"Russell, Eric Frank - Next Of Kin By Efr" - читать интересную книгу автора (Russell Eric Frank)Achtung!
Upon the
cover the nominal publisher claims that this superb story was
produced by Eric Frank Russell. It is a barefaced lie because his
Eustace knows better.
Apart from
the typing of it I had nothing whatever to do with the book. It was
ghost-written for me by my next of kin. Or perhaps I should say it
was kin-written by my next of ghost.
This
character, the real author, deposes that his name is Eustace
Postlethwaite and considers it a handicap to literary fame. All the
same, he swears that this yarn will be printed because he has
fraternal influence with the real publisher, Eustace Bam, who is a
shady relative of the nominal publisher.
I am given to
understand that neither of these Eustaces would ever be seen dead
with a Willy and that where the name appears herein it should be
viewed as obscene. Does this baffle you? Do you crave enlightenment?
Read on ...
ONE
He knew he'd
stuck his neck out and it was too late to withdraw. It had been the
same since early childhood when he'd accepted dares and been sorry
immediately afterward. They say that one learns from experience; if
that were true the human race would now be devoid of folly. He'd
learned plenty in his time and forgotten most of it within a week. So
yet again he'd wangled himself into a predicament and undoubtedly
would be left to wangle himself out of it as best he could.
Once more he
knocked at the door, a little harder but not imperatively. Behind the
panels a chair scraped and a harsh voice responded with hearable
impatience.
"Come
in!"
Marching
inside, he stood at attention before the desk; head erect, thumbs in
line with the seams of the pants, feet at an angle of forty-five
degrees. A robot, he thought, just a damned robot.
Fleet-Admiral
Markham surveyed him from beneath bushy brows, his cold gaze slowly
rising from feet to head then descending from head to feet.
"Who are
you?"
"Scout-Officer
John Leeming, sir."
"Oh,
yes." Markham maintained the stare then suddenly barked, "Button
your fly."
Leeming
jerked and showed embarrassment. "I can't, sir. It has defective
zipper."
"Then
why haven't you visited the tailor? That's what the base tailor-shop
is for, isn't it. Does your commanding officer approve of his men
appearing before him sloppily dressed? I doubt it!, What the devil do
you mean by it?"
"I
haven't had time to tend to it, sir. The zipper packed up only a few
minutes ago," explained Leeming.
"Is that
so?" Fleet Admiral Markham lay back in his chair and scowled at
nothing. "There's a war on, a galactic war. To fight it
successfully and to win it we are wholly dependent upon our
space-navies. It's a hell of a thing when the navy goes into battle
with defective zippers."
Since he
seemed to expect a reply to that one, Leeming gave it: "With all
respect, sir, I don't see that it matters. During a battle a man
doesn't care what happens to his pants so long as he survives
intact."
"I
agree," said Markham. "But what worries me is the question
of how much other and more important material may prove to be
substandard. If civilian contractors fail on little things they'll
certainly fail on big ones. Such failures can cost lives."
"Yes,
sir," said Leeming; wondering what the other was getting at.
"A new
and untried ship, for instance," Markham went on. "If it
operates as planned, we'll and good. If it doesn't--" He let the
sentence peter out, thought awhile, continued, "We asked for
volunteers for special long-range reconnaissance patrols: You were
the first to hand in your name. I want to know why."
"If the
job has to be done somebody must do it," answered Leeming
evasively.
"I am
fully aware of the fact. But I want to know exactly why you
volunteered." He waited a bit, urged, "Come on, speak up! I
won't penalize a risk-taker for giving his reasons."
Thus
encouraged, Leeming said, "I like action. I like working on my
own. I don't like the time-wasting discipline they go in for around
the base. It gives me a pain in the seat, Stand here, stand there,
put your chest out, pull your belly in, polish your shoes, get a
haircut, take that silly look off your face, who d'you think you're
speaking to? I'm a fully trained scout pilot and not a dressed-up
dummy for uniformed loudmouths to bark at. I want to get on with the
work for which I am suited and that's all there is to it"
Markham
showed no ire. On the contrary, he nodded understandingly. "So
do most of us. Terrans always were an impatient bunch. Do you think
I'm not frustrated sitting behind a desk while a major war is being
fought?" Without waiting for a response he added, "I've no
time far a man who volunteers because he's been crossed in love or
wants to do some heavy bragging or anything like that. I want a
competent pilot who is an individualist afflicted with the fidgets."
"Yes,
sir."
"You
seem to fit the part all right. Your technical record is first-class.
Your disciplinary record stinks to high heaven." He eyed his
listener blank-faced. "Two charges of refusing to obey a lawful
order. Four for insolence and insubordination. One for parading with
your cap on back to front. What on earth made you do that?"
"I had a
bad attack of what-the-hell, sir," explained Leeming.
"Did
you? Well, it's obvious that you're a confounded nuisance. The
space-base would be better off without you."
"Yes,
sir."
"As you
know, we and a few allies are fighting a big combine led by the
Lathians. The size of the opposition doesn't worry us. What we lack
in numbers we more than make up for in competence and efficiency. Our
war-potential is great and rapidly growing greater. We'll skin the
Lathians alive before we're through."
Leeming
offered no comment, having become tired of yessing.
"We've
one serious weakness," Markham informed. "We lack adequate
information about the enemy's cosmic hinterland. We know how wide
the Combine spreads but not how deep into the starfield it goes. It's
true that the enemy is no wiser with regard to us, but that's his
worry."
Again Leeming
made no remark.
"Ordinary
warships haven't flight-duration sufficiently prolonged to dig deep
behind the Combine's spatial front. That difficulty will be overcome
when we capture one or more of their outpost worlds with repair and
refuelling facilities. However, we can't afford to wait until then.
Our Intelligence Service wants some essential data just as soon as it
can be got. Do you understand?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Good!
We have developed. a new kind of superfast scout-ship. I can't tell
you how it functions except that it does not use the normal
caesium-ion form of propulsion. Its type of power-unit is a top
secret. For that reason it must not fall into the enemy's hands. At
the last resort the pilot must destroy it even if it means also
destroying himself."
"Completely
wrecking a ship, though a small one, is much more difficult than it
seems."
"Not
this ship," Markham retorted. "She carries an effective
charge in her engine-room. The pilot need but press a button to
scatter the power-units piecemeal over a wide area"
"I see."
"That
charge is the sole explosive aboard. The ship has not a gun, not a
guided missile, no armament of any sort. It's a stripped-down vessel
with everything sacrificed for the sake of speed and its only defence
is to scoot good and fast. That, I assure you, it can do. Nothing in
the galaxy can catch it providing it is squirting from all twenty
propulsors."
"Sounds
good to me, sir," approved Leeming, licking his lips. "It
is good. It's got to be good. The unanswered question is that of
whether it is good enough to take the beating of a long, long trip.
The tubes are the weakest part of any spaceship. Sooner or later they
burn out. That's what bothers me. The tubes on this ship have very
special linings. In theory they should last for months. In practice
they might not. You know. what that means?"
"No
repairs and no replacements in enemy territory, no means of getting
back," Leeming offered.
"Correct.
And the vessel would have to be destroyed. From that moment the
pilot, if still surviving, has isolated himself somewhere within the
mists of Creation, His chance of seeing. humankind again is remote
enough to verge on the impossible."
"There
could, be worse situations. I'd rather be alive someplace than
stone-dead here. While there's life there's hope."
"You
still wish to go through with this?"
"Sure
thing; sir:"
"Then
upon your own head be it," said Markham with grim humour. "Go
along the corridor, seventh door on the right, report to Colonel
Farmer. Tell him I sent you."
"Yes,
sir."
"And
before you go try that damned zipper again."
Obediently,
Leeming tried it. The thing slid all the way as smoothly as if oiled.
He stared at the other with a mixture of astonishment and injured
innocence.
"I
started in the ranks and I haven't forgotten it," said Markham,
pointedly. "You can't fool me."
Colonel
Farmer, of Military Intelligence, was a beefy, florid-faced character
who looked slightly dumb but had a sharp mind. He was examining a
huge star-map' hung upon one wall when Leeming walked in. Farmer
swung around as if expecting to be stabbed in the back.
"Haven't
you been taught to knock before you enter?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Then
why didn't you?"
"I
forgot, sir. My mind was occupied with the interview I've just had
with Fleet-Admiral Markham."
"Did he
send you to me?"
"Yes
sir."
"Oh, so
you're the long-range reconnaissance pilot, eh? I don't suppose
Commodore Keen will be sorry to see you go. You've been somewhat of a
thorn in his side, haven't you?"
"No,
sir," denied Leeming. "I have been a pain in his.
seat-every time he's tried to sit on me."
"In the
armed forces one must get used to that sort of thing."
"Sorry,
sir, but I don't agree. One joins the forces to help win a war and
for no other purpose. I am not a juvenile delinquent called up for
reformation by the Commodore or by anyone else."
"He'd
differ from you there. He's a stickler for discipline." Farmer
let go a chuckle at some secret joke, added, "Keen by name and
keen by nature." He contemplated the other a short while, went
on more soberly, "You've picked yourself a tough job."
"That
doesn't worry me," Leeming assured. "Birth, marriage and
death are tough jobs."
"You
might never come back."
"Makes
little difference. Eventually we'll all take a ride from which we'll
never come back."
"Well,
you needn't mention it with such ghoulish satisfaction," Farmer
complained. "Are you married?"
"No,
sir. Whenever I get the urge I just lie down quietly until the
feeling passes off."
Farmer eyed
the ceiling and said, "God!"
"What
else do you expect?" asked Leeming, displaying slight
aggressiveness. "A scout-pilot operates single-handed. He's like
a bug in a metal can and has to learn to dispense with a lot of
things; especially companionship. It's surprising how much one can do
without if one really tries."
"I'm
sure," soothed Farmer. He gestured toward the starmap. "On
that the nearest points of light are arrayed across the enemy's
front. The mist of stars behind them are unknown territory. The
Combine may be far weaker than we think because its front is
wafer-thin. Or it may be more powerful because its authority
stretches far to the rear. The only way to find out exactly what
we're up against is to effect a deep penetration through the enemy's
spatial lines."
Leeming said
nothing.
"We
propose to sent a special scout-ship through this area where occupied
worlds lie far apart, the Combine's defences are somewhat scattered
and their detector devices are relatively sparse." Farmer put
his finger on a dark patch on the map. "With the speed your
vessel possesses the enemy will have hardly enough time to identify
you as hostile before they lose trace of you We have every reason to
believe that you'll be able to slip through into their rear without
trouble"
"I hope
so," contributed Leeming seeing that a response was expected.
"The
only danger point is here." Shifting his finger an inch, Farmer
placed it on a bright star. "A Lathian-held solar system
containing at least four large space-navy stations. If those fleets
happen to be zooming around the bolt-hole they might intercept you
more by accident than good judgment. So you'll be accompanied that
far by a strong escort."
"That's
nice."
"If the
escort should become involved in a fight you will not attempt to take
part. it would be futile to do so, anyway, because your vessel
carries no offensive armament. You will take full advantage of the
diversion to race out of range and dive through the Combine's front.
Is that understood?"
"Yes,
sir."
"After
you get through you must use your initiative. Bear in mind that we
don't want to know how far beyond there are worlds holding
intelligent life-you would never reach the end of those even if you
continued to the crack of doom: We want to know only how far back
there are such worlds in regular communication with various members
of the Combine. Whenever you come across an organised planet playing
ball with the Combine you will at once transmit all the details you
can offer."
"I
will."
"Immediately
you are satisfied that you have gained the measure of the enemy's
depth you will return as quickly as possible. You must get the ship
back here if it can be done. If for any reason you cannot return, the
ship must be converted into scrap. No abandoning it in free space, no
dumping it into an ocean or anything like that. The ship must be
destroyed. Markham has emphasised this, hasn't he?"
"Yes,
sir."
"All
right. We're giving you forty-eight hours in which to clear up your
personal affairs. After that, you will report to Number Ten
Spaceport." Farmer held out his hand. I Wish you all the luck
you can get."
"Thinking
I'll need it?" Leeming grinned and went on, "You're laying
very heavy odds against ever seeing me again. It's written across
your face. I'll be back-want to bet on it?"
"No,"
said Farmer. "I never gamble because I'm a bad loser. But if and
when you do return I'll tuck you into bed With my own two hands."
"That's
a promise," warned Leeming.
He went to
his tiny room, found another fellow already in occupation. This
character eyed him with faint embarrassment.
"You
Leeming?"
"That's
right."
"I'm
Davies, Jack Davies."
"Glad to
know you." Grabbing his bags, Leeming started packing them,
stuffing away with careless haste shirts, collars and handkerchiefs.
Sitting on
the bed, Davies informed, "They told me to take over your room.
They said you'd be leaving today."
"Correct."
"Going
far?"
"Don't
know for certain. It might be too far."
"Are you
pleased to go?"
"Sure
am," Leeming enthused.
"Can't
say I blame you." Davies ruminated a moment in glum silence;
went on, "I arrived a couple of hours ago and reported to the
Base C.O. An autocratic type if ever I saw one." He gave a
brief, unflattering description of Commodore Keen. "I don't know
his name."
"Mallarqui,"
Leeming informed.
"That
so? Uncommon, isn't it?"
"No."
Closing the case, Leeming kneeled on its lid while he locked it,
started on the next one. "It's as old as the hills. You've heard
of a lot of Mallarqui, haven't you?"
"Yes, I.
have."
"Well,
in this dump there's too much of it"
"I think
you're right. Mallarqui took one look at me and yelled, `Haircut!’"
Ruefully, Davies rubbed the short bristle covering his pate. "So
I went and got one. What a Space navy! Immediately you show your face
they scalp you. And what d'you suppose happened next?"
"They
issued you with a brush and comb."
"They
did just that." He massaged the bristle again. "What for?"
"Same
reason as they do everything else," explained Leeming, "B.B.B."
"B.B.B?
What d'you mean?"
"It's a
motto adopted by the boys on inactive service. You'll find yourself
reciting it about twenty times per day. Baloney Baffles Brains."
"I see,"
said Davies, taking on a worried look:
"The
only way to escape is to fall foul of Keen. He'll get rid of
you-after he's broken your heart."
"Keen?
Who's he?"
"Mallarqui,"
corrected Leeming, hurriedly. "The fellows call him Keen behind
his back. If you want to stay out of the pokey don't ever ever
call him Commodore Keen to his face. He likes to be addressed as Mr.
Mallarqui."
"Thanks
for the tip," said Davies, innocently grateful.
"You're
quite welcome. Take your butt off the bed - I want my pyjamas."
"Sorry,"
Davies stood up, sat dawn again.
Cramming the
pyjamas into the case, Leeming closed it, took a long look around.
"That's
about all, I guess. Victory has been postponed by sheer lack of
efficient zippers. I got that information straight from the top. So
they're rushing me out to win the war. From now on all you need do is
sit around and count the days." He made for the door, a bag in
each hand. Coming to his feet again, Davies said awkwardly, "Happy
landings."
"Thanks."
In the corridor the first person Leeming encountered was Commodore
Keen. Being too burdened to salute, he threw the other a regulation
eyes-left which Keen acknowledged with a curt nod. Keen brushed past
and entered the room. His loud, harsh voice boosted out the open
door.
"Ah,
Davies, so you have settled in. Since you won't be required today you
can clean up this hog-pen in readiness for mp inspection this
evening."
"Yes,
Mr. Mallarqui."
"WHAT?"
Outside,
Leeming took a firmer grip on his bags and ran like hell.
The ship was
a beauty, the same diameter as an ordinary scout-vessel but over
twice the length. These proportions made it look less like a one-man
snoop-boat than a miniature cruiser. Standing on its tail, it towered
so high that its nose seemed to reach halfway towards the clouds.
Studying it
appreciatively, Leeming asked, "Any more like this!"
"Three,"
responded Montecelli, the spaceport's chief engineer. "All
hidden elsewhere with a tight security ring around them. Strict
orders from above say that this type of vessel may be used only one
at a time. A second must not be sent out until after yours has
returned."
"So I'm
first on the list, eh? What if I don't come back? What if this ship
is destroyed and you've no way of knowing?"
The other
shrugged. "That's the War Staff's worry, not mine. I only obey
directives from above and those can be trouble enough."
"H'm!
Probably they've set a time limit far my safe return. If I'm not back
by then they'll assume that I'm a gone goose."
"They
haven't said anything to you about it?"
"No."
"Then
don't you worry either. Life's too short. In time of war it gets
shortened for many." Montecelli scowled at the sky. "Whenever
a boat boosts upward on a column of flame I never know whether
that'll be the last I'll ever see of it."
"That's
right, cheer me on my way," said Leeming. "The life and
soul of the party."
"Sorry,
I clean forgot you're going:" He pointed to an adjacent
building. "In there we've set up a duplicate nose- cabin far
training purposes. It will take you most of a week to become
accustomed to the new-type controls, to learn how to handle the
transpatial radio and generally get the feel of things. You can start
your education as soon as you like." "All I'm bothered
about is the autopilot," Leeming told him. "It had better
be a good one. A fellow can't travel for days and weeks without sleep
and he can't snooze with the ship running wild. A really reliable,
autopilot is his fairy godmother."
"Listen,
son, if this one could do more than hold you on course while jerking
you away from dangers, if it could see and think and transmit
reports, we'd send it away without you." Montecelli gave his
listener a reassuring slap on the shoulder. "It's the best ever.
It'd take care of you even if you were on your honeymoon and
temporarily unconscious of the cosmos."
"The
only resemblance is that I'll need my strength," said Leeming.
He entered the building and more or less stayed in it for the
prescribed week.
The take-off
came at one hour after sunset. There was a cloudless sky, velvet
black and spangled with stars. Strange to think that far, far out
there, concealed by sheer distance, were countless populated worlds
with Combine warships parading warily between some of them while the
allied fleets of Terrans, Sirians, Rigellians and others were on the
prowl across an enormous front.
Below, long
chains of arc-lights dithered as a gentle breeze swept across the
spaceport. Beyond the safety barriers that defined the coming
blast-area a group of people were waiting to witness the ascent. If
the ship toppled instead of going up, thought Leeming wryly, the
whole lot of them would race for sanctuary with burning backsides. It
did not occur to him that in such an event he would be in poor
position to enjoy the sight. A voice came out of the tiny loudspeaker
set in the cabin wall. "Warm up Pilot."
He
pressed a button. Something went whump, then the
ship groaned and shuddered while a great circular cloud of dust and
vapour rolled across the concrete and concealed the safety barriers.
The low groaning and trembling continued while he sat in silence, his
full attention upon the instrument bank. The needles of twenty meters
crawled to the right, quivered awhile, became still. That meant
steady and equal pressure in the twenty stern tubes.
"Everything
all right, Pilot?"
"Yes."
"Take
off at will." A pause; followed by, "Lots of luck!"
"Thanks!"
He let the
tubes blow for another half minute before gradually lie moved the
tiny booster-lever towards him. Shuddering increased, the groan
raised its pitch until it became a howl, the cabin windows misted
over and the sky was obscured.
For a
nerve-wracking second the vessel rocked on its tail-fins. Then it
began to creep upward, a foot, a yard, ten yards. The howl was now a
shriek. The chronically slow rate of climb suddenly changed as
something seemed to give the vessel a hearty shove in the rear. Up it
went, a hundred feet, a thousand, ten thousand. Through the clouds
and into the deep of the night. The cabin windows were clear, the sky
was full of stars and the Moon looked huge.
The
loudspeaker said in faint, squeaky tones, "Nice work, Pilot."
"All my
work is nice," 5etorted Leeming. "See you in the asylum."
There was no
answer to that. They knew that he'd become afflicted with an
exaggerated sense of freedom referred to as take-off intoxication.
Most pilots suffered from it as soon as a planet lay behind their
tail and only the stars could be seen ahead. The symptoms consisted
of sardonic comments. and abuse raining down from the sky.
"Go get
a haircut," bawled Leeming into his microphone. He jiggled
around in his seat while the ship boomed onward.
"And
clean up that hog-pen. Haven't you been taught how to salute? Baloney
baffles brains!"
They didn't
answer that, either.
But down in
the spaceport control-tower the duty officer pulled a face and said
to Montecelli, "You know, I think that Einstein never worked out
the whole of it."
"What
d'you mean?"
"I have
a theory that as one approaches the velocity of light one's
inhibitions shrink to zero."
"You may
have something there," Montecelli conceded.
"Pork
and beans, pork and beans, Holy God, pork and beans," squawked
the control-tower speaker with swiftly fading strength. "Get
undressed because I want to test your eyes. Now inhale. Keen by name
and keen by-"
The duty
officer switched it off.
TWO
He picked up
the escort in the Sirian sector, the first encounter being made when
he was fast asleep. Activated by a challenging signal on a pre-set
frequency, the alarm sounded just above his ear and caused him to
dive out of the bunk while no more than half awake. For a moment he
gazed stupidly around while the ship vibrated and the autopilot went
tick-tick.
"Zern
kaid-whit?" rasped the loudspeaker. "Zern kaid-whit?"
That was code
and meant; "identify yourself-friend or foe?"
Taking the
pilot's seat, he turned a key that caused his transmitter to squirt
forth a short and ultra-rapid series of numbers. Then he rubbed his
eyes and looked into the forward starfield. Apart from the majestic
haze of suns shining in the dark there was nothing to be seen with
the naked eye. So he switched on his thermosensitive detector screens
and was rewarded with a line of brilliant dots paralleling his course
to starboard while a second group, in arrow formation, was about to
cut across far ahead of his nose. He was not seeing the ships, of
course, but only the visible evidence of their white-hot propulsion
tubes and flaming tails.
"Keefa"
said the loudspeaker, meaning, "All correct!"
Crawling back
into the bunk, Leeming hauled a blanket over his face, closed his
eyes and left the autopilot to carry on. After ten minutes his mind
began to drift into a pleasant, soothing dream about sleeping in free
space with nobody to bother him.
Dropping its
code-talk, the loudspeaker yelped in plain language, "Cut speed
before we lose you."
He sat up as
if stung, stared blearily across the cabin. Some-body had spoken;
somebody with a parade-ground voice. Or had he imagined it? He waited
a bit but nothing happened and so he lay down again.
The
loudspeaker bawled impatiently, "You deaf? Cut speed before we
lose you!"
Leeming
clambered irefully from the bunk, sat at the controls, adjusted them
slowly. A thin braking-jet in the bow let go a double plume of vapour
that swept back on either side as the ship overtook and passed by.
The stern-tubes meanwhile decreased their thrust. He watched his
meters until he thought their needles had dropped far enough to make
the others happy. Then he returned to bed and hid himself under the
blanket.
It seemed to
him that he was swinging in a celestial hammock and enjoying a
wonderful idleness when the loudspeaker roared, "Cut more! Cut
more!"
He shot out
from under the blanket, scrambled to the controls and cut more. Then
he switched on his transmitter and made a speech distinguished by its
passion. It was partly a seditious outburst and partly a lecture upon
the basic functions of the human body. From all he knew the
astonished listeners might include two rear-admirals and a dozen
commodores. If so, he was educating them.
In return he
received no heated retorts, no angry voice of authority. If he had
broadcast the same words from a heavily manned battleship they'd have
plastered him with forty charges and set the date for his
court-martial. But it was space-navy convention that a lone scout's
job created an unavoidable craziness among all those who performed it
and that ninety percent of them were overdue for psychiatric
treatment. A scout on active service could and often did say things
that nobody else in the space-navy dared utter. It is a wonderful
thing to be recognised as dotty.
For three
weeks they accompanied him in the glum silence with which a family
takes around an imbecile relation. He chafed impatiently during this
period because their top speed was far, far below his maximum
velocity and the need to keep pace with them gave him the feeling of
an urgent motorist trapped behind a funeral procession.
The
Sirian battleship Wassoon was the chief culprit,
a great clumsy contraption that wallowed along like a bloated
hippopotamus while a shoal of faster cruisers and destroyers were
compelled to amble with it. He did not know its name but he did know
that it was a battleship because on his detector screens it resembled
a glowing pea amid an array of fiery pinheads. Every time he looked
at the pea he cursed it something awful. He was, again venting his
ire upon it when the loudspeaker chipped in and spoke for the first
time in many days.
"Ponk!"
Ponk?
What the devil was ponk? The word meant something mighty important,
he could remember that much. Hastily he scrabbled through his
codebook and found it: Enemy in sight.
No sign of
the foe was visible on his screens. Evidently they were beyond
detector range and had been spotted only by the escort's advance
guard of four destroyers running far ahead.
"Dial
F," ordered the loudspeaker.
So they were
changing frequency in readiness for battle. Leeming touched the dial
of his multiband receiver from T back to F. Laconic interfleet
messages came through the speaker in a steady stream.
"Offside
group port twenty, rising inclination twelve."
"Check!"
"Break
off."
"Check!"
On the
screens five glowing dots swiftly angled away from the main body of
the escort: Four were mere pinheads, the fifth and middle one about
half the size of the pea. A cruiser and four destroyers were escaping
the combat area for the time-honoured purpose of getting between the
enemy and his nearest base.
In a
three-dimensional medium where speeds were tremendous and space was
vast this tactic never worked. It did not stop both sides from trying
to make it work whenever the opportunity came along. This could be
viewed as eternal optimism or persistent stupidity, according to the
state of one's liver.
The small
group of would-be ambushers scooted as fast as they could make it,
hoping to become lost within the confusing welter of starlights
before the enemy came near enough to detect the move. Meanwhile the
Wasoon and its attendant cohort plugged steadily onward. Ahead,
almost at the limit of the fleet's detector range, the four
destroyers continued to advance without attempting to disperse or
change course.
"Two
groups of ten converging from forty-five degrees rightward,
descending inclination fifteen;" reported the forward
destroyers.
"Classification?"
demanded the Wassoon.
"Not
possible yet."
Silence for
six hours, then, "Two groups still maintaining same course; each
appears to consist of two heavy cruisers and eight monitors."
That was
sheer guesswork based upon the theory that the greater the detectable
heat the bigger the ship. Leeming watched his screens knowing full
well that the enemy's vessels might prove to be warships as the
observers supposed or might equally well turn out to be escorted
convoys of merchantmen. Since the spatial war first broke out many a
lumbering tramp had been mistaken for a monitor.
Slowly, ever
so slowly twenty faintly discernible dots bloomed into his screens.
This was the time when he and his escort should be discovered by the
enemy's detection devices. The foe must have spotted the leading
destroyers hours ago; either they weren't worried about a mere four
ships or, more likely, had taken it for granted that they were
friendly. It would be interesting to watch their reaction when they
found the strong force farther behind.
He did not
get the chance to observe this pleasing phenomenon. The loudspeaker
let go a squawk of, "Ware zenith! " and automatically his
gaze perked upward to the screens above his head. They were poxed
with a host of rapidly enlarging dots He estimated that sixty to
eighty ships were diving in fast at ninety degrees to the plane of
the escort; but he didn't stop to count them. One glance was
sufficient to tell him that he was in a definite hot-spot.
Forthwith he
lifted his slender vessel's nose and switched to full boost. The
result pinned him in his seat while his intestines tried to wrap
themselves around his spine: It was easy to imagine the effect upon
the enemy's screens; they would see one mysterious, unidentifiable
ship break loose from the target area and swoop around them at a
speed previously thought impossible.
With luck,
they might assume that what one ship could do all the others could do
likewise. If there is anything a spaceship captain detests it is to
have another and faster ship sneaking up on his tail. The fiery end
of a spaceship is its weak spot for there can be no effective
armament in an area filled with propulsors.
Stubbornly
Leeming stuck to the upward curve which, if maintained long enough,
would take him well to one side of the approaching attackers and
around to the back of them. He kept full attention upon his screens.
The oncomers held course in a tight, vengeful knot for four hours, by
which time they were almost within shooting distance of the escort.
At that point their nerve failed. The fact that the escort still kept
impassive formation while one ship headed like a shooting star for
their rear made them suspect a trap. One thing the Combine never
lacked was suspicion of the Allies' motives and unshakable faith in
their cunning.
So they
curved out at right-angles and spread in all directions like the
petals of a blown flower, their detectors probing for another and
bigger fleet that might be lurking just beyond visibility.
Belting
along at top pace, one Lathian light cruiser realized that its new
course would bring it within range of the missiles with which
Leeming's strange, superfast ship presumably was armed. It tried to
play safe by changing course again and thereby delivered itself into
the hands of the Wassoon's electronic
predictors. The Wassoon fired, its missiles met the cruiser at
the precise point where it came within range. Cruiser and missiles
tried to occupy the same space at the same time. The result was, a
soundless explosion of great magnitude and a flare of heat that
temporarily obliterated every detector screen within range.
Another
blast shone briefly high in the starfield and far beyond reach of the
escort's armaments. A few minutes later a thin, reedy voice,
distorted by static, reported that a straggling enemy destroyer had
fallen foul of the distant ambushing party. This sudden loss, right
outside the scene of action, seemed to confirm the enemy's belief
that the Wassoon and its attendant fleet might
be mere bait in a trap loaded with something formidable. They
continued to radiate fast from their common centre in an effort to
locate the hidden menace and, at the same time, avoid being caught in
a bunch.
Seeing them
thus darting away like a shoal of frightened fish, Leeming muttered.
steadily to himself. A dispersed fleet should be easy prey to a
superfast ship capable of overhauling and dealing with its units one
by one. He had to face the fact that his vessel could do nothing more
than scare them individually while he lavished futile curses upon
them. Without a single effective weapon he was impotent to take
advantage of an opportunity that might never occur again. For the
moment he had quite forgotten his role, not to mention his strict
orders to avoid a space-fight at all costs.
The
Wassoon soon reminded him with a sharp call of,
"Scout pilot, where the hell d'you think you're going?"
"Up and
around," replied Leeming sourly.
"You're
more of a liability than an asset," retorted the Wassoon,
unappreciative of his efforts. "Get out while the going is
good."
Leeming
yelled into the microphone, "I know when I'm not wanted, see?
Spitting on parade is a punishable offence, see? Remember, man, you
must always salute a commodore. Stand properly
to attention when you speak to me! We're being sabotaged by defective
zippers. Come on, lift those feet, Dopey-one, two, three, hup!"
As before,
the listeners took no notice whatsoever. Leeming turned his ship on
to a new course with plane parallel to that of the escort and high
above them. They now became visible on his underbelly screens and
showed themselves in the same. unbroken formation by sweeping in a
wide circle to get on the reverse course. That meant they were
leaving him and heading homeward. The enemy, still scattered beyond
shooting range, must have viewed this move as wicked temptation for
although in superior strength they continued to refrain from direct
attack.
Quickly the
escort's array of shining dots slid off the screens as Leeming's
vessel shot away from them. Ahead and well to starboard the detectors
showed the two enemy groups that had first appeared. They had not
dispersed in the same manner that their main force had done but their
course showed that they were fleeing the area at the best pace they
could muster. This fact suggested that they really were two convoys
of merchantmen hugging close to their protecting cruisers. With deep
regret Leeming watched them go. Given the weapons he could have
swooped upon the bloated parade and slaughtered a couple of
heavily-laden ships before the cruisers had time to wake up.
At full pelt
he dived into the Combine's front and headed toward the unknown back
areas. Just before his detectors lost range his tailward screen
flared up twice in quick succession. Far behind him two ships had
ceased to exist and there was no way of telling whether these losses
had been suffered by the escort or the enemy.
He tried to
find out by calling on the interfleet frequency, "What goes?
What goes?"
No answer.
A third flash
covered the screen: It was weak with distance and swiftly fading
sensitivity.
Keying the
transmitter to give his identifying code-number, he called again.
No reply.
If
the battle had joined far to his rear they'd be much too busy to
bother with his queries. He'd have given a lot to turn back and see
for himself what was happening, to join the hooley and help litter
the cosmos with wreckage. But without a major or minor weapon he was
precisely what the Wassoon had declared him to
be, namely, an unmitigated nuisance.
Chewing his
bottom lip with annoyance, he squatted four square in the pilot's
seat and scowled straight ahead while the ship arrowed toward a dark
gap in the hostile starfield. In due time he got beyond the full
limit of Allied warships' non-stop range. At that point he also got
beyond help.
The first
world was easy meat. Believing it impossible for any Allied ship to
penetrate this far without refuelling and changing tubes, the enemy
assumed that any ship detected in local space must be friendly or, at
least, neutral. Therefore when picked up by their detectors they did
not bother to radio a challenge and identify him as hostile by his
inability to give a correct reply. They let him zoom around
unhampered by official nosiness.
So he found
the first occupied world by the simple process of shadowing a small
convoy heading inward from the spatial front, allowing them long
enough to make an accurate plot of their course. Then, because he
could not afford to waste days and weeks crawling along at their
relatively slow pace, he arced over them and raced ahead until he
reached the inhabited planet for which they were bound.
Checking the
planet was equally easy. He went twice around its equator at altitude
sufficiently low to permit swift visual observation. Complete
coverage of she sphere was not necessary to gain a shrewd idea of its
status, development and potentialities. What he could see in a narrow
strip around its belly was enough of a sampling for the purposes of
the Terran Intelligence Service.
In short time
he spotted three spaceports, two empty, the third holding eight
merchant ships of unknown origin and three Combine war vessels. Other
evidence showed the world to be heavily populated and well-advanced.
He could safely mark it as a pro-Combine planet of considerable
military value.
Shooting back
into free space, he dialled X, the special long-range frequency, and
beamed this information together with the planet's approximate
diameter, mass and spatial co-ordinates.
"I dived
in and circumnavigated the dump," he said, and let go a snigger.
He couldn't help if because he was recalling his careless response to
a similar situation set as a test-piece in his first examination.
He had
written, "I made cautious approach to the strange planet and
then quickly circumcised it."
The paper had
come back marked; "Why?"
He'd replied,
"I could get around better by taking short cuts."
It had cost
him ten marks and the dead-pan comment, "This information lacks
either accuracy or wit." But he had passed all the same.
There was no
reply to his signal and he did not expect one. He could beam signals
outward with impunity but they could not beam back into enemy
territory without awakening hostile listening-posts to the fact that
someone must be operating in their back areas. Beamed signals were
highly directional and the enemy was always on the alert to pick up
and decipher anything emanating from the Allied front while ignoring
all broadcasts from the rear.
The next
twelve worlds were found in substantially the same manner as the
first one: by plotting interplanetary and interstellar shipping
routes and following them to their termini. He signalled details of
each one and each time was rewarded with silence. By this time he
found himself deploring the necessary lack of response because he had
been going long enough to yearn for the sound of a human voice.
After weeks
that stretched to months, enclosed in a thundering metal bottle, he
was becoming afflicted with an appalling loneliness. Amid this vast
stretch of stars, with seemingly endless planets an which lived not a
soul to call him Joe, he could have really enjoyed the arrival from
far away or an irate human voice bawling him out good and proper for
some error, real or fancied. He'd have sat there and bathed his mind
in the stream of abuse. Constant, never-ending silence was the worst
of all, the hardest to bear.
Occasionally
he tried to break the hex by singing at the top of his voice or by
holding heated arguments with himself while the ship howled onward.
It was a poor and ineffectual substitute because he was less musical
than a tumescent tom-cat a nd he couldn't win an argument without
also losing it.
His sleeps
were lousy, too. Sometimes he dreamed that the autopilot had gone
haywire and that the ship was heading full-tilt into a blazing sun.
Then he'd wake up with his belly jumping and make quick, anxious
check of the apparatus before returning to slumber. Other times he
awoke heavy-eyed and dry-mouthed feeling that he'd had no sleep at
all, but had been lying supine through hours of constant trembling
and a long, sustained roar.
Several times
he had pursuit dreams in which he was being chased through dark,
metallic corridors that bellowed and quivered all around while close
behind him sounded the rapid, vengeful tread of feet that were not
feet. Invariably he woke up just as he was about to be grabbed by
hands that were not hands.
In theory
there was no need for him to suffer the wear and tear of long-range
reconnaissance. A case full of wonder-drugs had been provided to cope
with every conceivable condition of mind or body. The trouble was
that they were effective or they were not. If ineffective, the taking
of them proved sheer waste of time. If effective, they tended to
shove things to the opposite extreme.
Before one
sleep-period he had experimented by taking a so-called normalising
capsule positively guaranteed to get rid of nightmares and ensure
happy, interesting dreams. The result had been ten completely
uninhibited hours in a harem. They had been hours so utterly
interesting that they'd left him flat out. He never took another
capsule.
It was while
he was nosing after a merchant convoy, in expectation of tracing a
thirteenth planet, that he got some vocal sounds that at least broke
the monotony. He was following far behind and high above the group of
ships and the, feeling secure in their own backyard, were keeping no
detector watch and were unaware of his presence. Fiddling idly with
the controls of his receiver, he suddenly hit upon an enemy
interfleet frequency and picked up a conversation between ships.
The unknown
lifeform manning the vessels had loud, somewhat bellicose voices but
spoke a language with sound- forms curiously akin to Terran speech.
To Leeming's ears it came as a stream of cross-talk that his mind
instinctively framed in Terran words. It went like this:
First voice:
"Mayor Snorkum will lay the cake."
Second voice:
"What for the cake be laid by Snorkum?"
First voice:
"He will starch his moustache."
Second voice:
"That is night-gab. How can he starch a tepid mouse?"
They spent
the next ten minutes in what sounded like an acrimonious argument
about what one repeatedly called a tepid mouse while the other
insisted that it was a torpid moose. Leeming found that trying to
follow the point and counterpoint of this debate put quite a strain
upon the cerebellum. He suffered it until something snapped.
Tuning his
transmitter to the same frequency, he bawled, "Mouse or moose,
make up your goddam minds!"
This produced
a moment of dumbfounded silence before the first voice harshed,
"Gnof, can you lap a pie-chain?"
"No, he
can't," shouted Leeming, giving the unfortunate Gnof no chance
to brag of his ability as a pie-chain lapper.
There came
another pause, then Gnof resentfully told all and sundry, "I
shall lambast my mother."
"Dirty
dog!" said Leeming. "Shame on you!"
The other
voice informed, mysteriously, "Mine is a fat one."
"I can
imagine," Leeming agreed.
"Clam-shack?"
demanded Gnof in tones clearly, translatable as, "Who is that?"
"Mayor
Snorkum," Leeming told him.
For some
weird reason known only to alien minds this information caused the
argument to start all over again. They commenced by debating Mayor
Snorkum's antecedents and future prospects (or so it sounded) and
gradually and enthusiastically worked their way along to the tepid
mouse (or torpid moose).
There were
moments when they became mutually about something or other, possibly
Snorkum's habit of keeping his moose on a pie-chain. Finally they
dropped the subject by common consent and switched to the abstruse
question of how to paddle a puddle (according to one) or how to
peddle a poodle (according to the other).
"Holy
cow!" said Leeming fervently.
It must have
borne close resemblance to something pretty potent in the hearers'
language because they broke off and again Gnof challenged,
"Clam-shack?"
"Go
jump, Buster!" Leeming invited.
"Bosta?
My ham-plank is Bosta, enk?" His tones
suggested considerable passion about the matter as he repeated,
"Bosta, enk?"
"Yeah,"
confirmed Leeming. "Enk!"
Apparently
this was regarded as the last straw for their voices went off and
even the faint hum of the carrier-wave disappeared. It looked as
though he had managed to utter something extremely vulgar without
having the vaguest notion of what he had said.
Soon
afterwards the carrier wave came on and another and different voioe
called in guttural but fluent Cosmoglotta "What ship? What
ship?"
Leeming did
not answer.
A long wait
before again the voice demanded, "What ship?"
Still Leeming
took no notice. The mere fact that they had not broadcast a challenge
in war-code showed that they did not believe it possible for a
hostile vessel to be in the vicinity. Indeed, this was suggested by
the stolid way in which the convoy continued to plug along without
changing course or showing visible sign of alarm.
It was highly
likely that they could not so much as see his ship, not being
equipped with sufficiently sensitive detectors. The call of "What
ship?" had been nothing more than a random feel in the dark, an
effort to check up before seeking a practical joker somewhere within
the convoy itself.
Having
obtained adequate data on the enemy's course, Leeming bulleted ahead
of them and in due time came across the thirteenth planet. He beamed
the information homeward, went in search of the next. It was found
quickly, being in an adjacent solar system.
Time rolled
by as his probes took him across a broad stretch of
Combine-controlled space and measured its precise depth. After
discovering the fiftieth planet he was tempted to return to base for
overhaul and further orders. One can have a surfeit of exploration,
and he was sorely in need of a taste of Terra, its fresh air, green
fields and human companionship.
What kept him
going were the facts that the ship was running well, his fuel supply
was only a quarter expended and he could not resist the notion that
the more thoroughly he did this job the greater the triumph upon his
return and the better the prospect of quick promotion.
So on he went
and piled up the total to seventy-two planets before he reached a
preselected point where he was deep in the enemy hinterland at a part
facing the Allied outposts around Rigel. From here he was expected to
send a coded signal to which they would respond, this being the only
message they'd risk sending him.
He beamed the
one word, "Awa!" repeated at intervals for a couple of
hours. It meant, "Able to proceed-awaiting instructions."
To that they should give a reply too brief for enemy interceptors to
catch either the word, "Reeter!" meaning "We have
sufficient information - return at once," or else the word,
"Buzz" meaning "We need more information - continue
your reconnaissance."
What he did
get back was a short-short squirt of sound that he recognised as an
ultra-rapid series of numbers. They came in so fast that it was
impossible to note them aurally. Perforce he taped them as they were
repeated, then reached for his code-book as he played them off
slowly.
The result
was, "47926 Scout Pilot John Leeming promoted Lieutenant as from
date of receipt."
He stared at
this a long time before he resumed sending, "Awa! Awa!" For
his pains he got back the word "Foit!" He tried again and
once more was rewarded with, "Foit!" It looked vaguely
blasphemous to him, like the favourite curse of some rubbery creature
that had no palate.
Irritated by
this piece of nonsense, he stewed it over in his mind, decided that
some intervening Combine station was playing his own game by chipping
in with confusing comments. In theory the enemy shouldn't be able to
do it because he was using a frequency far higher than those favoured
by the Lathians and others, while both his and the Allied messages
were scrambled. All the same, somebody was doing it.
To the
faraway listeners near Rigel he beamed the interesting biological
statement that Mayor Snorkum would lay the moose and left them to
sort it out for themselves. Maybe it would teach some nuthead that he
was now dealing with a full lieutenant and not a mere scout-pilot.
Or, if the enemy intercepted it, they could drop their war effort
while they argued their way around to a final and satisfactory
peddling of the poodle.
Concluding
that no recall meant the same thing as not being recalled, he resumed
his search far hostile planets. It was four days later that he
happened to be looking idly through his code-book and found the word
"Foit" defined as "Use your a own judgement."
He thought it
over, decided that to go home with a record of seventy-two planets
discovered and identified would be a wonderful thing, but to be
credited with a nice, round, imposing number such as one hundred
would be wonderful enough to verge upon the miraculous. They'd make
him a Space Admiral at least. He'd be able to tell Colonel Farmer to
get a haircut and order Commodore Keen to polish his buttons. He
could strut around clanking with medals and be a saint to all the
privates and space-cadets, a swine to all the brasshats.
This absurd
picture was so appealing that he at once settled for a score of one
hundred planets as his target-figure before returning to base. As if
to give him the flavour of coming glory, four enemy-held worlds were
found close together in the nest solar system and these boosted his
total to seventy-six.
He shoved the
score up to eighty. Then to eighty-one.
The first
hint of impending disaster showed itself as he approached number
eighty-two.
THREE
Two dots
glowed in his detector-screens. They were fat but slow moving and it
was impossible to decide whether they were warships or cargo-boats.
But they were travelling in line abreast and obviously headed
someplace to which he'd not yet been. Using his always successful
tactics of shadowing them until he had obtained a plot, he followed
them awhile, made sure of the star toward which they were heading and
then bolted onward.
He had got so
far in advance that the two ships had faded right out of his screens
when suddenly a propulsor-tube blew its desiccated lining forty miles
back along the jet-track. The first he knew of it was when the
alarm-bell shrilled on the instrument-board, the needle of the
pressure meter dropped halfway back, the needle of its companion heat
meter crawled toward the red dot that indicated melting-point.
Swiftly he
cut off the feed to that propulsor. Its pressure meter immediately
fell to zero, its heat meter climbed a few more degrees, hesitated,
stayed put a short while then reluctantly slid back.
The ship's
tail fin was filled with twenty huge propulsors around which were
splayed eight steering jets of comparatively small diameter. If any
one propulsor ceased to function the effect was not serious. It meant
no mare than a five per cent loss in power output and a corresponding
loss in the ship's functional efficiency. On Earth they had told him
that he could sacrifice as many as eight propulsors-providing that
they were symmetrically positioned before his speed and
manoeuvrability were reduced to those of a Combine destroyer.
From the
viewpoint of his technical advantage over the foe he had nothing to
worry about yet. He could still move fast enough to make them look
like spatial sluggards. What was worrying was the fact that the
sudden breakdown of the refractory lining of one main driver might be
forewarning of the general condition of the rest. For all he knew
another propulsor might go haywire any minute and be followed by the
remainder in rapid succession.
Deep inside
him was the feeling that now was the time to back and make for home
while the going was good. Equally deep was the hunch that he'd never
get there because he had travelled too long and too far. The ship was
doomed never to see Earth again; inwardly he was as sure of that as
one can be sure of anything.
But the end
of the ship did not mean the end of its pilot even though he be
wandering like a lost soul through strange areas of a hostile
starfield. The precognition that told Leeming his ship was heading
for its grave also assured him that he was not. He felt it in his
bones that the day was yet to come when, figuratively speaking, he
would blow his nose in Colonel Farmer's handkerchief.
Rejecting the
impulse to reverse course and run for Rigel, he kept stubbornly on
toward planet number eighty-two, reached it, surveyed it and beamed
the information. Then he detected a shipping route between here and a
nearby solar system, started along it in the hope of finding planet
number eighty-three and adding it to his score. A second propulsor
shed its lining when halfway there, a third just before arrival.
All the same,
he circumnavigated the world at reduced speed; headed for free space
with the intention of transmitting the data but never did so. Five
more propulsors blew their linings simultaneously. He had to move
mighty fast to cut off the feed before their unhampered blasts could
melt his entire tail away.
The defective
drivers must have been bunched together off-centre for the ship now
refused to run straight. Instead it started to describe a wide curve
that eventually would bring it back in a great circle to the planet
it had just left. To make matters worse; it also commenced a slow,
regular rotation around its longitudinal axis with the result that
the entire starfield seemed to revolve before Leeming's eyes.
Desperately
he tried to straighten the ship's course by means of the steering
jets but this only produced an eerie swaying which combined with the
rotation, caused his fire-trail shape itself into an elongated
spiral. The curve continued until planet eighty-three slid into one
side of his observation port and spun slowly around it. Two more
propulsors blew long, thin clouds of ceramic dust far backward: The
planet swelled enormously in the armourglass. Yet another propulsor
gave up the ghost.
The vessel
was now beyond all hope of salvation as a cosmos-travelling vehicle
and the best he could hope to do with it was to get it down in one
piece for the sake of his own skin. He concentrated solely upon
achieving this end. Though in serious condition the ship was not
wholly beyond control because the steering jets could function
perfectly when not countered by a lopsided drive, while the braking
jets were capable of roaring with full-throated power.
As the planet
filled the forward view and its crinkled surface expanded into hills
and valleys, he cut off all remaining tail propulsors, used his
steering jets to hold the ship straight and blew his braking jets
repeatedly. The longitudinal rotation ceased and speed of descent
slowed while his hands sweated at the controls.
It was dead
certain that he could not land in the orthodox manner by standing the
ship on its tail fins. He lacked enough power-output to come down
atop a carefully controlled column of fire. The ship was suffering
from a much-dreaded condition known to the space service as weak-arse
and that meant he'd have to make a belly-landing at just enough speed
to retain control up to the last moment.
His eyes
strained at the observation port while the oncoming hills widened,
the valleys lengthened and the planet's surface fuzz changed to a
pattern of massed treetops. Then the whole picture appeared to leap
at him as if suddenly brought into focus under a powerful microscope.
He fired four propulsors and the lower steering jets in an effort to
level off.
The nose
lifted as the vessel shot across a valley and cleared the opposite
hill by a few hundred feet. In the net two minutes he saw five miles
of treetops, a clearing from which arose an army of trellis masts
bearing. radio antennas, a large village standing beside a river,
another great expanse of trees followed by. a gently rolling stretch
of moorland.
This was the
place! Mentally offering a quick prayer to God, he swooped in a
shallow curve with all braking jets going full blast. Despite this
dexterous handling the first contact slung him clean out of his seat
and threw him against the metal wall beneath his bunk. Bruised and
shaken but other-wise unhurt, he scrambled from under the bunk while
still the ship slid forward to the accompaniment of scraping,
knocking sounds from under its belly.
Gaining the
control-board, he stopped the braking jets, cut off all power. A
moment later the vessel expended the last of its forward momentum and
came to a halt. Resulting silence was like nothing he had experienced
in many months. It seemed almost to bang against his ears. Each
breath he took became a loud hiss, each step a noisy, metallic clank.
Going to the
lock, he examined the atmospheric analyser. it registered exterior
air pressure at fifteen pounds and said that it was much like Terra's
except that it was slightly richer in oxygen. At once he went through
the air-lock, stood in the rim of its outer door and found himself
fourteen feet above ground-level.
The automatic
ladder was of no use in this predicament since it was constructed to
extend itself from air-lock to tail, a direction that now was
horizontal. He could hang by his hands from the rim and let himself
drop without risk of injury but he could not jump fourteen feet to
get back in. The one thing he lacked was a length of rope.
"They
think of everything," he complained, talking out loud because a
justifiable gripe deserves to be uttered. "They think of
everything imaginable. Therefore twenty feet of rope is not
imaginable. Therefore I can imagine the unimaginable. Therefore I am
cracked. Anyone who talks to himself is cracked. It's legitimate for
a looney to say what he likes. When I get back I'll say what I like
and it'll be plenty!"
Feeling a bit
better for that, he returned to the cabin, hunted in vain for
something that would serve in lieu of rope. He was about to rip his
blankets into suitable strips when he remembered the power cables
snaking from control-board to engine-room. It took him a hurried half
hour to detach a suitable length from its terminals and tear it from
its wall fastenings
During the
whole of this time his nerves were tense and his ears were
continually perked for outside sounds indicating the approach of the
enemy. If they should arrive in time to trap him within the ship he'd
have no choice but to set off the explosive charge and blow himself
apart along with the vessel. It was of major importance that the.
ship should not fall intact into alien hands and his awn life was a
secondary consideration.
Naturally he
was most reluctant to spread himself in bloody shreds over the
landscape and therefore moved fast with jumpy nerves, taut mind and
stretched ears. Silence was still supreme when he tied one end of the
cable inside the lock, tossed the rest outside and slid down it to
ground.
He landed in
thick, cushiony vegetation bearing slight resemblance to heather.
Racing to the ship's tail, he had a look at the array of propulsors;
realised that he was lucky to have survived. Eleven of the great
tubes were completely without their essential linings, the remaining
nine were in poor condition and obviously could not have withstood
more than another two or three days of steady blasting.
It was out of
the question to effect any repairs or even to take the ship up again
for a short hop to somewhere more secluded. The long, sleek boat had
set up an all-time record by bearing him safely through a good slice
of the galaxy, past strange suns and around unknown worlds, and now
it was finished. He could not help feeling mournful about it. To
destroy such a ship would be like cold-blooded murder - but it had to
be done.
Now he took a
quick look of what was visible of the world on which he stood. The
sky was a deep, dark blue verging obscurely to purple, with a faint,
cloudlike haze on the eastern horizon. The sun, now past its zenith,
looked a fraction larger than Sol, had a redder colour, and its rays
produced a slight and not unpleasant stinging sensation. Underfoot
the heather-like growth covered a gently undulating landscape running
to the eastward horizon where the first ranks of trees stood guard.
Through it, an immense scar ran the long, deep rut caused by the
ship's belly-skid. To the west the undergrowth again gave way to
great trees, the edge of the forest being half a mile away.
Leeming now
found himself in another quandary of the kind not foreseen by those
unable to imagine a need for rope. If he blew the ship to pieces he
would destroy with it a lot of stuff he needed now or might need
later on, in particular a large stock of concentrated food. To save
the latter he would have to remove it from the ship, take it a safe
distance from the coming explosion and hide it someplace where enemy
patrols would not find it.
The nearby
forest was the ideal place for a cache. But to salvage everything
worth having he'd have to make several trips into the forest and risk
the enemy putting in an appearance when he was too far from the ship
to regain it ahead of them and set off the big bang.
If he became
a wandering fugitive, as he intended, it was possible that he'd have
no troub1e finding enough food to keep him going for years. But he
could not be sure of that. He knew nothing about this world except
that it held intelligent life and was part of or in cahoots with the
Combine. He couldn't so much as guess what its native lifeform looked
like though it was a pretty safe bet that like every other known
sentient form - it was more or less humanoid.
Sense of
urgency prevented him from pondering the situation very long. This
was a time for action rather than thought: He started working like a
maniac, grabbing packages and cans from the ship's store and throwing
them out of the air-lock. This went on until the entire food stock
had been cleared. Still the enemy was conspicuous by his absence.
Now he took
up armloads from the waiting pile and bore them into the edge of the
forest: Sheer anxiety made him waste a lot more effort for at each
trip he tried to take more than he could hold. His route into the
forest was marked back by dropped cans that had to be picked up at
each return to the ship. These returns he made at the run, pausing
only to snatch up the fallen stuff, and arriving breathless and
already half-loaded.
By dint of
haste and perspiration he transferred all the foodstuffs into the
forest, climbed aboard the ship, had a last look around for anything
worth saving. Making a roll of his blankets, he tied a waterproof
sheet over them to form a compact bundle.
Regretfully
he eyed the radio transmitter. It would be easy to send out a signal
saying that he was marooned on planet eighty-three and giving its
co-ordinates. But it would not do him any good. No Allied vessel
other than a special scout-ship could hope to get this far without
refuelling and having its tubes relined. Even if a ship did manage to
cover the distance non-stop if stood little chance of finding and
picking up one lone Terran hiding on a hostile world.
Satisfied
that nothing remained worth taking, he put on his storm-coat, tucked
the bundle under his arm and pressed the red button at one side of
the control-board. There was supposed to be a delay of two minutes
between activation and the resulting wallop. It wasn't much time.
Bolting through the air-lock, he jumped straight out, landed heavily
in the cushion of vegetation and dashed at top speed toward the
forest. Nothing had happened by the time he reached the trees.
Standing behind the protective thickness of a great trunk, he waited
for the bang.
Seconds
ticked by without result. Something must have gone wrong. Perhaps
those who could not imagine rope could not think of a fuse or
detonator either. He peeked cautiously around the rim of the trunk;
debating within himself whether to go back and examine the
connections to the explosive charge. At that point the ship blew up.
It flew apart
with a tremendous, ear-splitting roar that bent the trees and shook
the skies. A great column of smoke, dirt and shapeless lumps soared
to a considerable height. Gobs of distorted metal screamed through
the tree-tops and brought branches crashing down. A blast of hot wind
rushed either side of the trunk behind which Leeming was sheltering,
for a moment created a partial vacuum that made him gasp for breath.
Then followed
a pattering sound like that of heavy rain, also many loud thumps as
soil and scrap metal fell back to earth. Somewhat awed by the
unexpected violence of the explosion, he sneaked another look around
the tree-trunk, saw a smoking crater surrounded by two or three acres
of torn vegetation. It was a sobering thought that for countless
millions of miles he had been sitting on top of a bang that size.
When tardily
the foe arrived it was pretty certain that they would start a hunt
for the missing crew. Leeming's preliminary survey of the world,
though consisting only of one quick sweep around its equator, had
found evidence of some sort of organised civilisation and included
one spaceport holding five merchant ships and one Combine light
cruiser, all of antiquated pattern. This showed that the local
lifeform was at least of normal intelligence and as capable as anyone
else of adding two and two together.
The relative
shallowness of the crater and the wide scattering of remnants was
clear evidence that the mystery ship had not plunged to destruction
but rather had blown apart after making a successful landing. Natives
in the nearest village could confirm that there had been quite a long
delay between the ship's plunge over their roof-tops and the
subsequent explosion. The foe would know that none of his own ships
were missing in that area. Examination of fragments would reveal
non-Combine material. Their inevitable conclusion: that the vessel
had been a hostile one and that its crew had got away unscathed.
It would be
wise, he decided, to put more distance between himself and the crater
before the enemy arrived and started sniffing around the vicinity.
Perhaps he was fated to be caught eventually but it was up to him to
postpone the evil day as long as possible.
The basic
necessities of life are food, drink and shelter, with the main
emphasis on the first of these. This fact delayed his departure a
little while. He had food enough to last for several months. It was
one thing to have it, another to keep it safe from harm. At all costs
he must find a better hiding place to which he could return from time
to time with the assurance that the supply would still be there.
He pressed
farther into the forest, moving in a wide zigzag as he cast about for
a suitable dump. Visibility was good because the sun remained high
and the trees did not entirely obscure the overhead view. He sought
here and there, muttering angrily to himself and making vulgar
remarks about officials who decided what equipment a scout-ship
should carry. If he'd had a spade he could have dug a neat hole and
buried the stuff. But he did not have a spade and it would take too
long to scrabble a hideout with his bare hands.
Finally he
found a cave-like opening between the great arched roots of an
immense tree. It was far from ideal but it did have the virtue of
being deep within the woods and providing a certain amount of
concealment. Casting around, he picked up a smooth, heavy pebble,
flung it through the opening with all the force he could muster.
There came no answering yelp, howl or squeal, no sudden rush of some
outlandish creature intent on mayhem. The cave was unoccupied.
It took him
more than an hour to shift the food pile for the third time and stack
it neatly within the hole, leaving out a small quantity representing
seven days' rations. When this task had been completed he built up
part of the opening with clumps of earth, used twigs and branches to
fill in the rest. He now felt that if a regiment of enemy troops
explored the locality, as they were likely to do, there was small
chance of them discovering and either confiscating or destroying the
cache on which his continued liberty might depend.
Stuffing the
seven days' rations into a small rucksack and tying the bundled
blankets thereto, he set off at fast pace along the fringe of the
forest and headed southward. Right now he had no plan in mind, no
especial purpose other than that of evading capture by making
distance before the foe found the crater and searched the vicinity.
He doubted whether the enemy would maintain such a local hunt for
more than a couple of days, after which they'd decide that there were
no survivors or, alternatively, that it was high time that, they
started seeking them farther afield. Therefore it should be
reasonably safe for him to return for food in about one week's time.
He had been
going three hours and had covered eleven miles before the enemy
showed the first signs of activity. With the moorland on his right
and the forest on his left, he was trudging along when a black dot
soared above the horizon, swelled in size, shot silently overhead and
was followed some seconds later by a shrill scream.
Going at that
height and at that speed the jetplane's pilot could not possibly have
seen him. Unperturbed, he stepped into the shadow of a tree, turned
to watch the machine as it diminished northward. It was again a mere
dot when suddenly it swept around in a wide circle, spiralled upward
and continued circling. As nearly as Leeming could judge it was
turning high above the crater.
