbine.
And then all at once it occurred to him that old Leon Turpin might order him
to go along. In which case he would have to - or lose his job. And losing one's
job, these days, was no joke.
His appetite was gone. Leaving the kitchen, Don Stanley returned to his bed,
gloomily aware that with such thoughts on his mind he would probably be unable
to get back to sleep.
It turned out that he was right.
10
Because the defective Jiffi-scuttler technically belonged to him, Darius
Pethel could not effectively be denied permission to cross over, along with the
group of top scientific and linguistic experts leaving in the morning. Wearing
a carefully ironed and starched white shut and new tie, he arrived at TD's
central administrative offices in Washington, D.C., at exactly eight a.m. He
felt confident. TD employees had treated him with deference ever since he had
turned the defective 'scuttler over to them. After all, he could take it
back... or, at least, so Pethel reasoned.
Two officials of the company, both of them tense, accompanied him to Mr.
Turpin's office on the twentieth floor, depositing him there, and at once
hurrying off. Now he was on his own.
The board chairman of TD did not awe Darius Pethel. 'Morning, Mr. Turpin,'
he said in greeting. 'I hope I'm not late.' He was not sure where the group was
assembling. Probably down in the subsurface labs near the 'scuttler.
'Ump,' the old man said, glancing at him sideways, the wrinkled neck
twisting like a turkey's. 'Oh, yes. Pedal.'
'Pethel.'
'So you want to be in on things, do you ?' Leon Turpin studied him, smiling
a thin, gleeful smile.
'I want to keep in touch,' Pethel said. He pointed out: 'After all, it is
my, property.'
'Oh, yes, we're very conscious of that, Pethel. You're a highly important
figure in all that's going on. Being a businessman, you'll no doubt be useful
on this mission; you can establish trade relations with these people. In fact,
we expect you to start selling them 'scuttlers.' Leon Turpin laughed. 'All
right, Mr. Pethel. You go ahead downstairs to the labs and join the group; make
yourself at home here at TD. Do whatever you feel like. I myself - I'm staying
here. One trip across is enough for a man of my age; I’m sure you can appreciate
that.'
Conscious that he had been made fun of, Darius Pethel left Mr. Turpin's
office and took the elevator down. Smouldering, he said to himself, I can be
important in this. The people on this alternative Earth or whatever it is
can probably use an improved method of transportation even better than we can.
After all, from what the TV newsman said, they seem to be backward, compared to
us. There was something about a primitive ship or airplane. Something obsolete
in our world several centuries ago.
The elevator let him off at the guarded lower floors of the building, and he
made his way down the corridor, following the instructions painted on the
walls, to the main lab proper.
When he opened the lab door he found himself facing a man whom he had seen
many times on TV. It was the Republican-Liberal candidate for president, James
Briskin, and Pethel halted in awe and surprise.
'Let's get a shot of you standing at the entrance hoop,' a photographer was
saying to Briskin. 'Could you move over there, please ?'
Obligingly, Briskin walked to the 'scuttler.
This is the big time, Pethel realized. Our next president is here along with
me. I wonder what would happen if I said hello to him, he wondered. Would he
answer back ? Probably would because he's campaigning; after he gets into
office, he won't have to.
To Jim Briskin, Pethel said humbly, 'Hello, Mr. Briskin. You don't know me,
but I'm going to vote for you.' He had just made up his mind; seeing Briskin in
real life had decided him. 'I'm Darius Pethel.'
Glancing at him, Briskin said, 'Hello, Mr. Pethel.'
'This Jiffi-scuttler belongs to me,' Pethel explained. 'I discovered the
rent in it, the doorway to the other universe. Or rather, my repairman Rick
Erickson did. But he's dead now.' He added, 'Very tragic; I was there when it
happened,'
A TD official, appearing beside Jim Briskin, said, 'We're ready to get
started, Mr. Briskin.'
A small, rather handsome man strolled up, and Darius, with a start,
recognized him, too. This was Frank Woodbine, the famous deep-space explorer.
Good lord, Pethel said to himself, and I'm going with them!
'Jim,' Woodbine said to Jim Briskin, 'we're all carrying laser pistols
except you. Don't you think you're making a mistake ?'
'Hey,' Pethel said tremulously, 'nobody gave me a pistol.'
A TD employee passed a pistol, in its holster, over to him. 'Sorry, Mr.
Pethel.'
'That's more like it,' Dar Pethel said, wondering if he was supposed to hold
the thing in his hands or strap it on somehow.
'I don't need a gun,' Jim Briskin said.
'Of course you do,' Woodbine said. 'You want to come back, don't you ?' To
Pethel, Woodbine said, 'Tell him he needs a gun."
'You ought to have one, Mr. Briskin,' Pethel said eagerly. 'No one knows
what we'll run into over there.'
At last, with massive reluctance, Briskin accepted a gun. 'This is not the
way,' he said, to no one in particular. 'We shouldn't be doing this, going to
meet them armed like this.' He looked melancholy.
'What choice have we got ?' Woodbine said and disappeared through the
entrance hoop of the Jiffi-scuttler.
'I'll go in with you,. Mr. Briskin,' Pethel said. 'Instead of with those
scientists.' He indicated the group which had formed behind them. 'I can't talk
their language; I've got nothing in common with them.'
A man whom he recognized as Briskin's campaign manger, Salisbury Heim,
hurried up to join Briskin. 'Sorry I'm late.' Quickly, he made note of the news
photographers, TV cameras, the gang of media people. 'You fellows get every
step of this,' he called to them. 'You understand ?'
'Yes, Mr. Heim,' they murmured, moving forward.
'The time is now,' Salisbury Heim said, and gave Jim Briskin a small push in
the direction of the entrance hoop. 'Let's go, Jim.'
'Are you ready, Mr. Pethel ?' Jim Briskin asked.
'Oh, thanks; I am, yes,' Pethel answered hurriedly. 'This is certainly a
fascinating journey, isn't it ?'
'Momentous,' Salisbury Heim said.
'In fact even historical,' Briskin said, with a faint smile.
'Entering the Jiffi-scuttler now,' a TV newsman was saying into his lapel
mike, 'the possible future president of the United States reveals no indication
of concern for his personal safety. Solicitous of the welfare of the others
surrounding him, he makes certain that they understand the gravity or - as
James Briskin himself just now put it - the historical significance of this
body of persons passing across into a situation fraught with possible peril.
But the stakes in this are vast, and no one has forgotten that, least of all
James Briskin. Another world, another civilization ... what will this come to
mean in future centuries to mankind ? Undoubtedly, James Briskin is asking
himself that at this very instant as he crosses the threshold of the rather
plain, almost ordinary-appearing Jiffi-scuttler.'
Jim Briskin winked at Darius Pethel.
Startled, Pethel attempted to wink back, but he was too tense.
'Hey, just a moment, Mr. Briskin!' a homeopape photographer called. 'We want
to be sure we catch you going through the rent. Could you kindly retrace your
steps back to the hoop, please ? Those last four steps ?'
Obligingly, Jim Briskin did so.
The TV newsman was saying, 'So now in only a matter of seconds presidential
candidate Jim Briskin will be passing through the connecting link into a
universe whose very existence was not even suspected two days ago. Authorities
seem pretty well to agree now, on the basis of stellar charts taken by the no
longer functioning Queen Bee satellite ...' -
I wonder why it's no longer functioning, Pethel mused. Has something gotten
fouled up, over there ? It didn't sound like a good omen; it made him
uncomfortable.
On the other side, amid a meadow of excellently green grass and small white
flowers, they, now a party of thirty, boarded an express jet-hopper which TD
engineers hid somehow managed to disassemble, pass through the rent, and then
reassemble. Almost at once the 'hopper rose and soared out over the Atlantic,
toward the northern coast of France.
Watching a flight of gulls, Jim Briskin thought: From this vantage point, it
appears no different from our own world. The gulls disappeared behind them as
the jet-hopper hurried on. Will we see ships of any sort on this ocean ? he
wondered.
Fifteen minutes later, by his wristwatch, he saw a slip below.
It did not seem to be large. But it was ocean-going, and that, he decided,
was something. Of course it was wooden; he took that for granted, as did the
others in the 'hopper, all of whom were pressed against the windows, peering
out. The ship, did not have sails, but it also lacked a stack. What propels it
? he wondered. More nonsense machinery. If not the expansion of ice, then by
all means the popping of paper bags.
The pilot of the jet-hopper swooped low over the ship; they were treated to
a thorough look, at least momentarily. Figures on the deck scampered about in
agitation, then disappeared down below, lost from sight. The ship continued on.
And, presently, the 'hopper left it behind.
'We didn't learn much,' Dillingsworth, the anthropologist, said in
disappointment. 'How long before we reach Normandy ?'
'Another half hour,' the pilot said.
They saw, then, a collection of small boats, perhaps a fishing fleet; the
boats were anchored, and they did have sails. Aboard, the sailors gaped up at
the sight of the 'hopper, frozen in their positions as if carved there. Again
the 'hopper dipped low.
The anthropologist, staring down, said, 'Lower.'
'Can't,' the pilot answered. 'Too dangerous; we're overloaded'
'What's the matter ?' the sociologist from the University of California,
Edward Marshak, asked Dillingsworth. 'What did you see ?'
After a time Dillingsworth said, 'As soon as we reach the European landmass,
as soon as we can land, let's do so. Let's not wait to seek out their centers
of concentration; I want to have us set down by the first one of them we spot.'
The fishing boats disappeared behind them.
With shaking hands, Dillingsworth opened a textbook which he had brought,
began turning pages. He did not allow anyone else to see its title; he sat off,
by himself, in a corner of the 'hopper, a brooding, dark expression on his
face.
Stanley, the senior official from TD, said inquiringly, 'Do you think we
should turn back ?'
'Hell no,' Dillingsworth rasped. And that was all he said; he did not
amplify.
Next to Jim Briskin, the round, heavy-set little businessman from Kansas
City leaned over and said, 'He makes me nervous; he's found something and he
won't say what it is. It was when he saw those fishermen. I was watching his
face, and he almost fainted.'
Amused, Jim said, 'Take it easy, Mr. Pethel. We still have a long way to
go.'
I'm going to find out what it was,' Pethel said. He scrambled to his feet
and made his way over to Dillingsworth. 'Tell me,' he said. 'Why keep it quiet
? It must have been pretty bad to make you clam up like this. What could you
possibly have seen in those few seconds that would make you react this way ?
Personally, I don't think we should go on until...'
'Look at it this way,' Dillingsworth said. 'If I'm wrong, it doesn't matter.
If I'm right ...' He looked past Pethel to Jim Briskin. 'We'll know all about
it before we make our return trip, later today.'
After a pause, Jim said, 'That's good enough. For me, at least.'
Fuming, Darius Pethel returned to his seat. 'If I had known it'd be like
this...'
'Wouldn't you have come ?' Jim asked him.
'I don't know. Possibly not.'
Stirring restlessly, Sal Heim said, 'I didn't realize there was going to be
any hazard involved in this.'
'What did you think,' one of the newsmen asked him, 'when they took our QB
satellite out ?'
'I just learned about that,' Sal snapped back, 'as we were entering the damn
'scuttler.'
A photographer for one of the big homeopapes said, 'How about a game of draw
? Jacks or better to open, penny a chip but no table limit.'
Within a minute, the game had started.
Ahead, on the horizon, Sal Heim thought he saw something and he took a quick
look at his wristwatch. That's Normandy, he realized. We're almost there. He
felt his breath stifle in his throat; he could hardly breathe. God, I'm tense,
he decided. That anthropologist really shook me. But too late to turn back now.
We're fully committed; and anyhow it would look bad, politically-speaking, if
Jim Briskin backed out. No, for our own good we have to continue whether we
want to or not.
'Set us right down,' Dillingsworth instructed the pilot in a clipped, urgent
tone of voice.
'Do so,' Don Stanley of TD chimed in. The pilot nodded.
They were over open countryside, now; the coastline had already fallen
behind them, the wave-washed shore. Sal Heim saw a road. It was not much of a
road, but it could hardly be mistaken for anything else, and, looking along it,
he made out in the distance a vehicle, a sort of cart. Somebody going
uneventfully along the road, on his routine business, Sal realized. He could
see the wheels of the cart, now, and its load. And, in the front, the driver,
who wore a blue cap. The driver did not look up. Evidently he was not aware of
the 'hopper. And then Sal Heim realized that the pilot had cut the jets. The
'hopper was coasting silently down.
'I'm going to place it on the road,' the pilot explained.
'Directly in front of his cart.' He snapped on a retrojet, briefly, to brake
the 'hopper's fall.
Dillingsworth said, 'Christ, I was right.'
As the 'hopper struck, almost all of them were already on their feet,
peering at the cart ahead, trying to discover what it was that the
anthropologist saw. The cart had stopped. The driver stood up in his seat and
stared at the jet-hopper, at them inside it.
Sal Heim thought, There's something wrong with that man. He's - deformed.
A homeopape reporter said gruffly, 'Must be from wartime radiation, from
fallout. God, he looks awful.'
'No,' Dillingsworth said. 'That's not from fallout. Haven't you seen that
before ? 'Where have you seen it before ? Think.'
'In a book,' the little businessman from Kansas City said. 'It's in the book
you have there.' He pointed at Dillingsworth. 'You looked it up after we passed
those fishing boats!' His voice rose squeakily.
Jim Briskin said, 'He's one of the races of pre-humans.'
'He's of the Paleoanthropic wing of primate evolution,' Dillingsworth said.
'I'd guess Sinanthropus, a rather high form of Pithecanthropi, or Peking man,
as he is called. Notice the low vault of the skull, the very heavy brow ridge
which runs unbroken across the forehead above the eyes. The chin is
undeveloped. These are simian features, lost by the true line of Homo sapiens.
The brain capacity, however, is reasonably large, almost as great as our own.
Needless to say, the teeth are quite different from our own.' He added, 'In our
world, this branch of primate evolution came to an end in the Lower
Pleistocene, about a million and a half years ago.'
'Have we ... gone back in time ?' the Kansas City businessman asked.
'No,' Dillingsworth said irritably. 'Not one week. Evidently here Homo
sapiens either did not appear at all or for some reason did not win out. And
Sinanthropus became the dominant species. As in our world we are.'
Frank Woodbine said, 'Yes, I thought he stooped. That one who jumped out of
the glider yesterday.' His voice shook.
'True,' Dillingsworth agreed. 'Sinanthropus was not fully erect. That was an
advantage in plains areas where short grass grew; an erect posture would have
made him a better target.' He spoke flatly. Methodically.
'God,' Sal Heim said. 'So what do we do now ?
There was no answer. From any of them.
What a mess, Sal Heim said to himself as the thirty of them clambered from
the parked 'hopper and surrounded the stalled cart. Too frightened to try to
escape, the driver continued to stare meekly at them all, clutching some sort
of parcel in his arms. He wore, Sal noted, a toga-like one-piece garment. And
his hair, unlike the reconstructions in the museums of dawn men, had been cut
short and tidily. What repercussions there're going to be from this, Sal
realized. Damn it, what rotten luck!
But it was even worse than that. Far, far worse. So Jim Briskin got beaten
at the polls because of this ... so what ? That was a mere pebble in the bottom
of the barrel. In an intuitive flash of insight, he saw the entire thing,
spread out into their lives, ahead. His and Jim's and everyone else's .. whites
and cols alike. Because, in terms of race relations, this was an absolute
calamity.
By the cart, several TD employees and Dillingsworth were rapidly setting up
a linguistics machine. They evidently were going to make the attempt to
communicate with the driver.
Hypnotized by the sight of the apparition seated in he cart, the little
round businessman from Kansas City said stammeringly to Sal, 'Isn't it
something ? Given a chance these near-humans actually figured out how to lay
roads and build carts. And they even made a gas turbine, the TV sad.' He looked
stunned.
'They had a million and a half years to do it,' Sal pointed out.
'But it's still amazing. They built that ship we saw; it was crossing the
Atlantic! I'll bet there isn't an anthropologist in the world who would have
made book on that - bet they could create such an advanced culture, like they
have. I take off my hat to them; I think it's great. It's ... very encouraging,
don't you think ? It sort of makes you realize that ...' He struggled to
express himself. '... that if anything happened to us, to Homo sapiens, other
life forms would go on.'
It did not encourage Sal Heim.
The best thing to do, he said to himself bleakly, is to go back to our world
and then plug up that goddam hole. That entrance between our universe and this.
Forget it ever existed, that we ever saw this.
But we can't, because there'll always be some curious, scientific-type
busybody who'll insist on poking around here. And TD itself; it'll still want
to go over all the artifacts in this world to see what it can make use of. So
it's just not that simple. We can't just shut our eyes, walk off, pretend it
never happened.
'I don't think what these near-men have done here is so great,' Sal said
aloud. 'They're pitifully backward, compared to us, and they've had ten times
as long to do it in. At least ten times; maybe twenty. They haven't discovered
metal, for instance. Take that one example.'
Nobody paid any attention to him. They were all gathering around the
linguistics machine, waiting to see how the attempt at communication was going
to go.
'So who wants to talk to that semi-ape ?' Sal said bitterly. 'Who needs it
?' He walked about in an aimless, futile circle. I've got to get my candidate
out of here, he knew. I can't let him get identified with this.
But Jim Briskin showed no signs of leaving. In fact he had gone up to the
cart and was saying something to the Peking man, talking directly to him.
Probably trying to calm him down. That would be just like Jim.
You damn fool, Sal thought. You're ruining your political career; can't you
see that ? The ramifications of this - am I the only one who can perceive them
? It ought to be obvious. But evidently it was not.
Into the microphone of the TD linguistics machine, Dillingsworth was saying
over and over again, 'We're friends. We're peaceful.' To Stanley he said, 'Is
this thing working or not ? ... We're friends. We come to your world in peace.
We will hurt no one.'
'It takes time,' Stanley explained. 'Keep at it. See, what it has to do is
take the visual images connected to the intrinsically meaningless words, images
which flash up in your brain as you speak, and transmit replicas of those
visual images directly to the brain of...'
'I know how it works,' Dillingsworth said brusquely. 'I'm just anxious for
it to get started before he bolts. You can see he's getting ready to.' Into the
microphone he once agan said, 'We're friends. We come in peace.
All at once the Peking man spoke.
From the audio section of the linguistics machine a strangled noise sounded;
recorded automatically, it was immediately repeated as the tape-deck rewound
and played it back.
'What'd he say ?' the little businessman from Kansas City demanded, looking
around at everyone. 'What'd he say ?'
Dillingsworth said into the mike, 'Are you our friend, too ? Are you friends
with us as we are with you ?'
Going over to Jim Briskin, Sal put his hand on his shoulder and said 'Jim, I
want to talk to you.'
'For God's sake, later,' Jim answered.
'Now,' Sal said. 'It can't wait.'
Jim groaned. 'Jesus, man, are you out of your head ?'
'No, I'm not,' Sal said evenly. 'It's everyone else here who is. Including
you. Come on.' He took hold of Jim by he shoulder and propelled him forcibly
from the group, off to one side of the road. 'Listen,' Sal said. 'How do you define
man ? Go on, define man for me.'
Staring at him Jim said. 'What ?'
'Define man! I'll do it, then. Man's a tool-making animal. Okay, what's all
this - for example, that cart and that hat and that package and that robe ?
Plus the ship we saw and that glider with that compressor and turbine ? Tools.
All of them, broadly speaking. So what does that make that damn creature
sitting up there at the tiller of that cart ? I'll tell you: it makes him a
man, that's what. So he's ugly-looking; so he has a low forehead and beetling
brows and he isn't too bright. But he's bright enough to get in under the wire
and qualify, that's how bright he is goddam it. I mean, my god, he's even built
roads. And...' Sal vibrated with rage.'... he even shot down our QB satellite!'
'Look,' Jim began, wearily, 'this is no time ...'
'It's the only time. We have to get out of here. Back across and
forget what we saw.' But, of course, as Sid well knew., it was hopeless. The
'hopper, for instance, belonged to TD, was piloted by a TD employee to whom Sal
Heim could give no orders. Only Stanley could, and obviously Stanley had no
intention of leaving; he was standing by the linguistics machine, fascinated.
'Let me ask you this,' Sal panted. 'If they're men, and you admit they are,
how're we going to deny them the vote ?'
After a pause Jim said, 'Is that actually what you're worrying about ?'
'Yes,' Sal said.
Turning, Jim walked back to join the group. Without a word. Sal Heim watched
him go.
'He's going to be voting,' Sal said, aloud but to himself. I can see it
coming. And then you know what ? Mixed marriages. Between us and them. Let's go
home; please, let's go home. Okay ?' No one stirred. 'I don't want to foresee
it, but I do,' Sal said. 'Can I help that ? So I'm a prophet. Hell, don't blame
me; blame that thing sitting up there on that cart. It's his fault. He
shouldn't even be existing.'
From the audio circuit of the linguistics machine a guttural, hoarse voice
whispered,'... friend.'
Frantically, Dillingsworth turned to those around him and said, 'It was him;
that was not feedback from what I put in.'
"They don't even have radio, here,' Sal Heim said.
In his N'York office, the private investigator Tito Cravelli received a
puzzling bulletin from his contact at TD, Earl Bohegian: 'First report from
'hopper to TD. World inhabited by apes.'
Taking a calculated risk, Cravelli dialed Terran Development through regular
vidphone channels. When he reached TD's switchboard, he matter of factly asked
to speak to Mr. Bohegian.
'How could you be so foolish as to call me direct ?' Bohegian asked
nervously, when the call was put through to his office.
'Explain your message,' Tito said.
'They're educated apes,' Bohegian said, leaning close to the vidscreen and
speaking in a low, urgent voice. 'You know, missing links.'
'Dawn men,' Tito said, finally understanding. He felt his heart skip a beat.
'Go on, Earl, I want to hear it all; keep talking and if you ring off, I'll
call you right back, so help me God.'
Earl Bohegian muttered, 'The report was given to old Leon Turpin; he's
examining it right now on floor twenty. They're trying to decide if they want
to shut the 'scuttler down and wall the rent up or not. But I don't think
they're gonna, not from what I've heard.'
'No,' Tito agreed. "They won't. There's too much to gain by leaving it
open.'
'But they are sort of upset. Who isn't ? Imagine; here we took it for
granted that humans like ourselves ...'
'Did the 'hopper specifically state which variety of sub-Homo sapiens it is
?' Cravelli asked, trying to remember his college anthropology.
'Peking man. Does that sound right ?'
Cravelli bit his lip. "That's a hell of a low-grade type. One of the
lowest, Now, if it had been Cro-Magnon or even Neanderthal. ...' That would be
another matter. After all, the Palestine archeological discoveries were proof
that Homo sapiens and Neanderthal had already interbred, tens of thousands of
years in the past. And it had evidently done no harm; the Homo sapiens genetic
strain had dominated.
"They're going to bring one back,' Bohegian said. "They've already
got one inside the 'hopper, the scuttlebutt says down in the washroom at the
end of my hall. And they're in lin-com with it. It's docile, one exec told me
just now. Scared out of its wits.'
'Of course it would be,' Cravelli said. 'They probably remember us from
their past, remember getting rid of us.' Just as we got rid of them in our
world, he thought. Wiped them utterly out. 'And now we're back,' he said. 'It
must seem like black magic to them: ghosts from a hundred thousand years ago,
from their own Stone Age. Jeez, what a situation!'
'I've got to ring off,' Bohegian said. 'I told you everything anyhow, Tito.
When there's more...'
'Okay,' Tito Cravelli said and broke the connection.
I wonder if they'll be able to pilot that jet-hopper back across the
Atlantic and then back through the rent to our world, he conjectured. Or will
the Peking people get them along the way ? Good question.
This is going to work havoc with the November election, he said to himself,
broodingly. Who could have possibly anticipated something like this ? Once more
Tito Cravelli saw his Attorney Generalship receding, along with Jim Briskin’s
election.
These parallel worlds are a knotty problem, he realized. I wonder how many
exist. Dozens ? With a different human sub-species dominant on each ? Weird
idea. He shivered. God, how unpleasant ... like concentric rings of hell, each
with its own particular brand of torment.
And then he thought suddenly: Maybe there's one in which a human type
superior to us, one we know nothing about, dominates; one which, in our own
world, we extinguished at its inception. Blotto, right off the bat.
Somebody ought to tinker with a 'scuttler with that in mind, Tito decided.
But then, it occurred to him, they'd show up here, just the way we're appearing
in Peking man's orderly little universe. And we'd be finished. We wouldn't be
able to survive the competition.
Just, he thought, as Peking man isn't going to be able to stand up to us for
long.
The poor clucks. They don't know what's in store for them; their time is
limited, now. Because their ancestral foe has reappeared - and right in their
midst, with TV, rocket-ships, laser rifles, H-bombs, all kinds of devices
inconceivable to their limited mentalities. They spent a million or two years
developing a gas compressor, and what good is it going to do them, now that the
chips are down ? Them and their wooden gliders that travel a hundred feet and
then have to land again. My god, we've got ships in three star systems!
And then he remembered the QB satellite.
How'd they do that ? he asked himself. Remarkable! It doesn't quite fit in.
Because even so, they are an entire evolutionary step below us.
We can lick them with both hands and one frontal lobe of our brain tied
behind our backs... so to speak.
But the assurance of a moment ago had left him and he did not right now feel
quite so secure.
Jim Briskin, he said to himself, you just better darn well get back intact
from that alternate Earth. Because there's going to be a hard row to hoe, here,
for all of us, and we need someone capable. I can see Bill The Cat's Meatman
Schwarz attempting to deal with this problem ... yes, how I can see it.
Once more he dialed TD's Washington, D.C., number and again, when 'he had
their switchboard, asked for Earl Bohegian in 603.
'I want you to let me know,' Tito Cravelli instructed Bohegian when he had
him, 'the moment Jim Briskin crosses back. I don't give a damn about the others
- just him. Got it, Earl ?'
'Sure, Tito,' Bohegian said, nodding.
'Can you get a message to him ? After all, he'll be there in your building,
on the bottom floor.'
'I can try,' Bohegian said, sounding dubious.
'Tell him to call me.'
'Okay,' Bohegian said dutifully, 'I'll do my best.'
Ringing off, Cravelli sat back in his chair, then searched about for a
cigarette. He had done all he could - for now. Here on out he could only sit
and wait, at least until Jim showed up. And, he knew, that might be a long
time.
He thought, then, of something interesting. Perhaps be now understood why
Cally Vale had shot and killed the 'settler repairman with her laser pistol. If
she had run across one of the Peking men, she probably had gone straight into
hysterical shock. Had probably in her state taken the repairman for one more of
them. And after all, most 'settler repairmen - at least, those he had known
-were rather shambling, hunched creatures; the error was easy to comprehend,
once the circumstances were known.
Poor Cally, Tito thought. Stuck over there, supposedly in safety. What a
surprise it must have been, when one of those wooden gliders came sailing past,
one day.
It must have been quite a meeting.
11
Seated in the back of the jet-hopper as it made its return flight across the
Atlantic, the Peking man in his blue cloth cap and toga-like robe declared, 'My
name is Bill Smith.' At least, that was the way the TD linguistics machine
handled the utterance. It was the best the circuits could do. Bill Smith, Sal Heim thought. What an appropriate name the machine's
given it! As American as apple pie. He miserably inspected his wristwatch, for
the tenth time. Aren't we ever going to get back across this ocean ? he
wondered. It did not seem so. Time, for him, stood motionless, and he knew who
to blame; it was Bill Smith's fault. Riding with him in the 'hopper was for Sal
Heim a nightmare, yet totally and completely lucidly real.
'Hello, Bill Smith,' Dillingsworth was saying into the mike, now. 'We are
glad to know you. We admire your science and efforts as represented by your
roads, houses, gliders, ships, motor and clothing. In fact, wherever we look,
we see indications of your people's ability.'
The linguistics machine produced a hubbub of grunts, squeals and yips, to
which the Peking man listened with slack-jawed intensity; his small,
brow-overlain eyes glazed with the effort of paying attention. With a groan,
Sal Heim turned away and looked out the 'hopper window instead.
And to think I handed in my resignation over a little matter like the
disagreement about George Walt, he reflected. What was that compared with this
?
To Jim Briskin, seated beside him, Sal said bitingly, I'm certainly going to
be interested to hear your next speech. Got any idea what you're going to say,
Jim ? For instance, about the emigration situation as regards this new
development.' He waited, but Jim did not answer; hunched over, Jim somberly
scrutinized his interlocked fingers. 'Maybe you could say it's going to be like
the Mason-Dixon Line,' Sal continued. 'With them on one side and us on the
other. Of course, that's if these Pekes agree. And they might just not.'
'Why should they agree ?' Jim said.
'Well, we could offer them the alternative of total annihilation, if Bill
Schwarz can see his way clear in that direction.'
'That's out of the question,' Jim said. 'And I know Schwarz would back me
up. They've got just as much right to exist as we, especially over here. You
know it and I know it and they know it.'
'Is that what you're going to say in your speech ? That it's their planet -
just after having promised that all the bibs can cross over and become farmers
?'
Slowly, Jim said, 'I'm ... beginning to see what you mean.' His lean face
twisted wrathfully. 'Advise me, then. Do your job.'
'This planet,' Sal said, 'will still be able to absorb seventy million bibs.
They can fit in on the North American land-mass. But there's going to be
friction. People - and those deformed things - are going to get killed. It's
going to be roughly a reenactment of the situation when the first white colonists
landed in the New World. You see ? The Pekes in North America will be driven
back, step by step, until the continent is cleared of them; they might as well
resign themselves to that, and you might as well, too. I mean, it's
inevitable.'
'And then what ?'
'And then the trouble - the real trouble - comes. Because sooner or later
it's going to occur to some group or some corporation that if we can use North
America, we can use Europe and Asia as well. And then the fight that was fought
out on both worlds fifty or a hundred thousand years ago is going to take place
again, only not with flint hatchets. It'll be with tactical A-bombs and nerve
gas and lasers, on our side, and on their side ..." He paused,
ruminating.'... with whatever they took out the QB satellite by. Who knows ?
Maybe in a million and a half years they've managed to stumble over and come up
with a source of power we have no knowledge of. Something that's beyond our
conception. Had you thought of that ?'
Jim shrugged.
'And if we press them far enough,' Sal said, 'they'll have to use it on us.
They'd have no choice.'
'We can always slam down the door. Close down the nexus by turning off the
power supply of the 'scuttler.'
'But by that time there'll be seventy million colonists over there. Can we
strand them ?'
'Of course not.'
'Then don't talk about "slamming the door down". That's not going
to be the answer. The moment the first bib passes over, that's out.' Sal
pondered. 'That Bill Smith, back there; for him this is like a ride in a flying
saucer would be for one of us. Think what he can tell his playmates when he
gets back home. If he ever does.'
'What's a flying saucer ?'
Sal said, 'Back in the twentieth century a number of people claimed ...'
'I remember,' Jim nodded.
'If you were president already,' Sal said, 'if you held formal authority,
you could meet with some enormous dignitary from their world, assuming they
have a government of some kind. But right now you're just a private individual;
you can't bind this country to anything. And Schwarz, if history repeats
itself, won't do a damn thing because he knows he'll soon be out of office.
He'll leave it to be dumped in your lap. And by January it'll probably be too
late to settle this peacefully.'
'Phil Danville,' Jim said, 'can write me a speech that'll capture this
situation and explain it.'
Sal guffawed. 'Like hell he can. Nobody is going to be able to
capture this situation, especially an intellectual simp like Phil Danville. But
let him try. Let's see what Danville can come up with.' Say by tomorrow night,
Sal thought. Or the day after, at the very latest.
From his pocket he brought out the itinerary, unfolded it carefully and
began to study it.
'I have to speak in Cleveland,' Jim said. 'Tonight.'
In the back of the 'hopper, the Peking man Bill Smith, by means of the
linguistics equipment, was saying,'... metal is evil. It belongs inside the
Earth with the dead. It is part of the once-was, where everything goes when its
time is over.'
'Philosophy,' Sal said in disgust. 'Listen to him.' He jerked his head.
'And that's why you don't build with it ?' Dillingsworth asked, speaking
into the mike of the machine.
'We have areas we avoid,' Jim said to Sal. 'You'd think twice before making
a human skull into a drinking cup and using it every day.'
'Is that what Pekes do ?' Sal said, horrified.
'I believe I read that somewhere about them,' Jim said. 'At least their
ancestors did. The practice may have disappeared by now.' He added, "They
were cannibals.'
'Great,' Sal said and resumed studying the itinerary. "That's just what
we need to win the election.'
'Schwarz would have brought it out,' Jim said, 'eventually.'
Glancing out the 'hopper window at the ocean below, Sal said, 'I'll be
relieved to get out of here. And you won't catch me emigrating. I'd rather do
like your folks and give Mars a try, even if I wound up dying of thirst. At
least I wouldn't get eaten. And nobody would use my skull for a drinking cup.'
He felt severely depressed, meditating about that, and he did his best to
reinvolve his attention in the itinerary.
How's the first Negro President of the United States going to go about
handling the presence of a planetful of dawn linen who've proved themselves
capable of constructing a fairly adequate civilization ? Sal Heim asked himself.
A race that, in theory, shouldn't have been able to get past the flint-chipping
stage. But after all, each of us started out chipping flint. What's been proved
here is that given time enough .,.
I know I'm right, Sal thought. There isn't a single legal basis on which
these Pekes can be denied full rights under our laws - except, of course, that
they're not U.S. citizens
Was that the only barrier ? He had to laugh. What a way to stop an invasion
of Earth by denying the invaders citizenship.
But there was, sadly, a joker in that, too. Because U.S. citizens would be
emigrating to this world, in which the jet-hopper now droned, and in
this universe U.S. citizenship had no significance; the Pekes were here first
and could prove prior residence. So it would be wise not to raise the issue of
citizenship after all...
What'll we do, then, Sal asked himself, when our people and the Pekes begin
to interbreed ? Do you want your daughter to marry a Peke ? he asked himself
fiercely. Now the Ku Klux Klanners really have their job cut out for
thorn.
It was potentially pretty nasty.
At the front door of Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service, Stuart
Hadley stood leaning on his autonomic broom, watching the people go past. With
Dar Pethel gone today, a weight had been lifted from him; he could do what he
pleased.
As he stood there mentally magnifying his new status by a few well-chosen
daydreams, a slender red-haired shape, full-bosomed and young, all at once
strolled up to him, her lace stormy. 'They've closed the satellite down,'
Sparky said, massive, defeated bitterness.
Awakened, Hadley said, 'W-what ?'
'George Walt, that no-good crink, kicked us out this morning. It's all over
up there. I have absolutely no idea why. So I came right here to you. What'll
we do ?' With her toe she nudged a bit of rubbish from the sidewalk into the
gutter, glumly.
He reacted. It was superb corto-thalamic response; he was all there, as
alert as fine steel. The time had arrived for one of those unique, binding-type
decisions which would shape everything to come. 'You set out for the right
place, Sparky,' he informed her.
'I know that, Stuart.'
'We'll emigrate.' There it was, the decision.
She glanced sharply up. 'How ? Where ? To Mars ?'
'I love you,' Hadley announced to her. He had given it a great deal of
thought. The hell with his wife Mary and his job - everything that made up his
little routine life.
"Thank you, Stuart,' Sparky said. 'I'm glad you do. But explain where
you and I are going to go, for chrissakes, especially where they can't find
us.'
'I've got contacts,' Hadley said. 'Believe me, have I got contacts!
You know where I can put us ?' In a flash he had it all planned; it leaped
fully formed, completed, into his busy brain. 'Get set Sparky.'
I'm set.' She eyed him.
'Across. To that virgin world Jim Briskin talked about in his Chicago
speech. I can actually - and I'm not kidding you - get us there.'
She was impressed. Her eyes grew large. 'Gee.'
'So go and pack your things,' Hadley instructed her rapidly. 'Give me your
vidnumber at your conapt. As soon as I've got the details set up, I'll call you
and we'll take off for Washington, D.C.' He explained, "That's where the
nexus is, right now. At TD. That makes it awkward, naturally, but we can still
do it.'
'How'll we live over there, Stuart ?
'Let me handle that.' He had worked it all out. It practically blinded him,
it was so entire. 'Get going - that damn law that forbids us to meet down here,
we don't want to get picked up before we can get away.' And, in addition to the
police, he also was thinking about Mary. Every now and then his wife dropped by
the store. One glimpse of Sparky and it would be all over; he would be married
the rest of his life, possibly two hundred more years. It was not much of a
prospect.
On the inside of a match-folder Sparky wrote her vidnumber and gave it to
him. He put it away reverently in his billfold and then resumed sweeping with
the autonomic broom.
'You're sweeping ? ' Sparky exclaimed. 'I thought we were going to
emigrate from Earth; isn't that what you just now said ?'
'I'm waiting,' Hadley explained patiently. 'For my top-level contact. Nobody
can cross over unless they've got someone they know placed up high, there, at
TD. My contact's got carte blanche at TD; he's a wheel. But I have to wait for
him to get back here.' He explained, 'He's been at TD all day, on important
business.'
'Ding-aling,' Sparky said, awed.
He gave her a swift, brief goodbye kiss and sent her off; her slim figure
receded down the sidewalk and then was lost, for the time being, to sight.
Hadley swept on, plotting in his mind the last, infinitely tiny details of his
scheme. Everything - unfortunately - depended on Darius Pethel. I hope he shows
up soon, Hadley said to himself. Before I jump clear out of my skin.
Two hours later, Darius Pethel appeared from the direction of the all day
parking lot, his face gray. Mumbling, he passed by Hadley, who still stood out
front, and vanished into the store.
Something was bothering Dar, Hadley realized. Bad time to prevail on him,
but what choice did he have ? He followed after Pethel and found him in the
rear office, hanging up his coat.
Pethel said, 'What a day. I wish I could tell you what we ran into over
there, but I can't. It's classified; we all agreed. At least we got back here.
That's something.' He began rolling up his sleeves and taking an initial look
at the day's mail on his desk.
'You've really got those bigshots at TD over a barrel.' Hadley said. 'You
could whip that 'scuttler out of there any time, so fast it'd make their heads
swim. And then where'd they be ? In fact I'd say you're one of the most
important persons in the universe, right now.'
Seated at his desk, Pethel eyed him sourly.
Huskily, Stuart Hadley said, 'How about it, Dar ?'
'How about what ?'
'Set it up so I can go across.'
Pethel stared at him as if he were deranged, and repellently so. 'Get out of
here.' He began tearing open his mail.
'I mean it,' Hadley said. I'm in love, Dar. I'm leaving. You can get me -
the two of us - out of here and across to the other side where we can start our
lives over.'
'First of all,' Pethel said, 'you don't know what's over there; you don't
have the slightest idea."
'I know what Jim Briskin said in his speech.'
'Briskin, when he made that speech, hadn't been over there either. Second,
Mary would never ...'
'I don't mean Mary,' Hadley said. I'm going with someone else, the first
person I ever met who really understood and I could talk to instead of live out
a fake role in front of. Sparky and I are going to be the first couple to
emigrate and take up a new life in a virgin world half-way down the tube of
that Jiffi-scuttler. Don't try to talk me out of it; it's impossible. Write out
some sort of note that'll get me into TD's labs. We're depending on you, Dar.
Two human lives ...'
'Aw for god's sake,' Pethel protested. 'How are you going to live over there
?'
'How did Cally Vale live ?'
'Sands transported one of these old obsolete A-bomb shelters over.
Subsurface. Filled with supplies. She lived down in that.'
Hadley said, 'Is the shelter still over there ?'
'Of course. What would be the point of transporting it back ?'
'We'll live in that, then. Until we can build.'
'What happens when the food in the shelter runs out ? Assuming it hasn't
already.'
Seating himself on the edge of Dar Pethel's desk, Hadley said, 'I called
around. You can pick up one of those colonization units dirt cheap these days;
the manufacturers are going broke because virtually nobody is emigrating.
They're glad to get rid of one at any price, and the unit contains autonomic
farming equipment, well-drilling rig, basic tools for...'
'Okay,' Pethel said, nodding. 'I know what those colonization units contain;
I admit one of them can sustain you indefinitely. So you got that part figured
out - not bad.'
With fat, sleek pride Hadley said, 'I've even arranged for the unit to be
delivered at TD's offices in Washington later today.' He had thought of
everything. 'Let's be realistic, Dar; a lot of people are going to be
emigrating, and I want to get there first. I want things to be good for me and
Sparky. So will you write out whatever it'll take to get her and me into TD and
into that 'scuttler ? I ought to have some priority; I was down in the repair
department with Erickson when it happened, remember ?' He waited. Pethel said
nothing. 'Come on,' Hadley said. 'The forces of time and change are running
against you, Dar. And you know it, deep down inside.'
'Yes, but they always have,' Pethel murmured. He got a sheet of paper,
brought out his pen. 'Are you really in - how did you describe it ? - love
with her ?'
Hadley said, 'On my mother's honor.'
Wincing, Pethel began to write.
'I'll never forget you for this,' Hadley said. 'And I hate like hell to
leave you stranded with no sales manager ... but it can't be helped; she's
depending on me.' He explained, 'George Walt, you know, those two mutants who
own the satellite, they closed everything down.'
Pethel ceased writing, lifted his head. 'No kidding.' He scowled. 'I wonder
what that means. I wonder what they have in mind.'
'Who cares what they have in mind ?' Hadley said fervently. 'I'm getting out
of here.'
'But I'm not,' Pethel pointed out. He slowly resumed writing, deep in
frowning thought.
When Leon Turpin, chairman of the board of directors of Terran Development, heard
the news about the Pekes he was fit to be tied. How can we get any new
industrial techniques out of that! he asked himself. Dawn men don't have
anything on the ball, technologically speaking.
'Flint axes,' Turpin spat out disappointedly. 'So that's what's over there;
that's what hopped out of that childish glider. And we've expended a QB
satellite, seven million dollars.' Of course there were still mineral rights.
The Pekes, according to Don Stanley's report, definitely did not mine;
therefore, everything below the soil remained intact.
But that was not enough. Turpin yearned for more. There had to be
more. His mind reverted to the fallen satellite. They did manage to knock that
out, he realized, and we're still having trouble doing that.
Across from him Don Stanley shifted about restlessly in his chair. 'If you'd
like to see the Peking man we brought back, this Bill Smith, as the linguistics
machine calls him - '
'If I want to see a Peking man,' Turpin said, 'I'll look in the Britannica.
That's where they belong, Stanley, not walking around on the face of the globe
as if they owned it. But I guess it can't be helped, not at this late date.'
From his desk he picked up a letter. 'Here's a young couple, Art and Rachael
Chaffy, that want to emigrate over there. The first of a horde. Why not ? Call
them up and tell them to come by, and we'll let them go across.' He tossed the
letter toward Eton Stanley.
'Should I explain to them the risks ?"
Turpin shrugged. 'I don't see why you should; that's not our business. Let
them find out the hard way. Colonists are supposed to be hardy and brave. At
least they used to be, in my time. Back in the twentieth century, when we first
started landing on the planets. This certainly is no worse than that; in fact
it's considerably better.'
'You've got a point, Mr. Turpin.' Stanley folded the letter and placed it in
his breast pocket.
The intercom on Turpin's desk said, 'Mr. T, there's an official from the
U.S. Department of Special Public Welfare here to see you. It's Mr. Thomas
Rosenfeld, commissioner of the department.'
Cabinet level, Turpin said to himself. A big man. Capable of setting policy.
He said to the intercom, 'Send Mr. Rosenfeld in.' To Stanley he said, 'You know
what this is going to be ?'
'Bibs,' Stanley said.
'I can't make up my mind whether to tell him or not,' Turpin said. The news
about the Pekes would very soon, of course, begin to seep out; it was a
temporary secret only. But still, that was better than nothing. The party had
just returned from the other side, and the media people who had been along
could not possibly have released the news through their services so soon.
Rosenfeld, then, did not know; he could assume that. And could deal with the
man accordingly.
A tall, red-haired man, well-dressed, entered Turpin's office, smiling. 'Mr.
Turpin ? What a pleasure. President Schwarz asked me to drop by here for a
little while and sort of chat with you. Sound you out, as it were. Is that an
original Ramon Cadiz you have there on the wall behind you ?' Rosenfeld walked
over to inspect it. 'White on white. His best period.
'I'd give the painting to you,' Turpin said, 'but it was a gift to me. I
know you'll understand.' He lied in his feet, but why not ? Why, for purposes
of mere etiquette, should he give away a costly work of art ? It made no sense.
Rosenfeld said, 'How's your defective 'scuttler functioning ? Still as
defective as ever ? We're very interested in it. We were, even before Jim
Briskin's speech ... President Schwarz was exceptionally quick - even for him -
to spot the potentialities in this. I don't believe anyone else is able to
reach a major decision as efficiently as he.'
This was odd, in view of the fact that no way existed by which Schwarz could
have known about the break-through prior to Briskin's speech, Turpin realized.
However, he let this pass. Politics was politics.
Don Stanley spoke up. 'How many sleepers do you have in the fedgov
warehouses, Mr. Rosenfeld ?
'Well,' Rosenfeld said dryly, 'the figure generally given is close to seventy
million. But actually the true number at this date is more like one hundred
million.' He smiled a wry, humorless smile that was more a grimace than
anything else.
Whistling, Stanley said, 'That's a lot.'
'Yes, ' Rosenfeld agreed. 'We admit it. Domestically speaking, it's the
number one headache here in Washington. Of course as you very well know, this
administration inherited it from the last.'
'You want us to put your hundred million bibs through into this alternate
Earth ?' Turpin spoke up, weary of formalities.
'If the situation is such that...'
'We can do it,' Turpin said shortly. 'But you understand our role in this is
simply a technologic one. We provide the means of conveyance to this other
'Earth, but we make no warranty as to the conditions that obtain over there.
We're not anthropologists or sociologists or whoever it is that knows about
such things.'
Rosenfeld nodded. 'That's understood. We're not going to try to compel you
to produce any given set of conditions, over there. Your job, as you say, is
merely to get the persons across, and the rest is up to them. The government
takes the identical position regarding itself; we put forth no warranty,
either. This will be strictly on an as-is basis. If the settlers don't like
what they find, they can return.'
To himself Turpin thought acutely: So Schwarz doesn't actually care what
happens to them after they emigrate. He just wants those warehouses empty and
the enormous financial drain involved abolished.
'As to our costs ...' Turpin began.
'We've worked out a proposed schedule,' Rosenfeld said, digging into his
briefcase. 'Per capita and then extrapolated. Basing this on the figure of one
hundred million persons, this is what we feel would be an equitable return for
your corporation.' He slid a folded document to Leon Turpin and sat back to
wait
Turpin, examining the figure, blanched.
Coming around behind him, Don Stanley also looked. He grunted and said in a
strained voice, That's a good deal of money, Mr. Rosenfeld.'
'It's a good deal of a problem.' Rosenfeld said, candidly.
Glancing up, Turpin said, 'It's actually worth that much to you ?'
'Our costs in the Dept of SPW are ...' Rosenfeld gestured. 'Let's simply say
they're excessive.'
But that doesn't explain this figure, Turpin decided. However, I know what
does. If you can get the ball rolling light away, get the bibs started on their
trek to the alter-Earth, you'll have deprived Jim Briskin of his major
appeal. Why vote for Briskin when the incumbent is already shipping the
bibs across as rapidly as possible ?
As rapidly as possible. Turpin thought suddenly: But just how rapidly is
that ? To Don Stanley he said, 'How fast can full-grown human beings be put
through that rent ?'
'It would have to be one at a time,' Stanley said, after a thoughtful pause.
'Since it's not very large. In fact, as you probably recall, you have to stoop
down to get through.'
With pencil and paper Turpin began to calculate.
Allowing five seconds for each person - which was not a great deal - the
time involved in conveying one hundred million bibs across would be
approximately twenty years.
Seeing the figures, Don Stanley said, 'But they don't care; they're asleep.
For them twenty years is...'
'But I imagine Mr. Rosenfeld cares,' Turpin said caustically.
'Is that how long it would require ?' Rosenfeld looked a little
unnerved. 'That is a long time.'
Turpin reflected that Bill Schwarz, by the time the job had been completed,
would have been out of office sixteen years. Probably totally forgotten, to
boot. So there was no use trying to sell the fedgov on the idea. The time
element would simply have to be cut down.
To Don Stanley, Turpin said, 'Can that rent be enlarged ?'
Pondering, Stanley answered, 'Probably. Increased grid voltage or
oscillation within the field as it...'
'I don't want to know how,' Turpin said. "I just want to see it done.'
If two persons could pass through simultaneously, the time would be cut to ten
years. And four at once, only five years. That might satisfy the politicians in
the White House.
'Five years would be acceptable,' Rosenfeld said, when he had looked over
Turpin's figures.
'We'll finalize on that basis, then,' Don Stanley said. But he had a worried
expression on his face, and Turpin knew why. Don was thinking, Can it be
done ? Can we enlarge the rent that much ?
Rising, Rosenfeld said, 'Good enough. Legal people from my department will
draw up the contract in the next day or so, and procurement will go through the
process of validating it. Red tape - we can't seem to get away from it. But
this will give you time to implement your engineering changes.'
'It was nice meeting you, Mr. Rosenfeld,' Turpin said, as they shook hands.
'I presume we'll see you again from time to time as this matter is expedited.'
'I find it highly rewarding, working with you, sir,' Rosenfeld said. 'And I
admire your taste in art; that's only the second Ramon Cadiz I've seen this
year. Good day, Mr. Turpin. Mr. Stanley.'
The door closed after Rosenfeld.
Presently Don Stanley said, 'They like being in office.'
'Everybody likes being in office,' Turpin said. 'We call that human nature.'
He wondered what the government would do when the news about the Pekes appeared
in every homeopape in the country. Rescind the contract ? Abandon the whole
idea ?
He doubted it. Either Schwarz did this or he lost in November; it was as
simple as that Pekes or no Pekes. Of course, the president would send a few
Marine commando units to accompany the bibs, to make certain that all was in
order. Alter-Earth might require an interval of pacifying, to say the least.
But it could be done. Turpin had no doubt of it."
And anyhow that was not TD's problem - TD had its technological hands full
already. Enlarging the rent in the 'scuttler might very well prove to be
impossible, at least within the time available to TD's technicians.
But I want this contract, Leon Turpin said to himself. I want it very badly,
enough to do everything I can to acquire it. Perhaps the solution is to
fabricate another Jiffi-scuttler, identical to the one downstairs, hopefully
malfunctioning in the same way. Or two or five or even ten of them, with bibs
passing in single file through each, in unending lines.
What about equipment ? Turpin asked himself suddenly. Rosenfeld had not
expressed himself in that area. Was the government going to turn these people
loose in an alien world with no hardware ? Without proper machinery the colony
on the other side would be nothing more than a huge DP camp. To function at
all, the colony had to be self-sustaining; that was obvious to anyone who took
the trouble to think about it ten minutes. And it would take time, a good deal
of time, to ferry across sufficient gear for one hundred million people; the
logistics of it would be incredible. It would be something like thirty-three
times the problem of supply on D-day, back in World War Two. The government was
out of its mind. The policy planners were so enmeshed in the political
significance of the alter-Earth that they had lost sight of factual reality.
It could easily become the grandest confusion in recorded times.
But I refuse to worry about that, Leon Turpin reminded himself. It's not my
responsibility; mine's discharged in the drayage. If things get too far out of
hand too soon, Schwarz will be bounced right out of office and the burden will
fall on Jim Briskin or whatever his name is. And that's just where it ought to
be, because it was his speech that got this all started.
'Get everyone downstairs assembled in one spot where they can hear you,'
Turpin instructed Don Stanley.
'How much time do you estimate we've got ?' Stanley asked.
'Days. Merely days. There's a presidential campaign going on, or had that
slipped your mind ? We've already given Briskin a boost by letting Frank
Woodbine talk us into conveying him over there; now let's see what we can do
for Bill Schwarz.' And what we can do for Schwarz is a good deal more than we
did for Briskin. Which was, in itself, rather substantial.
Don Stanley departed, to make the situation known to the experts on level
one. As he passed out through the office door one of Leon Turpin's many
secretaries entered. 'Mr. Turpin, there's a young couple on floor five who sent
this up to you; they said you should see it at once.' The secretary added,
'It's from Mr. Pethel.'
'Who's Mr. Pethel ?' The name did not ring a bell.
'The owner of the Jiffi-scuttler, sir. The one downstairs in the lab; you
know, the important one.' She presented him with the message.
Opening it, Leon Turpin saw at a glance that it consisted of a request for
him to permit the young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Hadley, to make use of Pethels
'scuttler in order to emigrate to alter-Earth. Time was of the essence, for
reasons Pethel did not choose to state.
'All right,' Turpin said to the girl, 'I have no objection and we have to
cater to this Pethel person to some extent.' As he laid the message on his
desk, he once more noticed the application from the other young couple, Art and
Rachael Chaffy. That's right, he remembered. Don was supposed to call them, but
I guess he forgot in all the excitement. Well, he can do it later. He's got
their letter with him.
The Chaffys and the Hadleys can compete, Turpin reflected, as to who becomes
the first American family to emigrate to alter-Earth. I suppose there should be
some publicity attached to this. Homeopape reporters, TV newsmen and the like.
President Schwarz cutting a big blue ribbon hung across the entrance hoop of
the 'scuttler. Or perhaps a bottle of champagne swung against the side of the
'scuttler and an heroic name given it.
To the secretary he said, 'Ask the Hadleys to come up here to my office.'
Several minutes later she returned and with her came a blond, genial-looking
young man and a fabulously-attractive red-headed girl who seemed sheepish and
ill-at-ease.
'Sit down,' Leon Turpin said in a friendly voice.
'Mr. Bethel's my boss,' Hadley said. 'Rather, my ex-boss. I had to quit in
order to emigrate.' He and 'Mrs. Hadley' seated themselves. 'This is the
greatest moment in our entire lives. We're going to start a new life.' Hadley
squeezed his 'wife's' hand. 'Right ?'
'Yes,' she murmured almost inaudibly, nodding. She did not look at Turpin
directly, and he wondered why.
I've seen this girl somewhere before, Turpin realized. But where ?
'Are you fully equipped ?' he asked the Hadleys.
Briskly, Hadley gave him a long list of items they were taking; it sounded
complete, if not ornate. Turpin wondered idly how they expected to lug it all
across. Nobody on floor one would be offering them a hand; that was certain.