It was an
easy guess that the jetplane had come in response to a telephone or
radio call telling about a spaceship in distress and a following
explosion. Having found the scene of disaster, it was zooming above
the spot while summoning help. No doubt there'd be great activity at
the base from which it had come; receiving confirmation that a ship
had indeed been lost, the authorities would assume it to be one of
their own and start checking by radio to find which one was missing.
With luck it might be quite a time before they accepted the fact that
a vessel of unknown origin, probably hostile, had reached this far.
In any case,
from now on they'd keep a sharp watch for survivors. Leeming decided
that this was the time to leave the forest's fringe and progress
under cover. His rate of movement would be slowed but at least he'd
travel unobserved. There were two dangers in taking to the woods but
they'd have to be accepted as lesser evils.
For one,
unless he was mighty careful he could lose his sense of direction and
wander in a huge curve that eventually would take him back to the
crater and straight into the arms of whoever was waiting there. For
another, he ran the risk of encountering unknown forms of wild life
possessed of unimaginable weapons and unthinkable appetites.
Against the
latter peril he had a defence that was extremely effective but
hateful to use, namely a powerful compressed-air pistol that fired
breakable pellets filled with a stench so foul that one whiff would
make anything that lived and breathed vomit for hours - including, as
often as not, the user.
Some Terran
genius had worked it out that the real king of the wilds is not the
lion nor the grizzly bear but a kittenish creature named Joe Skunk
whose every battle is a victorious rearguard action, so to speak.
Some other genius had synthesized a horrible liquid seventy-seven
times more revolting than Joe's - with the result that an endangered
spaceman could never make up his mind whether to run like hell and
chance being caught oar whether to stand firm, shoot, and
subsequently puke himself to death.
Freedom
is worth a host of risks, so he plunged deep into the forest and kept
going. After about an hour's steady progress he heard the whump-whump
of many helicopters passing overhead and travelling toward the north:
By the sound of it there were quite a lot of them but none could be
seen crossing the few patches of sky visible between the tree-tops.
He made a
guess that they were a squadron of troop carriers transporting a
search party to the region of the crater. Some-time later a solitary
machine crept above with a loud humming noise while a downward blast
of air made the trees rustle and wave their topmost branches. It was
low and slow moving and sounded like a buoyant fan that probably was
carrying one observer. He stopped close by a gnarly trunk until it
had passed.
Soon
afterward he began to feel tired and decided to rest awhile upon a
mossy bank. Reposing at ease, he pondered this exhaustion, realised
that although his survey had shown this world to be approximately the
same size at Terra it must in fact be a little bigger or had slightly
greater mass. His own weight was up perhaps by as much as ten per
cent, though he had no way of checking it.
True, after a
long period of incarceration in a ship he must be out of condition
but he was making full allowance for that fact. He was undoubtedly
heavier than he'd been since birth, the rucksack was heavier, so were
the blankets, so were his feet. Therefore his ability to cover
mileage would be cut down in proportion and, in any emergency, so
would his ability to run.
It then
struck him that the day must be considerably longer than Earth's. The
sinking sun was now about forty degrees above the horizon. In the
time since he'd landed the arc it had covered showed that the day was
somewhere between thirty and thirty-two hours in length. He'd have to
accomodate himself to that with extended walks and prolonged sleeps
and it wouldn't be easy. Wherever they may be, Terrans have a natural
tendency to retain their own time-habits.
Isolation in
space is a hell of a thing, he thought, as idly, he toyed with the
flat, oblong-shaped lump under the left- hand pocket of his jacket.
The lump had been there so long that he was only dimly conscious of
its existence and, even when reminded of it, tended to suppose that
all jackets were made lumpy for some perverse reason known only to
members of the International Garment Workers' Union. Now it struck
him with what was approximate to a flash of pure genius that in the
long, long ago someone had once mentioned this lump and described it
as "the built-in emergency pack."
Taking out
his pocketknife, he used its point to unpick the lining of his
jacket. This produced a flat, shallow box of brown plastic. A
hair-thin line ran around its rim but there was no button, keyhole,
grip or any other visible means of opening it Pulling and pushing it
in a dozen different ways had no effect whatever. He tried to insert
the knife-blade in the hairline and pry the whole thing open; that
failed and the knife slipped and he nicked his thumb. Sucking the
thumb, he shoved his other hand through the slit lining and felt all
around his jacket in the hope of discovering written instructions of
some sort. All he got for his pains was fluff in his fingernails.
Reciting
several of the nine million names of God, he, kicked the box with
aggravated vim. Either the kick was the officially approved method of
dealing with it or some of the names were potent, for the box snapped
open. At once he commenced examining the contents which, in theory,
should assist him toward ultimate salvation.
The first was
a tiny, bead-sized vial of transparent plastic ornamented with an
embossed skull and containing an oily, yellowish liquid, Presumably
this was the death pill to be taken as a last extreme. Apart from the
skull there was nothing to distinguish it from a love-potion.
Next came a
long, thin bottle filled with what looked like diluted mud and marked
with a long, imposing list of vitamins, proteins and trace elements.
What one took it for, how much was supposed to be taken at a time,
and how often, were left to the judgement of the beneficiary - or the
victim.
After this
came a small sealed can bearing no identifying markings and no
can-opener to go with it. For all he knew it might be full of boot
polish, sockeye salmon or putty. He wouldn't put it past them to
thoughtfully provide some putty in case he wanted to fix a window
someplace and thus save his life by ingratiating himself with his
captors. If, back home, some genius got it into his head that no
lifeform known or unknown could possibly murder a window fixer, a can
of putty automatically became a must.
Dumping it at
one side, he took up the next can. This was longer, narrower and had
a rotatable cap. He twisted the cap and uncovered a sprinkler.
Shaking it over his open palm he got a puff of fine powder resembling
pepper. Well, that would come in very useful for coping with a pack
of bloodhounds, assuming that there were bloodhounds in these here
parts. Cautiously he sniffed at his palm. The stuff smelled exactly
pepper.
He let go a
violent sneeze, wiped his dusty hand on a handkerchief, closed the
can and concocted some heated remarks about the people at the
space-base. This had immediate effect for the handkerchief burst into
flames in his pocket. He tore it out, flung it down and danced on it.
Opening the can again he let a few grains of fall upon a dry piece of
rotten wood. A minute later the wood spat sparks and started blazing.
This sent a betraying column of smoke skyward, so he danced on the
wood until it ceased.
Exhibit
number five really did explain itself-providing that its owner had
the power of long-range clairvoyance. It was a tiny bottle of
colourless liquid around which was wrapped a paper that said,
"Administer two drops per hundred pounds bulk only in a
non-carbonaceous beverage." A skull complete with crossbones
added a sinister touch to this mysterious injunction.
After
studying it for some time Leeming decided that the liquid was either
a poison or the knockout additive favoured by Mr. Michael Finn.
Apparently, if one were to encounter a twenty-ton rhinoceros the
correct technique was to weight it upon the nearest weighing-machine,
calculate the appropriate dosage and administer it to the unfortunate
animal in a non-carbonaceous beverage. One would then be safe because
the creature would drop dead or fall asleep and lie with its legs in
the air.
Number
six was a miniature camera small enough to be concealed in the palm
of the hand. As an aid to survival its value was nil. It must have
been included in the kit with some other intention. Perhaps Terran
Intelligence had insisted that it be provided in the hope that anyone
who made successful escape from a hostile world could bring a lot of
photographic data home with him. Well, it was nice to think that
someone could be that optimistic. He pocketed
the camera, not with any expectation of using it, but solely because
it was a beautiful piece of microscopic workmanship too good to be
thrown away.
The seventh
and last was the most welcome and, so far as he was concerned; the
only item worth a hoot; a luminous compass. He put it carefully into
a vest pocket. After some consideration he decided to keep the
pepperpot but discarded the remaining cans and bottles. The
death-pill he flicked into an adjacent bush. The bottles he shied
between the trees. Finally he took the can of boot polish, sockeye,
putty or whatever and hurled it as far as he could.
The result
was a tremendous crash, a roar of flame and a large tree leaped
twenty feet into the air with dirt showering from its roots. The
blast knocked him full length on the moss; he picked himself up in
time to see a great spurt of smoke sticking out of the tree-tops like
a beckoning finger. Obviously visible for miles, it could not have
been more effective if he'd sent up a balloon-borne banner bearing
the words, "Here I am!"
Only
one thing could be done and that was to get out fast. Grabbing up his
load he scooted southward at the best pace he could make between the
trees. He had covered about two miles when the buoyant fan hummed low
down and slightly to his rear. A little later he heard the distant,
muted whup-whup of a helicopter descending upon
the scene of the crime. There'd be plenty of room for it to drop into
the forest because the explosive can of something-or-other had
cleared a wide gap. He tried to increase his speed, dodging around
bushes, clambering up sharply sloping banks, jumping across deep,
ditchlike depressions and all the time moving on leaden feet that
felt as if wearing size twenty boots.
As the sun
sank low and shadows lengthened he was again forced to rest through
sheer exhaustion. By now he had no idea of the total distance
covered; it had been impossible to travel in a dead straight line and
the constant zigzagging between the trees made mileage impossible to
estimate. However, there were now no sounds of aerial activity
either near or far away and, for all the evidence of the presence of
other life, he might have the entire cosmos to himself.
Recovering,
he pushed on until darkness was relieved only by the sparkle of
countless stars and the shine of two small moons. Then he had a meal
and bedded down in a secluded glade, rolling the blankets tightly
around him and keeping his stink-gun near to hand. What kind of
dangerous animal might stalk through the night he did not know and
was long past caring. A man must have sleep come what may, even at
the risk of waking up in somebody's belly.
FOUR
Lulled by the
silence and his own tiredness, he slept for twelve hours. It was not
an undisturbed slumber. Twice he awoke with the vague feeling that
something had slunk past him in the dark. He lay completely still,
nerves tense, gun in hand, his eyes straining to probe the
surrounding gloom until at last sleep claimed him again, the eyelids
fluttered and closed, he let go a subdued snore. Another time he
awakened to see five moons in the sky, including a tiny, fast-moving
one that arced across the vault of the heavens with a faint but hear
able hiss. The vision was so brief and abnormal that for some time he
was not sure whether he had actually witnessed it or merely dreamed
it.
Despite the
long and satisfying snooze he was only partway through the alien
night. There were many hours to go before sunrise. Feeling refreshed
and becoming bored by waiting, he gave way to his fidgets, rolled his
blankets, consulted the compass and tried to continue his southward
march. In short time he had tripped headlong over unseeable roots,
stumbled knee-deep into a hidden stream.
Progress in
open country was possible in the combined light of stars and moons,
but not within the forest. Reluctantly he gave up the attempt. There
was no point in wearing himself out blundering around in barely
visible patches that alternated with areas of stygian darkness.
Somehow he managed to find the glade again. There he lay in the
blankets and waited with some impatience for the delayed dawn.
As the first
faint glow appeared at one side of the sky something passed between
the trees a hundred yards away: He got to his feet, gun pointing in
that direction, watching and listening. Bushes rustled, dead leaves
crackled and twigs snapped over a distance stretching from his left
to far to his right.
The rate of
motion was slow, laborious and the sounds suggested that the cause
was sluggish and very heavy. Seeing nothing, he was unable to
determine whether the noise was created by a troop of things crawling
one behind the other or by one monstrous iifeform resembling a
colossal worm, the grandpappy of all anacondas. Whatever it was, it
did not come near to him and gradually the sounds died away.
Immediately
daylight had become sufficiently strong to permit progress he resumed
his southward trek and kept it up until mid-day. At that point he
found a big rocky hollow that looked very much like an abandoned
quarry. Trees grew thickly around its rim, bushes and lesser growths
covered its floor, various kinds of creepers straggled down its
walls. A tiny spring fed a midget stream that meandered across the
floor until it disappeared down a hole in the base-rock. At least six
caves were half-hidden in the walls, these varying from a narrow
cleft to an opening the size of a large room.
Surveying the
place, he realised that here was an ideal hideout. He had no thought
of settling there for the rest of his natural life even if the
availability of food permitted him to do so. He'd get nowhere by
sitting on his quoit until he was old and rheumy. Besides, he'd had
enough of a hermit's life in space without suffering more of it on
firm land. But at least this locale would serve as a hiding-glace
until the hue and cry died down and he'd had time to think out his
future plan of action.
Climbing down
the steep, almost vertical sides to the floor of the place proved a
tough task. From his viewpoint this was so much the better; whatever
was difficult for him would be equally difficult for others and might
deter any searching patrols that came snooping around. With that
complete absence of logic that afflicts one at times, it didn't occur
to him that a helicopter could come down upon him with no trouble at
all.
He soon found
a suitable cave and settled himself in by dumping his load on the
dry, sandy ground. The next job Was that of preparing a meal.
Building a smokeless fire of wood chips, he filled his dixie with
water and converted part of his rations into a thick soup. This, with
some enriched wholemeal flatcakes, served to fill his belly and bring
on a sense of peaceful well-being.
For a while
he mooched around his sunken domain which covered four acres. The
surrounding walls were eighty feet high while the crest of trees
towered another two hundred feet higher. A scout-ship could have
landed tail-first in this area and remained concealed for years from
all eyes save those directly above. He found himself regretting that
he had not known of this place and attempted an orthodox landing
within it. Even if the ship toppled over through lack of adequate
power, and he survived uninjured, he'd have the use of it as a
permanent home and, if necessary; a fortress. Wouldn't be easy for
the foe to winkle a man out of a heavy metal shell particularly when
the said shell had fore and aft jets as effective as several
batteries of guns.
Here and
there were small holes in the ground. Similar holes were in evidence
at the base of the walls. They reminded him of rabbit burrows. If
whatever had made them was the alien equivalent of the rabbit it
would be a welcome addition to his larder.
Getting down
in crawling position, he peered into several of these apertures but
could see nothing. He found a long, thin stick and poked it down some
of them, without result. Finally he sat silent and motionless outside
an array of holes for nearly two hours. At the end of that time a
creature came out, saw him immediately and bolted back in. It
resembled a fat and furry spider. Perhaps it was edible but the
thought of eating it turned his stomach.
It then
struck him that despite this planet's profuse supply of trees he had
not seen or heard anything resembling. a bird. If any arboreal
creatures existed they must be in small number, or not native to this
locality, or wholly nocturnal. There was also a noteworthy lack of
insects and for this he was thankful. On any alien world the insect
type of life could be and often was a major menace to any wandering
Terran. That weird world of Hypatia, for instance, held streamlined
whizz-bugs capable of travelling at six hundred miles per hour. A
whizz-bug could drill a hole through a human being, space-suit and
all, as neatly and effectively as a 45 slug.
At one end of
the area, grew a thick patch of feathery plants somewhat like giant
ferns. They exuded a pleasantly aromatic scent. He gathered a good
supply of these, laid them at the back of the cave, spread his
blankets over them and thus made himself a bed more springy and
comfortable than any he had enjoyed since childhood.
Although he
had done everything in the most lackadaisical, time-wasting manner of
which he was capable he still found it well-nigh impossible to cope
with the lengthy day. He'd explored the pseudo-quarry from side to
side, and from one end to the other, had two meals, tidied the cave;
done various chores necessary and unnecessary, and still the sun was
far from setting. As nearly as he could calculate it would be another
six hours before darkness fell. There was nothing to stop him from
going to bed at the first yawn but if he did he'd surely wake up and
face an equally long night. Adjustment to alien time did not come
easy.
So he sat at
the entrance to his cave and amused himself working out what best to
do in the future. For a start, he could spend a couple of weeks
transferring his foodstock from its place of concealment near the
crater to this cave. Then, using his present headquarters as a
strategic centre, he could make systematic exploration in all
directions and get to know as much as possible about the
potentialities of this world.
If
investigation proved it possible to live off the land he could then
travel father afield, scout warily around inhabited areas until
eventually he found a spaceport. Sooner or later the opportunity
might come to sneak aboard a fully fuelled enemy scout-ship after
dark and take it up with a triumphant bang. It was only one chance in
a thousand, perhaps one in ten thousand; but it might come off. Yes,
he'd go seeking such a chance and make it come off.
Even if, he
did manage to blast free in a Combine scout his problem could not be
solved. No vessel could reach the Rigellian sector non-stop from here
without at least one refuelling and one overhaul of propulsor tubes
to reach the Allied front he'd have to break his journey partway
there and repeat his present performance by dumping the ship and
stealing another. What can be done once can be done twice. All the
same, the odds against him ever seeing Terra were so tremendous that
he did not care to think of them. He concentrated solely upon the
ages-old thesis that while there's life there's hope.
Shortly
before dusk a jetplane screamed across the sky as if to remind him
that this world really was inhabited by superior life. Up to then the
perpetual silence and total lack of birds or bees had made his
situation seem like a crazy dream. Standing outside the cave, he
watched the high dot shoot across. the heavens and disappear to the
south. A little later he went to bed.
Early in the
morning eight helicopters went over, moving in line abreast. Spread
out a hundred yards apart from each other, they floated fifty feet
above the tree-tops. What they hoped to see beneath the concealing
mass of vegetation was a mystery but it was obvious that they were
searching all the same.
Going through
the motions, thought Leeming as he watched them drift beyond his
hiding-place. They had been ordered to look around, therefore they
were looking around even though there was nothing to be seen. The
pilots were enjoying a pleasant ride on the pretext that orders must
be obeyed. In all probability the brasshat who had issued the command
had never looked down into a forest in his life but by virtue of his
rank, was a self-styled authority upon the subject of how to find a
flea in a dogs' home. Baloney baffles brains in any part of the
cosmos. Leeming had long nursed a private theory that wars do not end
with victory for the side with the most brains: they are terminated
by the defeat of the side with the most dopes. Also that wars are
prolonged because there is stiff competition on general imbecility.
By the end of
the fourth day he was bored to tears. Squatting in a cave was not his
idea of the full life and he could no longer resist the urge to get
busy. He'd have to bestir himself before long in order to replenish
his food supplies. The time had come, he felt; to make a start on the
tedious chore of shifting the hidden dump southward and installing it
in the cave.
Accordingly
he set forth at dawn and pushed to the north as fast as he could go.
This activity boosted his spirits considerably and he had to suppress
the desire to whistle as he went along. In his haste he was making
noise enough and there was no sense in further advertising his coming
to any patrols that might be prowling through the woods.
As he neared
the scene of his landing his pace slowed to the minimum. Here, if
anywhere; caution was imperative since there was no knowing how many
of the foe might still be lurking in the area. By the time he came
within easy reach of his cache he was slinking from tree to tree,
pausing frequently to look ahead and listen.
It was a
great relief to find that the food-dump had not been disturbed. The
supply was intact, exactly as he had left it. There was no sign that
the enemy had been anywhere near it or, for the matter of that, was
within fifty miles of it at the present moment. Emboldened by this,
he decided to go to the edge of the forest and have another look at
the crater. It would be interesting to learn whether the local
lifeform had shown enough intelligence to take away the ship's
shattered remnants with the idea of establishing its origin The
knowledge that they had done so would not help him one little bit -
but he was curious and temporarily afflicted with a sense of false
security.
As quietly
and carefully as a cat stalking a bird, he sneaked the short distance
to the forest's rim, gained it a couple of hundred yards from where
he'd expected to view the crater. Walking farther along the edge of
the trees, he stopped and stared at the graveyard of his ship, his
attention concentrated upon it to the exclusion of all else. Many
distorted hunks of metal still lay around and it was impossible to
tell whether any of the junk had been removed.
Swinging his
gaze to take in the total blast area, he was dumbfounded to discover
three helicopters parked in line close to the trees: They were a
quarter mile away, apparently unoccupied and with nobody hanging
around That meant their crews must be somewhere nearby. At once he
started to back into the forest, his hairs tickling with alarm. He
had taken only two steps when fallen leaves crunched behind him,
something hard slammed into the middle of his back and a voice spoke
in harsh guttural tones.
"Smooge!"
it said.
Bitterness at
his own folly surged through Leeming's soul as he turned around to
face the speaker He found himself confronted by a humanoid six inches
shorter than himself but almost twice as broad; a squat, Powerful
creature wearing dun-coloured uniform, a metal helmet and grasping a
lethal instrument recognisable as some kind of gun. This character
had a scaly, lizardlike skin, horn-covered eyes and no eyelids He
watched Leeming with the cold, unwinking stare of a rattlesnake.
"Smooge!"
he repeated, giving a prod with the gun.
Raising his
hands, Leeming offered a deceitful smile and said in fluent
Cosmoglotta, "There is no need for this. I am a friend, an
ally."
It was a
waste of breath. Either the other did not understand Cosmoglotta or
he could recognise a thundering lie when it was offered. His
reptilian face showed not the slightest change of expression, his
eyes retained their blank stare as he emitted a shrill whistle.
Leeming noticed that his captor performed this feat without pursing
his lips, the sound apparently coming straight from the throat.
Twenty more
of the enemy responded by emerging from the forest at a point near
where the helicopters were stationed. Their feet made distinct thuds
as they ran with the stubby, clumping gait of very heavy men
Surrounding Leeming, they examined him with the same expressionless
stare that lacked surprise, curiosity or any other human trait. Next
they gabbled together in a language slightly reminiscent of the crazy
talk he had interrupted in space.
"Let me
elucidate the goose."
"Dry up
- the bostaniks all have six feet."
"I am a
friend, an ally;" informed Leeming, with suitable dignity.
This
statement caused them to shut up with one accord. They gave him a
mutual snake-look and then the biggest of them asked, "Snapnose?"
"I'm a
Combine scout from far, far away," asserted Leeming, swearing it
upon an invisible Bible. "As such I demand to be released,"
It meant
nothing whatever. Nobody smiled, nobody kissed him and it was obvious
that none knew a word of Cosmoglotta. They were ill-educated types
with not an officer among the lot.
"Now
look here," he began, lowering his arms.
"Smooge!"
shouted his captor, making a menacing gesture with the gun.
Leeming
raised his arms again and glowered at them. Now they held a brief
conversation containing frequent mention of cheese and spark-plugs.
It ended to their common satisfaction after which they searched him.
This was done by the simple method of confiscation, taking everything
in his possession including his braces.
That done,
they chivvied him toward the helicopters. Perforce, he went, trudging
surlily along while holding up his pants with his hands. The pants
were supposed to be self-supporting, the braces having been worn out
of sheer pessimism, but he had lost a good deal of weight during his
space trip, his middle was somewhat reduced in circumference and he
had no desire to exhibit his posterior to alien eyes.
At command he
climbed into a helicopter, turned quickly to slam the door in the
hope that he might be able to lock them out long enough to take to
the air without getting shot. They did not give him a chance. One was
following close upon his heels and was halfway through the door even
as he turned. Four more piled in. The pilot took his seat, started
the motor. Overhead vanes jerked, rotated slowly, speeded up.
The 'copter
bounced a couple of times, left the ground, soared into the purplish
sky. It did not travel far. Crossing the wide expanse of moorland and
the woods beyond, it descended upon the large village that Leeming
had roared over only a few days ago. Gently it landed upon a concrete
square at the back of a grim-looking building that, to Leeming's
mind, resembled a military barracks or an asylum for the insane.
Here, they
entered the building, hustled him along a corridor and into a
stone-walled cell. They slammed and locked the heavy door in which
was a small barred grille. A moment later one of them peered between
the bars. "We shall bend Murgatroyd's socks," announced the
face reassuringly.
"Thanks,"
said Leeming. "Damned decent of you."
The face went
away. Leeming walked ten times around the cell before sitting on a
bare wooden plank that presumably was intended to serve as both seat
and bed. There was no window through which to look upon the outside
world, no opening other than the door. Resting his elbows on his
knees, he held his face in his hands.
God, what a
chump he'd been. If only he had remained content to take from the
cache all the food he could carry and get away fast. If only he had
accepted the good fortune of finding the food-dump intact and been
satisfied to grab and run. But no, he had to be nosey and walk right
into a trap. Perhaps the nervous strain of his long journey or
something peculiar about the atmosphere of this planet had made him
weak-minded. Whatever the reason, he was caught and ready for the
chop.
As for his
future prospects; he did not care to guess at them. It was known that
the Combine had taken several hundreds of prisoners, mostly settlers
on outpost worlds who'd been attacked without warning. Their fate was
a mystery. Rumour insisted that the various lifeforms belonging to
the Combine had widely different notions of how to handle the
prisoner-of-war problem and that some were less humane than others.
Since nothing whatever was known about the lifeform inhabiting this
particular world the tactics they favoured were a matter for
speculation or, in his own case, grim experience.
It was said -
with what truth nobody knew - that the Lathians, for instance,
treated as bona fide prisoners-of-war only those who happened to be
captured unarmed and that anyone taken while bearing a weapon was
slaughtered out of hand. Also that possession of a knife was regarded
as justification for immediate murder providing that the said knife
came within their definition of a weapon by having a blade longer
than its owner's middle finger. This story might be ten miles wide of
the facts. The space service always had been a happy hunting ground
for incurable crap-mongers.
How long he
sat there he did not know. They had deprived him of his watch, he
could not observe the progress of the sun and had no means of
estimating the time. But after a long while a guard opened the door,
made an unmistakable gesture that he was to come out. He exited,
found a second guard waiting in the corridor. With one in the lead
and the other following, he was conducted through the building and
into a large office.
The sole
occupant was an autocratic specimen seated behind a desk on which
was arrayed the contents of the prisoner’s pockets. Leering
came to a halt before the desk, still holding up his pants. The
guards positioned themselves either side of the door and manag to
assume expressions of blank servility.
In fluent
Cosmoglotta, the one behind the desk said; "I am Major Klavith:
You will address me respectfully as becomes my rank. Do you
understand?"
"Yes."
"What is
your name, rank and number?"
"John
Leeming, Lieutenant, 47926."
"Your
species?"
"Terran.
Haven't you ever seen a Terran before?"
"I am
asking the questions," retorted Klavith, "and you will
provide the answers." He paused to let that sink in, then
continued, "You arrived here in a ship of Terran origin, did you
not?"
"Sure
did," agreed Leeming, with relish.
Bending
forward, Klavith demanded with great emphasis,
"On
which planet was your vessel refuelled?"
There was
silence as Leeming's thoughts moved fast. Obviously they could not
credit that he had reached here non-stop because such a feat was far
beyond their own technical ability. Therefore they believed that he
had been assisted by some world within the Combine's ranks. He was
being ordered to name the traitors. It was a wonderful opportunity to
create dissension but unfortunately he was unable to make good use of
it. He'd done no more than scout around hostile worlds, landing on
none of them, and for the life of him he could not name or describe a
Combine species anywhere on his route.
"Are you
going to tell me you don't know?" prompted Klavith
sarcastically.
"I do
and I don't," Leeming responded. "The world was named to me
only as XB173. I haven't the faintest notion of what you call it or
what it calls itself."
"In the
morning we shall produce comprehensive star-maps and you will mark
thereon the exact location of this world. Between now and then you
had better make sure that your memory will be accurate." Another
long pause accompanied by the cold, lizardlike stare of his kind.
"You have given us a lot of trouble. I have been flown here
because I am the only person on this planet who speaks Cosmoglotta."
"The
Lathians speak it"
"We are
not Lathians as you well know. We are Zangastans. We do not
slavishly imitate our allies in everything The Combine is an
association of free peoples."
"That
may be your opinion. There are others.”
"I am
not in the least bit interested in other opinions. And I am not here
to bandy words with you on the subject of interstellar politics."
Surveying the stuff that littered his desk, Klavith poked forward the
pepper-pot. "When you were caught you were carrying this
container of incendiary powder. We know what it is because we have
tested it. Why were you supplied with it?"
"It was
part of my emergency kit."
"Why
should you need incendiary powder in an emergency kit?"
"To
start a fire to cook food or to warm myself," said Leeming,
mentally damning the unknown inventor of emergency kits.
"I do
not believe you. See where I am pointing: an automatic lighter. Is
that not sufficient?"
"Those
lighters wear out or become exhausted."
"Neither
does the powder last for ever. You are lying to me. You brought this
stuff for the purposes of sabotage."
"Fat lot
of good I'd do starting a few blazes umpteen millions of miles from
home. When we hit the Combine we do it harder and more effectively."
"That
may be so," Klavith conceded. "But I am far from satisfied
with your explanation."
"If I
gave you the true one you wouldn't believe it."
"Let me
be the judge of that."
"All
right. The powder was included in my kit merely because some
high-ranking official thought it a wonderful idea."
"And why
should he think so?" Klavith urged.
"Because
any idea thought up by him must be wonderful."
"I don't
see it."
"Neither
do I. But he does and his opinion counts."
"Not
with me it doesn't," Klavith denied. "Anyway, we intend to
analyse this powder. Obviously it does not, burst into flame when air
reaches it, otherwise it would be too risky to carry. It must be in
direct contact with an inflammable substance before it will function.
A ship bearing a heavy load of this stuff could destroy a lot of
crops. Enough systematic burning would starve an entire species into
sub-mission, would it not?"
Leeming did
not answer.
"I
suggest that one of your motives in coming here was to test the
military effectiveness of this powder."
"What,
when we could try it on our own wastelands without the bother of
transporting it partway across a galaxy?"
"That is
not the same as inflicting it upon an enemy."
"If I'd
toted it all the way here just to do some wholesale burning,"
Leeming pointed out, "I'd have brought a hundred tons and not a
couple of ounces."
Klavith could
not find a satisfactory answer to that so he changed the subject by
poking another object on his desk. "I have identified this thing
as a midget camera. It is a remarkable instrument and cleverly made.
But since aerial photography is far easier, quicker, wider in scope
and more efficient than anything you could achieve with this gadget,
I see no point in you being equipped with it."
"Neither
do I," agreed Leeming.
"Then
why did you continue to carry it?"
"Because
it seemed a damned shame to throw it away."
This reason
was accepted without dispute. Grabbing the camera, Klavith put it in
his pocket.
"I can
understand that. It is as beautiful as a jewel. Henceforth it is my
personal property." He showed his teeth in what was supposed to
be a triumphant grin. "The, spoils of conquest." With
contemptuous generosity he picked up the braces and tossed them at
Leeming. "You may have these back. Put them on at once - a
prisoner should be properly dressed while in my presence." He
watched in silence as the other secured his pants, then said, "You
were also in possession of a luminous compass. That I can understand.
It is about the only item that makes sense." Leeming offered no
comment.
"Except
perhaps for this." Klavith took up the stink-gun.
"Either
it is a mock weapon or it is real." He pulled the trigger. a
couple of times and nothing happened. "Which is it?"
"Real."
"Then
how does it work?"
"To
prime it you must press the barrel inward."
"That
must be done every time you are about to use it?"
"Yes."
"In that
case it is nothing better than a compressed-air gun?"
"I find
it hard to credit that your authorities would arm you with anything
so primitive," opined Klavith, showing concealed suspicion.
"Such a
gun is not to be despised," offered Leeming. "It has its
advantages. It needs no explosive ammunition, it will fire any
missile that fits its barrel and it is comparatively silent.
Moreover, it is just as intimidating as any other kind of gun."
"You
argue very plausibly," Klavith admitted, "but I doubt
whether you are telling me the whole truth."
"There's
nothing to stop you trying it and seeing for yourself," Leeming
invited. His stomach started jumping at the mere thought of it.
"I
intend to do just that." Switching to his own language, Klavith
let go a flood of words at one of the guards. Showing some
reluctance, the guard propped his rifle against the wall, crossed the
room and took the gun. Under Klavith's instructions, he put the
muzzle to the floor and shoved. The barrel sank back, popped forward
when the pressure was released. Pointing the gun at the wall he
squeezed the trigger.
The
weapon went phut! A tiny pellet burst on the
wall and its contents immediately gasified. For a moment Klavith sat
gazing in puzzlement at the damp spot. Then the awful stench hit him.
His face took on a peculiar mottling, he leaned forward and spewed
with such violence that he fell off his chair. Holding his nose with
his left-hand, Leeming snatched the compass from the desk with hs
right and raced for the door. The guard who had fired the gun was now
rolling on the carpet and trying to turn himself inside-out with such
single-minded concentration that he neither knew nor cared what
anyone was doing. By the door the other guard had dropped his rifle
while he leaned against the wall and emitted a rapid succession of
violent whoops. Not one of the three was in any condition to pull up
his own socks much less get in the way of an escapee.
Still
gripping his nostrils, Leeming jerked open the door, dashed along the
passage and out of the building. Hearing the clatter of his boots,
three more guards rushed out of a room, pulled up as if held back by
an invisible hand and threw their dinners over each other.
Outside,
Leeming let go his nose. His straining lungs took in great gasps of
fresh air as he sprinted toward the helicopter that had brought him
here. This machine provided his only chance of freedom since the
barracks and the entire village would be aroused at any moment and he
could not hope to outrun the lot on foot.
Reaching the
helicopter, he clambered into it, locked its door. The alien controls
did not baffle him because he had made careful note of them during
his previous ride. Still breathing hard while his nerves twanged with
excitement, he started the motor. The vanes began to turn.
Nobody had
yet emerged from the stench-ridden exit he had used but somebody did
come out of another door farther along the building. This character
was unarmed and apparently unaware that anything extraordinary had
taken place. But he did know that the humming helicopter was in wrong
possession. He yelled and waved his arms as the vanes speeded up.
Then he dived back into the building, came out holding a rifle.
The 'copter
made its usual preliminary bumps, then soared. Below and a hundred
yards away the rifle went off like a firecracker. Four holes appeared
in the machine's plastic dome, something nicked the lobe of Leeming's
left ear and drew blood, the tachometer flew to pieces on the
instrument-board. A couple of fierce, hammer like clunks sounded on
the engine but it continued to run without falter and the 'copter
gained height.
Bending
sideways, Leeming looked out and down through the perforated dome.
His assailant was frantically shoving another magazine into the gun.
A second burst of fire came when the 'copter was five hundred feet up
and scooting fast There came a sharp ping as a sliver of metal flew
off the tail-fan but that was the only hit.
Leeming took
another look below. The marksman had been joined by half a dozen
others, all gazing skyward. None were attempting to shoot because the
fugitive was now out of range. Even as he watched, the whole bunch of
them ran into the building, still using the smell-free door. He could
give a guess where they were heading for, namely, the radio-room.
The sight
killed any elation he might have enjoyed. He had the sky to himself
but it wasn't going to be forever. Now the moot question was whether
he could keep it to himself long enough to make distance before he
landed in the wilds and took to his heels again.
FIVE
Definitely he
was not escaping the easy way. In many respects he was worse off than
he'd been before. Afoot in the forest he'd been able to trudge
around. in concealment, feed himself, get some sleep. Now the whole
world knew - or soon would know - that a Terran was on the loose. To
keep watch while flying he needed eyes in the back of his head and
even those wouldn't save him if something superfast such as a
jetplane appeared. And if he succeeded in dumping his machine unseen
he'd have to roam the world without a weapon of any kind.
Mentally he
cursed the extreme haste with which he had dashed out of that room.
The guard who'd fired the stink- gun had promptly collapsed upon it,
hiding it with his body, but there might have been time to roll the
fellow out of the way and snatch it up. And by the door had been two
rifles either of which he could have grabbed and taken with him. He
awarded himself the Idiot's Medal for passing up these opportunities
despite the knowledge that at the time his only concern had been to
hold his breath long enough to reach uncontaminated air.
Yes, his sole
object had been to race clear of a paralysing nausea - but that
needn't have stopped him from swiping a gun if he'd been quicker on
the uptake. Perhaps there was a gun aboard the 'copter. Flying at two
thousand feet, he was trying to keep full attention six ways at once,
before, behind, to either side, above and below. He couldn't do that
and examine the machine's interior as well. The search would have to
wait until after he had landed.
By now he was
some distance over the forest in which he'd been wandering. It struck
him that when he'd been captured and taken away two helicopters had
remained parked in this area. Possibly they had since departed for an
unknown base. Or perhaps they were still there and about to rise in
response to a radioed alarm.
His
alertness increased, he kept throwing swift glances around in all
directions while the machine hummed onward. After twenty minutes a
tiny dot arose from the far horizon. At that distance it was
impossible to tell whether it was a 'copter, a jetplane, or what. His
motor chose this moment to splutter and squirt a thin stream of
smoke. The whirling vanes hesitated, resumed their steady whup-whup.
Leeming
sweated with anxiety and watched the faraway dot. Again the motor
lost rhythm and spurted more smoke. The dot grew a little larger but
was moving at an angle that showed it was not heading straight for
him. Probably it was the herald of an aerial hunt that would find him
in short time.
The motor now
became asthmatic, the vanes slowed, the 'copter lost height. Greasy
smoke shot from its casing in a series of forceful puffs, a fishy
smell came with them. If a bullet had broken an oil-line, thought
Leeming, he couldn't keep up much longer. It would be best to descend
while he still retained some control.
As the
machine lowered he swung its tail-fan in an effort to zigzag and find
a suitable clearing amid the mass of trees. Down he went to one
thousand feet, to five hundred, and nowhere could he see a gap. There
was nothing for it but to use a tree as a cushion and hope for the
best. Reversing the tail-fan to arrest his forward motion, he sank
into an enormous tree that looked capable of supporting a house.
Appearances proved deceptive for the huge branches were so brittle
and easily gave way under the weight imposed upon them. To the
accompaniment of repeated cracks the 'copter fell through the foliage
in a rapid series of halts and jolts that made its occupant feel as
though locked in a barrel that was bumping down a steep flight of
stairs.
The last drop
was the longest but ended in thick bushes and heavy undergrowth that
served to absorb the shock. Leeming crawled out with bruised
cheekbone and shaken frame. Blood slowly oozed from the ear lobe that
had been. grazed by a bullet. He gazed upward. There was now a wide
hole in the overhead vegetation but he doubted whether. it would be
noticed by any aerial observer unless flying very low.
The 'copter
lay tilted to one side, its bent and twisted vanes forced to a sharp
angle with the drive shaft, bits of twig and bark still clinging to
their edges. Hurriedly he searched the big six-seater cabin for
anything that might prove useful. Of weapons there were none. In the
toolbox he did find a twenty-inch spanner of metal resembling bronze
and this he confiscated thinking it better than nothing.
Under the two
seats at the rear he discovered neat compartments filled with alien
food. It was peculiar stuff and not particularly appetizing in
appearance but right now he was hungry enough to gnaw a long-dead
goat covered with flies. So he tried a circular sandwich made of what
looked and tasted like two flat disks of unleavened bread with a thin
layer of white grease between them. It went down, stayed down and
made him feel better. For all he knew the, grease might have been
derived from a pregnant lizard. He was long past caring. His belly
demanded more and he ate another two sandwiches.
There was
quite a stack of these sandwiches plus a goodly number of blue-green
cubes of what seemed to be some highly compressed vegetable. Also a
can of sawdust that smelled like chopped peanuts and tasted like a
weird mixture of minced beef and seaweed. And finally a plastic
bottle filled with mysterious white tablets.
Taking no
chances on the tablets, he slung them into the undergrowth but
retained the bottle which would serve for carrying water. The can
holding the dehydrated stuff was equally valuable; it was strong,
well-made and would do duty as a cooking utensil. He now had food and
a primitive weapon but lacked the means of transporting the lot.
There was far too much to go into his pockets.
While he
pondered this problem something howled across the sky about half a
mile to the east. The sound had only just died away in the distance
when something else whined on a parallel course half a mile to the
west. Evidently hunt was on.
Checking his
impulse to run to some place better hidden from above, he took a
saw-toothed instrument out of the tool-kit, used it to remove the
canvas covering from a seat. This formed an excellent bag, clumsy in
shape, without straps or handles, but of just the right size. Filling
it with his supplies, he made a last inspection of the wrecked
helicopter and noticed that its tiny altimeter dial was fronted with
a magnifying lens. The rim holding the lens was strong and stubborn,
he had to work carefully to extract the lens without breaking it.
Under the
engine-casing he found the reservoir of a windshield water-spray. It
took the form of a light metal bottle holding about one quart.
Detaching it, he emptied it, filled it with fuel from the 'copter's
tank. These final acquisitions gave him the means of making a quick
fire. Klavith could keep the automatic lighter and the pepper-pot and
burn down the barracks with them. He, Leeming, had got something
better. A lens does not exhaust itself or wear out. He was so
gratified with his loot he forgot that a lens was somewhat useless
night-times.
The unseen
jetplanes screamed back, still a mile apart and on parallel courses.
This showed that the hunt was being conducted systematically with
more machines probing the air in other directions. Having failed to
find the missing 'copter anywhere within the maximum distance it
could travel since it was stolen, they'd soon realise that it had
landed and start looking for it from lower altitude. That meant a
painstaking survey from little more than tree-top height.
Now that he
was all set to go he wasn't worried about how soon the searchers
spotted the tree-gap and the 'copter. In the time it would take them
to drop troops on the spot he could flee beyond sight or sound,
becoming lost within the maze of trees. The only thing that bothered
him was the possibility that they might have some species of trained
animal capable of tracking him wherever he went.
He didn't
relish the idea of a Zangastan land-octopus, or whatever it might be,
snuffling up to him in the middle night and embracing him with
rubbery tentacles while he was asleep. There were several people back
home for whom such a fate would be more suitable, professional
loud-shouters who'd be shut up for keeps. However, chances had to be
taken. Shouldering his canvas bag he left the scene.
By nightfall
he'd put about four miles between himself and the abandoned
helicopter. He could not have done more even if he'd wished; the
stars and three tiny moons did not provide enough light to permit
further progress. Aerial activity continued without abate during the
whole of this time but ceased when the sun went down.
The best
sanctuary he could find for the night was a depression between huge
tree-roots. With rocks and sods he built a screen at one end of it,
making it sufficiently high to conceal a fire from anyone stalking
him at ground level. That done, he gathered a good supply of dry
twigs, wood chips and leaves. With everything ready he suddenly
discovered himself lacking the means to start a blaze. The lens was
useless in the dark; it was strictly for daytime only, beneath an
unobscured sun.
This started
him on a long spell of inspired cussing after which he hunted around
until he found a stick with a sharply splintered point. This he
rubbed hard and vigorously in the crack of a dead log. Powdered wood
accumulated in the channel as he kept on rubbing with all his weight
behind the stick. It took twenty-seven minutes of continuous effort
before the wood-powder glowed and gave forth a thin wisp of smoke.
Quickly he stuck a splinter wetted with 'copter fuel into the middle
of the faint glow and at once it burst into flame. The sight made him
feel as triumphant as if he'd won the war single-handed.
Now he got
the fire going properly. The crackle and spit of it was a great
comfort in his loneliness. Emptying the beef seaweed compound onto a
glossy leaf half the size of a blanket, he three-quarters filled the
can with water, stood it on the fire. To the water he added a small
quantity of the stuff on the leaf, also a vegetable cube and hoped
that the result would be a hot and nourishing soup. While waiting for
this alien mixture to cook he gathered more fuel, stacked it nearby,
sat close to the flames and ate a grease sandwich.
After the
soup had simmered for some time he put it aside to cool sufficiently
to be sipped straight from the can. When eventually he tried it the
stuff tasted much better than expected, thick, heavy and now
containing a faint flavour of. mushrooms. He absorbed the lot, washed
the can in an adjacent stream, dried it by the fire and carefully
refilled it with the compound on the leaf. Choosing the biggest lumps
of wood from his supply, he arranged them on the flames to last as
long as possible, and lay down within warming distance.
It was his
intention to spend an hour or two considering his present situation
and working out his future plans. But the soothing heat and the
satisfying sensation of a full paunch lulled him to sleep within five
minutes. He sprawled in the jungle with the great tree towering
overhead, its roots rising. on either side, the fire glowing near his
feet while he emitted snores and enjoyed one of the longest, deepest
sleeps he had ever known.
The snooze
lasted ten hours so that when he awoke he was only partway through
the lengthy night. His eyes opened to see stars glimmering through
the tree-gaps and for a moody moment they seemed impossibly far away.
Rested but cold, he sat up and looked beyond his feet. Nothing could
be seen of the fire. it must have burned itself out. He wished most
heartily that he had awakened a couple of times and added more wood.
But he had slept solidly, almost as if drugged. Perhaps some portion
of that alien fodder was a drug in its effect upon the Terran
digestive system.
Edging toward
where the fire had been he felt around it. The ground was warm. His
exploring hand went farther, plunged into hot ash. Three or four
sparks gleamed fitfully and he burned a finger. Grabbing a twig he
dunked it in the fuel-bottle and then used it to stir the embers. It
flamed like a torch. Soon he had the fire going again and the
coldness crept away.
Chewing a
sandwich, he let his mind toy with current problems. The first
thought that struck him was that he'd missed another chance when
looting the helicopter. He had taken one seat-cover to function as a
bag; if he'd had the hoss-sense to rob all the other seats and cut
their covers wide open he'd have provided himself with bedclothes.
Night-times he was going to miss his blankets unless somehow he could
keep a fire going continuously. The seat-covers would have served to
keep him wrapped and warm.
Damning
himself for his stupidity he played with the idea of returning to the
'copter and making good the deficiency. Then he decided that the risk
was too great. He'd been caught once by his own insistence upon
returning to the scene of the crime and he'd be a prize fool to let
himself be trapped the same way again.
For the time
being he'd have to cope as best he could without blankets or anything
in lieu thereof. If he shivered it was nobody's fault but his own. A
wise; far-seeing Providence had created the dull-witted especially to
do all the suffering. It was right and proper that he should pay for
his blunders with his fair quota of discomfort.
Of course,
even the sharpest brain could find itself ensnared by sheer bad luck
or by misfortunes impossible to foresee. Chance operates for and
against the individual with complete haphazardness. All the same, the
bigger the blow the greater the need to use one's wits in countering
it. Obstacles were made to be surmounted and not to be wept over.
Employing his
wits to the best of his ability, he came to several conclusions.
firstly, that it was not enough merely to remain free, because he had
no desire to spend the rest of his natural life hiding upon an alien
world. Somehow he must get off the planet and metaphorically kiss it
goodbye forever.
5econdly,
that there was no way of leaving except by spaceship, no way of
returning to Earth except by spaceship. Therefore he must concentrate
upon the formidable task of stealing a suitable ship. Any ship would
not do. Making off with a war vessel or a cargo-boat or a passenger
liner was far beyond his ability since all needed a complete crew to
handle them. It would have to be a one-man or two-man scout boat,
fully fuelled and ready for long-range flight. Such ships existed in
large numbers. But finding one and getting away with it was something
else again.
Thirdly, even
if by a near-miracle he could seize a scout- boat and vanish into
space he'd have solved one major problem only to be faced by another
identically the same. The ship could not reach Rigel, much less
Earth, without at least one overhaul and refuelling on the way. No
Combine group could be expected to perform this service for him
unless he had the incredible luck to drop upon a species not in their
right minds. His only answer to this predicament would be to land
upon a planet with hiding-places, abandon his worn-out vessel and
steal another. If either of these two ships failed to come up to
scratch he might have to make yet another landing and grab a third
one.
It was a grim
prospect. The odds were of the order of a million to one against him.
All the same, there had been times when the millionth chance came off
and there should be times when it would do so again.
There was
another alternative that he dismissed as not worthy of consideration,
namely, to stay put in the hope that the war would end reasonably
soon and he'd be permitted to go home in peace. But the termination
of the conflict had no fixed date. For all he knew, it might end when
he was old and grey bearded or fifty years after he was dead. All
wars are the same in that there are times when they seem to have
settled down for everlasting and lack of strife becomes almost
unthinkable.
His
ponderings ceased abruptly when something let go a deep-bellied cough
and four green eyes stared at him out of the dark. Leaping to the
fire, he snatched a flaming branch and hurled it in that direction.
It described a blazing arc and fell into a bush.
The eyes
blinked out, blinked on, then disappeared. There came the scuffling,
slithering sounds of a cumbersome creature backing away fast.
Gradually the noise died out in the distance. Leeming found himself
unable to decide whether it had been one animal or two, whether it
walked or crawled, whether it was the Zangastan equivalent of a
prowling tiger or no more than a curious cow. At any rate, it had
gone.
Sitting by
the tree-trunk, he kept the fire going and maintained a wary watch
until the dawn.
With the
sunrise he breakfasted on a can of soup and a sandwich. Stamping out
the fire, he picked up his belongings and headed to the south. This
direction would take him farther from the centre of the search and,
to his inward regret, would also put mileage between him and the
concealed dump of real Terran food. On the other hand, a southward
trek would bring him nearer to the equatorial belt in which he had
seen three spaceports during his circumnavigation. Where there are
ports there are ships.
Dawn had not
lasted an hour before a jetplane shot over-head. A little later four
helicopters came, all going slow and skimming the trees. Leeming
squatted under a bush until they had passed, resumed his journey and
was nearly spotted by a buoyant fan following close behind the
'copters. He heard the whoosh of it in the nick of time, flung
himself flat beside a rotting log and did his best to look like a
shapeless patch of earth. The thing's downward air-blast sprayed
across his back as it floated above him. Nearby trees rustled their
branches, dead leaves fluttered to ground. It required all his
self-control to remain perfectly motionless while, a pair of
expressionless, snakelike eyes stared down.
The fan
drifted away; its pilot fooled. Leeming got to his feet, glanced at
his compass and pressed on. Energetically he cussed all fans, those
who made them and those who rode them. They were slow, had short
range and carried only one man. But they were dangerously silent. If
a fugitive became preoccupied with his own thoughts, ceasing to be on
the alert, he could amble along unaware of the presence of such a
machine until he felt its air-blast.
Judging by
this early activity the search was being pursued in manner sufficient
to show that some high-ranking brasshat had been infuriated by his
escape. It would not be Klavith, he thought. A major did not stand
high enough in the military caste system. Somebody bigger and more
influential had swung into action, Such a character would make an
example of the unfortunate Klavith and every guard in the barrack-
block. While warily he trudged onward he couldn't help wondering what
Klavith's fate had been; quite likely anything from being boiled in
oil to demotion to private, fourth class. On an alien world one
cannot define disciplinary measures in Terran terms.
But it was a
safe bet that if he, John Leeming, were to be caught again they'd
take lots better care of him - such as by binding him in
mummy-wrappings or amputating his feet or something equally
unpleasant. He'd had one chance of freedom and had grabbed it with
both hands; they wouldn't give him another opportunity. Among any
species the escaper is regarded as a determined troublemaker
deserving of special treatment.
All that day
he continued to plod southward. Half a dozen times he sought brief
shelter while air machines of one sort or another scouted overhead.
At dusk he was still within the forest and the aerial snooping
ceased. The night was a repetition of the previous one with the same
regrets over the loss of his blankets, the same difficulty in making
a fire. Sitting by the soothing blaze, his insides filled and his
legs enjoying. a welcome rest, he felt vaguely surprised that the foe
had not thought to maintain the search through the night. Although he
had shielded his fire from ground-level observation it could easily
be spotted by a night-flying plane; it was a complete giveaway that
he could not hope to extinguish before it was seen from above.
The next day
was uneventful. Aerial activity appeared to have ceased. At any rate,
no machines came his way. Perhaps for some reason known only to
themselves they were concentrating the search elsewhere. He made good
progress without interruption or molestation and, when the sun stood
highest, used the lens to create a smokeless fire and give himself
another meal. Again he ate well, since the insipid but satisfying
alien food was having no adverse effect upon his system. A check on
how much he had left showed that there was sufficient for another
five or six days.
In the
mid-afternoon of the second day afterward he reached the southern
limit of the forest and found himself facing a broad road. Beyond it
stretched cultivated flatlands containing several sprawling buildings
that he assumed to be farms. About four miles away there arose from
the plain a cluster of stone-built erections around which ran a high
wall. At that distance he could not determine whether the place was a
fortress, a prison, a hospital, a lunatic asylum, a factory protected
by a top security barrier, or something unthinkable that Zangastans
preferred to screen from public gaze. Whatever it was, it had a
menacing appearance. His intuition told him to keep his distance from
it.
Retreating a
couple of hundred yards into the forest, he found a heavily wooded
hollow, sat on a log and readjusted his plans. Faced with an open
plain that stretched as far as the eye could see, with habitations
scattered around and with towns and villages probably just over the
horizon, it was obvious that he could no longer make progress in
broad day-light. On a planet populated by broad, squat,
lizard-skinned people a lighter-built and pink-faced Terran would
stand out as conspicuously as a giant panda at a bishops' convention.
He'd be grabbed on sight, especially if the radio and video had
broadcast his description with the information that he was wanted.
The Combine
included about twenty species half of whom the majority of Zangastans
had never seen. But they had a rough idea of what their co-partners
looked like and they'd know a fugitive Terran when they found him.
His chance of kidding his captors that he was an unfamiliar ally was
mighty small; even if he could talk a bunch of peasants into
half-believing him they'd hold him pending a check by authority.
Up to this
moment he'd been bored by the forest with its long parade of trees,
its primitiveness, its silence, its lack of visible life. Now he
viewed it as a sanctuary about to withdraw its protection. Henceforth
he'd have to march by night and sleep by day providing that he could
find suitable hiding places in which to lie up. It was a grim
prospect.
But the issue
was clear-cut. If he wanted to reach a spaceport and steal a scout
boat he must press forward no matter what the terrain and regardless
of risks. Alternatively, he must play safe by remaining in the
forest, perpetually foraging for food around its outskirts, living
the life of a hermit until ready for burial.
The extended
day had several hours yet to go; he decided to have a meal and get
some sleep before the fall of darkness. Accordingly he started a
small fire with the lens, made himself a can of hot soup and had two
sandwiches: Then he curled himself up in a wad of huge leaves and
closed his eyes. The sun gave a pleasant warmth, sleep seemed to come
easy. He slipped into a quick doze. Half a dozen vehicles buzzed and
rattled along the nearby road. Brought wide awake, he cussed them
with fervour, shut his eyes and tried again. It wasn't long before
more passing traffic disturbed him.
This
continued until the stars came out and two of the five small moons
shed an eerie light over the landscape. He stood in the shadow of a
tree overlooking the road and waited for the natives to go to bed -
if they did go to bed rather than hang bat-like by their heels from
the rafters.
A few small
trucks went past during this time. They had orange-coloured
headlights and emitted puffs of white smoke or vapour. They sounded
somewhat like model locomotives. Leeming got the notion that each one
was steam-powered, probably with a flash-boiler fired with wood.
There was no way of checking on this.
Ordinarily he
wouldn't have cared a hoot how Zangastan trucks operated: Right now
it was a matter of some importance. The opportunity might come to
steal a vehicle and thus help himself on his way to wherever he was
going, but as a fully qualified space-pilot he had not the vaguest
idea of how to drive a steam engine. Indeed, if threatened with the
death of a thousand cuts he'd have been compelled to admit that he
could not ride a bike.
While mulling
his educational handicaps it occurred to him that he'd be dim-witted
to sneak furtively through the night hoping for a chance to swipe a
car or truck. The man of initiative makes his chances and does not
sit around praying for them to lie placed in his lap.
Upbraiding
himself, he sought around in the gloom until he found a nice, smooth,
fist-sized rock. Then he waited for a victim to come along. The first
vehicle to appear was travelling in the wrong direction, using the
farther side of the road. Most of an hour crawled by before two more
came together, also on the farther side, one close behind the other.
Across the
road were no trees, bushes or other means of concealment; he'd no
choice but to keep to his own side and wait in patience for his luck
to turn. After what seemed an interminable period a pair of orange
lamps gleamed in the distance, sped toward him. As the lights grew
larger and more brilliant he tensed in readiness.
At exactly
the right moment he sprang from beside the tree, hurled the rock and
leaped back into darkness. In his haste and excitement, he missed.
The rock shot within an inch of the windshield's rim and clattered on
the road. Having had no more than a brief glimpse of a vague,
gesticulating shadow, the driver continued blithely on, unaware that
he'd escaped a taste of thuggery.
Making a few
remarks more emphatic than cogent, Leeming recovered the rock and
resumed his vigil. The next truck showed up at the same time as
another one coming in the opposite direction: He shifted to behind
the tree- trunk. The two vehicles passed each other at a point almost
level with his hiding-place. Scowling after their diminishing beams
he took up position again.
Traffic had
thinned with the lateness of the hour and it was a good while before
more headlights came beaming in the dark and running on road's near
side: This time he reacted with greater care and took better aim. A
swift jump, he heaved the rock, jumped back.
The
result was the dull whup of a hole being bashed
through transparent plastic. A guttural voice shouted something about
a turkey-leg, this being an oath in local dialect. The truck rolled
another twenty yards, pulled up. A broad, squat figure scrambled out
of the cab and ran toward the rear in evident belief that he'd hit
something.
Leeming, who
had anticipated this move, met him with raised spanner. The driver
didn't even see him; he bolted round the truck's tail and the spanner
whanged on his pate and he went down without a sound. For a horrid
moment Leeming thought that he had killed the fellow. Not that one
Zangastan mattered more or less in the general scheme of things. But
he had his own peculiar status to consider. Even the Terrans showed
scant mercy to prisoners who killed while escaping.
However, the
victim emitted bubbling snorts like a hog in childbirth and had
plenty of life left in him. Dragging him onto the verge and under a
tree, Leeming searched him, found nothing worth taking. The wad of
paper money was devoid of value to a Terran who'd have no opportunity
to spend it.
Just then a
long, low tanker rumbled into view. Taking a tight grip on the
spanner, Leeming watched its approach and prepared to fight or run as
circumstances dictated. It went straight past, showing no interest in
the halted truck.
Climbing into
the cab, he had a look around, found that the truck was not
steam-powered as he had thought. The engine was still running but
there was no firebox or anything resembling one. The only clue to
power-source was a strong scent like that of alcohol mixed with a
highly aromatic oil.
Tentatively
he pressed a button and the headlights went out. He pressed it again
and they came on. The next button produced a shrill, catlike yowl out
front. The third had no effect whatever, he assumed that it
controlled the self starter. After some fiddling around he found that
the solitary pedal was the footbrake and that a lever on the
steering-wheel caused the machine to move forward or back at speed
proportionate to the degree of its shift. There was no sign of an
ignition-switch, gear-change lever, headlight dipper or parking
brake. The whole lay-out was a curious mixture of the ultra-modern
and the antiquated.
Satisfied
that he could drive it, he advanced the lever. The truck rolled
forward, accelerated to a moderate pace and kept going at that. He
moved the lever farther and the speed increased. The, forest slid
past on his left; the flatlands on his right and the road was a
yellow ribbon streaming under the bonnet. Man, this was the life!
Relaxing in his seat and feeling pretty good, he broke into ribald
song.
The road
split. Without hesitation he choose the arm that tended southward. It
took him through a straggling village in which very few lights were
visible. Reaching the country beyond he got onto a road running in a
dead straight line across the plain. Now all five moons were in the
sky, the landscape looked ghostly and forbidding. Shoving the lever a
few more degrees, he raced onward.
After an
estimated eighty miles he by-passed a city, met desultory traffic on
the road but continued in peace and unchallenged; Next he drove past
a high stone wall surrounding a cluster of buildings resembling those
seen earlier. Peering upward as he swept by, he tried to see whether
there were any guards patrolling the wall-top but it was impossible
to tell without stopping the truck and getting out. That he did not
wish to do, preferring to travel as fast and as far as possible while
the going was good.