'Children,' Leon Turpin said, 'Terran Development is glad to contribute to a
new awakening, both metaphorically and quite literally, of the young people of
America...' And then, abruptly, he remembered where he met full-breasted, young
Mrs. Hadley before. He had gotten her at the Golden Door Moments of Bliss
satellite. After all, he visited it twice a week, had done so ever since it had
been built.
This is really terribly appropriate, Turpin said to himself, hiding his
glee. The first couple to emigrate to the new world consists of a customer of
the Golden Door satellite escaping with one of Thisbe Olt's girls. Too bad this
could not be made public. It was delightful.
'I wish you two luck,' Leon Turpin said, and giggled.
12
Within one week the initial collection of bibs passed through the
Jiffi-scuttler and into another world entirely, to virtually everyone's
satisfaction. On TV the country watched it and in person Leon Turpin, President
Schwarz, the Republican-Liberal candidate James Briskin, and Darius Pethel -
who owned the 'scuttler - and other pertinent notables looked on with a galaxy
of emotions, most of them concealed.
The darn fools, Dar Pethel thought as he watched the steady line of men and
women trudge past the entrance hoop. It made him sick to his stomach, and he
turned and walked to the far end of TD's lab, to light a cigarette. Don't they
know what's going to happen to them on the other side ? Don't they care ?
Doesn't anyone care ?
I ought to close it down, Pethel said to himself. It's my 'scuttler. And
I've decided I don't want it used for this, not now, not after my trip over
there, that 'hopper ride back across the Atlantic with Bill Smith.
He wondered where Bill Smith, the Peking man, was now. Perhaps at Yale Psychiatric
Institute or some such august place, being put through aptitude and profile
tests, one after another. And of course being subjected to relentless
questioning regarding the ingredients of his culture.
Some of Bill Smith's testimony had leaked to the homeopapes. The Pekes had
not, for instance, discovered glass. Rubber, too, was unknown to them, as were
electricity, gunpowder, and, of course, atomic energy. But, more mysteriously,
both clocks and the steam engine had never been stumbled onto or developed by
the Pekes, and Dar Pethel could make no sense out of that. In fact, their
entire society was an enigma to him.
However, one thing was certain: there had been no Thomas Edison on
alter-Earth. Phonographs, light bulbs, and, for that matter, the telephone and
even the ancient telegraph, were absent. What inventions they did have - for
example the technique of laying crushed rock roads - had been developed over
enormously long periods, microscopically elaborated by each generation
mosaic-style. Except for the odd, complex compressor and turbine system,
nothing seemed to have come to the Pekes in a single creative leap.
The device by which the QB satellite had been knocked off remained a
mystery; Bill Smith knew nothing about it, according to the homeopapes, and
knew nothing even of the satellite. The linguistics machine appeared to be
unable to clarify the situation.
Jim Briskin, as he also watched, found himself dwelling on the gloomier
aspects of the situation.
Where we made our mistake, he decided, was in not coming to some kind of
rapprochement with the Pithecanthropi. It should have been done before a single
emigrant crossed over ... now, of course, it's too late. But of course
President Schwarz had to proceed swiftly if this was to become a way of stealing
Jim Briskin's thunder. Both men knew this. In his situation, Jim mulled, I
probably would have done the same.
But that doesn't make it any less lethal.
Standing beside him, Sal Heim murmured, 'When do you think they'll be
streaming back ? Or will they be able to get back ?'
'Cally Vale stood it. Alone. Possibly they can adapt; it's certainly more
viable an environment than Mars.' In fact, there was no comparison. Mars was
utterly impossible and everyone knew it. 'It all depends on the reaction of the
Peking people.' And, he reflected, since the Schwarz administration couldn't
wait to find that out, we'll have to learn it the hard way. In terms of the
loss of human life.
'What I'm trying to figure out,' Sal murmured, 'is whether the public still
identifies you with this or whether Schwarz has succeeded in....'
'Even if you knew that,' Jim said, 'you wouldn't know anything. Because we
don't know yet what the upshot of this mass migration is going to be, and I
have a feeling that when we find out it won't matter who gets the credit for
it; well all be in the pot together.'
Sal said, 'I heard an interesting rumor on my way here. You're aware that
George Walt have been missing since they shut down the Golden Door. According
to this rumor ...' Sal chuckled. 'They emigrated.'
Feeling a pervasive, shocked chill, Jim said, "They what ? To
alter-Earth, you mean ?'
'Right through this 'scuttler, here, that we're looking at.'
'But that ought to be easy to check on. If George Walt had passed through,
TD's engineers would certainly remember; they could hardly mistake George Walt
for anybody else.' He was now deeply disturbed. 'I'll see what Leon Turpin has
to say about it.'
'Don't be so sure George Walt would be noticed,' Sal said. 'He, the actual
living brother, may have carried his synthetic twin over in dissembled form,
identified as maintenance and colonizing equipment; everyone who goes across
carries something, some of them a couple tons.'
'Why would George Walt emigrate ?' In fact, why had they shut the satellite
down ? Nobody had been able to explain that to his satisfaction, although a
number of theories had been floating around, the central one being that George
Walt anticipated Jim's election and realized that their day had virtually
arrived.
'Maybe the Pekes will take care of them,' Sal offered. 'They would be rather
a disheartening apparition, appearing in their midst; the Pekes might take it
as a bad omen and cast the two of them back here in pieces.'
'Who would be able to find this out ?' Jim said.
'You mean what George Walt are up to on the other side - assuming they're
there ? Perhaps Tito Cravelli.'
'How would Tito know ? He doesn't have any contacts among the Peking
people.'
Sal said, 'Tito keeps tabs on everything.'
'Not on this,' Jim disagreed. 'George Walt, if they've crossed over, have
gone where we can't scrutinize them; that's the cold, hard truth and we might
as well face it.' Broodingly he said, 'If I was positive they'd crossed over, I
think I'd seriously plead with TD to shut the 'scuttler down. To keep them
bottled up over there, for the rest of eternity.'
'Are you that much afraid of George Walt ?'
'Sometimes I am. Especially very late at night. I am right now, hearing
about this.' He moved a little away from Sal Heim, feeling depressed. 'I
thought we were through with George Walt," he said.
Through with them ? Without killing them ?' Sal laughed.
I guess in the final analysis I'm not very bright, Jim Briskin said to
himself glumly. We should have finished it, up there at the satellite, when we
almost had them. Instead we chose to shuffle naively back to Terra, for what
seemed a good idea at the time: a cup of hot syntho-coffee.
Now, it did not seem very brilliant. The passage of even a little time was a
great edifier.
Sal said sardonically, 'Hell, Jim, maybe you won their respect by being so
charitable.' He obviously did not think so. Far from it.
'You're a great second-guesser,' Jim said, with bitterness. 'Where were you
with your advice then ?'
Sal said quietly, 'Nobody expected them to do something so radical as close
the Golden Door. What happened up there on the satellite that day must really
have shaken them.'
Coming up beside him, ancient Leon Turpin leered happily and cackled, 'Well,
Briskin, or whatever you call yourself, that's the first batch of bibs.
Historic, isn't it ? Makes you feel young again, doesn't it ? Say something. At
least, smile.' To Sal he said, 'Is he always this solemn ?'
'Jim runs deep, Mr. Turpin,' Sal said. 'You have to get accustomed to it.'
'Just wait until we get that rent enlarged,' Turpin wheezed. 'My boys have
been on it all week and tonight they're going to hook up an entirely different
power source; it's all plotted out, rechecked dozens of times. By tomorrow morning,
we should have a hole two to three times bigger. And then we can really hustle
them through. Zip.' He made a quick gesture.
'Have you made thorough provision,' Jim said, 'to receive them back in the
event something goes wrong on the other side ?'
'Well,' Leon Turpin conceded, 'the 'scuttler will be turned off most of the
night as the boys work it over. Nobody can pass through then, of course. But we
weren't expecting any trouble. At least not so soon.'
Sal and Jim glanced at each other.
'President Schwarz said it would be agreeable,' Turpin added. 'After all,
our contract is with the Dept of SPW. We're acting well within the law. There's
nothing that compels us to keep the 'scuttler running at all times.'
God pity those colonists, Jim Briskin said to himself, if anything does go
wrong tonight.
"They know about the Pekes,' Turpin protested. 'It's been in the papes
constantly; nothing's been concealed from them; as soon as they were revived
the situation was explained to them in detail. Nobody forced them to
go.'
Jim said, 'They were given the choice of going across or being put back to
sleep.' He knew that for a fact; Tito had informed him.
'As far as I'm concerned,' Leon Turpin said sulkily, 'those people are over
there voluntarily. And any risk they're taking - '
You skunk, Jim Briskin thought.
It was going to be a long night. At least for him.
At eleven p.m. Tito Cravelli received from one of his almost infinite number
of paid contacts a piece of news which did not resemble anything he had ever
picked up before. Frankly, he did not know whether to laugh or rush to the
tocsin; it was simply too goddam peculiar. He mixed himself a whiskey sour in
the kitchen of his conap and pondered. The datum had reached him by a
circuitous route; initially it had been piped from a TD exploration team on the
other side of the 'scuttler nexus, prior to the shutting-down of the 'scuttler,
and from there to Bohegian, whereupon Earl had of course relayed it to him. Was
it possibly a gag ? If he could regard it that way, it would be a distinct
relief. But he could not afford to; it might be bona fide. And in that case...
Back in the living room, he dialed Jim Briskin's number. 'Listen to this,'
Cravelli said, when he had Jim on the vidscreen. He did not bother to apologize
for waking Jim up; that hardly mattered. 'See what you can make out of this.
George Walt is with the Pekes, at their population center in northern Europe.
TD's field corps believes they made contact with the Pekes somewhere in North
America, and the Pekes then transported them across the Atlantic.'
'So quickly ?' Jim said. 'I thought they had nothing better than slow
surface ships.'
'Here's the substance of it. The Pekes have installed George Walt at their
capital and are worshipping them as a god.'
There was silence.
Finally Jim said, 'How - did the TD field corps find this out ?'
'From parleys with North American Pekes. They've been palavering
continually; you know that. Those linguistics machines have been droning on
night and day. The Pekes are - dazzled. Well, weren't we a little in awe of
George Walt ourselves ? It's not so odd when you think of it. I'd make book
that George Walt went there anticipating some such reaction as that; they
probably did some groundwork In advance.'
Jim said cryptically, 'Another one of Sal's predictions bites the dust.' He
looked weary. 'Cravelli, you know we're over our head. Schwarz is over his
head. If someone suggested shutting - '
'And strand those people over there ?'
"They can be brought back tomorrow morning. And then it could be shut
down.'
'There's too much momentum behind it now,' Cravelli pointed out. 'You can't
turn off a mass movement like that. In Dept of SPW warehouses all over the
United States, they're rousing the sleepers right and left. Assembling
equipment, arranging transportation to Washington, D.C. -'
'I'll call Schwarz,' Jim said.
'He won't listen to you. He'll think you're just trying to regain a primary
relationship to the project, a relationship which he inherited by moving so
quickly. Schwarz has the initiative now, Jim, not you. His whole political life
depends on pushing those bibs across as fast as possible. Fix yourself a great
big stiff type drink. That's what I did. And then go back to bed. I'll talk to
you again in the morning. Maybe in the light of day we can hatch something
out.' But he didn't think so.
Jim said, 'I'll talk to Leon Turpin, then.'
'Ha! Turpin and Schwarz are interlaced through that lush contract let to TD
through Rosenfeld; it's a masterpiece. You can't offer TD that kind of money -
I hear it involves billions of dollars, and all TD has to do is keep the
'scuttler going, just stand there and pump power to it.' Cravelli added, 'And
enlarge the aperture, I understand. But that ought to be easy enough; they've
been studying it for the last week.' In fact they had probably already
accomplished it. 'I'm going back to my drink, now. And then I'm going to fix
another and then ...'
"There's one man who can stop this. The owner of the 'scuttler. I met
him on that trip across the Atlantic. Darius Pethel, in Kansas City.'
'Yes, he claims it as part of his inventory. But dammit, Jim, are you
really sure you want to shut down the 'scuttler and stop emigration ? It
would be the end of you politically. Sal must have told you that already.'
Woodenly, Jim nodded. 'Yes. Sal told me.'
'Don't do anything tonight'
'We're in the grip of fate,' Jim said. 'We can't do anything; we've
started something bigger than all of us put together. We may be seeing the end
of the human race.'
'Humanum est errare,' Cravelli said, assuming he was joking. But was
he ? 'You don't mean that,' Cravelli said, stricken. 'I hate that kind of talk;
it's morbid and defeatist and ten other things, all of them bad. That acceptance
speech you gave at the nominating convention; it was cut out of the same lousy
cloth. Sal ought to give you a good swift kick.'
'I believe what I believe,' Jim said.
At four a.m. the augmented power supply had been coupled to the
Jiffi-scuttler; supervising the work, Don Stanley gave the go-ahead signal to
start the 'scuttler back up. It had been off now for six and a half hours. His
fingers crossed, Stanley tensely smoked his cigarette and waited as the
entrance hoop gradually flared into unusual, pale-yellow brilliance, at least
four times as bright as before.
Beside him, Bascolm Howard, who had strolled in to watch, said, 'It
certainly caught right away. No hesitation there.'
'It really shines,' Stanley murmured. God, suppose we're overloading it he
thought. Suppose it heats up too much and burns out. But the engineers who had
done the work had assured him that the load was within the safe tolerance. And
he had to go by what they said.
'Tired ?' Howard asked him.
'Darn right.' Stanley felt irritable. 'I ought to be home in bed.' We all
should be, he said to himself. I'll be glad when they've run the final tests on
this and it's ready to go back into operation.
A senior engineer hopped into the tube of the 'scuttler and disappeared from
sight. Stanley dropped his cigarette to the lab floor and savagely ground it
out. Now we learn the truth, he realized. We get the poop, whether we've failed
or been successful.
Minutes passed.
Reappearing, the engineer called to him. 'Mr. Stanley, would you come here,
please ?'
Stanley, on rubber legs, made his way to the tube. 'How is it inside there
?'
The rent's big, now. Three and a half, maybe four times greater.'
Feeling limp as tension throughout his body lessened, Stanley said, 'Fine.
Now we can go home where we belong.'
'I want you to look through the rent,' the engineer said.
'Why ?' He did not see the point.
The engineer said, 'Just look, okay ? For chrissake, will you please look,
Mr. Stanley ?'
He looked.
Through the rent in the tube wall he saw, not a grassy meadow and
ultramarine sky, no white flowers with buzzing, lazy bees tackling them. And he
saw no sign of people. None of the tons of equipment which had been passed
through the rent. No tents. No temporary septic tanks. No improvised food
kitchens or overhead lighting. Instead he saw - and could not at first accept
that he saw - a marshlike expanse, gray with mist and the hollow croakings of
some distant birds. He saw reeds poking through the gummy, yellow water which
lay in pools. A snake moved suddenly, twisting its path through the stagnant
debris. And over to the right, some small living creature with a naked tail
dropped to safety in the dense shadows beneath a cracked, hairy mass of roots.
The air smelled of decay and silent, utter death.
Pulling back into the 'scuttler tube, Stanley said hoarsely, 'It's not the
same place.'
His chief engineer nodded mutely.
'It's a swamp,' Stanley said. 'My god, what kind of catastrophe is this ?
Can you make any sense out of it ? We better get the original power supply
right back on; you evidently can't increase the load and get the same results
only more so, instead you get this, whatever it is.' He took one more look. All
his determination was required merely to see it, let alone venture
through the rent and actually into it. 'I think I understand,' he said,
muttering to himself. 'There's not just one alter-Earth, parallel universe or
whatever you call it; there's several, and why we didn't deal that factor into
our planning I'll never know. We'll never make that mistake again.'
'I agree,' his engineer said, beside him, also looking.
'You think we can restore the original power supply and make contact again
with where we dumped those people ?'
'We can try.'
'We've got to,' Stanley said. 'You know who'll get the rap; it'll be us.
Start work immediately; we'll work the rest of the night.' God, he thought.
What'll I tell old man Turpin ? Nothing. If we can get this patched up again
we'll see it's forgotten forever. Like it never happened.
I'm not thinking about us getting the blame,' the senior engineer said to
him. 'I'm thinking about those people, especially those women, stranded there.'
'They'll be okay! They've got supplies; they went there to colonize, so let
them colonize. It was their idea to go across, they knew they were taking a
risk. It was their responsibility. So tough tubes.' He drew himself back into
the 'scuttler, shaking. 'Wow, what a hell of a sight. I can't see colonizing there.
You think you'd like to live there, Hal ?'
'No, Mr. Stanley,' the engineer said. He rose to his feet stiffly, waved to
the team standing before the entrance hoop. 'Shut it off!'
The power died. Stanley walked back out of the tubs and over to Howard. 'Now
we have to take apart the whole damn thing again and fix it back up the way it
was,' he said bitterly. 'What lousy luck. And it's going to take twenty years
to get those millions of bibs through; President Schwarz'll never buy that.
That's the end of that contract. That voids it automatically.' And to think we
worked six and a half hours for this, he said to himself.
Something appeared at the mouth of the tube.
Stanley saw it, but, even as he saw it, the shadow-like substance vanished.
'Who has a laser pistol ?' he said.
'Get a laser pistol,' Howard said. Evidently he had seen it, too. 'It must
have followed you. Come over from the other side. Before the power was turned
off.'
'It's just an insect,' Stanley said. 'Some miserable thing that flew up out
of that swamp.' I know that's all it is, he said to himself. It's got to be.
'For chrissakes, somebody kill it!' he said, looking around. Where had it gone
? Not back into the tube, but out into the room.
From within the tube, the senior engineer said loudly, 'Mr. Stanley, the
rent never shut down.'
'That's absolutely impossible,' Stanley said. 'The power's off.' He ran back
into the tube, found the engineer crouched down by the rent. Once more Stanley
saw across, into the world of the swamp, the decaying landscape of doomed, collapsing
ruin. His senior engineer was right; it was still there.
'I can think of only one explanation,' the engineer said to Stanley. 'It
must be that it's maintained by a power source on the other side, because you
know no power's coming to it from here; that's for sure.'
Stanley said, 'Did you see something that slipped through just now ?
Something alive ?'
'Only for a second. But I thought it went back.'
'It didn't go back,' Stanley said. 'It's out somewhere in the lab, in the TD
building, on our side, and now more are going to come across because we can't
shut down this damn rent. Maybe we can block it somehow. Can you put a barrier
right up ? I don't care what it's made out of, just as long as it's good and
solid.'
'We'll get on it right away,' the engineer said and scrambled to his feet.
What kind of power source could exist there on the other side ? Stanley
asked himself. There in that brackish, desolate swamp ... it's as if it were
waiting. But how could it know we'd show up ? How could it possibly have been
expecting us ?
When he made his way out of the tube once more, Howard said to him, 'It's
still somewhere in the room. I can feel it, but I'll be darned if I can see it.
It's like it just merged with everything on this side, just sort of - you know,
whatever it saw here.'
Don Stanley tried to remember when he had felt such fear. Not for a long
time. Had he ever reacted this way to anything in his life before ?
Once, he recalled. Years ago. He had felt the same fright when as he had
felt now, seeing this dark, pervasive substance scuttle into his world from the
other side. I was eighteen, he said to himself. Just a kid. It was my first
visit to the Golden Door satellite.
It had been when he had first seen George Walt.
Since it was impossible to close the rent, Don Stanley decided, they were
going to have to make the attempt to subject the dimly-lit swamp world to some
kind of ordered scrutiny. Taking full responsibility, he ordered a QB
observation satellite brought to the lab with launching equipment. Before the
barrier had been erected by TD's engineers he had sent the satellite across and
had watched as it shot up into the murky, ominous sky.
Reports from the orbiting satellite began to arrive almost at once, and he
seated himself with Howard and started methodically to go over them. The time
was five-thirty a.m. Much too early to awaken Leon Turpin, he realized. We'll
just have to go on as we are, for at least another two hours.
The planet - and he felt no surprise in learning this - was Earth. But the
stellar chart which the satellite recorded on the dark side contained data
which was totally unexpected. For a long time he and Howard sat together
conferring, to be certain there had been no error. There had not. By six-thirty
in the morning, Stanley was sure of the situation, sure enough to have Leon
Turpin woken up at his home on Long Island.
The QB satellite, this time, was orbiting an Earth in what was, for their
world, a century in the future.
'You realize what this implies, don't you ?' he said to Howard.
'This could still be the same alter-Earth. The one we sent our colonists
onto. Only we're seeing it a hundred years later.' Abruptly Howard shivered.
'Then what became of their colonizing efforts ? No trace at all ? After all,
the satellite is picking up lights on the dark side in exactly the same
locations as before.'
'I'll be glad when Turpin gets here,' Stanley said. The responsibility had
become too much for him; he wanted out. Obviously, the colonization attempt had
failed. But he simply refused to face it. It can't be the same Earth, he
repeated again and again to himself. It's just got to be a totally different
one.
Something terrible must have taken place between our colonists and the
Pekes.
At seven fifteen a.m., Leon Turpin arrived, perfectly shaved, washed,
dressed, and in absolute control of himself.
'Have you sent dredging equipment across ?' he asked Stanley as the two of
them stood by the partly-completed concrete barrier, looking out across the
swamp.
'What for ?' Stanley said.
Turpin's face twitched. 'To look for remains of our campsite. This is the
same spot, isn't it ? There's been no movement in space; this is where our
colonists set up their base a century ago. There ought to be all kinds of junk,
if we dig down far enough, down to the hundred-year level. Tell them to get
started right away.'
It took only two hours for the dredges to locate and bring up an aluminum
canteen and then a rusted, corroded, slime-drenched U.S. Army laser rifle. And,
after that...
Skeletons. First one which they identified as a human male and then a
smaller one, possibly that of a female.
Turpin signaled for the dredging to cease.
'Beyond any reasonable doubt, this was our campsite,' Turpin said,
presently. 'We've proved that, to my satisfaction at least.' The others nodded;
no one spoke, however, and they did not look directly at one another. 'Perhaps
it's possible to view this as a tremendous break,' Turpin said. 'We know now
not to send any more colonists across; we know what's going to happen to them.
They're going to perish right here at the campsite without having even...'
'They were slaughtered,' Stanley interrupted, 'because we didn't send
any more across. The first group wasn't large enough to hold off the Pekes;
it's obvious that the Pekes are responsible for this massacre. What else could
have happened to them ?'
'Disease,' Howard said, after a pause. 'We never took time to make thorough
studies of viruses and protozoa over there, as we should have. We were in such
a goddam hurry to rush them across.'
'If we had kept sending them across,' Stanley persisted, 'in a steady flow,
the Pekes wouldn't have been able to mow them down. My god, those colonists
suddenly found themselves cut off from us, stranded there with no way to get
back, abandoned by us ...' He broke off. 'We never should have tinkered with
the power supply. That's where we made our mistake.'
Howard said, 'I wonder what we'll find when we get the original power supply
hooked back up.' He jerked his head toward the group of TD engineers laboring
to disconnect the larger source. 'In a few more hours they'll have it back the
way it was. Presumably we'll find ourselves facing the original rent, the
original conditions; we'll be back in contact with our campsite, then, and if
necessary we can march them all back here to this side again. Every last one of
them.'
'But,' Stanley said almost inaudibly, 'you're leaving a factor out. The
nexus to this swamp world hasn't gone away; it's either self-maintaining or
some force on the other side is underwriting it... in any case it seems to be
there for good. Things are never going to be as they were; we can't
reestablish the original situation. We'll never see those colonists again. And
we might as well get used to that idea. I say, go ahead and hook up the first,
smaller power source again, but don't expect anything.' To Leon Turpin, he
said,
'I've been here all night. Can I go home and go to bed for a few hours ? I
can't keep my eyes open.'
Turpin said raspingly, 'Don't you want to be here when ...'
'You're just not facing it,' Stanley said. 'When I wake up, six or ten or
fifteen hours from now, the situation's going to be exactly as it is right now.
We'll be looking across at that swamp world, and it'll be staring right back at
us. I'll tell you what we've got to do. Somebody - and I don't mean just
another atavistic, simple-minded robot-type dredge - some brilliant human
individual has got to go across there into that swamp world and locate the
power source that's keeping this nexus alive. And then he's got to blow it to
bits or, at the very least, dismantle it.' Stanley added, 'And then - and this
may be almost impossible - someone's got to find out what established that
power source in the first place. And how they knew we were coming.'
After a pause Leon Turpin said, 'Howard tells me that in the first few
moments of operation with the augmented power source, something came through,
some living creature. Is that true ?'
Don Stanley sighed wearily. 'I thought so at the time. Now I think I was out
of my mind; I was simply just too scared by what I saw. I must have realized
right away that we had lost those colonists forever.' He walked unsteadily
toward the exit door of the lab. 'I'll see you a few hours from now. After I've
had some sleep.'
'But I saw it, too,' Howard was saying, as Stanley shut the lab door after
him.
I don't care what came through, Stanley said to himself. I don't care what
you saw. I've done all I can. I haven't got anything left to give to this
situation.
But you better have, Turpin, he realized. Because it's going to take a lot.
What I've done disconnecting the augmented power source, getting the barrier
erected, sending over the QB satellite, starting up the robot dredge - all
that's nothing. Just a way of finding out what confronts us.
He thought, I wish I could sleep forever. Never wake up again and have to
face this.
But he knew he had to.
And he was not the only one. They would all have to wake up, one by one, to
face this, President Schwarz involved in his deft political maneuverings to
outrun Jim Briskin, hitting him with his own idea ... Briskin, too, because no
matter what Schwarz had done, no matter how hurriedly and recklessly he had
acted, the idea behind the colonization had been Briskin's. The responsibility
remained essentially his, and Schwarz, now, would be quick to hand it back to
him.
Having ascended to surface-level, Stanley passed through the wide front
entrance of the TD building, down the steps and onto the morning sidewalk, the
busy downtown Washington street of people and 'hoppers and jet’ abs. The
motion, the familiar, reassuring activity, made him feel better. This world,
with its everyday sights, had not been blotted out, by any means; it remained
solid, thoroughly substantial. As always.
He looked about for a jet'ab to take to his conapt.
Far off, at the corner of TD's administration building, a figure hurriedly
disappeared.
Who was that ? Don Stanley asked himself. He halted, forbore hailing the
jet'ab. I know him, and I don't like him; it's somebody who in a day long past
reminds me of things almost too repellent to recall, a part of my life that's
dim, cut out, deliberately and for adequate reason forgotten. Mud, he thought.
Yes, oddly enough, he thought. That man makes me think of mud and twisted
plants, deranged organisms that burst poisonously and silently under a weak and
utterly useless sun. Where is this ? What have I been seeing ?
What just happened now, a few minutes ago, back there on level one in TD's
labs ? He felt confused; standing on the sidewalk among the passing people he
rubbed his forehead wearily, trying to rouse his mind. The swiftly-moving
figure of course had been George Walt, but hadn't he - or rather they - closed
down the Golden Door satellite and disappeared ?
He had heard that on TV or read it in the homeopapes. He was positive of it.
George Walt must be back, Stanley decided. From wherever they went.
Once more, a little dazedly, he began searching for a jet'ab to take him
home.
13
At the breakfast table in the small kitchen of his conapt, Jim Briskin ate,
and at the same time he carefully read the morning edition of the homeopape,
finding in it, as a kind of minor melody in the momentous fugue which was
playing itself out in heroic style, one item almost lost within the account of
the migration of men and women to alter-Earth.
The first couple to cross over, Art and Rachael Chaffy, had been Cols. And
the second couple, Stuart and Mrs. Hadley, had been white. It was exactly the
sort of neat and tidy detail which appeared to Jim Briskin's sense of
proportion, and he relaxed a little, enjoying his breakfast. Sal would be
pleased by this, too, he realized. I'll have to remember to mention it to him
when I see him later on this morning.
President Schwarz missed something, he reflected, by not noticing this
minuscule fact at the time it was occurring. Schwarz could have made an
extra-special superior speech to the two couples, presenting them with large
gaudy plastic keys to the alternate universe, disclosing to them that they're a
symbol of a new epic era in racial relations ... as arranged for, of course, by
the State's Rights Conservation Democratic Party in all its full and healthy
glory. Some minion on Schwarz' staff slipped up, there, and should be fired.
He turned on the TV, then, to see if there was any later news. Had TD's
engineering corps got the higher-yield power supply in operation yet, and if
so, had the aperture been affected in the way anticipated ? By now a lot more
emigrants should have joined the Chaffys and the Hadleys there on the other
side. He wondered if the Pithecanthropi-Sinanthropi people had taken notice
already ... had the crucial Augenblick, as the Germans put it, arrived
by now ? While he had slept ?
On the TV screen the image gathered, became stable and fixed. But it was not
what he had expected. The image had a certain grainy texture, familiar to him;
it was emanating from a satellite which was still too far away. The sound, too,
was distorted. It would, of course, clear up as the satellite moved closer, if
it was moving in this direction and not away. What was going on ? What was this
peculiar program, anyhow ? He leaned toward the speaker, trying to untangle the
garble of words.
The video image became clarified, then. It was a head, the mutual head of
the mutants George Walt. Its mouth opened and it spoke. 'I am king, now,'
George Walt declared. 'I have at my disposal up here an entire army of what
you'd like to think of as "near" men but which are actually - as you
are about to find out and not from me - the legitimate tenants of this world
and every other alternative Earth running parallel to us. You'd be surprised at
the type of scientific discoveries which the Peking race - and I call them that
merely as a means by which to identify them - have made over the centuries.
They can, for instance, warp time and also space to suit their needs. They've
tapped sources of energy unknown to you Homo sapiens. I have with me here in
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite the wisest and kindest philosopher
from among their great people. Just a moment.' George Walt's head disappeared
from the screen.
Merciful lord, Jim Briskin thought. He sat staring at the TV set, unable to
take his eyes from it. George Walt are back, and they're out of their mind.
That's all we need, Jim said to himself. A crazy George Walt up there in
their satellite, spinning around us. Now we've really got troubles.
His vidphone rang; automatically, he made his way over to answer it. 'Not
just now,' he murmured. 'Call me later; I'm busy - '
'Don't hang up.' It was Tito Cravelli, sweating and agitated. 'I see you've
got your TV set on. He ... they have been broadcasting all morning, since about
eight o'clock East Coast time. They're going to bring that Peke sage back on
again; this is a video tape, it's running over and over again. Get a load of
this so-called philosopher; you've never seen anything like it in your life.
And then call me back.' Tito hung up.
Jim Briskin numbly returned to the TV set to listen and watch.
'I can walk through wood,' the TV set was saying, but it was not George
Walt, now. It was as Tito had said, a Peking man, Sinanthropus telecasting from
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. So George Walt... now you're in
politics, Jim Briskin said to himself. And in a big way, too.
And we thought we were bad off before.
'Not only can I walk through wood,' the white-haired, massive-browed,
enormous-chinned, ancient-looking Sinanthropus said, in reasonably good but
somewhat mumbled English, 'but I can make myself invisible. The god of air
empowers me wherever I go. He fills the sails of life with his magic breath,
capable of accomplishing all things. Poor, puny Homo sapiens creatures! How
could you conceivably expect to infest our world, with the Wind God himself
present ?'
By the Wind God, Jim Briskin realized with a sickened, enervating start, was
meant George Walt.
He had never before quite thought of them that way, but there it was.
Let's see how President Schwarz decides to handle this,, he said to himself.
A Wind God in a satellite over our heads millions of fossil men straining to
get at us. Darius Pethel can have his defective Jiffi-scuttler back; it's time
we got rid of it, and by the quickest route possible. But how did this ancient
Sinanthropus so-called philosopher get across to our world ? Didn't anybody at
TD notice his coming through ?
They must have opened their own nexus, he decided. Either that or what he
says is actually true; he can make himself invisible.
It was a gloomy prospect, having to wake up in the early morning and face
this, to say the least.
And somebody has really lost this election now, he decided. Either Bill
Schwarz or myself, depending on whom the electorate, in its understandable
frenzy, decides to blame.
Going back to the kitchen table he seated himself and resumed eating his
breakfast, now cold. As he mechanically ate, he pondered the chances of
successfully shooting down the Golden Door satellite; surely that was the most
likely next move for President Schwarz. After all, the exact position of the
satellite at any given moment was known; it was - or had been until recently -
printed on the entertainment page of every homeopape.
What I'm afraid of now, he realized, is that I'll look out the window of my
decently private conapt and see Peking man walking along the sidewalk, and not
just one but many of them.
He decided not to look, just to be on the safe side. At least not for a
while. Instead he concentrated on finishing his breakfast, tasteless as it had
become. As trivial a task as it was, at least it was a familiar event; it
helped restore his sense of the regularity of reality.
Turning from the TV set Sal Heim released his emotion in an explosion of
words. 'Call someone,' he said to his wife. 'Call Jim Briskin. Wait a minute;
call Bill Schwarz at the White House - I'll talk to him direct myself. This is
a national emergency; anybody with half an eye can see that Party loyalty is
out, you can wipe your nose on it. Let me know as soon as you have Bill Schwarz
on the line.' He returned to watching the TV.
'Not only can I walk through wood and across the surface of water,' the
great old Peking man on the screen was saying, 'But I can annihilate time.'
Good grief, Sal thought. This is awful. They can do all kinds of things we
can't; they're centuries ahead of us. Who around here that I know can
annihilate time ? No one. He groaned aloud.
Pat said hecticly, 'I can't reach President Schwarz. The lines are tied up.
Everybody must be...'
'Of course they are,' Sal said. 'The authorities know what this means. It's
hopeless to try to get through to Schwarz. He'll have to get on the TV himself
and tell the nation that a state of war exists between us and these dawn men.
Or is this stuff on all channels ?' Savagely, he turned the knob. The same
image appeared on every other channel; the satellite was blanketing the
airwaves. He was not surprised. I might have known, he said to himself with
envenomed bitterness. Next we'll be picking them up on the vidphone.
'But more important than anything else,' the white-haired Peking man on the
TV screen was saying, 'I can work exceeding wonderful, powerful magic. For I am
a mighty magician; I can cause the stars to fall from the vault of the heavens
and confusion to blind the eyes of all my foes. What do you respond to that,
tiny Homo sapiens ? You should have cogitated on that before you invested our
world. Facilis descensus Averno. You see, through my use of supernatural
forces, entirely unknown to your little race, I can speak in German.'
'Latin,' Sal murmured. 'You damn fool dawn man; that's Latin. So you don't
know everything. Get off the TV so President Schwarz can declare war.' The
image, however, remained.
Standing by his chair Patricia said, 'I guess this finishes Jim at the
polls.'
'Didn't I just now get through saying that party doesn't count ?' He glared
at her; Pat shrank back. 'To cope with this we've got to think along entirely
novel lines - everything is changed. I noticed one interesting thing. When
George Walt were on they referred to us as "you Homo sapiens." Does
that mean they're not ? My god, you can't become a converted
Sinanthropus; it's not like a church. I really have to talk to someone about
this besides you,' he said scathingly to his wife. 'Someone who can come up
with answers.'
Pat said, 'What about ?'
'Wait,' He turned back to the TV screen. George Walt had once more appeared.
'They look older,' Sal said. 'I can't remember which of them is the artificial
body. The one on right, as I recall. The real one has certainly done a good job
of building it back, after we tore it to pieces.' He chuckled. 'We had them on
the run, then. Our finest hour.' Once more he became grim. 'Too bad it's not
like that now.'
'You know who I was going to suggest you call ? Tito Cravelli. He always
seems to be able to figure out what's happening.'
'Okay.' He nodded absently. 'Give me the phone; I'll call Tito.' He got to
his feet, then. 'No, I'll get it myself. Why should you wait on me ?' At the
vidphone he paused and turned toward her. 'I'm sure it's the one on the right.
You know, I'll bet at this moment everybody, including even Verne Engel and
every last damn member of that rotten bunch CLEAN, would give his shirt if we
could go back to, say, a month ago. To the way we were and the so-called
"race problem" we had then. That's who I ought to call: Verne Engel.
You know what I'd say to him ? "You stupid bastard, does what you're
fighting for look so real now ? Skin pigment. What a laugh! Why not eye color ?
Too bad nobody ever thought of that. It cuts it a little finer, but basically
it's the same thing. Okay, Verne, you get out there and die over the issue of
upholding one certain eye color. Lots of luck." ' Picking up the vidphone
he dialed.
Pat said, 'What color eyes do Peking men have ?' Glaring at her Sal said,
'Christ, how would I know ?' 'I just wondered. I never thought of it before.'
'Hello, Tito ?' Sal said, as the vidscreen lighted. 'Get us out of this,' Sal
said. 'Find where they're getting through into our world and plug it up, an
then we'll figure out how to knock down the Golden Door Moments of Bliss
satellite. You agree ? Tito, say something.'
'I know where they're getting through,' Tito said, laconically.
Sal turned to his wife. 'You were right. He does know.' He turned back to
the vidscreen. 'Well, what do we do ? How do we...'
'We make a deal,' Tito Cravelli said in a harsh, totally dry voice.
Staring at him Sal said, 'We what ? I don't believe it.'
'And we'll be lucky if we can manage that,' Tito added. 'There are a few
things you don't know, Sal. This attack on us by the Pekes is coming out of a
hundred years in the future. George Walt have had an entire century to work
with them, filling in the gaps in their culture, teaching them as many of our
techniques as they could cram into them in that time... and it's a very long
time. Don't ask me how I found this out; just take my word that it's the case.
The nexus that they're using is at TD, but we can't dose it; they're supplying
it with power from the other side, a possibility which doesn't seem to have
occurred to anyone at TD until it was too late. In other words, until now.'
'What kind of deal ?'
'I don't know yet. I'm seeing Jim Briskin in a few moments; we're going to
try to think of something we can offer them - offer George Walt actually, since
they're doing the talking. As I see it, the Pekes don't actually need to expand
into our world; they haven't even filled up their own. They have no pressing
population problem, as we have. So there may be something they want and can use
more than mere land. Because that's all they're going to find if they try to
come over here. I know damn well our people will put up a fight until there's
nothing left standing. It'll be a scorched-earth planet... we can promise them
that. As a starter.'
Turning to Pat, Sal said, 'We're going to make a deal; there's no other way
out.'
'I heard,' she said. 'I wish I hadn't; I didn't want to hear that.'
'Isn't that something ? Our ancestors didn't make a deal. They wiped the
Pekes out.'
'But now,' Pat said, 'they have George Walt.'
He nodded. Evidently that made the difference. But he had a terrible feeling
that Tito Cravelli was wrong as to the quantity of techniques that George Walt
had passed on to the Pekes. His intuition was that the transfer of knowledge
had gone the other way: it had been the Pekes who had educated George Walt.
Jim Briskin said half-ironically, 'We can offer them the Encyclopedia
Britannica, translated into their language.' If they have a written language,
he added to himself. Or if George Walt haven't given them that already. 'Maybe
George Walt have passed them everything they'll ever need,' he said to Tito
Cravelli, who sat moodily facing him across the room. 'I'd assume that during
the next century George Walt probably have gone back and forth continually.' He
could picture it, and it was not encouraging.
'Who can we ask for help from ?' Sal Heim said, to no one in particular.
'Call God.' His wife patted his arm, sympathetically. 'Don't do that,' Sal
complained. 'It distracts me. In the name of something-or-other there must be
somebody we can turn to.'
The vidphone rang and Tito Cravelli rose to answer it After a few moments he
returned. 'That was my contact at TD. At this moment, while we're sitting here
muttering pointless maledictions, Pekes are pouring through the rent.'
Everyone in the room stared at him.
'That's right,' Tito said, nodding. "So already now the TD
administration building is full of then; in fact they're beginning to leak out
into downtown Washington, D.C. Leon Turpin's been conversing with President
Schwarz, but so far ...' He shrugged. 'They erected a concrete barrier in front
of the rent but the Pekes simply moved the rent to one side. And kept on coming
across.' He added, 'Bohegian, my contact, is leaving the TD building; they're
being evacuated.'
'Christ,' Sal Heim said. 'Christ, sweet shimmering Christ.'
Pat Heim said, 'You know who I'd like to see you talk to ?' She glanced
around at the others. 'Bill Smith.'
'Who's that ?' Cravelli asked sharply. 'Oh yeah. The Peke. That
anthropologist Dillingsworth has him. What could Bill Smith tell us ?'
'He would know what they lack,' Patricia said. 'Maybe for instance they've
been trying for a dozen centuries to achieve a space drive. We could turn a
small rocket engine over to them, one with only a million pounds of thrust or
so. Or maybe they don't have music. Think what it would mean: we could start
them out with single instruments such as the harmonica or the Jew's harp or the
electric guitar
'Yes,' Cravelli agreed acidly, 'But George Walt have already done that. At
least, we've got to assume that. You heard that Peke talking Latin; I didn't
grasp, really genuinely grasp, how much George Walt have accomplished until I heard
that ... then I threw in the sponge. I don't mind admitting it; that's when I
gave up, pure and simple.'
'And decided to plead for a deal,' Sal Heim said, half to himself.
'That's right,' Cravelli said. 'Then I knew we had to come to some kind of
terms. It didn't terrify you to hear Sinanthropus talking Latin ? It should
have.'
'I've got it,' Pat Heim said. 'That one Sinanthropus, that old white-haired
so-called philosopher up in the satellite, he's a mutant. More evolved than the
others, greater cranial area or something, especially in the forehead region.
Unique. George Wall are pulling the wool over our eyes.'
'But they are pouring through the nexus rent,' Cravelli said coldly.
'Whether they speak Latin or don't. If Leon Turpin has ordered the TD administration
building evacuated, you know it's critical.'
'I've got it,' Pat said, 'Oh my god, I've really got it. Listen to me. Let's
turn the Smithsonian Institute over to the Pekes, in exchange for them leaving.
What about that ?'
'Institution,' Cravelli said, correcting her.
'And if that's not enough,' Pat said, 'we'll throw in the Library of
Congress. They'd be smart to take that. What an offer!'
'You know,' Sal said, hunching forward and gazing steadily down at his
knees, 'she may have something there. Look what they'd get out of that; the
entire assembled, collected artifacts and knowledge of our culture. A hell of a
lot more - incredibly much more - than George Walt can give them.
It's the wisdom of four thousand years. Boy, I tell you; I'd take it in a
second if it were offered to me.'
After a long pause Tito Cravelli said, 'But we're forgetting something. None
of us are in a position to make the Pekes any kind of offer; none of us hold
any official position in the government. Now, if you were already in office,
Jim...'
Take it to Schwarz, 'Sal said.
'We'd have to,' Pat agreed rapidly. 'And that means going to the White
House, since the phone lines are all tied up. Which one of us would Schwarz be
willing to see ? Assuming he'd see any of us.'
Sal said, 'It would have to be Jim.'
Shrugging, Jim Briskin said, 'I'll go. It's better than merely sitting
around here talking.' It all seemed futile to him anyhow. But at least this way
he'd be doing something.
'Who're you going to take the offer to ultimately ?' Cravelli asked him.
'Bill Smith ?'
'No, Jim said. 'To that white-haired Sinanthropi philosopher up in the
satellite.' Obviously, he was the one to go to; he held the power.
'George Walt aren't going to like it when they hear it,' Cravelli pointed
out. 'You'll have to talk fast; they'll do their best to shut you up.'
'I know,' Jim said, rising to his fed and moving toward the door. 'I'll
phone you from Washington and let you know how I made out.'
As he left the apartment, he heard Sal saying, 'I think, though, we ought to
take the Spirit of St Louis out when the Pekes aren't looking and keep
it. They won't know it's gone; what do they know about airplanes ?"
'And the Wright brothers' plane,' Pat said, as he started to shut the door
after him. He paused, then, as he heard her 'Do you think he'll get in to see
President Schwarz ?'
'Not a chance,' Sal said emphatically. 'But what else am we do ? It's the
best we could come up with on such short notice.'
'He'll get in,' Cravelli disagreed. 'I'll make you a dime bet.'
'You know what else we could have offered ?' Pat said. 'The Washington
Monument.'
'What the hell would the Pekes do with that ?' Sal demanded.
Jim shut the door after him and walked down the corridor to the elevator.
None of them, he reflected, had offered to come with him. But what difference
did it make ? There was nothing they could do vis-а-vis President Schwarz ...
and perhaps nothing he could do, either. And even if he did get in to see
Schwarz, and even if Schwarz went along with the idea - how far did that carry
him ? What were the chances that he could sell the Sinanthropi philosopher on
the idea with George Walt present ?
But I'm still going to try it, he decided. Because the alternative, a
general war, would doom our colonists there on the other side; it's their lives
we're trying to save.
And anyhow, he realized, none of us wants to start slaughtering the Peking
people. It would be too much like the old days, back among our cave-dwelling
ancestors. Back to their level. We must have grown out of that by now, he said
to himself. And if we haven't - what does it matter who wins ?
Four hours later, from a public vidphone booth in downtown Washington, D.C.,
Jim Briskin called back to report. He felt bone-weary and more than a little
depressed, but at least the first hurdle had been jumped successfully.
'So he liked the idea,' Tito Cravelli said.
Jim said, 'Schwarz is madly grasping at any straw he can find, and there
aren't even very many of them. Everyone in Washington is prepared to shoot down
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, of course; they'll do that if my
attempt at negotiation fails, my attempt to split George Walt off from the
Pekes.'
'If we shoot down the satellite,' Cravelli said, 'then we'd have to fight to
the bitter death. Either our race or theirs would be wiped out, and we can't
have that, not in this day and age. With the weapons we've got and what they
possibly have...'
'Schwarz realizes that. He appreciate all the nuances of the situation. But
he can't just sit idle while Pekes pour across at will. We're walking a highly
tricky line. It's not in our interest to make this into a full-scale hydrogen
bomb war, and yet we don't want simply to capitulate. Schwarz says to go ahead
with the Smithsonian, but to hold back on the Library of Congress as long as
possible, to give it up only under the greatest pressure. I tend to agree.' He
added, 'They're sending me up there; I'll do it myself.'
'Why you ? What's the matter with the State Department ? Don't they have
anyone who can do that sort of work any more ?
'I asked to go.'
'You're nuts. George Walt hates you already.'
'Yes,' Jim agreed, 'but I think I know how to handle this; I've got an idea
of how I can impair the relationship between George Walt and the Pekes in such
a way that it can't be repaired. Anyhow, it's worth a try.'
'Don't tell me what your idea is,' Cravelli said. 'Tell me after it works.
If it doesn't work, don't tell me at all.'
Jim grinned starkly. 'You're a hard man. You might be too ruthless as
Attorney General; I'll have to rethink that, possibly.'
'It's signed and sealed,' Cravelli said. 'You can't get out of it. Good luck
up on the satellite.' He rang off, then.
Leaving the phone booth, Jim Briskin walked along the half-deserted sidewalk
until he came to a parked, empty jet-hopper.
'Take me to the Golden Door satellite,' he said, opening the door and
getting in.
"The Golden Door is closed down,' the 'hopper driven said languidly.
'No more girls up there. Just some goof broadcasting that he's king of the
world or some crazy thing like that.' He turned to face Jim. 'However, I know a
gnuvvy doggone place in the north west side of town that I can...'
'The satellite,' Jim said. 'Okay ? Just drive the 'hopper and let me decide
where I want to go.'
'You Cols,' the driver muttered as he started the 'hopper up. 'You sure
always got a chip on your shoulder. All right, buddy, have it your way. But
you're going to be disappointed when you get up there.'
Silently, Jim leaned back against the seat and sat waiting as the 'hopper
rose into the sky.
At the landing field on the satellite, George Walt personally met him, hand
outstretched. 'This is George,' the head said, as Jim shook hands with
whichever of them it was. 'I knew they'd want to talk terms, but I didn't
expect them to send you, Briskin.'
'This is Walt,' the head said then, belligerently. 'I certainly have no
desire to do business with you, Briskin. Go back and tell them ...' The mouth
struggled as both brothers sought to make use of it simultaneously.
'What does it matter who they send ?' the head - no doubt George, now - said
at last. 'Come below to the office, Briskin, where we can make ourselves
comfortable. I have a hunch this darn business might take quite a while.'
It was extraordinary how much George Walt had aged. They had a wrinkled,
brittle, almost frail quality about them, and when they walked they moved
slowly, hesitantly, as if afraid of falling, as if they were terribly infirm.
What would account for this ? Jim wondered. And then he understood. George Walt
were now jerries. One hundred years had passed for them since he had last seen
them. He wondered how much longer they could keep going. Certainly not for too
great a period. But their mental energies were undimmed. He could still sense
the enormous alertness emanating from them; they remained as formidable as
ever.
In George Walt's office sat the huge, white-haired old Sinanthropus; he
watched warily from beneath his beetling brows as Jim Briskin entered,
obviously suspicious at once. It would be no easy task, Jim realized, to come
to terms with this man. Mistrust was profoundly written on his massive-jawed,
sloping face.
'We've got them where we want them,' George Walt said expansively to the
Sinanthropus. This man's coming up here - Jim Briskin is his name - verifies
it.' Both eyes flamed with gloating.
In a hoarse voice, the Sinanthropus said, 'What will you offer us if we
abandon your world ?'
Jim Briskin said, 'That which we prize beyond everything elite. Our most
valued possession.'
The Sinanthropus and George Walt watched him fixedly.
"The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.,' Jim said.
'Wait a minute' / 'We're not interested in that!' George Walt said together.
"That won't do; that's out of the question. We want political and economic
priority over the North American land mass - otherwise the invasion continues.
What kind of offer is the Smithsonian ? That's nothing but a museum.' / 'Who
wants a museum ? This is ridiculous!' Both eyes blazed with outraged and uneasy
anger.
The Sinanthropus, however, said slowly and distinctly, 'I am reading Mr.
Briskin's mind, and I am interested. Please be silent. Wind God, it goes
without saying that your opinion is valuable, but it is I who must make the
actual decision,"
"The conference is over!' / 'I've heard enough,' George Walt said. 'Go
back below to Terra, Briskin; you're not wanted here.' / 'Let's call this off.'
'There is, in the back of your mind,' the Sinanthropus said to Jim, 'the
thought that you will, if pressed, add in the Library of Congress. I will
consider that offer as well.'
'We'd prefer not to add that,' Jim said, 'but if we have to, we have to.' He
felt resigned.
'Goodbye, Briskin,' George Walt said. 'See you some time. It's evident that
you're trying to make a side deal, here; trying to cut my brother and me out.
But we won't be cut out.' The head added emphatically, 'I agree. You're
completely wasting your time, Briskin.' One of George Walt's four arms was
extended, then, 'Until next time.'
'Until next time,' Jim said, shaking hands. Taking a deep, unsteady breath
he all at once yanked with every dyne of strength which he could muster; the
hand and arm came loose from the artificial body and he was left holding them.
Bewildered, the Sinanthropus said, 'Wind God, it seems strange to me that
your arm is detachable.'
'This is no Wind God,' Jim Briskin said. 'You've been misled. Our people
were, too, for a good long time. This is an ordinary man with an extra,
artificial body.' He pointed to the wiring visible within the gaping shoulder.
'A Homo sapiens, you mean ?' the stooped old Sinanthropus said. 'Like
yourself ?' Slow but exact comprehension began to form in his reddish eyes.
'Not only is he not a Wind God,' Jim said, 'but he's been for decades the
owner of a ... I dislike naming it outright.'
'Name it!'
'Let's simply call it a house of pleasure. He's a businessman. No more, no
less.'
'I can think of nothing more obnoxious to the mores of my people,' the
Sinanthropus said to George Walt, 'than a hoax of this stripe. You swore to us
that you were our Wind God. And in fulfillment of many myths, your unusual
anatomy seemed to prove it.' He panted slowly, raggedly.
' "Unusual",' George Walt echoed. 'You mean unique. In all of the
parallel Earths - and God knows exactly how many there may be, you won't find
anyone, anyone at all, like me.' He amended quickly, 'Like us, rather. And
consider this satellite. What do you think keeps it up ? The wind, of course;
how else could it stay up here, month after month ? Obviously I control the
wind, as I told you. Otherwise this satellite would...'
'I could destroy you,' the old Sinanthropus said. He no longer seemed much
impressed by George Walt's line of argument. 'But I am frankly too disappointed
to care one way or another. It's clear to me, and I will soon see that it's
equally clear to my people, that you Homo sapiens are a treacherous lot.
Probably best avoided.' To Jim he said, 'It's that so ?'
'We're known for that,' Jim agreed.
'And that's how you triumphed originally over our ancestors on this parallel
world ?'
'You're damn right,' Jim said. He added, 'And we'd do it again, given half a
chance.'
'Probably you would not genuinely have delivered that museum of yours to
us,' the Sinanthropus said, 'the name of which I have already forgotten. Well,
no matter. Obviously it's impossible to do business with you Homo sapiens;
you're adept, polished liars. Nothing we agreed on would remain truly binding
in such a milieu. My people lack even a name for such conduct.'
'No wonder we had so little trouble wiping you out,' Jim said.
'In view of your dedication to fraud,' the Sinanthropus said, 'I see no real
point in my remaining here; the longer I go on, the more immersed I become.
Personally, I regret this whole encounter; my people have suffered by it
already. God knows what would become of us if we were so naive as to try to
continue.' An unhappy expression on his face, the aged, white-haired
Sinanthropus turned his back and walked away from Jim Briskin and George Walt.
'It would be unnatural for people of our race to seek to participate in an
exclusively destructive relationship,' he said, over his shoulder. And
vanished. One moment he stood there, the next he had gone. Even George Walt
seemed taken aback; both eyes blinked. The Sinanthropus, by means of his so
called magic, had returned to his own world.
'Smart,' George Walt said, presently. "You handled that extremely well,
Briskin. I never saw it coming. One hundred years of work gone down the drain.
Give me my arm back and we'll call it quits; I'm too old to go through this
kind of thing any more.' The head added, "You're probably right. After
all, politically speaking, Briskin is a professional; he can run rings around
us. What happened here just now demonstrates that.'
'Honesty generally wins out,' Jim said.
'You call that trash you peddled to that half-animal just now - you call
that honesty ? I never heard such a mass of twisted ...' George Walt
broke off, then. 'Like everybody else, I more or less trusted you, Briskin. It
never occurred to me you'd trade on such techniques to win an issue. Your
integrity's just a myth! Probably dreamed up by your campaign manager.'