He'd been
driving non-stop at high speed for several hours when a fire-trail
bloomed in the sky and moved like a tiny crimson feather across the
stars. As he watched, the feather floated round in a deep curve, grew
bigger and brighter as it descended. A ship was coming in. Slightly
to his left and far over the horizon there must be a spaceport.
Maybe within
easy reach of him there was a scout-boat fully fuelled and just
begging to be taken up. He licked his lips at the thought of it.
With its
engine still running smoothly the truck passed through a limb to
another large forest. He made mental note of the place lest within
short time he should be compelled to abandon the vehicle and take to
his heels once more. After recent experiences he found himself
developing a strong affection for forests; on a hostile world they
were the only places offering anonymity and liberty.
Gradually the
road tended leftward, leading him nearer and nearer toward where the
hidden spaceport was presumed to be. The truck rushed through four
small villages in rapid succession, all dark, silent and in deep
slumber. Again the road split and this time he found himself in a
quandary. Which arm would take him to the place of ships?
Nearby stood
a signpost but its alien script meant nothing to him. Stopping the
truck, he got out and examined his choice of routes as best he could
in the poor light. The right arm seemed to be the mare heavily used
to judge by the condition of its surface. Picking the right side, he
drove ahead.
Time went on
so long without evidence of a spaceport that he was commencing to
think he'd made a mistake when a faint glow appeared low in the
forward sky. It came from somewhere behind a rise in the terrain,
strengthened as he neared. He tooled up the hill, came over the crest
and saw in a shallow valley a big array of floodlights illuminating
buildings, concrete emplacements, blastpits and four snouty ships
standing on their tail-fins.
SIX
He should
have felt overjoyed: Instead he became filled with a sense of
wariness and foreboding. A complete getaway just couldn't be as easy
as he'd planned: there had to be a snag somewhere.
Edging the
truck onto the verge, he braked and switched off his lights. Then he
surveyed the scene more carefully. From this distance the vessels
looked too big and fat to be scout-boats, too small and out-of-date
to be warships. It vas very likely that they were cargo-carriers,
probably of the trampship type.
Assuming that
they were in good condition and fully prepared for flight it was not
impossible for an experienced, determined pilot to take one up
single-handed. And if it was fitted with an autopilot he could keep
it going for days and weeks. Without such assistance he was liable to
drop dead through sheer exhaustion long before he was due to arrive
anywhere worth reaching. The same problem did not apply to a genuine
scout-boat because a one-man ship had to be filled with robotic aids.
He estimated that these small merchantmen normally carried a crew of
at least twelve apiece, perhaps as many as twenty.
Furthermore;
he had seen a vessel coming in to land-so at least one of these four
had not been serviced and was unfit for flight. There was no way of
telling which one was the latest arrival. But a ship in the hand is
worth ten someplace else. To one of his profession the sight of
waiting vessels was irresistible.
Reluctance to
part company with the truck until the last moment, plus his natural
audacity, make him decide that there was no point in trying to sneak
across the well lit spaceport and reach a ship on foot. He'd do
better to take the enemy by surprise, boldly drive into the place,
park alongside a vessel and scoot up its ladder before they had time
to collect their wits.
Once inside a
ship with the airlock closed he'd be comparatively safe. It would
take them far longer to get him out than it would to take him to
master the strange controls and make ready to boost. He'd have shut
himself inside a metal fortress and the first blast of its propulsors
would clear the area for a couple of hundred yards around. Their only
means of thwarting him would be to bring up heavy artillery and hole
or topple the ship. By the time they'd dragged big guns to the scene
he should be crossing the orbit of the nearest moon.
He consoled
himself with the thoughts as he chivvied the truck onto the road and
let it surge forward but all the time he knew deep within his mind
that this was to be a crazy gamble. There was a good chance that he'd
grab himself a cold-dead rocket short of fuel and incapable of taking
off. In that event all the irate Zangastans need do was sit around
until he'd surrendered or starved to death. That they'd be so slow to
react as to give him time to swap ships was a possibility almost
non-existent.
Thundering
dawn the valley road, the truck took a wide bend, raced for the
spaceport's main gates. These were partly closed, leaving a yard-wide
gap in the middle. An armed sentry stood at one side, behind him a
hut containing others of the guard.
As the truck
shot into view and roared toward him the sentry gaped at it in dumb
amazement, showed the typical reaction of one far from the area of
combat. Instead of pointing his automatic weapon in readiness to
challenge he jumped into the road and tugged frantically to open the
gates. The half at which he was pulling swung wide just in time for
the truck to bullet through with a few inches to spare on either
side. Now the sentry resented the driver's failure to say, "Good
morning!" or "Drop dead!" or anything equally
courteous. Brandishing his gun, he performed a clumsy war-dance and
screamed vitriolic remarks.
Concentrating
on his driving to the exclusion of all else, Leeming went full tilt
around the spaceport's concrete perimeter toward where the ships were
parked. A bunch of lizard-skinned characters strolling along his path
scattered and ran for their lives. Farther on a long, low motorised
trolley loaded with fuel cylinders slid out of a shed, stopped in the
middle of the road. Its driver threw himself off his seat and tried
to dig himself out of sight as the truck wildly swerved around him
and threatened to overturn.
Picking the
most distant ship as the one it would take the foe longest to reach,
Leeming braked by its tail-fins, jumped out of the cab, looked up. No
ladder. Sprinting around the base he found the ladder on the other
side, went up it like a frightened monkey.
It was like
climbing the side of a factory chimney. Halfway up he paused for
breath, looked around. Diminished by distance and depth, a hundred
figures were racing toward him. So also were four trucks and a thing
resembling an armoured car. He resumed his climb, going as fast as he
could but using great care because he was now so high that one slip
would be fatal.
Anxiety
increased as he neared the airlock at top. A few more seconds and
he'd be out of shooting range. But they'd know that too, and were
liable to start popping at him while yet there was time. As he tried
to make more speed his belly quirked at the thought of a last-moment
bullet ploughing through him. His hands grabbed half a dozen rungs in
quick succession, reached the airlock rim at which point he rammed
his head against an unexpected metal rod. Surprised, he raised his
gaze, found himself looking into the muzzle of a gun not as big as a
cannon.
"Shatsi!"
ordered the owner of the gun, making a downward motion with it.
"Amash!"
For a mad
moment Leeming thought of holding on with one hand while he snatched
his opponent's feet with the other. He raised himself in readiness to
grab. Either the fellow was impatient or read his intention because
he hammered Leeming's fingers with the gun-barrel.
"Amash!
Shatsi-amash!" Leeming went slowly and reluctantly down the
ladder. Black despair grew blacker with every step he descended. To
be caught at the start of a chase was one thing; to be grabbed near
the end of it, within reach of success, was something else. Hell's
bells, he'd almost got away with it and that's what made the
situation so bitter.
Hereafter
they'd fasten him up twice as tightly and keep a doubly close watch
upon him. Even if in spite of these precautions he broke free a
second time his chance of total escape would be too small to be worth
considering; with an armed guard aboard every ship he'd be sticking
his head in the trap whenever he shoved it into an airlock. By the
looks of it he was stuck with this stinking world until such time as
a Terran task-force captured it or the war ended, either of which
events might take place a couple of centuries hence.
Reaching the
bottom, he stepped onto concrete and turned around expecting to be
given a kick in the stomach or a bust on the nose. Instead he found
himself faced by a muttering but blank-faced group containing an
officer whose attitude suggested that he was more baffled than
enraged. Favouring Leeming with an unwinking stare, the officer let
go a stream of incomprehensib1e gabble that ended on a note of query.
Leeming spread his hands and shrugged.
The officer
tried again. Leeming responded with another shrug and did his best to
look contrite. Accepting this lack of understanding as something that
proved nothing one way or the other, the officer bawled at the crowd.
Four armed guards emerged from the mob, hustled the prisoner into the
armoured car, slammed and locked the door and took him away.
At the end of
the ride they shoved him into the back room of a rock house with two
guards as company, the other two outside the door. Sitting on a low,
hard chair, he sighed, gazed blankly at the wall for two hours. The
guards also squatted, watched him as expressionlessly as a pair of
snakes and said not a word.
At the end of
that time a trooper brought food and water. Leeming gulped it down in
silence, studied the wall for another two hours. Meanwhile his
thoughts milled around. It seemed pretty obvious, he decided, that
the local gang had not realised that they'd caught a Terran. All
their reactions showed that they were far from certain what they'd
got.
To a certain
extent this was excusable. On the Allied side of the battle was a
federation of thirteen lifeforms, four of them human and three more
very humanlike: The Combine consisted of an uneasy, precarious union
of at least twenty lifeforms three of which also were rather
humanlike. Pending getting the answers from higher authority this
particular bunch of quasi-reptilians couldn't tell enemy from ally.
All the same,
they were taking no chances and he could imagine what was going on
while they kept him sitting on his butt. The officer would grab the
telephone-or whatever they used in lieu-and call the nearest garrison
town. The highest ranker there would promptly transfer
responsibility, to military headquarters. There, Klavith's alarm
would have been filed and forgotten and a ten-star panjandrum would
pass the query to the main beam-station. An operator would transmit a
message asking the three human-like allies whether they had lost
track of a scout in this region.
When back
came a signal saying, "No!" the local gang would realise
that a rare bird had been caught deep within the spatial empire. They
wouldn't like it. Holding-troops far behind the lines share all the
glory and none of the grief and they're happy to let things stay that
way. A sudden intrusion of the enemy where he's no right to be is an
event disturbing to the even tenor of life and not to be greeted with
cries of martial joy. Besides, from their viewpoint where one can
sneak in an army can follow and it is disconcerting to be taken in
force from the rear.
Then when the
news got around Klavith would arrive at full gallop to remind
everyone that this was not the first time Leeming has been captured,
but the second. What would they do to him eventually? He was far from
sure to the job. It was most unlikely that they'd shoot him out of
hand. If sufficiently civilised they'd cross-examine him and then
imprison him for the duration. If uncivilised they'd dig up Klavith
or maybe, an ally able to talk Terran and milk the prisoner of every
item of information he possessed by methods ruthless and bloody.
Back toward
the dawn of history when conflict had been confined to one planet
there had existed a protective device known as the Geneva Convention.
It had organised neutral inspection of prison camps, brought
occasional letters from home, provided food parcels that had kept
alive many a captive who otherwise might have died.
There was
nothing like that today. A prisoner had only two forms of protection,
those being his own resources and the power of his side to retaliate
against the prisoners they'd got. And the latter was a threat more
potential than real. There cannot be retaliation without actual
knowledge of maltreatment.
The day
dragged on. The guards were changed twice. More food and water came.
Eventually the one window showed that darkness was approaching.
Eyeing the window furtively, Leeming decided that it would be
suicidal to take a running jump at it under two guns. It was small
and high, difficult to scramble through in a hurry. How he wished he
had his own stink-gun now!
A prisoner's
first duty is to escape. That means biding one's time with appalling
patience until occurs an opportunity that may be seized and exploited
to the utmost. He'd done it once and he must do it again. If no way
of total escape existed he'd have to invent one.
The prospect
before him was tough indeed; before long it was likely to become a
good deal tougher. If only he'd been able to talk the local language,
or any Combine language, he might have been able to convince even the
linguistic Klavith that black was white. Sheer impudence can pay
dividends. Maybe he could have landed his ship, persuaded them with
smooth words, unlimited self-assurance and just the right touch of
arrogance to repair and reline his propulsors and cheer him on his
way never suspecting that they had been talked into providing aid and
comfort for the enemy.
It was a
beautiful dream but an idle one. Lack of ability to communicate in
any Combine tongue had balled up such a scheme at the start. You
can't chivvy a sucker into donating his pants merely by making noises
at him. Some other chance must now be watched for and grabbed,
swiftly and with both hands-providing that they were fools, enough to
permit a chance.
Weighing up
his guards in the same way as he had estimated the officer, his
earlier captors and Klavith, he didn't think that this species was
numbered among the Combine's brightest brains. All the same they were
broad in the back, sour in the puss and plenty good enough to put
someone in the pokey and keep him there for a long, long time.
In fact they
were naturals as prison wardens.
He remained
in the house four days, eating and drinking at regular intervals,
sleeping halfway through the lengthy nights, cogitating for hours and
often glowering at his impassive guards. Mentally he concocted,
examined and rejected a thousand ways of regaining his liberty, most
of them spectacular, fantastic and impossible.
At one time
he went so far as to try to stare the guards into a hypnotic trance,
gazing intently at them until his own eyeballs felt locked for keeps.
It did not bother them in the least. They had the reptilian ability
to remain motion-less and outstare him until kingdom come.
Mid-morning
of the fourth day the officer strutted in, yelled, "Amash!
Amash!" and gestured toward the door. His tone and manner were
decidedly unfriendly. Evidently someone had identified the prisoner
as an Allied space-louse.
Getting off
his seat Leeming walked out, two guards ahead, two behind, the
officer in the rear. A box-bodied car sheathed in steel waited on the
road. They urged him into it, locked it. A pair of guards stood on
the rear platform hard against the doors and clung to handrails. A
third joined the driver at the front. The journey took thirteen hours
the whole of which the inmate spent jouncing around in complete
darkness.
By the time
the car halted Leeming had invented one new and exceedingly repulsive
word. He used it immediately the rear doors opened.
"Quilpole-enk?"
he growled. "Enk?"
"Amash!"
bawled the guard, unappreciative of alien contributions to the
vocabulary of invective. He gave the other a powerful shove.
With poor
grace Leeming amashed. He glimpsed great walls rearing against the
night and a zone of brilliant light high up before he was pushed
through a metal portal and into a large room. Here a reception
committee of six thug-like samples awaited him. One of the six signed
a paper presented by the escort. The guards withdrew, the door
closed, the six eyed the arrival with complete lack of amiability.
One of them
said something in an authoritative voice and made motions indicative
of undressing.
Leeming
called him a smelly quilpole conceived in an alien marsh.
It did him no
good. The six grabbed him, stripped him naked, searched every vestige
of his clothing, paying special attention to seams and linings. They
displayed the expert technique of ones who'd done this job countless
times already, knew exactly where to look and what to look for. None
showed the slightest interest in his alien physique despite that he
was posing fully revealed in the raw.
Everything he
possessed was put on one side and his clothes shied back at him. He
dressed himself while they pawed through the loot and gabbled
together. Satisfied that the captive now owned nothing more than was
necessary to hide his shame, they led him through the farther door,
up a flight of thick stone stairs, along a stone corridor and into a
cell. The door slammed with a sound like that of the crack of doom.
In the dark
of night eight small stars and one tiny moon shone through a heavily
barred opening high up in one wall. Along the bottom of the gap shone
a faint yellow glow from some outside illumination.
Fumbling
around in the gloom he found a wooden bench against one wall. It
moved when he lugged it. Dragging it beneath the opening he stood
upon it but found himself a couple of feet too low to get a view
outside. Though heavy, he struggled with it until he had it propped
at an angle against the wall, then he crawled carefully up it and had
a look between the bars.
Forty feet
below lay a bare stone-floored space fifty yards wide and extending
to the limited distance he could see rightward and leftward. Beyond
the space a smooth-surfaced stone wall rising to his own level. The
top of the wall angled at about sixty degrees to form a sharp apex,
ten inches above which ran a single line of taut wire, without barbs.
From
unseeable sources to right and left poured powerful beams of light
that flooded the entire area between cell-block and outer wall as
well as a similarly wide space beyond the wall. There was no sign of
life. There was only the wall, the flares of light, the overhanging
night and the distant stars.
"So I'm
in the jug," he said. "That's torn it!"
He jumped to
the invisible floor and the slight thrust made the bench fall with a
resounding crash. It sounded as if he had produced a rocket and let
himself be whisked through the roof. Feet raced along the outside
passage, light poured through a suddenly opened spyhole in the heavy
metal door. An eye appeared in the hole.
"Sach
invigia, faplap!" shouted the guard.
Leeming
called him a flatfooted, duck-assed quilpole and added six more
words, older, timeworn but still potent. He lay on the hard bench and
tried to sleep.
An hour later
he kicked hell out of the door and when the spyhole opened he said,
"Faplap yourself!"
After that he
did sleep.
Breakfast
consisted of one lukewarm bowl of stewed grain resembling millet and
a mug of water. Both were served with disdain and eaten with disgust.
It wasn't as good as the alien muck on which he had lived in the
forest. But of course he hadn't been on convict's rations then; he'd
been eating the meals of some unlucky helicopter crew.
Sometime
later a thin-lipped specimen arrived in company with two guards. With
a long series of complicated gestures this character explained that
the prisoner was to learn a civilized language and, what was more,
would learn it fast- by order. Education would commence forthwith.
Puzzled by
the necessity; Leeming asked, "What about Major Klavith?"
"Snapnose?"
"Why
can't Klavith do the talking? Has he been struck dumb or something?"
A light
dawned upon the other. Making stabbing motions with his forefinger;
he said, "Klavith-fat, fat, fat!"
"Huh?"
"Klavith-fat,
fat, fat!" He tapped his chest several times, pretended to
crumple to the floor and succeeded in conveying that Klavith had
expired with official assistance.
"Holy
cow!" said Leeming.
In
businesslike manner the tutor produced a stack of juvenile picture
books and started the imparting process while the guards lounged
against the wall and looked bored. Leeming co-operated as one does
with the enemy, namely, by misunderstanding everything,
mispronouncing everything and overlooking nothing that would prove
him a linguistic moron.
The lesson
ended at noon and was celebrated by the arrival of another bowl of
gruel containing a hunk of stringy, rubbery substance resembling the
hind end of a rat. He drank the gruel, sucked the portion of animal,
shoved the bowl aside.
Then he
pondered the significance of their decision to teach him how to talk.
In bumping off the unfortunate Klavith they had become the victims of
their own ruthlessness. They'd deprived themselves of the world's
only speaker of Cosmoglotta. Probably they had a few others who could
speak it stationed on allied worlds but it would take time and
trouble to bring one of those back here. Someone had blundered by
ordering Klavith's execution; he was going to cover up the mistake by
teaching the prisoner to squeal.
Evidently
they'd got nothing resembling Earth's electronic brain-pryers and
could extract information only by question-and-answer methods aided
by unknown forms of persuasion. They wanted to know things and
intended to learn them if possible. The slower he was to gain fluency
the longer it would be before they put him on the rack, if that was
their intention.
His
speculations ended when the guards opened the door and ordered him
out. Leading him along the corridor, down the stairs, they released
him into a great yard filled with figures mooching aimlessly around
under a bright sun. He halted in surprise.
Rigellians!
About two thousand of them. These were allies, fighting friends of
Terra. He looked them over with mounting excitement, seeking a few
more familiar shapes amid the mob. Perhaps an Earthman or two. Or
even a few humanlike Centaurians.
But there
were none. Only rubber-limbed, pop-eyed Rigellians shuffling around
in the dreary manner of those confronted with many wasted years and
no conceivable future.
Even as he
gazed at them. he sensed something peculiar. They could see him as
clearly as he could see them and, being the only Earthman, he was a
legitimate object of attention, a friend from another star. They
should have been crowding up to him, full of talk, seeking the latest
news of the war, asking questions and offering information.
It wasn't
like that at all. They took no notice of him, behaved as if the
arrival of a Terran were of no consequence whatever. Slowly and
deliberately he walked across the yard, inviting some sort of
fraternal reaction. They got out of his way. A few eyed him
furtively, the majority pretended to be unaware of his existence.
Nobody offered a word of comfort. Obviously they were giving him the
conspicuous brush-off.
He trapped a
small group of them in a corner of the yard and demanded with
ill-concealed irritation, "Any of you speak Terran?"
They looked
at the sky, the wall, the ground, or at each other and remained
silent.
"Anyone
know Centaurian?"
No answer.
"Well,
how about Cosmoglotta?"
No reply.
Riled, he
walked away and tried another bunch. No luck. Within an hour he had
fired questions at two or three hundred without getting a single
response. It puzzled him completely. Their manner was not
contemptuous or hostile but something else. He tried to analyse it,
came to the conclusion that for an unknown reason they were wary;
they were afraid to speak to him.
Sitting on a
stone step he watched them until a shrill whistle signalled that
exercise-time was over. The Rigellians formed up in long lines in
readiness to march back to their quarters. Leeming's guards gave him
a kick in the pants and chivvied him to his cell.
Temporarily
he dismissed the problem of unsociable allies. After dark was the
time for thinking because then there was nothing else to do. He
wanted to spend the remaining hours of daylight in studying the
picture books and getting well ahead with the local lingo while
appearing to lay far behind. Fluency might prove an advantage
someday. Too bad that he had never learned Rigellian, for instance.
So he applied
himself fully to the task until print and pictures ceased to be
visible. He ate his evening portion of mush after which he lay on the
bench, closed his eyes, set his mind to work.
In all of his
hectic life he'd met no more than about twenty Rigellians. Never once
had he visited their three closely bunched solar systens. What little
he knew of them was hearsay evidence. It was said that their standard
of intelligence was good, they were technologically efficient, they
had been consistently friendly toward men of Earth since first
contact nearly a thousand years ago. Fifty per cent of them spoke
Cosmoglotta, about one per cent knew the Terran tongue.
Therefore if
the average held up several hundreds of those met in the yard should
have been able to converse with him in one language or another. Why
had they steered clear of him and maintained silence? And, why had
they been mighty unanimous about it?
Determined to
solve this puzzle he invented, examined and discarded a dozen
theories, all with sufficient flaws to strain the credulity. It was
about two hours before he hit upon the obvious solution.
These
Rigellians were prisoners deprived of liberty for an unknown number
of years to come. Some of them must have seen an Earthman at one time
or another. But all of them knew that in the Combine's ranks were a
few species superficially humanlike. They couldn't swear to it that a
Terran really was a Terran and they were taking no chances on him
being a spy, an ear of the enemy planted among them to listen for
plots.
That in turn
meant something else when a big mob of prisoners become excessively
suspicious of a possible traitor in their midst it's because they
have something to hide. Yes that was it! He slapped his knee in
delight. The Rigellians had an escape scheme in process of hatching
and meanwhile were taking no chances.
They had been
here plenty long enough to become at least bored, at most desperate,
and seek the means to make a break. Having found a way out, or being
in process of making one, they were refusing to take the risk of
letting the plot be messed up by a stranger of doubtful origin. Now
his problem was that of how to overcome their suspicions, gain their
confidence and get himself included in whatever was afoot. To this he
gave considerable thought.
Next day, at
the end of exercise-time, a guard swung a heavy leg and administered
the usual kick Leeming promptly hauled off and punched him clean on
the snout. Four guards jumped in and gave the culprit a thorough
going over. They did it good and proper, with zest and effectiveness
that no onlooking Rigellian could possibly mistake for a piece of
dramatic play-acting. It was an object lesson and intended as such.
The limp body was taken out of the yard and lugged upstairs, its face
a mess of blood.
SEVEN
It was a week
before Leeming was fit enough to reappear in the yard. The price of
confidence had proved rough, tough and heavy and his features were
still an ugly sight. He strolled through the crowd, ignored as
before, chose a soft spot in the sun and sat.
Soon
afterward a prisoner sprawled tiredly on the ground a couple of yards
away, watched distant guards and spoke in little more than a whisper.
"Where
d'you come from?"
"Terra."
"How'd
you get here?"
Leeming told
him briefly.
"How's
the war going?"
"We're
pushing them back slowly but surely. But it'll take a long time to
finish the job."
"How
long do you suppose?"
"I don't
know. It's anyone's guess." Leeming eyed him curiously. "What
brought your bunch here?"
"We're
not combatants but civilian colonists. Our government placed advance
parties, all male, on four new planets that were ours by right of
discovery. Twelve thousand of us altogether." The Rigellian
paused while he looked carefully around, noted the positions of
various guards. "The Combine descended on us in force. That was
two years ago. It was easy. We weren't prepared for trouble, weren't
adequately armed, didn't even know that a war was on."
"They
grabbed your four planets?"
"You bet
they did. And laughed in our faces."
Leeming
nodded understanding, Cynical and ruthless claim-jumping had been the
original cause of the fracas now extended across a great slice of the
galaxy. On one planet a colony had put up an heroic resistance and
died to the last man. The sacrifice had fired a blaze of fury, the
Allies had struck back and were still striking good and hard.
"Twelve
thousands, you said. Where are the others?"
"Scattered
around in prisons like this one. You certainly picked a choice dump
on which to sit out the war. The Combine had made this its chief
penal planet. It's far from the fighting front, unlikely ewer to be
discovered. The local lifeform isn't much good for space-battles but
plenty good enough to hold what its allies have captured. They're
throwing up big jails all over the world. If the war goes on long
enough this cosmic dump will become solid with prisoners."
"So your
crowd has been here about two years?"
"Sure
have and it seems more like ten."
"And
done nothing about it?"
"Nothing
much," agreed the Rigellian. "Just enough to get forty of
us shot for trying."
"Sorry,"
said Leeming sincerely.
"Don't
let it bother you. I know exactly how you feel. The first few weeks
are the worst. The idea of being pinned down for keeps can drive you
crazy unless you learn to be philosophical about it." He mused
awhile, indicated a heavily. built guard patrolling by the farther
wall. "A few days ago that lying swine boasted that already
there are two hundred thousand Allied prisoners on this planet and
added that by this time next year there would be two millions. I hope
he never lives to see it."
"I'm
getting out of here," said Leeming.
"How?"
"I don't
know yet. But I'm getting out. I'm not going to stay here and rot."
He waited in the hope of some comment about others feeling the same
way, perhaps evasive mention of a coming break, a hint that he might
be invited to join in.
Standing, up,
the Rigellian murmured, "Well, I wish you luck. You'll need all
you can get."
He ambled
away, having betrayed nothing. A whistle blew, the guards shouted;
"Merse, faplaps! Amash!" And that was that.
Over, the
next four weeks he had frequent conversations with the same Rigellian
and about twenty others, picking up odd items of information but
finding them peculiarly evasive whenever the subject of freedom came
up. They were friendly, in fact cordial, but remained determinedly
tightmouthed.
One day he
was having a surreptitious chat and asked, "Why does everyone
insist on talking to me secretively and in whispers? The guards don't
seem to care how much you gab to one another."
"You
haven't yet been cross-examined. If in the mean-time they notice that
we've had plenty to say to you they will try to force out of you
everything we've said - with, particular reference to ideas on
escape."
Leeming
immediately pounced upon the lovely word. "Ah escape, that's all
there is to live for right now. If anyone is thinking of making a bid
maybe I can he1p them and they can help me. I'm a competent
space-pilot and fact is worth something."
The other
cooled at once. "Nothing doing."
"Why
not?"
"We've
been behind walls a long time and have been taught many things that
you've yet to learn."
"Such
as?"
"We've
discovered at bitter cost that escape attempts fail when too many
know what is going on. Some planted spy betrays us. Or some selfish
fool messes things up by pushing in at the wrong moment."
"I am
neither a spy nor a fool. I'm certainly not enough of an imbecile to
spoil my own chance of breaking free."
"That
may be," the Rigellian conceded. "But imprisonment creates
its own special conventions. One firm rule we have established here
is that an escape-plot is the exclusive property of those who
concocted it and only they can make the attempt by that method.
Nobody else is told about it. Nobody else knows until the resulting
hullabaloo starts going. Secrecy is a protective screen that would-be
escapers must maintain at all costs. They'll give nobody a momentary
peek through it, not even a Terran and not even a qualified
space-pilot."
"So I'm
strictly on my own?"
"Afraid
so: You're on your own in any case. We sleep in dormitories, fifty to
a room. You're in a cell all by yourself. You're in no position to
help with anything."
"I can
damned well help myself," Leeming retorted angrily.
And it was
his turn to walk away.
He'd been in
the pokey just thirteen weeks when the tutor handed him a
metaphorical firecracker. Finishing a session distinguished only by
Leeming's dopiness and slowness to learn, the tutor scowled at him
and gave forth to some point "You are pleased to wear the cloak
of idiocy. But am I an idiot too? I do not think so! I am not
deceived-you are far more fluent than you pretend. In seven days'
time I shall report to the Commandant that you are ready for
examination."
"How's
that again?" asked Leeming, putting on a baffled frown.
"You
will be questioned by the Commandant seven days hence."
"I have
already been questioned by Major Klavith."
"That
was verbal, Klavith is dead and we have no record of what you told
him."
Slam went the
door. Came the gruel and a jaundiced lump of something unchewable.
The local catering department seemed to be obsessed by the edibility
of a rat's buttocks. Exercise-time followed.
"I've
been told they're going to put me through the mill a week from now."
"Don't
let that scare you," advised the Rigellian. "They would as
soon kill you as spit in the sink. But one thing keeps them in
check."
"What's
that?"
"The
Allies are holding a stack of prisoners too."
"Yes,
but what they don't know they can't grieve over." "There'll
be more grief for the entire Zangastan species if the victor finds
himself expected to exchange very live prisoners for very dead
corpses."
"You've
made a point there," agreed Leeming. "Maybe it would help
if I had nine feet of rape to dangle suggestively in front of the
Commandant."
"It
would help if I had a very large bottle of vitx
and a shapely female to stroke my hair," sighed the Rigellian,
"If you
can feel that way after two years of semi-starvation what are you
like on a full diet?"
"It's
all in the mind," the Rigellian said. "I like to think of
what might have been."
The whistle
again. More intensive study while daylight lasted. Another bowl of
ersatz porridge. Darkness and a few small stars peeping through the
barred slot high up. Time seemed to be standing still, as it does
with a high wall around it.
He lay on the
bench and produced thoughts like bubbles from a fountain. No place,
positively no place is absolutely impregnable. Given brawn and
brains, time and patience, there's always a way in or out. Escapees
shot down as they bolted had chosen the wrong time and wrong place,
or the right time but the wrong place, or the right place but the
wrong time. Or they had neglected brawn in favour of brains, a common
fault of the overcautious. Or they'd neglected brains in favour of,
brawn, a fault of the reckless.
With eyes
closed he carefully reviewed the situation. He was in a cell with
rock walls of granite hardness at least four feet thick. The only
openings were a narrow gap blocked by five massive steel bars, also
an armour-plated door in constant view of patrolling guards.
On his person
he had no hack-saw, no lock-pin, no implement of any sort, nothing
but the bedraggled clothes in which he reposed. If he pulled the
bench to pieces and somehow succeeded in doing it unheard he'd
acquire several large lumps of wood, a dozen six-inch nails and a
couple of steel bolts. None of that junk would serve to open the door
or cut the window-bars. And there was no other material available.
Outside
stretched a brilliantly illuminated gap fifty yards wide that must be
crossed to gain freedom. Then a smooth stone wall forty feet high,
devoid of handholds. Atop the wall an apex much too sharp to give
grip to the feet while stepping over an alarm-wire that would set the
sirens going if either touched or cut.
The great
wall completely encircled the entire prison. It was octagonal in
shape and topped at each angle by a watch-tower containing guards,
floodlights and guns. To get out, the wall would have to be
surmounted right under the noses of itchy-fingered watchers, in
bright light, without touching the wire. That wouldn't be the end of
it either; beyond the wall was another illuminated area also to be
crossed. An unlucky last-lapper could get over the wall by some kind
of miracle only to be shot to bloody shreds during his subsequent
dash for darkness.
Yes, the
whole set-up had the professional touch of those who knew what to do
to keep prisoners in prison. Escape over the wall was well nigh
impossible though not completely so. If somebody got out of his cell
or dormitory armed with a rope and grapnel, and if he had a daring
confederate who'd break into the power-room and switch off everything
at exactly the right moment, he might make it. Up the wall and over
the dead, unresponsive, alarm-wire in total darkness.
In a solitary
cell there is no rope, no grapnel, nothing capable of being adapted
as either. There is no desperate and trustworthy confederate. Even if
these things had been available he'd have considered such a project
as near suicidal.
If he
pondered once the most remote possibilities and took stock of the
minimum resources needed, he pondered them a hundred times. By long
after midnight he'd been beating his brains sufficiently hard to make
them come up with anything, including ideas that were slightly mad.
For example:
he could pull a plastic button from his jacket, swallow it and hope
that the result would get him a transfer to hospital. True, the
hospital was within the prison's confines but it might offer better
opportunity to escape. Then he thought a second time, decided that an
intestinal blockage would not guarantee his removal elsewhere. They
might do no more than force a powerful purgative down his neck and
thus add to his present discomforts.
As dawn broke
he arrived at a final conclusion. Thirty, forty or fifty Rigellians
working in a patient, determined group might tunnel under the wall
and both illuminated areas and get away. But he had one resource and
one only. That was guile. There was nothing else he could employ. He
let a loud groan and complained to himself, "So I'll have to use
both my heads!"
This
inane remark percolated through the innermost recesses of his mind
and began to ferment like yeast. After a while he sat up startled,
gazed at what he could see of the brightening sky and said in a tone
approaching a yelp, "Yes, sure, that's it - both
heads!"
Stewing the
idea over and over again, Leeming decided by exercise-time that it
was essential to have a gadget. A crucifix or a crystal ball provides
psychological advantages too good to miss. His gadget could be of any
shape, size or design, made of any material so long as it was visibly
and undeniably a contraption. Moreover, its potency would be greater
if not made from items obtainable within his cell such as parts of
his clothing or pieces of the bench. Preferably it should be
constructed of stuff from somewhere else and should convey the
irresistible suggestion of a strange, unknown technology.
He doubted
whether the Rigellians could help. Twelve hours per day they slaved
in the prison's workshops, a fate that he would share after he'd been
questioned and his aptitudes defined. The Rigellians made military
pants and jackets, harness and boots, a small range of light
engineering and electrical components. They detested producing for
the enemy but their choice was a simple one: work or starve.
According to
what he'd been told they hadn't the remotest chance of smuggling out
of the workshops anything really useful such as a knife, chisel,
hammer or hacksaw blade. At the end of, each work period the slaves
were paraded and none allowed to break ranks until every machine had
been checked, every loose tool accounted for and locked away.
The first
fifteen minutes of the mid-day break he spent searching the yard for
any loose item that might somehow be turned to advantage. He wandered
around with his gaze fixed on the ground like a worried kid seeking a
lost coin. The only things he found were a couple of pieces of wood
four inches square by one inch thick and these he slipped into his
pocket without having the vaguest nation of what he intended to do
with them.
Finishing the
hunt, he squatted by the wall, had a whispered chat with a couple of
Rigellians. His mind wasn't on the conversation and the pair mooched
off when a curious guard came near. Later another Rigellian edged up
to him.
"Earthman,
are you still going to get out of here?"
"You bet
I am."
The other
chuckled and scratched an ear, an action that his species used to
express polite scepticism. "I think we've a better chance than
you're ever likely to get."
Leeming shot
him a sharp glance. "Why?"
"There
are more of us and we're together," evaded the Rigellian as
though realising that he'd been on the point of saying too much.
"What can one do on one's own?"
"Bust
out and run like blazes first chance," said Leeming. Just then
he noticed the ring on the other's ear-scratching finger and became
fascinated with it. He'd seen the modest ornament before. A number of
Rigellians were wearing similar objects. So were some of the guards.
These rings were neat affairs consisting of four or five turns of
thin wire with the ends shaped and soldered to form the owner's
initials.
"Where'd
you dig up the jewellery?" he asked.
"Where
did I get what?"
"The
ring."
"Oh,
that." Lowering his hand, the Rigellian studied the ring with
satisfaction. "We make them ourselves in the workshops. It
breaks the monotony."
"Mean to
say the guards don't stop you?"
“They
don't interfere. There's no harm in it. Besides, we've made quite a
few for the guards themselves. We've made them some automatic
lighters as well and could have turned out a lot for ourselves if
we'd had any use for them." He paused, looked thoughtful and
added, "We think the guards have been selling rings and lighters
outside. At least, we hope so."
"Why?"
"Maybe
they'll build up a nice, steady trade. Then when they are comfortably
settled in it we'll cut supplies and demand a rake-off in the form of
extra rations and a few unofficial privileges."
"That's
a smart idea," approved Leeming. "It would help all
concerned to have a high-pressure salesman pushing the goods in the
big towns. How about putting me down for that job?"
Giving a
faint smile, the Rigellian continued, "Handmade junk doesn't
matter. But let the guards find that one small screwdriver is missing
and there's hell to pay. Everyone is stripped naked on the spot and
the culprit suffers."
"They
wouldn’t care about losing a small coil of that wire, would
they?"
"I doubt
it. There's plenty of it, they don't bother to check the stock. What
can anyone do with a piece of wire?"
"Heaven
alone knows," Leeming admitted: "But I want some all the
same."
"You'll
never pick a lock with it in a million moons," warned the other.
"It's too soft and thin."
"I want
enough to make a set of Zulu bangles. I sort of fancy myself in Zulu
bangles."
"And
what are those?"
"Never
mind. Get me some of that wire-that's all I ask.
“You
can steal it yourself in the near future. After you've been
questioned they'll send you to the workshops."
"I want
it before then. I want it just as soon as I can get it. The more the
better and the sooner the better."
Going silent,
the Rigellian thought it over, finally said, "If you've a plan
in your mind keep it to yourself. Don't let slip a hint of it to
anyone. Open your mouth once too often and somebody will beat you to
it."
"Thanks
for the good advice, friend," said Leeming. "Now how about
a supply of wire?"
"See you
this time tomorrow."
With that,
the Rigellian left him, wandered into the crowd.
At the
appointed hour the other was there, passed him the loot. "Nobody
gave this to you, see? You found it lying in the yard. Or you found
it hidden in your cell. Or you conjured it out of thin air. But
nobody gave it to you."
"Don't
worry. I won't involve you in any way. And thanks a million."
The wire was
a thick, pocket-sized coil of tinned copper. When unrolled in the
darkness of his cell it measured a little more than his own length,
or about seven feet.
Leeming
doubled it, waggled it to and fro until it broke, hid one half under
the bottom of the bench. Then he spent a couple of hours worrying a
nail out of the bench's end. It was hard going and it played hob with
his fingers but he persisted until the nail was free.
Finding one
of the small squares of wood, he approximated its centre, stamped the
nail-point into it with the heel of his boot. Footsteps sounded along
the corridor, he shoved the stuff out of sight beneath the bench, lay
dawn just in time before the spyhole opened. The light flashed on, a
cold reptilian eye looked in, somebody grunted. The light cut off,
the spyhole shut.
Resuming his
task, Leeming twisted the nail one way and then the other, stamping
on it with his boot from time to time. The task was tedious but at
least it gave him something to do. He persevered until he had drilled
a neat hole two-thirds of the way through the wood.
Next, he took
his half-length of wire, broke it into two unequal parts, shaped the
shorter piece to form a neat loop with two legs each three or four
inches long. He tried to make the loop as near to a perfect circle as
possible. The larger piece he wound tightly around the loop so that
it formed a close-fitting coil with legs matching the others.
Propping his
bench against the wall, he climbed it to the window and examined his
handiwork in the glow from outside floodlights, made a few minor
adjustments and felt satisfied. He replaced the bench and used the
nail to make on its edge two small nicks representing the exact
diameter of the loop. Lastly he counted the number of turns to the
coil. There were twenty-seven.
It was
important to remember these details because in all likelihood he
would have to make a second gadget as nearly identical as possible.
That very similarity would help to bother the enemy. When a plotter
makes two mysterious objects to all intents and purposes the same it
is hard to resist the notion that he knows what he is doing and has a
sinister purpose.
To complete
his preparations he coaxed the nail back into the place where it
belonged. Sometime he'd need it again as a valuable tool. They'd
never find it and deprive him of it because, to the searcher's mind,
anything visibly not disturbed is not suspect.
Carefully he
forced the four legs of the coiled loop into the hole that he'd
drilled, thus making the square of wood function as a supporting
base. He now had a gadget, a thingumbob, a means to an end. He was
the original inventor and sole proprietor of the Leeming-Finagle
something-or-other.
Certain
chemical reactions take place only in the presence of a catalyst,
like marriages legalised by the presence of an official. Some
equations can be solved only by the inclusion of an unknown quantity
called X. If you haven't enough to obtain a desired result you've got
to add what's needed. If you require outside help that doesn't exist
you must invent it.
Whenever Man
had found himself unable to master his environment with his bare
hands, thought Leeming, the said environment had be coerced or
bullied into submission by Man plus X. That had been so since the
beginning of time: Man plus a tool or a weapon.
But X did not
have to be anything concrete or solid, it did not have to be lethal
or even visible. It could be as intangible and unprovable as the
threat of hellfire or the promise of heaven. It could be a dream, an
illusion, a whacking great thundering lie-just anything.
There was
only one positive test: whether it worked.
If it did, it
was efficient.
Now to see.
There was no
sense in using the Terran language except perhaps as an incantation
when one was necessary. Nobody here understood Terran, to them it was
just an alien gabble. Besides, his delaying tactic of pretending to
be slow to learn the local tongue was no longer effective. They knew
that he could speak it almost as well as they could themselves.
Holding the
loop assembly in his left hand he went to the door, applied his ear
to the closed spyhole, listened for the sound of patrolling feet. It
was twenty minutes before heavy boots came clumping towards him.
"Are you
there?" he called, not too loudly but enough to be heard. "Are
you there?"
Backing off
fast, he lay on his belly on the floor and stood the loop six inches
in front of his face. "Are you there?"
The spyhole
clicked open, the light came on, a sour eye looked through.
Completely
ignoring the watcher and behaving with the air of one far too
absorbed in his task to notice that he was being observed, Leeming
spoke through the coiled loop.
"Are you
there?"
"What
are you doing?" demanded the guard.
Recognising
the other's voice, Leeming decided that for once luck must be turning
his way. This character, a chump named Marsin, knew enough to point a
gun and fire it, or, if unable to do so, yell for help. In all other
matters he was not of the elite. In fact Marsin would have to think
twice to pass muster as a half-wit.
"What
are you doing?" insisted Marsin, raising his voice.
"Calling,"
said Leeming, apparently just waking up to the other's existence.
"Calling?
Calling what or where?"
"Mind
your own quilpole business," Leeming ordered, giving a nice
display of impatience. Concentrating attention upon the loop, he
turned it round a couple of degrees. "Are you there?"
"It is
forbidden," insisted Marsin.
"Letting
go the loud sigh of one compelled to bear fools gladly, Leeming said,
"What is forbidden?"
"To
call."
"Don't
display your ignorance. My species is always allowed to call. Where
would we be if we couldn't, enk?"
That got
Marsin badly tangled. He knew nothing about Earthmen or what peculiar
privileges they considered essential to life, Neither could he give a
guess as to where they'd be without them.
Moreover, he
dared not enter the cell and put a stop to whatever was going on. An
armed guard was strictly prohibited from going into a cell by himself
and that rule had been rigid ever since a fed-up Rigellian had
slugged one, snatched his gun and killed six people while trying to
make a break.
If he wanted
to interfere he'd have to go and see the sergeant of the guard and
demand that something be done to stop pink-skinned aliens making
noises through loops. The sergeant was an unlovely character with a
tendency to shout the most intimate details of personal histories all
over the landscape. It was the witching hour between midnight and
dawn, a time when the sergeant's liver malfunctioned most audibly.
And lastly he, Marsin, had proved himself a misbegotten faplap far
too often.
"You
will cease calling and go to sleep," ordered Marsin with a touch
of desperation, "or in the morning I shall re-port your
insubordination to the officer of the day."
"Go ride
a camel," Leeming invited. He rotated the loop in manner of one
making careful adjustment. "Are you there?"
"I have
warned you," Marsin persisted, his only visible eye popping at
the loop.
"Fibble
off!" roared Leeming. Marsin shut the spyhole and fibbled off.
As was
inevitable after being up most of the night, Leeming overslept. His
awakening was abrupt and rude. The door burst open with a loud crash;
three guards plunged in followed by an officer.
Without
ceremony the prisoner was jerked off the bench, stripped and shoved
into the corridor stark naked. The guards then searched through the
clothing while the officer minced around watching them. He was,
decided Leeming, definitely a fairy.
Finding
nothing in the clothes they started examining the cell. Right off one
of them discovered the loop-assembly and gave it to the officer who
held it gingerly as if it were a bouquet suspected of being a bomb.
Another guard
trod on the second piece of wood, kicked it aside and ignored it.
They tapped the floor and walls, seeking hollow sounds. Dragging the
bench away from the wall, they looked over the other side of it but
failed to turn it upside-down and see anything underneath. However,
they handled the bench so much that it got an Leeming's nerves and he
decided that now was the time to take a walk. He started along the
corridor, a picture of nonchalant nudity.
The officer
let go a howl of outrage and pointed. The guards erupted from the
cell, bawled orders to halt. A fourth guard, attracted by the noise,
came sound the bend of the corridor, aimed his gun threateningly.
Leeming turned around and ambled back.
He
stopped as he reached the officer who was now outside the cell and
fuming with temper. Striking a modest pose, he said, "Look-September
Morn."
It meant
nothing to the other who flourished the loop, did a little dance of
rage and yelled, "What is this thing?"
"My
property," declared Leeming with naked dignity.
"You are
not entitled to possess it. As a prisoner of war you are not allowed
to have anything."
"Who
says so?"
"I say
so " informed the fairy somewhat violently.
"Who're
you?" asked Leeming, showing no more than academic interest.
"By the
Great Blue Sun, I'll show you who I am! Guards, take him inside and
-"
"You're
not the boss;" interrupted Leeming, impressively cocksure. "The
Commandant is the boss here. I say so and he says so. If you want to
dispute it, let's go ask him."
The guards
hesitated, assumed expressions of chronic uncertainty. They were
unanimous in passing the buck to the officer. That worthy was taken
aback. Staring incredulously at the prisoner, he became wary.
Are you
asserting that the Commandant has given permission for you to have
this object?"
"I'm
telling you that he hasn't refused permission. Also that it is, not
for you to give or refuse it. You roll in your own hog-pen and don't
try usurp the position of your betters."
"Hog-pen?
What is that?"
"You
wouldn't know."
"I shall
consult the Commandant about this." Deflated and unsure of
himself, the officer turned to the guards.
"Put him
back in his cell and give him his breakfast as usual.
"How
about returning my property, enk?" Leeming
prompted.
"Not
until I have seen the Commandant."
They hustled
him into the cell. He got dressed. Breakfast came, the inevitable
bowl of slop. He cussed the guards for not making it bacon and eggs.
That was deliberate and of malice aforethought. A display of self
assurance and some aggressiveness was necessary to push the game
along.
For some
reason the tutor did not appear so he spent the morning furbishing
his fluency with the aid of the books. At mid-day they let him into
the yard and he could detect no evidence of a special watch being
kept upon him while he mingled with the crowd.
The Rigellian
whispered, "I got the opportunity to take another coil of wire.
So I grabbed it in case you wanted more." He slipped it across,
saw it vanish into a pocket "That's all I intend to steal. Don't
ask me again. One can't tempt fate too often."
"What's
the matter? Is it getting risky? Are they suspicious of you?"
"Everything
is all right so far." He glanced cautiously; around. "If
some of the other prisoners learn that I'm pinching wire they'll
start taking it too. They'll snatch it in the hope of discovering
what I intend to do with it, that they can use it for the same
purpose. Two years in prison is two years of education in unmitigated
selfishness. Everybody is always on the watch for some advantage,
real or imaginary, that he can grab off somebody else. This lousy
life brings out the worst in us as well as the best."
"A
couple of small coils will never be missed," the other went on.
"But once the rush starts the stuff will evaporate in wholesale
quantities. And that's when all hell will break loose. I daren't take
the chance of creating a general ruckus."
"Meaning
you fellows can't afford to risk a detailed search right now?"
suggested Leeming pointedly.
The Rigellian
shied like a frightened horse. "I didn't say that."
"I can
put two and two together as expertly as anyone else." Leeming
favoured him with a reassuring wink. "I can also keep my mouth
shut."
He watched
the other mooch away. Then he sought around the yard for more pieces
of wood but failed to find any. Oh, well, no matter. At a pinch he
could do without. Come to that, he'd darned well have to do without.
The afternoon
was given over to linguistic studies on which he was able to
concentrate without interruption. That was one advantage of being in
the clink, perhaps the only one. A fellow could educate himself. When
the light became too poor and the first pale stars showed through the
barred opening in the wall he kicked the door until the sound of it
thundered all over the block.
EIGHT
Feet came
running and the spyhole opened. It was Marsin again.
"So it's
you, faplap," greeted Leeming. He let go a snort of contempt.
"You had to blab, of course. You had to curry favour by
reporting me to the officer." He drew himself up to full height.
"Well, I am sorry for you. I'd fifty times rather be me than
you."
"Sorry
for me?" Marsin registered confusion. "Why?"
"Because
you are going to suffer."
"I am?"
"Yes,
you! Not immediately, if that is any consolation. First of all it is
necessary for you to undergo the normal period of horrid
anticipation. But eventually you are going to suffer. I don't expect
you to believe me. All you need do is wait and see."
"It was
my duty," explained Marsin semi-apologetically.
"That
fact will be considered in mitigation," Leeming assured, "and
your agonies will be modified in due proportion."
"I don't
understand," complained Marsin, developing a node of worry
somewhere within the solid bone.
"You
will-some dire day. So also will those stinking faplaps who beat me
up in the yard. You can inform them from me that their quota of pain
is being arranged."
"I am
not supposed to talk to you," said Marsin, dimly perceiving that
the longer he stood by the spyhole the bigger the fix he got into. "I
shall have to go."
"All
right. But I want something."
"What is
it?"
"I want
my bopamagilvie-that thing the officer took away."
"You
cannot have it unless the Commandant gives permission. He is absent
today and will not return before tomorrow morning."
"That's
no use. I want it now."
"You
cannot have it now."
"Forget
it " Leeming gave an airy wave of his hand. "I'II create
another one."
"It is
forbidden," reminded Marsin very feebly.
"Ha-ha!"
said Leeming.
After
darkness had grown complete he got the wire from under the bench and
manufactured a second whatzit to all intents identical with the first
one. Twice he was interrupted but not caught.
That job
finished, he upended the bench and climbed it. Taking the newly
received coil of wire from his pocket, he tied one end tightly around
the middle bar and hung the coil outside the window-gap. With spit
and dust he camouflaged the bright tin surface of the one visible
strand, made sure that it could not be seen at farther than nose-tip
distance. He slid down, replaced the bench. The window-gap was so
high in the wall that all of its ledge and the bottom three inches of
its bars were invisible from below. Going to the door he listened and
at the right time called, "Are you there?"
When the
light came on and the spyhole had opened he got the instinctive
feeling that a bunch of them were clustered outside the door, also
that the eye in the hole was not Marsin's.
Ignoring
everything else, he rotated the loop slowly and carefully, meanwhile
calling, "Are you there? Are you there?" After traversing
about forty degrees he paused, gave his voice a tone of intense
satisfaction and exclaimed, "So you are there at last! Why don't
you keep within easy reach so that we can talk without me having to
summon you through a loop?"
Going silent,
he put on the expression of one who listens intently. The eye in the
spyhole widened, got shoved away, was replaced by another.
"Well,"
said Leeming, settling himself down for a cosy gossip, "I'll
point them out to you the first chance I get and leave you to deal
with them as you think fit. Let's switch to our own language. There
are too many big ears around for my liking." Taking a deep
breath, he rattled off at tremendous speed and without pause, "Out
sprang the web and opened wide the mirror cracked from side to side
the curse has come upon me cried the Lady of-"
Out sprang
the door and opened wide and two guards almost fell headlong into the
cell in their eagerness to make a quick snatch. Two more posed
outside with the fairy glowering between them. Marsin mooned
fearfully in the background.
A guard
grabbed the loop-assembly, yelled, "I've got it!" and
rushed out. His companion followed at full gallop. Both seemed
hysterical with excitement. There was a pause of ten seconds before
the door shut. Leeming exploited the fact. Pointing two fingers of
one hand at the group, he made horizontal stabbing motions toward
them. Giving 'em Devil's Horns they'd called it when he was a kid.
The classic gesture of donating the evil eye.
"There
you are," he declaimed dramatically; talking to something that
nobody else could see. "Those are the scaly-skinned bums I've
been telling you about. They want trouble. They like it, they love
it, they dote on it. Give them all they can take."
The whole
bunch managed to look alarmed before the door cut them from sight
with a vicious slam. Listening at the spyhole he heard them tramp
away muttering steadily between themselves.
Within ten
minutes he had broken a length off the coil hanging from the
window-bars, restored the spit and dust disguise of the holding
strand. Half an hour later he had another neatly made bopamagilvie.
Practice was making him expert in the swift and accurate manufacture
of these things. Lacking wood for a base he used the loose nail to
dig a hole in the dirt between the big stone slabs composing the
floor of his cell. He rammed the legs of the loop into the hole,
twisted the contraption this way and that to make ceremonial rotation
easy. Then he booted the door something cruel.
When the
right moment arrived he lay on his belly and commenced reciting
through the loop the third paragraph of Rule 27, Section 9,
Subsection B, of Space Regulations. He chose it because it was a gem
of bureaucratic phraseology, a single sentence one thousand words
long meaning something known only to God.
"Where
refuelling must be carried out as an emergency measure at a station
not officially listed as a home-station or definable for special
purposes as a home-station under Section A(5) amendment A(5)B the
said station shall be treated as if it were definable as a
home-station under Section A(5) amendment A(5)B providing that the
emergency falls within the authorised list of technical necessities
as given in Section J(29-33) with addenda subsequent thereto as
applicable to home-stations where such are-"
The spyhole
flipped open and shut. Somebody scooted away at top speed. A minute
afterward the corridor shook to what sounded like a massed cavalry
charge. The spyhole again opened and shut. The door crashed inward.
This time
they reduced him to his bare pelt, searched his clothes, raked the
cell from end to end. Their manner was that of those singularly
lacking in brotherly love. Turning the bench upside-down, they tapped
it, knocked it, kicked it; did everything but run a large magnifying
glass over it.
Watching this
operation, Leeming encouraged them by emitting a sinister snigger.
There had been a time when he could not have produced a sinister
snigger even to win a very large bet. But he could do it now. The
ways in which a man can rise to the occasion are without limit.
Giving him a
look of sudden death and total destruction, a guard went out,
staggered back with a heavy ladder mounted it and suspiciously
surveyed the window-gap. As an intelligent examination it was a dead
loss because. his mind was concerned only with the solidity of the
bars. He grasped each bar with both hands and shook vigorously. Hi
fingers did not touch the thread of wire nor did his eyes detect it.
Satisfied, he got down and tottered out with the ladder.
The others
departed. Leeming dressed himself, listened at the spyhole. Just a
very faint hiss of breath and an occasional rustle of clothes nearby.
He sat on the bench and waited. In short time the lights blazed on
and the spyhole popped open.
Stabbing two
fingers toward the hole, he declaimed, "Die, faplap!"
The hole
snapped shut. Feet moved away, stamping much too loudly. He waited.
After half an hour of complete silence the eye offered itself again
and for its pains received another two-fingered curse. Five minutes
later it had yet another bestowed upon it. If it was the same eye all
the time it was a glutton for punishment.
This game
continued at erratic intervals for four hours before the eye had had
enough. Leeming immediately made another coiled-loop, gabbled through
it at the top of his voice and precipitated another raid. They did
not strip him and search the cell this time. They contented
themselves with confiscating the gadget. And they showed symptoms of
aggravation.
There was
just enough wire life for one more blood-pressure booster. He decided
to keep it against a future need and get some sleep. Inadequate food
and not enough slumber were combining to make inroads upon his
physical reserves: Flopping full length on the bench, he sighed and
closed red-rimmed eyes. In due time he started snoring fit to saw
through the bars. That caused a panic in the passage and brought the
gang along in another rush.
Wakened by
the uproar, he damned them to perdition. Then he lay down again. He
was plain bone-tuckered - but so were they.
He slept
solidly until mid-day without a break except for the usual lousy
breakfast. Then came the usual lousy dinner. At exercise time they
kept him locked in. He hammered and kicked on the door, demanded to
know why he wasn't being allowed to walk in the yard, shouted threats
of glandular dissection for all and sundry. They took no notice.
So he sat on
the bench and thought things over. Perhaps this denial of his only
measure of freedom was a form of retaliation for making them hop
around like agitated fleas in the middle of the night. Or perhaps the
Rigellian was under suspicion and they'd decided to prevent contact.
Anyway, he
had got the enemy bothered. He was messing them about single-handed,
far behind the lines. That was something. The fact that a combatant
is a prisoner doesn't mean he's out of the battle. Even behind thick
walls, he can still harass the foe, absorbing his time and energy,
undermining his morale, pinning down at least a few of his forces.
The next
step, he concluded, was to widen and strengthen the curse. He must do
it as comprehensively as possible. The more he spread it and the more
ambiguous the terms in which he expressed it the more plausibly he
could grab the credit for any and every misfortune that was certain
to occur sooner or later.
It was the
technique of the gypsy's warning. People tend to attach specific
meanings to ambiguities when circumstances arise and shape themselves
to give especial meanings. People don't have to be very credulous,
either. It is sufficient for them to be made expectant, with a
tendency to wonder -- after the event.
"In the
near future a tall, dark man will cross your path." After which
any male above average height, and not a blond, fits the picture. And
any time from five minutes to five years is accepted as the near
future.
"Mamma,
when the insurance man called he really smiled at me. Do
you remember what the gypsy said?"
To accomplish
anything worth-while one must adapt to one's own environment. If the
said environment is radically different from everyone else's the
method of accommodating to it must be equally different. So far as he
knew, he, Leeming, was the only Terran in this prison and the only
prisoner held in solitary confinement. Therefore his tactics could
have nothing in common with any schemes the Rigellians had in mind.
The
Rigellians were up to something, no doubt of that They wouldn't be
wary and secretive about nothing. It was almost a dead-sure bet that
they were digging a tunnel. Probably a bunch of them were deep in the
earth right now, scraping and scratching without tools. Removing dirt
and rock a few pounds at a time. Progress at the rate of a pathetic
two or three inches per night. A constant, never-ending risk of
discovery, entrapment and perhaps some insane shooting: A yearlong
project that could be terminated in minutes with a shout and a
chatter of automatic guns.
But to get
out of a strong stone cell in a strong stone jail one doesn't have to
make a desperate and spectacular escape. If sufficiently patient,
resourceful, glib and cunning one can talk the foe into opening the
doors and pushing one out.
Yes, you can
use the wits that God has given you.
By the law of
probability various things must happen within and without the prison,
not all of them pleasing to the enemy. Some officer must get the
galloping gripes right under his body-belt. Or a guard must fall down
a watch- tower ladder and break a leg. Somebody must lose a wad of
money or his pants or his senses. Farther afield a bridge must
collapse, or a train get derailed, or a spaceship crash at take-off.
Or there'd be an explosion in a munitions factory. Or a military
leader would drop dead.
He'd be
playing a trump card if he could establish his claim as the author of
most of this trouble. The essential thing was to stake it in such a
way that they could not effectively combat it, neither could they
exact retribution in a torture-chamber.