'You mean you actually are their Wind God ?'
'Pragmatically speaking, yes. Every one of us, in relation to them, are gods
... speaking in terms of the evolutionary hierarchy, anyhow, in the broadest
possible sense.'
Jim said, 'Was it you who enabled them to shoot apart the QB observation
satellite ?'
Nodding, George Walt said, 'Yes, it was. By my magic.'
'What you mean,' Jim said, 'is that you ferried a ground-to-air guided
missile over to them. Magic, my foot.' He looked at his wristwatch. 'I have to
get back down to Earth; I've got a major speech to record. You care to
accompany me back to my 'hopper ?'
'I'm busy,' George Walt said curtly. 'I have to fit my arm back on. This
whole business makes me sick, and not only that, terribly angry; I'm going to
initiate beamed broadcasts twenty-four hours a day on all frequencies
denouncing you, as soon as I can get the satellite's transmitter started up
again. I look forward to your losing in November, Briskin; that's the one nice
thing I can count on.'
'Suit yourself,' Jim said, shrugging. He left the office, made his way to
the elevator. Behind him, George Walt brought a tool kit out from their desk
and began the task of repairing the damage to the artificial body which Jim
Briskin had purposefully accomplished. The expression on George Walt's face was
one of great gloom.
In his entrenched position, along with other company personnel, on the
outskirts of the flank of the TD administration building in Washington, D.C.,
Don Stanley noted all at once, and to his complete surprise, a sudden lull in
the fierce racket from the Pekes within.
'Some darn thing has happened,' Howard conjectured, also aware of the
unexpected silence. 'We better get set for another rush; they're probably
determined to overwhelm us this time. Before that idiot Schwarz can get
army...'
'Wait,' Stanley said, listening. 'You know what I think ? I think the
fliegemer Pekes are gone.'
Puzzled, Howard said, 'Gone where ?'
Rising to his haunches Stanley peered at the administration building, at the
shattered windows on the nearest side, and the conviction came to him stronger
than ever that the building was now, for some totally obscure and merciful
reason, deserted. With caution, aware of the acute risk he was taking, he began
to walk slowly step by step toward the front entrance.
'They'll pop you out of existence,' Howard called to him warningly, 'with
those funny little weapons of theirs; better get back down, you half-wit.' But
he, too, stood up. So did a number of armed company police.
Opening the familiar front door of the building, Stanley peeped inside.
He saw no sign of Pekes anywhere. The halls were empty and silent. The
invasion by the chinless dawn men from the parallel Earth had ceased as
abruptly as it had begun, and somewhat more mysteriously.
Howard, joining him, said, 'Um, we scared them off.'
'Scared them off nothing. They changed their collective minds.' Stanley
started in the direction of the elevator leading to the floor one subsurface
labs. "I have an intuition,' he said over his shoulder to Howard. 'And I
want to verify it as soon as I can.'
When he and Howard reached the labs, Stanley discovered that he was right
... and a good thing, too. The nexus joining the two parallel Earths had
vanished.
'They ... closed it down,' Howard said, wonderingly craning his neck, as if
expecting to see it crop up once more in a remote corner.
'So now,' Stanley murmured, 'our problem is to reopen our own earlier nexus.
The original one. And make the try to relocate our colonists before the moment
in which they're wiped out.' The chances of success struck him as being not
very good, and yet of course the attempt had to be made.
'Why do you think they called their invasion off ?' Howard asked.
Stanley gestured emptily. 'Maybe they didn't like it here after all.' Who
knew ? Certainly he did not. Perhaps they would never know. In any case they
had their work cut out for them; several thousand men and women on the other
side were wholly dependent on them for their lives. For their safe return to
this world. Remembering the human skeletons which had been dredged up from the
swamp a hundred years hence. Stanley felt deep forebodings. At best we can only
save some of them, he realized. But that's better than nothing. Even if we save
only one life, it's worth it.
'How long do you think it'll take to make contact with our people stranded
over there ?' Howard asked him. 'A day ? As long as a week ?'
'Let's find out,' Stanley said shortly, and started at once in the direction
of the power supply of Dar Pethel's defective Jiffi-scuttler.
The depressing task of bringing the colonists back from alter-Earth had
begun.
14
In November, despite the abusive broadcasts from the Golden Door Moments of
Bliss satellite, or because of them, Jim Briskin succeeded in nosing out the
incumbent Bill Schwarz; and thereby won the presidential election.
So now, at long last, Salisbury Heim said to himself, we have a Negro
President of the United States. A new epoch in human understanding has arrived.
At least, let's hope so.
'What we need,' Patricia said meditatively, 'is a party, so we can
celebrate.'
I'm too tired to celebrate,' Sal said, It had been a tough haul from the
nominating convention to this; he remembered clearly every inch of it. The
worst part, it went without saying, had been the collapse of the abortive
emigration program announced in Jim's Chicago speech; why that had not put a
permanent end to Jim's election chances, Sal Heim did not know even at this
late date. Perhaps it was because Bill Schwarz had managed to move so adroitly,
had embroiled himself - deliberately - in the situation; hence much, if not
most, of the ultimate blame had fallen on him, not on Jim.
'But we deserve to take a little time off to relax,' Pat pointed out. 'We've
been working for months; if we go on this way .. .'
'One beer at one small bar,' Sal decided. 'And then bed. I'll compromise at
that.' He did not especially enjoy going out in public, these days; inevitably
he rubbed up against some individual who had been a part of the colonizing
effort on alter-Earth or who, anyhow, had a brother-in-law who had gone
trustingly over there. Such encounters had been rather unpleasant; he always
found himself trying to answer questions which simply could not be answered. Why'd
you get us into that ? had been the primary inquiry, asked in a variety of
ways, but still always amounting to the same thing. And yet, despite this, they
had won.
'I think we should get together with a few people,' Pat disagreed.
'Certainly with Jim; that goes without saying. And then Leon Turpin, if he'll
join us, because after all it was Mr. Turpin who got us off the hook by
bringing those people back to our world - or anyhow his engineers did. Someone
at TD did. It was TD that saved us, Sal; let's finally face it and give credit
where credit is due.'
'All right,' Sal said. 'Just so long as that little Kansas City businessman
who showed up with that defective 'scuttler isn't along; that's all I insist
on.' The man on account of whom all the trouble had broken out in the first
place. At the moment, Sal could not even recall his name, an obvious Freudian
block.
'The one I blame,' Pat said, 'is Lurton Sands.'
'Then don't invite him either,' Sal said. But there was hardly much chance
of that; Sands was in prison, right now, for his crime against the sleeping
bibs and his ridiculous attempt on Jim's life. As was Cally Vale for having
lasered the 'scuttler repairman. That whole business had been excessively
melancholy, both intrinsically and as a conspicuous harbinger of the difficulties
which it had ushered into their collective lives, difficulties which by no
means were over.
'You know,' Pat said fretfully, 'there's one thing that still, right now, I
can't quite get out of my mind. I keep having this sneaking, nervous anxiety
that. ...' She smiled at him uneasily, her jessamine lips twitching. 'I hope I
don't pass it on to you, but...'
'But deep down inside,' Sal finished for her, 'you're afraid a few of those
Pekes have stayed on this side.'
'Yes.' She nodded.
Sal said, 'I get the same damn intimation, now and then. Late at night, I
keep looking out of the corner of my eye, especially on the street when I see
someone furtive looking hurrying away around a corner to get out of sight. And
the funny thing is that from what Jim tells me, I know he feels exactly the
same way. Maybe we all have a residual sense of guilt connected with the Pekes
... after all, we did invade their world first. It's our consciences bothering
us.'
Shivering, as she was wearing only a weightless Tafek-web negligee, his wife
said, 'I hope that's all it is. Because I'd really hate to run into a Peke some
dark night; I'd think right away that they'd opened a nexus again into our
world at some point and were very carefully, secretly, ferrying a wide stream
of their cousins and aunts across.'
As if we're not desperately overcrowded as it is, Sal thought, without
having to cope with that any more.
'What I can never comprehend,' he murmured, 'is why they didn't accept our
liberal offer of The Smithsonian. And for that matter the Library of Congress.
Gosh, they pulled out without getting anything.'
'Pride,' Pat said.
'No.' Sal shook his head.
'Stupidity, then. Dumb, dawn-man stupidity. There's no frontal lobe inside
that sloping forehead.'
'Maybe.' He shrugged. 'But how can you expect one species to follow the
logic of another ? They operate at their level; we operate at ours. And never
the twain will meet... I hope.' Anyhow not in his lifetime, he said to himself.
Maybe a later generation will be open-minded enough to accept such things, but
not now; not we who inhabit this world at this particular moment.
'Shall I ask Mr. Turpin to come here to our place ?' Pat asked. 'Are we
going to have the party here ?'
'Maybe Turpin won't want to celebrate Jim's victory,' Sal said. 'He and
Schwarz were pretty thick through most of the campaign.'
'Let me ask you something,' Pat said suddenly. 'Do you think George Walt
really are a Wind God ? After all, they were born with two bodies and four arms
and legs, the artificial part wasn't installed until much later. So originally
they were exactly what they pretended to be. Jim didn't tell that Sinanthropus
that.'
'You're darn right he didn't,' Sal said vigorously. 'And don't you rock the
boat out of any misplaced ethical motives ... you hear ?'
'Okay,' she said, nodding.
Outside on the sidewalk a gang of well-wishers yelled up praise and slogans
of congratulations; the racket filtered into the conapt, and Sal went to glance
out the living room window.
Some Cols, he saw. And also some Whites. Just what he hoped to see; just
what the entire struggle had been about. How long it had been in coming ...
almost two centuries more than it should have taken. The mind of man was
uncommonly stubborn and slow to change. Reformers, including himself, were always
prone to forget that. Victory always seemed just around the corner. But
generally it was not, after all. A vote for Jim Briskin, he thought, recalling the clichйs and tirades
of the campaign, is a vote for humanity itself. Stale now, and always
oversimplified, and yet deep underneath substantially true. The slogan had
embodied the motor which had driven them on, which had, finally, enabled them
to win. And now what ? Sal asked himself. The big problems, every one of them,
still remained. The bibs, in their all too many warehouses throughout the
nation, had become the property of Jim Briskin and the Republican-Liberal
Party. As had the desolate, roving packs of unemployed Cols, not to mention the
unhappy lower fringes of the white in-group . . men such as Mr. Hadley, who had
been the first White to emigrate, as well as nearly the first to come stumbling
back, after the nexus had, mercifully, been reopened.
It'll be a hard four years for Jim, he realized soberly. He's inherited a
vast, savage burden from Schwarz. If he thinks he's worn down now, he should
see himself next year or the year after that. But I guess that's what he wants.
I hope so, anyhow.
Did we get or learn anything from our unexpected confrontation with
the Pekes ? he wondered.
It showed us, he decided, that the difference between say myself and the
average Negro is so damn slight, by every truly meaningful criterion, that for
all intents and purposes it doesn't exist. When something like that, a contact
with a race that's not Homo sapiens, occurs, at last we can finally see this.
And I don't mean just myself; it was given to me to see this from the start. I
mean the ordinary (statistically speaking) fat, mean slob who plops down next
to you in a jet-hopper, snatches up a homeopape that someone's left, reads a
headline, and then begins to spout right and left his miserable opinions. So
maybe, in the final analysis, this is what won the election for Jim. Could it
be ? Admittedly, we can never be certain. But we can make an educated guess and
say yes, maybe so. Maybe it was.
In that case, the whole wretched fracas was worth while.
'All the time you've been standing there in your dreams of self-glory,' Pat
said archly, 'I've been on the vids getting hold of people for our party. Mr.
Turpin can't come or doesn't care to come, which is more likely, but he's
sending a few of his carefully cultivated big-time employees - an
administrative assistant named Donald Stanley, for instance, whom he said we
ought to meet. He didn't say why.'
'I know why,' Sal said. 'Tito Cravelli mentioned him, and anyhow I met him
personally on our trip to alter-Earth. Stanley was directly in charge of the
defective 'scuttler and, in a sense, was responsible for getting the entire
project going. Yes, Stanley certainly should be part of this get-together. And
I hope you called Tito. Our man in the world.'
'I'll call him now,' Pat said, 'and can you think of anyone else ?'
'The more the better,' Sal said, beginning finally to get into the spirit of
the thing.
At night Darius Pethel worked alone in his closed-up store. Something tapped
on the window, and he glanced up, startled. There, on the dark sidewalk, stood
Stuart Hadley.
Going to the front door, Pethel unlocked it. Opening it he said, 'I thought
you emigrated.'
'Cut it out. You know we all came back." Shoulders hunched, Hadley
entered the store. The familiar place where he had worked so long.
'How was it over there ?'
'Awful.'
'So I heard,' Pethel said. 'I suppose you want your job back. With each and
every trimming.'
'Why not ? I'm as good as I ever was.' Restlessly, Hadley roamed about the
marginal shadowy spaces of the store. 'You'll be glad to hear I'm back with my
wife. Sparky returned to the Golden Door satellite; they're going to open it
again. In spite of Jim Briskin's election. I guess there's going to be a
showdown fight.' He added,, 'Frankly I couldn't care less. I've got my own
problems. Well ? What do you say ? Can I come back ?' He tried to make it sound
casual.
'No reason why not,' Pethel said.
'Thanks.' Hadley looked relieved. Very much so.
'Some of you fellas got killed, I read. Nasty.'
'That's right, Dar; you've got it. They attacked us and the U.S. military
unit accompanying us fought them off bangupwise until the entrance, or maybe I
should say exit, was reopened. I'd rather not talk about it, to tell you the
truth. So many verflugender hopes went down the drainpipe when that failed,
mine and a lot of other people's. Now it's all up to the new president; we'll
wait, bide our time, see what he can dream up, I guess. That's about all we can
do, whether we like it or not.'
'You can write letters to homeopapes.'
Hadley glared at him in mute outrage. 'Some joke. You're personally okay,
Dar; you're all set. But what about the rest of us ? Briskin better come up
with something, or it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better.'
'How do you like knowing you're going to have a col for president ?'
'I voted for him, along with the others.' Hadley wandered back to the locked
front door of the store. 'Can I start tomorrow ?'
'Sure. Come in at nine.'
'You think life is worth living, Dar ? Hadley demanded suddenly.
'Who knows. And if you have to ask, there's something wrong with you. What's
the matter, are you sick or something ? I'm not hiring anybody who's a nut or
mentally flammy; you better get straightened out before you show up here
tomorrow morning.'
'The compassionate employers.' Hadley shook his head. 'Sorry I asked. I
should have known better.'
'That emigration stunt with that this-Olt girl didn't apparently teach you
anything; you're as fouled up as ever. What's the matter, can't you accept life
as it is ? You've always got to pine after what isn't ? A hell of a lot of men
would envy you your job; you're incredibly darn lucky to gel it back.'
'I know that.'
'Then why don't you calm down ? What's the matter ?'
'When you had hopes once,' Hadley explained after a pause, 'it's always hard
to go on after you give them up. It's not so hard to give them up; that part
is easy. After all, you've got to, sometimes. But afterward ...' He gestured,
grunting, '... What takes their place ? Nothing. And the emptiness is
frightening. It's so big. It sort of absorbs everything else; sometimes it's
bigger than the whole world. It grows. It becomes bottomless. Do you know what
I'm talking about ?'
'No,' Pethel said. Nor did he particularly care.
'You're lucky. Maybe it'll never hit you, or anyhow not until old age, until
you're a hundred and fifty or so.' Hadley gazed at him. 'I envy you.'
'Take a pill,' Pethel said.
'I'd be glad to take a pill, if I knew of one. I don't think they'd help,
though. I feel like taking a long walk; maybe I'll walk all night. You give a
darn ? Do you want to come along ? Hell no, you don't. I can see that.'
Pethel said, 'I've got work to do; I don't have time to stroll around taking
in the sights. I tell you what, Hadley. When you come back to work tomorrow -
listen to this - I'll give you a raise. Does that cheer you up ?' He peered at
him, trying to see.
'Yes,' Hadley said, but without conviction.
'I thought it would.'
'Maybe Briskin will go back to advocating planet-wetting.'
'Would that interest you ? That tired old nothing program ?'
Opening the door, Hadley moved back outside into the dark sidewalk.
'Anything would interest me. To be honest. I'd buy anything, right now.'
Gloomily, knowing that he had failed somewhere in this interchange with
Hadley, Darius Pethel said, 'Some employee you're going to make.'
'I can't help it,' Hadley pointed out. 'Maybe 'I'll change, though, in time;
maybe something'll come along. God, I'm still hoping!' He seemed amazed, even a
little disgusted with himself.
'You know what you could try for a change ?' Pethel said. 'Showing up a
little early, a few minutes before nine. It might alter your life. Even
more than that moronic attempt to escape by sneaking off with that girl to that
weird world where those semi-apes live. Try it. See if I'm not right.'
Hadley eyed him. 'You mean it. And that's the whole point; that's why we
don't understand each other. Maybe I should feel sorry for you instead of
trying to get you to feel sorry for me. You know, maybe someday you'll suddenly
crack up completely, fly into a million pieces, without warning. And I'll limp
on for years. Never really give up, never actually stop. Interesting.'
'For a person who used to be optimistic...'
'I've aged,' Hadley said briefly. 'That experience on that alter-world did
it to me. Can't you see it in my face ?' He nodded goodbye to Darius Pethel,
then. 'See you tomorrow. Bright and early.'
As he shut the door, Pethel said to himself, I hope he can still peddle
'scuttlers. We'll see about that. If not, he's out. For good. As far as I'm
concerned, he's just back here on probation, and he's lucky to get that.
He's sure depressing to talk to these days, Pethel said to himself as he
returned to his back office.
That raise in salary will eventually cheer him up, he decided. How can it
not ?
His own meager tendency to doubt was assuaged by that timely realization.
Thoroughly. Or ... was it ? Down underneath on a level which he did not care to
communicate, a region of his mind which remained his own damn business, he was
not so sure.
His feet up on the arm of the couch, Phil Danville said, 'It was my majestic
speeches that did it for you, Jim. So what's my reward ?' He grinned. 'I'm
waiting.' He waited. 'Well ?'
'Nothing on Earth could ever be sufficient reward for such an
accomplishment,' Jim Briskin said absently.
'He's got his mind on something else.' Danville said, appealing to Dorothy
Gill. 'Look at him. He's not even happy; he's going to ruin Sal Heim's party,
when we get there. Maybe we better not go.'
'We have to go,' Dorothy Gill said.
'I won't wreck the mood of the party,' Jim assured them, drawing himself up
dutifully. 'I'll be over it by the time we get there.' After all, this was the
moment. But actually the great historic instant had already managed to slide
away and disappear; it was too elusive, too subtly interwoven into the texture
of more commonplace reality. And, in addition, the problems awaiting him seemed
to efface his recognition of anything else. But that was the way it had to be.
The door of the room opened and a Peke entered, carrying a portable version
of a TD linguistics machine. At the sight of him everyone jumped to their feet.
The three Secret servicemen whipped out their guns and one of them yelled.
'Drop!' The people in the room sprawled clumsily, dropping to the floor in
grotesque, inexpert heaps, scrambling without dignity away from the line of
prospective fire.
'Hello, Homo friends,' the Peke said, by means of the linguistics machine.
'I wish in particular to thank you, Mr. Briskin, for permitting me to remain in
your world. I will comport myself entirely within the framework of your legal
code, believe me. And, in addition, perhaps later...'
The three Secret servicemen put their laser pistols away and slowly returned
to their unobtrusive places about the room.
'Good lord,' Dorothy Gill breathed in relief as she got unsteadily to her
feet. 'It's only Bill Smith. This time, anyhow.' She sank back down in her
chair, sighing. 'We're safe for a little while longer.'
'You really gave us a scare,' Jim Briskin said to the Peke. He found himself
still shaking. 'I don't remember having had anything to do with permitting him
to stay here,' he said to Tito Cravelli.
'He's thanking you in advance,' Tito said. 'You're going to decide after you
become president, or rather he hopes so.'
Phil Danville said, 'Let's take him along with us to the party. That ought
to please Sal Heim. To know there's still one of them here, that we haven't quite
gotten rid of them and probably never will.'
'It is highly fortunate that our two peoples ...' the Peke began, but Tito
Cravelli cut him off.
'Save it. The campaign is over.'
'We're taking a rest,' Danville added. 'Highly deserved, too.'
The Peke blinked in surprise, then said hurriedly, 'As currently the sole
surviving member of my race on this side of the...'
I'm sorry,' Jim said, 'But Tito's right; we can't listen to any more. We've
got to leave here. You're welcome to come along, but don't make any speeches.
You understand ? It's over. We've got other things on our minds, now." The
time you're talking about seems like a million years ago, he said to himself.
It no longer seems plausible that your race and ours made contact during
modern, historical times; the memory of it is beginning to fade. And your
presence here among us has the quality of a startling and unexplained anomaly;
it's more puzzling than anything else.
'Let's go,' Phil Danville said, getting his coat and Dorothy's from the hall
closet and moving toward the door.
'I would think twice before going out there,' the Peke said to Jim Briskin.
'There's a man lying in wait for you.'
The Secret servicemen, again alert, strolled forward.
'Who is it ?' Jim asked the Peke.
'I couldn't catch his name,' the Peke said.
'Better not go out there,' Tito said warningly.
'A well-wisher,' Jim said.
'An assassin, you mean,' Tito said.
Jim started to open the hall door, but one of the Secret servicemen stopped
him. 'Let us check first.' They filed, hard-eyed, out of the room.
'They're still after you,' Tito said to Jim.
'I doubt that very much,' Jim said.
A moment later the Secret servicemen returned, leisurely. 'It's okay, Mr.
Briskin. You can talk to him.'
Opening the hall door, Jim looked out. It was not a well wisher and, as the
Secret servicemen had said, it was not an assassin.
The man waiting for him was Bruno Mini.
Hand extended, Mini said, 'It certainly took me a long time to catch up with
you, Mr. Briskin. I've been trying all throughout the latter part of the
campaign.'
'Indeed you have, Mr. Mini,' Jim said.
Mini advanced toward Jim, smiling an intense, white-tooth smile. A small
man, wearing a stylish but somewhat gaudy Ionian purple snakeskin jacket with
illuminated kummerbund and curly-toed Brazilian pigbark slippers, Mini looked
exactly what he was: a dealer in wholesale dried fruit. 'We've got a tremendous
amount of vital business to transact,' Mini said earnestly. The gold toothpick
projecting from between his molar teeth wobbled in a spasm of energetic
activity. 'At this point I can reveal to you that the first planet I've planned
on - and this will no doubt come to you as a complete surprise - is Uranus.
You'll naturally ask why.'
'No,' Jim Briskin said. 'I won't ask why.' He felt resigned. Sooner or later
Mini had to catch up with him. In fact, he was very slightly but perceptibly
relieved that it had at last happened... and that did surprise him.
'Where can we go that we can talk at adequate length to do justice to this
topic, and of course, in strict private ?' Mini asked. He added, 'I've already
gone to the trouble of informing the media that we would meet, tonight; it's my
'conviction', based on years of experience, that dignified but continual public
exposure to our program will do much to put it over with the - how shall I
phrase it ? - less educated masses.' He rooted vigorously in his overstuffed
briefcase.
A Secret serviceman appeared out of nowhere and took the briefcase from
Mini.
Grumbling, Mini said, 'You fellows inspected it downstairs on the front
sidewalk and then here just a minute ago. For heaven's sake.'
'Can't afford to take any chances.' Obviously the Secret servicemen viewed
Bruno Mini with magnified distrust. Some quality about him aroused their
professional interest. The briefcase was elaborately examined and then,
reluctantly, passed back to Mini as being harmless.
From the room noisily trooped Tito Cravelli, Phil Danville, Dorothy Gill,
the Peke Bill Smith, wearing his blue cloth cap and carrying his linguistics
machine, and finally three Secret servicemen. 'We're on our way to Sal and
Pat's,' Tito explained to Jim Briskin. 'You coming or not ?'
'Not for a while,' Jim Briskin said, and knew that it would be a long time
before he managed to get to this party or any other party.
'Let me describe the advantages of Uranus,' Mini said enthusiastically. And
began handing Jim an overwhelming spectrum of documents from his briefcase as
rapidly as possible.
It was going to be a difficult four years. He could see that. Four ? More
likely eight.
The way things turned out, he was proved correct.
Cantata-104 by Philip K. Dick
CANTATA-141
by Philip K. Dick
Also by Philip K. Dick
Solar Lottery (1955)
The World Jones Made (1956)
The Man Who Japed (1956)
The Cosmic Puppets (1957)
Eye in the Sky (1957)
Dr. Futurity (1959)
Time Out of Joint (1959)
Vulcan's Hammer (1960)
The Man in the High Castle (1962)
The Game-Players of Titan (1963)
The Penultimate Truth (1964)
The Simulacra (1964)
Martian Time Slip (1964)
Clans of the Alphane Moon (1964)
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965)
Dr. Bloodmoney or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1965)
The Ganymede Takeover (with Ray F. Nelson) (1967)
Now Wait for Last Year (1966)
The Zap Gun (1967)
Counter-Clock World (1967)
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep ? (1968)
Galactic Pot-Healer (1969)
Ubik (1969)
Our Friends from Frolix 8 (1970)
A Maze of Death (1970)
We Can Build You (1972)
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said (1974)
Confessions of a Crap Artist (1975)
Deus Irae (with Roger Zelazny) (1976)
A Scanner Darkly (1977)
The Divine Invasion (1981)
Valis (1981)
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982)
Lies, Inc (1984)
The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1984)
Puttering About in a Small Land (1985)
In Milton Lumky Territory (1985)
Radio Free Albemuth (1985)
Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1986)
Mary and the Giant (1987)
The Broken Bubble (1988)
SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS
The Variable Man (1957)
A Handful of Darkness (1966)
The Turning Wheel (1977)
The Best of Philip K. Dick (1977)
The Golden Man (1980)
Minority Report (2002)
THE COLLECTED STORIES OF PHILIP K. DICK
Beyond Lies the Wub (1987)
Second Variety (1987)
The Father Thing (1987)
Minority Report (1987)
We Can Remember It For You Wholesale (1987)
Printed in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives pic
1
The young couple, black-haired, dark-skinned, probably Mexican or Puerto
Rican, stood nervously at Herb Lackmore's counter and the boy, the husband,
said in a low voice, 'Sir, we want to be put to sleep. We want to become bibs.'
Rising from his desk, Lackmore walked to the counter and although he did not
like Cols - there seemed to be more of them every month, coming into his
Oakland branch office of the U.S. Department on Special Public Welfare - he
said in a pleasant tone of voice designed to reassure the two of them, 'Have
you thought it over carefully, folks ? It's a big step. You might be out for, say,
a few hundred years. Have you shopped for any professional advice about
this ?'
The boy, glancing at his wife, swallowed and murmured, 'No, sir. We just
decided between us. Neither of us can get a job and we're about to be evicted
from our dorm. We don't even own a wheel, and what can you do without a wheel ?
You can't go anywhere. You can't even look for work.' He was not a bad-looking
boy, Lackmore noticed. Possibly eighteen, he still wore the coat and trousers
which were army-separation issue. The girl had long hair; she was quite small,
with black, bright eyes and a delicately-formed almost doll-like face. She
never ceased watching her husband.
'I'm going to have a baby,' the girl blurted.
'Aw, the heck with both of you,' Lackmore said in disgust, drawing his
breath in sharply. 'You both get right out of here.'
Ducking their heads guiltily the boy and his wife turned and started from
Lackmore's office, back outside onto the busy downtown early-morning Oakland,
California street.
'Go see an abort-consultant!' Lackmore called after them irritably. He
resented having to help them, but obviously someone had to; look at the spot
they had gotten themselves into. Because no doubt they were living on a
government military pension, and if the girl was pregnant the pension would
automatically be withdrawn.
Plucking hesitantly at the sleeve of his wrinkled coat the Col boy said,
'Sir, how do we find an abort-consultant ?'
The ignorance of the dark-skinned strata, despite the government's ceaseless
educational campaigns. No wonder their women were often preg. 'Look in the
phone book,' Lackmore said. 'Under abortionists, therapeutic. Then the
subsection advisors. Got it ?'
'Yes, sir. Thank you.' The boy nodded rapidly.
'Can you read ?'
'Yes. I stayed in school until I was thirteen.' On the boy's face fierce
pride showed; his black eyes gleamed.
Lackmore returned to reading his homeopape; he did not have any more time to
offer gratis. No wonder they wanted to become bibs. Preserved, unchanged, in a
government warehouse, year after year, until - would the labor market ever
improve ? Lackmore personally doubted it, and he had been around a long time;
he was ninety-five years old, a jerry. In his time he had put to sleep
thousands of people, almost all of them, like this couple, young. And - dark.
The door of the office shut. The young couple had gone again as quietly as
they had come.
Sighing, Lackmore began to read once more the pape's article on the divorce
trial of Lurton D. Sands, Jr, the most sensational event now taking place; as
always, he read every word of it avidly.
This day began for Darius Pethel with vidphone calls from irate customers
wanting to know why their Jiffi-scuttlers hadn't been fixed. Any time now, he
told them soothingly, and hoped that Erickson was already at work in the
service department of Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service.
As soon as he was off the vidphone Pethel searched among the litter on his
desk for the day's copy of U.S. Business Report; he of course kept
abreast of all the economic developments on the planet. This alone set him
above his employees; this, his wealth, and his advanced age.
'What's it say ?' his salesman, Stu Hadley, asked, standing in the office
doorway, robant magnetic broom in hand, pausing in his activity.
Silently, Pethel read the major headline.
EFFECTS ON THE NATION'S BUSINESS
COMMUNITY OF A NEGRO PRESIDENT
And there, in 3-D, animated, was a pic of James Briskin; the pic came to
life, Candidate Briskin smiled in miniature, as Pethel pressed the tab beneath it.
The Negro's mustache-obscured lips moved and above his head a balloon appeared,
filled with the words he was saying. My first task will be to find an equitable disposition of the tens of
millions of sleeping.
'And dump every last bib back on the labor market,' Pethel murmured,
releasing the word tab. 'If this guy gets in, the nation's ruined.' But it was
inevitable. Sooner or later, there would be a Negro president; after all, since
the Event of 1993 there had been more Cols than Caucs.
Gloomily, he turned to page-two for the latest on the Lurton Sands scandal;
maybe that would cheer him up, the political news being so bad. The famous
org-trans surgeon had become involved in a sensational contested divorce suit
with his equally famous wife Myra, the abort-consultant. All sorts of juicy
details were beginning to filter out, charges on both sides. Dr Sands,
according to the homeopapes, had a mistress; that was why Myra had stomped out,
and rightly so. Not like the old days, Pethel thought, recalling his youth in
the late decades of the twentieth century. Now it was 2080 and public - and
private - morality had worsened.
Why would Dr Sands want a mistress anyhow, Pethel wondered, when there's
that Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite passing overhead every day ? They
say there're five thousand girls to choose from.
He, himself, had never visited Thisbe Olt's satellite; he did not approve of
it, nor did very many jerries - it was too radical a solution to the
overpopulation problem, and seniors, by letter and telegram, had fought its
passage in Congress back in '72. But the bill had gone through anyhow ...
probably, he reflected, because most Congressmen had the idea of taking a
jet'ab up there themselves. And no doubt regularly did, now.
'If we whites stick together - ' Hadley began.
'Listen,' Pethel said, 'that time has passed. If Briskin can dispose of the
bibs, more power to him; personally, it keeps me awake at night, thinking of
all those people, most of them just kids, lying in those gov warehouses year after
year. Look at the talent going to waste. It's - bureaucratic! Only a swollen
socialist government would have dreamed up a solution like that.' He eyed his
salesman harshly. 'If you hadn't gotten this job with me, even you might - '
Hadley interrupted quietly, 'But I'm white.'
Reading on further, Pethel saw that Thisbe Olt's satellite had grossed a
billion U.S. dollars in 2079. Wow, he said to himself. That's big business,
Before him was a pic of Thisbe; with cadmium-white hair and little high conical
breasts she was a superb sight, an aesthetic as well as a sexual treat. The pic
showed her serving male guests of her satellite a tequila sour - an added
fillip because tequila, being derived from the mescal plant, had long been
illegal on Earth proper.
Pethel touched the word tab of Thisbe's pic and at once Thisbe's eyes
sparkled, her head turned, her stable, dense breasts vibrated subtly, and in
the balloon above her head the proper words formed. Embarrassing personal urgency, Mr. American businessman ? Do as many
doctors recommend: visit my Golden Door!
It was an ad, Pethel discovered. Not an informative article.
'Excuse me.' A customer had entered the store and Hadley moved in his
direction.
Oh lord, Darius Pethel thought as he recognized the customer. Don't we have
his 'scuttler fixed yet ? He rose to his feet, knowing that he would be
personally needed to appease the man; this was Dr Lurton Sands, and because of
his recent domestic troubles he had become, of late, demanding and hot-tempered.
'Yes, Doctor,' Pethel said, walking toward him. 'What can I do for you today
?' As if he didn't know. Trying to fight off Myra as well as keep his mistress,
Cally Vale, Dr Sands had enough problems; he really needed the use of his
Jiffi-scuttler. Unlike other customers it was not going to be possible to put
this man off.
Plucking by reflex at his great handlebar mustache, presidential candidate
Jim Briskin said tentatively, 'We're in a rut, Sal. I ought to fire you. You're
trying to make me out the epitome of the Cols and yet you know I've spent
twenty years playing up to the white power structure. Frankly, I think we'd
have better luck trying to get the white vote, not the dark. I'm used to them;
I can appeal to them.'
'You're wrong,' his campaign manager, Salisbury Heim, said. 'Your appeal -
listen and understand this, Jim - is to the dark kid and his wife scared to
death their only prospect is winding up bibs in some gov warehouse.
"Bottled in bond," as they say. In you these people see...'
'But I feel guilty.'
'Why ?' Sal Heim demanded.
'Because I'm a fake. I can't close the Dept of SPW warehouses; you know
that. You got me to promise, and ever since I've been sweating my life away
trying to conceive how it could be done. And there isn't any way.' He examined
his wristwatch; one quarter-hour remained before he had to give his speech.
'Have you read the speech Phil Danville wrote for me ?' He reached into his
disorganized, lumpy coat-pouch.
'Danville!' Heim's face convulsed. 'I thought you got rid of him; give me
that.' He grabbed the folded sheets and began going over them. 'Danville is a
nut. Look.' He waved the first sheet in Jim Briskin's face. 'According to him,
you're going to ban traffic from the U.S. to Thisbe's satellite.
That's insane! If the Golden Door is closed, the birth rate will jump back
up again where it was - what then ? How does Danville manage to counter that ?'
After a pause Briskin said, 'The Golden Door is immoral.'
Spluttering, Heim said, 'Sure. And animals should wear pants.'
'There's just got to be a better solution than that satellite.'
Heim lapsed into silence as he read further into title speech. 'And he has
you advocate this outmoded, thoroughly discredited planet-wetting technique of
Bruno Mini.' He tossed the papers into Jim Briskin's lap. 'So what do you wind
up with ? You back a planetary colonization scheme tried twenty years ago and
abandoned; you advocate closing the Golden Door satellite - you'll be popular,
Jim, after tonight. But popular with whom, though ? Just answer me; who is this
aimed at ?’ He waited.
There was silence.
'You know what I think ?' Heim said presently. 'I think this is your
elaborate way of giving up. Of saying to hell with the whole thing. It's how
you shed responsibility; I saw you start to do the same thing at the convention
in that crazy doomsday speech you gave, that morbid curiosity which still has
everyone baffled. But fortunately you'd already been nominated. It was too late
for the convention to repudiate you.'
Briskin said, 'I expressed my real convictions in that speech.'
'What, that civilization is now doomed because of this overpopulation biz ?
Some convictions for the first Col President to have.' Heim got to his feet and
walked to the window; he stood looking out at downtown Philadelphia, at tide
jet-copters landing, the runnels of autocars and ramps of footers coming and
going, into and out of every high-rise building in sight. 'I once in a while
think,' Heim said in a low voice, 'that you feel it's doomed because it's
nominated a Negro and may elect him; it's a way of putting yourself down.'
'No,' Briskin said, with calm; his long face remained unruffled.
'I'll tell you what to say in your speech for tonight,' Heim said, his back
to Briskin. 'First, you once more describe your relationship with Frank
Woodbine, because people go for space explorers; Woodbine is a hero, much more
so than you or what's-his-name. You know; the man you're running against. The
SRCD incumbent.'
'William Schwarz.'
Heim nodded exaggeratedly. 'Yes, you're right. Then after you gas about
Woodbine - and we show a few shots of you and him standing together on various
planets - then you make a joke about Dr Sands.'
'No,' Briskin said.
'Why not ? Is Sands a sacred cow ? You ain't touch him ?'
Jim Briskin said slowly, painstakingly, 'Because Sands is a great doctor and
shouldn't be ridiculed in the media the way he is right now.'
'He saved your brother's life. By finding him a wet new liver just in the
nick of time. Or he saved your mother just when...'
'Sands has preserved hundreds, thousands, of people. Including plenty of
Cols. Whether they were able to pay or not.' Briskin was silent a moment and
then he added, 'Also I met his wife Myra and I didn't like her. Years ago I
went to her; I had made a girl preg and we wanted abort advice.'
'Good!' Heim said violently. 'We can use that. You made a girl pregnant -
that, when Nonovulid is free for the asking; that shows you're a provident
type, Jim.' He tapped his forehead. 'You think ahead.'
'I now have five minutes,' Briskin said woodenly. He gathered up the pages
of Phil Danville's speech and returned them to his inside coat pouch; he still
wore a formal dark suit even in hot weather. That, and a flaming red wig, had
been his trademark back in the days when he had telecast as a TV newsclown.
'Give that speech,' Heim said, 'and you're politically dead. And if
you're...' He broke off. The door to the room had opened and his wife Patricia
stood there.
'Sorry to bother you,' Pat said. 'But everyone out here can hear you
yelling.' Heim caught a glimpse, then, of the big outside room full of teen-age
Briskinettes, uniformed young volunteers who had come from all over the country
to help elect the Republican Liberal candidate.
'Sorry,' Heim murmured.
Pat entered the room and shut the door after her. 'I think Jim’s right,
Sal.' Small, gracefully-built - she had once been a dancer - Pat lithely seated
herself and lit a cigar. 'The more naive Jim appears, the better.' She blew
gray smoke from between her luminous, pale lifts. 'He still has a lingering
reputation for being cynical. Whereas he should be another Wendell Wilkie.'
'Wilkie lost,' Heim pointed out.
'And Jim may lose,' Pat said; she tossed her head, brushing back her long
hair from her eyes. 'But if he does, he can run again and win next time. The
important thing is for him to appear sensitive and innocent, a sweet person who
takes the world's suffering on his own shoulders because he's made that way. He
can't help it; he has to suffer. You see ?'
'Amateurs,' Heim said, and groaned.
The TV cameras stood inert, as the seconds passed, but they were ready to
begin; the time for the speech lay just ahead as Jim Briskin sat at the small
desk which he employed when addressing the people. Before him, near at hand,
rested Phil Danville's speech. And he sat meditating as the TV technicians
prepared for the recording.
The speech would be beamed to the Republican-Liberal Party's satellite relay
station and from it telecast repeatedly until saturation point had been achieved.
States Rights Conservative Democrat attempts to jam it would probably fail,
because of the enormous signal-strength of the R-L satellite. The message would
get through despite Tompkins Act, which permitted jamming of political
material. And, simultaneously, Schwarz' speech would be jammed in return; it
was scheduled for release at the same time.
Across from him sat Patricia Heim, lost in a cloud of nervous introspection.
And, in the control room, he caught a glimpse of Sal, busy with the TV engineers,
making certain that the image recorded would be flattering.
And, off in a corner by himself, sat Phil Danville. No one talked to
Danville; the party bigwigs, passing in and out of the studio, astutely ignored
his existence.
A technician nodded to Jim. Time to begin his speech.
'It's very popular these days,' Jim Briskin said to the TV camera, 'to make
fun of the old dreams and schemes for planetary colonization. How could people
have been so nutty ? Trying to live in completely inhuman environments ... on
worlds never designed for Homo sapiens. And it's amusing that they tried for
decades to alter these hostile environments to meet human needs - and naturally
failed.' He spoke slowly, almost drawlingly; he took his time. He had the
attention of the nation, and he meant to make thorough use of it. 'So now we're
looking for a planet ready-made, another "Venus", or more accurately
what Venus specifically never was. What we had hoped it would be: lush,
moist and verdant and productive, a Garden of Eden just waiting for us to show
up.'
Reflectively, Patricia Heim smoked her El Producto alta cigar, never taking
her eyes from him.
'Well,' Jim Briskin said, 'we'll never find it. And if we do, it'll be too
late. Too small, too late, too far away. If we want another Venus, a planet we
can colonize, we'll have to manufacture it ourselves. We can laugh
ourselves sick at Bruno Mini, but the fact is, he was right.'
In the control room Sal Heim stared at him in gross anguish. He had done it.
Sanctioned Mini's abandoned scheme of recasting the ecology of another world.
Madness revisited.
The camera clicked off.
Turning his head, Jim Briskin saw the expression on Sal Heim's face. He had
been cut off there in the control room; Sal had given the order.
'You're not going to let me finish ?' Jim said.
Sal's voice, amplified, boomed, 'No, goddam it. No!'
Standing up, Pat called back, 'You have to. He's the candidate. If he wants
to hang himself, let him.'
Also on his feet, Danville said hoarsely, 'If you cut him off again I'll
spill it publicly. I'll leak the entire thing how you're working him like a
puppet!' He started at once toward the door of the studio; he was leaving.
Evidently he meant what he had said.
Jim Briskin said, 'You better turn it back on, Sal. They' re right; you have
to let me talk.' He did not feel angry, only impatient. His desire was to
continue, nothing else. 'Come on, Sal,' he said quietly. 'I'm waiting.'
The party brass and Sal Heim, in the control room, conferred.
'He'll give in,' Pat said to Jim Briskin. 'I know Sal.' Her face was
expressionless; she did not enjoy this, but she intended to endure it.
'Right,' Jim agreed, nodding.
'But will you watch a playback of the speech, Jim ?' She said, 'For Sal's
sake. Just to be sure you intend what you say.'
'Sure,' he said. He had meant to anyhow.
Sal Heim's voice boomed from the wall speaker. 'Damn your black Col hide,
Jim!'
Grinning, Jim Briskin waited, seated at his desk, his arms folded.
The read light of the central camera clicked back on.
2
After the speech Jim Briskin’s press secretary, Dorothy Gill, collared him
in the corridor. 'Mr. Briskin, you asked me yesterday to find out if Bruno Mini
is still alive. He is, after a fashion.' Miss Gill examined her notes. 'He's a
buyer for a dried fruit company in Sacramento, California, now. Evidently
Mini's entirely given up his planet-wetting career, but your speech just now
will probably bring him back to his old grazing ground.'
'Possibly not,' Briskin said. 'Mini may not like the idea of a Col taking up
his ideas and propagandizing them. Thanks, Dorothy.'
Coming up beside him, Sal Heim shook his head and said, 'Jim, you just don't
have political instinct.'
Shrugging, Jim Briskin said, 'Possibly you're right.' He was in that sort of
mood, now he felt passive and depressed. In any case the damage had been done;
the speech was on tape and already being relayed to the R-L satellite. His
review of it had been cursory at best.
'I heard what Dotty said,' Sal said. 'That Mini character will be showing up
here now; we'll have him to contend with, along with all our other problems.
Anyhow, how about a drink ?'
'Okay,' Jim Briskin agreed. 'Wherever you say. Lead the way.'
'May I join you ?' Patricia said, appearing beside her husband.
'Sure, 'Sal said. He put his arm around her and hugged her. 'A good big tall
one, full of curiously-refreshing tiny little bubbles that last all through the
drink. Just what women like.'
As they stepped out onto the sidewalk, Jim Briskin saw a picket - two of
them, in fact - carrying signs.
KEEP THE
WHITE HOUSE WHITE
LET'S KEEP AMERICA CLEAN!
The two pickets, both young Caucs, stared at him and he and Sal and Patricia
stared at them. No one spoke. Several homeopape camera men snapped picks; their
flashbulbs lit the static scene starkly for an instant, and then Sal and
Patricia, with Jim Briskin following, started on. The two pickets continued to
pace back and forth along their little routes.
'The bastards,' Pat said as the three of them sealed themselves at a booth
in the cocktail lounge across the street from the TV studio.
Jim Briskin said, 'It's their job. God evidently meant them to do that.' It
did not particularly bother him; in one form or another it had been a part of
his life as long as he could remember.
'But Schwarz agreed to keep race and religion out of the election,' Pat
said.
'Bill Schwarz did,' Jim Briskin said, 'but Verne Engel didn't. And it's
Engel who runs CLEAN, not the SRCD Party.'
'I know darn well the SRCD pays the money to keep CLEAN solvent,' Sal
murmured. 'Without their support it’d fold in a day.'
'I don't agree with you,' Briskin said. 'I think there'll always be a hate
organization like CLEAN, and there'll always be people to support it.' After
all, CLEAN had a point; they did not want to see a Negro President, and wasn't
it their right to feel like that ? Some people did, some people didn't; that
was perfectly natural. And, he thought, why should we pretend that race is not
the issue ? It is, really. I am a Negro. Verne Engel is factually correct. The
real question was: how large a percentage of the electorate supported CLEAN'S
views ? Certainly, CLEAN did not hurt his feelings; he could not be wounded; he
had experienced too much already in his years as a newsclown. In my years, he
thought to himself acidly, as an American Negro.
A small boy, white, appeared at the booth with a pen and tablet of paper.
'Mr. Briskin, can I get your autograph ?'
Jim signed and the boy darted off to join his parents at the door of the
tavern. The couple, well-dressed, young, and obviously upper stratum, waved at
him cheerily. 'We're with you!' the man called.
'Thanks,' Jim said, nodding to them and trying - but not successfully - to
sound cheery in return.
'You're in a mood,' Pat commented.
He nodded. Mutely.
'Think of all those people with lily-white skins,' Sal said, 'who're going
to vote for a Col. My, my. It's encouraging. Proves not all of us Whites are
bad down underneath.'
'Did I ever say you were ?' Jim asked.
'No, but you really think that. You don't really trust any of us.'
'Where'd you drag that up from ?' Jim demanded, angry now.
'What're you going to do ?' Sal said. 'Slash me with your electro-graphic
magnetic razor ?'
Pat said sharply, 'What are you doing, Sal ? Why are you talking to Jim like
that ?' She peered about nervously. 'Suppose someone overheard.'
'I'm trying to jerk him out of his depression,' Sal said. 'I don't like to
see him give in to them. Those CLEAN pickets upset him, but he doesn't
recognize it or feel it consciously.' He eyed Jim. 'I've heard you say it many
times. "I can't be hurt." Hell, you sure can. You were hurt just now.
You want everyone to love you, White and Col both. I don't know how you ever
got into politics in the first place. You should have stayed a newsclown,
delighting young and old. Especially the very young.'
Jim said, 'I want to help the human race.'
'By changing the ecology of the planets ? Are you serious ?'
'If I'm voted into office I actually intend to appoint Bruno Mini, without
even having met him, director of the space program; I'm going to give him the
chance they never let him have, even when they - '
'If you get elected, ' Pat said, 'you can pardon Dr Sands.'
'Pardon him ?' He glanced at her, disconcerted … 'He's not being tried; he's
being divorced.'
'You haven't heard the rumes ?' Pat said. 'His wife is going to dig up
something criminal he's done so she can dispatch him and obtain their total
property. No one knows what it is yet but she's hinted - '
'I don't want to hear,' Jim Briskin said.
'You may be right,' Pat said thoughtfully. 'The Sands divorce is turning
nasty; it might backfire if you mentioned it, as Sal wants you to. The
mistress, Cally Vale, has disappeared, possibly murdered. Maybe you do have an
instinct, Jim. Maybe you don't need us after all.'
'I need you,' Jim said, 'but not to embroil me in Dr Sands' marital
problems.' He sipped his drink.
Rick Erickson, repairman for Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service, lit
a cigarette, tipped his stool back by pushing with his bony knees against his
work bench. Before him rested the master turret of a defective jiffi-scuttler.
The one, in fact, which belonged to Dr Lurton Sands.
There had always been bugs in the 'scuttlers. This first one put in use had
broken down; years ago, that had been, but the 'scuttlers remained basically
the same now as then.
Historically, the original defective 'scuttler had belonged to an employee
of Terran Development named Henry Ellis. After the fashion of humans Ellis had
not reported the defect to his employers ... or so Rick recalled. It had been
before his time but myth persisted, an incredible legend, still current among
'scuttler repairmen, that through the defect in his 'scuttler Ellis had - it
was hard to believe - composed the Holy Bible.
The principle underlying the operation of the 'scuttlers was a limited form
of time travel. Along the tube of his 'scuttler - it was said - Ellis had found
a weak point, a shimmer at which another continuum completely had been visible.
He had stooped down and witnessed a gathering of tiny persons who yammered in
speeded-up voices and scampered about in their world just beyond the wall of
the tube.
Who were these people ? Initially, Ellis had not known, but even so he had
engaged in commerce with them; he had accepted sheets - astonishingly thin and
tiny - of questions, taken the questions to language-decoding equipment at TD,
then, once the foreign script of the tiny people had been translated, taking
the questions to one of the corporation's big computers to get them answered.
Then back to the Linguistics Department and at last at the end of the day, back
up the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler to hand to the tiny people the answers - in
their own language - to their questions.
Evidently, if you believed this, Ellis had been a charitable man.
However, Ellis had supposed that this was a non-Terran race dwelling on a
miniature planet in some other system entirely. He was wrong. According to the
legend, the tiny people were from Earth's own past; the script, of course, had
been ancient Hebrew. Whether this had really happened Rick did not pretend to
know, but, in any case, for some breach of company rules Ellis had been fired
by TD and had long since disappeared. Perhaps he had emigrated; who knew ? Who
cared ? TD's job was to patch the thin spot in the tube and see that the defect
did not reoccur in subsequent 'scuttlers.
All at once the intercom at the end of Rick's workbench blared. 'Hey,
Erickson.' It was Pethel's voice. 'Dr Sands is up here asking about his
'scuttler. When'll it be ready ?'
With the handle of a screwdriver Rick Erickson savagely tapped the master
turret of Dr Sands' 'scuttler. I better go upstairs and talk to Sands, he
reflected. I mean, this is driving me crazy. It can't malfunction the
way he claims.
Two steps at a time, Rick Erickson ascended to the main floor. There, at the
front door, a man was just leaving; it was Sands - Erickson recognized him from
the homeopape pics. He hurried, reached him outside on the sidewalk.
'Listen, doc - how come you say your 'scuttler dumps you off in Portland,
Oregon and places like that ? It just can't; it isn't built that way!'
They stood facing each other. Dr Sands, well-dressed, lean and slightly
balding, with deeply tanned skin and a thin, tapered nose, regarded him
complexly, cautious about answering. He looked smart, very smart.
So this is the man they're all writing about, Erickson said to himself.
Carries himself better than the rest of us and has a suit made from Martian
mole cricket hide. But - he felt irritation. Dr Sands in general had a helpless
manner; good-looking, in his mid-forties, he had an easy-going, bewildered
geniality about him, as if unable to deal with or comprehend the forces which
had overtaken him. Erickson could see that; Dr Sands had a crushed quality,
still stunned.
And yet Sands remained a gentleman. In a quiet, reasonable tone he said,
'But that's what it seems to do I wish I could tell you more, but I'm not
mechanically inclined.' He smiled, a thoroughly disarming smile that made
Erickson ashamed of his own gruffness.
'Aw, hell,' Erickson said, backtracking. 'It's the fault of TD - they could
have ironed the bugs out of the 'scuttlers years ago. Too bad you got a lemon.'
You look like a not too bad guy, he reflected.
' "A lemon,"'Dr. Sands echoed. 'Yes, that sums it up.' His face
twisted; he seemed amused. 'Well, that's my luck. Everything has been running
like this for me, lately.'
'Maybe I could get TD to take it back,' Erickson said. 'And swap you another
one for it.'
'No.' Dr Sands shook his head vigorously. 'I want that particular one.' His
tone had become firm; he meant what he said.
'Why ?' Who would want to keep an admitted lemon ? It didn't make sense. In
fact, the entire business had a wrong ring to it, and Erickson's keen faculties
detected this - he had seen many, many customers in his time.
'Because it's mine,' Sands said. 'I picked it out originally.' He started
on, then, down the sidewalk.
'Don't give me that,' Erickson said, half to himself.
Pausing, Sands said, 'What ?' He moved a step back, his face dark, now. The
geniality had departed.
'Sorry. No offense.' Erickson eyed Dr Sands acutely. And did not like what
he saw. Beneath the doctor's suavity there lay a coldness, something fixed and
hard. This was no ordinary person, and Erickson felt uneasy.
Dr Sands said in a crisp voice, 'Get it fixed and soon.' He turned and
strode on down the sidewalk, leaving Erickson standing there.
Jeez, Erickson said to himself, and whistled. My busted back. I wouldn't
want to tangle with him, he thought as he walked into the store.
Going downstairs a step at a time, hands thrust deep in his pockets, he
thought: Maybe I'll stick it all back together and take a trip through it. He
was again thinking of old Henry Ellis, the first man to receive a defective
'scuttler; he was recalling that Ellis had not wanted to give up his particular
one, either. And for good reason.
Back in the service department basement once more, Rick seated himself at
the work bench, picked up Dr Sands' 'scuttler-turret and began to reassemble
it. Presently, he had expertly restored it to its place and had hooked it back
into the circuit.
Now, he said to himself as he switched on the power field. Let's see where
it gets us. He entered the big gleaming circular hoop which was the entrance of
the 'scuttler, found himself - as usual - within a gray, formless tube which
stretched in both directions. Framed in the opening behind him lay his work
bench, And in front of him ?
New York City. An unstable view of an industriously-active street corner
which bordered Dr Sands' office. And a wedge, beyond it, of the vast building
itself, the high rise skyscraper of plastic - rexeroid compounds from Jupiter
-with its infinitude of floors, endless windows .,.. and, past that, monojets
rising and descending from the ramps, along which the footers scurried in
swarms so dense as to seem self-destructive. The largest city in the world,
four-fifths of which lay subsurface; what he saw was only a meager fraction, a
trace of its visible projections. No one in his lifetime, even a jerry,
could view it all; the city was simply too extensive.