The ideal
strategy was to convince the enemy of his malevolence in a way that
would equally convince them of their own impotence. If he succeeded -
and it was a big if - they would come to the logical conclusion that
the only method of getting rid of constant trouble would be to get
rid of Leeming, alive and in one piece. If - and it was a big if - he
could link cause and effect irrevocably together they'd have to
remove the cause in order to dispose of the effect.
The question
of exactly how to achieve this fantastic result was a jumbo problem
that would have appalled him back home. In fact he'd have declared it
impossible despite that the basic lesson of space-conquest is that
nothing is impossible. But by now he'd had three lonely months in
which to incubate a solution - and the brain becomes wonderfully
stimulated by grim necessity. It was a good thing that he had an idea
in mind; he had a mere ten minutes before the time came to apply it.
The door
opened, a trio of guards scowled at him and one of them rasped, "The
Commandant wishes to see you at once. Amash, faplap!"
Leeming
walked out saying, "Once and for all, I am not a faplap, see?"
The guard
booted him in the buttocks.
The
Commandant lolled behind a desk with a lower ranking officer seated
on either side. He was a heavily built specimen. His lidless,
horn-covered eyes gave him a frigid, unemotional appearance as he
studied the prisoner.
Leeming
calmly sat himself on a handy chair and the officer on the right
immediately bellowed, "Stand to attention in the presence of the
Commandant!"
Making a
gesture of contradiction, the Commandant said boredly, "Let him
sit."
A concession
at the start, thought Leeming. Curiously he eyed a wad of papers on
the desk. Probably a complete report of his misdeeds, he guessed.
Time would show. Anyway, he had one or two weapons with which to
counter theirs. It would be a pity, for instance, if he couldn't
exploit their ignorance. The Allies knew nothing about the
Zangastans. By the same token the Zangastans knew little or nothing
about several Allied species, Terrans included. In coping with him
they were coping with an unknown quantity.
And from now
on it was a quantity doubled by the addition of X. "I am given
to understand that you now speak our language," began the
Commandant.
"not
much used denying it," Leeming confessed.
"Very
well: You will give us information concerning yourself."
"I have
given it already: I gave it to Major Klavith."
"That is
no concern of mine. You will answer any questions and your answers
had better be truthful." Positioning an official form upon his
desk, he held his pen in readiness. "Name of planet of origin"
"Earth."
The other
wrote it phonetically in his own script, then continued, "Name
of race?"
"Terran."
"Name of
species?"
"Homo
nosipaca;" said Leeming, keeping his face straight. Writing
it down, the Commandant looked doubtful, asked, "What does that
mean?"
"Space-traversing
Man," Leeming informed. "H'm!" The other was impressed
despite himself. "Your personal name?"
"John
Leeming."
"John
Leeming," repeated the Commandant, putting it down.
"And
Eustace Phenackertiban." added Leeming airily.
That was
written down also, though the Commandant had some difficulty in
finding suitable hooks and curlicues to express Phenackertiban. Twice
he asked Leeming to repeat the alien cognomen and that worthy
obliged.
Studying the
result, which resembled a Chinese recipe for rotten egg gumbo, the
Commandant said, "Is it your custom to have two sets of names?"
"Most
certainly," Leeming assured. "We can't avoid it seeing that
there are two of us."
Twitching the
eyebrows he didn't possess, the listener showed mild surprise. "You
mean that you are always conceived and born in pairs? Two identical
males or females every time?" "No, no, not at all."
Leeming adopted the air of one about to state the obvious. "Whenever
one of us is born he immediately acquires a Eustace."
"A
Eustace?"
"Yes."
The
Commandant frowned, picked his teeth, glanced at the other officers.
If he was seeking inspiration he was out of luck; they put on the
blank expressions of fellows who'd came along merely to keep company.
"What,"
asked the Commandant at long last, "is a Eustace?"
Gaping at him
in open incredulity, Leeming said, "You don't know?"
"I am
putting the questions. You will provide the answers. What is a
Eustace?" Leeming informed, "An invisibility that is part
of one's self."
Understanding
dawned on the Commandant's scaly face. "Ah, you mean a soul? You
give your soul a separate name?"
"Nothing
of the sort. I have a soul of my own and Eustace has a soul of his
own." He added as an afterthought, "At least, I hope we
have."
The
Commandant lay back in his chair and stared at him. There was quite a
long silence during which the side officers continued to play
dummies.
Finally the
Commandant admitted, "I do not understand."
"In that
case," announced Leeming, irritatingly triumph-ant, "it is
evident that you have no alien equivalent of Eustaces yourselves.
You're all on your own. Just single-lifers. That's your hard luck."
Slamming a
hand on the desk the Commandant gave his voice a bit more military
whoof and demanded, "Exactly what is a Eustace? Explain to me as
clearly as possible."
"I'm in
poor position to refuse the information," Leeming conceded with
hypocritical reluctance. "Not that it matters much. Even if you
gain perfect understanding there is nothing you can do about it."
"That
remains to be seen," opined the Commandant, looking bellicose.
"Cease evading the issue and tell me all that you know about
these Eustaces."
"Every
Earthling lives a double life from birth to death," said
Leeming. "He exists in close mental association with an entity
that always calls himself Eustace something-or-other. Mine happens to
be Eustace Phenackertiban."
"You can
actually see this entity?"
"No,
never at any time. I cannot see him, smell him or feel him."
"Then
how do you know that this is not a racial delusion?"
"Firstly,
because every Terran can hear his own Eustace. I can hold long
conversations with mine, providing that he happens to be within
reach, and I can hear him speaking clearly and logically within the
depths of my mind."
"You
cannot hear him with the ears?"
"No,
only with the mind. The communication is telepathic or to be more
accurate, quasi-telepathic."
"I
can believe that," informed the Commandant with considerable
sarcasm. "You have been heard talking out loud, shouting at the
top of your voice. Some telepathy, enk?"
"When I
have to boost my thoughts to get range I can do it better by
expressing them in words. People do the same when they sort out a
problem by talking to them-selves. Haven't you ever talked to
yourself?"
"That is
no business of yours. What other proof have you that Eustace is not
imaginary?"
Taking a deep
breath, Leeming went determinedly on. "He has the power to do
many things after which there is visible evidence that those things
have been done." He shifted attention to the absorbed officer
sitting on the left. "For example, if my Eustace had a grudge
against this officer and advised me of his intention to make him fall
downstairs, and if before long the officer fell downstairs and broke
his neck-"
"It
could be mere coincidence," the Commandant scoffed.
"It
could," agreed Leeming. "But there can be far too many
coincidences. If a Eustace promises that he is going to do forty or
fifty things in succession and all of them happen he is either doing
them as promised or he is a most astounding prophet. Eustaces don't
claim to be prophets. Nobody visible or invisible can foresee the
future with such detailed accuracy."
"That is
true enough."
"Do you
accept the fact that you have a father and mother?"
"Of
course," admitted the Commandant.
"You
don't consider it strange or abnormal?"
"Certainly
not. It is inconceivable that one should be born without parents."
"Similarly
we accept the fact that we have Eustaces and we cannot conceive the
possibility of existing without them."
The
Commandant thought it over, said to the right-hand officer, "This
smacks of mutual parasitism. It would be interesting to learn what
benefit they derive from each other?"
"It's no
use asking what my Eustace gets out of me," Leeming chipped in,
"I can't tell you because I don't know."
"You
expect me to believe that?" asked the Commandant, behaving like
nobody's fool. He showed his teeth. "On your own evidence you
can talk with him. Why have you never asked him?"
"We
Terrans got tired of asking that question long, long ago. The subject
had been dropped and the situation accepted."
"Why?"
"The
answer is always the same. Eustaces readily admit that we are
essential to their existence but can not explain how because they've
no way of making us understand."
"That
could be an excuse, a self-preservative evasion," the Commandant
offered, "They won't tell you because they don't want you to
know."
"Well,
what do you suggest we do about it?"
Dodging that
one, the Commandant went on, "What benefit do, you get out of
the association. What good is your Eustace to you?" "He
provides company, comfort, information, advice and -"
"And
what?"
Bending
forward, hands on knees, Leeming practically spat it at him. "If
necessary, vengeance!"
That struck
home good and hard. The Commandant rocked back, displaying a mixture
of ire and scepticism. The two under-officers registered disciplined
apprehension. It's a hell of a war when one can be chopped down by a
ghost.
Pulling
himself together, the Commandant forced a grim smile as he pointed
out, "You're a prisoner. You've been under detention a good many
days. Your Eustace doesn't seem to have done much about it."
"Not
yet," agreed Leeming happily.
"What
d'you mean, not yet?"
"As one
free to roam at will on an enemy world he has enough top priority
jobs to keep him busy for a piece. He's been doing plenty and he'll
do plenty more, in his own time and his own way."
"Is that
so? And what does he intend to do?" "Wait and see,"
Leeming advised with formidable confidence.
That did not
fill them with delight.
"Nobody
can imprison more than half a Terran," he went on. "The
solid, visible, tangible half. The other half cannot be pinned down
by any method whatsoever. It is beyond anyone's control. It wanders
loose collecting information of military value, indulging a little
sabotage doing just as it pleases. You've created that situation and
you're stuck with it."
"We
created it? We didn't invite you to come here. You dumped yourself on
us unasked."
"I had
no choice about it because I had to make an emergency landing. This
could have been a friendly world. It isn't. Who's to blame for that?
If you insist on fighting with the Combine against the Allies you
must accept the consequences - including whatever a Eustace sees fit
to do."
"Not if
we kill you," said the Commandant nastily. Leeming gave a
disdainful laugh. "That would make matters fifty times worse."
"In what
way?"
"The
life-span of a Eustace is longer than that of his Terran partner,
When a man dies his Eustace takes seven to ten years to disappear
from existence. We have an ancient song to the effect that old
Eustaces never die, they only fade away. Our world holds thousands of
lonely, disconnected Eustaces gradually fading."
"So-?"
"Kill me
and you'll isolate my Eustace here with no man or other Eustace for
company. His days will be numbered and he'll know it. He'll have
nothing to lose, being no longer restricted by considerations of my
safety. Because I've gone for keeps he'll be able to eliminate me
from his plans and give his undivided attention to anything he
chooses." He eyed the listeners as he finished, "It's a
safe bet that he'll run amok and create an orgy of destruction.
Remember, you're an alien lifeform to him. He’ll have no
feelings or compunctions with regard to you."
The
Commandant reflected in silence. It was exceedingly difficult to
believe all this and his prime instinct was to reject it lock, stock
and barrel. But before space-conquest it had been equally difficult
to believe things more fantastic but now accepted as commonplace. He
dared not dismiss it as nonsense; the time had long gone by when
anyone could afford to be dogmatic. The space adventurings of all the
Combine and the Allied species had scarcely scratched one galaxy of
an unimaginable number composing the universe; none could say what
incredible secrets were yet to be revealed including, perhaps; Such
etheric entities as Eustaces.
Yes, the
stupid believe things because they are credulous- of they are
credulous because stupid. The intelligent do not blindly accept but,
being aware of their own ignorance, neither do they reject. Right now
the Commandant was acutely aware, of general ignorance concerning the
lifeform known as Terrans: It could be that they were dual creations,
half-Joe; half-Eustace.
"All
this is not impossible," he decided ponderously; "but it
appears to me somewhat improbable. There are more than twenty
lifeforms associated with us in the Combine. I do not know of one
that exists in natural co-partnership with another."
"The
Lathians do," contradicted Leeming, mentioning the leaders of
the opposition, the chief cause of the war. The Commandant was
suitably startled. "You mean they have Eustaces too?"
"No, I
don't. They have something similar but inferior. Each Lathian is
unconsciously controlled by an entity that calls itself Willy
something=or-other. They don't know it, of course. We wouldn't know
it if our Eustaces hadn't told us."
"How did
they find out?"
"As you
know, the biggest battles to date have all been fought in the Lathian
sector. Both sides have taken prisoners: Our Eustaces told us that
each Lathian prisoner had a controlling Willy but was blissfully
unaware of it." He grinned, added, "They made it plain that
a Eustace doesn't think much of a Willy. Apparently a Willy is a
pretty low form of associated life."
Frowning, the
Commandant said, "This is something definite, something we
should be able to check for ourselves: But how are we going to do it
if the Lathians are ignorant of this state of affairs?"
"Easy as
pie," Leeming offered. "They are holding a bunch of Terran
prisoners. Get someone to ask those prisoners separately and
individually, whether the Lathians' have the Willies."
"We'll
do just that," snapped the Commandant, his manner that of one
about to call a bluff. He turned to the right- hand officer.
"Bajashim, beam a signal to our chief liaison officer at Lathian
H.Q. and order him to question those prisoners."
"You can
double-check while you're at it," interjected Leeming, "just
to clinch it. To us, anyone who shares his life with an invisible
being is known as a Nut Ask the prisoners whether all the Lathians
are Nuts."
"Take
note of that and have it asked as well," ordered the Commandant.
He returned attention to Leeming. "Since you could not
anticipate your forced landing and capture, and since you have been
kept in close confinement, there is no possibility of collusion
between you and the Terran prisoners far away."
"That's
right "
"Therefore
I shall weigh your evidence in the light of what replies come to my
signal." He stared hard at the other. "If those replies
fail to confirm your statements I'll know that you are a shameless
liar in some respects and probably a liar in all respects. Here, we
have special and very effective methods of dealing with liars."
"That's
to be expected. But if the replies do confirm me you'll know that
I've told the truth, won't you?"
"No,"
said the Commandant savagely.
It was
Leeming's turn to be shocked. "Why not?"
Thinning his
lips, the Commandant growled, "As I have remarked, there cannot
possibly have been any direct communication between you and other
Terran prisoners. However, that means nothing. There can have been
collusion between your Eustace and their Eustaces."
Bending
sideways, he jerked open a drawer, placed a loop-assembly on the
desk. Then another and another. A bunch of them.
"Well,"
he invited with malicious triumph, "what have you to say to
that?"
NINE
Leeming went
into something not far off a momentary panic. He could see what the
other meant. He could talk to his Eustace who in turn could talk to
other Eustaces. And the other Eustaces could talk to their imprisoned
partners.
Get yourself
out of that!
He had an
agile mind but after three months of semi-starvation it was tending
to lose pace. Lack of adequate nourishment was telling on him
already; his thoughts plodded at the very time he wanted them to
sprint.
The three
behind the desk were waiting for him, watching His face, counting the
seconds he needed to produce an answer. The longer he took to find
one the weaker it would be. The quicker he came up with something
good the more plausible it would sound. Cynical satisfaction was
creeping into their faces and he was inwardly frantic by the time he
saw an opening and grabbed at it.
"You're
wrong on two counts."
"State
them."
"Firstly,
one Eustace cannot communicate with another over a distance so
enormous. His mental output just won't reach that far. To talk from
world to world he has to have the help of a Terran who, in his turn,
has radio equipment available."
"We've
only your word for that," the Commandant reminded. "If a
Eustace can communicate without limit it would be your best policy to
conceal the fact. You would be a fool to admit it."
"I
cannot do more than give you, my word regardless of whether or not
you credit it."
"I do
not credit it-yet "
"No
Terran task force has rushed to my rescue, as would happen had my
Eustace told them about me."
"Pfah!"
said the Commandant. "It would take them much longer to get here
than the time you have spent as a prisoner. Probably twice as long:
And then only if by some miracle they managed to avoid being shot to
pieces on the way. The absence of a rescue party means nothing."
He waited for a response that did not come, finished, "if you
have anything else to say it had better be convincing."
"It is,"
assured Leeming. "And we don't have my word for it. We have
yours."
"Nonsense!
I have made no statements concerning Eustaces."
"On the
contrary, you have said that there could be collusion between them."
"What of
it?"
"There
can be collusion only if Eustaces really exist, in which case my
evidence is true. But if my evidence is false, then Eustaces do not
exist and there cannot possibly be a conspiracy between non-existent
things."
The
Commandant sat perfectly still while his face took on a faint shade
of purple. He looked and felt like a trapper trapped. The left-hand
officer wore an expression of one struggling hard to suppress a
disrespectful snicker.
"If,"
continued Leeming, piling it on for good measure; "you do not
believe in Eustaces then you cannot logically believe in conspiracy
between them. On the other hand, if you believe in the possibility of
collusion then you've got to believe in Eustaces. That is, of course,
if you're in bright green breeches and your right mind."
"~Guard
" roared the Commandant. He pointed an angry finger. "Take
him back to his cell." Obediently they started hustling the
prisoner through the door when he changed his mind and bawled,
"Halt!" Snatching up a loop-assembly, he waved it at
Leeming. "Where did you get the material with which to make
this?"
"My
Eustace brought it for me. Who else?"
"Get out
of my sight!"
"Merse,
faplap!" urged the guards, prodding, with their guns. "Amash!
Amash!"
The rest of
that day and all the next one he spent sitting or lying on the bench,
reviewing what had taken place, planning his next moves and in
lighter moments admiring his own ability as a whacking great liar.
Now and again
he wandered how his efforts to battle his way to freedom with his
tongue compared with Rigellian attempts to do it with bare hands. Who
was making the most progress? Of greater importance, who, once out,
would stay out? One thing was certain: his method was less tiring to
the underfed and weakened body though more exhausting to the nerves.
Another
advantage was that for the time being he had sidetracked their
intention of squeezing him for military information. Or had he?
Possibly from their viewpoint his revelations concerning the dual
nature of Terrans were infinitely more important than details of
armaments, which data might be false anyway. All the same, he had
avoided for a time what might otherwise have been a rough and painful
interrogation. By thus postponing the agony he had added brilliance
to the original gem of wisdom, namely, that baloney baffles brains.
Just for the
ducks of it he bided his time and, when the spyhole opened, let it
catch him in the middle of giving grateful thanks to Eustace for some
weird service not specified. As intended, this got the jumpy Marsin
to wondering who had arrived at the crossroads and copped some of
Eustace's dirty work. Doubtless the sergeant of the guard would
speculate about the same matter before long. And in due course so
would the officers.
Near
midnight, with sleep still evading him, it occurred to him that there
vas no point in doing things by halves. If a thing is worth doing it
is worth doing well-and that- applies to lying or to any form of
villainy as much as to anything else. Why rest content merely to
register a knowing smile whenever the enemy suffered a petty
misfortune?
His tactics
could be extended much farther than that. No form of life was secure
from the vagaries of chance. Good fortune came along as well as bad,
in any part of the cosmos. There was no reason why Eustace should not
snatch the credit for both. No reason why he, Leeming, should not
take unto himself the implied power to reward as well as to punish.
That wasn't
the limit, either. Good luck and bad luck are positive phases of
existence. He could cross the neutral zone and confiscate the
negative phases. Through Eustace he could assign to himself not only
the credit for things done, good or bad, but also for things not
done. In the pauses between staking claims to things that happened he
could exploit those that did not happen.
The itch to
make a start right now was irresistible. Rolling off the bench, he
belted the door from top to bottom. The guard had just been changed
for the eye that peered in was that of Kolum, a character who had
bestowed a kick in the rump not so long ago. Kolum was a cut above
Marsin, being able to count upon all twelve fingers if given
sufficient time to cogitate.
"So it
is you!" said Leeming, showing vast relief. "I am very glad
of that. I befriended you in the hope that he would lay off you; that
he would leave you alone for at least a little while. He is far too
impetuous and much too drastic. I can see that you are more
intelligent than the other guards and therefore able to change for
the better. Indeed, I have pointed out to him that you are obviously
too civilized to be a sergeant. He is difficult to convince but I am
doing my best for you."
"Huh?"
said Kolum, half flattered, half scared.
"So he's
left you alone at least for the time being," Leeming said,
knowing that the other was in no position to deny it. "He's done
nothing to you yet." He increased the gratification. "I'll
do my very best to keep control of him. Only the stupidly brutal
deserve slow death."
"That is
true," agreed Kolum eagerly, "but what-"
"Now,"
interrupted Leeming with firmness, "it is up to you to prove
that any confidence is justified and thus protect yourself against
the fate that is going to visit the slower-witted. Brains were made
to be used, weren't they?"
"Yes,
but-" "Those who don't possess brains cannot use what they
haven't got, can they?"
"No,
they cannot, but-"
"All
that is necessary to demonstrate your intelligence is to take a
message to the Commandant."
Kolum popped
his eyes in horror. "It is impossible: I dare not disturb him at
this hour. The sergeant of the guard will not permit it. He will-"
"You are
not being asked to take the message to the Commandant immediately. it
is to be given to him personally when he awakens in the morning."
"That is
different," said Kolum; vastly relieved. "But I must warn
you that if he disapproves of the message he will punish you and not
me."
"He will
not punish me lest I in turn punish him," assured Leeming, as
though stating a demonstrable fact. "Write my message down."
Leaning his
gun against the corridor's farther wall, Kolum dug pencil and paper
out of a pocket. A strained expression came into his eyes as he
prepared himself for the formidable task of inscribing a number of
words.
"To the
Most Exalted Lousy Screw," began Leeming.
"What
does `lousy screw' mean?" asked Kolum as he struggled to put
down the strange Terran words phonetically.
"It's a
title. It means your highness. Man, how high he is!" Leeming
pinched his nose while the other pored over the paper. He continued
to dictate, going very slowly to keep pace with Kolum's literary
talent. "The food is insufficient and very poor in quality. I am
physically weak, I have lost much weight and my ribs are beginning to
show. My Eustace does not like it. The thinner I get the more
threatening he becomes. The time is fast approaching when I shall
have to refuse all responsibility for his actions. Therefore I beg
Your Most Exalted Lousy Screwship to give serious consideration to
this matter."
"There
are many words and some of them long ones," complained Kolum,
managing to look like a reptilian martyr.
"I shall
have to rewrite them more readably when I go off duty."
"I know
and I appreciate the trouble you are taking on my behalf."
Leeming bestowed a beam of fraternal fondness. "That's why I
feel sure you'll live long enough to do the job."
"I must
live longer than that," insisted Kolum, popping the eyes again.
"I have the right to live, haven't I?"
"That is
precisely the argument I've been using," said Leeming in the
manner of one who has striven all night to establish the irrefutable
but cannot yet guarantee success.
"I
cannot talk to you any longer," informed Kolum, picking up his
gun. "I am not supposed to talk to you at all. If the sergeant
of the guard should catch me he will-"
"The
sergeant's days are numbered," Leeming told him in, judicial
tones. "He will not live long enough to know he's dead."
His hand
extended in readiness to close the spyhole, Kolum paused, looked as
if he'd been slugged with a sockful of wet sand. Then he said, "How
can anyone live long enough to know that he's dead?"
"It
depends on the method of killing," assured Leeming. "There
are some you've never heard of and cannot imagine." At this
point Kolum found the conversation distasteful: He closed the
spyhole. Leeming returned to the bench, sprawled upon it. The light
went out. Seven stars peeped through the window-slot and they were
not unattainable.
In the
morning breakfast came an hour late but consisted of one full bowl of
lukewarm pap, two thick slices of brown bread heavily smeared with
grease and a large cup of warm liquid vaguely resembling paralysed
coffee. He got through the lot with mounting triumph. By contrast
with what they had been giving him this feast made the day seem like
Christmas. His spirits perked up with the fullness of his belly.
No summons to
a second interview came that day or the next. The Commandant made no
move for more than a week. His Lousy Screwship was still awaiting a
reply from the
Lathian
sector and did not feel inclined to take further action before he
received it. However meals remained more substantial, a fact that
Leeming viewed as positive evidence that someone was insuring himself
against disaster.
Then early
one morning the Rigellians acted up. From the cell they could be
heard but not seen. Every day at about an hour after dawn the tramp
of their two thousand pairs of feet sounded somewhere out of sight
and died away toward the workshops. Usually that was all that could
be heard, no voices, no desultory conversation, just the weary trudge
of feet and an occasional bellow from a guard.
This time
they came out singing, their raucous voices holding a distinct touch
of defiance. They were bawling in thunderous discord something about
Asta Zangasta's a dirty old geezer, got fleas on his chest and sores
on his beezer. It should have sounded childish and futile. It didn't.
The corporate effect seemed to convey an unspoken threat.
Guards yelled
at them. Singing rose higher, the defiance increasing along with the
volume. Standing below his window-slot, Leeming listened intently.
This was the first mention he'd heard of the much-abused Asta
Zangasta, presumably this world's king, emperor or leading hooligan.
The bawling
of two thousand voices rose crescendo. Guards screamed frenziedly and
were drowned within the din. Somewhere a warning shot was fired. In
the watchtowers the guards edged their guns around, dipped them as
they aimed into the yard.
"Oh,
what a basta is Asta Zangasta!" hollered the distant Rigellians
as they reached the end of their epic poem.
There
followed blows, shots, scuffling sounds, howls of fury. A bunch of
twenty fully armed guards raced flatfooted past Leeming's window,
headed for the unseeable fracas. The uproar continued for half an
hour before gradually it died away. Resulting silence could almost be
felt.
At
exercise-time Leeming had the yard to himself, there being not
another prisoner in sight. He mooched around, puzzled and gloomy,
until he encountered Marsin on yard-
"Where
are the others? what has happened to them?"
"They
misbehaved and wasted a lot of time. They are being detained in the
workshops until they have made up the loss in production. It is their
own fault. They started work late for the deliberate purpose of
slowing down output. We didn't even have time to count them."
Leeming
grinned into his face. "And some guards were hurt?"
"Yes."
Marsin admitted.
"Not
severely," Leeming suggested. "Just enough to give them a
taste of what is to come. Think it over!"
"What do
you mean?"
"I meant
what I said-think it over." Then he added, "But you were
not injured. Think that over too!"
He ambled
away, leaving Marsin uneasy and bewildered. Six times he trudged
around the yard while doing some heavy thinking himself. Sudden
indiscipline among the Rigellians certainly had stirred up the prison
and created enough excitement to last a week. He wondered what had
caused it. Probably they'd done it to gain relief from incarceration
and despair. Sheer boredom can drive people into performing the
craziest tricks.
On
the seventh time round he was still pondering when suddenly a remark
struck him wit, force like the blow of a hammer. "We
had not time even to count them." Holy smoke! that
must be the motive of this morning's rowdy performance. The choral
society had avoided a count. There could be only one reason why they
should wish to dodge the regular numbering parade.
Finding
Marsin again, he promised, "Tomorrow some of you guards will
wish you'd never been born."
"Are you
threatening us?"
"No, I
am making a prophetic promise. Tell the guard officer what I have
said. Tell the Commandant, too. It might help you to escape the
consequences."
"I will
tell them," said Marsin, mystified but grateful.
The following
morning proved that he had been one hundred per cent correct in his
supposition that the Rigellians were too shrewd -to invite thick ears
and black eyes without good reason. It had taken the enemy a full day
to arrive at the same conclusion.
At one hour
after dawn the Rigellians were marched out dormitory by dormitory in
batches of fifty instead of the usual continuous stream. They were
counted in fifties, the easy way. This simple arithmetic became
thrown out of kilter when one dormitory produced only twelve,
prisoners, all of them sick, weak, wounded or otherwise handicapped.
Infuriated
guards rushed indoors to drag out the absent thirty-eight. They
weren't there. The door was firm and solid, the window-bars intact.
Guards did considerable confused galloping around before one of them
detected the slight shift of a well-trampled floor-slab. They lugged
it up, found underneath a narrow but deep shaft from the bottom which
ran a tunnel. With great unwillingness one of them went down the
shaft, crawled into the tunnel and in due time emerged a good
distance outside the walls. Needless to say he had found the tunnel
empty.
Sirens
wailed, guards pounded all over the jail, officers shouted
contradictory orders, the entire place began to resemble a madhouse.
The Rigellians got it good and hard for spoiling the previous
morning's count and thus giving the escapees a full day's lead. Boots
and gun-butts were freely used, bodies dragged aside badly battered
and unconscious.
The surviving
top-ranker of the offending dormitory, a lieutenant with a severe
limp, was held responsible for the break, charged, tried, sentenced,
put against a wall and shot. Leeming could see nothing of this but
did hear the hoarse commands of, "Present . . . aim . . . fire!"
and the following volley.
He prowled
round and round his cell, clenching and unclenching his fists, his
stomach writhing like a sack of snakes and swearing mightily to
himself. All that he wanted, all that he prayed for was a
high-ranking Zangastan throat under his thumbs. The spyhole flipped
open but hastily shut before he could spit into somebody's eye. The
upset continued without abate as inflamed guards searched all
dormitories one by one, testing doors, bars, walls, floors and even
the ceilings. Officers screamed bloodthirsty threats at sullen groups
of Rigellians who were slow to respond to orders.
At twilight
outside forces dragged in seven tired, be-draggled escapees who'd
been caught on the run. Their reception was short and sharp. "Present
. . . aim . . . fire!" Frenziedly Leeming battered at his door
but the spyhole remained shut and nobody answered. Two hours later he
made another coiled loop with the last of his wire. He spent half the
night talking into it menacingly and at the tap of his voice. Nobody
took the slightest notice.
By noon next
day a feeling of deep frustration had come over him. He estimated
that the Rigellian breakout must have taken most of a year to
prepare. Result: eight dead and thirty-one still loose. If they kept
together and did not scatter the thirty-one could form a crew large
enough to seize a ship of any size up to and including a
space-destroyer. But on the basis of his own experiences he thought
they had remote chance of making such a theft.
With the
whole world alarmed by an escape of this size there'd be a strong
military screen around every spaceport and it would be maintained
until the last of the thirty-one had been rounded up. The free might
stay-free for quite a time if they were lucky, but they were
planet-bound, doomed to ultimate recapture and subsequent execution.
Meanwhile
their fellows were getting it rough in consequence and his own
efforts had been messed up. He did not resent the break, not one
little bit. Good luck to them. But if only it had taken place two
months earlier or later.
Moodily he
finished his dinner when four guards came for him. "The
Commandant wants you at once." Their manner was edgy and
subdued. One wore a narrow bandage around his scaly pate, another had
a badly swollen eye.
Just about
the worst moment to choose, thought Leeming. The Commandant would be
all set to go up like a rocket at first hint of opposition of any
kind. You cannot argue with a brasshat in a purple rage; emotion
comes uppermost, words are disregarded, logic is treated with
contempt. He was going to have a tough job on his hands.
The four
marched him along the corridor, two in front, two behind. Left,
right, left, right, thud, thud, thud it made him think of a
ceremonial parade to the guillotine. Around the corner in a little
triangular yard there should be waiting a priest, a hanging knife, a
wicker basket, a wooden box.
Together they
tramped into the same room as before. The Commandant was sitting
behind his desk but there were no junior officers in attendance. The
only other person present was an elderly civilian occupying a chair
on the Commandant’s right; he studied the prisoner with a
sharp, intent gaze as he entered and took a seat.
"This is
Pallam," introduced the Commandant with amiability so unexpected
that it dumbfounded the listener. Showing a touch of awe, he added,
"He has been sent here by no less a person than Zangasta
himself."
"A
mental specialist, I presume?" invited Leeming, wary of a trap.
"Nothing
like that," said Pallam quietly. "I am especially
interested in all aspects of symbiosis."
Leeming's
back hairs stirred. He did not like the idea of being cross-examined
by an expert. Such characters had penetrating, unmilitary minds and a
pernicious habit of destroying a good story by exhibiting its own
contradictions. This mild-looking civilian, he decided, was
definitely a major menace.
"Pallam
wishes to ask you a few questions," informed the Commandant,
"but those will come later:" He put on a self- satisfied
expression. "Far a start I wish to say that I am indebted for
the information you gave at our previous inter-view."
"You
mean that it has proved useful to you?" asked Leeming, hardly
believing his ears.
"Very
much so in view of this serious and most stupid mutiny. All the
guards responsible for Dormitory Fourteen are to be drafted to battle
areas where they will be stationed upon spaceports liable to attack.
That is their punishment for gross neglect of duty." He gazed
thoughtfully at the other, went on; "My own fate would have been
no less had not Zangasta considered the escape a minor matter when
compared with this important data I got from you."
Though taken
by surprise, Leeming was swift to cash in. "But when I asked you
saw to it personally that I had better food. Surely you expected some
reward?"
"Reward?"
The Commandant was taken aback: "I did not think of such a
thing."
"So much
the better," approved Leeming, admiring the other's magnanimity.
"A good deed is trebly good when done with no ulterior motive.
Eustace will take careful note of that."
"You
mean;" put in Pallam, "that his code of ethics is identical
with your own?"
Damn the
fellow! Why did he have to put his spoke in? Be careful now!
"Similar
in some respects but not identical."
"What is
the most outstanding difference?"
"Well,"
said Leeming, playing for time, "it's hard to decide." He
rubbed his brow while his mind whizzed dizzily. "I'd say in the
matter of vengeance."
"Define
the difference," ordered Pallam, sniffing along the trail like a
hungry bloodhound.
"From my
viewpoint," informed Leeming, inwardly cursing the other to hell
and perdition, "he is unnecessarily sadistic."
There, that
gave needed coverage for any widespread claims it might be desirable
to make later on.
"In what
way?" persisted Pallam,
"My
instinct is to take prompt action, to get things over and done with.
His tendency is to prolong the agony."
"Explain
further," pressed Pallam, making a thorough nuisance of himself.
"If you
and I were mortal enemies, if I had a gun and you, had not, I would
snoot and kill you. But if Eustace had you marked for death he'd make
it slower, more gradual."
"Describe
his method."
"First,
he'd let you know that you were doomed. Then he'd do nothing about it
until eventually you become obsessed with the notion that it was all
an illusion and that nothing ever would be done. At that point he'd
remind you with a minor blow. When resulting fear and alarm had worn
off he'd strike a harder one. And so on and so on with increasing
intensity spread over as long a time as necessary."
"Necessary
for what?"
"Until
your doom became plain and the strain of waiting for it became too
much to bear." He thought a moment, added, "No Eustace ever
has killed anyone. He uses tactics peculiarly his own. He arranges
accidents or he chivvies a victim into dying by his own hand."
"He
drives a victim to suicide."
"Yes,
that's what I've said."
"And
there is no way of avoiding such a fate?"
"Yes,
there is," Leeming contradicted. "At any time the victim
can gain personal safety and freedom from fear by redressing the
wrong he has done to that Eustace's partner."
"Such
redress immediately terminates the vendetta?"
"That's
right"
"Whether
or not you approve personally?"
"Yes. If
my grievance ceases to be real and becomes only imaginary, my Eustace
refuses to recognise it or do anything about it."
"So what
it boils down to," said Pallam pointedly, "is that his
method provides motive and opportunity for repentance while yours
does not?"
"I
suppose so."
"Which
means that he has a more balanced sense of justice?"
"He can
be darned ruthless," objected Leeming, momentarly unable to
think of a retort less feeble.
"That is
beside the point," snapped Pallam. He lapsed into meditative
silence, then remarked to the Commandant, "It seems that the
association is not between equals. The invisible component is also
the superior one. In effect, it is the master of a material slave but
exercises mastery with such cunning that the slave would be the first
to deny his own status."
He shot a
provocative glance at Leeming who set his teeth and said nothing.
Crafty old hog, thought Leeming if he was trying to tempt the
prisoner into a heated denial he was going to be disappointed. Let
him remain under the delusion that Leeming had been weighed in the
balance and found wanting. There is no shame in being defined as
inferior to a figment of one's own imagination.
Now
positively foxy, Pallam probed, "When your Eustace takes it upon
himself to wreak vengeance he does so because circumstances prevent
suitable punishment being administered either by yourself or the
Terran community? Is that correct?"
"Near
enough," admitted Leeming cautiously.
"In
other words, he functions only when you and the law are impotent?"
"He
takes over when the need arises."
"You are
being evasive. We must get this matter straight If you or your
fellows can and do punish someone does any Eustace also punish him?"
"No,"
said Leeming, fidgeting uneasily.
"If you
or your fellows cannot or do not punish someone does a Eustace then
step in and enforce punishment?"
"Only if
a living Terran has suffered unjustly."
"The
sufferer's Eustace takes action on his partner's behalf?"
"Yes."
"Good!"
declared Pallam. He leaned forward, watched the other keen-eyed and
managed to make his attitude intimidating. "Now let us suppose
that your Eustace finds justifiable reason to punish another Terran -
what does the victim's Eustace do about it?"
TEN
It was a
clever trap based upon the knowledge that questions about factual,
familiar, everyday things can be answered automatically, almost
without thought. Whereas a liar seeking a supporting lie needs time
to create consistency. It should have got Leeming completely foozled.
That it did not do so was no credit to his own wits.
While his
mind still whi2led his mouth opened and the wards "Not much"
popped out of their own accord. For a mad moment he wondered whether
Eustace had arrived and joined the party.
"Why
not?"
Encouraged by
his tongue's mastery of the situation, Leeming gave it free rein. "I
have told you before and I am telling you again that no Eustace will
concern himself for one moment with a grievance that is wholly
imaginary. A Terran who is guilty of a crime has no genuine cause for
complaint. He has brought vengeance upon himself and the cure lies in
his own hands. If he doesn't enjoy suffering he need only get busy
and undo whatever wrong he had done to another."
"Will
his Eustace urge or influence him to take action necessary to avoid
punishment?"
"Never
having been a criminal myself," answered Leeming with great
virtue, "I am unable to tell you. I suppose it would be near the
truth to say that Terrans behave because association with Eustaces
compels them to behave. They have little choice about the matter."
"On the
other hand, Terrans have no way of compelling their Eustaces to
behave?"
"No
compulsion is necessary. A Eustace will always listen to his
partner's reason and act within the limits of common justice."
"As I
told you," said Pallam in an aside to the Commandant, “the
Terran, is the lower form of the two." He returned attention to
the prisoner. "All that you have told us is acceptable because
it is consistent - as far as it goes."
"What
d'you mean; as far as it goes?"
"Let me
take it to the bitter end," suggested Pallam. "I do not see
any rational reason why any criminal's Eustace should allow his
partner to be driven to suicide. Since they are mutually independent
of others but mutually dependent upon each other, a Eustace's
inaction is contrary to the basic law of survival."
"Nobody
commits suicide until he has gone off his rocker."
"Until
he has done what?"
"Become
insane," said Leeming. "An insane person is worthless as a
material partner. To a Eustace he is already dead, not worth
protecting or avenging. Eustaces associate only with the sane."
Pouncing on
that, Pallam said excitedly, "So the benefit they derive is
rooted somewhere within Terran minds? Is it mental sustenance that
they draw from you?"
"I don't
know."
"Does
your Eustace ever make you feel tired, exhausted, perhaps a little
stupefied?"
"Yes,"
said Leeming with emphasis. How true, brother, how true. Right now
he'd find pleasure in choking Eustace to death.
"I
would like to pursue this phenomenon for months," Pallam told
the Commandant. "It is an absorbing subject There are no records
of symbiotic association among anything higher than the plants and
six species of the lower elames To find it among
the higher vertebrates, sentient forms, and one of them intangible,
is remarkable, truly remarkable." The Commandant looked
impressed without knowing what the other was talking about.
"Give
him your report," urged Pallam.
"Our
liaison officer, CoIonel Shomuth, has replied from the Lathian
sector," the Commandant told Leeming. "He is fluent in
Cosmoglotta and therefore was able to question many Terran prisoners
without the aid of a Lathian interpreter We sent him a little more
information and the result is significant."
"What
else did you expect?" Leeming observed, inwardly consumed with
curiosity.
Ignoring
that, the Commandant went on, "He reported that most of the
prisoners refused to make comment or to admit anything. They
maintained determined silence. That is understandable because nothing
could shake their belief that they were being tempted to surrender
information of military value. They resisted all of Colonel Shomuth’s
persuasions and kept their mouths shut." He sighed at such
stubbornness. "But some talked."
"A few
are always willing to blab," remarked Leeming.
"Certain
officers talked, including Cruiser Captain Tompass . . . Tompus . .
."
"Thomas?"
"Yes,
that is the word." Swivelling around in his chair, the
Commandant pressed a wall-button. "This is the beamed interview
unscrambled and recorded on tape."
A crackling
hiss poured out of a perforated grid set in the wall. It grew louder,
died down to a background wash. Voices came out of the grid.
Shomuth:
"Captain Thomas, I have been ordered to check certain
information now in our possession. You have nothing to lose by giving
answers, nothing to gain by refusing them. There are no Lathians
present, only the two of us. You may speak freely and what you say
will be treated in confidence." Thomas: "Mighty leery about
the Lathians all of a sudden, aren't you? You won't fool me with that
gambit. Enemies are enemies no matter what their name or shape. Go
trundle your hoop-you'll get nothing out of me."
Shomuth,
patiently: "I suggest, Captain Thomas, that you hear and
consider the questions before you decide whether or not to answer
them."
Thomas,
boredly: "All right. What d'you want to know?"
Shomuth:
"Whether our Lathian allies really are Nuts."
Thomas, after
a long pause: "You want the blunt truth?"
Shomuth: "We
do."
Thamas, with
a trace of sarcasm; "I hate to speak against anyone behind his
back, even a lousy Lathian But there are times when one is compelled
to admit that dirt is dirt, sin is sin and a Lathian is what he is,
eh?"
Shomuth:
"Please answer my question."
Thomas: "The
Lathians are nuts."
Shoinuth:
"And they have the Willies?"
Thomas: "Say,
where did you dig up this information?"
Shomuth:
"That is our business. Will you be good enough to give me an
answer."
Thomas,
belligerently: "Not only have they got the willies but they'll
have a darned sight more of them before we're through."
Shomuth,
puzzled: "How can that be? We have learned that each and every
Lathian is unconsciously controlled by a Willy. Therefore the total
number of Willies must be limited. It cannot be increased except by
the birth of more Lathians."
Thomas,
quickly: "You've got me wrong. What I meant was that as Lathian
casualties mount up the number of unattached Willies will increase.
Obviously even the best of Willies cannot control a corpse, can he?
There will be lots more Willies loafing around in proportion to the
number of Lathian survivors."
Shomuth:
"Yes, I see what you mean. And it will create a psychic problem
of great seriousness." Pause. "Now, Captain Thomas, have
you any reason to suppose that a large number of partnerless Willies
might be able to seize control of another and different lifeform?
Such as my own species, for example?"
Thomas, with
enough menace to deserve a space-medal: "I wouldn't be
surprised."
Shomuth: "You
don't know for sure?"
Thomas: "No."
Shomuth: "It
is true, is it not, that you are aware of the real Lathian nature
only because you have been warned of it by your Eustace?"
Thomas;
startled: "By my what?"
Shomuth: "By
your. Eustace. Why should that surprise you?"
Thomas,
recovering swiftly enough to earn a bar to the medal: "I thought
you said Useless. Silly of me. Yes, my Eustace. You're dead right
there."
Shomuth, in
lower tones: "There are more than four hundred Terran prisoners
here. That means more than four hundred Eustaces wandering around
unchallenged on this planet. Correct?"
Thomas: "I
am unable to deny it."
Shomuth:
"The Lathian heavy cruiser Veder crashed on
landing and was a total loss. The Lathians attributed it to an error
of judgment on the part of the crew. But that was just three days
after you prisoners were brought here. Was it a mere coincidence?"
Thomas,
scintillating: "Work it out for yourself."
Shomuth: "You
realise that so far as we are concerned your refusal to reply is as
good as an answer?"
Thomas:
"Construe it any way you like. I will not betray Terran military
secrets."
Shomuth: "All
right. Let me try you on something else. The biggest fuel dump in
this part of the galaxy is located a few degrees south of here. A
week ago it blew up to total destruction. The loss was a severe one;
it will handicap the Combine fleets for quite a time to come."
Thomas, with
enthusiasm: "Cheers!"
Shomuth:
"Lathian technicians theorise that a static spark caused a
leaking tank to explode and that set off the rest in rapid
succession. We can always trust technicians to come up with a glib
explanation."
Thomas:
"Well, what's wrong with it?"
Shomuth:
"That dump has been established for more than four years. No
static sparks have caused trouble during that time."
Thomas: "What
are you getting at?"
Shomuth,
pointedly: "You have admitted yourself that more than four
hundred Eustaces are roaming this area, free to do as they please."
Thomas, in
tones of stern patriotism: I am admitting nothing. I refuse to
answer any more questions."
Shomuth: "Has
your Eustace prompted you to say that?"
Silence.
Shomuth: "If
your Eustace is now present, can I question him through you?"
No reply.
Switching
off, the Commandant said; "There you are. Eight other Terran
officers gave more or less the same evidence. T he rest tried to
conceal the facts but, as you have heard, they failed. Zangasta
himself has listened to the taped records and is deeply concerned
about the situation."
"He
needn't worry his head about it," Leeming offered.
"Why
not?"
"It's
all a lot of bunk, a put-up job. There was collusion between my
Eustace and theirs."
The
Commandant looked sour." As you emphasised at our last meeting,
there cannot be collusion without Eustaces, so it makes no difference
either way."
"I'm
glad you can see it at last."
"Let it
pass," chipped in Pallam impatiently. "It is of no
consequence. The confirmatory evidence is adequate no matter how we
look at it."
Thus
prompted, the Commandant continued, "I have been doing some
investigating myself. In two years we've had a long series of
small-scale troubles with the Rigellians, none of them really
serious, but after you arrive there comes a big break that obviously
must have been planned long before you turned up but soon afterward
took place in circumstances suggesting outside help. Whence came this
assistance?"
"Not
telling," said Leeming knowingly.
"At one
time or another eight of my guards earned your enmity, by assaulting
you. Of these, four are now in hospital badly injured, two more are
to be drafted to the fighting front. I presume that it is only a
matter of time before the remaining two are plunged into trouble?"
"The
other two have arbitrated and earned forgiveness. Nothing will happen
to them."
"Is that
so?" The Commandant registered surprise.
Leeming went
on; "I cannot give the same guarantee with respect to the firing
squad, the officer in charge of it or the higher-up who ordered that
helpless prisoners be shot."
"We
always execute prisoners who break out of jail. It is an
old-established practice and a necessary deterrent."
"We
always settle accounts with the executioners," Leeming gave
back. "It is an old-established practice and a necessary
deterrent." "By `we' you mean you and your Eustace?"
put in Pallam.
"Yes."
"Why
should your Eustace care? The victims were not Terrans. They were
merely a bunch of obstreperous Rigellians."
"Rigellians
are allies. And allies are friends. I feel bad about the
cold-blooded, needless slaughtering of them. Eustace is very
sensitive to my emotions."
"But not
necessarily obedient to them?"
"No:"
"In
fact," pressed Pallam, determined to establish the point once
and for all, "if there is any question of one being subordinate
to the other, it is you who serves him."
"Most
times, anyway," conceded Leeming with the air of having a tooth
pulled.
"Well;
it confirms what you've already told us." Pallam gave a thin
smile. "The chief difference between Terrans and Lathians is
that you know you're controlled whereas the Lathians are ignorant of
their own status."
"We are
not controlled consciously or unconsciously," Leeming insisted.
"We exist in mutual partnership the same as you do with your
wife. Sometimes she gives way to you, other times you give way to
her. Neither of you bother to estimate who has given way the most in
any specific period and neither of you insists that a perfect balance
must be maintained. That's how it is. And it's mastery by neither
party "I wouldn't know, never having been mated." Pallam
turned to the Commandant. "Carry on."
"As
probably you are aware by now, this planet has been set aside as the
Combine's main penal world," informed the Commandant. "Already
we hold a large number of prisoners; mainly Rigellian."
"What of
it?"
"There
are more to come. Two thousand Centaurians and six hundred Thetans
are due to arrive and fill a new jail next week: Combine forces will
transfer more enemy life- forms as soon as we have accommodation
ready for them and ships are available. He eyed the other
speculatively. "It is only a matter of time before they start
dumping Terrans on us as well."
"Is the
prospect bothering you?"
"Zangasta
has decided that he must refuse to accept Terrans."
"That's
up to him," said Leeming, blandly indifferent.
"Zangasta
has a clever mind," opined the Commandant oozing patriotic
admiration. "He is of the firm opinion that to assemble a
formidable army of mixed prisoners all on one' planet, and then add
some thousands of Terrans to the mixture, is to create a potentially
dangerous situation. He foresees trouble on a scale vaster than we
could handle. Indeed, we might lose control of this world,
strategically placed in the Combine's rear, and become subject to the
violent attacks of our own allies."
"That is
quite possible," Leeming agreed. "In fact it's quite
probable. In fact it's practically certain. But it's not Zangasta's
only worry. It's the one he's seen fit to put out for publication.
He's got a private one too."
"And
what is that?"
"Zangasta
himself originated the order that escaped prisoners be shot. He must
have done so - otherwise nobody would dare shoot them. Now he's jumpy
because a Eustace may be sitting on his bed and grinning at him every
night. He thinks that a few thousand Eustaces will be a
proportionately greater menace to him. But he's wrong." "Why
is he wrong?" inquired the Commandant
"Because
it isn't only the repentant who have no cause to fear. The dead
haven't either. The arrival on this world of fifty million Eustaces
means nothing whatever to a corpse. Zangasta had better countermand
that shooting order if he wants to go on living."
"I'll
inform him of your remarks. However, such cancellation may not be
necessary. As I have told you, he is clever. He has devised s subtle
strategy that will put all your evidence to the final, conclusive
test and at the same time may solve his problems to his own
satisfaction."
Feeling vague
alarm, Leeming asked, "Am I permitted to know what he intends to
do?"
"He has
given instructions that you be told. And already he has swung into
action." The Commandant waited for the sake of effect then
finished, "He has beamed the Allies, a proposal to exchange
prisoners."
Leeming.
fidgeted around in his seat. Ye gods, the plot was thickening with a
vengeance. From the very beginning his sole purpose had been to talk
himself out of jail and into some other situation more favourable for
sudden departure at high speed. He'd been trying to lift himself over
the wall with his tongue. Now they were taking his story and
plastering it ail over the galaxy. Oh, what a tangled web we weave
when first we practise to deceive!
"What is
more," the Commandant went on, "the Allies have notified us
of their acceptance providing we exchange rank for rank. That is to
say, captains for captains, navigators for navigators and so forth."
"That's
reasonable."
"Zangasta,"
said the Commandant, grinning like a hungry wolf, "has agreed in
his turn - providing that the Allies take Terran prisoners first and
make exchange on a basis of two for one. He is now awaiting their
reply."
"Two for
one?" echoed Leeming, blinking. "You mean he wants them to
release two of their prisoners for every Terran they get back?"
"No, no,
of course not." He increased the grin and exposed
the roots of
his teeth. "They must return two Combine troopers for each
Terran and his Eustace that we hand back. That is two for two and
perfectly fair, is it not?"
"It's
not for me to say." Leeming swallowed hard. "The Allies are
the judges."
"Until a
reply arrives and mutual agreement has been achieved, Zangasta wishes
you to have better treatment. You will be transferred to the
officers' quarters outside the walls, you will share their meals and
be allowed to go walks in the country. Temporarily you will be
treated as a non-combatant and you'll be very comfortable. It is
necessary that you give me your parole not to try to escape."
Holy smoke,
this was another stinker. The entire fiction was shaped toward
ultimate escape. He couldn't abandon it now. Neither was he willing
to give his word of honour with the cynical intention of breaking it.
"Parole
refused," he said firmly.
The
Commandant was incredulous. "Surely you do not mean that?"
"I do. I
have no choice. Terran military law does not permit a prisoner-of-war
to give such a promise."
"Why
not?"
"Because
no Terran can accept responsibility for his Eustace. How can I swear
not tb get out when half of me cannot be got in? Can a twin take oath
on behalf of his brother?"
"Guard!"
called the Commandant, visibly disappointed. He mooched uneasily
around his cell for a full twelve days, occasionally chatting with
Eustace night-times for the benefit of ears lurking outside the door.
Definitely he'd wangled himself into a predicament that was a case of
put up or shut up; in order to put up he dared not shut up.
The food
remained better in quantity though little could be said for its
quality. Guards treated him with that diffidence accorded to captives
who somehow are in cahoots with their superiors. Four more recaptured
Rigellians were brought back but not shot. All the signs and portents
were that he'd still got a grip on the foe.
Though he'd
said nothing to them, the other prisoners had got wind of the fact
that in some mysterious way he was responsible for the general
softening of prison conditions. At exercise-time they treated him as
a deep and subtle character who could achieve the impossible. From
time to time their curiosity got the better of them.
"You
know they didn't execute those last four?"
"Yes,"
Leeming admitted.
"It's
being said that you stopped the shooting."
"Who
says so?"
"It's
just a story going around."
"That's
right, it's just a story going around."
"I
wonder why they shot the first bunch but not the second. There must
be a reason."
"Maybe
the Zangastans have developed qualms of conscience, even if
belatedly," Leeming suggested.
"There's
more to it than that."
"Such as
what?"
"Somebody
has shaken them up."
"Who,
for instance?"
"I don't
know. There's a strong rumour that you've got the Commandant eating
out of your hand."
"That's
likely, isn't it?" Leeming countered.
"I
wouldn't think so. But one never knows where one is with the
Terrans." The other brooded a bit, asked, "What did you do
with that wire I stole for you?"
"I'm
knitting it into a pair of socks. Nothing fits better nor wears
longer than solid wire socks."
Thus he
foiled their noseyness and kept silence, not wanting to arouse false
hopes. Inwardly he was badly bothered. The Allies in general and
Earth in particular knew nothing whatever about Eustaces and
therefore were likely to treat a two-for-one proposition with the
contempt it deserved. A blank refusal on their part might cause him
to be plied with awkward questions impossible to answer.
In that case
it would occur to them sooner or later that they
were
afflicted with the biggest liar in history. They'd then devise tests
of fiendish ingenuity. When he fluked them the balloon would go up.
He wasn't
inclined to give himself overmuch credit for kidding them along so
far. The few books he'd been able to read had shown that Zangastan
religion was based upon reverence for ancestral spirits. The
Zangastans were also familiar with what is known as poltergeist
phenomena. The ground had been prepared for him in advance; he'd
merely ploughed it and sown the crop. When a victim already believes
in two kinds of invisible beings it isn't hard to persuade him to
swallow a third.
But when the
Allies beamed Anga Zangasta a curt invitation to make his bed on a
railroad track it was possible that the third type of spirit would be
regurgitated with violence. Unless by fast, convincing talk he could
cram it back down their gullets when it was halfway out. How to do
that?
In his cell
he was stewing this problem over and over when the guards came for
him again. The Commandant was there but Pallam was not. Instead, a
dozen civilians eyed him curiously. That made a total of thirteen
enemies, a very suitable number to pronounce him ready for the
chopper. Feeling as much the centre of attraction as a six-tailed
wombat at the zoo, he sat down and four civilians immediately started
chivvying him, taking it in relays. They were interested in one
subject and one only, namely, bopamagilvies. It seemed that they'd
been playing for hours with his samples, had achieved nothing except
some practise in acting daft, and were not happy about it.
On what
principle did a bopamagilvie work? Did it focus telepathic output
into a narrow, long-range beam? At what distance did his Eustace get
beyond range of straight conversation and have to be summoned with
the aid of a gadget? Why was it necessary to make directional search
before obtaining a reply? How did he know how to make a coiled- loop
in the first place?
"I can't
explain. How does a bird know how to make a nest? The knowledge is
wholly instinctive. I have known how
to call my
Eustace ever since I was old enough to shape a piece of wire."
"Could
it be that your Eustace implants the necessary knowledge in your
mind?"
"Frankly,
I've never given that idea a thought. But it is possible."
"Will
any kind of wire serve?"
"So long
as it's non-ferrous."
"Are all
Terran loops of exactly the same construction and dimensions?"
"No,
they vary with the individual."
"We've
made careful and thorough search of Terran prisoners held by the
Lathians. Not one of them owns a similar piece of apparatus. How do
you account for that?"
"They
don't need one."
"Why
not?"
"Because
when more than four hundred of them are imprisoned together they can
always count on at least a few of their Eustaces being within easy
reach at any given time.
Somehow he
beat them off, feeling hot in the forehead and cold in the belly.
Then the Commandant took over. "The Allies have flatly refused
to accept Terran prisoners ahead of other species, or to exchange
them two for one, or to discuss the matter any further. What have you
to say to that?"
Steeling
himself, Leeming commented; "Look, on your side there are more
than twenty lifeforms of which the Lathians and the Zebs are by far
the most powerful. Now if the Allies had wanted to give priority of
exchange to one. species do you think the Combine would agree? If,
for example, the favoured species happened to be the Tansites, would
the Lathians and Zebs vote for them to get home first?"
A tall,
authoritative civilian chipped in. "I am Daverd; personal aide
to Zangasta. He is of your own opinion. He believes that the Terrans
have been outvoted. Therefore I am commanded to ask you one
question."
"What is
it?"
"Do your
allies know about your Eustaces?"
"No."
"You
have succeeded in hiding the facts from them?"
"There's
never been any question of concealing anything from them. With
friends the facts just don't become apparent. Eustaces take effective
action only against enemies and that is something that cannot be
concealed for ever."
"Very
well." Daverd came closer, put on a conspiratorial air. "The
Lathians started this war and the Zebs went with them by reason of
their military alliance. The rest of us got dragged in for one reason
or another. The Lathians are strong and arrogant but, as we now know,
they are not responsible for their actions."
"What's
this to me?"
"Separately
we numerically weaker lifeforms cannot stand against the Lathians or
the Zebs. But together we are strong enough to step out of the war
and maintain our right to be neutral. So Zangasta has consulted the
others."
"Lord!
isn't it amazing what can be done with a few yards of copper wire?
"He has
received their replies today," Daverd went on. "They are
willing to make a common front for the sake of enjoying mutual
peace-providing that the Allies are equally willing to recognise
their neutrality and exchange prisoners with them."
"Such
sudden unanimity among the small fry tells me something pretty good,"
observed Leeming with malice. "It tells you what?"
"Allied
forces have won a major battle lately. Somebody has been given a hell
of a lambasting."
Daverd
refused to Confirm or deny it. "You are the only Terran we hold
on this planet. Zangasta thinks he can make, good use of you."
"How?"
"He has
decided to send you back to Terra: It will be your task to persuade
them to agree to our plans. If you fail, a couple of hundred thousand
hostages will suffer - remember that!"
"The
prisoners have no say in this matter, no hand in it, no
responsibility for it. If you vent your, spite upon them a time will
surely come when you'll be made to pay - remember that!"
"The
Allies will know nothing about it," Daverd retorted. "There
will be no Terrans and no Eustaces here to inform them by any
underhanded method. Henceforth we are keeping Terrans out. The Allies
cannot use knowledge they do not possess."
"No,"
agreed Leeming. "It's quite impossible to employ something you
haven't got."
They provided
a light destroyer crewed by ten Zangastans. With one stop for
refuelling and the fitting of new tubes it took him to a servicing
planet right on the fringe of the battle area. This dump was a
Lathian outpost but those worthies showed no interest in what their
smaller allies were up to, neither did the' realise that the one
Terranlike creature really was a Terran. They got to work relining
the destroyer's tubes in readiness for its journey home. Meanwhile,
Leeming was transferred to an unarmed one-man Lathian scoutship. The
ten Zangastans officiously saluted before they left him. From this
point he was strictly on his own. Take-off was a heller. The seat was
far too big and shaped to fit the Lathian backside, which meant that
it was humped in the wrong places. The controls were unfamiliar and
situated too far apart. The little ship was fast and powerful but
responded differently from his own. How he got up he never knew, but
made it.