See ? Erickson grumbled to himself. Your 'scuttler's working okay; this
isn't Portland, Oregon - it's exactly what it's supposed to be.
Crouching down, Erickson ran an expert hand over tide surface of the tube.
Seeking - what ? He didn't know. But something which would justify the doctor's
insistence on retaining this particular 'scuttler.
He took his time. He was not in a hurry. And he intended to find what he was
searching for.
3
The planet-wetting speech which Jim Briskin delivered that night - taped
earlier during the day and then beamed from the R-L satellite - was too painful
for Salisbury Heim to endure. Therefore, he took an hour off and sought relief
as many men did: he boarded a jet'ab and shortly was on his way to the Golden
Door Moments of Bliss satellite. Let Jim blab away about Bruno Mini's crackpot
engineering program, he said to himself as he rested in the rear seat of the
rising 'ab, grateful for this interval of relaxation. Let him cut his own
throat. But at least I don't have to be dragged down to defeat along with him;
I'm tempted, sometime before election day, to cut myself loose and go over to
the SRCD party.
Beyond doubt, Bill Schwarz would take him on. By an intricate route Heim had
already sounded the opposition out. Schwarz had, through this careful, indirect
linkage, expressed pleasure at the idea of Heim joining forces with him.
However, Heim was not really ready to make his move; he had not pursued the
topic further.
At least, not until today. This new, painful bombshell. And at a time when
the party had troubles enough already.
The fact of the matter was - and he knew this from the latest polls - that
Jim Briskin was trailing Schwarz. Despite the fact that he had all the Col
vote, and that included non-Negro dark races such as Puerto Ricans on the East
Coast and the Mexicans on the West. It was not a shoo-in by any means. And why
was Briskin trailing ? Because all the Whites would be going to the polls,
whereas only about sixty per cent of the Cols would show up on election day.
Incredibly, they were apathetic toward Jim. Perhaps they believed - and he had
heard this said - that Jim had sold out to the White power structure. That he
was not authentically a leader of the Col people as such. And in a sense this
was true.
Because Jim Briskin represented Whites and Cols alike.
'We're there, sir,' the 'ab driver, a Col, informed him. The 'ab slowed,
came to rest on the breast-shaped vehicle port of the satellite, a dozen yards
from the pink nipple which served as a location-signal device. 'You're Jim
Briskin's campaign manager ?' the driver said, turning to face him.; 'Yeah, I
recognize you. Listen, Mr. Heim; he's not a sell-out, is he ? I heard a lot of
folk argue that, but he wouldn't do it; I know that.'
'Jim Briskin,' Heim said as he dug for his wallet 'has sold out nobody. And
never will. You can tell your buddies that because it's the truth.' He paid his
fare, feeling grumpy. Grumpy as hell.
'But is it true that ?'
'He's working with Whites, yes. He's working with me and I'm White. So what
? Are the Whites supposed to disappear when Briskin is elected ? Is that what
you want ? Because if it is, you're not going to get it.'
'I see what you mean, I guess,' the driver said, nodding slowly. 'You infer
he's for all the people, right ? He's got the interest of the White minority at
heart just like tie has the Col majority. He's going to protect everybody, even
including you Whites.'
'That's right,' Salisbury Heim said, as he opened the 'ab’s door. 'As you
put it, "even including you Whites".' He stepped out on the pavement.
Yes, even us, he said to himself. Because we merit it.
'Hello there, Mr. Heim.' A woman's melodious voice. Heim turned -
'Thisbe,' he said, pleased. 'How are you ?'
I'm glad to see that you haven't stayed below just because your candidate
disapproves of us,' Thisbe Olt said. Archly, she raised her green-painted,
shining eyebrows. Her narrow, harlequin-like face glinted with countless dots
of pure light embedded within her skin; it gave her eerie, nimbus-like
countenance the appearance of constantly-renewed beauty. And she had renewed herself,
over a number of decades. Willowy, almost frail, she fiddled with a tassel of
stone-impregnated fabric draped about her bare arms; she had put on gay clothes
in order to come out and greet him and he was gratified. He liked her very much
- had for some time now.
Guardedly, Sal Heim said, 'What makes you think Jim Briskin has any bones to
pick with the Golden Door, Thisbe ? Has he ever actually said anything to that
effect ?' As far as he knew, Jim's opinions on that topic had not been made
public; at least he had tried to keep them under wraps.
'We know these things, Sal,' Thisbe said, 'I think you'd better go inside
and talk with George Walt about it; they're down on level C, in their office.
They have a few things to say to you, Sal. I know because they've been
discussing it.'
Annoyed, Sal said, 'I didn't come here - ' But what was the use ? If the
owners of the Golden Door satellite wanted to see him, it was undoubtedly
advisable for him to come around. 'Okay,' he said, and followed Thisbe in the direction
of the elevator.
It always distressed him - despite his efforts to the contrary - to find
himself engaged in conversation with George Walt. They were a mutation of a
special sort; he had never seen anything quite like them. Nonetheless, although
handicapped, George Walt had risen to great economic power in this society. The
Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, it was rumored, was only one of their
holdings; they were spread extensively over the financial map of the modern
world. They were a form of mutated twinning, joined at the base of the skull so
that a single cephalic structure served both separate bodies. Evidently the
personality George inhabited one hemisphere of the brain, made use of
one eye: the right, as he recalled. And the personality Walt existed on
the other side, distinct with its own idiosyncrasies, views and drives - and
its own eye from which to view the outside universe.
A uniformed attendant, a sort of cop, stopped Sid, as the elevator doors
opened on level C.
'Mr. George Walt wanted to see me,' Sal said. 'Or so Miss Olt tells me, at
least.'
'This way, Mr. Heim,' the uniformed attendant said, touching his cap
respectfully and leading Sal down the carpeted, silent hall.
He was let into a large chamber - and there, on a couch, sat George Walt.
Both bodies at once rose to their feet, supporting between them the common
head. The head, containing the unmingled entities of tide brothers, nodded in
greeting and the mouth smiled. One eye - the left - regarded him steadily,
while the other wandered vaguely off, as if preoccupied.
The two necks joined the head in such a way that the head and face were
tilted slightly back. George Walt tended to look slightly over whomever they
were talking to, and this added to the unique impression; it made them seem
formidable, as if their attention could not really be engaged. The head was
normal size, however, as were both bodies. The body to the left - Sal did not
recall which of them it was - wore informal clothing, a cotton shirt and
slacks, with sandals on the feet. The right hand body, however, was formally
dressed in a single-breasted suit, tie and buttoned gray cape. And the hands of
the right body were jammed deep into the trouser pockets, a stance which gave
to it an aura of authority if not age; it seemed distinctly older than its
twin.
'This is George,' the head said, pleasantly. 'How are you, Sal Heim ? Good
to see you.' The left body extended its hand. Sal walked toward the two of them
and gingerly shook hands. The right hand body, Walt, did not want to shake with
him; its hands remained in its pockets.
'This is Walt,' the head said, less pleasantly, then. We wanted to discuss
your candidate with you, Heim. Sit down and have a drink. Here, what can we fix
for you ?' Together, the two bodies managed to walk to the sideboard, where an
elaborate bar could be seen. Walt's hands opened a bottle of Bourbon while
George's expertly fixed an old fashioned, mixed sugar and water and bitters
together in the bottom of a glass. Together, George Walt made the drink and
carried it back to Sal.
'Thanks,' Sal Heim said, accepting the drink.
'This is Walt,' the common head said to him. 'We know that if Jim Briskin is
elected he'll instruct his Attorney General to find ways to shut the satellite
down. Isn't that a fact ?' The two eyes, together now, fixed themselves on him
in an intense, astute gaze.
'I don't know where you heard that,' Sal said, evasively.
"This is Walt,' the head said. "There's a leak in your
organization; that's where we heard it. You realize what this means. We'll have
to throw our support behind Schwarz. And you know how many transmissions we
make to Earth in a single day.'
Sal sighed. The Golden Door kept a perpetual stream of junk, honky-tonk
stag-type shows, pouring down over a variety of channels, available to and
widely watched by almost everyone in the country. The shows - especially the
climactic orgy in which Thisbe herself, with her famous display of expanding
and contracting muscles working in twenty directions simultaneously and in four
colors, appeared - were a come-on for the activity of the satellite. But it
would be duck soup to work in an anti-Briskin bias; the satellite's announcers
were slick prose.
Downing his drink he rose and started toward the door. 'Go ahead and stick
your stag shows on Jim; we'll win the election anyhow and then you can be sure
he'll shut you. In fact, I personally guarantee it right now.'
The head looked uneasy. 'Dirty p-pool,' it stammered.
Sal shrugged. 'I'm just protecting the interests of my client; you've been
making threats toward him. You started it, both of you.'
'This is George,' the head said rapidly. 'Here's what I think we ought to
have. Listen to this, Walt. We want Jim Briskin to come up here to the Golden Door
and be photographed publicly.' It added, in applause for itself, 'Good idea.
Get it, Sal ? Briskin arrives here, covered by all the media, and visits one of
the girls; it'll be good for his image because it'll show he's a normal guy -
and not some creep. So you benefit from this. And, while he's here, Briskin
compliments us.' It added, 'A good final touch but optional. For instance, he
says the national interest has - '
'He'll never do it,' Sal said. 'He'll lose the election first.'
The head said, plaintively, 'We'll give him any girl he wants; my lord, we
have five thousand to choose from!'
'No luck,' Sal Heim said. 'Now if you were to make that offer to me I'd take
you up on it in a second. But not Jim. He's - old-fashioned.' That was as good
a way to put it as any. 'He's a Puritan. You can call him a remnant of the
twentieth century, if you want.'
'Or nineteenth,' the head said, venomously.
'Say anything you want,' Sal said, nodding. 'Jim won't care. He knows what
he believes in; he thinks the satellite is undignified. The way it's all
handled up here, boom, boom, boom - mechanically, with no personal touch, no
meeting of humans on a human basis. You run an autofac; I don't object and most
people don't object, because it saves times. But Jim does, because he's
sentimental.'
Two right arms gestured at Sal menacingly as the head said loudly, 'The hell
with that! We're as sentimental up here as you can get! We play background
music in every room - the girls always learn the customer's first name and
they're required to call him by that and nothing else! How sentimental
can you get, for chrissakes ? 'What do you want ?' In a higher-pitched
voice it roared on, 'A marriage ceremony before and then a divorce procedure
afterward, so it constitutes a legal marriage, is that it ? Or do you want us
to teach the girls to sew mother hubbards and bloomers, and you pay to see
their ankles, and that's it ? Listen, Sal.' Its voice dropped a tone, became
ominous and deadly 'Listen, Sal Heim,' it repeated. 'We know our business;
don't tell us our business and we won't tell you yours. Starting tonight our TV
announcers are going to insert a plug for Schwarz in every telecast to Earth,
right in the middle of the glorious chef-d'oeuvre you-know-what where the
girls... well, you know. Yes, I mean that part. And we're going to make
a campaign out of this, really put it over. We're going to insure Bill Schwarz'
reelection.' It added, 'And insure that Col fink's thorough, total defeat.'
Sal said nothing. The great carpeted office was silent.
'No response from you, Sal ? You're going to sit idly by ?'
'I came up here to visit a girl I like,' Sal said. 'Sparky Rivers, her name
is. I'd like to see her now.' He felt weary. 'She's different from all the
others ... at least, all I've tried.' Rubbing his forehead he murmured, 'No,
I'm too tired, now. I've changed my mind. I'll just leave.'
'If she's as good as you say,' the head said, 'it won't require any energy
from you.' It laughed in appreciation of its wit. 'Send a fray named Sparky Rivers
down here,' it instructed, pressing a button on its desk.
Sal Heim nodded dully. There was something to that. And after all, this was
what he had come here for, this ancient, appreciated remedy.
'You're working too hard,' the head said acutely. 'What's the matter, Sal ? Are
you losing ? Obviously, you need our help. Very badly, in fact.'
'Help, schmelp,' Sal said. 'What I need is a six-week rest, and not up here.
I ought to take an 'ab to Africa and hunt spiders or whatever the craze is
right now.' With all his problems, he had lost touch.
Those big trench-digging spiders are out, now,' the head informed him. 'Now
it's nocturnal moths, again.' Walt's right arm pointed at the wall and Sal saw,
behind glass, three enormous iridescent cadavers, displayed under an
ultraviolet lamp which brought out all their many colors. 'Caught them myself,'
the head said, and then chided itself. 'No, you didn't; I did, You saw them but
I popped them into the killing jar.'
Sal Heim sat silently waiting for Sparky Rivers, as the two inhabitants of
the head argued with each other as to which of them had brought back the
African moths.
The top-notch and expensive - and dark-skinned - private investigator, Tito
Cravelli, operating out of N'York, handed the woman seated across from him the
findings which his Altac 3-60 computer had derived from the data provided it.
It was a good machine.
'Forty hospitals,' Tito said. 'Forty transplant operations within last year.
Statistically, it's unlikely that the UN Vital Organ Fund Reserve would
have had that many organs available in so limited a time, but it is possible.
In other words, we've got nothing."
Mrs. Myra Sands smoothed her skirt thoughtfully, then lit a cigarette.
'We'll select at random from among the forty; I want you to follow at least
five or six up. How long will it take for you to do that ?'
Tito calculated silently. 'Say two days. If I have to go there and see
people. Of course, if I can do some of it on the phone-' He liked to work
through the Vidphone Corporation of America's product; it meant he could stick
near the Altac 3-60. And, when anything came up, he could feed the data on the
spot, get an opinion without delay. He respected the 3-60; it had set him back
a great deal, a year ago when he had purchased it. And he did not intend to
permit it to lie idle, not if he could help it. But sometimes -
This was a difficult situation. Myra Sands was; not the sort who could
endure uncertainty; for her things had to be either this or that, either A or
not-A - Myra made use of Aristotle's Law of the Excluded Middle like no one
else he knew. He admired her. Myra was a handsome, extremely well-educated
woman, light-haired, in her middle forties; across from him she sat erect and
trim in her yellow Lunar squeak-frog suit, her legs long and without defect.
Her sharp chin alone let on - to Tito at least - the grimness, the no-nonsense
aspect, of her personality. Myra was a businesswoman first, before anything
else; as one of the nation's foremost authorities in the field of therapeutic
abortions, she was highly paid and highly honored... and she was well aware of
this. After all, she had been at it for years. And Tito respected anyone who
lived as an independent business person; after all, he, too, was his own boss,
beholden to no one, to no subsidizing organization or economic entity. He and
Myra had something in common. Although, of course, Myra would have denied it,
Myra Sands was a terrible goddam snob; to her, Tito Cravelli was an employee
whom she had hired to find out - or rather to establish as fact -certain
information about her husband.
He could not imagine why Lurton Sands had married her. Surely it had been
conflict - psychological, social, sexual, professional - from the start.
However, there was no explaining the chemistry which joined men and women,
locked them in embraces of hate and mutual suffering sometimes for ninety years
on end. In his line, Tito had seen plenty of it, enough to last him even a jerry
lifetime.
'Call Lattimore Hospital in San Francisco,' Myra instructed in her crisp,
vigilantly authoritative voice. 'In August, Lurton transplanted a spleen for an
army major, there; I think his name was Walleck or some such quiddity as that.
I recall, at the time ... Lurton had had, what shall I say ? A little too much
to drink. It was evening and we were having dinner. Lurton blurted out some
darn thing or other. About "paying heavily" for the spleen. You know,
Tito, that VOFR prices are rigidly set by the UN and they're not high; in fact
they're too low ... that's the cardinal reason the fund runs out of certain
vital organs so often. Not from a lack of supply so much as the existence of
too darn many takers.'
'Hmm,' Tito said, jotting notes.
'Lurton always said that if the VOFR only were to raise its rates...'
'You're positive it was a spleen ?' Tito broke in.
'Yes.' Myra nodded curtly, exhaling streamers of gray smoke that swirled
toward the lamp behind her, a cloud that drifted in the artificial light of the
office. It was dark outside, now; the time was seven-thirty.
'A spleen,' Tito recapitulated. 'In August of this year. At Lattimore
General Hospital in San Francisco. An army major named - '
'Now I'm beginning to think it was Wozzeck,' Myra put in. 'Or is that an
opera composer ?'
'It's an opera,' Tito said. 'By Berg. Seldom performed, now.' He lifted the
receiver of the vidphone. 'I'll get hold of the business office at Lattimore;
it's only four-thirty out there on the Coast.'
Myra rose to her feet and roamed restlessly about the office, rubbing her
gloved hands together in a motion that irritated Tito and made it difficult for
him to concentrate on his call.
'Have you had dinner ?' he asked her, as he waited on the line.
'No. But I never eat until eight-thirty or nine; it's barbaric to eat any
earlier.'
Tito said, 'Can I take you to dinner, Mrs. Sands ? I know an awfully good
little Armenian place in the Village. The food's actually prepared by humans.'
'Humans ? As compared to what ?'
'Automatic food-processing systems,' Tito murmured. 'Or don't you ever eat
in autoprep restaurants ?' After all, the Sands were wealthy; possibly they
normally enjoyed human-prepared food. 'Personally, I can't stand autopreps. The
food's always so predictable. Never burned, never ...' He broke off; on the
vidscreen the miniature features of an employee at Lattimore had formed. 'Miss,
this is Life-factors Research Consultants of N'York calling. I'd like to
inquire about an operation performed on a Major Wozzeck or Walleck last August,
a spleen transplant.'
'Wait,' Myra said suddenly. 'Now I remember; it wasn't a spleen - it was an
islands of Langerhans; you know, that part of the pancreas which controls sugar
production in the body. I remember because Lurton got to talking about it
because he saw me putting two teaspoonfuls of sugar in my coffee.'
'I'll look that up,' the girl at Lattimore said, overhearing Myra. She
turned to her files.
'What I want to find out,' Tito said to her, 'is the exact date at which the
organ was obtained from the UN's VOFR.
If you can give me that datum, please.' He waited, accustomed to having to
be patient. His line of work absolutely required that virtue, above all others,
including intelligence.
The girl presently said, 'A Colonel Weiswasser received an organ transplant
on August twelve of this year. Islands of Langerhans, obtained from the VOFR
the day before, August eleven. Dr Lurton Sands performed the operation and of
course certified the organ.'
'Thanks, miss,' Tito said, and broke the connection. "The VOFR office
is closed,' Myra said, as he began once more to dial. 'You'll have to wait
until tomorrow.'
'I know somebody there,' Tito said and continued dialing.
At last he had Gus Anderton, his contact at the UN's vital organ bank. 'Gus,
this is Tito. Check August eleven this year for me. Islands of Langerhans; okay
? See if the org-trans surgeon we previously had reference to picked up one
there on that date.'
His contact was back almost at once with the information. 'Correct, Tito; it
all checks out. Aug eleven, Islands of Langerhans. Transferred by jet-hopper to
Lattimore in San Francisco. Routine in every way.'
Tito Cravelli cut the circuit, exasperated.
After a pause Myra Sands, still pacing restlessly about his office,
exclaimed, 'But I know he's been obtaining organs illegally. He never turned
anybody down, and you know there never have been that many organs in the bank
reserve - he had to get them somewhere else. He still is; I know it.'
'Knowing this and proving this are two ...'
Turning to him, Myra snapped, 'And outside of the UN bank there's only one
other place he would or could go.'
'Agreed,' Tito said, nodding. 'But as your attorney said, you better have
proof before you make the charge; otherwise he'll sue you for slander, libel,
defamation of character, the entire biz. He'd have to. You'd give him no
choice.'
'You don't like this,' Myra said.
Tito shrugged. 'I don't have to like it. That doesn't matter.'
'But you think I'm treading on dangerous ground.'
'I know you are. Even if it's true that Lurton Sands ...'
'Don't say "even if". He's a fanatic and you know it; he
identifies so fully with his public image as a savior of lives that he's simply
had to make a psychological break with reality. Probably he started in a small
way, with what he told himself was a unique situation, an exception; he had to
have a particular organ and he took it. And the next time...' She shrugged. 'It
was easier. And so on.'
'I see, 'Tito said.
'I think I see what we're going to have to do,' Myra said. 'What you're
going to have to do. Get started on-this. Find out from your contact at the UN
exactly what organ the bank lacks at this time. Then deliberately set up
another emergency situation; have someone in a hospital somewhere apply to Lurton
for that particular transplant. I realize that it'll cost one hell of a lot of
money, but I'm willing to underwrite the expense. Do you see ?'
'I see,' Tito said. In other words, trap Lurton Sands. Play on the man's
determination to save the life of a dying person ... make his humanitarianism
the instrument of his destruction. What a way to earn a living, Tito thought to
himself. Another day, another dollar ... it's hardly that. Not when you get
involved in something like this.
'I know you can arrange it,' Myra said to him fervently. 'You're good;
you're experienced. Aren't you ?'
'Yes, Mrs. Sands,' Tito said. I'm experienced. Yes, possibly I can trap the
guy. Lead him by the nose. It shouldn't be too hard.'
'Make sure your "patient" offers him plenty,' Myra said in a
bitter, taut voice. 'Lurton will bite if he senses a good financial return;
that's what interests him - in spite of what you and the darn public may or may
not imagine. I ought to know; I've lived with him a good many years, shared his
most intimate thoughts.' She smiled, briefly. 'It seems a shame I have to tell
you how to go about your business, but obviously I have to.' Her smile
returned, cold and exceedingly hard.
'I appreciate your assistance,' Tito said woodenly.
'No you don't. You think I'm trying to do something wicked. Something out of
mere spite.'
Tito said, 'I don't think anything; I'm just hungry. Maybe you don't eat
until eight-thirty or nine, but I have pyloric spasms and I have to eat by
seven. Will you excuse me ?' He rose to his feet, pushing his desk chair back.
'I want to close up shop.' He did not renew his offer to take her out to
dinner.
Gathering up her coat and purse, Myra Sands said, 'Have you located Cally
Vale and if so where ?'
'No luck,' Tito said, and felt uncomfortable.
Staring at him, Myra said, 'But why can't you locate her ? She must be somewhere
! She looked as if she could not believe her ears.
'The court process servers can't find her either,' Tito pointed out. 'But
I'm sure she'll turn up by trial time.' He, too, had been wondering why his
staff had been unable to locate Lurton Sands' mistress; after all, there were
only a limited number of places a person could hide, and detection and tracing
devices, especially during the last two decades, had improved to an almost
supernatural accuracy.
Myra said, 'I'm beginning to think you're just not any good. I wonder if I
shouldn't put my business in somebody else's hands.'
'That's your privilege,' Tito said. His stomach ached, a series of spasms of
his pyloric valve. He wondered if he was ever going to get an opportunity to
eat tonight.
'You must find Miss Vale,' Myra said. 'She knows all the details of his
activity; that's why he's got her hidden - in fact she's pumping blood with a
heart he procured for her.'
'Okay, Mrs. Sands,' Tito agreed, and inwardly winced at the growing pain ...
4
The black-haired, extremely dark youth said shyly, 'We came to you, Mrs.
Sands, because we read about you in the homeopape. It said you were very good
and also you take people without too much money.' He added, 'We don't have any
money at all right now, but maybe we can pay you later.'
Brusquely, Myra Sands said, 'Don't worry about that now.' She surveyed the
boy and girl. 'Let's see. Your names are Art and Rachael Chaffy. Sit down, both
of you, and let's talk, all right ?' She smiled at them, her professional smile
of greeting and warmth; it was reserved for her clients, given to no one else,
not even to her husband - or, as she thought of Lurton now, her former husband.
In a soft voice the girl, Rachael, said 'We tried to get them to let us
become bibs but they said we should consult an advisor first.' She explained,
'I'm - well, you see, somehow I got to be preg. I'm sorry.' She ducked her head
fearfully, with shame, her cheeks flushing deep scarlet. 'It's too bad they
don't just let you kill yourself, like they did a few years ago,' she murmured.
'Because that would solve it."
'That law,' Myra said firmly, 'was a bad idea. However imperfect deep-sleep
is, it's certainly preferable to the old form of self-destruction undertaken on
an individual basis. How far advanced is your pregnancy, dear ?'
'About a month and a half,' Rachael Chaffy said, lifting her head a trifle.
She managed to meet Myra's gaze; for a moment, at least.
'Then abort-processing presents no difficulty,' Myra said. 'It's routine. We
can arrange for it by noon today and have it done by six tonight. At any one of
several free government abort clinics here in the area. Just a moment.' Her
secretary had opened the door to the office and was trying to catch her
attention. 'What is it, Tina ?'
'An urgent phone call for you, Mrs. Sands.'
Myra clicked on her desk vidphone. On the screen Tito Cravelli's features
formed in replica, puffy with agitation.
'Mrs. Sands,' Tito said, 'sorry to bother you at your office so early this
morning. But a number of tracking devices we've been employing here have wound
up their term of service and have come home. I thought you'd want to know. Cally
Vale is nowhere on Earth. That's absolutely been determined; that's definite.'
He was silent, then, waiting for her to say something.
'Then she emigrated,' Myra said, trying to picture the dainty and rather
nauseatingly fragile Miss Vale in the rugged environment of Mars or Ganymede.
'No,' Tito Cravelli said emphatically, shaking his head. 'We've checked on
that, of course. Cally Vale did not emigrate. It doesn't make sense, but
there it is. No wonder we're making no headway; we're faced with an impossible
situation.' He did not appear very happy about it. His features sagged glumly.
Myra said, 'She's not on Earth and she didn't emigrate. Then she must...' It
was obvious to her; why hadn't they thought of it right away, when Cally
originally vanished from sight ? 'She's entered a government warehouse. Cally's
a bib.' It was the only possibility left.
'We're looking into that,' Tito said, but without enthusiasm. 'I admit it's
possible but frankly I just don't buy it. Personally, I think they've thought up
something new, something original; I'd stake my job on it, everything I have.'
Tito's tone was insistent, now. No longer hesitant. 'But we'll check all the
Dept. of SPW warehouses, all ninety-four of them. That'll take a couple of days
at least. Meanwhile ?' He caught sight of the young couple, the Chaffys,
waiting silently. 'Perhaps; I'd better discuss it with you later; there's no
urgency.'
Maybe what the homeopapes are hinting at actually did take place, Myra
thought to herself. Perhaps Lurton has actually killed her. So she can't be
subpoenaed by Frank Fenner at the trial.
'Do you believe Cally Vale is dead ?' Myra said to Tito bluntly. She ignored
the young couple seated opposite her; they did not at the moment matter; this
was far too important.
'I'm in no position ...' Tito began. Myra cut him off; she broke the
connection, and the screen faded. I'm in no position to say, she finished for
him. But who is ? Lurton ? Maybe even he doesn't know where Cally is. She might
have run out on him. Gone to the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite and
joined the army of girls there, under an assumed name. With relish, Myra
pondered that, picturing her former husband's mistress as one of Thisbe's
creatures, sexless and mechanical and automatic. Which will it be, Cally ? One,
two, three or four ? Only, the choice isn't yours. It's theirs. Every time.
Myra laughed. It's where you ought to be, Cally, she thought. For the rest of
your life, for the next two hundred years.
'Please forgive the interruption,' Myra said to the young couple seated
opposite her. 'And do go on.'
'Well,' the girl Rachael said awkwardly, 'Art and I felt that - we thought
over the abortion and we just don't want to do it. I don't know why, Mrs.
Sands. I know we should. But we can't.'
There was silence, then.
'I don't see what you came to me for,' Myra said. 'If you've made up your
minds against it already. Obviously, from a practical standpoint you should go
through with it; you're probably frightened... after all, you are very young.
But I'm not trying to talk you into it. A decision of this sort has to be your
own.'
In a low voice Art said, 'We're not scared, Mrs. Sands. That's not it. We -
well, we'd like to have the baby. That's all.'
Myra Sands did not know what to say. She had never, in her practice, run
into anything quite like this; it baffled her.
She could see already that this was going to be a bad day.
Between this and Tito's phone call - it was too much. And so early. It was
not yet even nine a.m.
In the basement of Pethel Jiff-scuttler Sales & Service, the repairman
Rick Erickson prepared, for the second day in a row, to enter the defective
'scuttler of Dr Lurton Sands, Jr. He still had not found what he was searching
for.
However, he did not intend to give up. He felt, on an intuitive level, that
he was very close. It would not be long now.
From behind him a voice said, 'What are you doing, Rick ?'
Startled, Erickson jumped, glanced around. At the door of the repair
department stood his employer, Darius Pethel, heavy-set in the wrinkled
dark-brown old-fashioned /i>jerry -type wool suit which he customarily wore.
'Listen,' Erickson said. 'This is Dr Sands' 'scuttler. You can laugh, but I
think he's got his mistress in here, somewhere.'
'What ?' Pethel laughed.
'I mean it. I don't think she's dead, even though I talked to Sands long
enough to know he could do it if he felt it was necessary - he's that kind of
guy. Anyhow nobody's found her, even Mrs. Sands. Naturally they can't find her,
because Lurton's got his 'scuttler in here with us, out of sight. He knows it's
here, but they don't. And he doesn't want it back, no matter what he
says; he wants it stuck down here, right in this basement.'
Staring at him Pethel said, 'Great fud. Is this what you've been doing on my
time ? Working out detective theories ?'
Erickson said, 'This is important! Even if it doesn't mean any money for
you. Hell, maybe it does; if I'm lucky and find her, maybe you can sell her
back to Mrs. Sands.'
After a pause Darius Pethel shrugged in a philosophical way. 'Okay. So look.
If you do find her ?'
Beside Pethel the salesman of the firm, Stuart Hadley, appeared. He said
breezily, 'What's up, Dar ?' As always cheerful and interested.
'Rick's searching for Dr Sands' mistress.' Pethel said. He jerked his thumb
at the 'scuttler.
'Is she pretty ?' Hadley asked. 'Well started ?' He looked hungry.
'You've seen her pics in the homeopapes,' Pethel said. 'She's cute.
Otherwise why do you suppose the doctor risked his marriage, if she wasn't something
exceptional ? Come on, Hadley; I need you upstairs on the floor. We can't all
three be down here - someone'll walk away with the register.' He started up the
stairs.
'And she's in there ?' Hadley said, looking puzzled as he bent to peer into
the 'scuttler. 'I don't see her, Dar.'
Darius Pethel guffawed. 'Neither do I. Neither does Rick, but he's still
searching - and on my time, goddam it! Listen, Rick; if you find her she's my
mistress, because you're on my time, working for me.'
All three of them laughed at that.
'Okay,' Rick agreed, on his hands and knees, scraping the surface of the
'scuttler tube with the blade of a screwdriver. 'You can laugh and I admit it's
funny. But I'm not stopping. Obviously, the rent isn't visible; if it was, Doc
Sands wouldn't have dared leave it here. He may think I'm dumb, but not that
dumb - he's got it concealed and real well.'
' "Rent,"'Pethel echoed. He frowned, startling back a few steps
down the stairs and into the basement once more. 'You mean like Henry Ellis
found, years ago ? That rupture in the tube-wall that led to ancient Israel ?'
'Israel is right,' Rick said briefly, as he scraped. His keen,
thoroughly-trained eye saw all at once in the surface near at hand a slight
irregularity, a distortion. Leaning forward, he reached out his hand...
His groping fingers passed through the wall of the tube and disappeared.
'Jesus,' Rick said. He raised his invisible fingers, felt nothing at first,
and then touched the upper edge of the rent. 'I found it,' he said. He looked
around, but Pethel had gone. 'Darius!' he yelled, but there was no answer.
'Damn him!' he said in fury to Hadley.
'You found what ?' Hadley asked, starting cautiously into the tube. 'You
mean you found the Vale woman ? Cally Vale ?'
Headfirst, Rick Erickson crept into the rent.
He sprawled, snatching for support; falling, he struck hard ground and
cursed. Opening his eyes, he saw, above, a pale blue sky with a few meager
clouds. And, around him, a meadow. Bees, or what looked something more or less
like bees, buzzed in tall-stemmed white flowers as large as saucers. The air
smelled of sweetness, as if the flowers had impregnated the atmosphere itself.
I'm there, he said to himself. I got through; this is where Doc Sands hid
his mistress to keep her from testifying for Mrs. Sands at the trial or hearing
or whatever it's called. He stood up, cautiously. Behind him he made out a hazy
shimmer: the nexus with the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler back in the store's
basement in Kansas City. I want to keep my bearings, he said to himself warily.
If I get lost, I may not be able to get back again and that might be bad. Where is this ? he asked himself. Must work that out - now.
Gravity like Earth's. Must be Earth, then, he decided. Long time ago ? Long
time in the future ? Think what this is worth; the hell with the man's
mistress, the hell with him and his personal problems - that's nothing. He
looked wildly around for some sign of habitation, for something animal-like, or
human; something to tell him what epoch this was, past or future, Saber-tooth
tiger, maybe. Or trilobite. No, too late for the trilobite already; look at
those bees. This is the break Terran Development has been trying to uncover for
thirty years now, he said to himself. And the rat that found it used it for his
own sneaky goings-on, as a place merely to hide his doxie. What a world!
Erickson began slowly to walk, step by step...
Far off, a figure moved.
Shading his eyes against the glare of the sky, Rick-Erickson tried to make
out what it was. Primitive man ? Cro-Magnon or some such thing ? Big-domed
inhabitant of the future, perhaps ? He squinted - it was a woman; he could tell
by her hair. She wore slacks and she was running toward him. Cally, he thought.
Doc Sands' mistress, hurrying toward me. Must think I'm Sands. In panic, he
halted; what'll I do ? He wondered. Maybe I better go back, think this out. He
started to turn in the direction he had come.
Out of the corner of his eye he saw the girl's arm come up swiftly.
No, he thought. Don't.
He stumbled as he snatched at the hazy, small loop which connected the two
environments, entrance to the 'scuttler tube.
The red glow of an aimed laser-beam passed over his head.
You missed me, he thought in terror. But - he clawed! for the entrance,
found it, began to struggle back through. But next time. Next time!
'Stop,' he shouted at her without looking at heir. His voice echoed in the
bee-zooming plain of flowers.
The second laser-beam caught him in the back.
He put his hand out, saw it pass through the haze and disappear beyond. It
was safe, but he was not. She had killed him; it was too late, now, too late to
get away from her. Why didn't she wait ? he asked himself. Find out who I was ?
Must have been afraid.
Again the laser-beam nicked. It touched the back of his head and that was
that. There was no returning for him, no reentry into the safety of the tube.
Rick Erickson was dead.
Standing on the far side, in the tube of Dr Sands' Jiffi-scuttler, Stuart Hadley
waited nervously, then saw Rick Erickson's fingers jerk through the wall near
the floor; the fingers writhed, and Hadley stooped down and grabbed Erickson by
the wrist. Trying to get back, he realized, and pulled Erickson by the arm with
all his strength. It was a corpse that he drew into the tube beside him.
Horrified, Hadley rose unsteadily to his feet; he saw the two clean holes
and knew that Erickson had been killed with a laser rifle, probably from a
distance. Stumbling down the tube, Hadley reached the controls of the 'scuttler
and cut the power off; the shimmer of the entrance hoop at once vanished, and
he knew or hoped - that now they, whoever they were who had murdered Rick
Erickson, could not follow him through.
'Pethel!' he shouted. 'Come down here!' He ran to Erickson's work bench and
the intercom. 'Mr. Pethel,' he said, 'come back down here to the basement right
away. Erickson's dead.'
The next he knew, Darius Pethel stood beside him, examining the body of the
repairman. 'He must have found it,' Pethel muttered, ashen-faced and trembling.
'Well, he got paid for his nosiness; he sure got paid.'
'We better get the police,' Hadley said.
'Yes.' Pethel nodded vacantly. 'Of course. I see you turned it off. Good
thing. We better leave it strictly alone. The poor guy, the poor goddam guy;
look at what he got for being smart enough to figure it all out. Look, he's got
something in his hand.' He bent down, opening Erickson's fingers.
The dead hand held a wad of grass.
'No org-trans operation can help him, either,' Pethel said. 'Because the
beam caught him in the head. Got his brain. Too bad.' He glanced at Stuart
Hadley. 'Anyhow the best org-trans surgeon is Sands and he isn't going to do
anything to help Erickson. You can make book on that.'
'A place where there's grass,' Hadley murmured, touching the contents of the
dead man's hand. 'Where can it be ? Not on Earth. Not now, anyway.'
'Must be the past,' Pethel said. 'So we've got time-travel. Isn't it great
?' His face twisted with grief. 'Terrific beginning, one good man dead. How
many left to go ? Imagine a guy's reputation meaning that much to him, that
he'd let this happen. Or maybe Sands doesn't know; maybe she was just given the
laser gun to protect herself. In case his wife's private cops got to her. And
anyhow, we don't know for sure if she did it; it could have been someone else
entirely, not Cally Vale at all. What do we know about it ? All we know is that
Erickson is dead. And there was something basically wrong with the theory he
was going on.'
'You can give Sands the benefit of the doubt, if you want,' Hadley said,
'but I'm not going to.' He stood up, then, taking a deep shuddering breath.
'Can we get the police, now ? You call them; I can't talk well enough to. You
do it, Pethel, okay ?'
Unsteadily, Darius Pethel moved toward the phone on Erickson's work bench,
his hand extended gropingly, as if his perception of touch had begun to
disintegrate. He picked up the receiver, and then he turned to Stuart Hadley
and said, 'Wait. This is a mistake. You know who we've got to call ? The
factory. We have to tell Terran Development about this; it's what they're
after. They come first.'
Hadley, staring at him, said, 'I - don't agree.'
This is more important than what you think or I think, more important than
Sands and Cally Vale, any of us.' Dar Pethel began to dial. 'Even if one of us
is dead. That still doesn't matter. You know what I'm thinking about ?
Emigration. You saw the grass in Erickson's hand. You know what it means. It
means the hell with that girl on the far side, or whoever it is over there who
shot Erickson. It means the hell with any of us and all of us, our sentiments
and opinions.' He gestured. 'All our lives put together.'
Dimly, Stuart Hadley understood. Or thought he did. 'But she'll probably
kill the next person who ...'
'Let TD worry about that,' Pethel said savagely. 'That's their problem.
They've got company police, armed guards they use for patrol purposes; let them
send them over, first.' His voice was low and harsh. 'Let them lose a few men,
so what. The lives of millions of people are involved in this, now. You get
that, Hadley ? Do you ?'
'Y-yes,' Hadley said, nodding.
'Anyhow,' Pethel said, more calmly, now, 'it's legitimately within the
jurisdiction of TD because it look place within one of their 'scuttlers. Call
it an accident; think of it that way. Unavoidable and awful. Between an
entrance and an exit hoop. Naturally the company has to know.' He turned his
back to Hadley, then, concentrating on the vidphone, calling Leon Turpin, the
chief of TD.
'I think,' Salisbury Heim said to his presidential candidate James Briskin,
'I have something cooking you won't like. I've been talking to George Walt...'
At once Jim Briskin said, 'No deal. Not with them. I know what they want and
that's out, Sal.'
'If you don't do business with George Walt,' Heim said steadily, 'I'm going
to have to resign as your campaign manager. I just can't take any more, not
after that planet-wetting speech of yours. Things are breaking too badly for us
as it is, we can't take George Walt on in addition to everything else.'
'There's something even worse,' Jim Briskin said, after a pause. 'Which you
haven't heard. A wire came from Bruno Mini. He was delighted with my speech and
he's on his way here to - as he puts it - "join forces with me." '
Heim said, 'But you can still...'
'Mini's already spoken to homeopape reporters. So it's too late to head him
off media-wise. Sorry.'
'You're going to lose.'
'Okay, I'll have to lose.'
'What gets me,' Heim said bitterly, 'what really gets me is that even if you
did win the election you couldn't have it all your way; one man just can't
alter things that much. The Golden Door Movements of Bliss satellite is going
to remain; the bibs are going to remain; so are Nonovulid and the
abort-consultants you can chip away a little here and there but not...'
He ceased, because Dorothy Gill had come up to Jim Briskin. 'A phone call
for you, Mr. Briskin. The gentleman says it's urgent and he won't be wasting
your time. You don't know him, he says, so he didn't give his name.' She added,
'He's a Col. If that helps you identify him.'
'It doesn't,' Jim said. 'But I'll talk to him anyhow.' Obviously, he was
glad to break off the conversation with Sal; relief showed on his face. 'Bring
the phone here, Dotty.'
'Yes, Mr. Briskin.' She disappeared and presently was back, carrying the
extension vidphone.
'Thanks.' Jim Briskin pressed the hold button, releasing it, and the
vidscreen glowed. A face formed, swarthy and handsome, a keen-eyed man,
well-dressed and evidently agitated. Who is he ? Sal Heim asked himself. I know
him. I've seen a pic of him somewhere.
Then he identified the man. It was the big-time N'York investigator who was
working for Myra Sands; it was a man named Tito Cravelli, and he was a tough
individual indeed. What did he want with Jim ?
The image of Tito Cravelli said, 'Mr. Briskin, I'd like to have lunch with
you. In private. I have something to discuss with you, just you and me; it's
vitally important to you, I assure you.' He added, with a glance toward Sal
Heim, 'So vital I don't want anybody else around.'
Maybe this is going to be an assassination attempt, Sal Heim thought.
Someone, a fanatic from CLEAN, sent by Verne Engel and his crowd of nuts. 'You
better not go, Jim,' he said aloud.
'Probably not,' Jim said. 'But I am anyhow.' To the image on the vidscreen
he said, 'What time and where ?'
Tito Cravelli said, There's a little restaurant in the N'York slum area, in
the five hundred block of Fifth Avenue; I always eat there when I'm in N'York -
the food's prepared by hand. It's called Scotty's Place. Will that be
satisfactory ? Say at one p.m., N'York time.'
'All right,' Jim Briskin agreed. 'At Scotty's Place at one o'clock. I've
been there.' He added tartly, They're willing to serve Cols.'
'Everyone serves Cols,' Tito said, 'when I'm along.' He broke the
connection; the screen faded and died.
'I don't like this,' Sal Heim said.
'We're ruined anyhow,' Jim reminded him. 'Didn't you say, just a minute ago
?' He smiled laconically. 'I think the time has arrived for me to clutch at
straws, Sal. Any straw I can reach. Even this.'
'What shall I tell George Walt ? They're waiting. I'm supposed to set up a
visit by you to the satellite within twenty-four hours; that would be by six
o'clock tonight.' Getting out his handkerchief, Sal Heim mopped his forehead.
'After that ...'
'After that,' Jim said, 'they begin systematically campaigning against me.'
Sal nodded.
'You can tell George Walt,' Jim said, 'that in my Chicago speech today I'm
going to come out and advocate the shutting of the satellite. And if I'm
elected ...'
'They know already,' Sal Heim said. 'There was a leak.'
'There's always a leak ...' Jim did not seem perturbed.
Reaching into his coat pocket, Sal brought out a sealed envelope. 'Here's my
resignation.' He had been carrying it for some time.
Jim Briskin accepted the envelope; without opening it he put it in his
coat-pouch. 'I hope you'll be watching my Chicago speech, Sal. It's going to be
an important one.' He grinned sorrowfully at his ex-campaign manager; his pain
at this breakdown of their relationship showed in the deep lines of his face.
The break had been long in coming; it had hung there in the atmosphere between
them in their former discussions.
But Jim intended to go on anyhow. And do what had to be done.
5
As he flew by Jet'ab to Scotty's Place, Jim Briskin thought: At least now I
don't have to come out for Lurton Sands; I don't have to follow Sal's advice
any more on any topic because if he's not my campaign manager he can't tell me
what to do. To some extent it was a relief. But on a deeper level Jim Briskin
felt acutely unhappy. I'm going to have trouble getting along without Sal, he realized.
I don't want to get along without him.
But it was already done. Sal, with his wife Patricia, had gone on to his
home in Cleveland, for a much-delayed rest. And Jim Briskin, with his
speechwriter Phil Danville and his press secretary Dorothy Gill, was on his way
in the opposite direction, toward downtown N'York, its tiny shops and
restaurants and old, decaying apartment buildings, and all the microscopic,
outdated business offices where peculiar and occult transactions continually
took place. It was a world which intrigued Jim Briskin, but it was also a world
he knew little about; he had been shielded from it most of his life.
Seated beside him, Phil Danville said, 'He may come back, Jim. You know Sal
when he gets overburdened; he blows up, falls into fragments. But after a week
of lazing around...'
'Not this time,' Jim said. The split was too basic.
'By the way,' Dorothy said, 'before he left, Sal told me who this man you're
meeting is. Sal recognized him; did he tell you ? It's Tito Cravelli, Sal says.
You know, Myra Sands' investigator.'
'No,' Jim said. 'I didn't know.' Sal had said nothing to him; the period in
which Sal Heim gave him the benefit of his experience was over, had ended there
on the spot.
At Republican-Liberal campaign headquarters in N'York he stopped briefly to
let off Phil Danville and Dorothy Grill, and then he went on, alone, to meet
with Tito Cravelli at Scotty's Place.
Cravelli, looking nervous and keyed-up, was already in a booth in the rear
of the restaurant, waiting for him, when he arrived.
'Thanks, Mr. Briskin,' Tito Cravelli said, as Jim seated himself across from
him. Hurriedly, Cravelli sipped what remained of his cup of coffee. 'This won't
take long. What I want for my information is a great deal. I want a promise
from you that when you're elected - and you will be, because of this - you'll
bring me in at cabinet rank." He was silent, then.
'Good god,' Jim said mildly. 'Is that all you want ?'
'I'm entitled to it,' Cravelli said. ‘For getting this information to you. I
came across it because I have someone working for me in ...' He broke off
abruptly. 'I want the post of Attorney General; I think I can handle the job
... I think I'd be a good Attorney General. If I'm not, you can fire me. But
you have to let me in for a chance at it'
'Tell me what your information is. I can't make that promise until I hear
it.'
Cravelli hesitated. 'Once I tell you - but you're honest, Briskin. Everyone
knows that. There's a way you can get rid of the bibs. You can bring them back
to activity, full activity.'
'Where ?'
'Not here,' Cravelli said. 'Obviously. Not on Earth. The man I have working
for me who picked this up is an employee of Terran Development. What does that
suggest to you ?'
After a pause Jim Briskin said, 'They've made a breakthrough.'
'A little firm has. A retailer in Kansas City, repairing a defective
Jiffi-scuttler. They did it - or rather found it. Discovered it. The
'scuttler's at TD, now, being gone over by factory engineers. It was moved east
two hours ago; they acted immediately, as soon as the retailer contacted them.
They knew what it meant.' He added, 'Just as you and I do, and my man working
for them.'
'Where's the break-through to ? What time period ?'
'No time period, evidently. The conversion seems to have taken place in
spacial terms, as near as they can determine. A planet with about the same mass
as Earth, similar atmosphere, well-developed fauna and flora, but not Earth -
they managed to snap a sky-chart, get a stellar reading. Within another few
hours they'll probably have plotted lit exactly, know which star-system it lies
in. Apparently it's a long, long way from here. Too far for direct deeps-ace
ships to probe - at least for some time to come. This break-through, this
direct shorted-out route, will have to be utilized for at least the next few
decades.'
The waitress, came for Jim's order.
'Perkin's Syn-Cof,' he murmured absently.
The waitress departed.
'Cally Gale's there,' Tito Cravelli said.
'What!'
'Doctor put her across. That's why my man got in touch with me; as you may
know, I've been retained to search for Cally, trying to produce her on demand
for the trial. It's a mess; she lasered an employee of this Kansas City
retailer, its one and only tried and true 'scuttler repairman. He had gone
across, exploring. Too bad for him. But in the great scheme of all things...'
'Yes,' Jim Briskin agreed. Cravelli was right; it was small cost indeed.
With so many millions of lives - and, potentially, billions - involved.
'Naturally TD has declared this top-secret. They've thrown up an enormous
security screen; I was lucky to get hold of the poop at all. If I hadn't
already had a man in there ...' Cravelli gestured.
'I'll name you to the cabinet,' Jim Briskin said. 'As Attorney General. The
arrangement doesn't please me, but I think it's in order.' It's worth it, he
said to himself. A hundred times over. To me and to everyone else on Earth,
bibs and non-bibs alike. To all of us.
Sagging with relief and exultation,, Tito Cravelli burbled, 'Wow. I can't
believe it; this is great!' He held out his hand, but Jim ignored it; he had
too much else on his mind at the moment to want to congratulate Tito Cravelli.
Jim thought, Sal Heim got out a little too soon. He should have stuck
around. So much for Sal's political intuition; at the crucial moment it had
failed to materialize for him.
Seated in her office, abort-consultant Myra Sands once more leafed through
Tito's brief report. But already, outside her window, a news machine for one of
the major homeopapes was screeching out the news that Cally Vale had been
found; it had been made public by the police.
I didn't think you could do it, Tito, Myra said to herself. Well, I was
wrong. You were worth your fee, large as it is.
It will be quite a trial, she said to herself with relish.
From a nearby office, probably the brokerage firm next door, the amplified
sound of a man's voice rose up and then was turned down to a more reasonable
level. Someone had tuned in the TV, was watching the Republican-Liberal
presidential candidate giving his latest speech. Perhaps I should listen, too,
she decided, and reached to turn on the TV set at her desk.
The set warmed, and there, on the screen, appeared the dark, intense
features of Jim Briskin. She swiveled her chair toward the set and momentarily
put aside Tito's report. After all, anything James Briskin said had become
important; he might easily be their next president.
'... an initial action on my part,' Briskin was saying, 'and one which many
may disapprove of, but one dear to my heart, will be to initiate legal action
against the so-called Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. I've thought
about this topic for some time; this is not a snap decision on my part. But,
much more vital than that, I think we will see the Golden Door satellite become
thoroughly obsolete. That would be best of all. The role of sexuality in our
society could return to its biological norm: as a means to childbirth rather
than an end in itself.'
Oh, really ? Myra thought archly. Exactly how ?
'I am about to give you a piece of news which none of you have heard,'
Briskin continued. 'It will make a vast difference in all our lives ... so
great, in fact, that no one could possibly foresee its full extent at this
time, A new possibility for emigration is about to open up at last. At Terran
Development...'
On Myra's desk the vidphone rang. Cursing in irritation, she turned down the
sound of the television set and took the receiver from its support. 'This is
Mrs. Sands,' she said. 'Could you please call back in a few moments, thank you
? I'm extremely busy right now.'
It was the dark-haired boy, Art Chaffy. 'We were just wondering what you'd
decided,' he mumbled apologetically. But he did not ring off. 'It means a lot
to us, Mrs. Sands.'
'I know it does, Art,' Myra Sands said, 'but if you'll just give me a few
more minutes, possibly half an hour ...' She strained to hear what James
Briskin was saying on the television; almost, she could make out the low murmur
of words. What was his new news ? Where were they going to emigrate to ? A
virgin environment ? Well, obviously; it would have to be. But precisely where
is it ? Myra wondered. Are you about to pull this virgin world out of your
sleeve, Mr. Briskin ? Because if you are, I would like to see it done; that
would be worth watching.
'Okay,' Art Chaffy said. 'I'll call you later, Mrs. Sands. And I'm sorry to
pester you.' He rang off, then.
'You ought to be listening to Briskin's speech,' Myra murmured aloud as she
swung her chair back to face the television set; bending, she turned the audio
knob and the sound of Briskin's voice rose once more to clear audibility. You
of all people, she said to herself.
'... and according to reports reaching me,' Briskin said slowly and gravely,
'it has an atmosphere nearly identical to that of earth, and a similar mass as
well.'
Good grief, Myra Sands said to herself. If that's the case then I'm out of a
job. Her heart labored painfully. No one would need abort brokers any more. But
frankly I'm just as glad, she decided. It's a task I'd like to see end -
forever.
Hands pressed together tautly, she listened to the remainder of Jim
Briskin's momentous Chicago speech.
My god, she thought. This is a piece of history being made, this discovery.
If it's true. If this isn't just a campaign stunt.
Somewhere inside her she knew that it was true. Because Jim Briskin was not
the kind of person who would make this up.
At the Oakland, California, branch of the U.S. Government Department of
Special Public Welfare, Herbert Lackmore also sat listening to presidential
candidate Jim Briskin's Chicago speech, being carried on all channels of the TV
as it was beamed from the R-L satellite above. He'll be elected now, Lackmore realized. We'll have a Col president
at last, just what I was afraid of.
And, if what he's saying is so, this business about a new possibility of
emigration to an untouched world with fauna and flora like Earth's, it means
the bibs will be awakened. In fact, he realized with a thrill of fright, it
means there won't be any more bibs. At all.
That would mean that Herb Lackmore's job would come to an end. And right
away.
Because of him, Lackmore said to himself, I'm going to be out of work; I'll
be in the same spot as all the Cols who come by here in a steady stream, day in
day out - I'll be like some nineteen-year-old Mexican or Puerto Rican or Negro
kid, without prospects or hope. All I've established over the years - wiped out
by this. Completely.
With shaking fingers, Herb Lackmore opened the local phone book and turned
the pages.
It was time to get hold of - and join - the organization of Verne Engel's
which called itself CLEAN. Because CLEAN would not sit idly by and let this
happen, not if CLEAN believed as Herb Lackmore did.
Now was the time for CLEAN to do something. And not necessarily of a
non-violent nature; it was too late for non-violence to work. Something more
was required, now. Much more. The situation had taken a dreadful turn and it
would have to be rectified, by direct and quick action.
And if they won't do it, Lackmore said to himself, I will. I'm not afraid
to; I know it has to be done.
On the TV screen Jim Briskin's face was stern as he said. '... will provide
a natural outlet for the biological pressures at work on everyone in our society.
We will be free at last to ...'
'You know what this means ?' George of George Walt said to his brother Walt.
'I know,' Walt answered. 'It means that nurf Sal Heim got nothing for us,
nothing at all. You watch Briskin; I'm going to call Verne Engel and make some
kind of arrangements. Him we can work with.'
'Okay,' George said, nodding their shared head. He kept his eye on the TV
screen, while his brother dialed the vidphone.
'All that gabble with Sal Heim,' Walt grumbled, and then became silent as his
brother stuck him with his elbow, signaling that he wanted to listen to the
Chicago speech. 'Sorry,' Walt said, turning his eye to the vidscreen of the
phone.
At the door of their office Thisbe Olt appeared, wearing a fawnskin gown
with alternating stripes of magnifying transparency. 'Mr. Heim is back,' she
informed them. 'To see you. He looks - dejected.'
'We've got no business to conduct with Sal Heim,' George said, with anger.
Tell him to go back to Earth,' Walt added. 'And from now on the satellite is
closed to him; he can't visit any of our girls - at any price. Let him die a
miserable, lingering death of frustration; it'll serve him right.'
George reminded him acidly, 'Heim won't need us any more, if Briskin is
telling the truth.'
'He is,' Walt said. 'He's too simple a horse's ass to lie; Briskin doesn't
have the ability.' His call had been put through on the private circuit, now.
On the vidscreen appeared the miniature image of one of Verne Engel's
gaudily-uniformed personal praetorian flunkies, the green and silver outfit of
the CLEAN people. 'Let me talk directly to Verne,' Walt said, making use of
their common mouth just as George was about to address a few more remarks to
Thisbe. 'Tell him this is Walt, on the satellite.'
'Run along,' George said to Thisbe, when Walt had finished. 'We're busy.'
Thisbe eyed him momentarily and then shut the office door after her.
On the screen Verne Engel's pinched, wabble-like face materialized. 'I see
you - at least half of you - are following Briskin's rabble-rousing,' Engel
said. 'How did you decide which half was to call me and which half was to
listen to the Col ?' Engel's distorted features twisted in a leer of derision.
'Watch it - that's enough,' George Walt retorted simultaneously.
'Sorry. I don't mean to offend you,' Engel said, but his expression remained
unchanged. 'Well, what can I do for you ? Please make it brief; I'd like to
follow Briskin's harangue too.'
'You're going to require help,' Walt said to Engel. 'If you're going
to stop Briskin now; this speech will put him across, and I don't think even
concerted transmissions from our satellite - as we discussed - will be
sufficient. It's just too damn clever the speech he's making. Isn't it, George
?'
'It certainly is,' George said, eye fixed on the TV screen. 'And getting
better each second as he goes along. He's barely getting; started; it's a
genuine spellbinder. Whacking fine.' His eye on the vidscreen, Walt continued, 'You heard Briskin come out
against us; you must have heard that part - everyone else in the country
certainly did. Planet-wetting with Bruno Mini isn't enough, he's also got to
take us on. Big plans for a Col, but evidently he and his advisors feel he can
handle it. We'll see. What do you plan to do, Engel ? At this very crucial
point ?'
'I've got plans, I've got plans,' Engel assured him.
'Still no-violence stuff ?'
There was no audible answer, but Engel's face contorted oddly.
'Come up here to the Golden Door,' Walt said, 'and let's talk. I think my
brother and I can see our way clear to make a donation to CLEAN, say in the
neighborhood of ten or eleven mil. Would that help ? You ought to be able to
buy what you need with money like that.'
Engel, white with shock, stammered, 'S-sure, George or Walt, whichever you
are.'
'Get up here as soon as you can, then,' Walt instructed him, and rang off.
'I think he'll do it for us,' he said to his brother.
'A gorp like that can't handle anything;,' George said sourly.
"Then for pop's sake, what do we do ?' Walt demanded.
'We do what we can. We help out Engel, we prompt him, shove him if
necessary. But we don't pin our hopes on him, at least not entirely. We go
ahead with something on our own, just to be certain. And we have to be certain;
this is too serious. That Col actually means to shut us down.'
Both their eyes, now, turned toward the TV screen, and both George and Walt
sat back in their special wide couch to listen to the speech.
In the luxurious apartment which he maintained in Reno, Dr Lurton Sands sat
raptly listening to the television set, the Col candidate James Briskin
delivering his Chicago speech. He knew what it meant. There was only one place
that Briskin could have happened across a 'lush, virgin world'. Obviously Cally
had been found.
Going to his desk drawer, Lurton Sands got out the small laser pistol which
he kept there and thrust it into his coat pocket. I'm amazed he'd do it, Sands
thought. Capitalize off my problems - evidently I misjudged him.
Now so many lives which I could have saved will be forfeited, Sands
realized. Due to this. And Briskin is responsible ... he's taken the healing
power out of my hands, darkened the force working for the good of man.
At the vidphone Sands dialed the local jet'ab company. 'I want an 'ab to
Chicago. As soon as possible.' He gave his address, then hurried from his
apartment to the elevator. Those that are hounding Cally and me to our deaths,
he thought, Myra and her detectives and the homeopapes ... now they've been
joined by Jim Briskin. How could he align himself with them ? Haven't I made
clear to everyone what I can do in the service of human need ? Briskin must
be aware; this ain't be merely ignorance on his part.
Frantically Sands thought. Could it possibly be that Briskin wants
the sick to die ? All those waiting for me, needing my help ... help which no
one else, after I've been pushed to my death, can possibly provide.
Touching the laser pistol in his pocket, Sands said aloud, glumly, 'It
certainly is easy to be mistaken about another person.' They can take you in so
easily, he thought. Deliberately mislead you. Yes, deliberately!
The jet'ab swept up to the curb and slid open its door.
6
When he had finished his speech Jim Briskin sat back and knew that this time
he had done, at last, a damn good job. It had been the best speech of his
political career, in some respects the only really decent one.
And now what ? he asked himself. Sal is gone, and along with him Patricia.
I've offended the powerful and immensely wealthy unicephalic brothers George
Walt, not to mention Thisbe herself ... and Terran Development, which is no
small potatoes, will be furious that its break-through has been made public.
But none of this matters. Nor does the fact that I'm now committed to naming a
well-known private operator as my Attorney General; even that isn't important.
My job was to make that speech as soon as Tito Cavelli brought me that
information. And - that's exactly what I did. To the letter. No matter what the
consequences.
Coming up to him, Phil Danville slapped him warmly on the back. 'A hell of a
good fuss, Jim. You really outdid yourself.'
'Thanks, Phil,' Jim Briskin murmured. He felt tired. He nodded to the TV
camera men and then, with Phil Danville, walked over to join the knot of party brass
waiting at the rear of the studio.
'I need a drink,' Jim said to them as several of them extended their hands,
wanting to shake with him. 'After that.' I wonder what the opposition will do
now, he said to himself. What can Bill Schwarz say ? Nothing, actually. I've
taken the lid off the whole thing, and there's no putting it back. Now that
everyone knows there's a place we can emigrate to, the rush will be on. By the
multitudes. The warehouses will be emptied, thank god. As they should have been
long ago.
I wish I had known about this, he thought abruptly, before I began publicly
advocating Bruno Mini's planet-wetting technique. I could have avoided that -
and the break with Sal as well.
But anyhow, he said to himself, I'll be elected.
Dorothy Gill said quietly to him, 'Jim, I think you're in.'
'I know he is,' Phil Danville agreed, grinning with pure delight. 'How about
it, Dotty ? It's not like it was a little while ago. How'd you get hold of that
info about TD, Jim ? It must have cost you ...'
'It did,' Jim Briskin said shortly. 'It cost me too much. But I'd pay it two
times over.'
'Now for the drink,' Phil said. 'There's a bar around the corner; I noticed
it when we were coming in here. Let's go.' He started for the door and Jim
Briskin followed, hands deep in his overcoat pockets.
The sidewalk, he discovered, was crowded with people, a mob which waved at
him, cheered him; he waved back, noticing that many of them were Whites as well
as Cols. A good sign, he reflected as his party moved step by step through the
dense mass of people, uniformed Chicago city police clearing a path for them to
the bar which Phil Danville had picked out.
From the crowd a red-headed girl, very small, wearing dazzling wubfur
lounging pajamas, the kind fashionable with the girls on the Golden Door
Moments of Bliss satellite, came hurrying, gliding and ducking toward him
breathlessly. 'Mr. Briskin ...'
He paused unwillingly, wondering who she was; and what she wanted. One of
Thisbe Olt's girls, evidently. 'Yes,' he said, and smiled at her.
'Mr. Briskin,' the little red-haired girl gasped, 'there's a rume going
around the satellite - George Walt's doing something with Verne Engel, the man
from CLEAN.' She caught hold of him anxiously by the arm, stopping him.
'They're going to assassinate you or something. Please be careful.' Her face
was stark with alarm.
'What's your name ?' Jim asked.
"Sparky Rivers. I - work there, Mr. Briskin.'
'Thanks, Sparky,' he said. 'I'll remember you. Maybe sometime I can give you
a cabinet post.' He continued to smile at her, but she did not smile back. I'm
just joking,' he said. 'Don't be downcast.'
'I think they're going to kill you,' Sparky said.
'Maybe so.' He shrugged. It was certainly possible. He leaned forward,
briefly, and kissed her on the forehead. Take care of yourself, too,' he said,
and then walked away with Phil Danville and Dorothy Gill.
After a time Phil said, 'What are you going to do, Jim ?'
'Nothing. What can I do ? Wait, I guess. Get my drink.'
'You'll have to protect yourself,' Dorothy Gill said. If anything happens to
you - what'll we do then ? The rest of us;.'
Jim Briskin said, 'Emigration will still exist, even without me. You can
still wake the sleepers. As it says in Bach's Cantata 140, "Wachet
auf". Sleepers, awake. That'll have to be your watchword, from now
on.'
'Here's the bar,' Phil Danville said. Ahead of them, a Chicago policeman
held the door open for them, and they entered one at a time.
'It was darn nice of that girl to warn me,' Jim Briskin said.
A man's voice, close to him, said, 'Mr. Briskin ? I'm Lurton Sands, Jr.
Perhaps you've been reading about me in the homeopapes, lately.'
'Oh, yes,' Jim said, surprised to see him; he held out his hand in greeting.
I'm glad to meet you, Dr Sands, I want to ...'
'May I talk, please ?' Sands said. 'I have something to say to you. Because
of you, my life and the humanitarian work of two decades is wrecked. Don't
answer; I'm not going to get into an argument with you. I'm simply telling you,
so you'll understand why.' Sands reached into his coat pocket. Now he held a
laser pistol, pointed directly at Jim Briskin's chest. 'I don't quite
understand what it is about my dedication to the sick that offended you and
made you turn against me, but everybody else has, so why not you ? After all,
Mr. Briskin, what better life-task could you set yourself than wrecking mine ?'
He squeezed the trigger of the pistol The pistol did not fire, and Lurton Sands
stared down at it in disbelief. 'Myra, my wife.' He sounded almost apologetic.
'She removed the energy cartridge, obviously. Evidently, she thought I'd try to
use it on her.' He tossed the pistol away.
After a pause Jim Briskin said huskily, 'Well, now what, Doctor ?'
'Nothing, Briskin. Nothing. If I had had more time I would have checked the
gun out, but I had to hurry to get here before you left. That was quite a
heroic speech you made; it'll certainly give most people the impression that
you're seeking to alleviate man's problems ... although of course you and I
know better. By the way - you do realize you won't be able to awaken all
the bibs; you can't fulfill that promise because some are dead. I'm responsible
for that. Roughly four hundred of them.'
Jim Briskin stared at him.
'That's right,' Sands said. 'I've had access to Department of Special Public
Welfare warehouses. Do you know what that means ? Every organ I've taken has
created a dead human - when the time comes for them to be revived, whenever
that may be. But I suppose the trump has to be played sooner or later. doesn't
it ?'
'You'd do that ?' Jim Briskin said.
'I did that,' Sands corrected. 'But remember this: I killed only
potentially. Whereas, in exchange, I saved someone right now, someone
conscious and alive in the present someone completely dependent on my skill.'
Two Chicago policemen shoved their way up to him; Dr Sands jerked irritably
away but they continued to hold onto him, pinning him between them.
Pale, Phil Danville said, 'That - was almost it, Jim. Wasn't it ?' He
deliberately stepped between Jim Briskin and Dr Sands, shielding Briskin.
'History revisited.'
'Yes,' Jim managed to say. He nodded, his mouth dry. Basically he felt
resigned. If Lurton Sands did not manage to carry it off then, certainly
someone else would, given time. It was just too easy. Weapons technology had
improved too much in the last hundred years; everyone knew that, and now the
assassin did not even have to be in his vicinity. Like an act of evil magic it
could be done from a distance. And the instruments were cheap and available to
virtually anyone - even, as history had shown, some ignorant, worthless
smallfry, without friends, funds, or even a fanatical purpose, an overriding
political cause.
This incident with Lurton Sands was a vile harbinger.
'Well,' Phil Danville said, and sighed, 'I guess we have to go on. What do
you want to drink ?'
'A Black Russian,’ Jim decided, after a pause. 'Vodka and ...'
'I know,' Phil interrupted. His face still ragged with fear and gloom, he
made his way unsteadily over to the bar to order.
To Dotty, Jim said, 'Even if they get me, I've done my job. I keep telling
myself that over and over again, anyhow. I broke the news about TD's
break-through and that's enough.'
'Do you actually mean that ?' she demanded. 'You're that fatalistic about
it, about your chances ?' She stared un-wincingly up into his face.
'Yes,' he said, finally. And well he might be.
I have a feeling, he thought to himself, that this is not the time a Negro
is going to make it to the presidency.
His contact within CLEAN came via an individual named Dave DeWinter.
DeWinter had joined the movement at its inception and had reported to Tito
Cravelli throughout. Now, hurriedly, DeWinter told his employer the most recent
- and urgent - news.
'They'll try it late tonight. The man actually doing it is not a member. His
name is Herb Lackmore or Luckmore. and with the equipment they're providing him
he doesn't need to be an accurate shot.' DeWinter added, 'The equipment, what
they call a boulder, was paid for by George Walt, those two mutants who
own the Golden Door.'
Tito Cravelli said, 'I see.' There goes my post as Attorney General, he said
to himself. 'Where can I find this Lackmore right now ?'
'In his con apt in Oakland, California. Probably eating dinner; it's about
six, there.'
From the locked closet of his office, Tito Cravelli got a collapsible
high-powered scope-sight laser rifle, he folded it up and stuffed it into his
pocket, out of sight. Such a rifle was strictly illegal, but that hardly
mattered right now; what Cravelli intended to do was against the law with any
kind of weapon.
But it was already too late to get Lackmore or Luckmore or whatever his name
was. By the time he reached the West Coast Lackmore would certainly be gone, on
his way east to intercept Jim Briskin; their flights would cross, his and
Lackmore's. Better to locate Briskin and stick close to him, get Lackmore when
he showed up. But Herb Lackmore would not have to show up, in the strict sense,
not with the variety of weapon which the mutant brothers had provided him. He
could be as far away as ten miles - and still reach Briskin.
George Walt will have to call him off, Cravelli decided. It's the only sure
way - and even that is merely relatively sure.
I'll have to go to the satellite, he said to himself. Now, if I expect to
accomplish anything at all. The mutants George Walt would not be expecting him;
they had no knowledge of his ties with Jim Briskin - or so he hoped. And also,
he had three individuals working for him on the satellite, three of the girls.
That gave him three separate places to stay - or hide - while he was up there.
Afterwards, after he took care of George Walt, it might well mean the
difference in saving his life.
That, of course, would be if George Walt wouldn't do business with him, if
they chose to fight it out. In a fight, they would lose; Tito Cravelli was a
crack shot. And in addition the initiative would be with him.
Where was the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite right now ? Getting the
evening homeopape, he turned to the entertainment page. If it was, say, over
India, he had no chance; he would not be able to reach the brothers in time.
The Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, according to the time-schedule
shown in the paper, was right now over Utah. By jet'ab he could reach it within
three quarters of an hour.
That was soon enough.
'Thanks a lot,' he said to Dave De Winter, who stood awkwardly in the middle
of the office, wearing his splendid green and silver CLEAN uniform. 'You trot
on back to Engel I'll keep in touch with you.' He left the office on a dead
run, then, racing down the stairs to the ground floor.
Presently, he was on his way to the satellite.
When the jet'ab had landed at the field, Cravelli hurried down the ramp,
purchased a ticket from the nude, golden-haired attendant, and then rushed
through gate five, searching for Francy's door. 705, it was - or so he
recalled, but under so much tension he felt rattled. With five thousand doors
spread out in corridor after corridor - and all around him, on every side, the
animated pics of the girls twisted and chirped, trying to snare his attention
and entice him to the joys inside.
I'll have to consult the satellite's directory, he decided. That would waste
precious time, but what alternative did he have ? Feverishly, he loped down the
corridor until he arrived at the immensely extensive, cross-indexed,
illuminated directory board, with all its names winking on and off as rooms
emptied and refilled, as customers hurried in and out.
It was 507, and it was empty of customers.
When he opened the door Francy said, 'Hello!' and sat up, then,
blinking in surprise to see him. 'Mr. Cravelli,' she said uncertainly. 'Is
everything all right ?' She slid from the bed, wearing a pale smock of some
cheap thin material, and came hesitantly up to him, her body bare and smooth.
'What can I do for you ? Are you here for...'
'Not for pleasure,' Tito Cravelli informed her. 'Button up your damn smock
and listen to me. Is there any way you can get George Walt up here ?'
Fancy pondered. "They never visit a crib, normally. I...'
'Suppose there was trouble. A customer refusing to pay.'
'No. A bouncer would show up then. But George Walt would come here if they
thought the FBI or some other police agency had moved in here and was
officially arresting us girls.' She pointed to an obscure button on the wall.
'For such an emergency. They have a regular neurosis about the police; they
think it's bound to come, sooner or later - they must have a guilty conscience
about it. The button, connects to that great big office of theirs.'
'Ring the button,' Cravelli said, and got out his laser rifle seating
himself on Francy's bed, he began to assemble it.
Minutes passed.
Standing uneasily at the door, listening, Francy said 'What's going to
happen in here Mr. Cravelli ? I hope there's no ..."
'Be quiet,' he said sharply.
The door of the room opened.
The mutants George Walt stood in the entrance, one hand on the knob, the
other three gripping short lengths of metal piping.
Tito Cravelli leveled the laser rifle and said, 'My intention is not to kill
both of you but merely one of you. That'll leave the other with half a dead
brain, one dead eye, and a deteriorating body attached to him. I don't think
you'd appreciate that. Can you threaten me with anything equally dreadful ? I
seriously doubt it.'
After a pause one of them - he did not know which - said, 'What - do you
want ?' The face was twisting and livid, the two eyes, not in unison, staring,
one of them at Tito, the other at his laser rifle.
'Come in and close the door,' Tito Cravelli said.
'Why ?' George Walt demanded. 'What's this all about, anyhow ?'
'Just come on in,' Tito said, and waited.
The mutants entered. The door shut after them and they stood facing him,
still gripping the three lengths of metal piping. 'This is George,' the head
said presently. 'Who are you ? Let's be reasonable; if you're dissatisfied with
the service you've received from this woman - no, can't you see this is a
strong-arm robbery ?' the head interrupted itself as the other brother took
control of the vocal apparatus. 'He's here to rob us; he brought that weapon
with him, didn't he ?'
'You're going to get in touch with Verne Engel,' Tito said. 'And he's going
to get in touch with his gunsel, Herbert Lackmore. Together you're going to
call this Lackmore back in. We'll do it from your office; obviously we can't
call from this woman's crib.' To Francy he said, 'You go ahead of them, lead
the way. Start now, please. There's no excess of time.' Within him his pyloric
valve began to writhe in spasms; he gritted his teeth and for an instant shut
his eyes.
A length of piping whistled past his head.
Tito Cravelli fired the laser rifle at George Walt. One of the two bodies
sagged, hit in the shoulder; it was wounded but not dead. 'You see ?' Cravelli
said. 'It would be terrible for the one of you that survived.'
'Yes,' the head said, bobbing up and down in a grotesque pumpkin-like fit of
nodding. 'We'll work with you, whoever you are. We'll call Engel; we can get
this all straightened out. Please.' Both eyes, each fixed on a different spot,
bulged in glazed fear. The right one, on the same side as the laser-wound, had
become opaque with pain.
'Good enough,' Tito Cravelli said. He thought, I may be Attorney General
yet. Herding them with his laser rifle, be moved George Walt toward the door.
7
The weapon which Herb Lackmore had been provided with contained a costly
replica of the encephalic wave-pattern of James Briskin. He needed merely to
place it within a few miles of Briskin, screw in the handle and then, with a
switch, detonate it.
It was a mechanism, he decided, which supplied little, if any, personal
satisfaction. However, at least it would do the job and that, in the long run,
was all that counted. And certainly it insured his personal escape, or at least
greatly aided it.
At this moment, nine o'clock at night, Jim Briskin sat upstairs in a room at
the Galton Plaza Hotel, in Chicago, conferring with aides and idea-men; pickets
of CLEAN, parading before the notably first class hotel, had seen him enter and
had conveyed the word to Lackmore.
I'll do it at exactly nine-fifteen, Lackmore decided. He sat in the back of
a rented wheel, the mechanism assembled beside him; it was no larger than a
football but rather heavy. It hummed faintly, off-key.
I wonder where the funds for this apparatus appeared from, he wondered.
Because these items cost a hell of a lot, or so I've read.
He was, a few minutes later, just making the final preparatory adjustments
when two dark, massive, upright shapes materialized along the nocturnal
sidewalk close beside the wheel. The shapes appeared to be wearing green and
silver uniforms which sparkled faintly, like moonlight.
Cautiously, with a near-Psionic sense of suspicions, Lackmore rolled down
the wheel window. 'What do you want ?' he asked the two CLEAN members.
'Get out,' one of them said brusquely.
'Why ?' Lackmore froze, did not budge. Could not.
There's been an alteration of plans. Engel just now buzzed us on the
portable seek-com. You're to give that boulder back to us.'
'No,' Lackmore said. Obviously, the CLEAN movement had at the last moment
sold out; he did not know exactly why, but there it was. The assassination
would not take place as planned - that was all he knew, all he cared about.
Rapidly, he began to screw the handle in.
'Engel says to forget it!' the other CLEAN man shouted. 'Don't you
understand ?'
'I understand,' Lackmore said, and groped for the detonating switch.
The door of his wheel popped open. One of the CLEAN men grabbed him by the
collar, yanked him from the back seat and dragged him kicking and thrashing
from the wheel and out onto the sidewalk. The other snatched up the boulder,
the expensive weapon, from him and swiftly, expertly, unscrewed the detonating
handle.
Lackmore bit and fought. He did not give up.
It did him no good. The CLEAN man with the boulder had already
disappeared into the night darkness; along with the weapon he had vanished -
the boulder, and all of Lackmore's tireless, busy, brooding plans, had
gone.
'I'll kill you,' Lackmore panted futilely, struggling with the fat, powerful
CLEAN man who had hold of him.
'You'll kill nobody, fella,' the CLEAN man answered, and increased his
pressure on Lackmore's throat.
It was not an even fight; Herb Lackmore had no chance. He had sat at a
government desk, stood idly behind a counter too many years.
Calmly, with clear enjoyment, the CLEAN man made mincemeat out of him.
For someone supposedly devoted to the cult of non-violence, it was amazing
how good he was at it.
From the two mutants' plush, Titan elk-beetle fuzz; carpeted office, Tito
Cravelli vidphoned Jim Briskin at the Gallon Plaza Hotel in Chicago.
'Are you all right ?' he inquired.
One of the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite's nurses was engaged in
attempting futilely to bind up the injured brother with a dermofax pack; she
worked silently, as Cravelli held the laser rifle and Francy stood by the
office door with a pistol which Tito had located in the brothers' desk.
'I'm all right,' Briskin said, puzzled. He evidently could see around Tito,
past him to George Walt.
Tito said. 'I've got a. snake by the tail here, and I can't let go. You have
any suggestions ? I've prevented your assassination, but how the heck am I
going to get out of here ?' He was beginning to become really worried.
After meditating, Briskin said, 'I could ask the Chicago police ...'
'Niddy,' Cravelli said, in derision. 'They wouldn't come.' He knew that for
a certainty. "They have no jurisdiction up here; that's been tested
countless times - this isn't part of the United States, even, let alone
Chicago.'
Briskin said, 'All right. I can send some party volunteers up to help you.
They'll go where I say. We have a few who've clashed on the streets with
Engel's organization; they might know exactly what to do.'
"That's more like it,' Cravelli said., relieved. But his stomach was
still killing him; he could scarcely stand the pain and he wondered if there
were any way he could obtain a glass of milk. 'The tension's getting me down,
he said. 'And I haven't had my dinner. They'll have to get up here pretty soon,
or frankly I'm going to fold up. I thought of taking George Walt off the
satellite entirely, but I'm afraid I'd never get them to the launch field. We'd
have to pass too many Golden Door employees on the way.'
'You're directly over N'York now,' Jim Briskin said. 'So it won't take too
long to get a few people there. How many do you want ?'
'Certainly at least a hopper-load. Actually, all you can spare. You don't
want to lose your future Attorney General, do you ?'
'Not especially.' Briskin seemed calm, but his dark eyes were bright. He
plucked at his great handlebar mustache, then, pondering. 'Maybe I'll come
along,' he decided.
'Why ?'
'To make sure you get away.'
'It's up to you,' Cravelli said. 'But I don't recommend it. Things are
somewhat hot, up here. Do you know any girls at the satellite who could lead
you through to George Walt's office ?'
'No,' Jim Briskin said. And then a peculiar expression appeared on his face.
'Wait. I know one. She was down here in Chicago today but perhaps she's gone
back up again.'
'Probably has,' Cravelli said. 'They flit back and forth like lightning
bugs. Take a chance on it, anyhow. I'll see you. And watch your step.' He rang
off at that point.
As he started to board the big jet-bus, which was filled with R-L
volunteers, Jim Briskin found himself facing two familiar figures.
'You can't go to the satellite,' Sal Heim said, stopping him. Beside him
Patricia stood somberly in her long coat, severing in the evening wind that
drew in off the lakes. 'It's too dangerous ... I know George Walt better than
you do - remember ? After all, I had you figured for a business deal with them;
that was to be my contribution.'
Pat said, 'If you go there, Jim, you'll never come back. I know if. Stay
here with me.' She caught hold of his arm, but he tugged loose.
'I have to go,' he told her. 'My gunsel is there and I have to get him away;
he's done too much for me just to leave him there.'
'I'll go instead of you,' Sal Heim said.
'Thanks.' It was a good offer, well meant. But - he had to repay Tito
Cravelli for what he'd done; obviously he had to see that Tito got safely away
from the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. It was as simple as that. 'The
best I can offer you,' he said, 'is the opportunity to ride along.' He meant it
ironically.
'All right.' Sal said, nodding. 'I'll come with you.' To Pat he said, 'but
you stay down below here. If we get back, we should be showing up right away -
or not at all. Come on, Jim.' He climbed the steps into the jet-bus, joining
the others already there.
'Take care of yourself,' Pat said to Jim Briskin.
'What did you think of my speech ?' he asked her.
'I was in the tub; I only heard part of it. But I think it was the
best you ever made. Sal said so, too, and he heard it all. Now he knows he made
a terrific mistake; he should have stuck with you.'
'Too bad he didn't,' Jim said.
'You wouldn't say something along the lines of "better late
than..."
'Okay,' he said. 'Better late than never.' Turning, he followed Sal Heim
onto the jet-bus. He had said it, but it was not true. Too much had happened;
too late was too late. He and Sal had split forever. And both of them knew it
... or rather, feared it. And sought instinctively for a new rapprochement
without having any idea how it could be done.
As the jet-bus whirled upward in brisk ascent, Sal leaned over and said,
'You've accomplished a lot since I saw you last, Jim. I want to congratulate
you. And I'm not being ironic. Hardly that.'
'Thanks,' Jim Briskin said, briefly.
'But you'll never forgive me for handing you my resignation when I did, will
you ? Well, I can't really blame you.' Sal was silent, then.
'You could have been Secretary of State,' Jim said.
Sal nodded. 'But that's the way the fifty yarrow stalks fall. Anyhow, I hope
you win, Jim. I know you will, after that speech; that certainly was a
masterpiece of promising everything to everybody - a billion gold chickens in a
billion gold pots. Needless to say I think you'll make a superb president. One
we all can be proud of.' He grinned warmly. 'Or am I making you sick ?'
The Moments of Bliss satellite lay directly ahead of them; in the center of
the breast-shaped landing field the winking pink nipple guided their vehicle to
its landing, a mammary invitation beckoning to all. The principle of Yin, out
in space, inflated to cosmic proportions.
'It's a wonder George Walt can perambulate,' Jim said. 'Joined at the base
of the skull, the way they are. Must be damned awkward.'
'What's your point ?' Sal sounded tense and irritable now.
Jim Briskin said, 'No particular point. But you'd think one would have
sacrificed the other long ago, for purpose of utility.'
'Have you ever actually seen them ?'
'No.' He had never even been to the satellite.
"They're fond of each other,' Sal Heim said.
The jet-bus began to settle on to the landing field of the satellite; the
spin of the satellite provided its constant magnetic flux, sufficient to hold
smaller objects to it, and Jim Briskin thought, That's where we made our
mistake. We should never have allowed this place to become attractive -in any
sense whatsoever. It was feeble wit, but the best he could manage under the
circumstances. Maybe Pat's right, he realized. Maybe I - and Sal Heim - will
never return from this place. It was not the kind of thought he enjoyed
thinking; the Golden Door satellite was not at all the kind of place he wanted
to wind up. Ironic that I should be going here now, for the first time, under
these circumstances, he said to himself.
The doors of the jet-bus slid back as the bus rolled to a halt.
'Here we are,' Sal Heim said, and got quickly to his feet. 'And here we go.'
Along with the party volunteers he moved towards the nearest exit. Jim Briskin,
after a moment, followed.
At the entrance gate the pretty, dark-haired, unclad attendant on duty
smiled a white-tooth smile at them and said, 'Your tickets, please.'
'We're all new here,' Sal Heim said to her, getting out his wallet. 'We'll
pay in cash.'
'Are there any girls you wish to visit in particular ?' the attendant asked,
as she rang the money up on her register.
Jim Briskin said, 'A girl named Sparky Rivers.'
'ALL OF YOU ?' The attendant blinked, then shrugged her bare shoulders
urbanely. 'All right, gentlemen. De gustibus non disputandum est. Gate
three. Watch your step and don't jostle, please. She's in room 395.' She
pointed toward gate three and the group moved in that direction.
Ahead, beyond gate three, Jim Briskin saw rows of gilded, shining doors;
over some lights glowed and he understood that those were empty at the moment
of customers. And, on each door, he saw the curious animated pic of the girl
within; the pics called, enticed, whined at them as they approached each in
turn, searching for room 395.
'Hi there!'
'Hello, big fellow.'
'Could you hurry ? I'm waiting ..."
'Well, how are you ?'
Sal Heim said, 'It's down this way. But you don't need her, Jim; I can take
you to their office.'
Can I trust you ? Jim Briskin asked himself silently. 'All right,' he said.
And hoped it was a wise choice.
'This elevator,' Sal said. Press the button marked C.' He entered the
elevator; the rest of the group followed, crowding in after him, as many as
could make it. More than half the group remained outside in the corridor. 'You
follow us,' Sal instructed them. 'As soon as you can.'
Jim touched the C button and the elevator door shut soundlessly. 'I'm
depressed,' he said to Sal. 'I don't know why.'
'It's this place,' Sal said. 'It isn't your style at all, Jim. Now, if you
were a necktie or a flatware or a poriferous vobile salesman, you'd like it.
You'd be up here every day, health permitting.'
'I don't believe so,' Jim said. 'No matter what line of work I was in.' It
went against everything ethical - and esthetic - in his makeup.
The elevator door slid back.
'Here we are,' Sal said. 'This is George Walt's private office.' He spoke
matter of factly. 'Hello, George Walt,' he said, and stepped out of the
elevator.
The two mutants sat at their big cherrywood desk in their specially
constructed wide couch. One of the bodies sagged like a limp sack and one eye
had become fused-over and empty, lolling as it focused on nothing.
In a shrill voice the head said, 'He's dying. I think he's even dead; you
know he's dead.' The active eye fixed malignantly on Tito Cravelli, who stood
with his laser rifle, on the far side of the office. In despair, one of the
living hands poked at the dangling, inert arm of his companion body. 'Say
something!' the head screeched. With immense difficulty the living body
struggled to its feet; now its silent companion flopped against it and in
horror it pushed the burdening lifeless sack away.
A faint spasm of life stirred the dangling sack; it was not quite dead. And,
on the face of the uninjured brother, wild hope appeared. At once it tottered
grotesquely toward the door.
'Run!' the head bleated, and clumsily groped for escape. 'You can make it!'
it urged its still-living companion. The four-legged, scrambling joint creature
bowled over the surprised volunteers at the door; together they all went down
in a floundering heap, the mutant among them, squealing in panic as the injured
body buried the other beneath it, struggling to rise.
Jim Briskin, as George Walt lurched upright, dived at them. He caught hold
of an arm and hung on.
The arm came off.
He held onto it as George Walt stumbled up to their four feet and out the
office door, into the corridor beyond.
Staring down at it, he said, 'The thing's artificial.' He handed it to Sal
Heim.
'So it is,' Sal agreed, stonily. Tossing the arm aside he hastily ran after
George Walt; Jim accompanied him and together they followed the mutants along
the thick-carpeted corridor. The three-armed organism moved badly, crashing
into itself as its twin bodies swung first wide apart and then stunningly
together. It sprawled, then, and Sal Heim seized the right hand body around the
waist.
The entire body came loose, arm and legs and trunk. But without the head.
The other body - and single head - managed, incredibly, to get up and continue
on.
George Walt was not a mutant at all. It - he - was an ordinarily-constituted
individual. Jim Briskin and Sal watched him go, his two legs pumping
vigorously, arms swinging.
After a long time Jim said, 'Let's - get out of here.'
'Right.' Nodding in agreement, Sal turned to the party volunteers who had
trickled out into the corridor behind them. Tito Cravelli emerged from the
office, rifle in hand; he saw the severed one-armed trunk which had been half
of the two mutants, glanced up swiftly with perceptive understanding as the
remaining portion disappeared from view past a corner of the corridor.
'We'll never catch them now,' Tito said.
'Him,' Sal Heim corrected bitingly. 'I wonder which one of them was
synthetic, George or Walt. And why did he do it ? I don't understand.'
Tito said, 'A long time ago one must have died.'
They both stared at him.
'Sure,' Tito said calmly. 'What happened here today must have happened
before. They were mutants, all right, joined from birth, and then the one body
perished and the surviving one quickly had this synthetic section built. It
couldn't have gone on alone without the symbiotic arrangement because the brain
- ' He broke off. 'You saw what it did to the surviving one just now; he
suffered terribly. Imagine how it must have been the first time, when ...'
'But he survived it,' Sal pointed out.
'Good for him,' Tito said, without irony. 'I'm frankly glad he did; he
deserved to.' Kneeling down, he inspected the trunk. 'It looks to me as if this
is George. I hope he can get it restored. In time.' He rose, then. 'Let's get
upstairs and back to the field; I want to get out of here.' He shivered. 'Then
I want a glass of warm, non-fat milk. A big one.' The three of them, with the
party volunteers struggling behind, made their way silently back to the
elevator. No one stopped them. The corridor, mercifully, was empty. Without
even a pic to leer and cajole at them.
When they arrived back in Chicago, Patricia Heim met them and at once said,
'Thank God.' She put her arms around her husband, and he hugged her tight.
'What happened ? It seemed to take so long, and yet it actually wasn't long at
all; you've only been gone an hour.'
'I'll tell you later,' Sal said shortly. 'Right now I just want to take it
easy.'
'Maybe I'll cease advocating shutting the Golden Door satellite down,' Jim
said suddenly.
'What ?' Sal said, astonished.
'I may have been too hard. Too puritanical. I'd prefer not to take away his
livelihood; it seems to me he's earned it.' He felt numb right now, unable
really to think about it. But what had shocked him the most, changed him, had
not been the sight of George Walt coming apart into two entities, one
artificial, one genuine. It had been Lurton Sands' disclosure about the mass of
maimed bibs.
He had been thinking about this, trying to see a way out. Obviously, if the
maimed bibs were to be awakened at all they would have to be last in sequence.
And by then perhaps replacement organs would be available in supply from the
UN's organ bank. But there was another possibility, and he had come onto it
only just now. George Walt's corporate existence proved the workability of
wholly mechanical organs. And in this Jim Briskin saw hope for Lurton
Sands' victims. Possibly a deal could be made with George Walt; he - or they -
would be left alone if they would reveal the manufacture of their highly
sophisticated and successful artificial components. It was, most likely, a West
German firm; the cartels were most advanced in such experimentation. But it
could of course be engineers under contract to the satellite alone, in
permanent residence there. In any case, four hundred lives represented a great
number, worth any effort at saving. Worth any deal, he decided, with George
Walt, which could be brought off.
'Let's get something warm to drink,' Pat said. 'I'm freezing.' She started
toward the front door of Republican-Liberal party headquarters, key in hand.
'We can fix some synthetic non- toxic coffee inside.'
As they stood around the coffee pot waiting for it to heat, Tito said, 'Why
not let the satellite decline naturally ? As emigration begins it can serve a
steadily dwindling market. You implied something along those lines in your
Chicago speech anyhow.'
'I've been up there before,' Sal said, 'as you know. And it didn't kill me.
Tito's been there before, too, and it didn't warp or kill him.'
'Okay, okay,' Jim said. 'If George Walt leaves me alone, I'll leave them
alone. But if they keep after me, or if they won't make a deal regarding
artif-org construction - then it'll be necessary to do something. In any case
the welfare of those four hundred bibs comes first.'
'Coffee's ready.' Pat said, and began pouring.
Sipping, Sal Heim said, 'Tastes good.'
'Yes,' Jim Briskin agreed. In fact the cup of hot coffee, synthetic and
non-toxic as it had to be (only low-stratum dorm-housed Cols drank the genuine
thing) was exactly what he needed. It made him feel a lot better.
Although the time was dreadfully late at night, Myra Sands had made up her
mind to call Art and Rachael Chaffy at their dorm. She had reached a decision
regarding their case, and the moment had arrived to tell them.
When the vidphone connection had been made to their public hall booth, Mrs.
Sands said, 'I'm sorry to bother you so late, Mr. Chaffy.'
"That's all right,' Art said, sleepily. Obviously, he and his wife had
gone to bed. 'What is it ?'
'I think you should go ahead and have your baby,' Myra said.
'You do ? But...'
'If you had listened to Jim Briskin's Chicago speech, you would know why,'
Myra said. 'There'll soon be a need for new families; everything has changed.
My advice to you and your wife is to apply to Terran Development for permission
to emigrate by means of their new system. You might as well be among the first.
You deserve to be.'
Bewildered, Art Chaffy said, 'Emigrate ? You mean they finally found a place
? We don't have to stay here ?'
'Buy a homeopape,' Myra said patiently. 'Go out now and get it; find a
vending machine, read about the speech. It'll be on the front page. And then
start packing your things.' TD will have to accept you, she knew. Because of
Jim Briskin's speech. They've been deprived of a choice.
'Gee, thanks, Mrs. Sands,' Art Chaffy mumbled, dazed. 'I'll tell Rachael
right away; I'll wake her up. And - thanks for calling.'
'Good night, Mr. Chaffy,' Myra said. 'And good luck.' She hung up, then,
satisfied.
Too bad, she thought, that there's no way I can celebrate. Unfortunately no
one else is up this late. Because that's what this calls for: some kind of a
party.
But at least she could go to bed tonight with a clear conscience.
For perhaps the first time in years.
8
For seventy years Leon Turpin had ruled the great industrial syndrome which
comprised the enterprise Terran Development. A jerry , Turpin was now
one hundred and two years old and still vigorous mentally, although physically
frail. The problem for a man of his age lay in the area of the unforeseen
accident; a broken hip would never mend and would put him permanently in bed.
However, no such accident had yet occurred to him, and, as was his custom,
he arrived at the central administrative offices of TD, located in Washington,
D.C., at eight in the morning. His chauffeur let him off at his own entrance,
and from there he was raised by special lift to his floor of the building and
his constellation of offices, through which he moved during the working day by three-wheeled
electric cart.
Today the elderly chief of TD twitched with ill-concealed nervousness as his
lift raised him to floor twenty. Last night he had heard someone, a political
candidate of some sort, discussing what up to then Turpin had imagined to be
his corporation's top secret. Now TD's hand was tipped. Anxiously, Leon Turpin
tried to picture to himself the possible means by which the news had leaked
out. Politics is the enemy of a sound economic entity, he mused. New laws,
harsher tax rates, meddling ... and now this. When, as a matter of fact, he
himself had not even had an opportunity to inspect this new development.
Today he would visit the scene of the technological breakthrough. Possibly,
if it was safe, he would pass over to the other side.
Turpin liked to see these things with his own eyes. Otherwise he could not
quite grasp what was happening.
As he stepped cautiously from the lift, he made out the sight of his
administrative assistant, Don Stanley, coming toward him. 'Can we go over ?' he
asked Don Stanley. 'Is it safe ? I want to see it.' He felt eager desire rising
up inside him.
Stanley, a portly man, bald with heavy-rimmed glasses, said, 'Before we do
that, Mr. Turpin, I'd like to show you the stellar shots they took over there.'
He took hold of Leon Turpin's arm, supporting him. 'Let's sit down, sir, and
discuss this.'
Disappointed, Turpin said, 'I don't want to see any charts; I want to go
there.' However, he seated himself with Stanley beside him opening a large
manila envelope.
The stellar charts show,' Stanley said, 'that our initial appraisal of the
situation was incorrect.'
'It's Earth,' Leon Turpin said. He felt keenly discouraged.
'Yes,' Stanley said.
'Past or future ?'
Stanley, rubbing his lower lip, said, 'Neither. If you’d look at the star
chart, which...'
'Just tell me,' Turpin said. He could not decipher the star chart; his eyes
were not that good any more.
'Suppose we go over there now,' Stanley said, 'and I'll do my best to show
you. It's perfectly safe; our engineers have shored up the nexus, expanded and
reinforced it, and we're experimenting with the idea of a broader power
supply.'
'You're really sure we'll get back ?' Turpin asked querulously. 'I
understand there's a girl over there who killed somebody.'
Don Stanley said, 'We've caught her. A group of company police went across;
she didn't try to fight it out with them, fortunately. She's in N'York now.
Hold by the New York state police.' He assisted Turpin in rising to his feet.
'Now, as to the stellar chart: I feel like a Babylonian when I start talking
about "celestial bodies" and their positions, but ...' He glanced at
Turpin, 'There's nothing to distinguish it from a sky-shot taken on this side
of the tube.'
What that signified, Leon Turpin could not tell. However, he said, 'I see,'
and nodded soberly. Eventually, he knew, his vice presidents; and executive
staff, including Stanley, would explain it to him.
'I'll tell you who we've got to conduct you across,' Don Stanley said. To be
entirely on the safe side we've hired Frank Woodbine.'
Impressed, Leon Turpin said, 'Good idea. He's that famous deep-space
explorer, isn't he ? The one who's been to Alpha Centaurus and Proxima and ...'
He could not recall the third star-system which Woodbine had visited; his
memory was just not what it once had been. 'He's an expert,' Turpin finished
lamely, 'in visiting other planets.'
'You'll be in good hands,' Stanley agreed. 'And I think you'll like
Woodbine. He's competent, integrated, although you never know what he's going
to say. Woodbine sees the world in his own creative way.'
'I like that,' Turpin said. 'You've notified our PR people that we have
Woodbine on the payroll, of course.'
'Absolutely,' Stanley said. 'There'll be teams from all the media along,
catching everything you and Woodbine do and say. Don't worry, Mr. Turpin; your
trip across will be well-covered.'
Tickled, Leon Turpin giggled in glee. 'Terrific!' he exclaimed. 'I think
you've done a good job, Don. It'll be an adventure, going over there to ...' He
broke off, again puzzled. 'Where do you say it is ? It's Earth; I understand
that. But...'
'It'll be easier to show you than to tell you,' Stanley said 'So let's wait
until we're actually there.'
'Yes, of course,' Leon Turpin said. He had always found that it paid to do
what Don Stanley told him; he trusted Stanley's judgment completely. And, as he
aged, he trusted Don more and more.
On the second subsurface level of TD's Washington plant, Leon Turpin met the
deep-space explorer Frank Woodbine, about whom he had heard so much. To his
vast surprise, he found Woodbine to be dainty and slight. The man was dapper,
with a tiny waxed mustache and rapidly blinking eyes. When they shook,
Woodbine's hand was soft and a little damp.
'How'd you ever get to be an explorer ?' Turpin asked bluntly; he was too
old, too experienced, to beat around the bush.
Stammering slightly, Woodbine said, 'Bad blood.'
Turpin, amused, laughed. 'But you're good. Everybody knows that. What do you
know about this place we're going to ?' He had spied the Jiffi-scuttler within
which the breakthrough had occurred; it was surrounded by TD researchers and
engineers - and armed company guards.
'I know very little,' Woodbine said. 'I've studied the star charts that have
been taken, and I don't argue the fact that it's Earth on the other side;
that's certain.' Woodbine had on his heavy trouble-suit, with helmet, supply of
oxygen, propulsion jets, meters and atmosphere analysis gear, and, of course,
two-way com system. Always he was pictured gotten up this way; everyone
expected it of him. 'It's not my job to make a decision in this matter; that's
up to your company geologists.'
Puzzled, Turpin turned to Don Stanley. 'I didn't know we had any
geologists.'
Ten of them,' Stanley said.
'Your astrophysicists have done all they can,' Woodbine said. 'Now that the
observation satellite has been launched.' Seeing that Turpin did not
understand, he amplified. 'Earlier this morning, a Queen Bee satellite and
launcher were taken through to the other side, and the satellite was
successfully put into orbit; it's already sending back TV reports of what it
sees.'
"That's correct,' Don Stanley added. 'So far it's functioning
perfectly. From that vantage point we can learn more about this other world in
an hour than fifty surface teams can learn in a year. But of course we're going
to augment the TB's data with geological analysis; that's what Woodbine was
referring to. And we've borrowed a botanist from Georgetown University; he's
over there right now, inspecting plants. And there's a zoologist on the way
from Harvard; he should arrive any time now.' After a pause, Stanley said
thoughtfully, 'And we've contacted the sociology and anthropology departments
at the University of Chicago to stand by in case, we need them.'
'Hmm,' Turpin said. What did that mean, for heaven's sake ? He was
lost. Anyhow, Stanley and Frank Woodbine appeared to have the situation well in
hand; evidently there was nothing to worry about. Even if he did not quite
comprehend the situation, they did.
'I'm anxious; to go over,' Woodbine said. 'I haven't been there yet, Turpin;
they asked me to wait for you.'
'Then let's get started,' Turpin said eagerly. 'Lead the way.' He started
toward the 'scuttler.
Frank Woodbine lit a cigar. 'Good enough. But don't be too disappointed,
Turpin, if it leads us right back here. This break-through may be nothing but a
doorway to our own world, a connection with some remote spot, say the extreme
northern part of India where I understand native trees and grasses are still
allowed to grow wild. Or it may turn out to be an African bird sanctuary.' He
grinned. 'That will upset my good friend Mr. Briskin, if it's so.'
'Briskin ?' Leon Turpin echoed. 'I've heard of him. Oh yes; he's that
political fellow.'
'He's the one who made the speech,' Don Stanley said, accompanying the two
of them through the small mob of engineers and researchers, up to the hooped
entrant of the 'scuttler.
Puffing out clouds of gray cigar smoke, Woodbine stepped through the hoop
and into the tube. Assisting Leon Turpin, Stanley followed. The three of them
were at once followed by a gang of TV cameramen and homeopape autonomic
recording machines as well as human reporters. Already the data-gathering
extensors of the media were busily at work, collecting, recording, transmitting
all. Woodbine did not seem to be bothered, but Leon Turpin felt slightly
irritable. Publicity was of course necessary, but why did they have to push so
close ? I guess they're just interested, he decided. Doing their job. Can't blame
them; this is important, especially with Woodbine here. He wouldn't have come
if this wasn't something big. And they know it.
Halfway down the tube of the Jiffi-scuttler Frank Woodbine conferred with a
TD engineer and then stooped down. His cigar jutting stiffly ahead of him, he
crept headfirst through the wall of the tube and disappeared.
'I'll be darned!' Turpin said, amazed. 'Can I get through there, Don ? I
mean, it's all been tested, like you said; it's safe ?'
With the assistance of three TD engineers Turpin managed to kneel down and
crawl tremulously after Woodbine. Felt like a kid again, Turpin said, to
himself, experiencing both fear and delight. Haven't done anything like this in
ninety years. The wall of the tube shimmered before him. 'You in there
somewhere, Frank ?' he called as he gingerly made his way forward. The shimmer
passed over him, and now he saw blue sky and a horizontal procession of great
trees.
Taking hold of him by the shoulders, Woodbine lifted Turpin to his feet and
set him upright on the grass-covered soil. The air smelled of weird things.
Leon Turpin inhaled, perplexed; the scents were old and familiar, but he could
not place them. I've experienced this before, in my childhood, sometime, he
said to himself. Back in the twentieth century. Yes, this certainly is Earth;
nothing else could smell this way. This is no alien, foreign planet. But was
that good or bad ? He did not know.
Bending, Woodbine picked a meager white flower. 'Have a morning glory,' he
said to Turpin.
Ahead of them, TD space engineers sat at mobile high-frequency receiving
equipment; they were no doubt accepting communications from the Queen Bee
satellite somewhere overhead. The 'scope of the central van revolved slowly, a
peculiar presence on this pastoral landscape.
'We're particularly interested in what it obtains from the dark side,' Don
Stanley said. 'That's where it is, now.'
Glancing at him, Woodbine said, 'Lights, you mean.'
'Yes.' Stanley nodded.
'Lights of what ?' Turpin asked.
'If there are lights,' Stanley said patiently, 'anywhere, in any quantity,
it means that this place is inhabited by a sentient race.' He added, 'It's
found roads, already, on the sun side. Or at least what appear to be roads. The
QB isn't by any means the best observation satellite; actually it was selected
because it's the easiest and quickest to launch. We'd follow it up in a few
days with more sophisticated equipment, of course,'
'If a developed society exists here,' Woodbine said, 'it'll be of enormous
importance anthropologically. But it'll hurt Jim Briskin. His whole speech took
as its premise the unestablished fact that this planet is vacant and available
for colonization. I don't know which to hope for; I'd personally like to see
the bibs revived and conveyed here, but...'
'Yes,' Turpin agreed. 'We put a fortune into those language translating
machines, decades ago, and never got anything back. Woodbine, where do you
think we are ?
'You figure it out, Turpin,' Woodbine said with a spasmodic grimace. 'After
all, you people built the 'scuttler. In fact, you invented it. I don't work by
a priori theory; I'm a data type. I have to gather a good deal of information
before I can figure out what's going on.' He gestured. 'Like those people who
followed us over here.' Behind them the media reporters had appeared, still
hard at work at their job of scrutinizing everything in sight. They did not
appear very awed by what they had found so far.
'I don't care about the bibs,' Turpin said candidly. He saw no need to
obscure his personal convictions. 'And I certainly don't care about what
happens to that politician,, whatever his name is. Briskett or Briskman - you
know, the one who made the speech. That's not my problem; I've got other things
to worry about. For instance ...' He broke off, because a communications
systems engineer was coming toward them, temporarily leaving the gear which
monitored the satellite. 'Maybe this man can tell us something,' Turpin said.
'But I'll say one thing more: when I look around here all I see is grass and trees,
so if it's inhabited, its tenants certainly don't have full control of the
environment. That might leave room for limited colonization.'
The com-sys engineer said respectfully, 'Mr. Turpin, you don't know me but
I'm Bascolm Howard; I work for you and have been for years. It's a great honor
for me to give you the news that the QB satellite has picked up sequences and
arrangements of lights on the dark side of this body. There's absolutely no
doubt about it; they're assemblages of habitation. In other words, towns.'
'Well, that's that,' Stanley said.
'Not at all,' Woodbine said sharply. To Howard he said, 'Where are these
conglomerations of lights ? Where they're supposed to be ?'
Frowning, Howard said, 'I don't quite...'
'At London ?' Woodbine said. 'Paris ? Berlin ? Warsaw ? Moscow ? All the big
centers ?'
'Some are in the right places,' Howard said. 'But some aren't. For instance,
we're picking up no lights from the British Isles, and there should be colossal
numbers, there. And, oddly, the image transmitted from above Africa shows many
lights. Many more than there ought to be. But overall there are distinctly
fewer lights than we're accustomed to; we noticed it right away. Perhaps only
one third or one fourth as many as anticipated.'
'As anticipated where ?' Woodbine said. 'Back home ? But we're not back
home, are we ? Or don't you believe that ? What is your operating theory ? Just
where do you imagine you are ?'
Flushing, Howard said, 'It's not my job to figure out where I am; I was told
to come here and set up monitoring systems for a QB satellite, and that’s what
I've done. We've had sufficient rotations already to assure us that we're on
Terra; we've seen all the normal land-mass outlines, all the familiar
continents and islands. Personally, I'm content simply to accept the obvious
fact that this is our own world, although somehow altered; as, for example, the
reformation of light-clusters. And, in addition, we've not been able to pick up
transmissions from any satellite except the QB launched earlier today. The air
is dead.'
'On what frequencies ?' Woodbine said.
'On every frequency we've tried. Starting with the thirty-meter band and
working on up.'
'Nothing ?' Woodbine persisted. 'Nothing at all ? That's impossible. Unless
we're back before the days of radio.' He glanced at Stanley and Turpin. 'Back
before 1900. But even so the U.K. should be lit up; it's one of the most
densely populated areas in the world and was such back in the 1900s ... back
for centuries. I don't understand.'
'Cloud layers ?' Stanley asked Howard. 'Masking the surface ?'
'Possibly,' Howard said. 'But that wouldn't explain the concentration of
lights on the African Continent. Nothing explains that.'
'We must have gone ahead into the future,' Stanley said.
"Then why no radio transmissions on any frequency ?' Woodbine said.
'Maybe they don't need to use the airwaves any more,' Stanley said. 'Maybe
they communicate by direct mind-to-mind telepathy or something on that order
which we know nothing about.'
'But the sky map,' Woodbine said. 'The stellar charts which your
astrophysicists developed distinctly set the time as being identical with ours.
We're coeval with this world, whether we like it - or can make up a theory
about it - or not. Let's face this fact and not try to weasel around it. But
why waste time theorizing ? All we really have to do is make physical contact
with one of these illuminated settlements and we'll know the answers.' He
looked extremely impatient. 'Haul some sort of vehicle over here, a jet-hopper
perhaps, and let’s get started.'