After that
there was the constant risk of being tracked by Allied detector
stations and blown apart in full flight. He charged among the stars
hoping for the best and left his beam transmitter severely alone;
calls on an enemy frequency might make him a dead duck in no time at
all.
He arrowed
straight for Terra. His sleeps were restless and uneasy. The tubes
were not to be trusted despite that flight-
duration
would be only a third of that done in his own vessel. The strange
autopilot was not to be trusted merely because it was of alien
design. The ship itself was not to be trusted for the same reason.
The forces of his own side were not to be trusted because they'd tend
to shoot first and ask questions afterward.
More by good
luck than good management he penetrated the Allied front without
interception. It was a feat that the foe could accomplish, given the
audacity, but had never attempted because the risk of getting into
Allied territory was as nothing to the trouble of getting out again.
In due time
he came in fast on Terra's night side and plonked the ship down in a
field a couple of miles west of the main spaceport. It would have
been foolish to take a chance by landing a Lathian vessel bang in the
middle of the port. Somebody behind a heavy gun might have stuttered
with excitement and let fly.
The moon was
shining bright along the Wabash when he approached the front gate
afoot and a sentry bawled, "Halt! Who goes there?"
"Lieutenant
Leeming and Eustace Phenackertiban."
"Advance
and be recognised."
He ambled
forward thinking to himself that such an order was manifestly
dunderheaded. Be recognised. The sentry had never seen him in his
life and wouldn't know him from Myrtle McTurtle. Oh, well, baloney
baffles brains.
At the gate a
powerful cone of light shone down upon him. Somebody with three
chevrons on his sleeve emerged from a nearby hut bearing a scanner on
the end of a thin, black cable. He waved the scanner over the arrival
from head to foot, concentrating mostly on the face.
A loudspeaker
in the hut ordered, "Bring him into Intelligence H.Q."
They started
walking.
The sentry
let go an agitated yelp. "Hey, where's the other guy?"
"What
guy?" asked the sergeant, stopping and staring around. "Smell
his breath," Leeming advised.
"You
gave me two names," asserted the sentry, full of resentment.
"Well, if you ask the sergeant nicely he'll give you two more,"
said Leeming. "Won't you, Sarge?"
"Let's
get going," growled the sergeant, displaying liverish
impatience.
They reached
Intelligence H.Q. The duty officer was Colonel Farmer. He gaped at
Leeming and said, "Well!" He said it seven times.
Without
preamble, Leeming demanded, "What's all this about us refusing
to make a two-for-one swap for Terran prisoners?"
Farmer
appeared to haul himself with an effort out of a fantastic dream.
"You know of it?"
"How
could I ask if I didn't?"
"All
right. Why should we accept such a cockeyed proposition? We're in
our right minds, you know!"
Bending over
the other's desk, hands splayed upon it, Leeming said, "All we
need do is agree upon one condition."
"What
condition?"
"That
they make a similar agreement with respect to Lathians. Two of our
men for one Lathian and one Willy."
"One
what?"
"One
Willy. The Lathians will take it like birds. They have been
propaganding all over the shop that one Lathian is worth two of
anything else. They're too conceited to refuse such an offer. They'll
advertise it as proof positive that even their enemies know how good
they are."
"But-"
began Farmer, slightly dazed.
"Their
allies will fall over themselves in their haste to agree also.
They'll do it from different motives to which the Lathians will wake
up when it's too late. Try it for size. Two of our fellows for one
Lathian and his Willy."
Farmer stood
up, his belly protruding, and roared, "What the blue blazes is a
Willy?" "You can easily find out," assured Leeming.
"Consult your Eustace."
Showing
alarm; Farmer lowered his tones to a soothing pitch and said as
gently as possible, "Your appearance here has been a great shock
to me. Many months ago you were reported missing and believed
killed."
"I
crash-landed and got taken prisoner in the back of beyond. They were
a snake-skinned bunch called Zangastans. They slung me into the jug."
"Yes,
yes," said Colonel Farmer, making pacifying gestures. "But
how on earth did you get away?"
"Farmer,
I cannot tell a lie hexed them with my bopamagilvie."
"Huh?".
"So I
left by rail," informed Leeming, "and there were ten
faplaps carrying it." Taking the other unaware he let go a
vicious kick at the desk and made a spurt of ink leap across the
blotter. "Now let's see some of the intelligence they're
supposed to have in Intelligence. Beam the offer. Two for a
cootie-coated Lathian and a Willy Terwilliger." He stared
around, a wild look in his eyes. "And find me somewhere to sleep
- I'm dead beat."
Holding
himself in enormous restraint, Farmer said, "Lieutenant, is that
the proper way in which to talk to a colonel?"
"One
talks in any way to anybody. Mayor Snorkum will lay the cake. Go
paddle a poodle." Leeming kicked the desk again. "Get busy
and tuck me into bed."
Achtung!
Upon the
cover the nominal publisher claims that this superb story was
produced by Eric Frank Russell. It is a barefaced lie because his
Eustace knows better.
Apart from
the typing of it I had nothing whatever to do with the book. It was
ghost-written for me by my next of kin. Or perhaps I should say it
was kin-written by my next of ghost.
This
character, the real author, deposes that his name is Eustace
Postlethwaite and considers it a handicap to literary fame. All the
same, he swears that this yarn will be printed because he has
fraternal influence with the real publisher, Eustace Bam, who is a
shady relative of the nominal publisher.
I am given to
understand that neither of these Eustaces would ever be seen dead
with a Willy and that where the name appears herein it should be
viewed as obscene. Does this baffle you? Do you crave enlightenment?
Read on ...
ONE
He knew he'd
stuck his neck out and it was too late to withdraw. It had been the
same since early childhood when he'd accepted dares and been sorry
immediately afterward. They say that one learns from experience; if
that were true the human race would now be devoid of folly. He'd
learned plenty in his time and forgotten most of it within a week. So
yet again he'd wangled himself into a predicament and undoubtedly
would be left to wangle himself out of it as best he could.
Once more he
knocked at the door, a little harder but not imperatively. Behind the
panels a chair scraped and a harsh voice responded with hearable
impatience.
"Come
in!"
Marching
inside, he stood at attention before the desk; head erect, thumbs in
line with the seams of the pants, feet at an angle of forty-five
degrees. A robot, he thought, just a damned robot.
Fleet-Admiral
Markham surveyed him from beneath bushy brows, his cold gaze slowly
rising from feet to head then descending from head to feet.
"Who are
you?"
"Scout-Officer
John Leeming, sir."
"Oh,
yes." Markham maintained the stare then suddenly barked, "Button
your fly."
Leeming
jerked and showed embarrassment. "I can't, sir. It has defective
zipper."
"Then
why haven't you visited the tailor? That's what the base tailor-shop
is for, isn't it. Does your commanding officer approve of his men
appearing before him sloppily dressed? I doubt it!, What the devil do
you mean by it?"
"I
haven't had time to tend to it, sir. The zipper packed up only a few
minutes ago," explained Leeming.
"Is that
so?" Fleet Admiral Markham lay back in his chair and scowled at
nothing. "There's a war on, a galactic war. To fight it
successfully and to win it we are wholly dependent upon our
space-navies. It's a hell of a thing when the navy goes into battle
with defective zippers."
Since he
seemed to expect a reply to that one, Leeming gave it: "With all
respect, sir, I don't see that it matters. During a battle a man
doesn't care what happens to his pants so long as he survives
intact."
"I
agree," said Markham. "But what worries me is the question
of how much other and more important material may prove to be
substandard. If civilian contractors fail on little things they'll
certainly fail on big ones. Such failures can cost lives."
"Yes,
sir," said Leeming; wondering what the other was getting at.
"A new
and untried ship, for instance," Markham went on. "If it
operates as planned, we'll and good. If it doesn't--" He let the
sentence peter out, thought awhile, continued, "We asked for
volunteers for special long-range reconnaissance patrols: You were
the first to hand in your name. I want to know why."
"If the
job has to be done somebody must do it," answered Leeming
evasively.
"I am
fully aware of the fact. But I want to know exactly why you
volunteered." He waited a bit, urged, "Come on, speak up! I
won't penalize a risk-taker for giving his reasons."
Thus
encouraged, Leeming said, "I like action. I like working on my
own. I don't like the time-wasting discipline they go in for around
the base. It gives me a pain in the seat, Stand here, stand there,
put your chest out, pull your belly in, polish your shoes, get a
haircut, take that silly look off your face, who d'you think you're
speaking to? I'm a fully trained scout pilot and not a dressed-up
dummy for uniformed loudmouths to bark at. I want to get on with the
work for which I am suited and that's all there is to it"
Markham
showed no ire. On the contrary, he nodded understandingly. "So
do most of us. Terrans always were an impatient bunch. Do you think
I'm not frustrated sitting behind a desk while a major war is being
fought?" Without waiting for a response he added, "I've no
time far a man who volunteers because he's been crossed in love or
wants to do some heavy bragging or anything like that. I want a
competent pilot who is an individualist afflicted with the fidgets."
"Yes,
sir."
"You
seem to fit the part all right. Your technical record is first-class.
Your disciplinary record stinks to high heaven." He eyed his
listener blank-faced. "Two charges of refusing to obey a lawful
order. Four for insolence and insubordination. One for parading with
your cap on back to front. What on earth made you do that?"
"I had a
bad attack of what-the-hell, sir," explained Leeming.
"Did
you? Well, it's obvious that you're a confounded nuisance. The
space-base would be better off without you."
"Yes,
sir."
"As you
know, we and a few allies are fighting a big combine led by the
Lathians. The size of the opposition doesn't worry us. What we lack
in numbers we more than make up for in competence and efficiency. Our
war-potential is great and rapidly growing greater. We'll skin the
Lathians alive before we're through."
Leeming
offered no comment, having become tired of yessing.
"We've
one serious weakness," Markham informed. "We lack adequate
information about the enemy's cosmic hinterland. We know how wide
the Combine spreads but not how deep into the starfield it goes. It's
true that the enemy is no wiser with regard to us, but that's his
worry."
Again Leeming
made no remark.
"Ordinary
warships haven't flight-duration sufficiently prolonged to dig deep
behind the Combine's spatial front. That difficulty will be overcome
when we capture one or more of their outpost worlds with repair and
refuelling facilities. However, we can't afford to wait until then.
Our Intelligence Service wants some essential data just as soon as it
can be got. Do you understand?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Good!
We have developed. a new kind of superfast scout-ship. I can't tell
you how it functions except that it does not use the normal
caesium-ion form of propulsion. Its type of power-unit is a top
secret. For that reason it must not fall into the enemy's hands. At
the last resort the pilot must destroy it even if it means also
destroying himself."
"Completely
wrecking a ship, though a small one, is much more difficult than it
seems."
"Not
this ship," Markham retorted. "She carries an effective
charge in her engine-room. The pilot need but press a button to
scatter the power-units piecemeal over a wide area"
"I see."
"That
charge is the sole explosive aboard. The ship has not a gun, not a
guided missile, no armament of any sort. It's a stripped-down vessel
with everything sacrificed for the sake of speed and its only defence
is to scoot good and fast. That, I assure you, it can do. Nothing in
the galaxy can catch it providing it is squirting from all twenty
propulsors."
"Sounds
good to me, sir," approved Leeming, licking his lips. "It
is good. It's got to be good. The unanswered question is that of
whether it is good enough to take the beating of a long, long trip.
The tubes are the weakest part of any spaceship. Sooner or later they
burn out. That's what bothers me. The tubes on this ship have very
special linings. In theory they should last for months. In practice
they might not. You know. what that means?"
"No
repairs and no replacements in enemy territory, no means of getting
back," Leeming offered.
"Correct.
And the vessel would have to be destroyed. From that moment the
pilot, if still surviving, has isolated himself somewhere within the
mists of Creation, His chance of seeing. humankind again is remote
enough to verge on the impossible."
"There
could, be worse situations. I'd rather be alive someplace than
stone-dead here. While there's life there's hope."
"You
still wish to go through with this?"
"Sure
thing; sir:"
"Then
upon your own head be it," said Markham with grim humour. "Go
along the corridor, seventh door on the right, report to Colonel
Farmer. Tell him I sent you."
"Yes,
sir."
"And
before you go try that damned zipper again."
Obediently,
Leeming tried it. The thing slid all the way as smoothly as if oiled.
He stared at the other with a mixture of astonishment and injured
innocence.
"I
started in the ranks and I haven't forgotten it," said Markham,
pointedly. "You can't fool me."
Colonel
Farmer, of Military Intelligence, was a beefy, florid-faced character
who looked slightly dumb but had a sharp mind. He was examining a
huge star-map' hung upon one wall when Leeming walked in. Farmer
swung around as if expecting to be stabbed in the back.
"Haven't
you been taught to knock before you enter?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Then
why didn't you?"
"I
forgot, sir. My mind was occupied with the interview I've just had
with Fleet-Admiral Markham."
"Did he
send you to me?"
"Yes
sir."
"Oh, so
you're the long-range reconnaissance pilot, eh? I don't suppose
Commodore Keen will be sorry to see you go. You've been somewhat of a
thorn in his side, haven't you?"
"No,
sir," denied Leeming. "I have been a pain in his.
seat-every time he's tried to sit on me."
"In the
armed forces one must get used to that sort of thing."
"Sorry,
sir, but I don't agree. One joins the forces to help win a war and
for no other purpose. I am not a juvenile delinquent called up for
reformation by the Commodore or by anyone else."
"He'd
differ from you there. He's a stickler for discipline." Farmer
let go a chuckle at some secret joke, added, "Keen by name and
keen by nature." He contemplated the other a short while, went
on more soberly, "You've picked yourself a tough job."
"That
doesn't worry me," Leeming assured. "Birth, marriage and
death are tough jobs."
"You
might never come back."
"Makes
little difference. Eventually we'll all take a ride from which we'll
never come back."
"Well,
you needn't mention it with such ghoulish satisfaction," Farmer
complained. "Are you married?"
"No,
sir. Whenever I get the urge I just lie down quietly until the
feeling passes off."
Farmer eyed
the ceiling and said, "God!"
"What
else do you expect?" asked Leeming, displaying slight
aggressiveness. "A scout-pilot operates single-handed. He's like
a bug in a metal can and has to learn to dispense with a lot of
things; especially companionship. It's surprising how much one can do
without if one really tries."
"I'm
sure," soothed Farmer. He gestured toward the starmap. "On
that the nearest points of light are arrayed across the enemy's
front. The mist of stars behind them are unknown territory. The
Combine may be far weaker than we think because its front is
wafer-thin. Or it may be more powerful because its authority
stretches far to the rear. The only way to find out exactly what
we're up against is to effect a deep penetration through the enemy's
spatial lines."
Leeming said
nothing.
"We
propose to sent a special scout-ship through this area where occupied
worlds lie far apart, the Combine's defences are somewhat scattered
and their detector devices are relatively sparse." Farmer put
his finger on a dark patch on the map. "With the speed your
vessel possesses the enemy will have hardly enough time to identify
you as hostile before they lose trace of you We have every reason to
believe that you'll be able to slip through into their rear without
trouble"
"I hope
so," contributed Leeming seeing that a response was expected.
"The
only danger point is here." Shifting his finger an inch, Farmer
placed it on a bright star. "A Lathian-held solar system
containing at least four large space-navy stations. If those fleets
happen to be zooming around the bolt-hole they might intercept you
more by accident than good judgment. So you'll be accompanied that
far by a strong escort."
"That's
nice."
"If the
escort should become involved in a fight you will not attempt to take
part. it would be futile to do so, anyway, because your vessel
carries no offensive armament. You will take full advantage of the
diversion to race out of range and dive through the Combine's front.
Is that understood?"
"Yes,
sir."
"After
you get through you must use your initiative. Bear in mind that we
don't want to know how far beyond there are worlds holding
intelligent life-you would never reach the end of those even if you
continued to the crack of doom: We want to know only how far back
there are such worlds in regular communication with various members
of the Combine. Whenever you come across an organised planet playing
ball with the Combine you will at once transmit all the details you
can offer."
"I
will."
"Immediately
you are satisfied that you have gained the measure of the enemy's
depth you will return as quickly as possible. You must get the ship
back here if it can be done. If for any reason you cannot return, the
ship must be converted into scrap. No abandoning it in free space, no
dumping it into an ocean or anything like that. The ship must be
destroyed. Markham has emphasised this, hasn't he?"
"Yes,
sir."
"All
right. We're giving you forty-eight hours in which to clear up your
personal affairs. After that, you will report to Number Ten
Spaceport." Farmer held out his hand. I Wish you all the luck
you can get."
"Thinking
I'll need it?" Leeming grinned and went on, "You're laying
very heavy odds against ever seeing me again. It's written across
your face. I'll be back-want to bet on it?"
"No,"
said Farmer. "I never gamble because I'm a bad loser. But if and
when you do return I'll tuck you into bed With my own two hands."
"That's
a promise," warned Leeming.
He went to
his tiny room, found another fellow already in occupation. This
character eyed him with faint embarrassment.
"You
Leeming?"
"That's
right."
"I'm
Davies, Jack Davies."
"Glad to
know you." Grabbing his bags, Leeming started packing them,
stuffing away with careless haste shirts, collars and handkerchiefs.
Sitting on
the bed, Davies informed, "They told me to take over your room.
They said you'd be leaving today."
"Correct."
"Going
far?"
"Don't
know for certain. It might be too far."
"Are you
pleased to go?"
"Sure
am," Leeming enthused.
"Can't
say I blame you." Davies ruminated a moment in glum silence;
went on, "I arrived a couple of hours ago and reported to the
Base C.O. An autocratic type if ever I saw one." He gave a
brief, unflattering description of Commodore Keen. "I don't know
his name."
"Mallarqui,"
Leeming informed.
"That
so? Uncommon, isn't it?"
"No."
Closing the case, Leeming kneeled on its lid while he locked it,
started on the next one. "It's as old as the hills. You've heard
of a lot of Mallarqui, haven't you?"
"Yes, I.
have."
"Well,
in this dump there's too much of it"
"I think
you're right. Mallarqui took one look at me and yelled, `Haircut!’"
Ruefully, Davies rubbed the short bristle covering his pate. "So
I went and got one. What a Space navy! Immediately you show your face
they scalp you. And what d'you suppose happened next?"
"They
issued you with a brush and comb."
"They
did just that." He massaged the bristle again. "What for?"
"Same
reason as they do everything else," explained Leeming, "B.B.B."
"B.B.B?
What d'you mean?"
"It's a
motto adopted by the boys on inactive service. You'll find yourself
reciting it about twenty times per day. Baloney Baffles Brains."
"I see,"
said Davies, taking on a worried look:
"The
only way to escape is to fall foul of Keen. He'll get rid of
you-after he's broken your heart."
"Keen?
Who's he?"
"Mallarqui,"
corrected Leeming, hurriedly. "The fellows call him Keen behind
his back. If you want to stay out of the pokey don't ever ever
call him Commodore Keen to his face. He likes to be addressed as Mr.
Mallarqui."
"Thanks
for the tip," said Davies, innocently grateful.
"You're
quite welcome. Take your butt off the bed - I want my pyjamas."
"Sorry,"
Davies stood up, sat dawn again.
Cramming the
pyjamas into the case, Leeming closed it, took a long look around.
"That's
about all, I guess. Victory has been postponed by sheer lack of
efficient zippers. I got that information straight from the top. So
they're rushing me out to win the war. From now on all you need do is
sit around and count the days." He made for the door, a bag in
each hand. Coming to his feet again, Davies said awkwardly, "Happy
landings."
"Thanks."
In the corridor the first person Leeming encountered was Commodore
Keen. Being too burdened to salute, he threw the other a regulation
eyes-left which Keen acknowledged with a curt nod. Keen brushed past
and entered the room. His loud, harsh voice boosted out the open
door.
"Ah,
Davies, so you have settled in. Since you won't be required today you
can clean up this hog-pen in readiness for mp inspection this
evening."
"Yes,
Mr. Mallarqui."
"WHAT?"
Outside,
Leeming took a firmer grip on his bags and ran like hell.
The ship was
a beauty, the same diameter as an ordinary scout-vessel but over
twice the length. These proportions made it look less like a one-man
snoop-boat than a miniature cruiser. Standing on its tail, it towered
so high that its nose seemed to reach halfway towards the clouds.
Studying it
appreciatively, Leeming asked, "Any more like this!"
"Three,"
responded Montecelli, the spaceport's chief engineer. "All
hidden elsewhere with a tight security ring around them. Strict
orders from above say that this type of vessel may be used only one
at a time. A second must not be sent out until after yours has
returned."
"So I'm
first on the list, eh? What if I don't come back? What if this ship
is destroyed and you've no way of knowing?"
The other
shrugged. "That's the War Staff's worry, not mine. I only obey
directives from above and those can be trouble enough."
"H'm!
Probably they've set a time limit far my safe return. If I'm not back
by then they'll assume that I'm a gone goose."
"They
haven't said anything to you about it?"
"No."
"Then
don't you worry either. Life's too short. In time of war it gets
shortened for many." Montecelli scowled at the sky. "Whenever
a boat boosts upward on a column of flame I never know whether
that'll be the last I'll ever see of it."
"That's
right, cheer me on my way," said Leeming. "The life and
soul of the party."
"Sorry,
I clean forgot you're going:" He pointed to an adjacent
building. "In there we've set up a duplicate nose- cabin far
training purposes. It will take you most of a week to become
accustomed to the new-type controls, to learn how to handle the
transpatial radio and generally get the feel of things. You can start
your education as soon as you like." "All I'm bothered
about is the autopilot," Leeming told him. "It had better
be a good one. A fellow can't travel for days and weeks without sleep
and he can't snooze with the ship running wild. A really reliable,
autopilot is his fairy godmother."
"Listen,
son, if this one could do more than hold you on course while jerking
you away from dangers, if it could see and think and transmit
reports, we'd send it away without you." Montecelli gave his
listener a reassuring slap on the shoulder. "It's the best ever.
It'd take care of you even if you were on your honeymoon and
temporarily unconscious of the cosmos."
"The
only resemblance is that I'll need my strength," said Leeming.
He entered the building and more or less stayed in it for the
prescribed week.
The take-off
came at one hour after sunset. There was a cloudless sky, velvet
black and spangled with stars. Strange to think that far, far out
there, concealed by sheer distance, were countless populated worlds
with Combine warships parading warily between some of them while the
allied fleets of Terrans, Sirians, Rigellians and others were on the
prowl across an enormous front.
Below, long
chains of arc-lights dithered as a gentle breeze swept across the
spaceport. Beyond the safety barriers that defined the coming
blast-area a group of people were waiting to witness the ascent. If
the ship toppled instead of going up, thought Leeming wryly, the
whole lot of them would race for sanctuary with burning backsides. It
did not occur to him that in such an event he would be in poor
position to enjoy the sight. A voice came out of the tiny loudspeaker
set in the cabin wall. "Warm up Pilot."
He
pressed a button. Something went whump, then the
ship groaned and shuddered while a great circular cloud of dust and
vapour rolled across the concrete and concealed the safety barriers.
The low groaning and trembling continued while he sat in silence, his
full attention upon the instrument bank. The needles of twenty meters
crawled to the right, quivered awhile, became still. That meant
steady and equal pressure in the twenty stern tubes.
"Everything
all right, Pilot?"
"Yes."
"Take
off at will." A pause; followed by, "Lots of luck!"
"Thanks!"
He let the
tubes blow for another half minute before gradually lie moved the
tiny booster-lever towards him. Shuddering increased, the groan
raised its pitch until it became a howl, the cabin windows misted
over and the sky was obscured.
For a
nerve-wracking second the vessel rocked on its tail-fins. Then it
began to creep upward, a foot, a yard, ten yards. The howl was now a
shriek. The chronically slow rate of climb suddenly changed as
something seemed to give the vessel a hearty shove in the rear. Up it
went, a hundred feet, a thousand, ten thousand. Through the clouds
and into the deep of the night. The cabin windows were clear, the sky
was full of stars and the Moon looked huge.
The
loudspeaker said in faint, squeaky tones, "Nice work, Pilot."
"All my
work is nice," 5etorted Leeming. "See you in the asylum."
There was no
answer to that. They knew that he'd become afflicted with an
exaggerated sense of freedom referred to as take-off intoxication.
Most pilots suffered from it as soon as a planet lay behind their
tail and only the stars could be seen ahead. The symptoms consisted
of sardonic comments. and abuse raining down from the sky.
"Go get
a haircut," bawled Leeming into his microphone. He jiggled
around in his seat while the ship boomed onward.
"And
clean up that hog-pen. Haven't you been taught how to salute? Baloney
baffles brains!"
They didn't
answer that, either.
But down in
the spaceport control-tower the duty officer pulled a face and said
to Montecelli, "You know, I think that Einstein never worked out
the whole of it."
"What
d'you mean?"
"I have
a theory that as one approaches the velocity of light one's
inhibitions shrink to zero."
"You may
have something there," Montecelli conceded.
"Pork
and beans, pork and beans, Holy God, pork and beans," squawked
the control-tower speaker with swiftly fading strength. "Get
undressed because I want to test your eyes. Now inhale. Keen by name
and keen by-"
The duty
officer switched it off.
TWO
He picked up
the escort in the Sirian sector, the first encounter being made when
he was fast asleep. Activated by a challenging signal on a pre-set
frequency, the alarm sounded just above his ear and caused him to
dive out of the bunk while no more than half awake. For a moment he
gazed stupidly around while the ship vibrated and the autopilot went
tick-tick.
"Zern
kaid-whit?" rasped the loudspeaker. "Zern kaid-whit?"
That was code
and meant; "identify yourself-friend or foe?"
Taking the
pilot's seat, he turned a key that caused his transmitter to squirt
forth a short and ultra-rapid series of numbers. Then he rubbed his
eyes and looked into the forward starfield. Apart from the majestic
haze of suns shining in the dark there was nothing to be seen with
the naked eye. So he switched on his thermosensitive detector screens
and was rewarded with a line of brilliant dots paralleling his course
to starboard while a second group, in arrow formation, was about to
cut across far ahead of his nose. He was not seeing the ships, of
course, but only the visible evidence of their white-hot propulsion
tubes and flaming tails.
"Keefa"
said the loudspeaker, meaning, "All correct!"
Crawling back
into the bunk, Leeming hauled a blanket over his face, closed his
eyes and left the autopilot to carry on. After ten minutes his mind
began to drift into a pleasant, soothing dream about sleeping in free
space with nobody to bother him.
Dropping its
code-talk, the loudspeaker yelped in plain language, "Cut speed
before we lose you."
He sat up as
if stung, stared blearily across the cabin. Some-body had spoken;
somebody with a parade-ground voice. Or had he imagined it? He waited
a bit but nothing happened and so he lay down again.
The
loudspeaker bawled impatiently, "You deaf? Cut speed before we
lose you!"
Leeming
clambered irefully from the bunk, sat at the controls, adjusted them
slowly. A thin braking-jet in the bow let go a double plume of vapour
that swept back on either side as the ship overtook and passed by.
The stern-tubes meanwhile decreased their thrust. He watched his
meters until he thought their needles had dropped far enough to make
the others happy. Then he returned to bed and hid himself under the
blanket.
It seemed to
him that he was swinging in a celestial hammock and enjoying a
wonderful idleness when the loudspeaker roared, "Cut more! Cut
more!"
He shot out
from under the blanket, scrambled to the controls and cut more. Then
he switched on his transmitter and made a speech distinguished by its
passion. It was partly a seditious outburst and partly a lecture upon
the basic functions of the human body. From all he knew the
astonished listeners might include two rear-admirals and a dozen
commodores. If so, he was educating them.
In return he
received no heated retorts, no angry voice of authority. If he had
broadcast the same words from a heavily manned battleship they'd have
plastered him with forty charges and set the date for his
court-martial. But it was space-navy convention that a lone scout's
job created an unavoidable craziness among all those who performed it
and that ninety percent of them were overdue for psychiatric
treatment. A scout on active service could and often did say things
that nobody else in the space-navy dared utter. It is a wonderful
thing to be recognised as dotty.
For three
weeks they accompanied him in the glum silence with which a family
takes around an imbecile relation. He chafed impatiently during this
period because their top speed was far, far below his maximum
velocity and the need to keep pace with them gave him the feeling of
an urgent motorist trapped behind a funeral procession.
The
Sirian battleship Wassoon was the chief culprit,
a great clumsy contraption that wallowed along like a bloated
hippopotamus while a shoal of faster cruisers and destroyers were
compelled to amble with it. He did not know its name but he did know
that it was a battleship because on his detector screens it resembled
a glowing pea amid an array of fiery pinheads. Every time he looked
at the pea he cursed it something awful. He was, again venting his
ire upon it when the loudspeaker chipped in and spoke for the first
time in many days.
"Ponk!"
Ponk?
What the devil was ponk? The word meant something mighty important,
he could remember that much. Hastily he scrabbled through his
codebook and found it: Enemy in sight.
No sign of
the foe was visible on his screens. Evidently they were beyond
detector range and had been spotted only by the escort's advance
guard of four destroyers running far ahead.
"Dial
F," ordered the loudspeaker.
So they were
changing frequency in readiness for battle. Leeming touched the dial
of his multiband receiver from T back to F. Laconic interfleet
messages came through the speaker in a steady stream.
"Offside
group port twenty, rising inclination twelve."
"Check!"
"Break
off."
"Check!"
On the
screens five glowing dots swiftly angled away from the main body of
the escort: Four were mere pinheads, the fifth and middle one about
half the size of the pea. A cruiser and four destroyers were escaping
the combat area for the time-honoured purpose of getting between the
enemy and his nearest base.
In a
three-dimensional medium where speeds were tremendous and space was
vast this tactic never worked. It did not stop both sides from trying
to make it work whenever the opportunity came along. This could be
viewed as eternal optimism or persistent stupidity, according to the
state of one's liver.
The small
group of would-be ambushers scooted as fast as they could make it,
hoping to become lost within the confusing welter of starlights
before the enemy came near enough to detect the move. Meanwhile the
Wasoon and its attendant cohort plugged steadily onward. Ahead,
almost at the limit of the fleet's detector range, the four
destroyers continued to advance without attempting to disperse or
change course.
"Two
groups of ten converging from forty-five degrees rightward,
descending inclination fifteen;" reported the forward
destroyers.
"Classification?"
demanded the Wassoon.
"Not
possible yet."
Silence for
six hours, then, "Two groups still maintaining same course; each
appears to consist of two heavy cruisers and eight monitors."
That was
sheer guesswork based upon the theory that the greater the detectable
heat the bigger the ship. Leeming watched his screens knowing full
well that the enemy's vessels might prove to be warships as the
observers supposed or might equally well turn out to be escorted
convoys of merchantmen. Since the spatial war first broke out many a
lumbering tramp had been mistaken for a monitor.
Slowly, ever
so slowly twenty faintly discernible dots bloomed into his screens.
This was the time when he and his escort should be discovered by the
enemy's detection devices. The foe must have spotted the leading
destroyers hours ago; either they weren't worried about a mere four
ships or, more likely, had taken it for granted that they were
friendly. It would be interesting to watch their reaction when they
found the strong force farther behind.
He did not
get the chance to observe this pleasing phenomenon. The loudspeaker
let go a squawk of, "Ware zenith! " and automatically his
gaze perked upward to the screens above his head. They were poxed
with a host of rapidly enlarging dots He estimated that sixty to
eighty ships were diving in fast at ninety degrees to the plane of
the escort; but he didn't stop to count them. One glance was
sufficient to tell him that he was in a definite hot-spot.
Forthwith he
lifted his slender vessel's nose and switched to full boost. The
result pinned him in his seat while his intestines tried to wrap
themselves around his spine: It was easy to imagine the effect upon
the enemy's screens; they would see one mysterious, unidentifiable
ship break loose from the target area and swoop around them at a
speed previously thought impossible.
With luck,
they might assume that what one ship could do all the others could do
likewise. If there is anything a spaceship captain detests it is to
have another and faster ship sneaking up on his tail. The fiery end
of a spaceship is its weak spot for there can be no effective
armament in an area filled with propulsors.
Stubbornly
Leeming stuck to the upward curve which, if maintained long enough,
would take him well to one side of the approaching attackers and
around to the back of them. He kept full attention upon his screens.
The oncomers held course in a tight, vengeful knot for four hours, by
which time they were almost within shooting distance of the escort.
At that point their nerve failed. The fact that the escort still kept
impassive formation while one ship headed like a shooting star for
their rear made them suspect a trap. One thing the Combine never
lacked was suspicion of the Allies' motives and unshakable faith in
their cunning.
So they
curved out at right-angles and spread in all directions like the
petals of a blown flower, their detectors probing for another and
bigger fleet that might be lurking just beyond visibility.
Belting
along at top pace, one Lathian light cruiser realized that its new
course would bring it within range of the missiles with which
Leeming's strange, superfast ship presumably was armed. It tried to
play safe by changing course again and thereby delivered itself into
the hands of the Wassoon's electronic
predictors. The Wassoon fired, its missiles met the cruiser at
the precise point where it came within range. Cruiser and missiles
tried to occupy the same space at the same time. The result was, a
soundless explosion of great magnitude and a flare of heat that
temporarily obliterated every detector screen within range.
Another
blast shone briefly high in the starfield and far beyond reach of the
escort's armaments. A few minutes later a thin, reedy voice,
distorted by static, reported that a straggling enemy destroyer had
fallen foul of the distant ambushing party. This sudden loss, right
outside the scene of action, seemed to confirm the enemy's belief
that the Wassoon and its attendant fleet might
be mere bait in a trap loaded with something formidable. They
continued to radiate fast from their common centre in an effort to
locate the hidden menace and, at the same time, avoid being caught in
a bunch.
Seeing them
thus darting away like a shoal of frightened fish, Leeming muttered.
steadily to himself. A dispersed fleet should be easy prey to a
superfast ship capable of overhauling and dealing with its units one
by one. He had to face the fact that his vessel could do nothing more
than scare them individually while he lavished futile curses upon
them. Without a single effective weapon he was impotent to take
advantage of an opportunity that might never occur again. For the
moment he had quite forgotten his role, not to mention his strict
orders to avoid a space-fight at all costs.
The
Wassoon soon reminded him with a sharp call of,
"Scout pilot, where the hell d'you think you're going?"
"Up and
around," replied Leeming sourly.
"You're
more of a liability than an asset," retorted the Wassoon,
unappreciative of his efforts. "Get out while the going is
good."
Leeming
yelled into the microphone, "I know when I'm not wanted, see?
Spitting on parade is a punishable offence, see? Remember, man, you
must always salute a commodore. Stand properly
to attention when you speak to me! We're being sabotaged by defective
zippers. Come on, lift those feet, Dopey-one, two, three, hup!"
As before,
the listeners took no notice whatsoever. Leeming turned his ship on
to a new course with plane parallel to that of the escort and high
above them. They now became visible on his underbelly screens and
showed themselves in the same. unbroken formation by sweeping in a
wide circle to get on the reverse course. That meant they were
leaving him and heading homeward. The enemy, still scattered beyond
shooting range, must have viewed this move as wicked temptation for
although in superior strength they continued to refrain from direct
attack.
Quickly the
escort's array of shining dots slid off the screens as Leeming's
vessel shot away from them. Ahead and well to starboard the detectors
showed the two enemy groups that had first appeared. They had not
dispersed in the same manner that their main force had done but their
course showed that they were fleeing the area at the best pace they
could muster. This fact suggested that they really were two convoys
of merchantmen hugging close to their protecting cruisers. With deep
regret Leeming watched them go. Given the weapons he could have
swooped upon the bloated parade and slaughtered a couple of
heavily-laden ships before the cruisers had time to wake up.
At full pelt
he dived into the Combine's front and headed toward the unknown back
areas. Just before his detectors lost range his tailward screen
flared up twice in quick succession. Far behind him two ships had
ceased to exist and there was no way of telling whether these losses
had been suffered by the escort or the enemy.
He tried to
find out by calling on the interfleet frequency, "What goes?
What goes?"
No answer.
A third flash
covered the screen: It was weak with distance and swiftly fading
sensitivity.
Keying the
transmitter to give his identifying code-number, he called again.
No reply.
If
the battle had joined far to his rear they'd be much too busy to
bother with his queries. He'd have given a lot to turn back and see
for himself what was happening, to join the hooley and help litter
the cosmos with wreckage. But without a major or minor weapon he was
precisely what the Wassoon had declared him to
be, namely, an unmitigated nuisance.
Chewing his
bottom lip with annoyance, he squatted four square in the pilot's
seat and scowled straight ahead while the ship arrowed toward a dark
gap in the hostile starfield. In due time he got beyond the full
limit of Allied warships' non-stop range. At that point he also got
beyond help.
The first
world was easy meat. Believing it impossible for any Allied ship to
penetrate this far without refuelling and changing tubes, the enemy
assumed that any ship detected in local space must be friendly or, at
least, neutral. Therefore when picked up by their detectors they did
not bother to radio a challenge and identify him as hostile by his
inability to give a correct reply. They let him zoom around
unhampered by official nosiness.
So he found
the first occupied world by the simple process of shadowing a small
convoy heading inward from the spatial front, allowing them long
enough to make an accurate plot of their course. Then, because he
could not afford to waste days and weeks crawling along at their
relatively slow pace, he arced over them and raced ahead until he
reached the inhabited planet for which they were bound.
Checking the
planet was equally easy. He went twice around its equator at altitude
sufficiently low to permit swift visual observation. Complete
coverage of she sphere was not necessary to gain a shrewd idea of its
status, development and potentialities. What he could see in a narrow
strip around its belly was enough of a sampling for the purposes of
the Terran Intelligence Service.
In short time
he spotted three spaceports, two empty, the third holding eight
merchant ships of unknown origin and three Combine war vessels. Other
evidence showed the world to be heavily populated and well-advanced.
He could safely mark it as a pro-Combine planet of considerable
military value.
Shooting back
into free space, he dialled X, the special long-range frequency, and
beamed this information together with the planet's approximate
diameter, mass and spatial co-ordinates.
"I dived
in and circumnavigated the dump," he said, and let go a snigger.
He couldn't help if because he was recalling his careless response to
a similar situation set as a test-piece in his first examination.
He had
written, "I made cautious approach to the strange planet and
then quickly circumcised it."
The paper had
come back marked; "Why?"
He'd replied,
"I could get around better by taking short cuts."
It had cost
him ten marks and the dead-pan comment, "This information lacks
either accuracy or wit." But he had passed all the same.
There was no
reply to his signal and he did not expect one. He could beam signals
outward with impunity but they could not beam back into enemy
territory without awakening hostile listening-posts to the fact that
someone must be operating in their back areas. Beamed signals were
highly directional and the enemy was always on the alert to pick up
and decipher anything emanating from the Allied front while ignoring
all broadcasts from the rear.
The next
twelve worlds were found in substantially the same manner as the
first one: by plotting interplanetary and interstellar shipping
routes and following them to their termini. He signalled details of
each one and each time was rewarded with silence. By this time he
found himself deploring the necessary lack of response because he had
been going long enough to yearn for the sound of a human voice.
After weeks
that stretched to months, enclosed in a thundering metal bottle, he
was becoming afflicted with an appalling loneliness. Amid this vast
stretch of stars, with seemingly endless planets an which lived not a
soul to call him Joe, he could have really enjoyed the arrival from
far away or an irate human voice bawling him out good and proper for
some error, real or fancied. He'd have sat there and bathed his mind
in the stream of abuse. Constant, never-ending silence was the worst
of all, the hardest to bear.
Occasionally
he tried to break the hex by singing at the top of his voice or by
holding heated arguments with himself while the ship howled onward.
It was a poor and ineffectual substitute because he was less musical
than a tumescent tom-cat a nd he couldn't win an argument without
also losing it.
His sleeps
were lousy, too. Sometimes he dreamed that the autopilot had gone
haywire and that the ship was heading full-tilt into a blazing sun.
Then he'd wake up with his belly jumping and make quick, anxious
check of the apparatus before returning to slumber. Other times he
awoke heavy-eyed and dry-mouthed feeling that he'd had no sleep at
all, but had been lying supine through hours of constant trembling
and a long, sustained roar.
Several times
he had pursuit dreams in which he was being chased through dark,
metallic corridors that bellowed and quivered all around while close
behind him sounded the rapid, vengeful tread of feet that were not
feet. Invariably he woke up just as he was about to be grabbed by
hands that were not hands.
In theory
there was no need for him to suffer the wear and tear of long-range
reconnaissance. A case full of wonder-drugs had been provided to cope
with every conceivable condition of mind or body. The trouble was
that they were effective or they were not. If ineffective, the taking
of them proved sheer waste of time. If effective, they tended to
shove things to the opposite extreme.
Before one
sleep-period he had experimented by taking a so-called normalising
capsule positively guaranteed to get rid of nightmares and ensure
happy, interesting dreams. The result had been ten completely
uninhibited hours in a harem. They had been hours so utterly
interesting that they'd left him flat out. He never took another
capsule.
It was while
he was nosing after a merchant convoy, in expectation of tracing a
thirteenth planet, that he got some vocal sounds that at least broke
the monotony. He was following far behind and high above the group of
ships and the, feeling secure in their own backyard, were keeping no
detector watch and were unaware of his presence. Fiddling idly with
the controls of his receiver, he suddenly hit upon an enemy
interfleet frequency and picked up a conversation between ships.
The unknown
lifeform manning the vessels had loud, somewhat bellicose voices but
spoke a language with sound- forms curiously akin to Terran speech.
To Leeming's ears it came as a stream of cross-talk that his mind
instinctively framed in Terran words. It went like this:
First voice:
"Mayor Snorkum will lay the cake."
Second voice:
"What for the cake be laid by Snorkum?"
First voice:
"He will starch his moustache."
Second voice:
"That is night-gab. How can he starch a tepid mouse?"
They spent
the next ten minutes in what sounded like an acrimonious argument
about what one repeatedly called a tepid mouse while the other
insisted that it was a torpid moose. Leeming found that trying to
follow the point and counterpoint of this debate put quite a strain
upon the cerebellum. He suffered it until something snapped.
Tuning his
transmitter to the same frequency, he bawled, "Mouse or moose,
make up your goddam minds!"
This produced
a moment of dumbfounded silence before the first voice harshed,
"Gnof, can you lap a pie-chain?"
"No, he
can't," shouted Leeming, giving the unfortunate Gnof no chance
to brag of his ability as a pie-chain lapper.
There came
another pause, then Gnof resentfully told all and sundry, "I
shall lambast my mother."
"Dirty
dog!" said Leeming. "Shame on you!"
The other
voice informed, mysteriously, "Mine is a fat one."
"I can
imagine," Leeming agreed.
"Clam-shack?"
demanded Gnof in tones clearly, translatable as, "Who is that?"
"Mayor
Snorkum," Leeming told him.
For some
weird reason known only to alien minds this information caused the
argument to start all over again. They commenced by debating Mayor
Snorkum's antecedents and future prospects (or so it sounded) and
gradually and enthusiastically worked their way along to the tepid
mouse (or torpid moose).
There were
moments when they became mutually about something or other, possibly
Snorkum's habit of keeping his moose on a pie-chain. Finally they
dropped the subject by common consent and switched to the abstruse
question of how to paddle a puddle (according to one) or how to
peddle a poodle (according to the other).
"Holy
cow!" said Leeming fervently.
It must have
borne close resemblance to something pretty potent in the hearers'
language because they broke off and again Gnof challenged,
"Clam-shack?"
"Go
jump, Buster!" Leeming invited.
"Bosta?
My ham-plank is Bosta, enk?" His tones
suggested considerable passion about the matter as he repeated,
"Bosta, enk?"
"Yeah,"
confirmed Leeming. "Enk!"
Apparently
this was regarded as the last straw for their voices went off and
even the faint hum of the carrier-wave disappeared. It looked as
though he had managed to utter something extremely vulgar without
having the vaguest notion of what he had said.
Soon
afterwards the carrier wave came on and another and different voioe
called in guttural but fluent Cosmoglotta "What ship? What
ship?"
Leeming did
not answer.
A long wait
before again the voice demanded, "What ship?"
Still Leeming
took no notice. The mere fact that they had not broadcast a challenge
in war-code showed that they did not believe it possible for a
hostile vessel to be in the vicinity. Indeed, this was suggested by
the stolid way in which the convoy continued to plug along without
changing course or showing visible sign of alarm.
It was highly
likely that they could not so much as see his ship, not being
equipped with sufficiently sensitive detectors. The call of "What
ship?" had been nothing more than a random feel in the dark, an
effort to check up before seeking a practical joker somewhere within
the convoy itself.
Having
obtained adequate data on the enemy's course, Leeming bulleted ahead
of them and in due time came across the thirteenth planet. He beamed
the information homeward, went in search of the next. It was found
quickly, being in an adjacent solar system.
Time rolled
by as his probes took him across a broad stretch of
Combine-controlled space and measured its precise depth. After
discovering the fiftieth planet he was tempted to return to base for
overhaul and further orders. One can have a surfeit of exploration,
and he was sorely in need of a taste of Terra, its fresh air, green
fields and human companionship.
What kept him
going were the facts that the ship was running well, his fuel supply
was only a quarter expended and he could not resist the notion that
the more thoroughly he did this job the greater the triumph upon his
return and the better the prospect of quick promotion.
So on he went
and piled up the total to seventy-two planets before he reached a
preselected point where he was deep in the enemy hinterland at a part
facing the Allied outposts around Rigel. From here he was expected to
send a coded signal to which they would respond, this being the only
message they'd risk sending him.
He beamed the
one word, "Awa!" repeated at intervals for a couple of
hours. It meant, "Able to proceed-awaiting instructions."
To that they should give a reply too brief for enemy interceptors to
catch either the word, "Reeter!" meaning "We have
sufficient information - return at once," or else the word,
"Buzz" meaning "We need more information - continue
your reconnaissance."
What he did
get back was a short-short squirt of sound that he recognised as an
ultra-rapid series of numbers. They came in so fast that it was
impossible to note them aurally. Perforce he taped them as they were
repeated, then reached for his code-book as he played them off
slowly.
The result
was, "47926 Scout Pilot John Leeming promoted Lieutenant as from
date of receipt."
He stared at
this a long time before he resumed sending, "Awa! Awa!" For
his pains he got back the word "Foit!" He tried again and
once more was rewarded with, "Foit!" It looked vaguely
blasphemous to him, like the favourite curse of some rubbery creature
that had no palate.
Irritated by
this piece of nonsense, he stewed it over in his mind, decided that
some intervening Combine station was playing his own game by chipping
in with confusing comments. In theory the enemy shouldn't be able to
do it because he was using a frequency far higher than those favoured
by the Lathians and others, while both his and the Allied messages
were scrambled. All the same, somebody was doing it.
To the
faraway listeners near Rigel he beamed the interesting biological
statement that Mayor Snorkum would lay the moose and left them to
sort it out for themselves. Maybe it would teach some nuthead that he
was now dealing with a full lieutenant and not a mere scout-pilot.
Or, if the enemy intercepted it, they could drop their war effort
while they argued their way around to a final and satisfactory
peddling of the poodle.
Concluding
that no recall meant the same thing as not being recalled, he resumed
his search far hostile planets. It was four days later that he
happened to be looking idly through his code-book and found the word
"Foit" defined as "Use your a own judgement."
He thought it
over, decided that to go home with a record of seventy-two planets
discovered and identified would be a wonderful thing, but to be
credited with a nice, round, imposing number such as one hundred
would be wonderful enough to verge upon the miraculous. They'd make
him a Space Admiral at least. He'd be able to tell Colonel Farmer to
get a haircut and order Commodore Keen to polish his buttons. He
could strut around clanking with medals and be a saint to all the
privates and space-cadets, a swine to all the brasshats.
This absurd
picture was so appealing that he at once settled for a score of one
hundred planets as his target-figure before returning to base. As if
to give him the flavour of coming glory, four enemy-held worlds were
found close together in the nest solar system and these boosted his
total to seventy-six.
He shoved the
score up to eighty. Then to eighty-one.
The first
hint of impending disaster showed itself as he approached number
eighty-two.
THREE
Two dots
glowed in his detector-screens. They were fat but slow moving and it
was impossible to decide whether they were warships or cargo-boats.
But they were travelling in line abreast and obviously headed
someplace to which he'd not yet been. Using his always successful
tactics of shadowing them until he had obtained a plot, he followed
them awhile, made sure of the star toward which they were heading and
then bolted onward.
He had got so
far in advance that the two ships had faded right out of his screens
when suddenly a propulsor-tube blew its desiccated lining forty miles
back along the jet-track. The first he knew of it was when the
alarm-bell shrilled on the instrument-board, the needle of the
pressure meter dropped halfway back, the needle of its companion heat
meter crawled toward the red dot that indicated melting-point.
Swiftly he
cut off the feed to that propulsor. Its pressure meter immediately
fell to zero, its heat meter climbed a few more degrees, hesitated,
stayed put a short while then reluctantly slid back.
The ship's
tail fin was filled with twenty huge propulsors around which were
splayed eight steering jets of comparatively small diameter. If any
one propulsor ceased to function the effect was not serious. It meant
no mare than a five per cent loss in power output and a corresponding
loss in the ship's functional efficiency. On Earth they had told him
that he could sacrifice as many as eight propulsors-providing that
they were symmetrically positioned before his speed and
manoeuvrability were reduced to those of a Combine destroyer.
From the
viewpoint of his technical advantage over the foe he had nothing to
worry about yet. He could still move fast enough to make them look
like spatial sluggards. What was worrying was the fact that the
sudden breakdown of the refractory lining of one main driver might be
forewarning of the general condition of the rest. For all he knew
another propulsor might go haywire any minute and be followed by the
remainder in rapid succession.
Deep inside
him was the feeling that now was the time to back and make for home
while the going was good. Equally deep was the hunch that he'd never
get there because he had travelled too long and too far. The ship was
doomed never to see Earth again; inwardly he was as sure of that as
one can be sure of anything.
But the end
of the ship did not mean the end of its pilot even though he be
wandering like a lost soul through strange areas of a hostile
starfield. The precognition that told Leeming his ship was heading
for its grave also assured him that he was not. He felt it in his
bones that the day was yet to come when, figuratively speaking, he
would blow his nose in Colonel Farmer's handkerchief.
Rejecting the
impulse to reverse course and run for Rigel, he kept stubbornly on
toward planet number eighty-two, reached it, surveyed it and beamed
the information. Then he detected a shipping route between here and a
nearby solar system, started along it in the hope of finding planet
number eighty-three and adding it to his score. A second propulsor
shed its lining when halfway there, a third just before arrival.
All the same,
he circumnavigated the world at reduced speed; headed for free space
with the intention of transmitting the data but never did so. Five
more propulsors blew their linings simultaneously. He had to move
mighty fast to cut off the feed before their unhampered blasts could
melt his entire tail away.
The defective
drivers must have been bunched together off-centre for the ship now
refused to run straight. Instead it started to describe a wide curve
that eventually would bring it back in a great circle to the planet
it had just left. To make matters worse; it also commenced a slow,
regular rotation around its longitudinal axis with the result that
the entire starfield seemed to revolve before Leeming's eyes.
Desperately
he tried to straighten the ship's course by means of the steering
jets but this only produced an eerie swaying which combined with the
rotation, caused his fire-trail shape itself into an elongated
spiral. The curve continued until planet eighty-three slid into one
side of his observation port and spun slowly around it. Two more
propulsors blew long, thin clouds of ceramic dust far backward: The
planet swelled enormously in the armourglass. Yet another propulsor
gave up the ghost.
The vessel
was now beyond all hope of salvation as a cosmos-travelling vehicle
and the best he could hope to do with it was to get it down in one
piece for the sake of his own skin. He concentrated solely upon
achieving this end. Though in serious condition the ship was not
wholly beyond control because the steering jets could function
perfectly when not countered by a lopsided drive, while the braking
jets were capable of roaring with full-throated power.
As the planet
filled the forward view and its crinkled surface expanded into hills
and valleys, he cut off all remaining tail propulsors, used his
steering jets to hold the ship straight and blew his braking jets
repeatedly. The longitudinal rotation ceased and speed of descent
slowed while his hands sweated at the controls.
It was dead
certain that he could not land in the orthodox manner by standing the
ship on its tail fins. He lacked enough power-output to come down
atop a carefully controlled column of fire. The ship was suffering
from a much-dreaded condition known to the space service as weak-arse
and that meant he'd have to make a belly-landing at just enough speed
to retain control up to the last moment.
His eyes
strained at the observation port while the oncoming hills widened,
the valleys lengthened and the planet's surface fuzz changed to a
pattern of massed treetops. Then the whole picture appeared to leap
at him as if suddenly brought into focus under a powerful microscope.
He fired four propulsors and the lower steering jets in an effort to
level off.
The nose
lifted as the vessel shot across a valley and cleared the opposite
hill by a few hundred feet. In the net two minutes he saw five miles
of treetops, a clearing from which arose an army of trellis masts
bearing. radio antennas, a large village standing beside a river,
another great expanse of trees followed by. a gently rolling stretch
of moorland.
This was the
place! Mentally offering a quick prayer to God, he swooped in a
shallow curve with all braking jets going full blast. Despite this
dexterous handling the first contact slung him clean out of his seat
and threw him against the metal wall beneath his bunk. Bruised and
shaken but other-wise unhurt, he scrambled from under the bunk while
still the ship slid forward to the accompaniment of scraping,
knocking sounds from under its belly.
Gaining the
control-board, he stopped the braking jets, cut off all power. A
moment later the vessel expended the last of its forward momentum and
came to a halt. Resulting silence was like nothing he had experienced
in many months. It seemed almost to bang against his ears. Each
breath he took became a loud hiss, each step a noisy, metallic clank.
Going to the
lock, he examined the atmospheric analyser. it registered exterior
air pressure at fifteen pounds and said that it was much like Terra's
except that it was slightly richer in oxygen. At once he went through
the air-lock, stood in the rim of its outer door and found himself
fourteen feet above ground-level.
The automatic
ladder was of no use in this predicament since it was constructed to
extend itself from air-lock to tail, a direction that now was
horizontal. He could hang by his hands from the rim and let himself
drop without risk of injury but he could not jump fourteen feet to
get back in. The one thing he lacked was a length of rope.
"They
think of everything," he complained, talking out loud because a
justifiable gripe deserves to be uttered. "They think of
everything imaginable. Therefore twenty feet of rope is not
imaginable. Therefore I can imagine the unimaginable. Therefore I am
cracked. Anyone who talks to himself is cracked. It's legitimate for
a looney to say what he likes. When I get back I'll say what I like
and it'll be plenty!"
Feeling a bit
better for that, he returned to the cabin, hunted in vain for
something that would serve in lieu of rope. He was about to rip his
blankets into suitable strips when he remembered the power cables
snaking from control-board to engine-room. It took him a hurried half
hour to detach a suitable length from its terminals and tear it from
its wall fastenings
During the
whole of this time his nerves were tense and his ears were
continually perked for outside sounds indicating the approach of the
enemy. If they should arrive in time to trap him within the ship he'd
have no choice but to set off the explosive charge and blow himself
apart along with the vessel. It was of major importance that the.
ship should not fall intact into alien hands and his awn life was a
secondary consideration.
Naturally he
was most reluctant to spread himself in bloody shreds over the
landscape and therefore moved fast with jumpy nerves, taut mind and
stretched ears. Silence was still supreme when he tied one end of the
cable inside the lock, tossed the rest outside and slid down it to
ground.
He landed in
thick, cushiony vegetation bearing slight resemblance to heather.
Racing to the ship's tail, he had a look at the array of propulsors;
realised that he was lucky to have survived. Eleven of the great
tubes were completely without their essential linings, the remaining
nine were in poor condition and obviously could not have withstood
more than another two or three days of steady blasting.
It was out of
the question to effect any repairs or even to take the ship up again
for a short hop to somewhere more secluded. The long, sleek boat had
set up an all-time record by bearing him safely through a good slice
of the galaxy, past strange suns and around unknown worlds, and now
it was finished. He could not help feeling mournful about it. To
destroy such a ship would be like cold-blooded murder - but it had to
be done.
Now he took a
quick look of what was visible of the world on which he stood. The
sky was a deep, dark blue verging obscurely to purple, with a faint,
cloudlike haze on the eastern horizon. The sun, now past its zenith,
looked a fraction larger than Sol, had a redder colour, and its rays
produced a slight and not unpleasant stinging sensation. Underfoot
the heather-like growth covered a gently undulating landscape running
to the eastward horizon where the first ranks of trees stood guard.
Through it, an immense scar ran the long, deep rut caused by the
ship's belly-skid. To the west the undergrowth again gave way to
great trees, the edge of the forest being half a mile away.
Leeming now
found himself in another quandary of the kind not foreseen by those
unable to imagine a need for rope. If he blew the ship to pieces he
would destroy with it a lot of stuff he needed now or might need
later on, in particular a large stock of concentrated food. To save
the latter he would have to remove it from the ship, take it a safe
distance from the coming explosion and hide it someplace where enemy
patrols would not find it.
The nearby
forest was the ideal place for a cache. But to salvage everything
worth having he'd have to make several trips into the forest and risk
the enemy putting in an appearance when he was too far from the ship
to regain it ahead of them and set off the big bang.
If he became
a wandering fugitive, as he intended, it was possible that he'd have
no troub1e finding enough food to keep him going for years. But he
could not be sure of that. He knew nothing about this world except
that it held intelligent life and was part of or in cahoots with the
Combine. He couldn't so much as guess what its native lifeform looked
like though it was a pretty safe bet that like every other known
sentient form - it was more or less humanoid.
Sense of
urgency prevented him from pondering the situation very long. This
was a time for action rather than thought: He started working like a
maniac, grabbing packages and cans from the ship's store and throwing
them out of the air-lock. This went on until the entire food stock
had been cleared. Still the enemy was conspicuous by his absence.
Now he took
up armloads from the waiting pile and bore them into the edge of the
forest: Sheer anxiety made him waste a lot more effort for at each
trip he tried to take more than he could hold. His route into the
forest was marked back by dropped cans that had to be picked up at
each return to the ship. These returns he made at the run, pausing
only to snatch up the fallen stuff, and arriving breathless and
already half-loaded.
By dint of
haste and perspiration he transferred all the foodstuffs into the
forest, climbed aboard the ship, had a last look around for anything
worth saving. Making a roll of his blankets, he tied a waterproof
sheet over them to form a compact bundle.
Regretfully
he eyed the radio transmitter. It would be easy to send out a signal
saying that he was marooned on planet eighty-three and giving its
co-ordinates. But it would not do him any good. No Allied vessel
other than a special scout-ship could hope to get this far without
refuelling and having its tubes relined. Even if a ship did manage to
cover the distance non-stop if stood little chance of finding and
picking up one lone Terran hiding on a hostile world.
Satisfied
that nothing remained worth taking, he put on his storm-coat, tucked
the bundle under his arm and pressed the red button at one side of
the control-board. There was supposed to be a delay of two minutes
between activation and the resulting wallop. It wasn't much time.
Bolting through the air-lock, he jumped straight out, landed heavily
in the cushion of vegetation and dashed at top speed toward the
forest. Nothing had happened by the time he reached the trees.
Standing behind the protective thickness of a great trunk, he waited
for the bang.
Seconds
ticked by without result. Something must have gone wrong. Perhaps
those who could not imagine rope could not think of a fuse or
detonator either. He peeked cautiously around the rim of the trunk;
debating within himself whether to go back and examine the
connections to the explosive charge. At that point the ship blew up.
It flew apart
with a tremendous, ear-splitting roar that bent the trees and shook
the skies. A great column of smoke, dirt and shapeless lumps soared
to a considerable height. Gobs of distorted metal screamed through
the tree-tops and brought branches crashing down. A blast of hot wind
rushed either side of the trunk behind which Leeming was sheltering,
for a moment created a partial vacuum that made him gasp for breath.
Then followed
a pattering sound like that of heavy rain, also many loud thumps as
soil and scrap metal fell back to earth. Somewhat awed by the
unexpected violence of the explosion, he sneaked another look around
the tree-trunk, saw a smoking crater surrounded by two or three acres
of torn vegetation. It was a sobering thought that for countless
millions of miles he had been sitting on top of a bang that size.
When tardily
the foe arrived it was pretty certain that they would start a hunt
for the missing crew. Leeming's preliminary survey of the world,
though consisting only of one quick sweep around its equator, had
found evidence of some sort of organised civilisation and included
one spaceport holding five merchant ships and one Combine light
cruiser, all of antiquated pattern. This showed that the local
lifeform was at least of normal intelligence and as capable as anyone
else of adding two and two together.
The relative
shallowness of the crater and the wide scattering of remnants was
clear evidence that the mystery ship had not plunged to destruction
but rather had blown apart after making a successful landing. Natives
in the nearest village could confirm that there had been quite a long
delay between the ship's plunge over their roof-tops and the
subsequent explosion. The foe would know that none of his own ships
were missing in that area. Examination of fragments would reveal
non-Combine material. Their inevitable conclusion: that the vessel
had been a hostile one and that its crew had got away unscathed.
It would be
wise, he decided, to put more distance between himself and the crater
before the enemy arrived and started sniffing around the vicinity.
Perhaps he was fated to be caught eventually but it was up to him to
postpone the evil day as long as possible.
The basic
necessities of life are food, drink and shelter, with the main
emphasis on the first of these. This fact delayed his departure a
little while. He had food enough to last for several months. It was
one thing to have it, another to keep it safe from harm. At all costs
he must find a better hiding place to which he could return from time
to time with the assurance that the supply would still be there.
He pressed
farther into the forest, moving in a wide zigzag as he cast about for
a suitable dump. Visibility was good because the sun remained high
and the trees did not entirely obscure the overhead view. He sought
here and there, muttering angrily to himself and making vulgar
remarks about officials who decided what equipment a scout-ship
should carry. If he'd had a spade he could have dug a neat hole and
buried the stuff. But he did not have a spade and it would take too
long to scrabble a hideout with his bare hands.
Finally he
found a cave-like opening between the great arched roots of an
immense tree. It was far from ideal but it did have the virtue of
being deep within the woods and providing a certain amount of
concealment. Casting around, he picked up a smooth, heavy pebble,
flung it through the opening with all the force he could muster.
There came no answering yelp, howl or squeal, no sudden rush of some
outlandish creature intent on mayhem. The cave was unoccupied.
It took him
more than an hour to shift the food pile for the third time and stack
it neatly within the hole, leaving out a small quantity representing
seven days' rations. When this task had been completed he built up
part of the opening with clumps of earth, used twigs and branches to
fill in the rest. He now felt that if a regiment of enemy troops
explored the locality, as they were likely to do, there was small
chance of them discovering and either confiscating or destroying the
cache on which his continued liberty might depend.
Stuffing the
seven days' rations into a small rucksack and tying the bundled
blankets thereto, he set off at fast pace along the fringe of the
forest and headed southward. Right now he had no plan in mind, no
especial purpose other than that of evading capture by making
distance before the foe found the crater and searched the vicinity.
He doubted whether the enemy would maintain such a local hunt for
more than a couple of days, after which they'd decide that there were
no survivors or, alternatively, that it was high time that, they
started seeking them farther afield. Therefore it should be
reasonably safe for him to return for food in about one week's time.
He had been
going three hours and had covered eleven miles before the enemy
showed the first signs of activity. With the moorland on his right
and the forest on his left, he was trudging along when a black dot
soared above the horizon, swelled in size, shot silently overhead and
was followed some seconds later by a shrill scream.
Going at that
height and at that speed the jetplane's pilot could not possibly have
seen him. Unperturbed, he stepped into the shadow of a tree, turned
to watch the machine as it diminished northward. It was again a mere
dot when suddenly it swept around in a wide circle, spiralled upward
and continued circling. As nearly as Leeming could judge it was
turning high above the crater.
It was an
easy guess that the jetplane had come in response to a telephone or
radio call telling about a spaceship in distress and a following
explosion. Having found the scene of disaster, it was zooming above
the spot while summoning help. No doubt there'd be great activity at
the base from which it had come; receiving confirmation that a ship
had indeed been lost, the authorities would assume it to be one of
their own and start checking by radio to find which one was missing.
With luck it might be quite a time before they accepted the fact that
a vessel of unknown origin, probably hostile, had reached this far.
In any case,
from now on they'd keep a sharp watch for survivors. Leeming decided
that this was the time to leave the forest's fringe and progress
under cover. His rate of movement would be slowed but at least he'd
travel unobserved. There were two dangers in taking to the woods but
they'd have to be accepted as lesser evils.
For one,
unless he was mighty careful he could lose his sense of direction and
wander in a huge curve that eventually would take him back to the
crater and straight into the arms of whoever was waiting there. For
another, he ran the risk of encountering unknown forms of wild life
possessed of unimaginable weapons and unthinkable appetites.
Against the
latter peril he had a defence that was extremely effective but
hateful to use, namely a powerful compressed-air pistol that fired
breakable pellets filled with a stench so foul that one whiff would
make anything that lived and breathed vomit for hours - including, as
often as not, the user.
Some Terran
genius had worked it out that the real king of the wilds is not the
lion nor the grizzly bear but a kittenish creature named Joe Skunk
whose every battle is a victorious rearguard action, so to speak.
Some other genius had synthesized a horrible liquid seventy-seven
times more revolting than Joe's - with the result that an endangered
spaceman could never make up his mind whether to run like hell and
chance being caught oar whether to stand firm, shoot, and
subsequently puke himself to death.
Freedom
is worth a host of risks, so he plunged deep into the forest and kept
going. After about an hour's steady progress he heard the whump-whump
of many helicopters passing overhead and travelling toward the north:
By the sound of it there were quite a lot of them but none could be
seen crossing the few patches of sky visible between the tree-tops.
He made a
guess that they were a squadron of troop carriers transporting a
search party to the region of the crater. Some-time later a solitary
machine crept above with a loud humming noise while a downward blast
of air made the trees rustle and wave their topmost branches. It was
low and slow moving and sounded like a buoyant fan that probably was
carrying one observer. He stopped close by a gnarly trunk until it
had passed.
Soon
afterward he began to feel tired and decided to rest awhile upon a
mossy bank. Reposing at ease, he pondered this exhaustion, realised
that although his survey had shown this world to be approximately the
same size at Terra it must in fact be a little bigger or had slightly
greater mass. His own weight was up perhaps by as much as ten per
cent, though he had no way of checking it.
True, after a
long period of incarceration in a ship he must be out of condition
but he was making full allowance for that fact. He was undoubtedly
heavier than he'd been since birth, the rucksack was heavier, so were
the blankets, so were his feet. Therefore his ability to cover
mileage would be cut down in proportion and, in any emergency, so
would his ability to run.
It then
struck him that the day must be considerably longer than Earth's. The
sinking sun was now about forty degrees above the horizon. In the
time since he'd landed the arc it had covered showed that the day was
somewhere between thirty and thirty-two hours in length. He'd have to
accomodate himself to that with extended walks and prolonged sleeps
and it wouldn't be easy. Wherever they may be, Terrans have a natural
tendency to retain their own time-habits.
Isolation in
space is a hell of a thing, he thought, as idly, he toyed with the
flat, oblong-shaped lump under the left- hand pocket of his jacket.
The lump had been there so long that he was only dimly conscious of
its existence and, even when reminded of it, tended to suppose that
all jackets were made lumpy for some perverse reason known only to
members of the International Garment Workers' Union. Now it struck
him with what was approximate to a flash of pure genius that in the
long, long ago someone had once mentioned this lump and described it
as "the built-in emergency pack."
Taking out
his pocketknife, he used its point to unpick the lining of his
jacket. This produced a flat, shallow box of brown plastic. A
hair-thin line ran around its rim but there was no button, keyhole,
grip or any other visible means of opening it Pulling and pushing it
in a dozen different ways had no effect whatever. He tried to insert
the knife-blade in the hairline and pry the whole thing open; that
failed and the knife slipped and he nicked his thumb. Sucking the
thumb, he shoved his other hand through the slit lining and felt all
around his jacket in the hope of discovering written instructions of
some sort. All he got for his pains was fluff in his fingernails.
Reciting
several of the nine million names of God, he, kicked the box with
aggravated vim. Either the kick was the officially approved method of
dealing with it or some of the names were potent, for the box snapped
open. At once he commenced examining the contents which, in theory,
should assist him toward ultimate salvation.
The first was
a tiny, bead-sized vial of transparent plastic ornamented with an
embossed skull and containing an oily, yellowish liquid, Presumably
this was the death pill to be taken as a last extreme. Apart from the
skull there was nothing to distinguish it from a love-potion.
Next came a
long, thin bottle filled with what looked like diluted mud and marked
with a long, imposing list of vitamins, proteins and trace elements.
What one took it for, how much was supposed to be taken at a time,
and how often, were left to the judgement of the beneficiary - or the
victim.
After this
came a small sealed can bearing no identifying markings and no
can-opener to go with it. For all he knew it might be full of boot
polish, sockeye salmon or putty. He wouldn't put it past them to
thoughtfully provide some putty in case he wanted to fix a window
someplace and thus save his life by ingratiating himself with his
captors. If, back home, some genius got it into his head that no
lifeform known or unknown could possibly murder a window fixer, a can
of putty automatically became a must.
Dumping it at
one side, he took up the next can. This was longer, narrower and had
a rotatable cap. He twisted the cap and uncovered a sprinkler.
Shaking it over his open palm he got a puff of fine powder resembling
pepper. Well, that would come in very useful for coping with a pack
of bloodhounds, assuming that there were bloodhounds in these here
parts. Cautiously he sniffed at his palm. The stuff smelled exactly
pepper.
He let go a
violent sneeze, wiped his dusty hand on a handkerchief, closed the
can and concocted some heated remarks about the people at the
space-base. This had immediate effect for the handkerchief burst into
flames in his pocket. He tore it out, flung it down and danced on it.
Opening the can again he let a few grains of fall upon a dry piece of
rotten wood. A minute later the wood spat sparks and started blazing.
This sent a betraying column of smoke skyward, so he danced on the
wood until it ceased.
Exhibit
number five really did explain itself-providing that its owner had
the power of long-range clairvoyance. It was a tiny bottle of
colourless liquid around which was wrapped a paper that said,
"Administer two drops per hundred pounds bulk only in a
non-carbonaceous beverage." A skull complete with crossbones
added a sinister touch to this mysterious injunction.
After
studying it for some time Leeming decided that the liquid was either
a poison or the knockout additive favoured by Mr. Michael Finn.
Apparently, if one were to encounter a twenty-ton rhinoceros the
correct technique was to weight it upon the nearest weighing-machine,
calculate the appropriate dosage and administer it to the unfortunate
animal in a non-carbonaceous beverage. One would then be safe because
the creature would drop dead or fall asleep and lie with its legs in
the air.
Number
six was a miniature camera small enough to be concealed in the palm
of the hand. As an aid to survival its value was nil. It must have
been included in the kit with some other intention. Perhaps Terran
Intelligence had insisted that it be provided in the hope that anyone
who made successful escape from a hostile world could bring a lot of
photographic data home with him. Well, it was nice to think that
someone could be that optimistic. He pocketed
the camera, not with any expectation of using it, but solely because
it was a beautiful piece of microscopic workmanship too good to be
thrown away.
The seventh
and last was the most welcome and, so far as he was concerned; the
only item worth a hoot; a luminous compass. He put it carefully into
a vest pocket. After some consideration he decided to keep the
pepperpot but discarded the remaining cans and bottles. The
death-pill he flicked into an adjacent bush. The bottles he shied
between the trees. Finally he took the can of boot polish, sockeye,
putty or whatever and hurled it as far as he could.
The result
was a tremendous crash, a roar of flame and a large tree leaped
twenty feet into the air with dirt showering from its roots. The
blast knocked him full length on the moss; he picked himself up in
time to see a great spurt of smoke sticking out of the tree-tops like
a beckoning finger. Obviously visible for miles, it could not have
been more effective if he'd sent up a balloon-borne banner bearing
the words, "Here I am!"
Only
one thing could be done and that was to get out fast. Grabbing up his
load he scooted southward at the best pace he could make between the
trees. He had covered about two miles when the buoyant fan hummed low
down and slightly to his rear. A little later he heard the distant,
muted whup-whup of a helicopter descending upon
the scene of the crime. There'd be plenty of room for it to drop into
the forest because the explosive can of something-or-other had
cleared a wide gap. He tried to increase his speed, dodging around
bushes, clambering up sharply sloping banks, jumping across deep,
ditchlike depressions and all the time moving on leaden feet that
felt as if wearing size twenty boots.
As the sun
sank low and shadows lengthened he was again forced to rest through
sheer exhaustion. By now he had no idea of the total distance
covered; it had been impossible to travel in a dead straight line and
the constant zigzagging between the trees made mileage impossible to
estimate. However, there were now no sounds of aerial activity
either near or far away and, for all the evidence of the presence of
other life, he might have the entire cosmos to himself.
Recovering,
he pushed on until darkness was relieved only by the sparkle of
countless stars and the shine of two small moons. Then he had a meal
and bedded down in a secluded glade, rolling the blankets tightly
around him and keeping his stink-gun near to hand. What kind of
dangerous animal might stalk through the night he did not know and
was long past caring. A man must have sleep come what may, even at
the risk of waking up in somebody's belly.
FOUR
Lulled by the
silence and his own tiredness, he slept for twelve hours. It was not
an undisturbed slumber. Twice he awoke with the vague feeling that
something had slunk past him in the dark. He lay completely still,
nerves tense, gun in hand, his eyes straining to probe the
surrounding gloom until at last sleep claimed him again, the eyelids
fluttered and closed, he let go a subdued snore. Another time he
awakened to see five moons in the sky, including a tiny, fast-moving
one that arced across the vault of the heavens with a faint but hear
able hiss. The vision was so brief and abnormal that for some time he
was not sure whether he had actually witnessed it or merely dreamed
it.
Despite the
long and satisfying snooze he was only partway through the alien
night. There were many hours to go before sunrise. Feeling refreshed
and becoming bored by waiting, he gave way to his fidgets, rolled his
blankets, consulted the compass and tried to continue his southward
march. In short time he had tripped headlong over unseeable roots,
stumbled knee-deep into a hidden stream.
Progress in
open country was possible in the combined light of stars and moons,
but not within the forest. Reluctantly he gave up the attempt. There
was no point in wearing himself out blundering around in barely
visible patches that alternated with areas of stygian darkness.
Somehow he managed to find the glade again. There he lay in the
blankets and waited with some impatience for the delayed dawn.
As the first
faint glow appeared at one side of the sky something passed between
the trees a hundred yards away: He got to his feet, gun pointing in
that direction, watching and listening. Bushes rustled, dead leaves
crackled and twigs snapped over a distance stretching from his left
to far to his right.
The rate of
motion was slow, laborious and the sounds suggested that the cause
was sluggish and very heavy. Seeing nothing, he was unable to
determine whether the noise was created by a troop of things crawling
one behind the other or by one monstrous iifeform resembling a
colossal worm, the grandpappy of all anacondas. Whatever it was, it
did not come near to him and gradually the sounds died away.
Immediately
daylight had become sufficiently strong to permit progress he resumed
his southward trek and kept it up until mid-day. At that point he
found a big rocky hollow that looked very much like an abandoned
quarry. Trees grew thickly around its rim, bushes and lesser growths
covered its floor, various kinds of creepers straggled down its
walls. A tiny spring fed a midget stream that meandered across the
floor until it disappeared down a hole in the base-rock. At least six
caves were half-hidden in the walls, these varying from a narrow
cleft to an opening the size of a large room.
Surveying the
place, he realised that here was an ideal hideout. He had no thought
of settling there for the rest of his natural life even if the
availability of food permitted him to do so. He'd get nowhere by
sitting on his quoit until he was old and rheumy. Besides, he'd had
enough of a hermit's life in space without suffering more of it on
firm land. But at least this locale would serve as a hiding-glace
until the hue and cry died down and he'd had time to think out his
future plan of action.
Climbing down
the steep, almost vertical sides to the floor of the place proved a
tough task. From his viewpoint this was so much the better; whatever
was difficult for him would be equally difficult for others and might
deter any searching patrols that came snooping around. With that
complete absence of logic that afflicts one at times, it didn't occur
to him that a helicopter could come down upon him with no trouble at
all.
He soon found
a suitable cave and settled himself in by dumping his load on the
dry, sandy ground. The next job Was that of preparing a meal.
Building a smokeless fire of wood chips, he filled his dixie with
water and converted part of his rations into a thick soup. This, with
some enriched wholemeal flatcakes, served to fill his belly and bring
on a sense of peaceful well-being.
For a while
he mooched around his sunken domain which covered four acres. The
surrounding walls were eighty feet high while the crest of trees
towered another two hundred feet higher. A scout-ship could have
landed tail-first in this area and remained concealed for years from
all eyes save those directly above. He found himself regretting that
he had not known of this place and attempted an orthodox landing
within it. Even if the ship toppled over through lack of adequate
power, and he survived uninjured, he'd have the use of it as a
permanent home and, if necessary; a fortress. Wouldn't be easy for
the foe to winkle a man out of a heavy metal shell particularly when
the said shell had fore and aft jets as effective as several
batteries of guns.
Here and
there were small holes in the ground. Similar holes were in evidence
at the base of the walls. They reminded him of rabbit burrows. If
whatever had made them was the alien equivalent of the rabbit it
would be a welcome addition to his larder.
Getting down
in crawling position, he peered into several of these apertures but
could see nothing. He found a long, thin stick and poked it down some
of them, without result. Finally he sat silent and motionless outside
an array of holes for nearly two hours. At the end of that time a
creature came out, saw him immediately and bolted back in. It
resembled a fat and furry spider. Perhaps it was edible but the
thought of eating it turned his stomach.
It then
struck him that despite this planet's profuse supply of trees he had
not seen or heard anything resembling. a bird. If any arboreal
creatures existed they must be in small number, or not native to this
locality, or wholly nocturnal. There was also a noteworthy lack of
insects and for this he was thankful. On any alien world the insect
type of life could be and often was a major menace to any wandering
Terran. That weird world of Hypatia, for instance, held streamlined
whizz-bugs capable of travelling at six hundred miles per hour. A
whizz-bug could drill a hole through a human being, space-suit and
all, as neatly and effectively as a 45 slug.
At one end of
the area, grew a thick patch of feathery plants somewhat like giant
ferns. They exuded a pleasantly aromatic scent. He gathered a good
supply of these, laid them at the back of the cave, spread his
blankets over them and thus made himself a bed more springy and
comfortable than any he had enjoyed since childhood.
Although he
had done everything in the most lackadaisical, time-wasting manner of
which he was capable he still found it well-nigh impossible to cope
with the lengthy day. He'd explored the pseudo-quarry from side to
side, and from one end to the other, had two meals, tidied the cave;
done various chores necessary and unnecessary, and still the sun was
far from setting. As nearly as he could calculate it would be another
six hours before darkness fell. There was nothing to stop him from
going to bed at the first yawn but if he did he'd surely wake up and
face an equally long night. Adjustment to alien time did not come
easy.
So he sat at
the entrance to his cave and amused himself working out what best to
do in the future. For a start, he could spend a couple of weeks
transferring his foodstock from its place of concealment near the
crater to this cave. Then, using his present headquarters as a
strategic centre, he could make systematic exploration in all
directions and get to know as much as possible about the
potentialities of this world.
If
investigation proved it possible to live off the land he could then
travel father afield, scout warily around inhabited areas until
eventually he found a spaceport. Sooner or later the opportunity
might come to sneak aboard a fully fuelled enemy scout-ship after
dark and take it up with a triumphant bang. It was only one chance in
a thousand, perhaps one in ten thousand; but it might come off. Yes,
he'd go seeking such a chance and make it come off.
Even if, he
did manage to blast free in a Combine scout his problem could not be
solved. No vessel could reach the Rigellian sector non-stop from here
without at least one refuelling and one overhaul of propulsor tubes
to reach the Allied front he'd have to break his journey partway
there and repeat his present performance by dumping the ship and
stealing another. What can be done once can be done twice. All the
same, the odds against him ever seeing Terra were so tremendous that
he did not care to think of them. He concentrated solely upon the
ages-old thesis that while there's life there's hope.
Shortly
before dusk a jetplane screamed across the sky as if to remind him
that this world really was inhabited by superior life. Up to then the
perpetual silence and total lack of birds or bees had made his
situation seem like a crazy dream. Standing outside the cave, he
watched the high dot shoot across. the heavens and disappear to the
south. A little later he went to bed.
Early in the
morning eight helicopters went over, moving in line abreast. Spread
out a hundred yards apart from each other, they floated fifty feet
above the tree-tops. What they hoped to see beneath the concealing
mass of vegetation was a mystery but it was obvious that they were
searching all the same.
Going through
the motions, thought Leeming as he watched them drift beyond his
hiding-place. They had been ordered to look around, therefore they
were looking around even though there was nothing to be seen. The
pilots were enjoying a pleasant ride on the pretext that orders must
be obeyed. In all probability the brasshat who had issued the command
had never looked down into a forest in his life but by virtue of his
rank, was a self-styled authority upon the subject of how to find a
flea in a dogs' home. Baloney baffles brains in any part of the
cosmos. Leeming had long nursed a private theory that wars do not end
with victory for the side with the most brains: they are terminated
by the defeat of the side with the most dopes. Also that wars are
prolonged because there is stiff competition on general imbecility.
By the end of
the fourth day he was bored to tears. Squatting in a cave was not his
idea of the full life and he could no longer resist the urge to get
busy. He'd have to bestir himself before long in order to replenish
his food supplies. The time had come, he felt; to make a start on the
tedious chore of shifting the hidden dump southward and installing it
in the cave.
Accordingly
he set forth at dawn and pushed to the north as fast as he could go.
This activity boosted his spirits considerably and he had to suppress
the desire to whistle as he went along. In his haste he was making
noise enough and there was no sense in further advertising his coming
to any patrols that might be prowling through the woods.
As he neared
the scene of his landing his pace slowed to the minimum. Here, if
anywhere; caution was imperative since there was no knowing how many
of the foe might still be lurking in the area. By the time he came
within easy reach of his cache he was slinking from tree to tree,
pausing frequently to look ahead and listen.
It was a
great relief to find that the food-dump had not been disturbed. The
supply was intact, exactly as he had left it. There was no sign that
the enemy had been anywhere near it or, for the matter of that, was
within fifty miles of it at the present moment. Emboldened by this,
he decided to go to the edge of the forest and have another look at
the crater. It would be interesting to learn whether the local
lifeform had shown enough intelligence to take away the ship's
shattered remnants with the idea of establishing its origin The
knowledge that they had done so would not help him one little bit -
but he was curious and temporarily afflicted with a sense of false
security.
As quietly
and carefully as a cat stalking a bird, he sneaked the short distance
to the forest's rim, gained it a couple of hundred yards from where
he'd expected to view the crater. Walking farther along the edge of
the trees, he stopped and stared at the graveyard of his ship, his
attention concentrated upon it to the exclusion of all else. Many
distorted hunks of metal still lay around and it was impossible to
tell whether any of the junk had been removed.
Swinging his
gaze to take in the total blast area, he was dumbfounded to discover
three helicopters parked in line close to the trees: They were a
quarter mile away, apparently unoccupied and with nobody hanging
around That meant their crews must be somewhere nearby. At once he
started to back into the forest, his hairs tickling with alarm. He
had taken only two steps when fallen leaves crunched behind him,
something hard slammed into the middle of his back and a voice spoke
in harsh guttural tones.
"Smooge!"
it said.
Bitterness at
his own folly surged through Leeming's soul as he turned around to
face the speaker He found himself confronted by a humanoid six inches
shorter than himself but almost twice as broad; a squat, Powerful
creature wearing dun-coloured uniform, a metal helmet and grasping a
lethal instrument recognisable as some kind of gun. This character
had a scaly, lizardlike skin, horn-covered eyes and no eyelids He
watched Leeming with the cold, unwinking stare of a rattlesnake.
"Smooge!"
he repeated, giving a prod with the gun.
Raising his
hands, Leeming offered a deceitful smile and said in fluent
Cosmoglotta, "There is no need for this. I am a friend, an
ally."
It was a
waste of breath. Either the other did not understand Cosmoglotta or
he could recognise a thundering lie when it was offered. His
reptilian face showed not the slightest change of expression, his
eyes retained their blank stare as he emitted a shrill whistle.
Leeming noticed that his captor performed this feat without pursing
his lips, the sound apparently coming straight from the throat.
Twenty more
of the enemy responded by emerging from the forest at a point near
where the helicopters were stationed. Their feet made distinct thuds
as they ran with the stubby, clumping gait of very heavy men
Surrounding Leeming, they examined him with the same expressionless
stare that lacked surprise, curiosity or any other human trait. Next
they gabbled together in a language slightly reminiscent of the crazy
talk he had interrupted in space.
"Let me
elucidate the goose."
"Dry up
- the bostaniks all have six feet."
"I am a
friend, an ally;" informed Leeming, with suitable dignity.
This
statement caused them to shut up with one accord. They gave him a
mutual snake-look and then the biggest of them asked, "Snapnose?"
"I'm a
Combine scout from far, far away," asserted Leeming, swearing it
upon an invisible Bible. "As such I demand to be released,"
It meant
nothing whatever. Nobody smiled, nobody kissed him and it was obvious
that none knew a word of Cosmoglotta. They were ill-educated types
with not an officer among the lot.
"Now
look here," he began, lowering his arms.
"Smooge!"
shouted his captor, making a menacing gesture with the gun.
Leeming
raised his arms again and glowered at them. Now they held a brief
conversation containing frequent mention of cheese and spark-plugs.
It ended to their common satisfaction after which they searched him.
This was done by the simple method of confiscation, taking everything
in his possession including his braces.
That done,
they chivvied him toward the helicopters. Perforce, he went, trudging
surlily along while holding up his pants with his hands. The pants
were supposed to be self-supporting, the braces having been worn out
of sheer pessimism, but he had lost a good deal of weight during his
space trip, his middle was somewhat reduced in circumference and he
had no desire to exhibit his posterior to alien eyes.
At command he
climbed into a helicopter, turned quickly to slam the door in the
hope that he might be able to lock them out long enough to take to
the air without getting shot. They did not give him a chance. One was
following close upon his heels and was halfway through the door even
as he turned. Four more piled in. The pilot took his seat, started
the motor. Overhead vanes jerked, rotated slowly, speeded up.
The 'copter
bounced a couple of times, left the ground, soared into the purplish
sky. It did not travel far. Crossing the wide expanse of moorland and
the woods beyond, it descended upon the large village that Leeming
had roared over only a few days ago. Gently it landed upon a concrete
square at the back of a grim-looking building that, to Leeming's
mind, resembled a military barracks or an asylum for the insane.
Here, they
entered the building, hustled him along a corridor and into a
stone-walled cell. They slammed and locked the heavy door in which
was a small barred grille. A moment later one of them peered between
the bars. "We shall bend Murgatroyd's socks," announced the
face reassuringly.
"Thanks,"
said Leeming. "Damned decent of you."
The face went
away. Leeming walked ten times around the cell before sitting on a
bare wooden plank that presumably was intended to serve as both seat
and bed. There was no window through which to look upon the outside
world, no opening other than the door. Resting his elbows on his
knees, he held his face in his hands.
God, what a
chump he'd been. If only he had remained content to take from the
cache all the food he could carry and get away fast. If only he had
accepted the good fortune of finding the food-dump intact and been
satisfied to grab and run. But no, he had to be nosey and walk right
into a trap. Perhaps the nervous strain of his long journey or
something peculiar about the atmosphere of this planet had made him
weak-minded. Whatever the reason, he was caught and ready for the
chop.
As for his
future prospects; he did not care to guess at them. It was known that
the Combine had taken several hundreds of prisoners, mostly settlers
on outpost worlds who'd been attacked without warning. Their fate was
a mystery. Rumour insisted that the various lifeforms belonging to
the Combine had widely different notions of how to handle the
prisoner-of-war problem and that some were less humane than others.
Since nothing whatever was known about the lifeform inhabiting this
particular world the tactics they favoured were a matter for
speculation or, in his own case, grim experience.
It was said -
with what truth nobody knew - that the Lathians, for instance,
treated as bona fide prisoners-of-war only those who happened to be
captured unarmed and that anyone taken while bearing a weapon was
slaughtered out of hand. Also that possession of a knife was regarded
as justification for immediate murder providing that the said knife
came within their definition of a weapon by having a blade longer
than its owner's middle finger. This story might be ten miles wide of
the facts. The space service always had been a happy hunting ground
for incurable crap-mongers.
How long he
sat there he did not know. They had deprived him of his watch, he
could not observe the progress of the sun and had no means of
estimating the time. But after a long while a guard opened the door,
made an unmistakable gesture that he was to come out. He exited,
found a second guard waiting in the corridor. With one in the lead
and the other following, he was conducted through the building and
into a large office.
The sole
occupant was an autocratic specimen seated behind a desk on which
was arrayed the contents of the prisoner’s pockets. Leering
came to a halt before the desk, still holding up his pants. The
guards positioned themselves either side of the door and manag to
assume expressions of blank servility.
In fluent
Cosmoglotta, the one behind the desk said; "I am Major Klavith:
You will address me respectfully as becomes my rank. Do you
understand?"
"Yes."
"What is
your name, rank and number?"
"John
Leeming, Lieutenant, 47926."
"Your
species?"
"Terran.
Haven't you ever seen a Terran before?"
"I am
asking the questions," retorted Klavith, "and you will
provide the answers." He paused to let that sink in, then
continued, "You arrived here in a ship of Terran origin, did you
not?"
"Sure
did," agreed Leeming, with relish.
Bending
forward, Klavith demanded with great emphasis,
"On
which planet was your vessel refuelled?"
There was
silence as Leeming's thoughts moved fast. Obviously they could not
credit that he had reached here non-stop because such a feat was far
beyond their own technical ability. Therefore they believed that he
had been assisted by some world within the Combine's ranks. He was
being ordered to name the traitors. It was a wonderful opportunity to
create dissension but unfortunately he was unable to make good use of
it. He'd done no more than scout around hostile worlds, landing on
none of them, and for the life of him he could not name or describe a
Combine species anywhere on his route.
"Are you
going to tell me you don't know?" prompted Klavith
sarcastically.
"I do
and I don't," Leeming responded. "The world was named to me
only as XB173. I haven't the faintest notion of what you call it or
what it calls itself."
"In the
morning we shall produce comprehensive star-maps and you will mark
thereon the exact location of this world. Between now and then you
had better make sure that your memory will be accurate." Another
long pause accompanied by the cold, lizardlike stare of his kind.
"You have given us a lot of trouble. I have been flown here
because I am the only person on this planet who speaks Cosmoglotta."
"The
Lathians speak it"
"We are
not Lathians as you well know. We are Zangastans. We do not
slavishly imitate our allies in everything The Combine is an
association of free peoples."
"That
may be your opinion. There are others.”
"I am
not in the least bit interested in other opinions. And I am not here
to bandy words with you on the subject of interstellar politics."
Surveying the stuff that littered his desk, Klavith poked forward the
pepper-pot. "When you were caught you were carrying this
container of incendiary powder. We know what it is because we have
tested it. Why were you supplied with it?"
"It was
part of my emergency kit."
"Why
should you need incendiary powder in an emergency kit?"
"To
start a fire to cook food or to warm myself," said Leeming,
mentally damning the unknown inventor of emergency kits.
"I do
not believe you. See where I am pointing: an automatic lighter. Is
that not sufficient?"
"Those
lighters wear out or become exhausted."
"Neither
does the powder last for ever. You are lying to me. You brought this
stuff for the purposes of sabotage."
"Fat lot
of good I'd do starting a few blazes umpteen millions of miles from
home. When we hit the Combine we do it harder and more effectively."
"That
may be so," Klavith conceded. "But I am far from satisfied
with your explanation."
"If I
gave you the true one you wouldn't believe it."
"Let me
be the judge of that."
"All
right. The powder was included in my kit merely because some
high-ranking official thought it a wonderful idea."
"And why
should he think so?" Klavith urged.
"Because
any idea thought up by him must be wonderful."
"I don't
see it."
"Neither
do I. But he does and his opinion counts."
"Not
with me it doesn't," Klavith denied. "Anyway, we intend to
analyse this powder. Obviously it does not, burst into flame when air
reaches it, otherwise it would be too risky to carry. It must be in
direct contact with an inflammable substance before it will function.
A ship bearing a heavy load of this stuff could destroy a lot of
crops. Enough systematic burning would starve an entire species into
sub-mission, would it not?"
Leeming did
not answer.
"I
suggest that one of your motives in coming here was to test the
military effectiveness of this powder."
"What,
when we could try it on our own wastelands without the bother of
transporting it partway across a galaxy?"
"That is
not the same as inflicting it upon an enemy."
"If I'd
toted it all the way here just to do some wholesale burning,"
Leeming pointed out, "I'd have brought a hundred tons and not a
couple of ounces."
Klavith could
not find a satisfactory answer to that so he changed the subject by
poking another object on his desk. "I have identified this thing
as a midget camera. It is a remarkable instrument and cleverly made.
But since aerial photography is far easier, quicker, wider in scope
and more efficient than anything you could achieve with this gadget,
I see no point in you being equipped with it."
"Neither
do I," agreed Leeming.
"Then
why did you continue to carry it?"
"Because
it seemed a damned shame to throw it away."
This reason
was accepted without dispute. Grabbing the camera, Klavith put it in
his pocket.
"I can
understand that. It is as beautiful as a jewel. Henceforth it is my
personal property." He showed his teeth in what was supposed to
be a triumphant grin. "The, spoils of conquest." With
contemptuous generosity he picked up the braces and tossed them at
Leeming. "You may have these back. Put them on at once - a
prisoner should be properly dressed while in my presence." He
watched in silence as the other secured his pants, then said, "You
were also in possession of a luminous compass. That I can understand.
It is about the only item that makes sense." Leeming offered no
comment.
"Except
perhaps for this." Klavith took up the stink-gun.
"Either
it is a mock weapon or it is real." He pulled the trigger. a
couple of times and nothing happened. "Which is it?"
"Real."
"Then
how does it work?"
"To
prime it you must press the barrel inward."
"That
must be done every time you are about to use it?"
"Yes."
"In that
case it is nothing better than a compressed-air gun?"
"I find
it hard to credit that your authorities would arm you with anything
so primitive," opined Klavith, showing concealed suspicion.
"Such a
gun is not to be despised," offered Leeming. "It has its
advantages. It needs no explosive ammunition, it will fire any
missile that fits its barrel and it is comparatively silent.
Moreover, it is just as intimidating as any other kind of gun."
"You
argue very plausibly," Klavith admitted, "but I doubt
whether you are telling me the whole truth."
"There's
nothing to stop you trying it and seeing for yourself," Leeming
invited. His stomach started jumping at the mere thought of it.
"I
intend to do just that." Switching to his own language, Klavith
let go a flood of words at one of the guards. Showing some
reluctance, the guard propped his rifle against the wall, crossed the
room and took the gun. Under Klavith's instructions, he put the
muzzle to the floor and shoved. The barrel sank back, popped forward
when the pressure was released. Pointing the gun at the wall he
squeezed the trigger.
The
weapon went phut! A tiny pellet burst on the
wall and its contents immediately gasified. For a moment Klavith sat
gazing in puzzlement at the damp spot. Then the awful stench hit him.
His face took on a peculiar mottling, he leaned forward and spewed
with such violence that he fell off his chair. Holding his nose with
his left-hand, Leeming snatched the compass from the desk with hs
right and raced for the door. The guard who had fired the gun was now
rolling on the carpet and trying to turn himself inside-out with such
single-minded concentration that he neither knew nor cared what
anyone was doing. By the door the other guard had dropped his rifle
while he leaned against the wall and emitted a rapid succession of
violent whoops. Not one of the three was in any condition to pull up
his own socks much less get in the way of an escapee.
Still
gripping his nostrils, Leeming jerked open the door, dashed along the
passage and out of the building. Hearing the clatter of his boots,
three more guards rushed out of a room, pulled up as if held back by
an invisible hand and threw their dinners over each other.
Outside,
Leeming let go his nose. His straining lungs took in great gasps of
fresh air as he sprinted toward the helicopter that had brought him
here. This machine provided his only chance of freedom since the
barracks and the entire village would be aroused at any moment and he
could not hope to outrun the lot on foot.
Reaching the
helicopter, he clambered into it, locked its door. The alien controls
did not baffle him because he had made careful note of them during
his previous ride. Still breathing hard while his nerves twanged with
excitement, he started the motor. The vanes began to turn.
Nobody had
yet emerged from the stench-ridden exit he had used but somebody did
come out of another door farther along the building. This character
was unarmed and apparently unaware that anything extraordinary had
taken place. But he did know that the humming helicopter was in wrong
possession. He yelled and waved his arms as the vanes speeded up.
Then he dived back into the building, came out holding a rifle.
The 'copter
made its usual preliminary bumps, then soared. Below and a hundred
yards away the rifle went off like a firecracker. Four holes appeared
in the machine's plastic dome, something nicked the lobe of Leeming's
left ear and drew blood, the tachometer flew to pieces on the
instrument-board. A couple of fierce, hammer like clunks sounded on
the engine but it continued to run without falter and the 'copter
gained height.
Bending
sideways, Leeming looked out and down through the perforated dome.
His assailant was frantically shoving another magazine into the gun.
A second burst of fire came when the 'copter was five hundred feet up
and scooting fast There came a sharp ping as a sliver of metal flew
off the tail-fan but that was the only hit.
Leeming took
another look below. The marksman had been joined by half a dozen
others, all gazing skyward. None were attempting to shoot because the
fugitive was now out of range. Even as he watched, the whole bunch of
them ran into the building, still using the smell-free door. He could
give a guess where they were heading for, namely, the radio-room.
The sight
killed any elation he might have enjoyed. He had the sky to himself
but it wasn't going to be forever. Now the moot question was whether
he could keep it to himself long enough to make distance before he
landed in the wilds and took to his heels again.
FIVE
Definitely he
was not escaping the easy way. In many respects he was worse off than
he'd been before. Afoot in the forest he'd been able to trudge
around. in concealment, feed himself, get some sleep. Now the whole
world knew - or soon would know - that a Terran was on the loose. To
keep watch while flying he needed eyes in the back of his head and
even those wouldn't save him if something superfast such as a
jetplane appeared. And if he succeeded in dumping his machine unseen
he'd have to roam the world without a weapon of any kind.
Mentally he
cursed the extreme haste with which he had dashed out of that room.
The guard who'd fired the stink- gun had promptly collapsed upon it,
hiding it with his body, but there might have been time to roll the
fellow out of the way and snatch it up. And by the door had been two
rifles either of which he could have grabbed and taken with him. He
awarded himself the Idiot's Medal for passing up these opportunities
despite the knowledge that at the time his only concern had been to
hold his breath long enough to reach uncontaminated air.
Yes, his sole
object had been to race clear of a paralysing nausea - but that
needn't have stopped him from swiping a gun if he'd been quicker on
the uptake. Perhaps there was a gun aboard the 'copter. Flying at two
thousand feet, he was trying to keep full attention six ways at once,
before, behind, to either side, above and below. He couldn't do that
and examine the machine's interior as well. The search would have to
wait until after he had landed.
By now he was
some distance over the forest in which he'd been wandering. It struck
him that when he'd been captured and taken away two helicopters had
remained parked in this area. Possibly they had since departed for an
unknown base. Or perhaps they were still there and about to rise in
response to a radioed alarm.
His
alertness increased, he kept throwing swift glances around in all
directions while the machine hummed onward. After twenty minutes a
tiny dot arose from the far horizon. At that distance it was
impossible to tell whether it was a 'copter, a jetplane, or what. His
motor chose this moment to splutter and squirt a thin stream of
smoke. The whirling vanes hesitated, resumed their steady whup-whup.
Leeming
sweated with anxiety and watched the faraway dot. Again the motor
lost rhythm and spurted more smoke. The dot grew a little larger but
was moving at an angle that showed it was not heading straight for
him. Probably it was the herald of an aerial hunt that would find him
in short time.
The motor now
became asthmatic, the vanes slowed, the 'copter lost height. Greasy
smoke shot from its casing in a series of forceful puffs, a fishy
smell came with them. If a bullet had broken an oil-line, thought
Leeming, he couldn't keep up much longer. It would be best to descend
while he still retained some control.
As the
machine lowered he swung its tail-fan in an effort to zigzag and find
a suitable clearing amid the mass of trees. Down he went to one
thousand feet, to five hundred, and nowhere could he see a gap. There
was nothing for it but to use a tree as a cushion and hope for the
best. Reversing the tail-fan to arrest his forward motion, he sank
into an enormous tree that looked capable of supporting a house.
Appearances proved deceptive for the huge branches were so brittle
and easily gave way under the weight imposed upon them. To the
accompaniment of repeated cracks the 'copter fell through the foliage
in a rapid series of halts and jolts that made its occupant feel as
though locked in a barrel that was bumping down a steep flight of
stairs.
The last drop
was the longest but ended in thick bushes and heavy undergrowth that
served to absorb the shock. Leeming crawled out with bruised
cheekbone and shaken frame. Blood slowly oozed from the ear lobe that
had been. grazed by a bullet. He gazed upward. There was now a wide
hole in the overhead vegetation but he doubted whether. it would be
noticed by any aerial observer unless flying very low.
The 'copter
lay tilted to one side, its bent and twisted vanes forced to a sharp
angle with the drive shaft, bits of twig and bark still clinging to
their edges. Hurriedly he searched the big six-seater cabin for
anything that might prove useful. Of weapons there were none. In the
toolbox he did find a twenty-inch spanner of metal resembling bronze
and this he confiscated thinking it better than nothing.
Under the two
seats at the rear he discovered neat compartments filled with alien
food. It was peculiar stuff and not particularly appetizing in
appearance but right now he was hungry enough to gnaw a long-dead
goat covered with flies. So he tried a circular sandwich made of what
looked and tasted like two flat disks of unleavened bread with a thin
layer of white grease between them. It went down, stayed down and
made him feel better. For all he knew the, grease might have been
derived from a pregnant lizard. He was long past caring. His belly
demanded more and he ate another two sandwiches.
There was
quite a stack of these sandwiches plus a goodly number of blue-green
cubes of what seemed to be some highly compressed vegetable. Also a
can of sawdust that smelled like chopped peanuts and tasted like a
weird mixture of minced beef and seaweed. And finally a plastic
bottle filled with mysterious white tablets.
Taking no
chances on the tablets, he slung them into the undergrowth but
retained the bottle which would serve for carrying water. The can
holding the dehydrated stuff was equally valuable; it was strong,
well-made and would do duty as a cooking utensil. He now had food and
a primitive weapon but lacked the means of transporting the lot.
There was far too much to go into his pockets.
While he
pondered this problem something howled across the sky about half a
mile to the east. The sound had only just died away in the distance
when something else whined on a parallel course half a mile to the
west. Evidently hunt was on.
Checking his
impulse to run to some place better hidden from above, he took a
saw-toothed instrument out of the tool-kit, used it to remove the
canvas covering from a seat. This formed an excellent bag, clumsy in
shape, without straps or handles, but of just the right size. Filling
it with his supplies, he made a last inspection of the wrecked
helicopter and noticed that its tiny altimeter dial was fronted with
a magnifying lens. The rim holding the lens was strong and stubborn,
he had to work carefully to extract the lens without breaking it.
Under the
engine-casing he found the reservoir of a windshield water-spray. It
took the form of a light metal bottle holding about one quart.
Detaching it, he emptied it, filled it with fuel from the 'copter's
tank. These final acquisitions gave him the means of making a quick
fire. Klavith could keep the automatic lighter and the pepper-pot and
burn down the barracks with them. He, Leeming, had got something
better. A lens does not exhaust itself or wear out. He was so
gratified with his loot he forgot that a lens was somewhat useless
night-times.
The unseen
jetplanes screamed back, still a mile apart and on parallel courses.
This showed that the hunt was being conducted systematically with
more machines probing the air in other directions. Having failed to
find the missing 'copter anywhere within the maximum distance it
could travel since it was stolen, they'd soon realise that it had
landed and start looking for it from lower altitude. That meant a
painstaking survey from little more than tree-top height.
Now that he
was all set to go he wasn't worried about how soon the searchers
spotted the tree-gap and the 'copter. In the time it would take them
to drop troops on the spot he could flee beyond sight or sound,
becoming lost within the maze of trees. The only thing that bothered
him was the possibility that they might have some species of trained
animal capable of tracking him wherever he went.
He didn't
relish the idea of a Zangastan land-octopus, or whatever it might be,
snuffling up to him in the middle night and embracing him with
rubbery tentacles while he was asleep. There were several people back
home for whom such a fate would be more suitable, professional
loud-shouters who'd be shut up for keeps. However, chances had to be
taken. Shouldering his canvas bag he left the scene.
By nightfall
he'd put about four miles between himself and the abandoned
helicopter. He could not have done more even if he'd wished; the
stars and three tiny moons did not provide enough light to permit
further progress. Aerial activity continued without abate during the
whole of this time but ceased when the sun went down.
The best
sanctuary he could find for the night was a depression between huge
tree-roots. With rocks and sods he built a screen at one end of it,
making it sufficiently high to conceal a fire from anyone stalking
him at ground level. That done, he gathered a good supply of dry
twigs, wood chips and leaves. With everything ready he suddenly
discovered himself lacking the means to start a blaze. The lens was
useless in the dark; it was strictly for daytime only, beneath an
unobscured sun.
This started
him on a long spell of inspired cussing after which he hunted around
until he found a stick with a sharply splintered point. This he
rubbed hard and vigorously in the crack of a dead log. Powdered wood
accumulated in the channel as he kept on rubbing with all his weight
behind the stick. It took twenty-seven minutes of continuous effort
before the wood-powder glowed and gave forth a thin wisp of smoke.
Quickly he stuck a splinter wetted with 'copter fuel into the middle
of the faint glow and at once it burst into flame. The sight made him
feel as triumphant as if he'd won the war single-handed.
Now he got
the fire going properly. The crackle and spit of it was a great
comfort in his loneliness. Emptying the beef seaweed compound onto a
glossy leaf half the size of a blanket, he three-quarters filled the
can with water, stood it on the fire. To the water he added a small
quantity of the stuff on the leaf, also a vegetable cube and hoped
that the result would be a hot and nourishing soup. While waiting for
this alien mixture to cook he gathered more fuel, stacked it nearby,
sat close to the flames and ate a grease sandwich.
After the
soup had simmered for some time he put it aside to cool sufficiently
to be sipped straight from the can. When eventually he tried it the
stuff tasted much better than expected, thick, heavy and now
containing a faint flavour of. mushrooms. He absorbed the lot, washed
the can in an adjacent stream, dried it by the fire and carefully
refilled it with the compound on the leaf. Choosing the biggest lumps
of wood from his supply, he arranged them on the flames to last as
long as possible, and lay down within warming distance.
It was his
intention to spend an hour or two considering his present situation
and working out his future plans. But the soothing heat and the
satisfying sensation of a full paunch lulled him to sleep within five
minutes. He sprawled in the jungle with the great tree towering
overhead, its roots rising. on either side, the fire glowing near his
feet while he emitted snores and enjoyed one of the longest, deepest
sleeps he had ever known.
The snooze
lasted ten hours so that when he awoke he was only partway through
the lengthy night. His eyes opened to see stars glimmering through
the tree-gaps and for a moody moment they seemed impossibly far away.
Rested but cold, he sat up and looked beyond his feet. Nothing could
be seen of the fire. it must have burned itself out. He wished most
heartily that he had awakened a couple of times and added more wood.
But he had slept solidly, almost as if drugged. Perhaps some portion
of that alien fodder was a drug in its effect upon the Terran
digestive system.
Edging toward
where the fire had been he felt around it. The ground was warm. His
exploring hand went farther, plunged into hot ash. Three or four
sparks gleamed fitfully and he burned a finger. Grabbing a twig he
dunked it in the fuel-bottle and then used it to stir the embers. It
flamed like a torch. Soon he had the fire going again and the
coldness crept away.
Chewing a
sandwich, he let his mind toy with current problems. The first
thought that struck him was that he'd missed another chance when
looting the helicopter. He had taken one seat-cover to function as a
bag; if he'd had the hoss-sense to rob all the other seats and cut
their covers wide open he'd have provided himself with bedclothes.
Night-times he was going to miss his blankets unless somehow he could
keep a fire going continuously. The seat-covers would have served to
keep him wrapped and warm.
Damning
himself for his stupidity he played with the idea of returning to the
'copter and making good the deficiency. Then he decided that the risk
was too great. He'd been caught once by his own insistence upon
returning to the scene of the crime and he'd be a prize fool to let
himself be trapped the same way again.
For the time
being he'd have to cope as best he could without blankets or anything
in lieu thereof. If he shivered it was nobody's fault but his own. A
wise; far-seeing Providence had created the dull-witted especially to
do all the suffering. It was right and proper that he should pay for
his blunders with his fair quota of discomfort.
Of course,
even the sharpest brain could find itself ensnared by sheer bad luck
or by misfortunes impossible to foresee. Chance operates for and
against the individual with complete haphazardness. All the same, the
bigger the blow the greater the need to use one's wits in countering
it. Obstacles were made to be surmounted and not to be wept over.
Employing his
wits to the best of his ability, he came to several conclusions.
firstly, that it was not enough merely to remain free, because he had
no desire to spend the rest of his natural life hiding upon an alien
world. Somehow he must get off the planet and metaphorically kiss it
goodbye forever.
5econdly,
that there was no way of leaving except by spaceship, no way of
returning to Earth except by spaceship. Therefore he must concentrate
upon the formidable task of stealing a suitable ship. Any ship would
not do. Making off with a war vessel or a cargo-boat or a passenger
liner was far beyond his ability since all needed a complete crew to
handle them. It would have to be a one-man or two-man scout boat,
fully fuelled and ready for long-range flight. Such ships existed in
large numbers. But finding one and getting away with it was something
else again.
Thirdly, even
if by a near-miracle he could seize a scout- boat and vanish into
space he'd have solved one major problem only to be faced by another
identically the same. The ship could not reach Rigel, much less
Earth, without at least one overhaul and refuelling on the way. No
Combine group could be expected to perform this service for him
unless he had the incredible luck to drop upon a species not in their
right minds. His only answer to this predicament would be to land
upon a planet with hiding-places, abandon his worn-out vessel and
steal another. If either of these two ships failed to come up to
scratch he might have to make yet another landing and grab a third
one.
It was a grim
prospect. The odds were of the order of a million to one against him.
All the same, there had been times when the millionth chance came off
and there should be times when it would do so again.
There was
another alternative that he dismissed as not worthy of consideration,
namely, to stay put in the hope that the war would end reasonably
soon and he'd be permitted to go home in peace. But the termination
of the conflict had no fixed date. For all he knew, it might end when
he was old and grey bearded or fifty years after he was dead. All
wars are the same in that there are times when they seem to have
settled down for everlasting and lack of strife becomes almost
unthinkable.
His
ponderings ceased abruptly when something let go a deep-bellied cough
and four green eyes stared at him out of the dark. Leaping to the
fire, he snatched a flaming branch and hurled it in that direction.
It described a blazing arc and fell into a bush.
The eyes
blinked out, blinked on, then disappeared. There came the scuffling,
slithering sounds of a cumbersome creature backing away fast.
Gradually the noise died out in the distance. Leeming found himself
unable to decide whether it had been one animal or two, whether it
walked or crawled, whether it was the Zangastan equivalent of a
prowling tiger or no more than a curious cow. At any rate, it had
gone.
Sitting by
the tree-trunk, he kept the fire going and maintained a wary watch
until the dawn.
With the
sunrise he breakfasted on a can of soup and a sandwich. Stamping out
the fire, he picked up his belongings and headed to the south. This
direction would take him farther from the centre of the search and,
to his inward regret, would also put mileage between him and the
concealed dump of real Terran food. On the other hand, a southward
trek would bring him nearer to the equatorial belt in which he had
seen three spaceports during his circumnavigation. Where there are
ports there are ships.
Dawn had not
lasted an hour before a jetplane shot over-head. A little later four
helicopters came, all going slow and skimming the trees. Leeming
squatted under a bush until they had passed, resumed his journey and
was nearly spotted by a buoyant fan following close behind the
'copters. He heard the whoosh of it in the nick of time, flung
himself flat beside a rotting log and did his best to look like a
shapeless patch of earth. The thing's downward air-blast sprayed
across his back as it floated above him. Nearby trees rustled their
branches, dead leaves fluttered to ground. It required all his
self-control to remain perfectly motionless while, a pair of
expressionless, snakelike eyes stared down.
The fan
drifted away; its pilot fooled. Leeming got to his feet, glanced at
his compass and pressed on. Energetically he cussed all fans, those
who made them and those who rode them. They were slow, had short
range and carried only one man. But they were dangerously silent. If
a fugitive became preoccupied with his own thoughts, ceasing to be on
the alert, he could amble along unaware of the presence of such a
machine until he felt its air-blast.
Judging by
this early activity the search was being pursued in manner sufficient
to show that some high-ranking brasshat had been infuriated by his
escape. It would not be Klavith, he thought. A major did not stand
high enough in the military caste system. Somebody bigger and more
influential had swung into action, Such a character would make an
example of the unfortunate Klavith and every guard in the barrack-
block. While warily he trudged onward he couldn't help wondering what
Klavith's fate had been; quite likely anything from being boiled in
oil to demotion to private, fourth class. On an alien world one
cannot define disciplinary measures in Terran terms.
But it was a
safe bet that if he, John Leeming, were to be caught again they'd
take lots better care of him - such as by binding him in
mummy-wrappings or amputating his feet or something equally
unpleasant. He'd had one chance of freedom and had grabbed it with
both hands; they wouldn't give him another opportunity. Among any
species the escaper is regarded as a determined troublemaker
deserving of special treatment.
All that day
he continued to plod southward. Half a dozen times he sought brief
shelter while air machines of one sort or another scouted overhead.
At dusk he was still within the forest and the aerial snooping
ceased. The night was a repetition of the previous one with the same
regrets over the loss of his blankets, the same difficulty in making
a fire. Sitting by the soothing blaze, his insides filled and his
legs enjoying. a welcome rest, he felt vaguely surprised that the foe
had not thought to maintain the search through the night. Although he
had shielded his fire from ground-level observation it could easily
be spotted by a night-flying plane; it was a complete giveaway that
he could not hope to extinguish before it was seen from above.
The next day
was uneventful. Aerial activity appeared to have ceased. At any rate,
no machines came his way. Perhaps for some reason known only to
themselves they were concentrating the search elsewhere. He made good
progress without interruption or molestation and, when the sun stood
highest, used the lens to create a smokeless fire and give himself
another meal. Again he ate well, since the insipid but satisfying
alien food was having no adverse effect upon his system. A check on
how much he had left showed that there was sufficient for another
five or six days.
In the
mid-afternoon of the second day afterward he reached the southern
limit of the forest and found himself facing a broad road. Beyond it
stretched cultivated flatlands containing several sprawling buildings
that he assumed to be farms. About four miles away there arose from
the plain a cluster of stone-built erections around which ran a high
wall. At that distance he could not determine whether the place was a
fortress, a prison, a hospital, a lunatic asylum, a factory protected
by a top security barrier, or something unthinkable that Zangastans
preferred to screen from public gaze. Whatever it was, it had a
menacing appearance. His intuition told him to keep his distance from
it.
Retreating a
couple of hundred yards into the forest, he found a heavily wooded
hollow, sat on a log and readjusted his plans. Faced with an open
plain that stretched as far as the eye could see, with habitations
scattered around and with towns and villages probably just over the
horizon, it was obvious that he could no longer make progress in
broad day-light. On a planet populated by broad, squat,
lizard-skinned people a lighter-built and pink-faced Terran would
stand out as conspicuously as a giant panda at a bishops' convention.
He'd be grabbed on sight, especially if the radio and video had
broadcast his description with the information that he was wanted.
The Combine
included about twenty species half of whom the majority of Zangastans
had never seen. But they had a rough idea of what their co-partners
looked like and they'd know a fugitive Terran when they found him.
His chance of kidding his captors that he was an unfamiliar ally was
mighty small; even if he could talk a bunch of peasants into
half-believing him they'd hold him pending a check by authority.
Up to this
moment he'd been bored by the forest with its long parade of trees,
its primitiveness, its silence, its lack of visible life. Now he
viewed it as a sanctuary about to withdraw its protection. Henceforth
he'd have to march by night and sleep by day providing that he could
find suitable hiding places in which to lie up. It was a grim
prospect.
But the issue
was clear-cut. If he wanted to reach a spaceport and steal a scout
boat he must press forward no matter what the terrain and regardless
of risks. Alternatively, he must play safe by remaining in the
forest, perpetually foraging for food around its outskirts, living
the life of a hermit until ready for burial.
The extended
day had several hours yet to go; he decided to have a meal and get
some sleep before the fall of darkness. Accordingly he started a
small fire with the lens, made himself a can of hot soup and had two
sandwiches: Then he curled himself up in a wad of huge leaves and
closed his eyes. The sun gave a pleasant warmth, sleep seemed to come
easy. He slipped into a quick doze. Half a dozen vehicles buzzed and
rattled along the nearby road. Brought wide awake, he cussed them
with fervour, shut his eyes and tried again. It wasn't long before
more passing traffic disturbed him.
This
continued until the stars came out and two of the five small moons
shed an eerie light over the landscape. He stood in the shadow of a
tree overlooking the road and waited for the natives to go to bed -
if they did go to bed rather than hang bat-like by their heels from
the rafters.
A few small
trucks went past during this time. They had orange-coloured
headlights and emitted puffs of white smoke or vapour. They sounded
somewhat like model locomotives. Leeming got the notion that each one
was steam-powered, probably with a flash-boiler fired with wood.
There was no way of checking on this.