Stanley said, 'There is a 'hopper over here already. From the beginning, we
intended to provide Mr. Turpin with an aerial view. After all, this entire
place, whatever it is, belongs to him.'
Snorting, Woodbine said, "The government may have something to say
about that. Especially if Briskin is elected, which I understand is certain
now.'
'We'll fight it in the courts,' Turpin said. 'Typical socialism,
bureaucratic governmental interference in the free enterprise system; we've had
enough of that. Anyhow, TD and TD alone has the means of getting over here. Or
does the fedgov plan to seize the 'scuttler ?'
'Very probably it does,' Woodbine said. 'Or will, after Briskin is in. Even
Bill Schwarz may want to; he's not that stupid.'
Bristling, Turpin said, 'Look here, Woodbine, you're working for TD, now.
Our opinion is your opinion, whether you like it or not. This place is company
property, and no one can come here without TD's permission. And that includes
you,' Turpin said, turning toward the news media people. 'So watch your step.'
'Just a moment,' Howard said. "The boys want me back.' He hurried over
to his post at the monitoring gear. Presently he returned, a perplexed
expression on his face. 'They're picking up no lights from Australia,' he said.
'But a tremendous concentration from Southeast Asia and from the region of the
Gobi Desert. The greatest concentrations yet. And all throughout China. But
none in Japan.'
'Where are we on the planet's surface ?' Woodbine asked. 'According to the
QB ?'
'In North America on the East Coast. Near the Potomac. Where the TD central
complex is located - or at least in that vicinity, give or take ten miles.'
'There's no TD here,' Woodbine said. 'And no Washington D.C. So that's that.
We haven't gone through a circular doorway and found ourselves led back to a
remote area of our own world. This may be Earth, but it's obvious that it isn't
our Earth. In that case, whose is it ? And how many Earths are there ?'
'I thought there was only one,' Turpin said.
'And they used to think that one was flat,' Woodbine reminded him. 'You
learn as you go along. I'd like to get into that jet-hopper right now, if no
one objects, and get started surveying. Is that agreeable, Turpin ?'
'Yes, it is,' Turpin said eagerly. 'What do you think we'll find, Frank ? Is
this more or less exciting than exploring planets in other star systems ?' He
chuckled knowingly. 'I can see you're all steamed up, Frank; this situation has
got you hooked.'
Shrugging, Woodbine said, 'Why not ?' He started toward the jet-hopper; Leon
Turpin and Stanley followed. 'I never implied I was jaded; I certainly am not
about to fall asleep over this.'
'I know what this is!' Leon Turpin bleated excitedly. 'Listen, this is a
parallel Earth, in another universe; do you get it ? Maybe there are hundreds
of them, all alike physically but you know, branching off and evolving
differently.'
Sourly, Woodbine said, 'Let's not go up in the 'hopper; let's just stand
here in one spot with our eyes shut and theorize.'
But I know I'm right, Leon Turpin said to himself. I've got a sure instinct,
sometimes; that's how I rose to be chairman of the board of directors of TD.
Frank Woodbine will find out, pretty soon, and he'll have to apologize to me.
I'll wait for that and not say anything more.
Together, Woodbine and Stanley assisted the old man in entering the 'hopper.
The hatch slid shut; the 'hopper rose in the air and headed out across the
meadow and over the nearby great trees.
If that's true, Turpin realized suddenly, then TD owns an entire Earth. And,
since I control TD, what Don Stanley said is true; Earth belongs to me. This
particular Earth, anyhow. But isn't one as good as another ? They're all
equally real.
Rubbing his hands together with excitement, Turpin said, 'Isn't this a
lovely virgin place ? Look at that forest down below; look at all that timber!'
And mines, he realized. Maybe there's never been any coal mined here or oil
wells sunk. All the metals, all the ores, may still be buried, on this
particular Earth - unlike our own, where everything valuable has been brought
up long ago.
I'd rather possess this one than our own, Turpin said to himself. Any day.
Who wants a worn-out world, thoroughly exploited over tens of centuries ?
'I'll carry it to the Supreme Court,' he said aloud, 'with the finest legal
minds in the world. I'll put all the financial resources of TD into this, even
if it breaks the company's back. It'll be worth it.'
Both Stanley and Woodbine glanced at him sourly.
Below them, directly ahead, lay an ocean. Evidently it was the Atlantic,
Turpin decided. It looked like the Atlantic, at least. Gazing down at
the shoreline, he saw only trees. No roads, no towns - in fact no sign of human
habitation of any variety whatsoever. Like it was before the damn Pilgrims
showed up here, he said to himself. But he also saw no Indians, either.
Strange. Assuming he was correct, assuming this was an Earth parallel to their
own, why was it so underpopulated ? For instance, what had become of the racial
groups which had lived in North America before the whites arrived ?
Could parallel Earths differ that much and still be considered authentically
parallel ? Unparallel is more like it, Turpin decided.
All at once in a hoarse voice, Don Stanley said, 'Woodbine, something is following
us.'
Turpin looked back, but his eyes were not good enough; he made out nothing
in the bright blue mid-morning sky. Woodbine, however, seemed able to see it;
he grunted, rose from the controls of the 'hopper and stood peering. By
autopilot, the 'hopper continued on.
'It's losing ground,' Stanley said. 'We're leaving it behind. Want to turn
around and approach it ?'
'What's it seem to be ?' Turpin asked apprehensively. 'We better not get too
close; it may shoot us down.' He cringed from the idea of an emergency crash:
he was well aware of the brittleness of his bones. Any sort of unsafe landing
would end his life. And he did not want it ended, just now. This was the worst
possible time.
'I'll swing back that way,' Woodbine said, returning to the controls. A
moment later the 'hopper had reversed its direction.
And, at last, Turpin could perceive the other object in the sky. It was
clearly not a bird; no wings flapped, and anyhow it was too large. He knew, saw
with his own eyes, that it was an artificial construct, a man-made vehicle.
The vehicle was hurrying off as rapidly as possible.
Woodbine said, 'It won't be long; it's very slow. You know what it looks
like ? A boat, a goddam boat. It's got a hull and sails. It's a flying boat.'
Hi; laughed tautly. 'It's absurd!'
Yes, Turpin thought. It does look grotesque. It's a wonder it can stay up.
And now, sure enough, the boat-shaped airborne vehicle was dipping down in
increasingly narrowing spirals, its sails hanging limply. The vehicle held one
single person who, they could now see, was working frantically with the
controls of his craft. Was he trying to land it or keep it in the air ? Turpin
did not know, but in any case the vehicle was about to land - or crash.
It landed. In an open pasture, away from trees.
As the 'hopper began to descend after it, the figure within leaped from the
vehicle and scampered off to disappear into the closest stand of trees.
'We frightened him,' Woodbine said, as he brought the 'hopper expertly down
beside the parked, abandoned craft. 'But anyhow we get to examine his ship;
that ought to tell us a lot, practically everything we want to know.'
Immediately he slammed the cabin hatch back and scrambled out, to drop to the
ground. Without waiting for Stanley or Turpin, he sprinted toward the parked
alien vehicle.
As he, too, clambered out of the 'hopper Don Stanley murmured, 'It looks
like it's made out of wood.' He dropped to the ground and walked over to stand
beside Woodbine.
I'd better stay here, Leon Turpin decided. Too risky for me to try to get
out; I might break a leg. And anyhow it's their job to inspect this flying
machine. That's what I hired them for.
'It's wood, all right,' Stanley said, his voice filtering to Leon Turpin,
mixing with the rushing of wind through the nearby trees. 'And a cloth sail; I
guess it's canvas.'
'But what makes it go ?' Woodbine said, walking all around it. 'Is it just a
glider ? No power supply ?'
'That was certainly a timid individual in it,' Stanley said.
'How do you think a jet-hopper would look to the innocent eye ?' Woodbine
said severely. 'Pretty horrible. But he had the courage to follow us for a
time.' He had climbed up on the vehicle and was peering inside. 'It's laminated
wood,' he said suddenly. 'Very thin layers. Looks to be extremely strong.' He
banged on the hull with his fist.
Stanley, examining the rear of the craft, straightened up and said, 'It has
a power supply. Looks like a turbine of some kind. Or possibly a compressor.
Take a look at it.'
Together, as Leon Turpin watched, Frank Woodbine and Stanley studied the
machinery which propelled the craft.
'What is it ?' Turpin yelled. His voice, in the open like this, sounded
feeble.
Neither man paid any attention to him. He felt agitated and peeved, and he
shifted about irritably, wishing they'd come back.
'Apparently,' Woodbine said, 'the turbine or whatever it is gives it an
initial thrust which launches it. Then it glides for a while. Then the operator
starts up the turbine once more and it receives an additional thrust. Thrust,
coast, thrust, coast and so on. Odd damn way to get from, one place to another.
My god, it may have to land at the end of each glide. Could that be ? It
doesn't seem likely.'
Stanley said, 'Like a flying squirrel.' He turned to Woodbine. 'You know
what ?' he said. 'The turbine is made out of wood, too.'
'It can't be,' Woodbine said. 'It’ll incinerate.'
'You can scrape the paint off,' Stanley said. He had a pocket knife open and
was working with it. 'I'd guess this is asbestos paint; anyhow it's heat
resistant. And underneath it, more laminated wood. I wonder what the fuel is.'
He left the turbine, began walking all around the craft. 'I smell oil,' he
said. 'I guess it could burn oil. The late twentieth century turbines and
diesel engines all burned low-grade oil, so that's not too impossible.'
'Did you notice anything peculiar about the man piloting this ship ?'
Woodbine said.
'No,' Stanley said. 'We were too far off. I could just barely make him out.'
Woodbine said, thoughtfully, 'He was hunched. I noticed it when he ran. He
loped along decidedly bent over.'
9
Late at night, Tito Cravelli sat in his conapt, before a genuine fire,
sipping Scotch and milk and reading over the written report which his contact
at Terran Development had a little earlier in the evening submitted to him.
Softly, his tape deck played one of the cloud chamber pieces by the great
mid-twentieth century composer, Harry Parch. The instrument, called by Parch
'the spoils of war', consisted of cloud chambers, a rasper, a modernized
musical saw, and artillery shell casings suspended so as to resonate, each at a
different frequency. And, as a ground bass accompanying the spoils of war
instrument, one of Parch's hollow bamboo marimba-like inventions tapped out an
intricate rhythm. It was a piece very popular these days with the public.
But Cravelli was not listening. His attention was fixed on the report of
TD's activities.
The old man, Leon Turpin himself, had crossed over via the defective
Jiffi-scuttler, along with various company personnel and media people. Turpin
had managed to shake the reporters off and had made a sortie by jet-hopper.
Something had been found on that sortie and had been carefully brought back to
TD; it was now in their labs being examined. Cravelli's contact did not know
precisely what it was.
However, one fact was clear. The object brought, back was an artifact. It
was manmade.
Apparently Jim Briskin went off half-cocked, Cravelli said to himself. We're
going to emigrate - compel the bibs to emigrate - into a region already
occupied. Too bad Jim didn't think of that. Too bad I didn't think of it, for
that matter.
We were fooled, it appeared, by the initial visual impression of the place.
It seemed deserted, seemed susceptible to immigration.
Well, it can't be helped now, he realized. Jim made his speech; we're
committed. We'll have to go on, hoping that we can still pull it off anyhow.
But damn it, he thought. If only we had waited one more day!
Maybe we can kill them off, he thought. Maybe they'll catch some plague from
us, die like flies.
He hated himself for having such thoughts. But there it was, clear in his
mind. We need the room so badly, he realized. We've got to have it, no matter
what. No matter how we have to go about it.
But will Jim agree ? He's so damn soft-hearted.
He's got to agree, Cravelli said to himself. Or it's the end -politically,
for us, and in every way for the bibs.
While he was rereading the rather meager report, his door number was all at
once tapped out; someone stood at the entrance to the conapt building, wanting
permission to enter and visit him. Cravelli put the report away and crossed the
room to the audio-video circuit which connected his apt with the front door.
'Who is it ?' he said, guardedly. As always, he was somewhat wary of
nocturnal visitors.
'It's me... Earl,' the speaker informed him. There was no video image,
however; the man was standing deliberately out of range. 'Are you alone ?'
Instantly Cravelli said, 'Entirely.' He pressed the release button; fifteen
stories below him the door automatically opened to admit Earl Bohegian, his
contact at TD. 'You'll have to get by the doorman,' Cravelli told him. 'The key
word for the building today is "potato." '
Several minutes later Bohegian, a dark, somber-looking man in his late
fifties, entered the apartment. With a sigh, he seated himself facing Tito
Cravelli. 'How about a beer ?' Cravelli asked him. 'You look tired.'
'Fine.' Bohegian nodded. 'I am tired. I just left TD; I came directly here.
We're all on emergency double-shift. Frankly, I was lucky to get away at all; I
told them I had a migraine headache and had to leave. So the company guards
finally let me out.'
'What's up ?' Cravelli said, getting the beer from the refrigerator in the
kitchen.
"The thing they hauled back here,' Earl Bohegian said. 'What I
mentioned in my written report. The artifact they've been going over it, and
it's apparently the damnedest junk you ever heard of. It's a vehicle of some
kind; I finally managed to find that out by hanging around in the executives'
washroom, drinking "Coke", and listening to stray colloquies. It's
made out of wood, but it's not primitive. It's the turbine, though, that's
really throwing the engineers on Level One.' Gratefully, he accepted the beer
and gulped at it. "It works by compressing gases. I'm not an engineer -
you know that - so I can't help you out on technical details. But anyhow, by
compressing gases it manages to freeze a trapped chamber of water. So help me,
Cravelli, the rumor going around TD is that the damn thing is run by ...' He
laughed. 'Excuse-me, but it's funny. It runs by expansion of the ice. The water
freezes, expands as ice, and drives a piston upward with enormous force, then
the ice is melted - all this happens extremely fast - and the gases expand
again, which gives another thrust to the piston, driving it back down in the
cylinder again. Ice! Did you ever hear of such a sources of power ?
'It's funnier than steam, is it ?' Cravelli said.
Laughing until tears filled his eyes, Bohegian nodded. 'Yes, a lot funnier
than steam. Because it's so darn cumbersome. And so utterly ineffective. You
should see it. It's incredibly complicated, especially in view of the meager
thrust it ultimately manages to deliver. The vehicle coasts forward on runners,
not wheels, and finally gets tip into the air, but just for a very few moments.
Then it glides back down. It's a kind of wooden rocketship with a sail. That's
what they're building on the other side of the defective 'scuttler. That's
their technology. What kind of a civilization is that ?' He finished his beer,
set the glass down. "The story going around TD is that one of the better
engineers got into it, cranked it up, literally, and manage to fly around the
lab for fifteen or sixteen seconds, at a height of about four feet,
approximately waist level.'
'Your report,' Cravelli said, once more getting it out, 'says that the
stellar charts made by TD's astro-physicists prove that the planet, beyond any
reasonable doubt, is Earth ?'
Earl Bohegian became serious, then. 'Yes, and right here in the present.
There's been no time-travel at all, not even so much as a fraction of a second.
Don't ask me to explain it; they can't explain it, and they're supposed
to know about these things. I know what the old man believes, though. According
to him - and evidently he hatched this out on his own - it's an Earth that
started out like ours and then split off and took a different course; at least
its evolution did, its development at the level of human society. Say, ten
thousand years back. Maybe even further, even as far back as the Pleistocene
Period. The flowers and plants seem to be identical with ours, anyhow. And the
continental configurations show no deviation from ours. All the land masses are
congruent with ours, so the split-off can't be too long ago. For instance San
Francisco Bay. And the Gulf of Mexico. They don't differ from ours, and I
understand they formed as they are now in quasi-historical tunes.'
'How great is the population, do they think ?'
'Not great, certainly not like ours. By the number of lights on the dark
side they assume that it lies in the millions - at most. And certainly not in
the billions. For instance, whole areas don't appear to be inhabited at all, at
least if you accept the lights as an index.'
'Maybe there's a war on,' Cravelli said, 'and they're blacked out.'
'But as the light side moves,' Bohegian said, 'there's little indication of
cities, only what appear to be roads and some sort of small, town-like
structures ... they'll know more about that in a day or so. The whole business
is bizarre, to say the least. Because of the total lack of radio signals, TD is
beginning to speculate that, although they have developed a turbine of sorts,
they for some reason haven't ran onto electricity. And the use of wood,
laminated and then coated with asbestos paint; it's possible - although
virtually incredible -that they don't work with metal. At least not in
industry.'
'What language do they speak ?'
'TD doesn't even pretend to know. They're in the process of hauling a number
of linguistic decoders over from the linguistics department, so when they
finally manage to nab one of the citizens over there, they'll be able to
converse with him or her. That should happen any time. In fact it may already
have occurred after I left TD and came here. I tell you, this is going to be
the apologia pro sua vita of every sociologist, ethnologist, and
anthropologist in the world. They're going to be migrating from here to there
in droves. And I don't blame them. God knows what they'll find. Is it actually
possible that a culture could develop a turbine-powered, airborne craft and not
have, say, a written language ? Because, according to the scuttlebutt at TD,
there were no letters, signs or figures anywhere on the craft, and they
certainly scrutinized it thoroughly for that.'
Half to himself, Cravelli said, "I frankly don't care what they have
and have not developed. As long as there's room on their planet for immigration.
Mass immigration, in terms of millions of people.'
They each had a second beer, he and Earl Bohegian, and then Bohegian
departed.
You're lucky, Jim Briskin, Cravelli thought as he shut the door after
Bohegian. You took a chance when you made that speech, but evidently you're
going to be able to swing it after all. Unless you balk at sharing this
alter-Earth with its natives ... or unless they happen to possess some
mechanism by which they can halt us.
God, I'd like to go there, Cravelli realized. See this civilization with my
own eyes. Before we smear it up, as we inevitably will. What an experience it
would be! They may have developed into areas which we've never even imagined.
Scientifically, philosophically, even technically, in terms of machinery and
industrial techniques, sources of power, medicines - in fact in every area,
from contraceptive devices to visions of God. From books and cathedrals, if
any, to children's toys.
We'll probably initiate events, he reflected, by murdering a few of them, just
to be on the safe side. Too bad this isn't in the hands of the government; it's
damn bad luck that so far it's entirely the personal property of a private
business corporation. Of course, when Jim is elected, all that will change. But
Schwarz. He won't do anything; he'll just sit. And TD will be permitted to go
ahead in any way it chooses.
To himself Sal Heim said: I've got to arrange a meeting between Leon Turpin,
head of Terran Development, and Jim Briskin. Jim had to be photographed over
there in that new world - not just talking about it, but actually standing on
it.
And the way to make the contact, Heim realized, is through Frank Woodbine,
because Jim and Frank are old-time friends. I'll get hold of Woodbine and fix
it all up, and that will be that. We'll have Jim over there and maybe Frank
with him, and what a boost to our campaign that'll be. We've just got to have
it, that's all.
'Get on the vidphone,' he instructed his wife Pat. 'Start them searching
down Frank Woodbine; you know, the deep space explorer, the hero.'
'I know,' Pat said. She lifted the receiver and asked for information.
'A hero is a good thing to have around,' Sal said meditatively as he waited.
'It always was my hope to get Jim involved with Woodbine during this campaign.
Now I think we've got the exact tie-in we want.' He felt pleased with himself;
he had a good idea, and he knew it. All his professional instincts told him
that he was onto something, a two-birds-with-one-stone item.
On TV he had seen the media's excursion across into tine other world. Along
with the rest of the nation, he had witnessed scenes of blissful trees and
grass and clear sky, and he had reacted vigorously. This was it, all right. As
soon as he had viewed it for himself, he had realized how profound Jim's
insight had been. A new epoch in human history had begun, and his candidate had
called the shots right from the start. Now, if they could just get Jim over
there along with Woodbine, this one last essential act...
'I have him,' Pat said, breaking into his thoughts. 'Here.' She held the
vidphone receiver toward him. 'He knows who you are. Because of Jim, he
accepted the call.'
'Mr. Woodbine,' Sal said, seating himself at the vidphone. 'It's darn nice
of you to take a minute or so off from your busy schedule to hear me out. Jim
Briskin would like very much to visit this other world. "Can you arrange
it with Turpin at TD ?' He explained, then, why it was vital, just in case
Woodbine was ignorant of Jim's Chicago speech. But Woodbine was not ignorant of
it; he understood immediately what the situation was.
'I think,' Woodbine said thoughtfully, 'that you'd better have Jim drop by
my conapt. Tonight, if possible. I want to discuss with him the material we've
uncovered on the far side. Before he goes across, he should know about it. I'm
sure TD won't mind; they're going to release it to the media sometime tomorrow
anyhow.'
'Fine,' Sal said, immensely pleased. 'I'll have him shoot right over to your
place.' He thanked Woodbine profusely and then rang off.
Now let's see if I can light the proper fire under Jim, he said to himself
as he dialed. Get him to do this. What if he won't ?
'Maybe I can help,' Pat said, from behind him. 'I can usually persuade Jim
when it's genuinely in his interest. and this certainly is, beyond a doubt.'
'I'm glad you see it this way,' Sal said, 'because I'm very anxious about
this.' He wondered what material TD had uncovered in the new world; evidently,
it was important. And the way Woodbine had talked, he was obviously concerned.
Hmm, Sal thought. He felt a little worried. Just a little: the first
stirrings.
Frank Woodbine answered the knock on his conapt door, and there on the
threshold stood his tall and very dark friend Jim Briskin, looking gloomy as
always.
'It's been a hell of a long time,' Woodbine said, ushering Jim in. 'Come
over here; I want to show you right away what we've turned up on the other
side.' He led Jim to the long table in the living room. 'Their compressor.' He
pointed to the photograph. 'There are a hundred better ways to build a
compressor than this. Why'd they choose the most cumbersome way possible ? You
can't call a culture primitive if it's got such artifacts in it as piston
engines and gas compressors. In fact, their ability to construct a power glider
alone puts them out of that class automatically. And yet, something's obviously
wrong. Tomorrow, of course, we'll know what it is, but I'd like to know
tonight, before we establish contact with them.'
Picking up the photo of the compressor, Jim Briskin studied it. 'The
homeopapes thought you'd found something like this, when you hauled that object
back. According to the rumor, you've actually ...'
'Yes,' Woodbine said. "The rumor's correct. Here's a pic of it.' He
showed Jim the photograph of the power glider. 'It's in TD's basement. They're
smart, and yet they're dumb - the people on the other side, I mean. Come on
along with me tomorrow; we're going to set down exactly here.' He laid out a
sequence of shots taken by the QB satellite. 'Recognize the terrain ? It's the
coast of France. Over here ...' He pointed.'... Normandy. A town of theirs. You
can't call it a city, because it's simply not that large. But it's the largest
one the QB has been able to detect. So we're going there .To confront them in
their own bailiwick. By doing so, we get a direct confrontation vis-а-vis their
culture, the totality of what they've managed to develop. TD is supplying
linguistics machines; we've got anthropologists, sociologists ...' He broke off.
"Why are you looking at me like that, Jim ?'
Jim Briskin said, 'I thought it was a planet in another star system. Then
the hints in the media were right, after all. But I'll come with you; I'm glad
to. Thanks for letting me.'
'Don't take it so hard, 'Woodbine said.
'But it's inhabited,' Jim said.
'Not entirely. My god, look on the bright side. This is a tremendous event,
an encounter with another civilization entirely, what I've been searching for
over three star-systems and a time-period of four decades. You're not going to
begrudge us that, are you ?'
After a pause Jim said, 'You're right, of course. I'm just having trouble
adjusting to this. Give me a little time.'
'Are you sorry now that you made that Chicago speech ?'
'No,' Jim said.
'I hope your attitude doesn't have to change. There's one more thing we
found: no one at TD has so far been able to make out what it signifies. Look at
this pic.' He placed the glossy print before Jim. 'It was in the glider, poked
down out of sight, obviously deliberately concealed. In a little leather bag.'
'Rocks ?' Jim said, scrutinizing the pic.
'Diamonds. Rough, not cut. Just as they come out of the ground. The
inference is that these people prize precious stones but don't know how to cut
or polish them. So, in this one respect at least, they're some four or five
thousand years behind us. What would you say about a culture that can build a
power glider, including piston engine and compressor, but hasn't learned to cut
and polish gems ?'
Jim said, 'I - don't know."
'We're taking some cut stones with us tomorrow. Couple of diamonds, opals, a
gold ring set with a nice fat ruby donated by the wife of one of TD's vice
presidents. And we're also taking this.' He tossed a sheet of rolled-up paper
before Jim. 'A schematic of a very simple, efficient turbine. And this.' He
bounced another tube of paper onto the table. 'A schematic of a medium-size
steam engine, circa 1880, used as a donkey engine in mine work. But, of course,
our main effort will be directed toward finding a few of their technological
experts, if there are any, over here. Turpin wants to show them around TD, for
example. And after that, probably N'York City.'
'Has the government made an effort to get involved in this ?'
'Schwarz, I understand, has asked Turpin if a mixed bag of specialists from
various bureaus can accompany us tomorrow. I don't know what the old man has
decided; it's up to him. After all, TD can shut down the nexus any time it so
desires. Schwarz knows that.'
Jim said, 'Would you hazard any kind of estimate as to the level of their
culture in terms of chronology relative to ours ?'
'Sure,' Frank Woodbine said. 'Somewhere between 3000 B.C. and A.D. 1920.
Does that answer your question ?'
'So it can't be graded on a time-scale which compares it to us.'
'We'll know tomorrow,' Frank said. 'Or rather - and I fully expect this, Jim
- we'll know that they're so damn different from us that they might as well
live on a planet in some other star system, as you'd like them to be. A
non-terrestrial race entirely.'
'With six legs and an exoskeleton,' Jim murmured.
'If not worse. Something that would make George Walt look perfectly
ordinary. You know, that's what we ought to do: take George Walt over with us
tomorrow. Tell the people on the other side that George Walt is our god, that
we worship him and they'd better, too, or he'll make the bad atoms rain down on
them and cause them to die of leukemia.'
'Probably,' Jim said, 'they've not reached the level of developing atomic power.
Either for industry or warfare.'
'For all I know,' Frank said quietly, 'they've got an atomic tactical bomb
made out of wood.'
'That's impossible. It's a joke. You're kidding.'
'I'm not kidding - I'm just terribly upset. Nobody in our world ever knew
that you could build complex modem machinery out of wood, as these people have.
If they can manage to do that, although God knows how long it took them to do
it, they can do anything. At least, that's the way it strikes me. I'm going to
set the jet-hopper down in Normandy tomorrow with my heart in my mouth, and
I've been to more star-systems than any other human being; don't forget that.
I've seen a lot of alien worlds.'
Somberly, Jim Briskin picked up the photo of the wooden engine and once more
studied it.
'Of course,' Frank added, 'I keep saying to myself, "Look what we can
learn." And look what they can learn from us.'
'Yes,' Jim agreed, 'we have to look on this as an opportunity,' His tone,
however, was grave.
'You know, just as I know, that something is awfully wrong.'
Jim Briskin nodded.
In the middle of the night Don Stanley, administrative assistant to Leon
Turpin, was awakened by the ringing of his vidphone.
Sitting up groggily, he managed to locate the receiver in the dark. 'Yes ?'
he said, switching on the light. In the bed, his wife slept on.
On the vidscreen the physiognomy of a top-level TD researcher came into
view. 'Mr. Stanley, we're calling you instead of Mr. Turpin. Somebody at policy
has to know this.' The researcher's voice was jumpy with tension. 'The
QB is down.'
'Down what ?' Stanley could not focus his faculties.
"They shot it down. God knows how. Just now, not ten minutes ago. We
don't know whether we should try to put up another one to replace it or just
wait.'
Stanley said, 'Maybe the QB merely malfunctioned. Maybe it's up there
coasting around dead.'
'It's not up there at all; we've got a number of instruments capable of
registering that. You know, bringing down an orbiting satellite requires a
pretty exact science of weapons development; it's not easy to do.'
Still half-asleep, Don Stanley had a momentary hypnogogic vision of an
enormous crossbow with a cord capable of being stretched back a mile. He shook
the vision off and said, 'Maybe we shouldn't send Woodbine over there tomorrow.
We don't want to lose him.'
'Whatever you and Mr. Turpin decide,' the researcher said. 'But sooner or
later we have to make formal contact with them, don't we ? So why not right
away ? It seems to me that, in view of their maneuver against the QB, we can't
afford to wait. We've got to know what they possess.'
'We'll go ahead,' Stanley decided, 'but we'll see that Woodbine is
accompanied by company police. And we'll keep in constant radio contact with
him all the time he's there.'
' "Company police,"' the researcher said in disgust. 'What
Woodbine needs is the United States Army.'
'We don't want the government meddling into this,' Stanley said sharply. 'If
TD can't handle this, we'll shut down the 'scuttler and abolish the nexus.
Forget the entire matter.' He felt irritable. This puts an entirely new light
on everything, this about the QB, he realized. In no way - or at least in no
important way - are these people lagging behind as. We're not going to be able
to get away with trading them a basketful of glass beads in exchange for North
America. He recalled the leather bag of uncut diamonds found in this glider.
They may not be able to finish up stones, he though , but at least they know
what's really valuable. There's a crucial difference between carrying around a
bagful of rough diamonds and, say, a bagful of seashells.
'You've still got a team on the other side, don't you' Stanley said. 'You
didn't pull them back over here.'
'They're there,' the researcher said, 'but they're just standing by, waiting
for dawn and the party of university professors and the linguistics machines,
all that stuff that's been promised.
'We don't want to get into a brawl with these people,,' Stanley said, 'even
if they did get to our satellite. TD wants industrial techniques from them,
wants their know-how hardwarewise. Let's not spoil that. Okay ?'
'Okay,' the researcher agreed, 'and lots of luck.'
Don Stanley hung up, sat for a time, then rose and walked to the kitchen of
his conapt to fix himself something to eat.
Tomorrow's going to be quite a day, he said to himself. I wish I was going
along, but, in view of this, I think I'll stay on this side. After all, I'm a
desk man, not a leg man; let somebody else do it. Somebody like Woodbine who's
paid to take risks. This is exactly why we hired him.
He did not envy Woodbine.
And then all at once it occurred to him that old Leon Turpin might order him
to go along. In which case he would have to - or lose his job. And losing one's
job, these days, was no joke.
His appetite was gone. Leaving the kitchen, Don Stanley returned to his bed,
gloomily aware that with such thoughts on his mind he would probably be unable
to get back to sleep.
It turned out that he was right.
10
Because the defective Jiffi-scuttler technically belonged to him, Darius
Pethel could not effectively be denied permission to cross over, along with the
group of top scientific and linguistic experts leaving in the morning. Wearing
a carefully ironed and starched white shut and new tie, he arrived at TD's
central administrative offices in Washington, D.C., at exactly eight a.m. He
felt confident. TD employees had treated him with deference ever since he had
turned the defective 'scuttler over to them. After all, he could take it
back... or, at least, so Pethel reasoned.
Two officials of the company, both of them tense, accompanied him to Mr.
Turpin's office on the twentieth floor, depositing him there, and at once
hurrying off. Now he was on his own.
The board chairman of TD did not awe Darius Pethel. 'Morning, Mr. Turpin,'
he said in greeting. 'I hope I'm not late.' He was not sure where the group was
assembling. Probably down in the subsurface labs near the 'scuttler.
'Ump,' the old man said, glancing at him sideways, the wrinkled neck
twisting like a turkey's. 'Oh, yes. Pedal.'
'Pethel.'
'So you want to be in on things, do you ?' Leon Turpin studied him, smiling
a thin, gleeful smile.
'I want to keep in touch,' Pethel said. He pointed out: 'After all, it is
my, property.'
'Oh, yes, we're very conscious of that, Pethel. You're a highly important
figure in all that's going on. Being a businessman, you'll no doubt be useful
on this mission; you can establish trade relations with these people. In fact,
we expect you to start selling them 'scuttlers.' Leon Turpin laughed. 'All
right, Mr. Pethel. You go ahead downstairs to the labs and join the group; make
yourself at home here at TD. Do whatever you feel like. I myself - I'm staying
here. One trip across is enough for a man of my age; I’m sure you can appreciate
that.'
Conscious that he had been made fun of, Darius Pethel left Mr. Turpin's
office and took the elevator down. Smouldering, he said to himself, I can be
important in this. The people on this alternative Earth or whatever it is
can probably use an improved method of transportation even better than we can.
After all, from what the TV newsman said, they seem to be backward, compared to
us. There was something about a primitive ship or airplane. Something obsolete
in our world several centuries ago.
The elevator let him off at the guarded lower floors of the building, and he
made his way down the corridor, following the instructions painted on the
walls, to the main lab proper.
When he opened the lab door he found himself facing a man whom he had seen
many times on TV. It was the Republican-Liberal candidate for president, James
Briskin, and Pethel halted in awe and surprise.
'Let's get a shot of you standing at the entrance hoop,' a photographer was
saying to Briskin. 'Could you move over there, please ?'
Obligingly, Briskin walked to the 'scuttler.
This is the big time, Pethel realized. Our next president is here along with
me. I wonder what would happen if I said hello to him, he wondered. Would he
answer back ? Probably would because he's campaigning; after he gets into
office, he won't have to.
To Jim Briskin, Pethel said humbly, 'Hello, Mr. Briskin. You don't know me,
but I'm going to vote for you.' He had just made up his mind; seeing Briskin in
real life had decided him. 'I'm Darius Pethel.'
Glancing at him, Briskin said, 'Hello, Mr. Pethel.'
'This Jiffi-scuttler belongs to me,' Pethel explained. 'I discovered the
rent in it, the doorway to the other universe. Or rather, my repairman Rick
Erickson did. But he's dead now.' He added, 'Very tragic; I was there when it
happened,'
A TD official, appearing beside Jim Briskin, said, 'We're ready to get
started, Mr. Briskin.'
A small, rather handsome man strolled up, and Darius, with a start,
recognized him, too. This was Frank Woodbine, the famous deep-space explorer.
Good lord, Pethel said to himself, and I'm going with them!
'Jim,' Woodbine said to Jim Briskin, 'we're all carrying laser pistols
except you. Don't you think you're making a mistake ?'
'Hey,' Pethel said tremulously, 'nobody gave me a pistol.'
A TD employee passed a pistol, in its holster, over to him. 'Sorry, Mr.
Pethel.'
'That's more like it,' Dar Pethel said, wondering if he was supposed to hold
the thing in his hands or strap it on somehow.
'I don't need a gun,' Jim Briskin said.
'Of course you do,' Woodbine said. 'You want to come back, don't you ?' To
Pethel, Woodbine said, 'Tell him he needs a gun."
'You ought to have one, Mr. Briskin,' Pethel said eagerly. 'No one knows
what we'll run into over there.'
At last, with massive reluctance, Briskin accepted a gun. 'This is not the
way,' he said, to no one in particular. 'We shouldn't be doing this, going to
meet them armed like this.' He looked melancholy.
'What choice have we got ?' Woodbine said and disappeared through the
entrance hoop of the Jiffi-scuttler.
'I'll go in with you,. Mr. Briskin,' Pethel said. 'Instead of with those
scientists.' He indicated the group which had formed behind them. 'I can't talk
their language; I've got nothing in common with them.'
A man whom he recognized as Briskin's campaign manger, Salisbury Heim,
hurried up to join Briskin. 'Sorry I'm late.' Quickly, he made note of the news
photographers, TV cameras, the gang of media people. 'You fellows get every
step of this,' he called to them. 'You understand ?'
'Yes, Mr. Heim,' they murmured, moving forward.
'The time is now,' Salisbury Heim said, and gave Jim Briskin a small push in
the direction of the entrance hoop. 'Let's go, Jim.'
'Are you ready, Mr. Pethel ?' Jim Briskin asked.
'Oh, thanks; I am, yes,' Pethel answered hurriedly. 'This is certainly a
fascinating journey, isn't it ?'
'Momentous,' Salisbury Heim said.
'In fact even historical,' Briskin said, with a faint smile.
'Entering the Jiffi-scuttler now,' a TV newsman was saying into his lapel
mike, 'the possible future president of the United States reveals no indication
of concern for his personal safety. Solicitous of the welfare of the others
surrounding him, he makes certain that they understand the gravity or - as
James Briskin himself just now put it - the historical significance of this
body of persons passing across into a situation fraught with possible peril.
But the stakes in this are vast, and no one has forgotten that, least of all
James Briskin. Another world, another civilization ... what will this come to
mean in future centuries to mankind ? Undoubtedly, James Briskin is asking
himself that at this very instant as he crosses the threshold of the rather
plain, almost ordinary-appearing Jiffi-scuttler.'
Jim Briskin winked at Darius Pethel.
Startled, Pethel attempted to wink back, but he was too tense.
'Hey, just a moment, Mr. Briskin!' a homeopape photographer called. 'We want
to be sure we catch you going through the rent. Could you kindly retrace your
steps back to the hoop, please ? Those last four steps ?'
Obligingly, Jim Briskin did so.
The TV newsman was saying, 'So now in only a matter of seconds presidential
candidate Jim Briskin will be passing through the connecting link into a
universe whose very existence was not even suspected two days ago. Authorities
seem pretty well to agree now, on the basis of stellar charts taken by the no
longer functioning Queen Bee satellite ...' -
I wonder why it's no longer functioning, Pethel mused. Has something gotten
fouled up, over there ? It didn't sound like a good omen; it made him
uncomfortable.
On the other side, amid a meadow of excellently green grass and small white
flowers, they, now a party of thirty, boarded an express jet-hopper which TD
engineers hid somehow managed to disassemble, pass through the rent, and then
reassemble. Almost at once the 'hopper rose and soared out over the Atlantic,
toward the northern coast of France.
Watching a flight of gulls, Jim Briskin thought: From this vantage point, it
appears no different from our own world. The gulls disappeared behind them as
the jet-hopper hurried on. Will we see ships of any sort on this ocean ? he
wondered.
Fifteen minutes later, by his wristwatch, he saw a slip below.
It did not seem to be large. But it was ocean-going, and that, he decided,
was something. Of course it was wooden; he took that for granted, as did the
others in the 'hopper, all of whom were pressed against the windows, peering
out. The ship, did not have sails, but it also lacked a stack. What propels it
? he wondered. More nonsense machinery. If not the expansion of ice, then by
all means the popping of paper bags.
The pilot of the jet-hopper swooped low over the ship; they were treated to
a thorough look, at least momentarily. Figures on the deck scampered about in
agitation, then disappeared down below, lost from sight. The ship continued on.
And, presently, the 'hopper left it behind.
'We didn't learn much,' Dillingsworth, the anthropologist, said in
disappointment. 'How long before we reach Normandy ?'
'Another half hour,' the pilot said.
They saw, then, a collection of small boats, perhaps a fishing fleet; the
boats were anchored, and they did have sails. Aboard, the sailors gaped up at
the sight of the 'hopper, frozen in their positions as if carved there. Again
the 'hopper dipped low.
The anthropologist, staring down, said, 'Lower.'
'Can't,' the pilot answered. 'Too dangerous; we're overloaded'
'What's the matter ?' the sociologist from the University of California,
Edward Marshak, asked Dillingsworth. 'What did you see ?'
After a time Dillingsworth said, 'As soon as we reach the European landmass,
as soon as we can land, let's do so. Let's not wait to seek out their centers
of concentration; I want to have us set down by the first one of them we spot.'
The fishing boats disappeared behind them.
With shaking hands, Dillingsworth opened a textbook which he had brought,
began turning pages. He did not allow anyone else to see its title; he sat off,
by himself, in a corner of the 'hopper, a brooding, dark expression on his
face.
Stanley, the senior official from TD, said inquiringly, 'Do you think we
should turn back ?'
'Hell no,' Dillingsworth rasped. And that was all he said; he did not
amplify.
Next to Jim Briskin, the round, heavy-set little businessman from Kansas
City leaned over and said, 'He makes me nervous; he's found something and he
won't say what it is. It was when he saw those fishermen. I was watching his
face, and he almost fainted.'
Amused, Jim said, 'Take it easy, Mr. Pethel. We still have a long way to
go.'
I'm going to find out what it was,' Pethel said. He scrambled to his feet
and made his way over to Dillingsworth. 'Tell me,' he said. 'Why keep it quiet
? It must have been pretty bad to make you clam up like this. What could you
possibly have seen in those few seconds that would make you react this way ?
Personally, I don't think we should go on until...'
'Look at it this way,' Dillingsworth said. 'If I'm wrong, it doesn't matter.
If I'm right ...' He looked past Pethel to Jim Briskin. 'We'll know all about
it before we make our return trip, later today.'
After a pause, Jim said, 'That's good enough. For me, at least.'
Fuming, Darius Pethel returned to his seat. 'If I had known it'd be like
this...'
'Wouldn't you have come ?' Jim asked him.
'I don't know. Possibly not.'
Stirring restlessly, Sal Heim said, 'I didn't realize there was going to be
any hazard involved in this.'
'What did you think,' one of the newsmen asked him, 'when they took our QB
satellite out ?'
'I just learned about that,' Sal snapped back, 'as we were entering the damn
'scuttler.'
A photographer for one of the big homeopapes said, 'How about a game of draw
? Jacks or better to open, penny a chip but no table limit.'
Within a minute, the game had started.
Ahead, on the horizon, Sal Heim thought he saw something and he took a quick
look at his wristwatch. That's Normandy, he realized. We're almost there. He
felt his breath stifle in his throat; he could hardly breathe. God, I'm tense,
he decided. That anthropologist really shook me. But too late to turn back now.
We're fully committed; and anyhow it would look bad, politically-speaking, if
Jim Briskin backed out. No, for our own good we have to continue whether we
want to or not.
'Set us right down,' Dillingsworth instructed the pilot in a clipped, urgent
tone of voice.
'Do so,' Don Stanley of TD chimed in. The pilot nodded.
They were over open countryside, now; the coastline had already fallen
behind them, the wave-washed shore. Sal Heim saw a road. It was not much of a
road, but it could hardly be mistaken for anything else, and, looking along it,
he made out in the distance a vehicle, a sort of cart. Somebody going
uneventfully along the road, on his routine business, Sal realized. He could
see the wheels of the cart, now, and its load. And, in the front, the driver,
who wore a blue cap. The driver did not look up. Evidently he was not aware of
the 'hopper. And then Sal Heim realized that the pilot had cut the jets. The
'hopper was coasting silently down.
'I'm going to place it on the road,' the pilot explained.
'Directly in front of his cart.' He snapped on a retrojet, briefly, to brake
the 'hopper's fall.
Dillingsworth said, 'Christ, I was right.'
As the 'hopper struck, almost all of them were already on their feet,
peering at the cart ahead, trying to discover what it was that the
anthropologist saw. The cart had stopped. The driver stood up in his seat and
stared at the jet-hopper, at them inside it.
Sal Heim thought, There's something wrong with that man. He's - deformed.
A homeopape reporter said gruffly, 'Must be from wartime radiation, from
fallout. God, he looks awful.'
'No,' Dillingsworth said. 'That's not from fallout. Haven't you seen that
before ? 'Where have you seen it before ? Think.'
'In a book,' the little businessman from Kansas City said. 'It's in the book
you have there.' He pointed at Dillingsworth. 'You looked it up after we passed
those fishing boats!' His voice rose squeakily.
Jim Briskin said, 'He's one of the races of pre-humans.'
'He's of the Paleoanthropic wing of primate evolution,' Dillingsworth said.
'I'd guess Sinanthropus, a rather high form of Pithecanthropi, or Peking man,
as he is called. Notice the low vault of the skull, the very heavy brow ridge
which runs unbroken across the forehead above the eyes. The chin is
undeveloped. These are simian features, lost by the true line of Homo sapiens.
The brain capacity, however, is reasonably large, almost as great as our own.
Needless to say, the teeth are quite different from our own.' He added, 'In our
world, this branch of primate evolution came to an end in the Lower
Pleistocene, about a million and a half years ago.'
'Have we ... gone back in time ?' the Kansas City businessman asked.
'No,' Dillingsworth said irritably. 'Not one week. Evidently here Homo
sapiens either did not appear at all or for some reason did not win out. And
Sinanthropus became the dominant species. As in our world we are.'
Frank Woodbine said, 'Yes, I thought he stooped. That one who jumped out of
the glider yesterday.' His voice shook.
'True,' Dillingsworth agreed. 'Sinanthropus was not fully erect. That was an
advantage in plains areas where short grass grew; an erect posture would have
made him a better target.' He spoke flatly. Methodically.
'God,' Sal Heim said. 'So what do we do now ?
There was no answer. From any of them.
What a mess, Sal Heim said to himself as the thirty of them clambered from
the parked 'hopper and surrounded the stalled cart. Too frightened to try to
escape, the driver continued to stare meekly at them all, clutching some sort
of parcel in his arms. He wore, Sal noted, a toga-like one-piece garment. And
his hair, unlike the reconstructions in the museums of dawn men, had been cut
short and tidily. What repercussions there're going to be from this, Sal
realized. Damn it, what rotten luck!
But it was even worse than that. Far, far worse. So Jim Briskin got beaten
at the polls because of this ... so what ? That was a mere pebble in the bottom
of the barrel. In an intuitive flash of insight, he saw the entire thing,
spread out into their lives, ahead. His and Jim's and everyone else's .. whites
and cols alike. Because, in terms of race relations, this was an absolute
calamity.
By the cart, several TD employees and Dillingsworth were rapidly setting up
a linguistics machine. They evidently were going to make the attempt to
communicate with the driver.
Hypnotized by the sight of the apparition seated in he cart, the little
round businessman from Kansas City said stammeringly to Sal, 'Isn't it
something ? Given a chance these near-humans actually figured out how to lay
roads and build carts. And they even made a gas turbine, the TV sad.' He looked
stunned.
'They had a million and a half years to do it,' Sal pointed out.
'But it's still amazing. They built that ship we saw; it was crossing the
Atlantic! I'll bet there isn't an anthropologist in the world who would have
made book on that - bet they could create such an advanced culture, like they
have. I take off my hat to them; I think it's great. It's ... very encouraging,
don't you think ? It sort of makes you realize that ...' He struggled to
express himself. '... that if anything happened to us, to Homo sapiens, other
life forms would go on.'
It did not encourage Sal Heim.
The best thing to do, he said to himself bleakly, is to go back to our world
and then plug up that goddam hole. That entrance between our universe and this.
Forget it ever existed, that we ever saw this.
But we can't, because there'll always be some curious, scientific-type
busybody who'll insist on poking around here. And TD itself; it'll still want
to go over all the artifacts in this world to see what it can make use of. So
it's just not that simple. We can't just shut our eyes, walk off, pretend it
never happened.
'I don't think what these near-men have done here is so great,' Sal said
aloud. 'They're pitifully backward, compared to us, and they've had ten times
as long to do it in. At least ten times; maybe twenty. They haven't discovered
metal, for instance. Take that one example.'
Nobody paid any attention to him. They were all gathering around the
linguistics machine, waiting to see how the attempt at communication was going
to go.
'So who wants to talk to that semi-ape ?' Sal said bitterly. 'Who needs it
?' He walked about in an aimless, futile circle. I've got to get my candidate
out of here, he knew. I can't let him get identified with this.
But Jim Briskin showed no signs of leaving. In fact he had gone up to the
cart and was saying something to the Peking man, talking directly to him.
Probably trying to calm him down. That would be just like Jim.
You damn fool, Sal thought. You're ruining your political career; can't you
see that ? The ramifications of this - am I the only one who can perceive them
? It ought to be obvious. But evidently it was not.
Into the microphone of the TD linguistics machine, Dillingsworth was saying
over and over again, 'We're friends. We're peaceful.' To Stanley he said, 'Is
this thing working or not ? ... We're friends. We come to your world in peace.
We will hurt no one.'
'It takes time,' Stanley explained. 'Keep at it. See, what it has to do is
take the visual images connected to the intrinsically meaningless words, images
which flash up in your brain as you speak, and transmit replicas of those
visual images directly to the brain of...'
'I know how it works,' Dillingsworth said brusquely. 'I'm just anxious for
it to get started before he bolts. You can see he's getting ready to.' Into the
microphone he once agan said, 'We're friends. We come in peace.
All at once the Peking man spoke.
From the audio section of the linguistics machine a strangled noise sounded;
recorded automatically, it was immediately repeated as the tape-deck rewound
and played it back.
'What'd he say ?' the little businessman from Kansas City demanded, looking
around at everyone. 'What'd he say ?'
Dillingsworth said into the mike, 'Are you our friend, too ? Are you friends
with us as we are with you ?'
Going over to Jim Briskin, Sal put his hand on his shoulder and said 'Jim, I
want to talk to you.'
'For God's sake, later,' Jim answered.
'Now,' Sal said. 'It can't wait.'
Jim groaned. 'Jesus, man, are you out of your head ?'
'No, I'm not,' Sal said evenly. 'It's everyone else here who is. Including
you. Come on.' He took hold of Jim by he shoulder and propelled him forcibly
from the group, off to one side of the road. 'Listen,' Sal said. 'How do you define
man ? Go on, define man for me.'
Staring at him Jim said. 'What ?'
'Define man! I'll do it, then. Man's a tool-making animal. Okay, what's all
this - for example, that cart and that hat and that package and that robe ?
Plus the ship we saw and that glider with that compressor and turbine ? Tools.
All of them, broadly speaking. So what does that make that damn creature
sitting up there at the tiller of that cart ? I'll tell you: it makes him a
man, that's what. So he's ugly-looking; so he has a low forehead and beetling
brows and he isn't too bright. But he's bright enough to get in under the wire
and qualify, that's how bright he is goddam it. I mean, my god, he's even built
roads. And...' Sal vibrated with rage.'... he even shot down our QB satellite!'
'Look,' Jim began, wearily, 'this is no time ...'
'It's the only time. We have to get out of here. Back across and
forget what we saw.' But, of course, as Sid well knew., it was hopeless. The
'hopper, for instance, belonged to TD, was piloted by a TD employee to whom Sal
Heim could give no orders. Only Stanley could, and obviously Stanley had no
intention of leaving; he was standing by the linguistics machine, fascinated.
'Let me ask you this,' Sal panted. 'If they're men, and you admit they are,
how're we going to deny them the vote ?'
After a pause Jim said, 'Is that actually what you're worrying about ?'
'Yes,' Sal said.
Turning, Jim walked back to join the group. Without a word. Sal Heim watched
him go.
'He's going to be voting,' Sal said, aloud but to himself. I can see it
coming. And then you know what ? Mixed marriages. Between us and them. Let's go
home; please, let's go home. Okay ?' No one stirred. 'I don't want to foresee
it, but I do,' Sal said. 'Can I help that ? So I'm a prophet. Hell, don't blame
me; blame that thing sitting up there on that cart. It's his fault. He
shouldn't even be existing.'
From the audio circuit of the linguistics machine a guttural, hoarse voice
whispered,'... friend.'
Frantically, Dillingsworth turned to those around him and said, 'It was him;
that was not feedback from what I put in.'
"They don't even have radio, here,' Sal Heim said.
In his N'York office, the private investigator Tito Cravelli received a
puzzling bulletin from his contact at TD, Earl Bohegian: 'First report from
'hopper to TD. World inhabited by apes.'
Taking a calculated risk, Cravelli dialed Terran Development through regular
vidphone channels. When he reached TD's switchboard, he matter of factly asked
to speak to Mr. Bohegian.
'How could you be so foolish as to call me direct ?' Bohegian asked
nervously, when the call was put through to his office.
'Explain your message,' Tito said.
'They're educated apes,' Bohegian said, leaning close to the vidscreen and
speaking in a low, urgent voice. 'You know, missing links.'
'Dawn men,' Tito said, finally understanding. He felt his heart skip a beat.
'Go on, Earl, I want to hear it all; keep talking and if you ring off, I'll
call you right back, so help me God.'
Earl Bohegian muttered, 'The report was given to old Leon Turpin; he's
examining it right now on floor twenty. They're trying to decide if they want
to shut the 'scuttler down and wall the rent up or not. But I don't think
they're gonna, not from what I've heard.'
'No,' Tito agreed. "They won't. There's too much to gain by leaving it
open.'
'But they are sort of upset. Who isn't ? Imagine; here we took it for
granted that humans like ourselves ...'
'Did the 'hopper specifically state which variety of sub-Homo sapiens it is
?' Cravelli asked, trying to remember his college anthropology.
'Peking man. Does that sound right ?'
Cravelli bit his lip. "That's a hell of a low-grade type. One of the
lowest, Now, if it had been Cro-Magnon or even Neanderthal. ...' That would be
another matter. After all, the Palestine archeological discoveries were proof
that Homo sapiens and Neanderthal had already interbred, tens of thousands of
years in the past. And it had evidently done no harm; the Homo sapiens genetic
strain had dominated.
"They're going to bring one back,' Bohegian said. "They've already
got one inside the 'hopper, the scuttlebutt says down in the washroom at the
end of my hall. And they're in lin-com with it. It's docile, one exec told me
just now. Scared out of its wits.'
'Of course it would be,' Cravelli said. 'They probably remember us from
their past, remember getting rid of us.' Just as we got rid of them in our
world, he thought. Wiped them utterly out. 'And now we're back,' he said. 'It
must seem like black magic to them: ghosts from a hundred thousand years ago,
from their own Stone Age. Jeez, what a situation!'
'I've got to ring off,' Bohegian said. 'I told you everything anyhow, Tito.
When there's more...'
'Okay,' Tito Cravelli said and broke the connection.
I wonder if they'll be able to pilot that jet-hopper back across the
Atlantic and then back through the rent to our world, he conjectured. Or will
the Peking people get them along the way ? Good question.
This is going to work havoc with the November election, he said to himself,
broodingly. Who could have possibly anticipated something like this ? Once more
Tito Cravelli saw his Attorney Generalship receding, along with Jim Briskin’s
election.
These parallel worlds are a knotty problem, he realized. I wonder how many
exist. Dozens ? With a different human sub-species dominant on each ? Weird
idea. He shivered. God, how unpleasant ... like concentric rings of hell, each
with its own particular brand of torment.
And then he thought suddenly: Maybe there's one in which a human type
superior to us, one we know nothing about, dominates; one which, in our own
world, we extinguished at its inception. Blotto, right off the bat.
Somebody ought to tinker with a 'scuttler with that in mind, Tito decided.