Ordinarily he
wouldn't have cared a hoot how Zangastan trucks operated: Right now
it was a matter of some importance. The opportunity might come to
steal a vehicle and thus help himself on his way to wherever he was
going, but as a fully qualified space-pilot he had not the vaguest
idea of how to drive a steam engine. Indeed, if threatened with the
death of a thousand cuts he'd have been compelled to admit that he
could not ride a bike.
While mulling
his educational handicaps it occurred to him that he'd be dim-witted
to sneak furtively through the night hoping for a chance to swipe a
car or truck. The man of initiative makes his chances and does not
sit around praying for them to lie placed in his lap.
Upbraiding
himself, he sought around in the gloom until he found a nice, smooth,
fist-sized rock. Then he waited for a victim to come along. The first
vehicle to appear was travelling in the wrong direction, using the
farther side of the road. Most of an hour crawled by before two more
came together, also on the farther side, one close behind the other.
Across the
road were no trees, bushes or other means of concealment; he'd no
choice but to keep to his own side and wait in patience for his luck
to turn. After what seemed an interminable period a pair of orange
lamps gleamed in the distance, sped toward him. As the lights grew
larger and more brilliant he tensed in readiness.
At exactly
the right moment he sprang from beside the tree, hurled the rock and
leaped back into darkness. In his haste and excitement, he missed.
The rock shot within an inch of the windshield's rim and clattered on
the road. Having had no more than a brief glimpse of a vague,
gesticulating shadow, the driver continued blithely on, unaware that
he'd escaped a taste of thuggery.
Making a few
remarks more emphatic than cogent, Leeming recovered the rock and
resumed his vigil. The next truck showed up at the same time as
another one coming in the opposite direction: He shifted to behind
the tree- trunk. The two vehicles passed each other at a point almost
level with his hiding-place. Scowling after their diminishing beams
he took up position again.
Traffic had
thinned with the lateness of the hour and it was a good while before
more headlights came beaming in the dark and running on road's near
side: This time he reacted with greater care and took better aim. A
swift jump, he heaved the rock, jumped back.
The
result was the dull whup of a hole being bashed
through transparent plastic. A guttural voice shouted something about
a turkey-leg, this being an oath in local dialect. The truck rolled
another twenty yards, pulled up. A broad, squat figure scrambled out
of the cab and ran toward the rear in evident belief that he'd hit
something.
Leeming, who
had anticipated this move, met him with raised spanner. The driver
didn't even see him; he bolted round the truck's tail and the spanner
whanged on his pate and he went down without a sound. For a horrid
moment Leeming thought that he had killed the fellow. Not that one
Zangastan mattered more or less in the general scheme of things. But
he had his own peculiar status to consider. Even the Terrans showed
scant mercy to prisoners who killed while escaping.
However, the
victim emitted bubbling snorts like a hog in childbirth and had
plenty of life left in him. Dragging him onto the verge and under a
tree, Leeming searched him, found nothing worth taking. The wad of
paper money was devoid of value to a Terran who'd have no opportunity
to spend it.
Just then a
long, low tanker rumbled into view. Taking a tight grip on the
spanner, Leeming watched its approach and prepared to fight or run as
circumstances dictated. It went straight past, showing no interest in
the halted truck.
Climbing into
the cab, he had a look around, found that the truck was not
steam-powered as he had thought. The engine was still running but
there was no firebox or anything resembling one. The only clue to
power-source was a strong scent like that of alcohol mixed with a
highly aromatic oil.
Tentatively
he pressed a button and the headlights went out. He pressed it again
and they came on. The next button produced a shrill, catlike yowl out
front. The third had no effect whatever, he assumed that it
controlled the self starter. After some fiddling around he found that
the solitary pedal was the footbrake and that a lever on the
steering-wheel caused the machine to move forward or back at speed
proportionate to the degree of its shift. There was no sign of an
ignition-switch, gear-change lever, headlight dipper or parking
brake. The whole lay-out was a curious mixture of the ultra-modern
and the antiquated.
Satisfied
that he could drive it, he advanced the lever. The truck rolled
forward, accelerated to a moderate pace and kept going at that. He
moved the lever farther and the speed increased. The, forest slid
past on his left; the flatlands on his right and the road was a
yellow ribbon streaming under the bonnet. Man, this was the life!
Relaxing in his seat and feeling pretty good, he broke into ribald
song.
The road
split. Without hesitation he choose the arm that tended southward. It
took him through a straggling village in which very few lights were
visible. Reaching the country beyond he got onto a road running in a
dead straight line across the plain. Now all five moons were in the
sky, the landscape looked ghostly and forbidding. Shoving the lever a
few more degrees, he raced onward.
After an
estimated eighty miles he by-passed a city, met desultory traffic on
the road but continued in peace and unchallenged; Next he drove past
a high stone wall surrounding a cluster of buildings resembling those
seen earlier. Peering upward as he swept by, he tried to see whether
there were any guards patrolling the wall-top but it was impossible
to tell without stopping the truck and getting out. That he did not
wish to do, preferring to travel as fast and as far as possible while
the going was good.
He'd been
driving non-stop at high speed for several hours when a fire-trail
bloomed in the sky and moved like a tiny crimson feather across the
stars. As he watched, the feather floated round in a deep curve, grew
bigger and brighter as it descended. A ship was coming in. Slightly
to his left and far over the horizon there must be a spaceport.
Maybe within
easy reach of him there was a scout-boat fully fuelled and just
begging to be taken up. He licked his lips at the thought of it.
With its
engine still running smoothly the truck passed through a limb to
another large forest. He made mental note of the place lest within
short time he should be compelled to abandon the vehicle and take to
his heels once more. After recent experiences he found himself
developing a strong affection for forests; on a hostile world they
were the only places offering anonymity and liberty.
Gradually the
road tended leftward, leading him nearer and nearer toward where the
hidden spaceport was presumed to be. The truck rushed through four
small villages in rapid succession, all dark, silent and in deep
slumber. Again the road split and this time he found himself in a
quandary. Which arm would take him to the place of ships?
Nearby stood
a signpost but its alien script meant nothing to him. Stopping the
truck, he got out and examined his choice of routes as best he could
in the poor light. The right arm seemed to be the mare heavily used
to judge by the condition of its surface. Picking the right side, he
drove ahead.
Time went on
so long without evidence of a spaceport that he was commencing to
think he'd made a mistake when a faint glow appeared low in the
forward sky. It came from somewhere behind a rise in the terrain,
strengthened as he neared. He tooled up the hill, came over the crest
and saw in a shallow valley a big array of floodlights illuminating
buildings, concrete emplacements, blastpits and four snouty ships
standing on their tail-fins.
SIX
He should
have felt overjoyed: Instead he became filled with a sense of
wariness and foreboding. A complete getaway just couldn't be as easy
as he'd planned: there had to be a snag somewhere.
Edging the
truck onto the verge, he braked and switched off his lights. Then he
surveyed the scene more carefully. From this distance the vessels
looked too big and fat to be scout-boats, too small and out-of-date
to be warships. It vas very likely that they were cargo-carriers,
probably of the trampship type.
Assuming that
they were in good condition and fully prepared for flight it was not
impossible for an experienced, determined pilot to take one up
single-handed. And if it was fitted with an autopilot he could keep
it going for days and weeks. Without such assistance he was liable to
drop dead through sheer exhaustion long before he was due to arrive
anywhere worth reaching. The same problem did not apply to a genuine
scout-boat because a one-man ship had to be filled with robotic aids.
He estimated that these small merchantmen normally carried a crew of
at least twelve apiece, perhaps as many as twenty.
Furthermore;
he had seen a vessel coming in to land-so at least one of these four
had not been serviced and was unfit for flight. There was no way of
telling which one was the latest arrival. But a ship in the hand is
worth ten someplace else. To one of his profession the sight of
waiting vessels was irresistible.
Reluctance to
part company with the truck until the last moment, plus his natural
audacity, make him decide that there was no point in trying to sneak
across the well lit spaceport and reach a ship on foot. He'd do
better to take the enemy by surprise, boldly drive into the place,
park alongside a vessel and scoot up its ladder before they had time
to collect their wits.
Once inside a
ship with the airlock closed he'd be comparatively safe. It would
take them far longer to get him out than it would to take him to
master the strange controls and make ready to boost. He'd have shut
himself inside a metal fortress and the first blast of its propulsors
would clear the area for a couple of hundred yards around. Their only
means of thwarting him would be to bring up heavy artillery and hole
or topple the ship. By the time they'd dragged big guns to the scene
he should be crossing the orbit of the nearest moon.
He consoled
himself with the thoughts as he chivvied the truck onto the road and
let it surge forward but all the time he knew deep within his mind
that this was to be a crazy gamble. There was a good chance that he'd
grab himself a cold-dead rocket short of fuel and incapable of taking
off. In that event all the irate Zangastans need do was sit around
until he'd surrendered or starved to death. That they'd be so slow to
react as to give him time to swap ships was a possibility almost
non-existent.
Thundering
dawn the valley road, the truck took a wide bend, raced for the
spaceport's main gates. These were partly closed, leaving a yard-wide
gap in the middle. An armed sentry stood at one side, behind him a
hut containing others of the guard.
As the truck
shot into view and roared toward him the sentry gaped at it in dumb
amazement, showed the typical reaction of one far from the area of
combat. Instead of pointing his automatic weapon in readiness to
challenge he jumped into the road and tugged frantically to open the
gates. The half at which he was pulling swung wide just in time for
the truck to bullet through with a few inches to spare on either
side. Now the sentry resented the driver's failure to say, "Good
morning!" or "Drop dead!" or anything equally
courteous. Brandishing his gun, he performed a clumsy war-dance and
screamed vitriolic remarks.
Concentrating
on his driving to the exclusion of all else, Leeming went full tilt
around the spaceport's concrete perimeter toward where the ships were
parked. A bunch of lizard-skinned characters strolling along his path
scattered and ran for their lives. Farther on a long, low motorised
trolley loaded with fuel cylinders slid out of a shed, stopped in the
middle of the road. Its driver threw himself off his seat and tried
to dig himself out of sight as the truck wildly swerved around him
and threatened to overturn.
Picking the
most distant ship as the one it would take the foe longest to reach,
Leeming braked by its tail-fins, jumped out of the cab, looked up. No
ladder. Sprinting around the base he found the ladder on the other
side, went up it like a frightened monkey.
It was like
climbing the side of a factory chimney. Halfway up he paused for
breath, looked around. Diminished by distance and depth, a hundred
figures were racing toward him. So also were four trucks and a thing
resembling an armoured car. He resumed his climb, going as fast as he
could but using great care because he was now so high that one slip
would be fatal.
Anxiety
increased as he neared the airlock at top. A few more seconds and
he'd be out of shooting range. But they'd know that too, and were
liable to start popping at him while yet there was time. As he tried
to make more speed his belly quirked at the thought of a last-moment
bullet ploughing through him. His hands grabbed half a dozen rungs in
quick succession, reached the airlock rim at which point he rammed
his head against an unexpected metal rod. Surprised, he raised his
gaze, found himself looking into the muzzle of a gun not as big as a
cannon.
"Shatsi!"
ordered the owner of the gun, making a downward motion with it.
"Amash!"
For a mad
moment Leeming thought of holding on with one hand while he snatched
his opponent's feet with the other. He raised himself in readiness to
grab. Either the fellow was impatient or read his intention because
he hammered Leeming's fingers with the gun-barrel.
"Amash!
Shatsi-amash!" Leeming went slowly and reluctantly down the
ladder. Black despair grew blacker with every step he descended. To
be caught at the start of a chase was one thing; to be grabbed near
the end of it, within reach of success, was something else. Hell's
bells, he'd almost got away with it and that's what made the
situation so bitter.
Hereafter
they'd fasten him up twice as tightly and keep a doubly close watch
upon him. Even if in spite of these precautions he broke free a
second time his chance of total escape would be too small to be worth
considering; with an armed guard aboard every ship he'd be sticking
his head in the trap whenever he shoved it into an airlock. By the
looks of it he was stuck with this stinking world until such time as
a Terran task-force captured it or the war ended, either of which
events might take place a couple of centuries hence.
Reaching the
bottom, he stepped onto concrete and turned around expecting to be
given a kick in the stomach or a bust on the nose. Instead he found
himself faced by a muttering but blank-faced group containing an
officer whose attitude suggested that he was more baffled than
enraged. Favouring Leeming with an unwinking stare, the officer let
go a stream of incomprehensib1e gabble that ended on a note of query.
Leeming spread his hands and shrugged.
The officer
tried again. Leeming responded with another shrug and did his best to
look contrite. Accepting this lack of understanding as something that
proved nothing one way or the other, the officer bawled at the crowd.
Four armed guards emerged from the mob, hustled the prisoner into the
armoured car, slammed and locked the door and took him away.
At the end of
the ride they shoved him into the back room of a rock house with two
guards as company, the other two outside the door. Sitting on a low,
hard chair, he sighed, gazed blankly at the wall for two hours. The
guards also squatted, watched him as expressionlessly as a pair of
snakes and said not a word.
At the end of
that time a trooper brought food and water. Leeming gulped it down in
silence, studied the wall for another two hours. Meanwhile his
thoughts milled around. It seemed pretty obvious, he decided, that
the local gang had not realised that they'd caught a Terran. All
their reactions showed that they were far from certain what they'd
got.
To a certain
extent this was excusable. On the Allied side of the battle was a
federation of thirteen lifeforms, four of them human and three more
very humanlike: The Combine consisted of an uneasy, precarious union
of at least twenty lifeforms three of which also were rather
humanlike. Pending getting the answers from higher authority this
particular bunch of quasi-reptilians couldn't tell enemy from ally.
All the same,
they were taking no chances and he could imagine what was going on
while they kept him sitting on his butt. The officer would grab the
telephone-or whatever they used in lieu-and call the nearest garrison
town. The highest ranker there would promptly transfer
responsibility, to military headquarters. There, Klavith's alarm
would have been filed and forgotten and a ten-star panjandrum would
pass the query to the main beam-station. An operator would transmit a
message asking the three human-like allies whether they had lost
track of a scout in this region.
When back
came a signal saying, "No!" the local gang would realise
that a rare bird had been caught deep within the spatial empire. They
wouldn't like it. Holding-troops far behind the lines share all the
glory and none of the grief and they're happy to let things stay that
way. A sudden intrusion of the enemy where he's no right to be is an
event disturbing to the even tenor of life and not to be greeted with
cries of martial joy. Besides, from their viewpoint where one can
sneak in an army can follow and it is disconcerting to be taken in
force from the rear.
Then when the
news got around Klavith would arrive at full gallop to remind
everyone that this was not the first time Leeming has been captured,
but the second. What would they do to him eventually? He was far from
sure to the job. It was most unlikely that they'd shoot him out of
hand. If sufficiently civilised they'd cross-examine him and then
imprison him for the duration. If uncivilised they'd dig up Klavith
or maybe, an ally able to talk Terran and milk the prisoner of every
item of information he possessed by methods ruthless and bloody.
Back toward
the dawn of history when conflict had been confined to one planet
there had existed a protective device known as the Geneva Convention.
It had organised neutral inspection of prison camps, brought
occasional letters from home, provided food parcels that had kept
alive many a captive who otherwise might have died.
There was
nothing like that today. A prisoner had only two forms of protection,
those being his own resources and the power of his side to retaliate
against the prisoners they'd got. And the latter was a threat more
potential than real. There cannot be retaliation without actual
knowledge of maltreatment.
The day
dragged on. The guards were changed twice. More food and water came.
Eventually the one window showed that darkness was approaching.
Eyeing the window furtively, Leeming decided that it would be
suicidal to take a running jump at it under two guns. It was small
and high, difficult to scramble through in a hurry. How he wished he
had his own stink-gun now!
A prisoner's
first duty is to escape. That means biding one's time with appalling
patience until occurs an opportunity that may be seized and exploited
to the utmost. He'd done it once and he must do it again. If no way
of total escape existed he'd have to invent one.
The prospect
before him was tough indeed; before long it was likely to become a
good deal tougher. If only he'd been able to talk the local language,
or any Combine language, he might have been able to convince even the
linguistic Klavith that black was white. Sheer impudence can pay
dividends. Maybe he could have landed his ship, persuaded them with
smooth words, unlimited self-assurance and just the right touch of
arrogance to repair and reline his propulsors and cheer him on his
way never suspecting that they had been talked into providing aid and
comfort for the enemy.
It was a
beautiful dream but an idle one. Lack of ability to communicate in
any Combine tongue had balled up such a scheme at the start. You
can't chivvy a sucker into donating his pants merely by making noises
at him. Some other chance must now be watched for and grabbed,
swiftly and with both hands-providing that they were fools, enough to
permit a chance.
Weighing up
his guards in the same way as he had estimated the officer, his
earlier captors and Klavith, he didn't think that this species was
numbered among the Combine's brightest brains. All the same they were
broad in the back, sour in the puss and plenty good enough to put
someone in the pokey and keep him there for a long, long time.
In fact they
were naturals as prison wardens.
He remained
in the house four days, eating and drinking at regular intervals,
sleeping halfway through the lengthy nights, cogitating for hours and
often glowering at his impassive guards. Mentally he concocted,
examined and rejected a thousand ways of regaining his liberty, most
of them spectacular, fantastic and impossible.
At one time
he went so far as to try to stare the guards into a hypnotic trance,
gazing intently at them until his own eyeballs felt locked for keeps.
It did not bother them in the least. They had the reptilian ability
to remain motion-less and outstare him until kingdom come.
Mid-morning
of the fourth day the officer strutted in, yelled, "Amash!
Amash!" and gestured toward the door. His tone and manner were
decidedly unfriendly. Evidently someone had identified the prisoner
as an Allied space-louse.
Getting off
his seat Leeming walked out, two guards ahead, two behind, the
officer in the rear. A box-bodied car sheathed in steel waited on the
road. They urged him into it, locked it. A pair of guards stood on
the rear platform hard against the doors and clung to handrails. A
third joined the driver at the front. The journey took thirteen hours
the whole of which the inmate spent jouncing around in complete
darkness.
By the time
the car halted Leeming had invented one new and exceedingly repulsive
word. He used it immediately the rear doors opened.
"Quilpole-enk?"
he growled. "Enk?"
"Amash!"
bawled the guard, unappreciative of alien contributions to the
vocabulary of invective. He gave the other a powerful shove.
With poor
grace Leeming amashed. He glimpsed great walls rearing against the
night and a zone of brilliant light high up before he was pushed
through a metal portal and into a large room. Here a reception
committee of six thug-like samples awaited him. One of the six signed
a paper presented by the escort. The guards withdrew, the door
closed, the six eyed the arrival with complete lack of amiability.
One of them
said something in an authoritative voice and made motions indicative
of undressing.
Leeming
called him a smelly quilpole conceived in an alien marsh.
It did him no
good. The six grabbed him, stripped him naked, searched every vestige
of his clothing, paying special attention to seams and linings. They
displayed the expert technique of ones who'd done this job countless
times already, knew exactly where to look and what to look for. None
showed the slightest interest in his alien physique despite that he
was posing fully revealed in the raw.
Everything he
possessed was put on one side and his clothes shied back at him. He
dressed himself while they pawed through the loot and gabbled
together. Satisfied that the captive now owned nothing more than was
necessary to hide his shame, they led him through the farther door,
up a flight of thick stone stairs, along a stone corridor and into a
cell. The door slammed with a sound like that of the crack of doom.
In the dark
of night eight small stars and one tiny moon shone through a heavily
barred opening high up in one wall. Along the bottom of the gap shone
a faint yellow glow from some outside illumination.
Fumbling
around in the gloom he found a wooden bench against one wall. It
moved when he lugged it. Dragging it beneath the opening he stood
upon it but found himself a couple of feet too low to get a view
outside. Though heavy, he struggled with it until he had it propped
at an angle against the wall, then he crawled carefully up it and had
a look between the bars.
Forty feet
below lay a bare stone-floored space fifty yards wide and extending
to the limited distance he could see rightward and leftward. Beyond
the space a smooth-surfaced stone wall rising to his own level. The
top of the wall angled at about sixty degrees to form a sharp apex,
ten inches above which ran a single line of taut wire, without barbs.
From
unseeable sources to right and left poured powerful beams of light
that flooded the entire area between cell-block and outer wall as
well as a similarly wide space beyond the wall. There was no sign of
life. There was only the wall, the flares of light, the overhanging
night and the distant stars.
"So I'm
in the jug," he said. "That's torn it!"
He jumped to
the invisible floor and the slight thrust made the bench fall with a
resounding crash. It sounded as if he had produced a rocket and let
himself be whisked through the roof. Feet raced along the outside
passage, light poured through a suddenly opened spyhole in the heavy
metal door. An eye appeared in the hole.
"Sach
invigia, faplap!" shouted the guard.
Leeming
called him a flatfooted, duck-assed quilpole and added six more
words, older, timeworn but still potent. He lay on the hard bench and
tried to sleep.
An hour later
he kicked hell out of the door and when the spyhole opened he said,
"Faplap yourself!"
After that he
did sleep.
Breakfast
consisted of one lukewarm bowl of stewed grain resembling millet and
a mug of water. Both were served with disdain and eaten with disgust.
It wasn't as good as the alien muck on which he had lived in the
forest. But of course he hadn't been on convict's rations then; he'd
been eating the meals of some unlucky helicopter crew.
Sometime
later a thin-lipped specimen arrived in company with two guards. With
a long series of complicated gestures this character explained that
the prisoner was to learn a civilized language and, what was more,
would learn it fast- by order. Education would commence forthwith.
Puzzled by
the necessity; Leeming asked, "What about Major Klavith?"
"Snapnose?"
"Why
can't Klavith do the talking? Has he been struck dumb or something?"
A light
dawned upon the other. Making stabbing motions with his forefinger;
he said, "Klavith-fat, fat, fat!"
"Huh?"
"Klavith-fat,
fat, fat!" He tapped his chest several times, pretended to
crumple to the floor and succeeded in conveying that Klavith had
expired with official assistance.
"Holy
cow!" said Leeming.
In
businesslike manner the tutor produced a stack of juvenile picture
books and started the imparting process while the guards lounged
against the wall and looked bored. Leeming co-operated as one does
with the enemy, namely, by misunderstanding everything,
mispronouncing everything and overlooking nothing that would prove
him a linguistic moron.
The lesson
ended at noon and was celebrated by the arrival of another bowl of
gruel containing a hunk of stringy, rubbery substance resembling the
hind end of a rat. He drank the gruel, sucked the portion of animal,
shoved the bowl aside.
Then he
pondered the significance of their decision to teach him how to talk.
In bumping off the unfortunate Klavith they had become the victims of
their own ruthlessness. They'd deprived themselves of the world's
only speaker of Cosmoglotta. Probably they had a few others who could
speak it stationed on allied worlds but it would take time and
trouble to bring one of those back here. Someone had blundered by
ordering Klavith's execution; he was going to cover up the mistake by
teaching the prisoner to squeal.
Evidently
they'd got nothing resembling Earth's electronic brain-pryers and
could extract information only by question-and-answer methods aided
by unknown forms of persuasion. They wanted to know things and
intended to learn them if possible. The slower he was to gain fluency
the longer it would be before they put him on the rack, if that was
their intention.
His
speculations ended when the guards opened the door and ordered him
out. Leading him along the corridor, down the stairs, they released
him into a great yard filled with figures mooching aimlessly around
under a bright sun. He halted in surprise.
Rigellians!
About two thousand of them. These were allies, fighting friends of
Terra. He looked them over with mounting excitement, seeking a few
more familiar shapes amid the mob. Perhaps an Earthman or two. Or
even a few humanlike Centaurians.
But there
were none. Only rubber-limbed, pop-eyed Rigellians shuffling around
in the dreary manner of those confronted with many wasted years and
no conceivable future.
Even as he
gazed at them. he sensed something peculiar. They could see him as
clearly as he could see them and, being the only Earthman, he was a
legitimate object of attention, a friend from another star. They
should have been crowding up to him, full of talk, seeking the latest
news of the war, asking questions and offering information.
It wasn't
like that at all. They took no notice of him, behaved as if the
arrival of a Terran were of no consequence whatever. Slowly and
deliberately he walked across the yard, inviting some sort of
fraternal reaction. They got out of his way. A few eyed him
furtively, the majority pretended to be unaware of his existence.
Nobody offered a word of comfort. Obviously they were giving him the
conspicuous brush-off.
He trapped a
small group of them in a corner of the yard and demanded with
ill-concealed irritation, "Any of you speak Terran?"
They looked
at the sky, the wall, the ground, or at each other and remained
silent.
"Anyone
know Centaurian?"
No answer.
"Well,
how about Cosmoglotta?"
No reply.
Riled, he
walked away and tried another bunch. No luck. Within an hour he had
fired questions at two or three hundred without getting a single
response. It puzzled him completely. Their manner was not
contemptuous or hostile but something else. He tried to analyse it,
came to the conclusion that for an unknown reason they were wary;
they were afraid to speak to him.
Sitting on a
stone step he watched them until a shrill whistle signalled that
exercise-time was over. The Rigellians formed up in long lines in
readiness to march back to their quarters. Leeming's guards gave him
a kick in the pants and chivvied him to his cell.
Temporarily
he dismissed the problem of unsociable allies. After dark was the
time for thinking because then there was nothing else to do. He
wanted to spend the remaining hours of daylight in studying the
picture books and getting well ahead with the local lingo while
appearing to lay far behind. Fluency might prove an advantage
someday. Too bad that he had never learned Rigellian, for instance.
So he applied
himself fully to the task until print and pictures ceased to be
visible. He ate his evening portion of mush after which he lay on the
bench, closed his eyes, set his mind to work.
In all of his
hectic life he'd met no more than about twenty Rigellians. Never once
had he visited their three closely bunched solar systens. What little
he knew of them was hearsay evidence. It was said that their standard
of intelligence was good, they were technologically efficient, they
had been consistently friendly toward men of Earth since first
contact nearly a thousand years ago. Fifty per cent of them spoke
Cosmoglotta, about one per cent knew the Terran tongue.
Therefore if
the average held up several hundreds of those met in the yard should
have been able to converse with him in one language or another. Why
had they steered clear of him and maintained silence? And, why had
they been mighty unanimous about it?
Determined to
solve this puzzle he invented, examined and discarded a dozen
theories, all with sufficient flaws to strain the credulity. It was
about two hours before he hit upon the obvious solution.
These
Rigellians were prisoners deprived of liberty for an unknown number
of years to come. Some of them must have seen an Earthman at one time
or another. But all of them knew that in the Combine's ranks were a
few species superficially humanlike. They couldn't swear to it that a
Terran really was a Terran and they were taking no chances on him
being a spy, an ear of the enemy planted among them to listen for
plots.
That in turn
meant something else when a big mob of prisoners become excessively
suspicious of a possible traitor in their midst it's because they
have something to hide. Yes that was it! He slapped his knee in
delight. The Rigellians had an escape scheme in process of hatching
and meanwhile were taking no chances.
They had been
here plenty long enough to become at least bored, at most desperate,
and seek the means to make a break. Having found a way out, or being
in process of making one, they were refusing to take the risk of
letting the plot be messed up by a stranger of doubtful origin. Now
his problem was that of how to overcome their suspicions, gain their
confidence and get himself included in whatever was afoot. To this he
gave considerable thought.
Next day, at
the end of exercise-time, a guard swung a heavy leg and administered
the usual kick Leeming promptly hauled off and punched him clean on
the snout. Four guards jumped in and gave the culprit a thorough
going over. They did it good and proper, with zest and effectiveness
that no onlooking Rigellian could possibly mistake for a piece of
dramatic play-acting. It was an object lesson and intended as such.
The limp body was taken out of the yard and lugged upstairs, its face
a mess of blood.
SEVEN
It was a week
before Leeming was fit enough to reappear in the yard. The price of
confidence had proved rough, tough and heavy and his features were
still an ugly sight. He strolled through the crowd, ignored as
before, chose a soft spot in the sun and sat.
Soon
afterward a prisoner sprawled tiredly on the ground a couple of yards
away, watched distant guards and spoke in little more than a whisper.
"Where
d'you come from?"
"Terra."
"How'd
you get here?"
Leeming told
him briefly.
"How's
the war going?"
"We're
pushing them back slowly but surely. But it'll take a long time to
finish the job."
"How
long do you suppose?"
"I don't
know. It's anyone's guess." Leeming eyed him curiously. "What
brought your bunch here?"
"We're
not combatants but civilian colonists. Our government placed advance
parties, all male, on four new planets that were ours by right of
discovery. Twelve thousand of us altogether." The Rigellian
paused while he looked carefully around, noted the positions of
various guards. "The Combine descended on us in force. That was
two years ago. It was easy. We weren't prepared for trouble, weren't
adequately armed, didn't even know that a war was on."
"They
grabbed your four planets?"
"You bet
they did. And laughed in our faces."
Leeming
nodded understanding, Cynical and ruthless claim-jumping had been the
original cause of the fracas now extended across a great slice of the
galaxy. On one planet a colony had put up an heroic resistance and
died to the last man. The sacrifice had fired a blaze of fury, the
Allies had struck back and were still striking good and hard.
"Twelve
thousands, you said. Where are the others?"
"Scattered
around in prisons like this one. You certainly picked a choice dump
on which to sit out the war. The Combine had made this its chief
penal planet. It's far from the fighting front, unlikely ewer to be
discovered. The local lifeform isn't much good for space-battles but
plenty good enough to hold what its allies have captured. They're
throwing up big jails all over the world. If the war goes on long
enough this cosmic dump will become solid with prisoners."
"So your
crowd has been here about two years?"
"Sure
have and it seems more like ten."
"And
done nothing about it?"
"Nothing
much," agreed the Rigellian. "Just enough to get forty of
us shot for trying."
"Sorry,"
said Leeming sincerely.
"Don't
let it bother you. I know exactly how you feel. The first few weeks
are the worst. The idea of being pinned down for keeps can drive you
crazy unless you learn to be philosophical about it." He mused
awhile, indicated a heavily. built guard patrolling by the farther
wall. "A few days ago that lying swine boasted that already
there are two hundred thousand Allied prisoners on this planet and
added that by this time next year there would be two millions. I hope
he never lives to see it."
"I'm
getting out of here," said Leeming.
"How?"
"I don't
know yet. But I'm getting out. I'm not going to stay here and rot."
He waited in the hope of some comment about others feeling the same
way, perhaps evasive mention of a coming break, a hint that he might
be invited to join in.
Standing, up,
the Rigellian murmured, "Well, I wish you luck. You'll need all
you can get."
He ambled
away, having betrayed nothing. A whistle blew, the guards shouted;
"Merse, faplaps! Amash!" And that was that.
Over, the
next four weeks he had frequent conversations with the same Rigellian
and about twenty others, picking up odd items of information but
finding them peculiarly evasive whenever the subject of freedom came
up. They were friendly, in fact cordial, but remained determinedly
tightmouthed.
One day he
was having a surreptitious chat and asked, "Why does everyone
insist on talking to me secretively and in whispers? The guards don't
seem to care how much you gab to one another."
"You
haven't yet been cross-examined. If in the mean-time they notice that
we've had plenty to say to you they will try to force out of you
everything we've said - with, particular reference to ideas on
escape."
Leeming
immediately pounced upon the lovely word. "Ah escape, that's all
there is to live for right now. If anyone is thinking of making a bid
maybe I can he1p them and they can help me. I'm a competent
space-pilot and fact is worth something."
The other
cooled at once. "Nothing doing."
"Why
not?"
"We've
been behind walls a long time and have been taught many things that
you've yet to learn."
"Such
as?"
"We've
discovered at bitter cost that escape attempts fail when too many
know what is going on. Some planted spy betrays us. Or some selfish
fool messes things up by pushing in at the wrong moment."
"I am
neither a spy nor a fool. I'm certainly not enough of an imbecile to
spoil my own chance of breaking free."
"That
may be," the Rigellian conceded. "But imprisonment creates
its own special conventions. One firm rule we have established here
is that an escape-plot is the exclusive property of those who
concocted it and only they can make the attempt by that method.
Nobody else is told about it. Nobody else knows until the resulting
hullabaloo starts going. Secrecy is a protective screen that would-be
escapers must maintain at all costs. They'll give nobody a momentary
peek through it, not even a Terran and not even a qualified
space-pilot."
"So I'm
strictly on my own?"
"Afraid
so: You're on your own in any case. We sleep in dormitories, fifty to
a room. You're in a cell all by yourself. You're in no position to
help with anything."
"I can
damned well help myself," Leeming retorted angrily.
And it was
his turn to walk away.
He'd been in
the pokey just thirteen weeks when the tutor handed him a
metaphorical firecracker. Finishing a session distinguished only by
Leeming's dopiness and slowness to learn, the tutor scowled at him
and gave forth to some point "You are pleased to wear the cloak
of idiocy. But am I an idiot too? I do not think so! I am not
deceived-you are far more fluent than you pretend. In seven days'
time I shall report to the Commandant that you are ready for
examination."
"How's
that again?" asked Leeming, putting on a baffled frown.
"You
will be questioned by the Commandant seven days hence."
"I have
already been questioned by Major Klavith."
"That
was verbal, Klavith is dead and we have no record of what you told
him."
Slam went the
door. Came the gruel and a jaundiced lump of something unchewable.
The local catering department seemed to be obsessed by the edibility
of a rat's buttocks. Exercise-time followed.
"I've
been told they're going to put me through the mill a week from now."
"Don't
let that scare you," advised the Rigellian. "They would as
soon kill you as spit in the sink. But one thing keeps them in
check."
"What's
that?"
"The
Allies are holding a stack of prisoners too."
"Yes,
but what they don't know they can't grieve over." "There'll
be more grief for the entire Zangastan species if the victor finds
himself expected to exchange very live prisoners for very dead
corpses."
"You've
made a point there," agreed Leeming. "Maybe it would help
if I had nine feet of rape to dangle suggestively in front of the
Commandant."
"It
would help if I had a very large bottle of vitx
and a shapely female to stroke my hair," sighed the Rigellian,
"If you
can feel that way after two years of semi-starvation what are you
like on a full diet?"
"It's
all in the mind," the Rigellian said. "I like to think of
what might have been."
The whistle
again. More intensive study while daylight lasted. Another bowl of
ersatz porridge. Darkness and a few small stars peeping through the
barred slot high up. Time seemed to be standing still, as it does
with a high wall around it.
He lay on the
bench and produced thoughts like bubbles from a fountain. No place,
positively no place is absolutely impregnable. Given brawn and
brains, time and patience, there's always a way in or out. Escapees
shot down as they bolted had chosen the wrong time and wrong place,
or the right time but the wrong place, or the right place but the
wrong time. Or they had neglected brawn in favour of brains, a common
fault of the overcautious. Or they'd neglected brains in favour of,
brawn, a fault of the reckless.
With eyes
closed he carefully reviewed the situation. He was in a cell with
rock walls of granite hardness at least four feet thick. The only
openings were a narrow gap blocked by five massive steel bars, also
an armour-plated door in constant view of patrolling guards.
On his person
he had no hack-saw, no lock-pin, no implement of any sort, nothing
but the bedraggled clothes in which he reposed. If he pulled the
bench to pieces and somehow succeeded in doing it unheard he'd
acquire several large lumps of wood, a dozen six-inch nails and a
couple of steel bolts. None of that junk would serve to open the door
or cut the window-bars. And there was no other material available.
Outside
stretched a brilliantly illuminated gap fifty yards wide that must be
crossed to gain freedom. Then a smooth stone wall forty feet high,
devoid of handholds. Atop the wall an apex much too sharp to give
grip to the feet while stepping over an alarm-wire that would set the
sirens going if either touched or cut.
The great
wall completely encircled the entire prison. It was octagonal in
shape and topped at each angle by a watch-tower containing guards,
floodlights and guns. To get out, the wall would have to be
surmounted right under the noses of itchy-fingered watchers, in
bright light, without touching the wire. That wouldn't be the end of
it either; beyond the wall was another illuminated area also to be
crossed. An unlucky last-lapper could get over the wall by some kind
of miracle only to be shot to bloody shreds during his subsequent
dash for darkness.
Yes, the
whole set-up had the professional touch of those who knew what to do
to keep prisoners in prison. Escape over the wall was well nigh
impossible though not completely so. If somebody got out of his cell
or dormitory armed with a rope and grapnel, and if he had a daring
confederate who'd break into the power-room and switch off everything
at exactly the right moment, he might make it. Up the wall and over
the dead, unresponsive, alarm-wire in total darkness.
In a solitary
cell there is no rope, no grapnel, nothing capable of being adapted
as either. There is no desperate and trustworthy confederate. Even if
these things had been available he'd have considered such a project
as near suicidal.
If he
pondered once the most remote possibilities and took stock of the
minimum resources needed, he pondered them a hundred times. By long
after midnight he'd been beating his brains sufficiently hard to make
them come up with anything, including ideas that were slightly mad.
For example:
he could pull a plastic button from his jacket, swallow it and hope
that the result would get him a transfer to hospital. True, the
hospital was within the prison's confines but it might offer better
opportunity to escape. Then he thought a second time, decided that an
intestinal blockage would not guarantee his removal elsewhere. They
might do no more than force a powerful purgative down his neck and
thus add to his present discomforts.
As dawn broke
he arrived at a final conclusion. Thirty, forty or fifty Rigellians
working in a patient, determined group might tunnel under the wall
and both illuminated areas and get away. But he had one resource and
one only. That was guile. There was nothing else he could employ. He
let a loud groan and complained to himself, "So I'll have to use
both my heads!"
This
inane remark percolated through the innermost recesses of his mind
and began to ferment like yeast. After a while he sat up startled,
gazed at what he could see of the brightening sky and said in a tone
approaching a yelp, "Yes, sure, that's it - both
heads!"
Stewing the
idea over and over again, Leeming decided by exercise-time that it
was essential to have a gadget. A crucifix or a crystal ball provides
psychological advantages too good to miss. His gadget could be of any
shape, size or design, made of any material so long as it was visibly
and undeniably a contraption. Moreover, its potency would be greater
if not made from items obtainable within his cell such as parts of
his clothing or pieces of the bench. Preferably it should be
constructed of stuff from somewhere else and should convey the
irresistible suggestion of a strange, unknown technology.
He doubted
whether the Rigellians could help. Twelve hours per day they slaved
in the prison's workshops, a fate that he would share after he'd been
questioned and his aptitudes defined. The Rigellians made military
pants and jackets, harness and boots, a small range of light
engineering and electrical components. They detested producing for
the enemy but their choice was a simple one: work or starve.
According to
what he'd been told they hadn't the remotest chance of smuggling out
of the workshops anything really useful such as a knife, chisel,
hammer or hacksaw blade. At the end of, each work period the slaves
were paraded and none allowed to break ranks until every machine had
been checked, every loose tool accounted for and locked away.
The first
fifteen minutes of the mid-day break he spent searching the yard for
any loose item that might somehow be turned to advantage. He wandered
around with his gaze fixed on the ground like a worried kid seeking a
lost coin. The only things he found were a couple of pieces of wood
four inches square by one inch thick and these he slipped into his
pocket without having the vaguest nation of what he intended to do
with them.
Finishing the
hunt, he squatted by the wall, had a whispered chat with a couple of
Rigellians. His mind wasn't on the conversation and the pair mooched
off when a curious guard came near. Later another Rigellian edged up
to him.
"Earthman,
are you still going to get out of here?"
"You bet
I am."
The other
chuckled and scratched an ear, an action that his species used to
express polite scepticism. "I think we've a better chance than
you're ever likely to get."
Leeming shot
him a sharp glance. "Why?"
"There
are more of us and we're together," evaded the Rigellian as
though realising that he'd been on the point of saying too much.
"What can one do on one's own?"
"Bust
out and run like blazes first chance," said Leeming. Just then
he noticed the ring on the other's ear-scratching finger and became
fascinated with it. He'd seen the modest ornament before. A number of
Rigellians were wearing similar objects. So were some of the guards.
These rings were neat affairs consisting of four or five turns of
thin wire with the ends shaped and soldered to form the owner's
initials.
"Where'd
you dig up the jewellery?" he asked.
"Where
did I get what?"
"The
ring."
"Oh,
that." Lowering his hand, the Rigellian studied the ring with
satisfaction. "We make them ourselves in the workshops. It
breaks the monotony."
"Mean to
say the guards don't stop you?"
“They
don't interfere. There's no harm in it. Besides, we've made quite a
few for the guards themselves. We've made them some automatic
lighters as well and could have turned out a lot for ourselves if
we'd had any use for them." He paused, looked thoughtful and
added, "We think the guards have been selling rings and lighters
outside. At least, we hope so."
"Why?"
"Maybe
they'll build up a nice, steady trade. Then when they are comfortably
settled in it we'll cut supplies and demand a rake-off in the form of
extra rations and a few unofficial privileges."
"That's
a smart idea," approved Leeming. "It would help all
concerned to have a high-pressure salesman pushing the goods in the
big towns. How about putting me down for that job?"
Giving a
faint smile, the Rigellian continued, "Handmade junk doesn't
matter. But let the guards find that one small screwdriver is missing
and there's hell to pay. Everyone is stripped naked on the spot and
the culprit suffers."
"They
wouldn’t care about losing a small coil of that wire, would
they?"
"I doubt
it. There's plenty of it, they don't bother to check the stock. What
can anyone do with a piece of wire?"
"Heaven
alone knows," Leeming admitted: "But I want some all the
same."
"You'll
never pick a lock with it in a million moons," warned the other.
"It's too soft and thin."
"I want
enough to make a set of Zulu bangles. I sort of fancy myself in Zulu
bangles."
"And
what are those?"
"Never
mind. Get me some of that wire-that's all I ask.
“You
can steal it yourself in the near future. After you've been
questioned they'll send you to the workshops."
"I want
it before then. I want it just as soon as I can get it. The more the
better and the sooner the better."
Going silent,
the Rigellian thought it over, finally said, "If you've a plan
in your mind keep it to yourself. Don't let slip a hint of it to
anyone. Open your mouth once too often and somebody will beat you to
it."
"Thanks
for the good advice, friend," said Leeming. "Now how about
a supply of wire?"
"See you
this time tomorrow."
With that,
the Rigellian left him, wandered into the crowd.
At the
appointed hour the other was there, passed him the loot. "Nobody
gave this to you, see? You found it lying in the yard. Or you found
it hidden in your cell. Or you conjured it out of thin air. But
nobody gave it to you."
"Don't
worry. I won't involve you in any way. And thanks a million."
The wire was
a thick, pocket-sized coil of tinned copper. When unrolled in the
darkness of his cell it measured a little more than his own length,
or about seven feet.
Leeming
doubled it, waggled it to and fro until it broke, hid one half under
the bottom of the bench. Then he spent a couple of hours worrying a
nail out of the bench's end. It was hard going and it played hob with
his fingers but he persisted until the nail was free.
Finding one
of the small squares of wood, he approximated its centre, stamped the
nail-point into it with the heel of his boot. Footsteps sounded along
the corridor, he shoved the stuff out of sight beneath the bench, lay
dawn just in time before the spyhole opened. The light flashed on, a
cold reptilian eye looked in, somebody grunted. The light cut off,
the spyhole shut.
Resuming his
task, Leeming twisted the nail one way and then the other, stamping
on it with his boot from time to time. The task was tedious but at
least it gave him something to do. He persevered until he had drilled
a neat hole two-thirds of the way through the wood.
Next, he took
his half-length of wire, broke it into two unequal parts, shaped the
shorter piece to form a neat loop with two legs each three or four
inches long. He tried to make the loop as near to a perfect circle as
possible. The larger piece he wound tightly around the loop so that
it formed a close-fitting coil with legs matching the others.
Propping his
bench against the wall, he climbed it to the window and examined his
handiwork in the glow from outside floodlights, made a few minor
adjustments and felt satisfied. He replaced the bench and used the
nail to make on its edge two small nicks representing the exact
diameter of the loop. Lastly he counted the number of turns to the
coil. There were twenty-seven.
It was
important to remember these details because in all likelihood he
would have to make a second gadget as nearly identical as possible.
That very similarity would help to bother the enemy. When a plotter
makes two mysterious objects to all intents and purposes the same it
is hard to resist the notion that he knows what he is doing and has a
sinister purpose.
To complete
his preparations he coaxed the nail back into the place where it
belonged. Sometime he'd need it again as a valuable tool. They'd
never find it and deprive him of it because, to the searcher's mind,
anything visibly not disturbed is not suspect.
Carefully he
forced the four legs of the coiled loop into the hole that he'd
drilled, thus making the square of wood function as a supporting
base. He now had a gadget, a thingumbob, a means to an end. He was
the original inventor and sole proprietor of the Leeming-Finagle
something-or-other.
Certain
chemical reactions take place only in the presence of a catalyst,
like marriages legalised by the presence of an official. Some
equations can be solved only by the inclusion of an unknown quantity
called X. If you haven't enough to obtain a desired result you've got
to add what's needed. If you require outside help that doesn't exist
you must invent it.
Whenever Man
had found himself unable to master his environment with his bare
hands, thought Leeming, the said environment had be coerced or
bullied into submission by Man plus X. That had been so since the
beginning of time: Man plus a tool or a weapon.
But X did not
have to be anything concrete or solid, it did not have to be lethal
or even visible. It could be as intangible and unprovable as the
threat of hellfire or the promise of heaven. It could be a dream, an
illusion, a whacking great thundering lie-just anything.
There was
only one positive test: whether it worked.
If it did, it
was efficient.
Now to see.
There was no
sense in using the Terran language except perhaps as an incantation
when one was necessary. Nobody here understood Terran, to them it was
just an alien gabble. Besides, his delaying tactic of pretending to
be slow to learn the local tongue was no longer effective. They knew
that he could speak it almost as well as they could themselves.
Holding the
loop assembly in his left hand he went to the door, applied his ear
to the closed spyhole, listened for the sound of patrolling feet. It
was twenty minutes before heavy boots came clumping towards him.
"Are you
there?" he called, not too loudly but enough to be heard. "Are
you there?"
Backing off
fast, he lay on his belly on the floor and stood the loop six inches
in front of his face. "Are you there?"
The spyhole
clicked open, the light came on, a sour eye looked through.
Completely
ignoring the watcher and behaving with the air of one far too
absorbed in his task to notice that he was being observed, Leeming
spoke through the coiled loop.
"Are you
there?"
"What
are you doing?" demanded the guard.
Recognising
the other's voice, Leeming decided that for once luck must be turning
his way. This character, a chump named Marsin, knew enough to point a
gun and fire it, or, if unable to do so, yell for help. In all other
matters he was not of the elite. In fact Marsin would have to think
twice to pass muster as a half-wit.
"What
are you doing?" insisted Marsin, raising his voice.
"Calling,"
said Leeming, apparently just waking up to the other's existence.
"Calling?
Calling what or where?"
"Mind
your own quilpole business," Leeming ordered, giving a nice
display of impatience. Concentrating attention upon the loop, he
turned it round a couple of degrees. "Are you there?"
"It is
forbidden," insisted Marsin.
"Letting
go the loud sigh of one compelled to bear fools gladly, Leeming said,
"What is forbidden?"
"To
call."
"Don't
display your ignorance. My species is always allowed to call. Where
would we be if we couldn't, enk?"
That got
Marsin badly tangled. He knew nothing about Earthmen or what peculiar
privileges they considered essential to life, Neither could he give a
guess as to where they'd be without them.
Moreover, he
dared not enter the cell and put a stop to whatever was going on. An
armed guard was strictly prohibited from going into a cell by himself
and that rule had been rigid ever since a fed-up Rigellian had
slugged one, snatched his gun and killed six people while trying to
make a break.
If he wanted
to interfere he'd have to go and see the sergeant of the guard and
demand that something be done to stop pink-skinned aliens making
noises through loops. The sergeant was an unlovely character with a
tendency to shout the most intimate details of personal histories all
over the landscape. It was the witching hour between midnight and
dawn, a time when the sergeant's liver malfunctioned most audibly.
And lastly he, Marsin, had proved himself a misbegotten faplap far
too often.
"You
will cease calling and go to sleep," ordered Marsin with a touch
of desperation, "or in the morning I shall re-port your
insubordination to the officer of the day."
"Go ride
a camel," Leeming invited. He rotated the loop in manner of one
making careful adjustment. "Are you there?"
"I have
warned you," Marsin persisted, his only visible eye popping at
the loop.
"Fibble
off!" roared Leeming. Marsin shut the spyhole and fibbled off.
As was
inevitable after being up most of the night, Leeming overslept. His
awakening was abrupt and rude. The door burst open with a loud crash;
three guards plunged in followed by an officer.
Without
ceremony the prisoner was jerked off the bench, stripped and shoved
into the corridor stark naked. The guards then searched through the
clothing while the officer minced around watching them. He was,
decided Leeming, definitely a fairy.
Finding
nothing in the clothes they started examining the cell. Right off one
of them discovered the loop-assembly and gave it to the officer who
held it gingerly as if it were a bouquet suspected of being a bomb.
Another guard
trod on the second piece of wood, kicked it aside and ignored it.
They tapped the floor and walls, seeking hollow sounds. Dragging the
bench away from the wall, they looked over the other side of it but
failed to turn it upside-down and see anything underneath. However,
they handled the bench so much that it got an Leeming's nerves and he
decided that now was the time to take a walk. He started along the
corridor, a picture of nonchalant nudity.
The officer
let go a howl of outrage and pointed. The guards erupted from the
cell, bawled orders to halt. A fourth guard, attracted by the noise,
came sound the bend of the corridor, aimed his gun threateningly.
Leeming turned around and ambled back.
He
stopped as he reached the officer who was now outside the cell and
fuming with temper. Striking a modest pose, he said, "Look-September
Morn."
It meant
nothing to the other who flourished the loop, did a little dance of
rage and yelled, "What is this thing?"
"My
property," declared Leeming with naked dignity.
"You are
not entitled to possess it. As a prisoner of war you are not allowed
to have anything."
"Who
says so?"
"I say
so " informed the fairy somewhat violently.
"Who're
you?" asked Leeming, showing no more than academic interest.
"By the
Great Blue Sun, I'll show you who I am! Guards, take him inside and
-"
"You're
not the boss;" interrupted Leeming, impressively cocksure. "The
Commandant is the boss here. I say so and he says so. If you want to
dispute it, let's go ask him."
The guards
hesitated, assumed expressions of chronic uncertainty. They were
unanimous in passing the buck to the officer. That worthy was taken
aback. Staring incredulously at the prisoner, he became wary.
Are you
asserting that the Commandant has given permission for you to have
this object?"
"I'm
telling you that he hasn't refused permission. Also that it is, not
for you to give or refuse it. You roll in your own hog-pen and don't
try usurp the position of your betters."
"Hog-pen?
What is that?"
"You
wouldn't know."
"I shall
consult the Commandant about this." Deflated and unsure of
himself, the officer turned to the guards.
"Put him
back in his cell and give him his breakfast as usual.
"How
about returning my property, enk?" Leeming
prompted.
"Not
until I have seen the Commandant."
They hustled
him into the cell. He got dressed. Breakfast came, the inevitable
bowl of slop. He cussed the guards for not making it bacon and eggs.
That was deliberate and of malice aforethought. A display of self
assurance and some aggressiveness was necessary to push the game
along.
For some
reason the tutor did not appear so he spent the morning furbishing
his fluency with the aid of the books. At mid-day they let him into
the yard and he could detect no evidence of a special watch being
kept upon him while he mingled with the crowd.
The Rigellian
whispered, "I got the opportunity to take another coil of wire.
So I grabbed it in case you wanted more." He slipped it across,
saw it vanish into a pocket "That's all I intend to steal. Don't
ask me again. One can't tempt fate too often."
"What's
the matter? Is it getting risky? Are they suspicious of you?"
"Everything
is all right so far." He glanced cautiously; around. "If
some of the other prisoners learn that I'm pinching wire they'll
start taking it too. They'll snatch it in the hope of discovering
what I intend to do with it, that they can use it for the same
purpose. Two years in prison is two years of education in unmitigated
selfishness. Everybody is always on the watch for some advantage,
real or imaginary, that he can grab off somebody else. This lousy
life brings out the worst in us as well as the best."
"A
couple of small coils will never be missed," the other went on.
"But once the rush starts the stuff will evaporate in wholesale
quantities. And that's when all hell will break loose. I daren't take
the chance of creating a general ruckus."
"Meaning
you fellows can't afford to risk a detailed search right now?"
suggested Leeming pointedly.
The Rigellian
shied like a frightened horse. "I didn't say that."
"I can
put two and two together as expertly as anyone else." Leeming
favoured him with a reassuring wink. "I can also keep my mouth
shut."
He watched
the other mooch away. Then he sought around the yard for more pieces
of wood but failed to find any. Oh, well, no matter. At a pinch he
could do without. Come to that, he'd darned well have to do without.
The afternoon
was given over to linguistic studies on which he was able to
concentrate without interruption. That was one advantage of being in
the clink, perhaps the only one. A fellow could educate himself. When
the light became too poor and the first pale stars showed through the
barred opening in the wall he kicked the door until the sound of it
thundered all over the block.
EIGHT
Feet came
running and the spyhole opened. It was Marsin again.
"So it's
you, faplap," greeted Leeming. He let go a snort of contempt.
"You had to blab, of course. You had to curry favour by
reporting me to the officer." He drew himself up to full height.
"Well, I am sorry for you. I'd fifty times rather be me than
you."
"Sorry
for me?" Marsin registered confusion. "Why?"
"Because
you are going to suffer."
"I am?"
"Yes,
you! Not immediately, if that is any consolation. First of all it is
necessary for you to undergo the normal period of horrid
anticipation. But eventually you are going to suffer. I don't expect
you to believe me. All you need do is wait and see."
"It was
my duty," explained Marsin semi-apologetically.
"That
fact will be considered in mitigation," Leeming assured, "and
your agonies will be modified in due proportion."
"I don't
understand," complained Marsin, developing a node of worry
somewhere within the solid bone.
"You
will-some dire day. So also will those stinking faplaps who beat me
up in the yard. You can inform them from me that their quota of pain
is being arranged."
"I am
not supposed to talk to you," said Marsin, dimly perceiving that
the longer he stood by the spyhole the bigger the fix he got into. "I
shall have to go."
"All
right. But I want something."
"What is
it?"
"I want
my bopamagilvie-that thing the officer took away."
"You
cannot have it unless the Commandant gives permission. He is absent
today and will not return before tomorrow morning."
"That's
no use. I want it now."
"You
cannot have it now."
"Forget
it " Leeming gave an airy wave of his hand. "I'II create
another one."
"It is
forbidden," reminded Marsin very feebly.
"Ha-ha!"
said Leeming.
After
darkness had grown complete he got the wire from under the bench and
manufactured a second whatzit to all intents identical with the first
one. Twice he was interrupted but not caught.
That job
finished, he upended the bench and climbed it. Taking the newly
received coil of wire from his pocket, he tied one end tightly around
the middle bar and hung the coil outside the window-gap. With spit
and dust he camouflaged the bright tin surface of the one visible
strand, made sure that it could not be seen at farther than nose-tip
distance. He slid down, replaced the bench. The window-gap was so
high in the wall that all of its ledge and the bottom three inches of
its bars were invisible from below. Going to the door he listened and
at the right time called, "Are you there?"
When the
light came on and the spyhole had opened he got the instinctive
feeling that a bunch of them were clustered outside the door, also
that the eye in the hole was not Marsin's.
Ignoring
everything else, he rotated the loop slowly and carefully, meanwhile
calling, "Are you there? Are you there?" After traversing
about forty degrees he paused, gave his voice a tone of intense
satisfaction and exclaimed, "So you are there at last! Why don't
you keep within easy reach so that we can talk without me having to
summon you through a loop?"
Going silent,
he put on the expression of one who listens intently. The eye in the
spyhole widened, got shoved away, was replaced by another.
"Well,"
said Leeming, settling himself down for a cosy gossip, "I'll
point them out to you the first chance I get and leave you to deal
with them as you think fit. Let's switch to our own language. There
are too many big ears around for my liking." Taking a deep
breath, he rattled off at tremendous speed and without pause, "Out
sprang the web and opened wide the mirror cracked from side to side
the curse has come upon me cried the Lady of-"
Out sprang
the door and opened wide and two guards almost fell headlong into the
cell in their eagerness to make a quick snatch. Two more posed
outside with the fairy glowering between them. Marsin mooned
fearfully in the background.
A guard
grabbed the loop-assembly, yelled, "I've got it!" and
rushed out. His companion followed at full gallop. Both seemed
hysterical with excitement. There was a pause of ten seconds before
the door shut. Leeming exploited the fact. Pointing two fingers of
one hand at the group, he made horizontal stabbing motions toward
them. Giving 'em Devil's Horns they'd called it when he was a kid.
The classic gesture of donating the evil eye.
"There
you are," he declaimed dramatically; talking to something that
nobody else could see. "Those are the scaly-skinned bums I've
been telling you about. They want trouble. They like it, they love
it, they dote on it. Give them all they can take."
The whole
bunch managed to look alarmed before the door cut them from sight
with a vicious slam. Listening at the spyhole he heard them tramp
away muttering steadily between themselves.
Within ten
minutes he had broken a length off the coil hanging from the
window-bars, restored the spit and dust disguise of the holding
strand. Half an hour later he had another neatly made bopamagilvie.
Practice was making him expert in the swift and accurate manufacture
of these things. Lacking wood for a base he used the loose nail to
dig a hole in the dirt between the big stone slabs composing the
floor of his cell. He rammed the legs of the loop into the hole,
twisted the contraption this way and that to make ceremonial rotation
easy. Then he booted the door something cruel.
When the
right moment arrived he lay on his belly and commenced reciting
through the loop the third paragraph of Rule 27, Section 9,
Subsection B, of Space Regulations. He chose it because it was a gem
of bureaucratic phraseology, a single sentence one thousand words
long meaning something known only to God.
"Where
refuelling must be carried out as an emergency measure at a station
not officially listed as a home-station or definable for special
purposes as a home-station under Section A(5) amendment A(5)B the
said station shall be treated as if it were definable as a
home-station under Section A(5) amendment A(5)B providing that the
emergency falls within the authorised list of technical necessities
as given in Section J(29-33) with addenda subsequent thereto as
applicable to home-stations where such are-"
The spyhole
flipped open and shut. Somebody scooted away at top speed. A minute
afterward the corridor shook to what sounded like a massed cavalry
charge. The spyhole again opened and shut. The door crashed inward.
This time
they reduced him to his bare pelt, searched his clothes, raked the
cell from end to end. Their manner was that of those singularly
lacking in brotherly love. Turning the bench upside-down, they tapped
it, knocked it, kicked it; did everything but run a large magnifying
glass over it.
Watching this
operation, Leeming encouraged them by emitting a sinister snigger.
There had been a time when he could not have produced a sinister
snigger even to win a very large bet. But he could do it now. The
ways in which a man can rise to the occasion are without limit.
Giving him a
look of sudden death and total destruction, a guard went out,
staggered back with a heavy ladder mounted it and suspiciously
surveyed the window-gap. As an intelligent examination it was a dead
loss because. his mind was concerned only with the solidity of the
bars. He grasped each bar with both hands and shook vigorously. Hi
fingers did not touch the thread of wire nor did his eyes detect it.