But then, it occurred to him, they'd show up here, just the way we're appearing
in Peking man's orderly little universe. And we'd be finished. We wouldn't be
able to survive the competition.
Just, he thought, as Peking man isn't going to be able to stand up to us for
long.
The poor clucks. They don't know what's in store for them; their time is
limited, now. Because their ancestral foe has reappeared - and right in their
midst, with TV, rocket-ships, laser rifles, H-bombs, all kinds of devices
inconceivable to their limited mentalities. They spent a million or two years
developing a gas compressor, and what good is it going to do them, now that the
chips are down ? Them and their wooden gliders that travel a hundred feet and
then have to land again. My god, we've got ships in three star systems!
And then he remembered the QB satellite.
How'd they do that ? he asked himself. Remarkable! It doesn't quite fit in.
Because even so, they are an entire evolutionary step below us.
We can lick them with both hands and one frontal lobe of our brain tied
behind our backs... so to speak.
But the assurance of a moment ago had left him and he did not right now feel
quite so secure.
Jim Briskin, he said to himself, you just better darn well get back intact
from that alternate Earth. Because there's going to be a hard row to hoe, here,
for all of us, and we need someone capable. I can see Bill The Cat's Meatman
Schwarz attempting to deal with this problem ... yes, how I can see it.
Once more he dialed TD's Washington, D.C., number and again, when 'he had
their switchboard, asked for Earl Bohegian in 603.
'I want you to let me know,' Tito Cravelli instructed Bohegian when he had
him, 'the moment Jim Briskin crosses back. I don't give a damn about the others
- just him. Got it, Earl ?'
'Sure, Tito,' Bohegian said, nodding.
'Can you get a message to him ? After all, he'll be there in your building,
on the bottom floor.'
'I can try,' Bohegian said, sounding dubious.
'Tell him to call me.'
'Okay,' Bohegian said dutifully, 'I'll do my best.'
Ringing off, Cravelli sat back in his chair, then searched about for a
cigarette. He had done all he could - for now. Here on out he could only sit
and wait, at least until Jim showed up. And, he knew, that might be a long
time.
He thought, then, of something interesting. Perhaps be now understood why
Cally Vale had shot and killed the 'settler repairman with her laser pistol. If
she had run across one of the Peking men, she probably had gone straight into
hysterical shock. Had probably in her state taken the repairman for one more of
them. And after all, most 'settler repairmen - at least, those he had known
-were rather shambling, hunched creatures; the error was easy to comprehend,
once the circumstances were known.
Poor Cally, Tito thought. Stuck over there, supposedly in safety. What a
surprise it must have been, when one of those wooden gliders came sailing past,
one day.
It must have been quite a meeting.
11
Seated in the back of the jet-hopper as it made its return flight across the
Atlantic, the Peking man in his blue cloth cap and toga-like robe declared, 'My
name is Bill Smith.' At least, that was the way the TD linguistics machine
handled the utterance. It was the best the circuits could do. Bill Smith, Sal Heim thought. What an appropriate name the machine's
given it! As American as apple pie. He miserably inspected his wristwatch, for
the tenth time. Aren't we ever going to get back across this ocean ? he
wondered. It did not seem so. Time, for him, stood motionless, and he knew who
to blame; it was Bill Smith's fault. Riding with him in the 'hopper was for Sal
Heim a nightmare, yet totally and completely lucidly real.
'Hello, Bill Smith,' Dillingsworth was saying into the mike, now. 'We are
glad to know you. We admire your science and efforts as represented by your
roads, houses, gliders, ships, motor and clothing. In fact, wherever we look,
we see indications of your people's ability.'
The linguistics machine produced a hubbub of grunts, squeals and yips, to
which the Peking man listened with slack-jawed intensity; his small,
brow-overlain eyes glazed with the effort of paying attention. With a groan,
Sal Heim turned away and looked out the 'hopper window instead.
And to think I handed in my resignation over a little matter like the
disagreement about George Walt, he reflected. What was that compared with this
?
To Jim Briskin, seated beside him, Sal said bitingly, I'm certainly going to
be interested to hear your next speech. Got any idea what you're going to say,
Jim ? For instance, about the emigration situation as regards this new
development.' He waited, but Jim did not answer; hunched over, Jim somberly
scrutinized his interlocked fingers. 'Maybe you could say it's going to be like
the Mason-Dixon Line,' Sal continued. 'With them on one side and us on the
other. Of course, that's if these Pekes agree. And they might just not.'
'Why should they agree ?' Jim said.
'Well, we could offer them the alternative of total annihilation, if Bill
Schwarz can see his way clear in that direction.'
'That's out of the question,' Jim said. 'And I know Schwarz would back me
up. They've got just as much right to exist as we, especially over here. You
know it and I know it and they know it.'
'Is that what you're going to say in your speech ? That it's their planet -
just after having promised that all the bibs can cross over and become farmers
?'
Slowly, Jim said, 'I'm ... beginning to see what you mean.' His lean face
twisted wrathfully. 'Advise me, then. Do your job.'
'This planet,' Sal said, 'will still be able to absorb seventy million bibs.
They can fit in on the North American land-mass. But there's going to be
friction. People - and those deformed things - are going to get killed. It's
going to be roughly a reenactment of the situation when the first white colonists
landed in the New World. You see ? The Pekes in North America will be driven
back, step by step, until the continent is cleared of them; they might as well
resign themselves to that, and you might as well, too. I mean, it's
inevitable.'
'And then what ?'
'And then the trouble - the real trouble - comes. Because sooner or later
it's going to occur to some group or some corporation that if we can use North
America, we can use Europe and Asia as well. And then the fight that was fought
out on both worlds fifty or a hundred thousand years ago is going to take place
again, only not with flint hatchets. It'll be with tactical A-bombs and nerve
gas and lasers, on our side, and on their side ..." He paused,
ruminating.'... with whatever they took out the QB satellite by. Who knows ?
Maybe in a million and a half years they've managed to stumble over and come up
with a source of power we have no knowledge of. Something that's beyond our
conception. Had you thought of that ?'
Jim shrugged.
'And if we press them far enough,' Sal said, 'they'll have to use it on us.
They'd have no choice.'
'We can always slam down the door. Close down the nexus by turning off the
power supply of the 'scuttler.'
'But by that time there'll be seventy million colonists over there. Can we
strand them ?'
'Of course not.'
'Then don't talk about "slamming the door down". That's not going
to be the answer. The moment the first bib passes over, that's out.' Sal
pondered. 'That Bill Smith, back there; for him this is like a ride in a flying
saucer would be for one of us. Think what he can tell his playmates when he
gets back home. If he ever does.'
'What's a flying saucer ?'
Sal said, 'Back in the twentieth century a number of people claimed ...'
'I remember,' Jim nodded.
'If you were president already,' Sal said, 'if you held formal authority,
you could meet with some enormous dignitary from their world, assuming they
have a government of some kind. But right now you're just a private individual;
you can't bind this country to anything. And Schwarz, if history repeats
itself, won't do a damn thing because he knows he'll soon be out of office.
He'll leave it to be dumped in your lap. And by January it'll probably be too
late to settle this peacefully.'
'Phil Danville,' Jim said, 'can write me a speech that'll capture this
situation and explain it.'
Sal guffawed. 'Like hell he can. Nobody is going to be able to
capture this situation, especially an intellectual simp like Phil Danville. But
let him try. Let's see what Danville can come up with.' Say by tomorrow night,
Sal thought. Or the day after, at the very latest.
From his pocket he brought out the itinerary, unfolded it carefully and
began to study it.
'I have to speak in Cleveland,' Jim said. 'Tonight.'
In the back of the 'hopper, the Peking man Bill Smith, by means of the
linguistics equipment, was saying,'... metal is evil. It belongs inside the
Earth with the dead. It is part of the once-was, where everything goes when its
time is over.'
'Philosophy,' Sal said in disgust. 'Listen to him.' He jerked his head.
'And that's why you don't build with it ?' Dillingsworth asked, speaking
into the mike of the machine.
'We have areas we avoid,' Jim said to Sal. 'You'd think twice before making
a human skull into a drinking cup and using it every day.'
'Is that what Pekes do ?' Sal said, horrified.
'I believe I read that somewhere about them,' Jim said. 'At least their
ancestors did. The practice may have disappeared by now.' He added, "They
were cannibals.'
'Great,' Sal said and resumed studying the itinerary. "That's just what
we need to win the election.'
'Schwarz would have brought it out,' Jim said, 'eventually.'
Glancing out the 'hopper window at the ocean below, Sal said, 'I'll be
relieved to get out of here. And you won't catch me emigrating. I'd rather do
like your folks and give Mars a try, even if I wound up dying of thirst. At
least I wouldn't get eaten. And nobody would use my skull for a drinking cup.'
He felt severely depressed, meditating about that, and he did his best to
reinvolve his attention in the itinerary.
How's the first Negro President of the United States going to go about
handling the presence of a planetful of dawn linen who've proved themselves
capable of constructing a fairly adequate civilization ? Sal Heim asked himself.
A race that, in theory, shouldn't have been able to get past the flint-chipping
stage. But after all, each of us started out chipping flint. What's been proved
here is that given time enough .,.
I know I'm right, Sal thought. There isn't a single legal basis on which
these Pekes can be denied full rights under our laws - except, of course, that
they're not U.S. citizens
Was that the only barrier ? He had to laugh. What a way to stop an invasion
of Earth by denying the invaders citizenship.
But there was, sadly, a joker in that, too. Because U.S. citizens would be
emigrating to this world, in which the jet-hopper now droned, and in
this universe U.S. citizenship had no significance; the Pekes were here first
and could prove prior residence. So it would be wise not to raise the issue of
citizenship after all...
What'll we do, then, Sal asked himself, when our people and the Pekes begin
to interbreed ? Do you want your daughter to marry a Peke ? he asked himself
fiercely. Now the Ku Klux Klanners really have their job cut out for
thorn.
It was potentially pretty nasty.
At the front door of Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service, Stuart
Hadley stood leaning on his autonomic broom, watching the people go past. With
Dar Pethel gone today, a weight had been lifted from him; he could do what he
pleased.
As he stood there mentally magnifying his new status by a few well-chosen
daydreams, a slender red-haired shape, full-bosomed and young, all at once
strolled up to him, her lace stormy. 'They've closed the satellite down,'
Sparky said, massive, defeated bitterness.
Awakened, Hadley said, 'W-what ?'
'George Walt, that no-good crink, kicked us out this morning. It's all over
up there. I have absolutely no idea why. So I came right here to you. What'll
we do ?' With her toe she nudged a bit of rubbish from the sidewalk into the
gutter, glumly.
He reacted. It was superb corto-thalamic response; he was all there, as
alert as fine steel. The time had arrived for one of those unique, binding-type
decisions which would shape everything to come. 'You set out for the right
place, Sparky,' he informed her.
'I know that, Stuart.'
'We'll emigrate.' There it was, the decision.
She glanced sharply up. 'How ? Where ? To Mars ?'
'I love you,' Hadley announced to her. He had given it a great deal of
thought. The hell with his wife Mary and his job - everything that made up his
little routine life.
"Thank you, Stuart,' Sparky said. 'I'm glad you do. But explain where
you and I are going to go, for chrissakes, especially where they can't find
us.'
'I've got contacts,' Hadley said. 'Believe me, have I got contacts!
You know where I can put us ?' In a flash he had it all planned; it leaped
fully formed, completed, into his busy brain. 'Get set Sparky.'
I'm set.' She eyed him.
'Across. To that virgin world Jim Briskin talked about in his Chicago
speech. I can actually - and I'm not kidding you - get us there.'
She was impressed. Her eyes grew large. 'Gee.'
'So go and pack your things,' Hadley instructed her rapidly. 'Give me your
vidnumber at your conapt. As soon as I've got the details set up, I'll call you
and we'll take off for Washington, D.C.' He explained, "That's where the
nexus is, right now. At TD. That makes it awkward, naturally, but we can still
do it.'
'How'll we live over there, Stuart ?
'Let me handle that.' He had worked it all out. It practically blinded him,
it was so entire. 'Get going - that damn law that forbids us to meet down here,
we don't want to get picked up before we can get away.' And, in addition to the
police, he also was thinking about Mary. Every now and then his wife dropped by
the store. One glimpse of Sparky and it would be all over; he would be married
the rest of his life, possibly two hundred more years. It was not much of a
prospect.
On the inside of a match-folder Sparky wrote her vidnumber and gave it to
him. He put it away reverently in his billfold and then resumed sweeping with
the autonomic broom.
'You're sweeping ? ' Sparky exclaimed. 'I thought we were going to
emigrate from Earth; isn't that what you just now said ?'
'I'm waiting,' Hadley explained patiently. 'For my top-level contact. Nobody
can cross over unless they've got someone they know placed up high, there, at
TD. My contact's got carte blanche at TD; he's a wheel. But I have to wait for
him to get back here.' He explained, 'He's been at TD all day, on important
business.'
'Ding-aling,' Sparky said, awed.
He gave her a swift, brief goodbye kiss and sent her off; her slim figure
receded down the sidewalk and then was lost, for the time being, to sight.
Hadley swept on, plotting in his mind the last, infinitely tiny details of his
scheme. Everything - unfortunately - depended on Darius Pethel. I hope he shows
up soon, Hadley said to himself. Before I jump clear out of my skin.
Two hours later, Darius Pethel appeared from the direction of the all day
parking lot, his face gray. Mumbling, he passed by Hadley, who still stood out
front, and vanished into the store.
Something was bothering Dar, Hadley realized. Bad time to prevail on him,
but what choice did he have ? He followed after Pethel and found him in the
rear office, hanging up his coat.
Pethel said, 'What a day. I wish I could tell you what we ran into over
there, but I can't. It's classified; we all agreed. At least we got back here.
That's something.' He began rolling up his sleeves and taking an initial look
at the day's mail on his desk.
'You've really got those bigshots at TD over a barrel.' Hadley said. 'You
could whip that 'scuttler out of there any time, so fast it'd make their heads
swim. And then where'd they be ? In fact I'd say you're one of the most
important persons in the universe, right now.'
Seated at his desk, Pethel eyed him sourly.
Huskily, Stuart Hadley said, 'How about it, Dar ?'
'How about what ?'
'Set it up so I can go across.'
Pethel stared at him as if he were deranged, and repellently so. 'Get out of
here.' He began tearing open his mail.
'I mean it,' Hadley said. I'm in love, Dar. I'm leaving. You can get me -
the two of us - out of here and across to the other side where we can start our
lives over.'
'First of all,' Pethel said, 'you don't know what's over there; you don't
have the slightest idea."
'I know what Jim Briskin said in his speech.'
'Briskin, when he made that speech, hadn't been over there either. Second,
Mary would never ...'
'I don't mean Mary,' Hadley said. I'm going with someone else, the first
person I ever met who really understood and I could talk to instead of live out
a fake role in front of. Sparky and I are going to be the first couple to
emigrate and take up a new life in a virgin world half-way down the tube of
that Jiffi-scuttler. Don't try to talk me out of it; it's impossible. Write out
some sort of note that'll get me into TD's labs. We're depending on you, Dar.
Two human lives ...'
'Aw for god's sake,' Pethel protested. 'How are you going to live over there
?'
'How did Cally Vale live ?'
'Sands transported one of these old obsolete A-bomb shelters over.
Subsurface. Filled with supplies. She lived down in that.'
Hadley said, 'Is the shelter still over there ?'
'Of course. What would be the point of transporting it back ?'
'We'll live in that, then. Until we can build.'
'What happens when the food in the shelter runs out ? Assuming it hasn't
already.'
Seating himself on the edge of Dar Pethel's desk, Hadley said, 'I called
around. You can pick up one of those colonization units dirt cheap these days;
the manufacturers are going broke because virtually nobody is emigrating.
They're glad to get rid of one at any price, and the unit contains autonomic
farming equipment, well-drilling rig, basic tools for...'
'Okay,' Pethel said, nodding. 'I know what those colonization units contain;
I admit one of them can sustain you indefinitely. So you got that part figured
out - not bad.'
With fat, sleek pride Hadley said, 'I've even arranged for the unit to be
delivered at TD's offices in Washington later today.' He had thought of
everything. 'Let's be realistic, Dar; a lot of people are going to be
emigrating, and I want to get there first. I want things to be good for me and
Sparky. So will you write out whatever it'll take to get her and me into TD and
into that 'scuttler ? I ought to have some priority; I was down in the repair
department with Erickson when it happened, remember ?' He waited. Pethel said
nothing. 'Come on,' Hadley said. 'The forces of time and change are running
against you, Dar. And you know it, deep down inside.'
'Yes, but they always have,' Pethel murmured. He got a sheet of paper,
brought out his pen. 'Are you really in - how did you describe it ? - love
with her ?'
Hadley said, 'On my mother's honor.'
Wincing, Pethel began to write.
'I'll never forget you for this,' Hadley said. 'And I hate like hell to
leave you stranded with no sales manager ... but it can't be helped; she's
depending on me.' He explained, 'George Walt, you know, those two mutants who
own the satellite, they closed everything down.'
Pethel ceased writing, lifted his head. 'No kidding.' He scowled. 'I wonder
what that means. I wonder what they have in mind.'
'Who cares what they have in mind ?' Hadley said fervently. 'I'm getting out
of here.'
'But I'm not,' Pethel pointed out. He slowly resumed writing, deep in
frowning thought.
When Leon Turpin, chairman of the board of directors of Terran Development, heard
the news about the Pekes he was fit to be tied. How can we get any new
industrial techniques out of that! he asked himself. Dawn men don't have
anything on the ball, technologically speaking.
'Flint axes,' Turpin spat out disappointedly. 'So that's what's over there;
that's what hopped out of that childish glider. And we've expended a QB
satellite, seven million dollars.' Of course there were still mineral rights.
The Pekes, according to Don Stanley's report, definitely did not mine;
therefore, everything below the soil remained intact.
But that was not enough. Turpin yearned for more. There had to be
more. His mind reverted to the fallen satellite. They did manage to knock that
out, he realized, and we're still having trouble doing that.
Across from him Don Stanley shifted about restlessly in his chair. 'If you'd
like to see the Peking man we brought back, this Bill Smith, as the linguistics
machine calls him - '
'If I want to see a Peking man,' Turpin said, 'I'll look in the Britannica.
That's where they belong, Stanley, not walking around on the face of the globe
as if they owned it. But I guess it can't be helped, not at this late date.'
From his desk he picked up a letter. 'Here's a young couple, Art and Rachael
Chaffy, that want to emigrate over there. The first of a horde. Why not ? Call
them up and tell them to come by, and we'll let them go across.' He tossed the
letter toward Eton Stanley.
'Should I explain to them the risks ?"
Turpin shrugged. 'I don't see why you should; that's not our business. Let
them find out the hard way. Colonists are supposed to be hardy and brave. At
least they used to be, in my time. Back in the twentieth century, when we first
started landing on the planets. This certainly is no worse than that; in fact
it's considerably better.'
'You've got a point, Mr. Turpin.' Stanley folded the letter and placed it in
his breast pocket.
The intercom on Turpin's desk said, 'Mr. T, there's an official from the
U.S. Department of Special Public Welfare here to see you. It's Mr. Thomas
Rosenfeld, commissioner of the department.'
Cabinet level, Turpin said to himself. A big man. Capable of setting policy.
He said to the intercom, 'Send Mr. Rosenfeld in.' To Stanley he said, 'You know
what this is going to be ?'
'Bibs,' Stanley said.
'I can't make up my mind whether to tell him or not,' Turpin said. The news
about the Pekes would very soon, of course, begin to seep out; it was a
temporary secret only. But still, that was better than nothing. The party had
just returned from the other side, and the media people who had been along
could not possibly have released the news through their services so soon.
Rosenfeld, then, did not know; he could assume that. And could deal with the
man accordingly.
A tall, red-haired man, well-dressed, entered Turpin's office, smiling. 'Mr.
Turpin ? What a pleasure. President Schwarz asked me to drop by here for a
little while and sort of chat with you. Sound you out, as it were. Is that an
original Ramon Cadiz you have there on the wall behind you ?' Rosenfeld walked
over to inspect it. 'White on white. His best period.
'I'd give the painting to you,' Turpin said, 'but it was a gift to me. I
know you'll understand.' He lied in his feet, but why not ? Why, for purposes
of mere etiquette, should he give away a costly work of art ? It made no sense.
Rosenfeld said, 'How's your defective 'scuttler functioning ? Still as
defective as ever ? We're very interested in it. We were, even before Jim
Briskin's speech ... President Schwarz was exceptionally quick - even for him -
to spot the potentialities in this. I don't believe anyone else is able to
reach a major decision as efficiently as he.'
This was odd, in view of the fact that no way existed by which Schwarz could
have known about the break-through prior to Briskin's speech, Turpin realized.
However, he let this pass. Politics was politics.
Don Stanley spoke up. 'How many sleepers do you have in the fedgov
warehouses, Mr. Rosenfeld ?
'Well,' Rosenfeld said dryly, 'the figure generally given is close to seventy
million. But actually the true number at this date is more like one hundred
million.' He smiled a wry, humorless smile that was more a grimace than
anything else.
Whistling, Stanley said, 'That's a lot.'
'Yes, ' Rosenfeld agreed. 'We admit it. Domestically speaking, it's the
number one headache here in Washington. Of course as you very well know, this
administration inherited it from the last.'
'You want us to put your hundred million bibs through into this alternate
Earth ?' Turpin spoke up, weary of formalities.
'If the situation is such that...'
'We can do it,' Turpin said shortly. 'But you understand our role in this is
simply a technologic one. We provide the means of conveyance to this other
'Earth, but we make no warranty as to the conditions that obtain over there.
We're not anthropologists or sociologists or whoever it is that knows about
such things.'
Rosenfeld nodded. 'That's understood. We're not going to try to compel you
to produce any given set of conditions, over there. Your job, as you say, is
merely to get the persons across, and the rest is up to them. The government
takes the identical position regarding itself; we put forth no warranty,
either. This will be strictly on an as-is basis. If the settlers don't like
what they find, they can return.'
To himself Turpin thought acutely: So Schwarz doesn't actually care what
happens to them after they emigrate. He just wants those warehouses empty and
the enormous financial drain involved abolished.
'As to our costs ...' Turpin began.
'We've worked out a proposed schedule,' Rosenfeld said, digging into his
briefcase. 'Per capita and then extrapolated. Basing this on the figure of one
hundred million persons, this is what we feel would be an equitable return for
your corporation.' He slid a folded document to Leon Turpin and sat back to
wait
Turpin, examining the figure, blanched.
Coming around behind him, Don Stanley also looked. He grunted and said in a
strained voice, That's a good deal of money, Mr. Rosenfeld.'
'It's a good deal of a problem.' Rosenfeld said, candidly.
Glancing up, Turpin said, 'It's actually worth that much to you ?'
'Our costs in the Dept of SPW are ...' Rosenfeld gestured. 'Let's simply say
they're excessive.'
But that doesn't explain this figure, Turpin decided. However, I know what
does. If you can get the ball rolling light away, get the bibs started on their
trek to the alter-Earth, you'll have deprived Jim Briskin of his major
appeal. Why vote for Briskin when the incumbent is already shipping the
bibs across as rapidly as possible ?
As rapidly as possible. Turpin thought suddenly: But just how rapidly is
that ? To Don Stanley he said, 'How fast can full-grown human beings be put
through that rent ?'
'It would have to be one at a time,' Stanley said, after a thoughtful pause.
'Since it's not very large. In fact, as you probably recall, you have to stoop
down to get through.'
With pencil and paper Turpin began to calculate.
Allowing five seconds for each person - which was not a great deal - the
time involved in conveying one hundred million bibs across would be
approximately twenty years.
Seeing the figures, Don Stanley said, 'But they don't care; they're asleep.
For them twenty years is...'
'But I imagine Mr. Rosenfeld cares,' Turpin said caustically.
'Is that how long it would require ?' Rosenfeld looked a little
unnerved. 'That is a long time.'
Turpin reflected that Bill Schwarz, by the time the job had been completed,
would have been out of office sixteen years. Probably totally forgotten, to
boot. So there was no use trying to sell the fedgov on the idea. The time
element would simply have to be cut down.
To Don Stanley, Turpin said, 'Can that rent be enlarged ?'
Pondering, Stanley answered, 'Probably. Increased grid voltage or
oscillation within the field as it...'
'I don't want to know how,' Turpin said. "I just want to see it done.'
If two persons could pass through simultaneously, the time would be cut to ten
years. And four at once, only five years. That might satisfy the politicians in
the White House.
'Five years would be acceptable,' Rosenfeld said, when he had looked over
Turpin's figures.
'We'll finalize on that basis, then,' Don Stanley said. But he had a worried
expression on his face, and Turpin knew why. Don was thinking, Can it be
done ? Can we enlarge the rent that much ?
Rising, Rosenfeld said, 'Good enough. Legal people from my department will
draw up the contract in the next day or so, and procurement will go through the
process of validating it. Red tape - we can't seem to get away from it. But
this will give you time to implement your engineering changes.'
'It was nice meeting you, Mr. Rosenfeld,' Turpin said, as they shook hands.
'I presume we'll see you again from time to time as this matter is expedited.'
'I find it highly rewarding, working with you, sir,' Rosenfeld said. 'And I
admire your taste in art; that's only the second Ramon Cadiz I've seen this
year. Good day, Mr. Turpin. Mr. Stanley.'
The door closed after Rosenfeld.
Presently Don Stanley said, 'They like being in office.'
'Everybody likes being in office,' Turpin said. 'We call that human nature.'
He wondered what the government would do when the news about the Pekes appeared
in every homeopape in the country. Rescind the contract ? Abandon the whole
idea ?
He doubted it. Either Schwarz did this or he lost in November; it was as
simple as that Pekes or no Pekes. Of course, the president would send a few
Marine commando units to accompany the bibs, to make certain that all was in
order. Alter-Earth might require an interval of pacifying, to say the least.
But it could be done. Turpin had no doubt of it."
And anyhow that was not TD's problem - TD had its technological hands full
already. Enlarging the rent in the 'scuttler might very well prove to be
impossible, at least within the time available to TD's technicians.
But I want this contract, Leon Turpin said to himself. I want it very badly,
enough to do everything I can to acquire it. Perhaps the solution is to
fabricate another Jiffi-scuttler, identical to the one downstairs, hopefully
malfunctioning in the same way. Or two or five or even ten of them, with bibs
passing in single file through each, in unending lines.
What about equipment ? Turpin asked himself suddenly. Rosenfeld had not
expressed himself in that area. Was the government going to turn these people
loose in an alien world with no hardware ? Without proper machinery the colony
on the other side would be nothing more than a huge DP camp. To function at
all, the colony had to be self-sustaining; that was obvious to anyone who took
the trouble to think about it ten minutes. And it would take time, a good deal
of time, to ferry across sufficient gear for one hundred million people; the
logistics of it would be incredible. It would be something like thirty-three
times the problem of supply on D-day, back in World War Two. The government was
out of its mind. The policy planners were so enmeshed in the political
significance of the alter-Earth that they had lost sight of factual reality.
It could easily become the grandest confusion in recorded times.
But I refuse to worry about that, Leon Turpin reminded himself. It's not my
responsibility; mine's discharged in the drayage. If things get too far out of
hand too soon, Schwarz will be bounced right out of office and the burden will
fall on Jim Briskin or whatever his name is. And that's just where it ought to
be, because it was his speech that got this all started.
'Get everyone downstairs assembled in one spot where they can hear you,'
Turpin instructed Don Stanley.
'How much time do you estimate we've got ?' Stanley asked.
'Days. Merely days. There's a presidential campaign going on, or had that
slipped your mind ? We've already given Briskin a boost by letting Frank
Woodbine talk us into conveying him over there; now let's see what we can do
for Bill Schwarz.' And what we can do for Schwarz is a good deal more than we
did for Briskin. Which was, in itself, rather substantial.
Don Stanley departed, to make the situation known to the experts on level
one. As he passed out through the office door one of Leon Turpin's many
secretaries entered. 'Mr. Turpin, there's a young couple on floor five who sent
this up to you; they said you should see it at once.' The secretary added,
'It's from Mr. Pethel.'
'Who's Mr. Pethel ?' The name did not ring a bell.
'The owner of the Jiffi-scuttler, sir. The one downstairs in the lab; you
know, the important one.' She presented him with the message.
Opening it, Leon Turpin saw at a glance that it consisted of a request for
him to permit the young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Hadley, to make use of Pethels
'scuttler in order to emigrate to alter-Earth. Time was of the essence, for
reasons Pethel did not choose to state.
'All right,' Turpin said to the girl, 'I have no objection and we have to
cater to this Pethel person to some extent.' As he laid the message on his
desk, he once more noticed the application from the other young couple, Art and
Rachael Chaffy. That's right, he remembered. Don was supposed to call them, but
I guess he forgot in all the excitement. Well, he can do it later. He's got
their letter with him.
The Chaffys and the Hadleys can compete, Turpin reflected, as to who becomes
the first American family to emigrate to alter-Earth. I suppose there should be
some publicity attached to this. Homeopape reporters, TV newsmen and the like.
President Schwarz cutting a big blue ribbon hung across the entrance hoop of
the 'scuttler. Or perhaps a bottle of champagne swung against the side of the
'scuttler and an heroic name given it.
To the secretary he said, 'Ask the Hadleys to come up here to my office.'
Several minutes later she returned and with her came a blond, genial-looking
young man and a fabulously-attractive red-headed girl who seemed sheepish and
ill-at-ease.
'Sit down,' Leon Turpin said in a friendly voice.
'Mr. Bethel's my boss,' Hadley said. 'Rather, my ex-boss. I had to quit in
order to emigrate.' He and 'Mrs. Hadley' seated themselves. 'This is the
greatest moment in our entire lives. We're going to start a new life.' Hadley
squeezed his 'wife's' hand. 'Right ?'
'Yes,' she murmured almost inaudibly, nodding. She did not look at Turpin
directly, and he wondered why.
I've seen this girl somewhere before, Turpin realized. But where ?
'Are you fully equipped ?' he asked the Hadleys.
Briskly, Hadley gave him a long list of items they were taking; it sounded
complete, if not ornate. Turpin wondered idly how they expected to lug it all
across. Nobody on floor one would be offering them a hand; that was certain.
'Children,' Leon Turpin said, 'Terran Development is glad to contribute to a
new awakening, both metaphorically and quite literally, of the young people of
America...' And then, abruptly, he remembered where he met full-breasted, young
Mrs. Hadley before. He had gotten her at the Golden Door Moments of Bliss
satellite. After all, he visited it twice a week, had done so ever since it had
been built.
This is really terribly appropriate, Turpin said to himself, hiding his
glee. The first couple to emigrate to the new world consists of a customer of
the Golden Door satellite escaping with one of Thisbe Olt's girls. Too bad this
could not be made public. It was delightful.
'I wish you two luck,' Leon Turpin said, and giggled.
12
Within one week the initial collection of bibs passed through the
Jiffi-scuttler and into another world entirely, to virtually everyone's
satisfaction. On TV the country watched it and in person Leon Turpin, President
Schwarz, the Republican-Liberal candidate James Briskin, and Darius Pethel -
who owned the 'scuttler - and other pertinent notables looked on with a galaxy
of emotions, most of them concealed.
The darn fools, Dar Pethel thought as he watched the steady line of men and
women trudge past the entrance hoop. It made him sick to his stomach, and he
turned and walked to the far end of TD's lab, to light a cigarette. Don't they
know what's going to happen to them on the other side ? Don't they care ?
Doesn't anyone care ?
I ought to close it down, Pethel said to himself. It's my 'scuttler. And
I've decided I don't want it used for this, not now, not after my trip over
there, that 'hopper ride back across the Atlantic with Bill Smith.
He wondered where Bill Smith, the Peking man, was now. Perhaps at Yale Psychiatric
Institute or some such august place, being put through aptitude and profile
tests, one after another. And of course being subjected to relentless
questioning regarding the ingredients of his culture.
Some of Bill Smith's testimony had leaked to the homeopapes. The Pekes had
not, for instance, discovered glass. Rubber, too, was unknown to them, as were
electricity, gunpowder, and, of course, atomic energy. But, more mysteriously,
both clocks and the steam engine had never been stumbled onto or developed by
the Pekes, and Dar Pethel could make no sense out of that. In fact, their
entire society was an enigma to him.
However, one thing was certain: there had been no Thomas Edison on
alter-Earth. Phonographs, light bulbs, and, for that matter, the telephone and
even the ancient telegraph, were absent. What inventions they did have - for
example the technique of laying crushed rock roads - had been developed over
enormously long periods, microscopically elaborated by each generation
mosaic-style. Except for the odd, complex compressor and turbine system,
nothing seemed to have come to the Pekes in a single creative leap.
The device by which the QB satellite had been knocked off remained a
mystery; Bill Smith knew nothing about it, according to the homeopapes, and
knew nothing even of the satellite. The linguistics machine appeared to be
unable to clarify the situation.
Jim Briskin, as he also watched, found himself dwelling on the gloomier
aspects of the situation.
Where we made our mistake, he decided, was in not coming to some kind of
rapprochement with the Pithecanthropi. It should have been done before a single
emigrant crossed over ... now, of course, it's too late. But of course
President Schwarz had to proceed swiftly if this was to become a way of stealing
Jim Briskin's thunder. Both men knew this. In his situation, Jim mulled, I
probably would have done the same.
But that doesn't make it any less lethal.
Standing beside him, Sal Heim murmured, 'When do you think they'll be
streaming back ? Or will they be able to get back ?'
'Cally Vale stood it. Alone. Possibly they can adapt; it's certainly more
viable an environment than Mars.' In fact, there was no comparison. Mars was
utterly impossible and everyone knew it. 'It all depends on the reaction of the
Peking people.' And, he reflected, since the Schwarz administration couldn't
wait to find that out, we'll have to learn it the hard way. In terms of the
loss of human life.
'What I'm trying to figure out,' Sal murmured, 'is whether the public still
identifies you with this or whether Schwarz has succeeded in....'
'Even if you knew that,' Jim said, 'you wouldn't know anything. Because we
don't know yet what the upshot of this mass migration is going to be, and I
have a feeling that when we find out it won't matter who gets the credit for
it; well all be in the pot together.'
Sal said, 'I heard an interesting rumor on my way here. You're aware that
George Walt have been missing since they shut down the Golden Door. According
to this rumor ...' Sal chuckled. 'They emigrated.'
Feeling a pervasive, shocked chill, Jim said, "They what ? To
alter-Earth, you mean ?'
'Right through this 'scuttler, here, that we're looking at.'
'But that ought to be easy to check on. If George Walt had passed through,
TD's engineers would certainly remember; they could hardly mistake George Walt
for anybody else.' He was now deeply disturbed. 'I'll see what Leon Turpin has
to say about it.'
'Don't be so sure George Walt would be noticed,' Sal said. 'He, the actual
living brother, may have carried his synthetic twin over in dissembled form,
identified as maintenance and colonizing equipment; everyone who goes across
carries something, some of them a couple tons.'
'Why would George Walt emigrate ?' In fact, why had they shut the satellite
down ? Nobody had been able to explain that to his satisfaction, although a
number of theories had been floating around, the central one being that George
Walt anticipated Jim's election and realized that their day had virtually
arrived.
'Maybe the Pekes will take care of them,' Sal offered. 'They would be rather
a disheartening apparition, appearing in their midst; the Pekes might take it
as a bad omen and cast the two of them back here in pieces.'
'Who would be able to find this out ?' Jim said.
'You mean what George Walt are up to on the other side - assuming they're
there ? Perhaps Tito Cravelli.'
'How would Tito know ? He doesn't have any contacts among the Peking
people.'
Sal said, 'Tito keeps tabs on everything.'
'Not on this,' Jim disagreed. 'George Walt, if they've crossed over, have
gone where we can't scrutinize them; that's the cold, hard truth and we might
as well face it.' Broodingly he said, 'If I was positive they'd crossed over, I
think I'd seriously plead with TD to shut the 'scuttler down. To keep them
bottled up over there, for the rest of eternity.'
'Are you that much afraid of George Walt ?'
'Sometimes I am. Especially very late at night. I am right now, hearing
about this.' He moved a little away from Sal Heim, feeling depressed. 'I
thought we were through with George Walt," he said.
Through with them ? Without killing them ?' Sal laughed.
I guess in the final analysis I'm not very bright, Jim Briskin said to
himself glumly. We should have finished it, up there at the satellite, when we
almost had them. Instead we chose to shuffle naively back to Terra, for what
seemed a good idea at the time: a cup of hot syntho-coffee.
Now, it did not seem very brilliant. The passage of even a little time was a
great edifier.
Sal said sardonically, 'Hell, Jim, maybe you won their respect by being so
charitable.' He obviously did not think so. Far from it.
'You're a great second-guesser,' Jim said, with bitterness. 'Where were you
with your advice then ?'
Sal said quietly, 'Nobody expected them to do something so radical as close
the Golden Door. What happened up there on the satellite that day must really
have shaken them.'
Coming up beside him, ancient Leon Turpin leered happily and cackled, 'Well,
Briskin, or whatever you call yourself, that's the first batch of bibs.
Historic, isn't it ? Makes you feel young again, doesn't it ? Say something. At
least, smile.' To Sal he said, 'Is he always this solemn ?'
'Jim runs deep, Mr. Turpin,' Sal said. 'You have to get accustomed to it.'
'Just wait until we get that rent enlarged,' Turpin wheezed. 'My boys have
been on it all week and tonight they're going to hook up an entirely different
power source; it's all plotted out, rechecked dozens of times. By tomorrow morning,
we should have a hole two to three times bigger. And then we can really hustle
them through. Zip.' He made a quick gesture.
'Have you made thorough provision,' Jim said, 'to receive them back in the
event something goes wrong on the other side ?'
'Well,' Leon Turpin conceded, 'the 'scuttler will be turned off most of the
night as the boys work it over. Nobody can pass through then, of course. But we
weren't expecting any trouble. At least not so soon.'
Sal and Jim glanced at each other.
'President Schwarz said it would be agreeable,' Turpin added. 'After all,
our contract is with the Dept of SPW. We're acting well within the law. There's
nothing that compels us to keep the 'scuttler running at all times.'
God pity those colonists, Jim Briskin said to himself, if anything does go
wrong tonight.
"They know about the Pekes,' Turpin protested. 'It's been in the papes
constantly; nothing's been concealed from them; as soon as they were revived
the situation was explained to them in detail. Nobody forced them to
go.'
Jim said, 'They were given the choice of going across or being put back to
sleep.' He knew that for a fact; Tito had informed him.
'As far as I'm concerned,' Leon Turpin said sulkily, 'those people are over
there voluntarily. And any risk they're taking - '
You skunk, Jim Briskin thought.
It was going to be a long night. At least for him.
At eleven p.m. Tito Cravelli received from one of his almost infinite number
of paid contacts a piece of news which did not resemble anything he had ever
picked up before. Frankly, he did not know whether to laugh or rush to the
tocsin; it was simply too goddam peculiar. He mixed himself a whiskey sour in
the kitchen of his conap and pondered. The datum had reached him by a
circuitous route; initially it had been piped from a TD exploration team on the
other side of the 'scuttler nexus, prior to the shutting-down of the 'scuttler,
and from there to Bohegian, whereupon Earl had of course relayed it to him. Was
it possibly a gag ? If he could regard it that way, it would be a distinct
relief. But he could not afford to; it might be bona fide. And in that case...
Back in the living room, he dialed Jim Briskin's number. 'Listen to this,'
Cravelli said, when he had Jim on the vidscreen. He did not bother to apologize
for waking Jim up; that hardly mattered. 'See what you can make out of this.
George Walt is with the Pekes, at their population center in northern Europe.
TD's field corps believes they made contact with the Pekes somewhere in North
America, and the Pekes then transported them across the Atlantic.'
'So quickly ?' Jim said. 'I thought they had nothing better than slow
surface ships.'
'Here's the substance of it. The Pekes have installed George Walt at their
capital and are worshipping them as a god.'
There was silence.
Finally Jim said, 'How - did the TD field corps find this out ?'
'From parleys with North American Pekes. They've been palavering
continually; you know that. Those linguistics machines have been droning on
night and day. The Pekes are - dazzled. Well, weren't we a little in awe of
George Walt ourselves ? It's not so odd when you think of it. I'd make book
that George Walt went there anticipating some such reaction as that; they
probably did some groundwork In advance.'
Jim said cryptically, 'Another one of Sal's predictions bites the dust.' He
looked weary. 'Cravelli, you know we're over our head. Schwarz is over his
head. If someone suggested shutting - '
'And strand those people over there ?'
"They can be brought back tomorrow morning. And then it could be shut
down.'
'There's too much momentum behind it now,' Cravelli pointed out. 'You can't
turn off a mass movement like that. In Dept of SPW warehouses all over the
United States, they're rousing the sleepers right and left. Assembling
equipment, arranging transportation to Washington, D.C. -'
'I'll call Schwarz,' Jim said.
'He won't listen to you. He'll think you're just trying to regain a primary
relationship to the project, a relationship which he inherited by moving so
quickly. Schwarz has the initiative now, Jim, not you. His whole political life
depends on pushing those bibs across as fast as possible. Fix yourself a great
big stiff type drink. That's what I did. And then go back to bed. I'll talk to
you again in the morning. Maybe in the light of day we can hatch something
out.' But he didn't think so.
Jim said, 'I'll talk to Leon Turpin, then.'
'Ha! Turpin and Schwarz are interlaced through that lush contract let to TD
through Rosenfeld; it's a masterpiece. You can't offer TD that kind of money -
I hear it involves billions of dollars, and all TD has to do is keep the
'scuttler going, just stand there and pump power to it.' Cravelli added, 'And
enlarge the aperture, I understand. But that ought to be easy enough; they've
been studying it for the last week.' In fact they had probably already
accomplished it. 'I'm going back to my drink, now. And then I'm going to fix
another and then ...'
"There's one man who can stop this. The owner of the 'scuttler. I met
him on that trip across the Atlantic. Darius Pethel, in Kansas City.'
'Yes, he claims it as part of his inventory. But dammit, Jim, are you
really sure you want to shut down the 'scuttler and stop emigration ? It
would be the end of you politically. Sal must have told you that already.'
Woodenly, Jim nodded. 'Yes. Sal told me.'
'Don't do anything tonight'
'We're in the grip of fate,' Jim said. 'We can't do anything; we've
started something bigger than all of us put together. We may be seeing the end
of the human race.'
'Humanum est errare,' Cravelli said, assuming he was joking. But was
he ? 'You don't mean that,' Cravelli said, stricken. 'I hate that kind of talk;
it's morbid and defeatist and ten other things, all of them bad. That acceptance
speech you gave at the nominating convention; it was cut out of the same lousy
cloth. Sal ought to give you a good swift kick.'
'I believe what I believe,' Jim said.
At four a.m. the augmented power supply had been coupled to the
Jiffi-scuttler; supervising the work, Don Stanley gave the go-ahead signal to
start the 'scuttler back up. It had been off now for six and a half hours. His
fingers crossed, Stanley tensely smoked his cigarette and waited as the
entrance hoop gradually flared into unusual, pale-yellow brilliance, at least
four times as bright as before.
Beside him, Bascolm Howard, who had strolled in to watch, said, 'It
certainly caught right away. No hesitation there.'
'It really shines,' Stanley murmured. God, suppose we're overloading it he
thought. Suppose it heats up too much and burns out. But the engineers who had
done the work had assured him that the load was within the safe tolerance. And
he had to go by what they said.
'Tired ?' Howard asked him.
'Darn right.' Stanley felt irritable. 'I ought to be home in bed.' We all
should be, he said to himself. I'll be glad when they've run the final tests on
this and it's ready to go back into operation.
A senior engineer hopped into the tube of the 'scuttler and disappeared from
sight. Stanley dropped his cigarette to the lab floor and savagely ground it
out. Now we learn the truth, he realized. We get the poop, whether we've failed
or been successful.
Minutes passed.
Reappearing, the engineer called to him. 'Mr. Stanley, would you come here,
please ?'
Stanley, on rubber legs, made his way to the tube. 'How is it inside there
?'
The rent's big, now. Three and a half, maybe four times greater.'
Feeling limp as tension throughout his body lessened, Stanley said, 'Fine.
Now we can go home where we belong.'
'I want you to look through the rent,' the engineer said.
'Why ?' He did not see the point.
The engineer said, 'Just look, okay ? For chrissake, will you please look,
Mr. Stanley ?'
He looked.
Through the rent in the tube wall he saw, not a grassy meadow and
ultramarine sky, no white flowers with buzzing, lazy bees tackling them. And he
saw no sign of people. None of the tons of equipment which had been passed
through the rent. No tents. No temporary septic tanks. No improvised food
kitchens or overhead lighting. Instead he saw - and could not at first accept
that he saw - a marshlike expanse, gray with mist and the hollow croakings of
some distant birds. He saw reeds poking through the gummy, yellow water which
lay in pools. A snake moved suddenly, twisting its path through the stagnant
debris. And over to the right, some small living creature with a naked tail
dropped to safety in the dense shadows beneath a cracked, hairy mass of roots.
The air smelled of decay and silent, utter death.
Pulling back into the 'scuttler tube, Stanley said hoarsely, 'It's not the
same place.'
His chief engineer nodded mutely.
'It's a swamp,' Stanley said. 'My god, what kind of catastrophe is this ?
Can you make any sense out of it ? We better get the original power supply
right back on; you evidently can't increase the load and get the same results
only more so, instead you get this, whatever it is.' He took one more look. All
his determination was required merely to see it, let alone venture
through the rent and actually into it. 'I think I understand,' he said,
muttering to himself. 'There's not just one alter-Earth, parallel universe or
whatever you call it; there's several, and why we didn't deal that factor into
our planning I'll never know. We'll never make that mistake again.'
'I agree,' his engineer said, beside him, also looking.
'You think we can restore the original power supply and make contact again
with where we dumped those people ?'
'We can try.'
'We've got to,' Stanley said. 'You know who'll get the rap; it'll be us.
Start work immediately; we'll work the rest of the night.' God, he thought.
What'll I tell old man Turpin ? Nothing. If we can get this patched up again
we'll see it's forgotten forever. Like it never happened.
I'm not thinking about us getting the blame,' the senior engineer said to
him. 'I'm thinking about those people, especially those women, stranded there.'
'They'll be okay! They've got supplies; they went there to colonize, so let
them colonize. It was their idea to go across, they knew they were taking a
risk. It was their responsibility. So tough tubes.' He drew himself back into
the 'scuttler, shaking. 'Wow, what a hell of a sight. I can't see colonizing there.
You think you'd like to live there, Hal ?'
'No, Mr. Stanley,' the engineer said. He rose to his feet stiffly, waved to
the team standing before the entrance hoop. 'Shut it off!'
The power died. Stanley walked back out of the tubs and over to Howard. 'Now
we have to take apart the whole damn thing again and fix it back up the way it
was,' he said bitterly. 'What lousy luck. And it's going to take twenty years
to get those millions of bibs through; President Schwarz'll never buy that.
That's the end of that contract. That voids it automatically.' And to think we
worked six and a half hours for this, he said to himself.
Something appeared at the mouth of the tube.
Stanley saw it, but, even as he saw it, the shadow-like substance vanished.
'Who has a laser pistol ?' he said.
'Get a laser pistol,' Howard said. Evidently he had seen it, too. 'It must
have followed you. Come over from the other side. Before the power was turned
off.'
'It's just an insect,' Stanley said. 'Some miserable thing that flew up out
of that swamp.' I know that's all it is, he said to himself. It's got to be.
'For chrissakes, somebody kill it!' he said, looking around. Where had it gone
? Not back into the tube, but out into the room.
From within the tube, the senior engineer said loudly, 'Mr. Stanley, the
rent never shut down.'
'That's absolutely impossible,' Stanley said. 'The power's off.' He ran back
into the tube, found the engineer crouched down by the rent. Once more Stanley
saw across, into the world of the swamp, the decaying landscape of doomed, collapsing
ruin. His senior engineer was right; it was still there.
'I can think of only one explanation,' the engineer said to Stanley. 'It
must be that it's maintained by a power source on the other side, because you
know no power's coming to it from here; that's for sure.'
Stanley said, 'Did you see something that slipped through just now ?
Something alive ?'
'Only for a second. But I thought it went back.'
'It didn't go back,' Stanley said. 'It's out somewhere in the lab, in the TD
building, on our side, and now more are going to come across because we can't
shut down this damn rent. Maybe we can block it somehow. Can you put a barrier
right up ? I don't care what it's made out of, just as long as it's good and
solid.'
'We'll get on it right away,' the engineer said and scrambled to his feet.
What kind of power source could exist there on the other side ? Stanley
asked himself. There in that brackish, desolate swamp ... it's as if it were
waiting. But how could it know we'd show up ? How could it possibly have been
expecting us ?
When he made his way out of the tube once more, Howard said to him, 'It's
still somewhere in the room. I can feel it, but I'll be darned if I can see it.
It's like it just merged with everything on this side, just sort of - you know,
whatever it saw here.'
Don Stanley tried to remember when he had felt such fear. Not for a long
time. Had he ever reacted this way to anything in his life before ?
Once, he recalled. Years ago. He had felt the same fright when as he had
felt now, seeing this dark, pervasive substance scuttle into his world from the
other side. I was eighteen, he said to himself. Just a kid. It was my first
visit to the Golden Door satellite.
It had been when he had first seen George Walt.
Since it was impossible to close the rent, Don Stanley decided, they were
going to have to make the attempt to subject the dimly-lit swamp world to some
kind of ordered scrutiny. Taking full responsibility, he ordered a QB
observation satellite brought to the lab with launching equipment. Before the
barrier had been erected by TD's engineers he had sent the satellite across and
had watched as it shot up into the murky, ominous sky.
Reports from the orbiting satellite began to arrive almost at once, and he
seated himself with Howard and started methodically to go over them. The time
was five-thirty a.m. Much too early to awaken Leon Turpin, he realized. We'll
just have to go on as we are, for at least another two hours.
The planet - and he felt no surprise in learning this - was Earth. But the
stellar chart which the satellite recorded on the dark side contained data
which was totally unexpected. For a long time he and Howard sat together
conferring, to be certain there had been no error. There had not. By six-thirty
in the morning, Stanley was sure of the situation, sure enough to have Leon
Turpin woken up at his home on Long Island.
The QB satellite, this time, was orbiting an Earth in what was, for their
world, a century in the future.
'You realize what this implies, don't you ?' he said to Howard.
'This could still be the same alter-Earth. The one we sent our colonists
onto. Only we're seeing it a hundred years later.' Abruptly Howard shivered.
'Then what became of their colonizing efforts ? No trace at all ? After all,
the satellite is picking up lights on the dark side in exactly the same
locations as before.'
'I'll be glad when Turpin gets here,' Stanley said. The responsibility had
become too much for him; he wanted out. Obviously, the colonization attempt had
failed. But he simply refused to face it. It can't be the same Earth, he
repeated again and again to himself. It's just got to be a totally different
one.
Something terrible must have taken place between our colonists and the
Pekes.
At seven fifteen a.m., Leon Turpin arrived, perfectly shaved, washed,
dressed, and in absolute control of himself.
'Have you sent dredging equipment across ?' he asked Stanley as the two of
them stood by the partly-completed concrete barrier, looking out across the
swamp.
'What for ?' Stanley said.
Turpin's face twitched. 'To look for remains of our campsite. This is the
same spot, isn't it ? There's been no movement in space; this is where our
colonists set up their base a century ago. There ought to be all kinds of junk,
if we dig down far enough, down to the hundred-year level. Tell them to get
started right away.'
It took only two hours for the dredges to locate and bring up an aluminum
canteen and then a rusted, corroded, slime-drenched U.S. Army laser rifle. And,
after that...
Skeletons. First one which they identified as a human male and then a
smaller one, possibly that of a female.
Turpin signaled for the dredging to cease.
'Beyond any reasonable doubt, this was our campsite,' Turpin said,
presently. 'We've proved that, to my satisfaction at least.' The others nodded;
no one spoke, however, and they did not look directly at one another. 'Perhaps
it's possible to view this as a tremendous break,' Turpin said. 'We know now
not to send any more colonists across; we know what's going to happen to them.
They're going to perish right here at the campsite without having even...'
'They were slaughtered,' Stanley interrupted, 'because we didn't send
any more across. The first group wasn't large enough to hold off the Pekes;
it's obvious that the Pekes are responsible for this massacre. What else could
have happened to them ?'
'Disease,' Howard said, after a pause. 'We never took time to make thorough
studies of viruses and protozoa over there, as we should have. We were in such
a goddam hurry to rush them across.'
'If we had kept sending them across,' Stanley persisted, 'in a steady flow,
the Pekes wouldn't have been able to mow them down. My god, those colonists
suddenly found themselves cut off from us, stranded there with no way to get
back, abandoned by us ...' He broke off. 'We never should have tinkered with
the power supply. That's where we made our mistake.'
Howard said, 'I wonder what we'll find when we get the original power supply
hooked back up.' He jerked his head toward the group of TD engineers laboring
to disconnect the larger source. 'In a few more hours they'll have it back the
way it was. Presumably we'll find ourselves facing the original rent, the
original conditions; we'll be back in contact with our campsite, then, and if
necessary we can march them all back here to this side again. Every last one of
them.'
'But,' Stanley said almost inaudibly, 'you're leaving a factor out. The
nexus to this swamp world hasn't gone away; it's either self-maintaining or
some force on the other side is underwriting it... in any case it seems to be
there for good. Things are never going to be as they were; we can't
reestablish the original situation. We'll never see those colonists again. And
we might as well get used to that idea. I say, go ahead and hook up the first,
smaller power source again, but don't expect anything.' To Leon Turpin, he
said,
'I've been here all night. Can I go home and go to bed for a few hours ? I
can't keep my eyes open.'
Turpin said raspingly, 'Don't you want to be here when ...'
'You're just not facing it,' Stanley said. 'When I wake up, six or ten or
fifteen hours from now, the situation's going to be exactly as it is right now.
We'll be looking across at that swamp world, and it'll be staring right back at
us. I'll tell you what we've got to do. Somebody - and I don't mean just
another atavistic, simple-minded robot-type dredge - some brilliant human
individual has got to go across there into that swamp world and locate the
power source that's keeping this nexus alive. And then he's got to blow it to
bits or, at the very least, dismantle it.' Stanley added, 'And then - and this
may be almost impossible - someone's got to find out what established that
power source in the first place. And how they knew we were coming.'
After a pause Leon Turpin said, 'Howard tells me that in the first few
moments of operation with the augmented power source, something came through,
some living creature. Is that true ?'
Don Stanley sighed wearily. 'I thought so at the time. Now I think I was out
of my mind; I was simply just too scared by what I saw. I must have realized
right away that we had lost those colonists forever.' He walked unsteadily
toward the exit door of the lab. 'I'll see you a few hours from now. After I've
had some sleep.'
'But I saw it, too,' Howard was saying, as Stanley shut the lab door after
him.
I don't care what came through, Stanley said to himself. I don't care what
you saw. I've done all I can. I haven't got anything left to give to this
situation.
But you better have, Turpin, he realized. Because it's going to take a lot.
What I've done disconnecting the augmented power source, getting the barrier
erected, sending over the QB satellite, starting up the robot dredge - all
that's nothing. Just a way of finding out what confronts us.
He thought, I wish I could sleep forever. Never wake up again and have to
face this.
But he knew he had to.
And he was not the only one. They would all have to wake up, one by one, to
face this, President Schwarz involved in his deft political maneuverings to
outrun Jim Briskin, hitting him with his own idea ... Briskin, too, because no
matter what Schwarz had done, no matter how hurriedly and recklessly he had
acted, the idea behind the colonization had been Briskin's. The responsibility
remained essentially his, and Schwarz, now, would be quick to hand it back to
him.
Having ascended to surface-level, Stanley passed through the wide front
entrance of the TD building, down the steps and onto the morning sidewalk, the
busy downtown Washington street of people and 'hoppers and jet’ abs. The
motion, the familiar, reassuring activity, made him feel better. This world,
with its everyday sights, had not been blotted out, by any means; it remained
solid, thoroughly substantial. As always.
He looked about for a jet'ab to take to his conapt.
Far off, at the corner of TD's administration building, a figure hurriedly
disappeared.
Who was that ? Don Stanley asked himself. He halted, forbore hailing the
jet'ab. I know him, and I don't like him; it's somebody who in a day long past
reminds me of things almost too repellent to recall, a part of my life that's
dim, cut out, deliberately and for adequate reason forgotten. Mud, he thought.
Yes, oddly enough, he thought. That man makes me think of mud and twisted
plants, deranged organisms that burst poisonously and silently under a weak and
utterly useless sun. Where is this ? What have I been seeing ?
What just happened now, a few minutes ago, back there on level one in TD's
labs ? He felt confused; standing on the sidewalk among the passing people he
rubbed his forehead wearily, trying to rouse his mind. The swiftly-moving
figure of course had been George Walt, but hadn't he - or rather they - closed
down the Golden Door satellite and disappeared ?
He had heard that on TV or read it in the homeopapes. He was positive of it.
George Walt must be back, Stanley decided. From wherever they went.
Once more, a little dazedly, he began searching for a jet'ab to take him
home.
13
At the breakfast table in the small kitchen of his conapt, Jim Briskin ate,
and at the same time he carefully read the morning edition of the homeopape,
finding in it, as a kind of minor melody in the momentous fugue which was
playing itself out in heroic style, one item almost lost within the account of
the migration of men and women to alter-Earth.
The first couple to cross over, Art and Rachael Chaffy, had been Cols. And
the second couple, Stuart and Mrs. Hadley, had been white. It was exactly the
sort of neat and tidy detail which appeared to Jim Briskin's sense of
proportion, and he relaxed a little, enjoying his breakfast. Sal would be
pleased by this, too, he realized. I'll have to remember to mention it to him
when I see him later on this morning.
President Schwarz missed something, he reflected, by not noticing this
minuscule fact at the time it was occurring. Schwarz could have made an
extra-special superior speech to the two couples, presenting them with large
gaudy plastic keys to the alternate universe, disclosing to them that they're a
symbol of a new epic era in racial relations ... as arranged for, of course, by
the State's Rights Conservation Democratic Party in all its full and healthy
glory. Some minion on Schwarz' staff slipped up, there, and should be fired.
He turned on the TV, then, to see if there was any later news. Had TD's
engineering corps got the higher-yield power supply in operation yet, and if
so, had the aperture been affected in the way anticipated ? By now a lot more
emigrants should have joined the Chaffys and the Hadleys there on the other
side. He wondered if the Pithecanthropi-Sinanthropi people had taken notice
already ... had the crucial Augenblick, as the Germans put it, arrived
by now ? While he had slept ?
On the TV screen the image gathered, became stable and fixed. But it was not
what he had expected. The image had a certain grainy texture, familiar to him;
it was emanating from a satellite which was still too far away. The sound, too,
was distorted. It would, of course, clear up as the satellite moved closer, if
it was moving in this direction and not away. What was going on ? What was this
peculiar program, anyhow ? He leaned toward the speaker, trying to untangle the
garble of words.
The video image became clarified, then. It was a head, the mutual head of
the mutants George Walt. Its mouth opened and it spoke. 'I am king, now,'
George Walt declared. 'I have at my disposal up here an entire army of what
you'd like to think of as "near" men but which are actually - as you
are about to find out and not from me - the legitimate tenants of this world
and every other alternative Earth running parallel to us. You'd be surprised at
the type of scientific discoveries which the Peking race - and I call them that
merely as a means by which to identify them - have made over the centuries.
They can, for instance, warp time and also space to suit their needs. They've
tapped sources of energy unknown to you Homo sapiens. I have with me here in
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite the wisest and kindest philosopher
from among their great people. Just a moment.' George Walt's head disappeared
from the screen.
Merciful lord, Jim Briskin thought. He sat staring at the TV set, unable to
take his eyes from it. George Walt are back, and they're out of their mind.
That's all we need, Jim said to himself. A crazy George Walt up there in
their satellite, spinning around us. Now we've really got troubles.
His vidphone rang; automatically, he made his way over to answer it. 'Not
just now,' he murmured. 'Call me later; I'm busy - '
'Don't hang up.' It was Tito Cravelli, sweating and agitated. 'I see you've
got your TV set on. He ... they have been broadcasting all morning, since about
eight o'clock East Coast time. They're going to bring that Peke sage back on
again; this is a video tape, it's running over and over again. Get a load of
this so-called philosopher; you've never seen anything like it in your life.
And then call me back.' Tito hung up.
Jim Briskin numbly returned to the TV set to listen and watch.
'I can walk through wood,' the TV set was saying, but it was not George
Walt, now. It was as Tito had said, a Peking man, Sinanthropus telecasting from
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite. So George Walt... now you're in
politics, Jim Briskin said to himself. And in a big way, too.
And we thought we were bad off before.
'Not only can I walk through wood,' the white-haired, massive-browed,
enormous-chinned, ancient-looking Sinanthropus said, in reasonably good but
somewhat mumbled English, 'but I can make myself invisible. The god of air
empowers me wherever I go. He fills the sails of life with his magic breath,
capable of accomplishing all things. Poor, puny Homo sapiens creatures! How
could you conceivably expect to infest our world, with the Wind God himself
present ?'
By the Wind God, Jim Briskin realized with a sickened, enervating start, was
meant George Walt.
He had never before quite thought of them that way, but there it was.
Let's see how President Schwarz decides to handle this,, he said to himself.
A Wind God in a satellite over our heads millions of fossil men straining to
get at us. Darius Pethel can have his defective Jiffi-scuttler back; it's time
we got rid of it, and by the quickest route possible. But how did this ancient
Sinanthropus so-called philosopher get across to our world ? Didn't anybody at
TD notice his coming through ?
They must have opened their own nexus, he decided. Either that or what he
says is actually true; he can make himself invisible.
It was a gloomy prospect, having to wake up in the early morning and face
this, to say the least.
And somebody has really lost this election now, he decided. Either Bill
Schwarz or myself, depending on whom the electorate, in its understandable
frenzy, decides to blame.
Going back to the kitchen table he seated himself and resumed eating his
breakfast, now cold. As he mechanically ate, he pondered the chances of
successfully shooting down the Golden Door satellite; surely that was the most
likely next move for President Schwarz. After all, the exact position of the
satellite at any given moment was known; it was - or had been until recently -
printed on the entertainment page of every homeopape.
What I'm afraid of now, he realized, is that I'll look out the window of my
decently private conapt and see Peking man walking along the sidewalk, and not
just one but many of them.
He decided not to look, just to be on the safe side. At least not for a
while. Instead he concentrated on finishing his breakfast, tasteless as it had
become. As trivial a task as it was, at least it was a familiar event; it
helped restore his sense of the regularity of reality.
Turning from the TV set Sal Heim released his emotion in an explosion of
words. 'Call someone,' he said to his wife. 'Call Jim Briskin. Wait a minute;
call Bill Schwarz at the White House - I'll talk to him direct myself. This is
a national emergency; anybody with half an eye can see that Party loyalty is
out, you can wipe your nose on it. Let me know as soon as you have Bill Schwarz
on the line.' He returned to watching the TV.
'Not only can I walk through wood and across the surface of water,' the
great old Peking man on the screen was saying, 'But I can annihilate time.'
Good grief, Sal thought. This is awful. They can do all kinds of things we
can't; they're centuries ahead of us. Who around here that I know can
annihilate time ? No one. He groaned aloud.
Pat said hecticly, 'I can't reach President Schwarz. The lines are tied up.
Everybody must be...'
'Of course they are,' Sal said. 'The authorities know what this means. It's
hopeless to try to get through to Schwarz. He'll have to get on the TV himself
and tell the nation that a state of war exists between us and these dawn men.
Or is this stuff on all channels ?' Savagely, he turned the knob. The same
image appeared on every other channel; the satellite was blanketing the
airwaves. He was not surprised. I might have known, he said to himself with
envenomed bitterness. Next we'll be picking them up on the vidphone.
'But more important than anything else,' the white-haired Peking man on the
TV screen was saying, 'I can work exceeding wonderful, powerful magic. For I am
a mighty magician; I can cause the stars to fall from the vault of the heavens
and confusion to blind the eyes of all my foes. What do you respond to that,
tiny Homo sapiens ? You should have cogitated on that before you invested our
world. Facilis descensus Averno. You see, through my use of supernatural
forces, entirely unknown to your little race, I can speak in German.'
'Latin,' Sal murmured. 'You damn fool dawn man; that's Latin. So you don't
know everything. Get off the TV so President Schwarz can declare war.' The
image, however, remained.
Standing by his chair Patricia said, 'I guess this finishes Jim at the
polls.'
'Didn't I just now get through saying that party doesn't count ?' He glared
at her; Pat shrank back. 'To cope with this we've got to think along entirely
novel lines - everything is changed. I noticed one interesting thing. When
George Walt were on they referred to us as "you Homo sapiens." Does
that mean they're not ? My god, you can't become a converted
Sinanthropus; it's not like a church. I really have to talk to someone about
this besides you,' he said scathingly to his wife. 'Someone who can come up
with answers.'
Pat said, 'What about ?'
'Wait,' He turned back to the TV screen. George Walt had once more appeared.
'They look older,' Sal said. 'I can't remember which of them is the artificial
body. The one on right, as I recall. The real one has certainly done a good job
of building it back, after we tore it to pieces.' He chuckled. 'We had them on
the run, then. Our finest hour.' Once more he became grim. 'Too bad it's not
like that now.'
'You know who I was going to suggest you call ? Tito Cravelli. He always
seems to be able to figure out what's happening.'
'Okay.' He nodded absently. 'Give me the phone; I'll call Tito.' He got to
his feet, then. 'No, I'll get it myself. Why should you wait on me ?' At the
vidphone he paused and turned toward her. 'I'm sure it's the one on the right.
You know, I'll bet at this moment everybody, including even Verne Engel and
every last damn member of that rotten bunch CLEAN, would give his shirt if we
could go back to, say, a month ago. To the way we were and the so-called
"race problem" we had then. That's who I ought to call: Verne Engel.
You know what I'd say to him ? "You stupid bastard, does what you're
fighting for look so real now ? Skin pigment. What a laugh! Why not eye color ?
Too bad nobody ever thought of that. It cuts it a little finer, but basically
it's the same thing. Okay, Verne, you get out there and die over the issue of
upholding one certain eye color. Lots of luck." ' Picking up the vidphone
he dialed.
Pat said, 'What color eyes do Peking men have ?' Glaring at her Sal said,
'Christ, how would I know ?' 'I just wondered. I never thought of it before.'
'Hello, Tito ?' Sal said, as the vidscreen lighted. 'Get us out of this,' Sal
said. 'Find where they're getting through into our world and plug it up, an
then we'll figure out how to knock down the Golden Door Moments of Bliss
satellite. You agree ? Tito, say something.'
'I know where they're getting through,' Tito said, laconically.
Sal turned to his wife. 'You were right. He does know.' He turned back to
the vidscreen. 'Well, what do we do ? How do we...'
'We make a deal,' Tito Cravelli said in a harsh, totally dry voice.
Staring at him Sal said, 'We what ? I don't believe it.'
'And we'll be lucky if we can manage that,' Tito added. 'There are a few
things you don't know, Sal. This attack on us by the Pekes is coming out of a
hundred years in the future. George Walt have had an entire century to work
with them, filling in the gaps in their culture, teaching them as many of our
techniques as they could cram into them in that time... and it's a very long
time. Don't ask me how I found this out; just take my word that it's the case.
The nexus that they're using is at TD, but we can't dose it; they're supplying
it with power from the other side, a possibility which doesn't seem to have
occurred to anyone at TD until it was too late. In other words, until now.'
'What kind of deal ?'
'I don't know yet. I'm seeing Jim Briskin in a few moments; we're going to
try to think of something we can offer them - offer George Walt actually, since
they're doing the talking. As I see it, the Pekes don't actually need to expand
into our world; they haven't even filled up their own. They have no pressing
population problem, as we have. So there may be something they want and can use
more than mere land. Because that's all they're going to find if they try to
come over here. I know damn well our people will put up a fight until there's
nothing left standing. It'll be a scorched-earth planet... we can promise them
that. As a starter.'
Turning to Pat, Sal said, 'We're going to make a deal; there's no other way
out.'
'I heard,' she said. 'I wish I hadn't; I didn't want to hear that.'
'Isn't that something ? Our ancestors didn't make a deal. They wiped the
Pekes out.'
'But now,' Pat said, 'they have George Walt.'
He nodded. Evidently that made the difference. But he had a terrible feeling
that Tito Cravelli was wrong as to the quantity of techniques that George Walt
had passed on to the Pekes. His intuition was that the transfer of knowledge
had gone the other way: it had been the Pekes who had educated George Walt.
Jim Briskin said half-ironically, 'We can offer them the Encyclopedia
Britannica, translated into their language.' If they have a written language,
he added to himself. Or if George Walt haven't given them that already. 'Maybe
George Walt have passed them everything they'll ever need,' he said to Tito
Cravelli, who sat moodily facing him across the room. 'I'd assume that during
the next century George Walt probably have gone back and forth continually.' He
could picture it, and it was not encouraging.
'Who can we ask for help from ?' Sal Heim said, to no one in particular.
'Call God.' His wife patted his arm, sympathetically. 'Don't do that,' Sal
complained. 'It distracts me. In the name of something-or-other there must be
somebody we can turn to.'
The vidphone rang and Tito Cravelli rose to answer it After a few moments he
returned. 'That was my contact at TD. At this moment, while we're sitting here
muttering pointless maledictions, Pekes are pouring through the rent.'
Everyone in the room stared at him.
'That's right,' Tito said, nodding. "So already now the TD
administration building is full of then; in fact they're beginning to leak out
into downtown Washington, D.C. Leon Turpin's been conversing with President
Schwarz, but so far ...' He shrugged. 'They erected a concrete barrier in front
of the rent but the Pekes simply moved the rent to one side. And kept on coming
across.' He added, 'Bohegian, my contact, is leaving the TD building; they're
being evacuated.'
'Christ,' Sal Heim said. 'Christ, sweet shimmering Christ.'
Pat Heim said, 'You know who I'd like to see you talk to ?' She glanced
around at the others. 'Bill Smith.'
'Who's that ?' Cravelli asked sharply. 'Oh yeah. The Peke. That
anthropologist Dillingsworth has him. What could Bill Smith tell us ?'
'He would know what they lack,' Patricia said. 'Maybe for instance they've
been trying for a dozen centuries to achieve a space drive. We could turn a
small rocket engine over to them, one with only a million pounds of thrust or
so. Or maybe they don't have music. Think what it would mean: we could start
them out with single instruments such as the harmonica or the Jew's harp or the
electric guitar
'Yes,' Cravelli agreed acidly, 'But George Walt have already done that. At
least, we've got to assume that. You heard that Peke talking Latin; I didn't
grasp, really genuinely grasp, how much George Walt have accomplished until I heard
that ... then I threw in the sponge. I don't mind admitting it; that's when I
gave up, pure and simple.'
'And decided to plead for a deal,' Sal Heim said, half to himself.
'That's right,' Cravelli said. 'Then I knew we had to come to some kind of
terms. It didn't terrify you to hear Sinanthropus talking Latin ? It should
have.'
'I've got it,' Pat Heim said. 'That one Sinanthropus, that old white-haired
so-called philosopher up in the satellite, he's a mutant. More evolved than the
others, greater cranial area or something, especially in the forehead region.
Unique. George Wall are pulling the wool over our eyes.'
'But they are pouring through the nexus rent,' Cravelli said coldly.
'Whether they speak Latin or don't. If Leon Turpin has ordered the TD administration
building evacuated, you know it's critical.'
'I've got it,' Pat said, 'Oh my god, I've really got it. Listen to me. Let's
turn the Smithsonian Institute over to the Pekes, in exchange for them leaving.
What about that ?'
'Institution,' Cravelli said, correcting her.
'And if that's not enough,' Pat said, 'we'll throw in the Library of
Congress. They'd be smart to take that. What an offer!'
'You know,' Sal said, hunching forward and gazing steadily down at his
knees, 'she may have something there. Look what they'd get out of that; the
entire assembled, collected artifacts and knowledge of our culture. A hell of a
lot more - incredibly much more - than George Walt can give them.
It's the wisdom of four thousand years. Boy, I tell you; I'd take it in a
second if it were offered to me.'
After a long pause Tito Cravelli said, 'But we're forgetting something. None
of us are in a position to make the Pekes any kind of offer; none of us hold
any official position in the government. Now, if you were already in office,
Jim...'
Take it to Schwarz, 'Sal said.
'We'd have to,' Pat agreed rapidly. 'And that means going to the White
House, since the phone lines are all tied up. Which one of us would Schwarz be
willing to see ? Assuming he'd see any of us.'
Sal said, 'It would have to be Jim.'
Shrugging, Jim Briskin said, 'I'll go. It's better than merely sitting
around here talking.' It all seemed futile to him anyhow. But at least this way
he'd be doing something.
'Who're you going to take the offer to ultimately ?' Cravelli asked him.
'Bill Smith ?'
'No, Jim said. 'To that white-haired Sinanthropi philosopher up in the
satellite.' Obviously, he was the one to go to; he held the power.
'George Walt aren't going to like it when they hear it,' Cravelli pointed
out. 'You'll have to talk fast; they'll do their best to shut you up.'
'I know,' Jim said, rising to his fed and moving toward the door. 'I'll
phone you from Washington and let you know how I made out.'
As he left the apartment, he heard Sal saying, 'I think, though, we ought to
take the Spirit of St Louis out when the Pekes aren't looking and keep
it. They won't know it's gone; what do they know about airplanes ?"
'And the Wright brothers' plane,' Pat said, as he started to shut the door
after him. He paused, then, as he heard her 'Do you think he'll get in to see
President Schwarz ?'
'Not a chance,' Sal said emphatically. 'But what else am we do ? It's the
best we could come up with on such short notice.'
'He'll get in,' Cravelli disagreed. 'I'll make you a dime bet.'
'You know what else we could have offered ?' Pat said. 'The Washington
Monument.'
'What the hell would the Pekes do with that ?' Sal demanded.
Jim shut the door after him and walked down the corridor to the elevator.
None of them, he reflected, had offered to come with him. But what difference
did it make ? There was nothing they could do vis-а-vis President Schwarz ...
and perhaps nothing he could do, either. And even if he did get in to see
Schwarz, and even if Schwarz went along with the idea - how far did that carry
him ? What were the chances that he could sell the Sinanthropi philosopher on
the idea with George Walt present ?
But I'm still going to try it, he decided. Because the alternative, a
general war, would doom our colonists there on the other side; it's their lives
we're trying to save.
And anyhow, he realized, none of us wants to start slaughtering the Peking
people. It would be too much like the old days, back among our cave-dwelling
ancestors. Back to their level. We must have grown out of that by now, he said
to himself. And if we haven't - what does it matter who wins ?
Four hours later, from a public vidphone booth in downtown Washington, D.C.,
Jim Briskin called back to report. He felt bone-weary and more than a little
depressed, but at least the first hurdle had been jumped successfully.
'So he liked the idea,' Tito Cravelli said.
Jim said, 'Schwarz is madly grasping at any straw he can find, and there
aren't even very many of them. Everyone in Washington is prepared to shoot down
the Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite, of course; they'll do that if my
attempt at negotiation fails, my attempt to split George Walt off from the
Pekes.'
'If we shoot down the satellite,' Cravelli said, 'then we'd have to fight to
the bitter death. Either our race or theirs would be wiped out, and we can't
have that, not in this day and age. With the weapons we've got and what they
possibly have...'
'Schwarz realizes that. He appreciate all the nuances of the situation. But
he can't just sit idle while Pekes pour across at will. We're walking a highly
tricky line. It's not in our interest to make this into a full-scale hydrogen
bomb war, and yet we don't want simply to capitulate. Schwarz says to go ahead
with the Smithsonian, but to hold back on the Library of Congress as long as
possible, to give it up only under the greatest pressure. I tend to agree.' He
added, 'They're sending me up there; I'll do it myself.'
'Why you ? What's the matter with the State Department ? Don't they have
anyone who can do that sort of work any more ?
'I asked to go.'
'You're nuts. George Walt hates you already.'
'Yes,' Jim agreed, 'but I think I know how to handle this; I've got an idea
of how I can impair the relationship between George Walt and the Pekes in such
a way that it can't be repaired. Anyhow, it's worth a try.'
'Don't tell me what your idea is,' Cravelli said. 'Tell me after it works.
If it doesn't work, don't tell me at all.'
Jim grinned starkly. 'You're a hard man. You might be too ruthless as
Attorney General; I'll have to rethink that, possibly.'
'It's signed and sealed,' Cravelli said. 'You can't get out of it. Good luck
up on the satellite.' He rang off, then.
Leaving the phone booth, Jim Briskin walked along the half-deserted sidewalk
until he came to a parked, empty jet-hopper.
'Take me to the Golden Door satellite,' he said, opening the door and
getting in.
"The Golden Door is closed down,' the 'hopper driven said languidly.
'No more girls up there. Just some goof broadcasting that he's king of the
world or some crazy thing like that.' He turned to face Jim. 'However, I know a
gnuvvy doggone place in the north west side of town that I can...'
'The satellite,' Jim said. 'Okay ? Just drive the 'hopper and let me decide
where I want to go.'
'You Cols,' the driver muttered as he started the 'hopper up. 'You sure
always got a chip on your shoulder. All right, buddy, have it your way. But
you're going to be disappointed when you get up there.'
Silently, Jim leaned back against the seat and sat waiting as the 'hopper
rose into the sky.
At the landing field on the satellite, George Walt personally met him, hand
outstretched. 'This is George,' the head said, as Jim shook hands with
whichever of them it was. 'I knew they'd want to talk terms, but I didn't
expect them to send you, Briskin.'
'This is Walt,' the head said then, belligerently. 'I certainly have no
desire to do business with you, Briskin. Go back and tell them ...' The mouth
struggled as both brothers sought to make use of it simultaneously.
'What does it matter who they send ?' the head - no doubt George, now - said
at last. 'Come below to the office, Briskin, where we can make ourselves
comfortable. I have a hunch this darn business might take quite a while.'
It was extraordinary how much George Walt had aged. They had a wrinkled,
brittle, almost frail quality about them, and when they walked they moved
slowly, hesitantly, as if afraid of falling, as if they were terribly infirm.
What would account for this ? Jim wondered. And then he understood. George Walt
were now jerries. One hundred years had passed for them since he had last seen
them. He wondered how much longer they could keep going. Certainly not for too
great a period. But their mental energies were undimmed. He could still sense
the enormous alertness emanating from them; they remained as formidable as
ever.
In George Walt's office sat the huge, white-haired old Sinanthropus; he
watched warily from beneath his beetling brows as Jim Briskin entered,
obviously suspicious at once. It would be no easy task, Jim realized, to come
to terms with this man. Mistrust was profoundly written on his massive-jawed,
sloping face.
'We've got them where we want them,' George Walt said expansively to the
Sinanthropus. This man's coming up here - Jim Briskin is his name - verifies
it.' Both eyes flamed with gloating.
In a hoarse voice, the Sinanthropus said, 'What will you offer us if we
abandon your world ?'
Jim Briskin said, 'That which we prize beyond everything elite. Our most
valued possession.'
The Sinanthropus and George Walt watched him fixedly.
"The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.,' Jim said.
'Wait a minute' / 'We're not interested in that!' George Walt said together.
"That won't do; that's out of the question. We want political and economic
priority over the North American land mass - otherwise the invasion continues.
What kind of offer is the Smithsonian ? That's nothing but a museum.' / 'Who
wants a museum ? This is ridiculous!' Both eyes blazed with outraged and uneasy
anger.
The Sinanthropus, however, said slowly and distinctly, 'I am reading Mr.
Briskin's mind, and I am interested. Please be silent. Wind God, it goes
without saying that your opinion is valuable, but it is I who must make the
actual decision,"
"The conference is over!' / 'I've heard enough,' George Walt said. 'Go
back below to Terra, Briskin; you're not wanted here.' / 'Let's call this off.'
'There is, in the back of your mind,' the Sinanthropus said to Jim, 'the
thought that you will, if pressed, add in the Library of Congress. I will
consider that offer as well.'
'We'd prefer not to add that,' Jim said, 'but if we have to, we have to.' He
felt resigned.
'Goodbye, Briskin,' George Walt said. 'See you some time. It's evident that
you're trying to make a side deal, here; trying to cut my brother and me out.
But we won't be cut out.' The head added emphatically, 'I agree. You're
completely wasting your time, Briskin.' One of George Walt's four arms was
extended, then, 'Until next time.'
'Until next time,' Jim said, shaking hands. Taking a deep, unsteady breath
he all at once yanked with every dyne of strength which he could muster; the
hand and arm came loose from the artificial body and he was left holding them.
Bewildered, the Sinanthropus said, 'Wind God, it seems strange to me that
your arm is detachable.'
'This is no Wind God,' Jim Briskin said. 'You've been misled. Our people
were, too, for a good long time. This is an ordinary man with an extra,
artificial body.' He pointed to the wiring visible within the gaping shoulder.
'A Homo sapiens, you mean ?' the stooped old Sinanthropus said. 'Like
yourself ?' Slow but exact comprehension began to form in his reddish eyes.
'Not only is he not a Wind God,' Jim said, 'but he's been for decades the
owner of a ... I dislike naming it outright.'
'Name it!'
'Let's simply call it a house of pleasure. He's a businessman. No more, no
less.'
'I can think of nothing more obnoxious to the mores of my people,' the
Sinanthropus said to George Walt, 'than a hoax of this stripe. You swore to us
that you were our Wind God. And in fulfillment of many myths, your unusual
anatomy seemed to prove it.' He panted slowly, raggedly.
' "Unusual",' George Walt echoed. 'You mean unique. In all of the
parallel Earths - and God knows exactly how many there may be, you won't find
anyone, anyone at all, like me.' He amended quickly, 'Like us, rather. And
consider this satellite. What do you think keeps it up ? The wind, of course;
how else could it stay up here, month after month ? Obviously I control the
wind, as I told you. Otherwise this satellite would...'
'I could destroy you,' the old Sinanthropus said. He no longer seemed much
impressed by George Walt's line of argument. 'But I am frankly too disappointed
to care one way or another. It's clear to me, and I will soon see that it's
equally clear to my people, that you Homo sapiens are a treacherous lot.
Probably best avoided.' To Jim he said, 'It's that so ?'
'We're known for that,' Jim agreed.
'And that's how you triumphed originally over our ancestors on this parallel
world ?'
'You're damn right,' Jim said. He added, 'And we'd do it again, given half a
chance.'
'Probably you would not genuinely have delivered that museum of yours to
us,' the Sinanthropus said, 'the name of which I have already forgotten. Well,
no matter. Obviously it's impossible to do business with you Homo sapiens;
you're adept, polished liars. Nothing we agreed on would remain truly binding
in such a milieu. My people lack even a name for such conduct.'
'No wonder we had so little trouble wiping you out,' Jim said.
'In view of your dedication to fraud,' the Sinanthropus said, 'I see no real
point in my remaining here; the longer I go on, the more immersed I become.
Personally, I regret this whole encounter; my people have suffered by it
already. God knows what would become of us if we were so naive as to try to
continue.' An unhappy expression on his face, the aged, white-haired
Sinanthropus turned his back and walked away from Jim Briskin and George Walt.
'It would be unnatural for people of our race to seek to participate in an
exclusively destructive relationship,' he said, over his shoulder. And
vanished. One moment he stood there, the next he had gone. Even George Walt
seemed taken aback; both eyes blinked. The Sinanthropus, by means of his so
called magic, had returned to his own world.
'Smart,' George Walt said, presently. "You handled that extremely well,
Briskin. I never saw it coming. One hundred years of work gone down the drain.
Give me my arm back and we'll call it quits; I'm too old to go through this
kind of thing any more.' The head added, "You're probably right. After
all, politically speaking, Briskin is a professional; he can run rings around
us. What happened here just now demonstrates that.'
'Honesty generally wins out,' Jim said.
'You call that trash you peddled to that half-animal just now - you call
that honesty ? I never heard such a mass of twisted ...' George Walt
broke off, then. 'Like everybody else, I more or less trusted you, Briskin. It
never occurred to me you'd trade on such techniques to win an issue. Your
integrity's just a myth! Probably dreamed up by your campaign manager.'
'You mean you actually are their Wind God ?'
'Pragmatically speaking, yes. Every one of us, in relation to them, are gods
... speaking in terms of the evolutionary hierarchy, anyhow, in the broadest
possible sense.'
Jim said, 'Was it you who enabled them to shoot apart the QB observation
satellite ?'
Nodding, George Walt said, 'Yes, it was. By my magic.'
'What you mean,' Jim said, 'is that you ferried a ground-to-air guided
missile over to them. Magic, my foot.' He looked at his wristwatch. 'I have to
get back down to Earth; I've got a major speech to record. You care to
accompany me back to my 'hopper ?'
'I'm busy,' George Walt said curtly. 'I have to fit my arm back on. This
whole business makes me sick, and not only that, terribly angry; I'm going to
initiate beamed broadcasts twenty-four hours a day on all frequencies
denouncing you, as soon as I can get the satellite's transmitter started up
again. I look forward to your losing in November, Briskin; that's the one nice
thing I can count on.'
'Suit yourself,' Jim said, shrugging. He left the office, made his way to
the elevator. Behind him, George Walt brought a tool kit out from their desk
and began the task of repairing the damage to the artificial body which Jim
Briskin had purposefully accomplished. The expression on George Walt's face was
one of great gloom.
In his entrenched position, along with other company personnel, on the
outskirts of the flank of the TD administration building in Washington, D.C.,
Don Stanley noted all at once, and to his complete surprise, a sudden lull in
the fierce racket from the Pekes within.
'Some darn thing has happened,' Howard conjectured, also aware of the
unexpected silence. 'We better get set for another rush; they're probably
determined to overwhelm us this time. Before that idiot Schwarz can get
army...'
'Wait,' Stanley said, listening. 'You know what I think ? I think the
fliegemer Pekes are gone.'
Puzzled, Howard said, 'Gone where ?'
Rising to his haunches Stanley peered at the administration building, at the
shattered windows on the nearest side, and the conviction came to him stronger
than ever that the building was now, for some totally obscure and merciful
reason, deserted. With caution, aware of the acute risk he was taking, he began
to walk slowly step by step toward the front entrance.
'They'll pop you out of existence,' Howard called to him warningly, 'with
those funny little weapons of theirs; better get back down, you half-wit.' But
he, too, stood up. So did a number of armed company police.
Opening the familiar front door of the building, Stanley peeped inside.
He saw no sign of Pekes anywhere. The halls were empty and silent. The
invasion by the chinless dawn men from the parallel Earth had ceased as
abruptly as it had begun, and somewhat more mysteriously.
Howard, joining him, said, 'Um, we scared them off.'
'Scared them off nothing. They changed their collective minds.' Stanley
started in the direction of the elevator leading to the floor one subsurface
labs. "I have an intuition,' he said over his shoulder to Howard. 'And I
want to verify it as soon as I can.'
When he and Howard reached the labs, Stanley discovered that he was right
... and a good thing, too. The nexus joining the two parallel Earths had
vanished.
'They ... closed it down,' Howard said, wonderingly craning his neck, as if
expecting to see it crop up once more in a remote corner.
'So now,' Stanley murmured, 'our problem is to reopen our own earlier nexus.
The original one. And make the try to relocate our colonists before the moment
in which they're wiped out.' The chances of success struck him as being not
very good, and yet of course the attempt had to be made.
'Why do you think they called their invasion off ?' Howard asked.
Stanley gestured emptily. 'Maybe they didn't like it here after all.' Who
knew ? Certainly he did not. Perhaps they would never know. In any case they
had their work cut out for them; several thousand men and women on the other
side were wholly dependent on them for their lives. For their safe return to
this world. Remembering the human skeletons which had been dredged up from the
swamp a hundred years hence. Stanley felt deep forebodings. At best we can only
save some of them, he realized. But that's better than nothing. Even if we save
only one life, it's worth it.
'How long do you think it'll take to make contact with our people stranded
over there ?' Howard asked him. 'A day ? As long as a week ?'
'Let's find out,' Stanley said shortly, and started at once in the direction
of the power supply of Dar Pethel's defective Jiffi-scuttler.
The depressing task of bringing the colonists back from alter-Earth had
begun.
14
In November, despite the abusive broadcasts from the Golden Door Moments of
Bliss satellite, or because of them, Jim Briskin succeeded in nosing out the
incumbent Bill Schwarz; and thereby won the presidential election.
So now, at long last, Salisbury Heim said to himself, we have a Negro
President of the United States. A new epoch in human understanding has arrived.
At least, let's hope so.
'What we need,' Patricia said meditatively, 'is a party, so we can
celebrate.'
I'm too tired to celebrate,' Sal said, It had been a tough haul from the
nominating convention to this; he remembered clearly every inch of it. The
worst part, it went without saying, had been the collapse of the abortive
emigration program announced in Jim's Chicago speech; why that had not put a
permanent end to Jim's election chances, Sal Heim did not know even at this
late date. Perhaps it was because Bill Schwarz had managed to move so adroitly,
had embroiled himself - deliberately - in the situation; hence much, if not
most, of the ultimate blame had fallen on him, not on Jim.
'But we deserve to take a little time off to relax,' Pat pointed out. 'We've
been working for months; if we go on this way .. .'
'One beer at one small bar,' Sal decided. 'And then bed. I'll compromise at
that.' He did not especially enjoy going out in public, these days; inevitably
he rubbed up against some individual who had been a part of the colonizing
effort on alter-Earth or who, anyhow, had a brother-in-law who had gone
trustingly over there. Such encounters had been rather unpleasant; he always
found himself trying to answer questions which simply could not be answered. Why'd
you get us into that ? had been the primary inquiry, asked in a variety of
ways, but still always amounting to the same thing. And yet, despite this, they
had won.
'I think we should get together with a few people,' Pat disagreed.
'Certainly with Jim; that goes without saying. And then Leon Turpin, if he'll
join us, because after all it was Mr. Turpin who got us off the hook by
bringing those people back to our world - or anyhow his engineers did. Someone
at TD did. It was TD that saved us, Sal; let's finally face it and give credit
where credit is due.'
'All right,' Sal said. 'Just so long as that little Kansas City businessman
who showed up with that defective 'scuttler isn't along; that's all I insist
on.' The man on account of whom all the trouble had broken out in the first
place. At the moment, Sal could not even recall his name, an obvious Freudian
block.
'The one I blame,' Pat said, 'is Lurton Sands.'
'Then don't invite him either,' Sal said. But there was hardly much chance
of that; Sands was in prison, right now, for his crime against the sleeping
bibs and his ridiculous attempt on Jim's life. As was Cally Vale for having
lasered the 'scuttler repairman. That whole business had been excessively
melancholy, both intrinsically and as a conspicuous harbinger of the difficulties
which it had ushered into their collective lives, difficulties which by no
means were over.
'You know,' Pat said fretfully, 'there's one thing that still, right now, I
can't quite get out of my mind. I keep having this sneaking, nervous anxiety
that. ...' She smiled at him uneasily, her jessamine lips twitching. 'I hope I
don't pass it on to you, but...'
'But deep down inside,' Sal finished for her, 'you're afraid a few of those
Pekes have stayed on this side.'
'Yes.' She nodded.
Sal said, 'I get the same damn intimation, now and then. Late at night, I
keep looking out of the corner of my eye, especially on the street when I see
someone furtive looking hurrying away around a corner to get out of sight. And
the funny thing is that from what Jim tells me, I know he feels exactly the
same way. Maybe we all have a residual sense of guilt connected with the Pekes
... after all, we did invade their world first. It's our consciences bothering
us.'
Shivering, as she was wearing only a weightless Tafek-web negligee, his wife
said, 'I hope that's all it is. Because I'd really hate to run into a Peke some
dark night; I'd think right away that they'd opened a nexus again into our
world at some point and were very carefully, secretly, ferrying a wide stream
of their cousins and aunts across.'
As if we're not desperately overcrowded as it is, Sal thought, without
having to cope with that any more.
'What I can never comprehend,' he murmured, 'is why they didn't accept our
liberal offer of The Smithsonian. And for that matter the Library of Congress.
Gosh, they pulled out without getting anything.'
'Pride,' Pat said.
'No.' Sal shook his head.
'Stupidity, then. Dumb, dawn-man stupidity. There's no frontal lobe inside
that sloping forehead.'
'Maybe.' He shrugged. 'But how can you expect one species to follow the
logic of another ? They operate at their level; we operate at ours. And never
the twain will meet... I hope.' Anyhow not in his lifetime, he said to himself.
Maybe a later generation will be open-minded enough to accept such things, but
not now; not we who inhabit this world at this particular moment.
'Shall I ask Mr. Turpin to come here to our place ?' Pat asked. 'Are we
going to have the party here ?'
'Maybe Turpin won't want to celebrate Jim's victory,' Sal said. 'He and
Schwarz were pretty thick through most of the campaign.'
'Let me ask you something,' Pat said suddenly. 'Do you think George Walt
really are a Wind God ? After all, they were born with two bodies and four arms
and legs, the artificial part wasn't installed until much later. So originally
they were exactly what they pretended to be. Jim didn't tell that Sinanthropus
that.'
'You're darn right he didn't,' Sal said vigorously. 'And don't you rock the
boat out of any misplaced ethical motives ... you hear ?'
'Okay,' she said, nodding.
Outside on the sidewalk a gang of well-wishers yelled up praise and slogans
of congratulations; the racket filtered into the conapt, and Sal went to glance
out the living room window.
Some Cols, he saw. And also some Whites. Just what he hoped to see; just
what the entire struggle had been about. How long it had been in coming ...
almost two centuries more than it should have taken. The mind of man was
uncommonly stubborn and slow to change. Reformers, including himself, were always
prone to forget that. Victory always seemed just around the corner. But
generally it was not, after all. A vote for Jim Briskin, he thought, recalling the clichйs and tirades
of the campaign, is a vote for humanity itself. Stale now, and always
oversimplified, and yet deep underneath substantially true. The slogan had
embodied the motor which had driven them on, which had, finally, enabled them
to win. And now what ? Sal asked himself. The big problems, every one of them,
still remained. The bibs, in their all too many warehouses throughout the
nation, had become the property of Jim Briskin and the Republican-Liberal
Party. As had the desolate, roving packs of unemployed Cols, not to mention the
unhappy lower fringes of the white in-group . . men such as Mr. Hadley, who had
been the first White to emigrate, as well as nearly the first to come stumbling
back, after the nexus had, mercifully, been reopened.
It'll be a hard four years for Jim, he realized soberly. He's inherited a
vast, savage burden from Schwarz. If he thinks he's worn down now, he should
see himself next year or the year after that. But I guess that's what he wants.
I hope so, anyhow.
Did we get or learn anything from our unexpected confrontation with
the Pekes ? he wondered.
It showed us, he decided, that the difference between say myself and the
average Negro is so damn slight, by every truly meaningful criterion, that for
all intents and purposes it doesn't exist. When something like that, a contact
with a race that's not Homo sapiens, occurs, at last we can finally see this.
And I don't mean just myself; it was given to me to see this from the start. I
mean the ordinary (statistically speaking) fat, mean slob who plops down next
to you in a jet-hopper, snatches up a homeopape that someone's left, reads a
headline, and then begins to spout right and left his miserable opinions. So
maybe, in the final analysis, this is what won the election for Jim. Could it
be ? Admittedly, we can never be certain. But we can make an educated guess and
say yes, maybe so. Maybe it was.
In that case, the whole wretched fracas was worth while.
'All the time you've been standing there in your dreams of self-glory,' Pat
said archly, 'I've been on the vids getting hold of people for our party. Mr.
Turpin can't come or doesn't care to come, which is more likely, but he's
sending a few of his carefully cultivated big-time employees - an
administrative assistant named Donald Stanley, for instance, whom he said we
ought to meet. He didn't say why.'
'I know why,' Sal said. 'Tito Cravelli mentioned him, and anyhow I met him
personally on our trip to alter-Earth. Stanley was directly in charge of the
defective 'scuttler and, in a sense, was responsible for getting the entire
project going. Yes, Stanley certainly should be part of this get-together. And
I hope you called Tito. Our man in the world.'
'I'll call him now,' Pat said, 'and can you think of anyone else ?'
'The more the better,' Sal said, beginning finally to get into the spirit of
the thing.
At night Darius Pethel worked alone in his closed-up store. Something tapped
on the window, and he glanced up, startled. There, on the dark sidewalk, stood
Stuart Hadley.
Going to the front door, Pethel unlocked it. Opening it he said, 'I thought
you emigrated.'
'Cut it out. You know we all came back." Shoulders hunched, Hadley
entered the store. The familiar place where he had worked so long.
'How was it over there ?'
'Awful.'
'So I heard,' Pethel said. 'I suppose you want your job back. With each and
every trimming.'
'Why not ? I'm as good as I ever was.' Restlessly, Hadley roamed about the
marginal shadowy spaces of the store. 'You'll be glad to hear I'm back with my
wife. Sparky returned to the Golden Door satellite; they're going to open it
again. In spite of Jim Briskin's election. I guess there's going to be a
showdown fight.' He added,, 'Frankly I couldn't care less. I've got my own
problems. Well ? What do you say ? Can I come back ?' He tried to make it sound
casual.
'No reason why not,' Pethel said.
'Thanks.' Hadley looked relieved. Very much so.
'Some of you fellas got killed, I read. Nasty.'
'That's right, Dar; you've got it. They attacked us and the U.S. military
unit accompanying us fought them off bangupwise until the entrance, or maybe I
should say exit, was reopened. I'd rather not talk about it, to tell you the
truth. So many verflugender hopes went down the drainpipe when that failed,
mine and a lot of other people's. Now it's all up to the new president; we'll
wait, bide our time, see what he can dream up, I guess. That's about all we can
do, whether we like it or not.'
'You can write letters to homeopapes.'
Hadley glared at him in mute outrage. 'Some joke. You're personally okay,
Dar; you're all set. But what about the rest of us ? Briskin better come up
with something, or it's going to get a lot worse before it gets better.'
'How do you like knowing you're going to have a col for president ?'
'I voted for him, along with the others.' Hadley wandered back to the locked
front door of the store. 'Can I start tomorrow ?'
'Sure. Come in at nine.'
'You think life is worth living, Dar ? Hadley demanded suddenly.
'Who knows. And if you have to ask, there's something wrong with you. What's
the matter, are you sick or something ? I'm not hiring anybody who's a nut or
mentally flammy; you better get straightened out before you show up here
tomorrow morning.'
'The compassionate employers.' Hadley shook his head. 'Sorry I asked. I
should have known better.'
'That emigration stunt with that this-Olt girl didn't apparently teach you
anything; you're as fouled up as ever. What's the matter, can't you accept life
as it is ? You've always got to pine after what isn't ? A hell of a lot of men
would envy you your job; you're incredibly darn lucky to gel it back.'
'I know that.'
'Then why don't you calm down ? What's the matter ?'
'When you had hopes once,' Hadley explained after a pause, 'it's always hard
to go on after you give them up. It's not so hard to give them up; that part
is easy. After all, you've got to, sometimes. But afterward ...' He gestured,
grunting, '... What takes their place ? Nothing. And the emptiness is
frightening. It's so big. It sort of absorbs everything else; sometimes it's
bigger than the whole world. It grows. It becomes bottomless. Do you know what
I'm talking about ?'
'No,' Pethel said. Nor did he particularly care.
'You're lucky. Maybe it'll never hit you, or anyhow not until old age, until
you're a hundred and fifty or so.' Hadley gazed at him. 'I envy you.'
'Take a pill,' Pethel said.
'I'd be glad to take a pill, if I knew of one. I don't think they'd help,
though. I feel like taking a long walk; maybe I'll walk all night. You give a
darn ? Do you want to come along ? Hell no, you don't. I can see that.'
Pethel said, 'I've got work to do; I don't have time to stroll around taking
in the sights. I tell you what, Hadley. When you come back to work tomorrow -
listen to this - I'll give you a raise. Does that cheer you up ?' He peered at
him, trying to see.
'Yes,' Hadley said, but without conviction.
'I thought it would.'
'Maybe Briskin will go back to advocating planet-wetting.'
'Would that interest you ? That tired old nothing program ?'
Opening the door, Hadley moved back outside into the dark sidewalk.
'Anything would interest me. To be honest. I'd buy anything, right now.'
Gloomily, knowing that he had failed somewhere in this interchange with
Hadley, Darius Pethel said, 'Some employee you're going to make.'
'I can't help it,' Hadley pointed out. 'Maybe 'I'll change, though, in time;
maybe something'll come along. God, I'm still hoping!' He seemed amazed, even a
little disgusted with himself.
'You know what you could try for a change ?' Pethel said. 'Showing up a
little early, a few minutes before nine. It might alter your life. Even
more than that moronic attempt to escape by sneaking off with that girl to that
weird world where those semi-apes live. Try it. See if I'm not right.'
Hadley eyed him. 'You mean it. And that's the whole point; that's why we
don't understand each other. Maybe I should feel sorry for you instead of
trying to get you to feel sorry for me. You know, maybe someday you'll suddenly
crack up completely, fly into a million pieces, without warning. And I'll limp
on for years. Never really give up, never actually stop. Interesting.'
'For a person who used to be optimistic...'
'I've aged,' Hadley said briefly. 'That experience on that alter-world did
it to me. Can't you see it in my face ?' He nodded goodbye to Darius Pethel,
then. 'See you tomorrow. Bright and early.'
As he shut the door, Pethel said to himself, I hope he can still peddle
'scuttlers. We'll see about that. If not, he's out. For good. As far as I'm
concerned, he's just back here on probation, and he's lucky to get that.
He's sure depressing to talk to these days, Pethel said to himself as he
returned to his back office.
That raise in salary will eventually cheer him up, he decided. How can it
not ?
His own meager tendency to doubt was assuaged by that timely realization.
Thoroughly. Or ... was it ? Down underneath on a level which he did not care to
communicate, a region of his mind which remained his own damn business, he was
not so sure.
His feet up on the arm of the couch, Phil Danville said, 'It was my majestic
speeches that did it for you, Jim. So what's my reward ?' He grinned. 'I'm
waiting.' He waited. 'Well ?'
'Nothing on Earth could ever be sufficient reward for such an
accomplishment,' Jim Briskin said absently.
'He's got his mind on something else.' Danville said, appealing to Dorothy
Gill. 'Look at him. He's not even happy; he's going to ruin Sal Heim's party,
when we get there. Maybe we better not go.'
'We have to go,' Dorothy Gill said.
'I won't wreck the mood of the party,' Jim assured them, drawing himself up
dutifully. 'I'll be over it by the time we get there.' After all, this was the
moment. But actually the great historic instant had already managed to slide
away and disappear; it was too elusive, too subtly interwoven into the texture
of more commonplace reality. And, in addition, the problems awaiting him seemed
to efface his recognition of anything else. But that was the way it had to be.
The door of the room opened and a Peke entered, carrying a portable version
of a TD linguistics machine. At the sight of him everyone jumped to their feet.
The three Secret servicemen whipped out their guns and one of them yelled.
'Drop!' The people in the room sprawled clumsily, dropping to the floor in
grotesque, inexpert heaps, scrambling without dignity away from the line of
prospective fire.
'Hello, Homo friends,' the Peke said, by means of the linguistics machine.
'I wish in particular to thank you, Mr. Briskin, for permitting me to remain in
your world. I will comport myself entirely within the framework of your legal
code, believe me. And, in addition, perhaps later...'
The three Secret servicemen put their laser pistols away and slowly returned
to their unobtrusive places about the room.
'Good lord,' Dorothy Gill breathed in relief as she got unsteadily to her
feet. 'It's only Bill Smith. This time, anyhow.' She sank back down in her
chair, sighing. 'We're safe for a little while longer.'
'You really gave us a scare,' Jim Briskin said to the Peke. He found himself
still shaking. 'I don't remember having had anything to do with permitting him
to stay here,' he said to Tito Cravelli.
'He's thanking you in advance,' Tito said. 'You're going to decide after you
become president, or rather he hopes so.'
Phil Danville said, 'Let's take him along with us to the party. That ought
to please Sal Heim. To know there's still one of them here, that we haven't quite
gotten rid of them and probably never will.'
'It is highly fortunate that our two peoples ...' the Peke began, but Tito
Cravelli cut him off.
'Save it. The campaign is over.'
'We're taking a rest,' Danville added. 'Highly deserved, too.'
The Peke blinked in surprise, then said hurriedly, 'As currently the sole
surviving member of my race on this side of the...'
I'm sorry,' Jim said, 'But Tito's right; we can't listen to any more. We've
got to leave here. You're welcome to come along, but don't make any speeches.
You understand ? It's over. We've got other things on our minds, now." The
time you're talking about seems like a million years ago, he said to himself.
It no longer seems plausible that your race and ours made contact during
modern, historical times; the memory of it is beginning to fade. And your
presence here among us has the quality of a startling and unexplained anomaly;
it's more puzzling than anything else.
'Let's go,' Phil Danville said, getting his coat and Dorothy's from the hall
closet and moving toward the door.
'I would think twice before going out there,' the Peke said to Jim Briskin.
'There's a man lying in wait for you.'
The Secret servicemen, again alert, strolled forward.
'Who is it ?' Jim asked the Peke.
'I couldn't catch his name,' the Peke said.
'Better not go out there,' Tito said warningly.
'A well-wisher,' Jim said.
'An assassin, you mean,' Tito said.
Jim started to open the hall door, but one of the Secret servicemen stopped
him. 'Let us check first.' They filed, hard-eyed, out of the room.
'They're still after you,' Tito said to Jim.
'I doubt that very much,' Jim said.
A moment later the Secret servicemen returned, leisurely. 'It's okay, Mr.
Briskin. You can talk to him.'
Opening the hall door, Jim looked out. It was not a well wisher and, as the
Secret servicemen had said, it was not an assassin.
The man waiting for him was Bruno Mini.
Hand extended, Mini said, 'It certainly took me a long time to catch up with
you, Mr. Briskin. I've been trying all throughout the latter part of the
campaign.'
'Indeed you have, Mr. Mini,' Jim said.
Mini advanced toward Jim, smiling an intense, white-tooth smile. A small
man, wearing a stylish but somewhat gaudy Ionian purple snakeskin jacket with
illuminated kummerbund and curly-toed Brazilian pigbark slippers, Mini looked
exactly what he was: a dealer in wholesale dried fruit. 'We've got a tremendous
amount of vital business to transact,' Mini said earnestly. The gold toothpick
projecting from between his molar teeth wobbled in a spasm of energetic
activity. 'At this point I can reveal to you that the first planet I've planned
on - and this will no doubt come to you as a complete surprise - is Uranus.
You'll naturally ask why.'
'No,' Jim Briskin said. 'I won't ask why.' He felt resigned. Sooner or later
Mini had to catch up with him. In fact, he was very slightly but perceptibly
relieved that it had at last happened... and that did surprise him.
'Where can we go that we can talk at adequate length to do justice to this
topic, and of course, in strict private ?' Mini asked. He added, 'I've already
gone to the trouble of informing the media that we would meet, tonight; it's my
'conviction', based on years of experience, that dignified but continual public
exposure to our program will do much to put it over with the - how shall I
phrase it ? - less educated masses.' He rooted vigorously in his overstuffed
briefcase.
A Secret serviceman appeared out of nowhere and took the briefcase from
Mini.
Grumbling, Mini said, 'You fellows inspected it downstairs on the front
sidewalk and then here just a minute ago. For heaven's sake.'
'Can't afford to take any chances.' Obviously the Secret servicemen viewed
Bruno Mini with magnified distrust. Some quality about him aroused their
professional interest. The briefcase was elaborately examined and then,
reluctantly, passed back to Mini as being harmless.
From the room noisily trooped Tito Cravelli, Phil Danville, Dorothy Gill,
the Peke Bill Smith, wearing his blue cloth cap and carrying his linguistics
machine, and finally three Secret servicemen. 'We're on our way to Sal and
Pat's,' Tito explained to Jim Briskin. 'You coming or not ?'
'Not for a while,' Jim Briskin said, and knew that it would be a long time
before he managed to get to this party or any other party.
'Let me describe the advantages of Uranus,' Mini said enthusiastically. And
began handing Jim an overwhelming spectrum of documents from his briefcase as
rapidly as possible.
It was going to be a difficult four years. He could see that. Four ? More
likely eight.
The way things turned out, he was proved correct.