Satisfied, he got down and tottered out with the ladder.
The others
departed. Leeming dressed himself, listened at the spyhole. Just a
very faint hiss of breath and an occasional rustle of clothes nearby.
He sat on the bench and waited. In short time the lights blazed on
and the spyhole popped open.
Stabbing two
fingers toward the hole, he declaimed, "Die, faplap!"
The hole
snapped shut. Feet moved away, stamping much too loudly. He waited.
After half an hour of complete silence the eye offered itself again
and for its pains received another two-fingered curse. Five minutes
later it had yet another bestowed upon it. If it was the same eye all
the time it was a glutton for punishment.
This game
continued at erratic intervals for four hours before the eye had had
enough. Leeming immediately made another coiled-loop, gabbled through
it at the top of his voice and precipitated another raid. They did
not strip him and search the cell this time. They contented
themselves with confiscating the gadget. And they showed symptoms of
aggravation.
There was
just enough wire life for one more blood-pressure booster. He decided
to keep it against a future need and get some sleep. Inadequate food
and not enough slumber were combining to make inroads upon his
physical reserves: Flopping full length on the bench, he sighed and
closed red-rimmed eyes. In due time he started snoring fit to saw
through the bars. That caused a panic in the passage and brought the
gang along in another rush.
Wakened by
the uproar, he damned them to perdition. Then he lay down again. He
was plain bone-tuckered - but so were they.
He slept
solidly until mid-day without a break except for the usual lousy
breakfast. Then came the usual lousy dinner. At exercise time they
kept him locked in. He hammered and kicked on the door, demanded to
know why he wasn't being allowed to walk in the yard, shouted threats
of glandular dissection for all and sundry. They took no notice.
So he sat on
the bench and thought things over. Perhaps this denial of his only
measure of freedom was a form of retaliation for making them hop
around like agitated fleas in the middle of the night. Or perhaps the
Rigellian was under suspicion and they'd decided to prevent contact.
Anyway, he
had got the enemy bothered. He was messing them about single-handed,
far behind the lines. That was something. The fact that a combatant
is a prisoner doesn't mean he's out of the battle. Even behind thick
walls, he can still harass the foe, absorbing his time and energy,
undermining his morale, pinning down at least a few of his forces.
The next
step, he concluded, was to widen and strengthen the curse. He must do
it as comprehensively as possible. The more he spread it and the more
ambiguous the terms in which he expressed it the more plausibly he
could grab the credit for any and every misfortune that was certain
to occur sooner or later.
It was the
technique of the gypsy's warning. People tend to attach specific
meanings to ambiguities when circumstances arise and shape themselves
to give especial meanings. People don't have to be very credulous,
either. It is sufficient for them to be made expectant, with a
tendency to wonder -- after the event.
"In the
near future a tall, dark man will cross your path." After which
any male above average height, and not a blond, fits the picture. And
any time from five minutes to five years is accepted as the near
future.
"Mamma,
when the insurance man called he really smiled at me. Do
you remember what the gypsy said?"
To accomplish
anything worth-while one must adapt to one's own environment. If the
said environment is radically different from everyone else's the
method of accommodating to it must be equally different. So far as he
knew, he, Leeming, was the only Terran in this prison and the only
prisoner held in solitary confinement. Therefore his tactics could
have nothing in common with any schemes the Rigellians had in mind.
The
Rigellians were up to something, no doubt of that They wouldn't be
wary and secretive about nothing. It was almost a dead-sure bet that
they were digging a tunnel. Probably a bunch of them were deep in the
earth right now, scraping and scratching without tools. Removing dirt
and rock a few pounds at a time. Progress at the rate of a pathetic
two or three inches per night. A constant, never-ending risk of
discovery, entrapment and perhaps some insane shooting: A yearlong
project that could be terminated in minutes with a shout and a
chatter of automatic guns.
But to get
out of a strong stone cell in a strong stone jail one doesn't have to
make a desperate and spectacular escape. If sufficiently patient,
resourceful, glib and cunning one can talk the foe into opening the
doors and pushing one out.
Yes, you can
use the wits that God has given you.
By the law of
probability various things must happen within and without the prison,
not all of them pleasing to the enemy. Some officer must get the
galloping gripes right under his body-belt. Or a guard must fall down
a watch- tower ladder and break a leg. Somebody must lose a wad of
money or his pants or his senses. Farther afield a bridge must
collapse, or a train get derailed, or a spaceship crash at take-off.
Or there'd be an explosion in a munitions factory. Or a military
leader would drop dead.
He'd be
playing a trump card if he could establish his claim as the author of
most of this trouble. The essential thing was to stake it in such a
way that they could not effectively combat it, neither could they
exact retribution in a torture-chamber.
The ideal
strategy was to convince the enemy of his malevolence in a way that
would equally convince them of their own impotence. If he succeeded -
and it was a big if - they would come to the logical conclusion that
the only method of getting rid of constant trouble would be to get
rid of Leeming, alive and in one piece. If - and it was a big if - he
could link cause and effect irrevocably together they'd have to
remove the cause in order to dispose of the effect.
The question
of exactly how to achieve this fantastic result was a jumbo problem
that would have appalled him back home. In fact he'd have declared it
impossible despite that the basic lesson of space-conquest is that
nothing is impossible. But by now he'd had three lonely months in
which to incubate a solution - and the brain becomes wonderfully
stimulated by grim necessity. It was a good thing that he had an idea
in mind; he had a mere ten minutes before the time came to apply it.
The door
opened, a trio of guards scowled at him and one of them rasped, "The
Commandant wishes to see you at once. Amash, faplap!"
Leeming
walked out saying, "Once and for all, I am not a faplap, see?"
The guard
booted him in the buttocks.
The
Commandant lolled behind a desk with a lower ranking officer seated
on either side. He was a heavily built specimen. His lidless,
horn-covered eyes gave him a frigid, unemotional appearance as he
studied the prisoner.
Leeming
calmly sat himself on a handy chair and the officer on the right
immediately bellowed, "Stand to attention in the presence of the
Commandant!"
Making a
gesture of contradiction, the Commandant said boredly, "Let him
sit."
A concession
at the start, thought Leeming. Curiously he eyed a wad of papers on
the desk. Probably a complete report of his misdeeds, he guessed.
Time would show. Anyway, he had one or two weapons with which to
counter theirs. It would be a pity, for instance, if he couldn't
exploit their ignorance. The Allies knew nothing about the
Zangastans. By the same token the Zangastans knew little or nothing
about several Allied species, Terrans included. In coping with him
they were coping with an unknown quantity.
And from now
on it was a quantity doubled by the addition of X. "I am given
to understand that you now speak our language," began the
Commandant.
"not
much used denying it," Leeming confessed.
"Very
well: You will give us information concerning yourself."
"I have
given it already: I gave it to Major Klavith."
"That is
no concern of mine. You will answer any questions and your answers
had better be truthful." Positioning an official form upon his
desk, he held his pen in readiness. "Name of planet of origin"
"Earth."
The other
wrote it phonetically in his own script, then continued, "Name
of race?"
"Terran."
"Name of
species?"
"Homo
nosipaca;" said Leeming, keeping his face straight. Writing
it down, the Commandant looked doubtful, asked, "What does that
mean?"
"Space-traversing
Man," Leeming informed. "H'm!" The other was impressed
despite himself. "Your personal name?"
"John
Leeming."
"John
Leeming," repeated the Commandant, putting it down.
"And
Eustace Phenackertiban." added Leeming airily.
That was
written down also, though the Commandant had some difficulty in
finding suitable hooks and curlicues to express Phenackertiban. Twice
he asked Leeming to repeat the alien cognomen and that worthy
obliged.
Studying the
result, which resembled a Chinese recipe for rotten egg gumbo, the
Commandant said, "Is it your custom to have two sets of names?"
"Most
certainly," Leeming assured. "We can't avoid it seeing that
there are two of us."
Twitching the
eyebrows he didn't possess, the listener showed mild surprise. "You
mean that you are always conceived and born in pairs? Two identical
males or females every time?" "No, no, not at all."
Leeming adopted the air of one about to state the obvious. "Whenever
one of us is born he immediately acquires a Eustace."
"A
Eustace?"
"Yes."
The
Commandant frowned, picked his teeth, glanced at the other officers.
If he was seeking inspiration he was out of luck; they put on the
blank expressions of fellows who'd came along merely to keep company.
"What,"
asked the Commandant at long last, "is a Eustace?"
Gaping at him
in open incredulity, Leeming said, "You don't know?"
"I am
putting the questions. You will provide the answers. What is a
Eustace?" Leeming informed, "An invisibility that is part
of one's self."
Understanding
dawned on the Commandant's scaly face. "Ah, you mean a soul? You
give your soul a separate name?"
"Nothing
of the sort. I have a soul of my own and Eustace has a soul of his
own." He added as an afterthought, "At least, I hope we
have."
The
Commandant lay back in his chair and stared at him. There was quite a
long silence during which the side officers continued to play
dummies.
Finally the
Commandant admitted, "I do not understand."
"In that
case," announced Leeming, irritatingly triumph-ant, "it is
evident that you have no alien equivalent of Eustaces yourselves.
You're all on your own. Just single-lifers. That's your hard luck."
Slamming a
hand on the desk the Commandant gave his voice a bit more military
whoof and demanded, "Exactly what is a Eustace? Explain to me as
clearly as possible."
"I'm in
poor position to refuse the information," Leeming conceded with
hypocritical reluctance. "Not that it matters much. Even if you
gain perfect understanding there is nothing you can do about it."
"That
remains to be seen," opined the Commandant, looking bellicose.
"Cease evading the issue and tell me all that you know about
these Eustaces."
"Every
Earthling lives a double life from birth to death," said
Leeming. "He exists in close mental association with an entity
that always calls himself Eustace something-or-other. Mine happens to
be Eustace Phenackertiban."
"You can
actually see this entity?"
"No,
never at any time. I cannot see him, smell him or feel him."
"Then
how do you know that this is not a racial delusion?"
"Firstly,
because every Terran can hear his own Eustace. I can hold long
conversations with mine, providing that he happens to be within
reach, and I can hear him speaking clearly and logically within the
depths of my mind."
"You
cannot hear him with the ears?"
"No,
only with the mind. The communication is telepathic or to be more
accurate, quasi-telepathic."
"I
can believe that," informed the Commandant with considerable
sarcasm. "You have been heard talking out loud, shouting at the
top of your voice. Some telepathy, enk?"
"When I
have to boost my thoughts to get range I can do it better by
expressing them in words. People do the same when they sort out a
problem by talking to them-selves. Haven't you ever talked to
yourself?"
"That is
no business of yours. What other proof have you that Eustace is not
imaginary?"
Taking a deep
breath, Leeming went determinedly on. "He has the power to do
many things after which there is visible evidence that those things
have been done." He shifted attention to the absorbed officer
sitting on the left. "For example, if my Eustace had a grudge
against this officer and advised me of his intention to make him fall
downstairs, and if before long the officer fell downstairs and broke
his neck-"
"It
could be mere coincidence," the Commandant scoffed.
"It
could," agreed Leeming. "But there can be far too many
coincidences. If a Eustace promises that he is going to do forty or
fifty things in succession and all of them happen he is either doing
them as promised or he is a most astounding prophet. Eustaces don't
claim to be prophets. Nobody visible or invisible can foresee the
future with such detailed accuracy."
"That is
true enough."
"Do you
accept the fact that you have a father and mother?"
"Of
course," admitted the Commandant.
"You
don't consider it strange or abnormal?"
"Certainly
not. It is inconceivable that one should be born without parents."
"Similarly
we accept the fact that we have Eustaces and we cannot conceive the
possibility of existing without them."
The
Commandant thought it over, said to the right-hand officer, "This
smacks of mutual parasitism. It would be interesting to learn what
benefit they derive from each other?"
"It's no
use asking what my Eustace gets out of me," Leeming chipped in,
"I can't tell you because I don't know."
"You
expect me to believe that?" asked the Commandant, behaving like
nobody's fool. He showed his teeth. "On your own evidence you
can talk with him. Why have you never asked him?"
"We
Terrans got tired of asking that question long, long ago. The subject
had been dropped and the situation accepted."
"Why?"
"The
answer is always the same. Eustaces readily admit that we are
essential to their existence but can not explain how because they've
no way of making us understand."
"That
could be an excuse, a self-preservative evasion," the Commandant
offered, "They won't tell you because they don't want you to
know."
"Well,
what do you suggest we do about it?"
Dodging that
one, the Commandant went on, "What benefit do, you get out of
the association. What good is your Eustace to you?" "He
provides company, comfort, information, advice and -"
"And
what?"
Bending
forward, hands on knees, Leeming practically spat it at him. "If
necessary, vengeance!"
That struck
home good and hard. The Commandant rocked back, displaying a mixture
of ire and scepticism. The two under-officers registered disciplined
apprehension. It's a hell of a war when one can be chopped down by a
ghost.
Pulling
himself together, the Commandant forced a grim smile as he pointed
out, "You're a prisoner. You've been under detention a good many
days. Your Eustace doesn't seem to have done much about it."
"Not
yet," agreed Leeming happily.
"What
d'you mean, not yet?"
"As one
free to roam at will on an enemy world he has enough top priority
jobs to keep him busy for a piece. He's been doing plenty and he'll
do plenty more, in his own time and his own way."
"Is that
so? And what does he intend to do?" "Wait and see,"
Leeming advised with formidable confidence.
That did not
fill them with delight.
"Nobody
can imprison more than half a Terran," he went on. "The
solid, visible, tangible half. The other half cannot be pinned down
by any method whatsoever. It is beyond anyone's control. It wanders
loose collecting information of military value, indulging a little
sabotage doing just as it pleases. You've created that situation and
you're stuck with it."
"We
created it? We didn't invite you to come here. You dumped yourself on
us unasked."
"I had
no choice about it because I had to make an emergency landing. This
could have been a friendly world. It isn't. Who's to blame for that?
If you insist on fighting with the Combine against the Allies you
must accept the consequences - including whatever a Eustace sees fit
to do."
"Not if
we kill you," said the Commandant nastily. Leeming gave a
disdainful laugh. "That would make matters fifty times worse."
"In what
way?"
"The
life-span of a Eustace is longer than that of his Terran partner,
When a man dies his Eustace takes seven to ten years to disappear
from existence. We have an ancient song to the effect that old
Eustaces never die, they only fade away. Our world holds thousands of
lonely, disconnected Eustaces gradually fading."
"So-?"
"Kill me
and you'll isolate my Eustace here with no man or other Eustace for
company. His days will be numbered and he'll know it. He'll have
nothing to lose, being no longer restricted by considerations of my
safety. Because I've gone for keeps he'll be able to eliminate me
from his plans and give his undivided attention to anything he
chooses." He eyed the listeners as he finished, "It's a
safe bet that he'll run amok and create an orgy of destruction.
Remember, you're an alien lifeform to him. He’ll have no
feelings or compunctions with regard to you."
The
Commandant reflected in silence. It was exceedingly difficult to
believe all this and his prime instinct was to reject it lock, stock
and barrel. But before space-conquest it had been equally difficult
to believe things more fantastic but now accepted as commonplace. He
dared not dismiss it as nonsense; the time had long gone by when
anyone could afford to be dogmatic. The space adventurings of all the
Combine and the Allied species had scarcely scratched one galaxy of
an unimaginable number composing the universe; none could say what
incredible secrets were yet to be revealed including, perhaps; Such
etheric entities as Eustaces.
Yes, the
stupid believe things because they are credulous- of they are
credulous because stupid. The intelligent do not blindly accept but,
being aware of their own ignorance, neither do they reject. Right now
the Commandant was acutely aware, of general ignorance concerning the
lifeform known as Terrans: It could be that they were dual creations,
half-Joe; half-Eustace.
"All
this is not impossible," he decided ponderously; "but it
appears to me somewhat improbable. There are more than twenty
lifeforms associated with us in the Combine. I do not know of one
that exists in natural co-partnership with another."
"The
Lathians do," contradicted Leeming, mentioning the leaders of
the opposition, the chief cause of the war. The Commandant was
suitably startled. "You mean they have Eustaces too?"
"No, I
don't. They have something similar but inferior. Each Lathian is
unconsciously controlled by an entity that calls itself Willy
something=or-other. They don't know it, of course. We wouldn't know
it if our Eustaces hadn't told us."
"How did
they find out?"
"As you
know, the biggest battles to date have all been fought in the Lathian
sector. Both sides have taken prisoners: Our Eustaces told us that
each Lathian prisoner had a controlling Willy but was blissfully
unaware of it." He grinned, added, "They made it plain that
a Eustace doesn't think much of a Willy. Apparently a Willy is a
pretty low form of associated life."
Frowning, the
Commandant said, "This is something definite, something we
should be able to check for ourselves: But how are we going to do it
if the Lathians are ignorant of this state of affairs?"
"Easy as
pie," Leeming offered. "They are holding a bunch of Terran
prisoners. Get someone to ask those prisoners separately and
individually, whether the Lathians' have the Willies."
"We'll
do just that," snapped the Commandant, his manner that of one
about to call a bluff. He turned to the right- hand officer.
"Bajashim, beam a signal to our chief liaison officer at Lathian
H.Q. and order him to question those prisoners."
"You can
double-check while you're at it," interjected Leeming, "just
to clinch it. To us, anyone who shares his life with an invisible
being is known as a Nut Ask the prisoners whether all the Lathians
are Nuts."
"Take
note of that and have it asked as well," ordered the Commandant.
He returned attention to Leeming. "Since you could not
anticipate your forced landing and capture, and since you have been
kept in close confinement, there is no possibility of collusion
between you and the Terran prisoners far away."
"That's
right "
"Therefore
I shall weigh your evidence in the light of what replies come to my
signal." He stared hard at the other. "If those replies
fail to confirm your statements I'll know that you are a shameless
liar in some respects and probably a liar in all respects. Here, we
have special and very effective methods of dealing with liars."
"That's
to be expected. But if the replies do confirm me you'll know that
I've told the truth, won't you?"
"No,"
said the Commandant savagely.
It was
Leeming's turn to be shocked. "Why not?"
Thinning his
lips, the Commandant growled, "As I have remarked, there cannot
possibly have been any direct communication between you and other
Terran prisoners. However, that means nothing. There can have been
collusion between your Eustace and their Eustaces."
Bending
sideways, he jerked open a drawer, placed a loop-assembly on the
desk. Then another and another. A bunch of them.
"Well,"
he invited with malicious triumph, "what have you to say to
that?"
NINE
Leeming went
into something not far off a momentary panic. He could see what the
other meant. He could talk to his Eustace who in turn could talk to
other Eustaces. And the other Eustaces could talk to their imprisoned
partners.
Get yourself
out of that!
He had an
agile mind but after three months of semi-starvation it was tending
to lose pace. Lack of adequate nourishment was telling on him
already; his thoughts plodded at the very time he wanted them to
sprint.
The three
behind the desk were waiting for him, watching His face, counting the
seconds he needed to produce an answer. The longer he took to find
one the weaker it would be. The quicker he came up with something
good the more plausible it would sound. Cynical satisfaction was
creeping into their faces and he was inwardly frantic by the time he
saw an opening and grabbed at it.
"You're
wrong on two counts."
"State
them."
"Firstly,
one Eustace cannot communicate with another over a distance so
enormous. His mental output just won't reach that far. To talk from
world to world he has to have the help of a Terran who, in his turn,
has radio equipment available."
"We've
only your word for that," the Commandant reminded. "If a
Eustace can communicate without limit it would be your best policy to
conceal the fact. You would be a fool to admit it."
"I
cannot do more than give you, my word regardless of whether or not
you credit it."
"I do
not credit it-yet "
"No
Terran task force has rushed to my rescue, as would happen had my
Eustace told them about me."
"Pfah!"
said the Commandant. "It would take them much longer to get here
than the time you have spent as a prisoner. Probably twice as long:
And then only if by some miracle they managed to avoid being shot to
pieces on the way. The absence of a rescue party means nothing."
He waited for a response that did not come, finished, "if you
have anything else to say it had better be convincing."
"It is,"
assured Leeming. "And we don't have my word for it. We have
yours."
"Nonsense!
I have made no statements concerning Eustaces."
"On the
contrary, you have said that there could be collusion between them."
"What of
it?"
"There
can be collusion only if Eustaces really exist, in which case my
evidence is true. But if my evidence is false, then Eustaces do not
exist and there cannot possibly be a conspiracy between non-existent
things."
The
Commandant sat perfectly still while his face took on a faint shade
of purple. He looked and felt like a trapper trapped. The left-hand
officer wore an expression of one struggling hard to suppress a
disrespectful snicker.
"If,"
continued Leeming, piling it on for good measure; "you do not
believe in Eustaces then you cannot logically believe in conspiracy
between them. On the other hand, if you believe in the possibility of
collusion then you've got to believe in Eustaces. That is, of course,
if you're in bright green breeches and your right mind."
"~Guard
" roared the Commandant. He pointed an angry finger. "Take
him back to his cell." Obediently they started hustling the
prisoner through the door when he changed his mind and bawled,
"Halt!" Snatching up a loop-assembly, he waved it at
Leeming. "Where did you get the material with which to make
this?"
"My
Eustace brought it for me. Who else?"
"Get out
of my sight!"
"Merse,
faplap!" urged the guards, prodding, with their guns. "Amash!
Amash!"
The rest of
that day and all the next one he spent sitting or lying on the bench,
reviewing what had taken place, planning his next moves and in
lighter moments admiring his own ability as a whacking great liar.
Now and again
he wandered how his efforts to battle his way to freedom with his
tongue compared with Rigellian attempts to do it with bare hands. Who
was making the most progress? Of greater importance, who, once out,
would stay out? One thing was certain: his method was less tiring to
the underfed and weakened body though more exhausting to the nerves.
Another
advantage was that for the time being he had sidetracked their
intention of squeezing him for military information. Or had he?
Possibly from their viewpoint his revelations concerning the dual
nature of Terrans were infinitely more important than details of
armaments, which data might be false anyway. All the same, he had
avoided for a time what might otherwise have been a rough and painful
interrogation. By thus postponing the agony he had added brilliance
to the original gem of wisdom, namely, that baloney baffles brains.
Just for the
ducks of it he bided his time and, when the spyhole opened, let it
catch him in the middle of giving grateful thanks to Eustace for some
weird service not specified. As intended, this got the jumpy Marsin
to wondering who had arrived at the crossroads and copped some of
Eustace's dirty work. Doubtless the sergeant of the guard would
speculate about the same matter before long. And in due course so
would the officers.
Near
midnight, with sleep still evading him, it occurred to him that there
vas no point in doing things by halves. If a thing is worth doing it
is worth doing well-and that- applies to lying or to any form of
villainy as much as to anything else. Why rest content merely to
register a knowing smile whenever the enemy suffered a petty
misfortune?
His tactics
could be extended much farther than that. No form of life was secure
from the vagaries of chance. Good fortune came along as well as bad,
in any part of the cosmos. There was no reason why Eustace should not
snatch the credit for both. No reason why he, Leeming, should not
take unto himself the implied power to reward as well as to punish.
That wasn't
the limit, either. Good luck and bad luck are positive phases of
existence. He could cross the neutral zone and confiscate the
negative phases. Through Eustace he could assign to himself not only
the credit for things done, good or bad, but also for things not
done. In the pauses between staking claims to things that happened he
could exploit those that did not happen.
The itch to
make a start right now was irresistible. Rolling off the bench, he
belted the door from top to bottom. The guard had just been changed
for the eye that peered in was that of Kolum, a character who had
bestowed a kick in the rump not so long ago. Kolum was a cut above
Marsin, being able to count upon all twelve fingers if given
sufficient time to cogitate.
"So it
is you!" said Leeming, showing vast relief. "I am very glad
of that. I befriended you in the hope that he would lay off you; that
he would leave you alone for at least a little while. He is far too
impetuous and much too drastic. I can see that you are more
intelligent than the other guards and therefore able to change for
the better. Indeed, I have pointed out to him that you are obviously
too civilized to be a sergeant. He is difficult to convince but I am
doing my best for you."
"Huh?"
said Kolum, half flattered, half scared.
"So he's
left you alone at least for the time being," Leeming said,
knowing that the other was in no position to deny it. "He's done
nothing to you yet." He increased the gratification. "I'll
do my very best to keep control of him. Only the stupidly brutal
deserve slow death."
"That is
true," agreed Kolum eagerly, "but what-"
"Now,"
interrupted Leeming with firmness, "it is up to you to prove
that any confidence is justified and thus protect yourself against
the fate that is going to visit the slower-witted. Brains were made
to be used, weren't they?"
"Yes,
but-" "Those who don't possess brains cannot use what they
haven't got, can they?"
"No,
they cannot, but-"
"All
that is necessary to demonstrate your intelligence is to take a
message to the Commandant."
Kolum popped
his eyes in horror. "It is impossible: I dare not disturb him at
this hour. The sergeant of the guard will not permit it. He will-"
"You are
not being asked to take the message to the Commandant immediately. it
is to be given to him personally when he awakens in the morning."
"That is
different," said Kolum; vastly relieved. "But I must warn
you that if he disapproves of the message he will punish you and not
me."
"He will
not punish me lest I in turn punish him," assured Leeming, as
though stating a demonstrable fact. "Write my message down."
Leaning his
gun against the corridor's farther wall, Kolum dug pencil and paper
out of a pocket. A strained expression came into his eyes as he
prepared himself for the formidable task of inscribing a number of
words.
"To the
Most Exalted Lousy Screw," began Leeming.
"What
does `lousy screw' mean?" asked Kolum as he struggled to put
down the strange Terran words phonetically.
"It's a
title. It means your highness. Man, how high he is!" Leeming
pinched his nose while the other pored over the paper. He continued
to dictate, going very slowly to keep pace with Kolum's literary
talent. "The food is insufficient and very poor in quality. I am
physically weak, I have lost much weight and my ribs are beginning to
show. My Eustace does not like it. The thinner I get the more
threatening he becomes. The time is fast approaching when I shall
have to refuse all responsibility for his actions. Therefore I beg
Your Most Exalted Lousy Screwship to give serious consideration to
this matter."
"There
are many words and some of them long ones," complained Kolum,
managing to look like a reptilian martyr.
"I shall
have to rewrite them more readably when I go off duty."
"I know
and I appreciate the trouble you are taking on my behalf."
Leeming bestowed a beam of fraternal fondness. "That's why I
feel sure you'll live long enough to do the job."
"I must
live longer than that," insisted Kolum, popping the eyes again.
"I have the right to live, haven't I?"
"That is
precisely the argument I've been using," said Leeming in the
manner of one who has striven all night to establish the irrefutable
but cannot yet guarantee success.
"I
cannot talk to you any longer," informed Kolum, picking up his
gun. "I am not supposed to talk to you at all. If the sergeant
of the guard should catch me he will-"
"The
sergeant's days are numbered," Leeming told him in, judicial
tones. "He will not live long enough to know he's dead."
His hand
extended in readiness to close the spyhole, Kolum paused, looked as
if he'd been slugged with a sockful of wet sand. Then he said, "How
can anyone live long enough to know that he's dead?"
"It
depends on the method of killing," assured Leeming. "There
are some you've never heard of and cannot imagine." At this
point Kolum found the conversation distasteful: He closed the
spyhole. Leeming returned to the bench, sprawled upon it. The light
went out. Seven stars peeped through the window-slot and they were
not unattainable.
In the
morning breakfast came an hour late but consisted of one full bowl of
lukewarm pap, two thick slices of brown bread heavily smeared with
grease and a large cup of warm liquid vaguely resembling paralysed
coffee. He got through the lot with mounting triumph. By contrast
with what they had been giving him this feast made the day seem like
Christmas. His spirits perked up with the fullness of his belly.
No summons to
a second interview came that day or the next. The Commandant made no
move for more than a week. His Lousy Screwship was still awaiting a
reply from the
Lathian
sector and did not feel inclined to take further action before he
received it. However meals remained more substantial, a fact that
Leeming viewed as positive evidence that someone was insuring himself
against disaster.
Then early
one morning the Rigellians acted up. From the cell they could be
heard but not seen. Every day at about an hour after dawn the tramp
of their two thousand pairs of feet sounded somewhere out of sight
and died away toward the workshops. Usually that was all that could
be heard, no voices, no desultory conversation, just the weary trudge
of feet and an occasional bellow from a guard.
This time
they came out singing, their raucous voices holding a distinct touch
of defiance. They were bawling in thunderous discord something about
Asta Zangasta's a dirty old geezer, got fleas on his chest and sores
on his beezer. It should have sounded childish and futile. It didn't.
The corporate effect seemed to convey an unspoken threat.
Guards yelled
at them. Singing rose higher, the defiance increasing along with the
volume. Standing below his window-slot, Leeming listened intently.
This was the first mention he'd heard of the much-abused Asta
Zangasta, presumably this world's king, emperor or leading hooligan.
The bawling
of two thousand voices rose crescendo. Guards screamed frenziedly and
were drowned within the din. Somewhere a warning shot was fired. In
the watchtowers the guards edged their guns around, dipped them as
they aimed into the yard.
"Oh,
what a basta is Asta Zangasta!" hollered the distant Rigellians
as they reached the end of their epic poem.
There
followed blows, shots, scuffling sounds, howls of fury. A bunch of
twenty fully armed guards raced flatfooted past Leeming's window,
headed for the unseeable fracas. The uproar continued for half an
hour before gradually it died away. Resulting silence could almost be
felt.
At
exercise-time Leeming had the yard to himself, there being not
another prisoner in sight. He mooched around, puzzled and gloomy,
until he encountered Marsin on yard-
"Where
are the others? what has happened to them?"
"They
misbehaved and wasted a lot of time. They are being detained in the
workshops until they have made up the loss in production. It is their
own fault. They started work late for the deliberate purpose of
slowing down output. We didn't even have time to count them."
Leeming
grinned into his face. "And some guards were hurt?"
"Yes."
Marsin admitted.
"Not
severely," Leeming suggested. "Just enough to give them a
taste of what is to come. Think it over!"
"What do
you mean?"
"I meant
what I said-think it over." Then he added, "But you were
not injured. Think that over too!"
He ambled
away, leaving Marsin uneasy and bewildered. Six times he trudged
around the yard while doing some heavy thinking himself. Sudden
indiscipline among the Rigellians certainly had stirred up the prison
and created enough excitement to last a week. He wondered what had
caused it. Probably they'd done it to gain relief from incarceration
and despair. Sheer boredom can drive people into performing the
craziest tricks.
On
the seventh time round he was still pondering when suddenly a remark
struck him wit, force like the blow of a hammer. "We
had not time even to count them." Holy smoke! that
must be the motive of this morning's rowdy performance. The choral
society had avoided a count. There could be only one reason why they
should wish to dodge the regular numbering parade.
Finding
Marsin again, he promised, "Tomorrow some of you guards will
wish you'd never been born."
"Are you
threatening us?"
"No, I
am making a prophetic promise. Tell the guard officer what I have
said. Tell the Commandant, too. It might help you to escape the
consequences."
"I will
tell them," said Marsin, mystified but grateful.
The following
morning proved that he had been one hundred per cent correct in his
supposition that the Rigellians were too shrewd -to invite thick ears
and black eyes without good reason. It had taken the enemy a full day
to arrive at the same conclusion.
At one hour
after dawn the Rigellians were marched out dormitory by dormitory in
batches of fifty instead of the usual continuous stream. They were
counted in fifties, the easy way. This simple arithmetic became
thrown out of kilter when one dormitory produced only twelve,
prisoners, all of them sick, weak, wounded or otherwise handicapped.
Infuriated
guards rushed indoors to drag out the absent thirty-eight. They
weren't there. The door was firm and solid, the window-bars intact.
Guards did considerable confused galloping around before one of them
detected the slight shift of a well-trampled floor-slab. They lugged
it up, found underneath a narrow but deep shaft from the bottom which
ran a tunnel. With great unwillingness one of them went down the
shaft, crawled into the tunnel and in due time emerged a good
distance outside the walls. Needless to say he had found the tunnel
empty.
Sirens
wailed, guards pounded all over the jail, officers shouted
contradictory orders, the entire place began to resemble a madhouse.
The Rigellians got it good and hard for spoiling the previous
morning's count and thus giving the escapees a full day's lead. Boots
and gun-butts were freely used, bodies dragged aside badly battered
and unconscious.
The surviving
top-ranker of the offending dormitory, a lieutenant with a severe
limp, was held responsible for the break, charged, tried, sentenced,
put against a wall and shot. Leeming could see nothing of this but
did hear the hoarse commands of, "Present . . . aim . . . fire!"
and the following volley.
He prowled
round and round his cell, clenching and unclenching his fists, his
stomach writhing like a sack of snakes and swearing mightily to
himself. All that he wanted, all that he prayed for was a
high-ranking Zangastan throat under his thumbs. The spyhole flipped
open but hastily shut before he could spit into somebody's eye. The
upset continued without abate as inflamed guards searched all
dormitories one by one, testing doors, bars, walls, floors and even
the ceilings. Officers screamed bloodthirsty threats at sullen groups
of Rigellians who were slow to respond to orders.
At twilight
outside forces dragged in seven tired, be-draggled escapees who'd
been caught on the run. Their reception was short and sharp. "Present
. . . aim . . . fire!" Frenziedly Leeming battered at his door
but the spyhole remained shut and nobody answered. Two hours later he
made another coiled loop with the last of his wire. He spent half the
night talking into it menacingly and at the tap of his voice. Nobody
took the slightest notice.
By noon next
day a feeling of deep frustration had come over him. He estimated
that the Rigellian breakout must have taken most of a year to
prepare. Result: eight dead and thirty-one still loose. If they kept
together and did not scatter the thirty-one could form a crew large
enough to seize a ship of any size up to and including a
space-destroyer. But on the basis of his own experiences he thought
they had remote chance of making such a theft.
With the
whole world alarmed by an escape of this size there'd be a strong
military screen around every spaceport and it would be maintained
until the last of the thirty-one had been rounded up. The free might
stay-free for quite a time if they were lucky, but they were
planet-bound, doomed to ultimate recapture and subsequent execution.
Meanwhile
their fellows were getting it rough in consequence and his own
efforts had been messed up. He did not resent the break, not one
little bit. Good luck to them. But if only it had taken place two
months earlier or later.
Moodily he
finished his dinner when four guards came for him. "The
Commandant wants you at once." Their manner was edgy and
subdued. One wore a narrow bandage around his scaly pate, another had
a badly swollen eye.
Just about
the worst moment to choose, thought Leeming. The Commandant would be
all set to go up like a rocket at first hint of opposition of any
kind. You cannot argue with a brasshat in a purple rage; emotion
comes uppermost, words are disregarded, logic is treated with
contempt. He was going to have a tough job on his hands.
The four
marched him along the corridor, two in front, two behind. Left,
right, left, right, thud, thud, thud it made him think of a
ceremonial parade to the guillotine. Around the corner in a little
triangular yard there should be waiting a priest, a hanging knife, a
wicker basket, a wooden box.
Together they
tramped into the same room as before. The Commandant was sitting
behind his desk but there were no junior officers in attendance. The
only other person present was an elderly civilian occupying a chair
on the Commandant’s right; he studied the prisoner with a
sharp, intent gaze as he entered and took a seat.
"This is
Pallam," introduced the Commandant with amiability so unexpected
that it dumbfounded the listener. Showing a touch of awe, he added,
"He has been sent here by no less a person than Zangasta
himself."
"A
mental specialist, I presume?" invited Leeming, wary of a trap.
"Nothing
like that," said Pallam quietly. "I am especially
interested in all aspects of symbiosis."
Leeming's
back hairs stirred. He did not like the idea of being cross-examined
by an expert. Such characters had penetrating, unmilitary minds and a
pernicious habit of destroying a good story by exhibiting its own
contradictions. This mild-looking civilian, he decided, was
definitely a major menace.
"Pallam
wishes to ask you a few questions," informed the Commandant,
"but those will come later:" He put on a self- satisfied
expression. "Far a start I wish to say that I am indebted for
the information you gave at our previous inter-view."
"You
mean that it has proved useful to you?" asked Leeming, hardly
believing his ears.
"Very
much so in view of this serious and most stupid mutiny. All the
guards responsible for Dormitory Fourteen are to be drafted to battle
areas where they will be stationed upon spaceports liable to attack.
That is their punishment for gross neglect of duty." He gazed
thoughtfully at the other, went on; "My own fate would have been
no less had not Zangasta considered the escape a minor matter when
compared with this important data I got from you."
Though taken
by surprise, Leeming was swift to cash in. "But when I asked you
saw to it personally that I had better food. Surely you expected some
reward?"
"Reward?"
The Commandant was taken aback: "I did not think of such a
thing."
"So much
the better," approved Leeming, admiring the other's magnanimity.
"A good deed is trebly good when done with no ulterior motive.
Eustace will take careful note of that."
"You
mean;" put in Pallam, "that his code of ethics is identical
with your own?"
Damn the
fellow! Why did he have to put his spoke in? Be careful now!
"Similar
in some respects but not identical."
"What is
the most outstanding difference?"
"Well,"
said Leeming, playing for time, "it's hard to decide." He
rubbed his brow while his mind whizzed dizzily. "I'd say in the
matter of vengeance."
"Define
the difference," ordered Pallam, sniffing along the trail like a
hungry bloodhound.
"From my
viewpoint," informed Leeming, inwardly cursing the other to hell
and perdition, "he is unnecessarily sadistic."
There, that
gave needed coverage for any widespread claims it might be desirable
to make later on.
"In what
way?" persisted Pallam,
"My
instinct is to take prompt action, to get things over and done with.
His tendency is to prolong the agony."
"Explain
further," pressed Pallam, making a thorough nuisance of himself.
"If you
and I were mortal enemies, if I had a gun and you, had not, I would
snoot and kill you. But if Eustace had you marked for death he'd make
it slower, more gradual."
"Describe
his method."
"First,
he'd let you know that you were doomed. Then he'd do nothing about it
until eventually you become obsessed with the notion that it was all
an illusion and that nothing ever would be done. At that point he'd
remind you with a minor blow. When resulting fear and alarm had worn
off he'd strike a harder one. And so on and so on with increasing
intensity spread over as long a time as necessary."
"Necessary
for what?"
"Until
your doom became plain and the strain of waiting for it became too
much to bear." He thought a moment, added, "No Eustace ever
has killed anyone. He uses tactics peculiarly his own. He arranges
accidents or he chivvies a victim into dying by his own hand."
"He
drives a victim to suicide."
"Yes,
that's what I've said."
"And
there is no way of avoiding such a fate?"
"Yes,
there is," Leeming contradicted. "At any time the victim
can gain personal safety and freedom from fear by redressing the
wrong he has done to that Eustace's partner."
"Such
redress immediately terminates the vendetta?"
"That's
right"
"Whether
or not you approve personally?"
"Yes. If
my grievance ceases to be real and becomes only imaginary, my Eustace
refuses to recognise it or do anything about it."
"So what
it boils down to," said Pallam pointedly, "is that his
method provides motive and opportunity for repentance while yours
does not?"
"I
suppose so."
"Which
means that he has a more balanced sense of justice?"
"He can
be darned ruthless," objected Leeming, momentarly unable to
think of a retort less feeble.
"That is
beside the point," snapped Pallam. He lapsed into meditative
silence, then remarked to the Commandant, "It seems that the
association is not between equals. The invisible component is also
the superior one. In effect, it is the master of a material slave but
exercises mastery with such cunning that the slave would be the first
to deny his own status."
He shot a
provocative glance at Leeming who set his teeth and said nothing.
Crafty old hog, thought Leeming if he was trying to tempt the
prisoner into a heated denial he was going to be disappointed. Let
him remain under the delusion that Leeming had been weighed in the
balance and found wanting. There is no shame in being defined as
inferior to a figment of one's own imagination.
Now
positively foxy, Pallam probed, "When your Eustace takes it upon
himself to wreak vengeance he does so because circumstances prevent
suitable punishment being administered either by yourself or the
Terran community? Is that correct?"
"Near
enough," admitted Leeming cautiously.
"In
other words, he functions only when you and the law are impotent?"
"He
takes over when the need arises."
"You are
being evasive. We must get this matter straight If you or your
fellows can and do punish someone does any Eustace also punish him?"
"No,"
said Leeming, fidgeting uneasily.
"If you
or your fellows cannot or do not punish someone does a Eustace then
step in and enforce punishment?"
"Only if
a living Terran has suffered unjustly."
"The
sufferer's Eustace takes action on his partner's behalf?"
"Yes."
"Good!"
declared Pallam. He leaned forward, watched the other keen-eyed and
managed to make his attitude intimidating. "Now let us suppose
that your Eustace finds justifiable reason to punish another Terran -
what does the victim's Eustace do about it?"
TEN
It was a
clever trap based upon the knowledge that questions about factual,
familiar, everyday things can be answered automatically, almost
without thought. Whereas a liar seeking a supporting lie needs time
to create consistency. It should have got Leeming completely foozled.
That it did not do so was no credit to his own wits.
While his
mind still whi2led his mouth opened and the wards "Not much"
popped out of their own accord. For a mad moment he wondered whether
Eustace had arrived and joined the party.
"Why
not?"
Encouraged by
his tongue's mastery of the situation, Leeming gave it free rein. "I
have told you before and I am telling you again that no Eustace will
concern himself for one moment with a grievance that is wholly
imaginary. A Terran who is guilty of a crime has no genuine cause for
complaint. He has brought vengeance upon himself and the cure lies in
his own hands. If he doesn't enjoy suffering he need only get busy
and undo whatever wrong he had done to another."
"Will
his Eustace urge or influence him to take action necessary to avoid
punishment?"
"Never
having been a criminal myself," answered Leeming with great
virtue, "I am unable to tell you. I suppose it would be near the
truth to say that Terrans behave because association with Eustaces
compels them to behave. They have little choice about the matter."
"On the
other hand, Terrans have no way of compelling their Eustaces to
behave?"
"No
compulsion is necessary. A Eustace will always listen to his
partner's reason and act within the limits of common justice."
"As I
told you," said Pallam in an aside to the Commandant, “the
Terran, is the lower form of the two." He returned attention to
the prisoner. "All that you have told us is acceptable because
it is consistent - as far as it goes."
"What
d'you mean; as far as it goes?"
"Let me
take it to the bitter end," suggested Pallam. "I do not see
any rational reason why any criminal's Eustace should allow his
partner to be driven to suicide. Since they are mutually independent
of others but mutually dependent upon each other, a Eustace's
inaction is contrary to the basic law of survival."
"Nobody
commits suicide until he has gone off his rocker."
"Until
he has done what?"
"Become
insane," said Leeming. "An insane person is worthless as a
material partner. To a Eustace he is already dead, not worth
protecting or avenging. Eustaces associate only with the sane."
Pouncing on
that, Pallam said excitedly, "So the benefit they derive is
rooted somewhere within Terran minds? Is it mental sustenance that
they draw from you?"
"I don't
know."
"Does
your Eustace ever make you feel tired, exhausted, perhaps a little
stupefied?"
"Yes,"
said Leeming with emphasis. How true, brother, how true. Right now
he'd find pleasure in choking Eustace to death.
"I
would like to pursue this phenomenon for months," Pallam told
the Commandant. "It is an absorbing subject There are no records
of symbiotic association among anything higher than the plants and
six species of the lower elames To find it among
the higher vertebrates, sentient forms, and one of them intangible,
is remarkable, truly remarkable." The Commandant looked
impressed without knowing what the other was talking about.
"Give
him your report," urged Pallam.
"Our
liaison officer, CoIonel Shomuth, has replied from the Lathian
sector," the Commandant told Leeming. "He is fluent in
Cosmoglotta and therefore was able to question many Terran prisoners
without the aid of a Lathian interpreter We sent him a little more
information and the result is significant."
"What
else did you expect?" Leeming observed, inwardly consumed with
curiosity.
Ignoring
that, the Commandant went on, "He reported that most of the
prisoners refused to make comment or to admit anything. They
maintained determined silence. That is understandable because nothing
could shake their belief that they were being tempted to surrender
information of military value. They resisted all of Colonel Shomuth’s
persuasions and kept their mouths shut." He sighed at such
stubbornness. "But some talked."
"A few
are always willing to blab," remarked Leeming.
"Certain
officers talked, including Cruiser Captain Tompass . . . Tompus . .
."
"Thomas?"
"Yes,
that is the word." Swivelling around in his chair, the
Commandant pressed a wall-button. "This is the beamed interview
unscrambled and recorded on tape."
A crackling
hiss poured out of a perforated grid set in the wall. It grew louder,
died down to a background wash. Voices came out of the grid.
Shomuth:
"Captain Thomas, I have been ordered to check certain
information now in our possession. You have nothing to lose by giving
answers, nothing to gain by refusing them. There are no Lathians
present, only the two of us. You may speak freely and what you say
will be treated in confidence." Thomas: "Mighty leery about
the Lathians all of a sudden, aren't you? You won't fool me with that
gambit. Enemies are enemies no matter what their name or shape. Go
trundle your hoop-you'll get nothing out of me."
Shomuth,
patiently: "I suggest, Captain Thomas, that you hear and
consider the questions before you decide whether or not to answer
them."
Thomas,
boredly: "All right. What d'you want to know?"
Shomuth:
"Whether our Lathian allies really are Nuts."
Thomas, after
a long pause: "You want the blunt truth?"
Shomuth: "We
do."
Thamas, with
a trace of sarcasm; "I hate to speak against anyone behind his
back, even a lousy Lathian But there are times when one is compelled
to admit that dirt is dirt, sin is sin and a Lathian is what he is,
eh?"
Shomuth:
"Please answer my question."
Thomas: "The
Lathians are nuts."
Shoinuth:
"And they have the Willies?"
Thomas: "Say,
where did you dig up this information?"
Shomuth:
"That is our business. Will you be good enough to give me an
answer."
Thomas,
belligerently: "Not only have they got the willies but they'll
have a darned sight more of them before we're through."
Shomuth,
puzzled: "How can that be? We have learned that each and every
Lathian is unconsciously controlled by a Willy. Therefore the total
number of Willies must be limited. It cannot be increased except by
the birth of more Lathians."
Thomas,
quickly: "You've got me wrong. What I meant was that as Lathian
casualties mount up the number of unattached Willies will increase.
Obviously even the best of Willies cannot control a corpse, can he?
There will be lots more Willies loafing around in proportion to the
number of Lathian survivors."
Shomuth:
"Yes, I see what you mean. And it will create a psychic problem
of great seriousness." Pause. "Now, Captain Thomas, have
you any reason to suppose that a large number of partnerless Willies
might be able to seize control of another and different lifeform?
Such as my own species, for example?"
Thomas, with
enough menace to deserve a space-medal: "I wouldn't be
surprised."
Shomuth: "You
don't know for sure?"
Thomas: "No."
Shomuth: "It
is true, is it not, that you are aware of the real Lathian nature
only because you have been warned of it by your Eustace?"
Thomas;
startled: "By my what?"
Shomuth: "By
your. Eustace. Why should that surprise you?"
Thomas,
recovering swiftly enough to earn a bar to the medal: "I thought
you said Useless. Silly of me. Yes, my Eustace. You're dead right
there."
Shomuth, in
lower tones: "There are more than four hundred Terran prisoners
here. That means more than four hundred Eustaces wandering around
unchallenged on this planet. Correct?"
Thomas: "I
am unable to deny it."
Shomuth:
"The Lathian heavy cruiser Veder crashed on
landing and was a total loss. The Lathians attributed it to an error
of judgment on the part of the crew. But that was just three days
after you prisoners were brought here. Was it a mere coincidence?"
Thomas,
scintillating: "Work it out for yourself."
Shomuth: "You
realise that so far as we are concerned your refusal to reply is as
good as an answer?"
Thomas:
"Construe it any way you like. I will not betray Terran military
secrets."
Shomuth: "All
right. Let me try you on something else. The biggest fuel dump in
this part of the galaxy is located a few degrees south of here. A
week ago it blew up to total destruction. The loss was a severe one;
it will handicap the Combine fleets for quite a time to come."
Thomas, with
enthusiasm: "Cheers!"
Shomuth:
"Lathian technicians theorise that a static spark caused a
leaking tank to explode and that set off the rest in rapid
succession. We can always trust technicians to come up with a glib
explanation."
Thomas:
"Well, what's wrong with it?"
Shomuth:
"That dump has been established for more than four years. No
static sparks have caused trouble during that time."
Thomas: "What
are you getting at?"
Shomuth,
pointedly: "You have admitted yourself that more than four
hundred Eustaces are roaming this area, free to do as they please."
Thomas, in
tones of stern patriotism: I am admitting nothing. I refuse to
answer any more questions."
Shomuth: "Has
your Eustace prompted you to say that?"
Silence.
Shomuth: "If
your Eustace is now present, can I question him through you?"
No reply.
Switching
off, the Commandant said; "There you are. Eight other Terran
officers gave more or less the same evidence. T he rest tried to
conceal the facts but, as you have heard, they failed. Zangasta
himself has listened to the taped records and is deeply concerned
about the situation."
"He
needn't worry his head about it," Leeming offered.
"Why
not?"
"It's
all a lot of bunk, a put-up job. There was collusion between my
Eustace and theirs."
The
Commandant looked sour." As you emphasised at our last meeting,
there cannot be collusion without Eustaces, so it makes no difference
either way."
"I'm
glad you can see it at last."
"Let it
pass," chipped in Pallam impatiently. "It is of no
consequence. The confirmatory evidence is adequate no matter how we
look at it."
Thus
prompted, the Commandant continued, "I have been doing some
investigating myself. In two years we've had a long series of
small-scale troubles with the Rigellians, none of them really
serious, but after you arrive there comes a big break that obviously
must have been planned long before you turned up but soon afterward
took place in circumstances suggesting outside help. Whence came this
assistance?"
"Not
telling," said Leeming knowingly.
"At one
time or another eight of my guards earned your enmity, by assaulting
you. Of these, four are now in hospital badly injured, two more are
to be drafted to the fighting front. I presume that it is only a
matter of time before the remaining two are plunged into trouble?"
"The
other two have arbitrated and earned forgiveness. Nothing will happen
to them."
"Is that
so?" The Commandant registered surprise.
Leeming went
on; "I cannot give the same guarantee with respect to the firing
squad, the officer in charge of it or the higher-up who ordered that
helpless prisoners be shot."
"We
always execute prisoners who break out of jail. It is an
old-established practice and a necessary deterrent."
"We
always settle accounts with the executioners," Leeming gave
back. "It is an old-established practice and a necessary
deterrent." "By `we' you mean you and your Eustace?"
put in Pallam.
"Yes."
"Why
should your Eustace care? The victims were not Terrans. They were
merely a bunch of obstreperous Rigellians."
"Rigellians
are allies. And allies are friends. I feel bad about the
cold-blooded, needless slaughtering of them. Eustace is very
sensitive to my emotions."
"But not
necessarily obedient to them?"
"No:"
"In
fact," pressed Pallam, determined to establish the point once
and for all, "if there is any question of one being subordinate
to the other, it is you who serves him."
"Most
times, anyway," conceded Leeming with the air of having a tooth
pulled.
"Well;
it confirms what you've already told us." Pallam gave a thin
smile. "The chief difference between Terrans and Lathians is
that you know you're controlled whereas the Lathians are ignorant of
their own status."
"We are
not controlled consciously or unconsciously," Leeming insisted.
"We exist in mutual partnership the same as you do with your
wife. Sometimes she gives way to you, other times you give way to
her. Neither of you bother to estimate who has given way the most in
any specific period and neither of you insists that a perfect balance
must be maintained. That's how it is. And it's mastery by neither
party "I wouldn't know, never having been mated." Pallam
turned to the Commandant. "Carry on."
"As
probably you are aware by now, this planet has been set aside as the
Combine's main penal world," informed the Commandant. "Already
we hold a large number of prisoners; mainly Rigellian."
"What of
it?"
"There
are more to come. Two thousand Centaurians and six hundred Thetans
are due to arrive and fill a new jail next week: Combine forces will
transfer more enemy life- forms as soon as we have accommodation
ready for them and ships are available. He eyed the other
speculatively. "It is only a matter of time before they start
dumping Terrans on us as well."
"Is the
prospect bothering you?"
"Zangasta
has decided that he must refuse to accept Terrans."
"That's
up to him," said Leeming, blandly indifferent.
"Zangasta
has a clever mind," opined the Commandant oozing patriotic
admiration. "He is of the firm opinion that to assemble a
formidable army of mixed prisoners all on one' planet, and then add
some thousands of Terrans to the mixture, is to create a potentially
dangerous situation. He foresees trouble on a scale vaster than we
could handle. Indeed, we might lose control of this world,
strategically placed in the Combine's rear, and become subject to the
violent attacks of our own allies."
"That is
quite possible," Leeming agreed. "In fact it's quite
probable. In fact it's practically certain. But it's not Zangasta's
only worry. It's the one he's seen fit to put out for publication.
He's got a private one too."
"And
what is that?"
"Zangasta
himself originated the order that escaped prisoners be shot. He must
have done so - otherwise nobody would dare shoot them. Now he's jumpy
because a Eustace may be sitting on his bed and grinning at him every
night. He thinks that a few thousand Eustaces will be a
proportionately greater menace to him. But he's wrong." "Why
is he wrong?" inquired the Commandant
"Because
it isn't only the repentant who have no cause to fear. The dead
haven't either. The arrival on this world of fifty million Eustaces
means nothing whatever to a corpse. Zangasta had better countermand
that shooting order if he wants to go on living."
"I'll
inform him of your remarks. However, such cancellation may not be
necessary. As I have told you, he is clever. He has devised s subtle
strategy that will put all your evidence to the final, conclusive
test and at the same time may solve his problems to his own
satisfaction."
Feeling vague
alarm, Leeming asked, "Am I permitted to know what he intends to
do?"
"He has
given instructions that you be told. And already he has swung into
action." The Commandant waited for the sake of effect then
finished, "He has beamed the Allies, a proposal to exchange
prisoners."
Leeming.
fidgeted around in his seat. Ye gods, the plot was thickening with a
vengeance. From the very beginning his sole purpose had been to talk
himself out of jail and into some other situation more favourable for
sudden departure at high speed. He'd been trying to lift himself over
the wall with his tongue. Now they were taking his story and
plastering it ail over the galaxy. Oh, what a tangled web we weave
when first we practise to deceive!
"What is
more," the Commandant went on, "the Allies have notified us
of their acceptance providing we exchange rank for rank. That is to
say, captains for captains, navigators for navigators and so forth."
"That's
reasonable."
"Zangasta,"
said the Commandant, grinning like a hungry wolf, "has agreed in
his turn - providing that the Allies take Terran prisoners first and
make exchange on a basis of two for one. He is now awaiting their
reply."
"Two for
one?" echoed Leeming, blinking. "You mean he wants them to
release two of their prisoners for every Terran they get back?"
"No, no,
of course not." He increased the grin and exposed
the roots of
his teeth. "They must return two Combine troopers for each
Terran and his Eustace that we hand back. That is two for two and
perfectly fair, is it not?"
"It's
not for me to say." Leeming swallowed hard. "The Allies are
the judges."
"Until a
reply arrives and mutual agreement has been achieved, Zangasta wishes
you to have better treatment. You will be transferred to the
officers' quarters outside the walls, you will share their meals and
be allowed to go walks in the country. Temporarily you will be
treated as a non-combatant and you'll be very comfortable. It is
necessary that you give me your parole not to try to escape."
Holy smoke,
this was another stinker. The entire fiction was shaped toward
ultimate escape. He couldn't abandon it now. Neither was he willing
to give his word of honour with the cynical intention of breaking it.
"Parole
refused," he said firmly.
The
Commandant was incredulous. "Surely you do not mean that?"
"I do. I
have no choice. Terran military law does not permit a prisoner-of-war
to give such a promise."
"Why
not?"
"Because
no Terran can accept responsibility for his Eustace. How can I swear
not tb get out when half of me cannot be got in? Can a twin take oath
on behalf of his brother?"
"Guard!"
called the Commandant, visibly disappointed. He mooched uneasily
around his cell for a full twelve days, occasionally chatting with
Eustace night-times for the benefit of ears lurking outside the door.
Definitely he'd wangled himself into a predicament that was a case of
put up or shut up; in order to put up he dared not shut up.
The food
remained better in quantity though little could be said for its
quality. Guards treated him with that diffidence accorded to captives
who somehow are in cahoots with their superiors. Four more recaptured
Rigellians were brought back but not shot. All the signs and portents
were that he'd still got a grip on the foe.
Though he'd
said nothing to them, the other prisoners had got wind of the fact
that in some mysterious way he was responsible for the general
softening of prison conditions. At exercise-time they treated him as
a deep and subtle character who could achieve the impossible. From
time to time their curiosity got the better of them.
"You
know they didn't execute those last four?"
"Yes,"
Leeming admitted.
"It's
being said that you stopped the shooting."
"Who
says so?"
"It's
just a story going around."
"That's
right, it's just a story going around."
"I
wonder why they shot the first bunch but not the second. There must
be a reason."
"Maybe
the Zangastans have developed qualms of conscience, even if
belatedly," Leeming suggested.
"There's
more to it than that."
"Such as
what?"
"Somebody
has shaken them up."
"Who,
for instance?"
"I don't
know. There's a strong rumour that you've got the Commandant eating
out of your hand."
"That's
likely, isn't it?" Leeming countered.
"I
wouldn't think so. But one never knows where one is with the
Terrans." The other brooded a bit, asked, "What did you do
with that wire I stole for you?"
"I'm
knitting it into a pair of socks. Nothing fits better nor wears
longer than solid wire socks."
Thus he
foiled their noseyness and kept silence, not wanting to arouse false
hopes. Inwardly he was badly bothered. The Allies in general and
Earth in particular knew nothing whatever about Eustaces and
therefore were likely to treat a two-for-one proposition with the
contempt it deserved. A blank refusal on their part might cause him
to be plied with awkward questions impossible to answer.
In that case
it would occur to them sooner or later that they
were
afflicted with the biggest liar in history. They'd then devise tests
of fiendish ingenuity. When he fluked them the balloon would go up.
He wasn't
inclined to give himself overmuch credit for kidding them along so
far. The few books he'd been able to read had shown that Zangastan
religion was based upon reverence for ancestral spirits. The
Zangastans were also familiar with what is known as poltergeist
phenomena. The ground had been prepared for him in advance; he'd
merely ploughed it and sown the crop. When a victim already believes
in two kinds of invisible beings it isn't hard to persuade him to
swallow a third.
But when the
Allies beamed Anga Zangasta a curt invitation to make his bed on a
railroad track it was possible that the third type of spirit would be
regurgitated with violence. Unless by fast, convincing talk he could
cram it back down their gullets when it was halfway out. How to do
that?
In his cell
he was stewing this problem over and over when the guards came for
him again. The Commandant was there but Pallam was not. Instead, a
dozen civilians eyed him curiously. That made a total of thirteen
enemies, a very suitable number to pronounce him ready for the
chopper. Feeling as much the centre of attraction as a six-tailed
wombat at the zoo, he sat down and four civilians immediately started
chivvying him, taking it in relays. They were interested in one
subject and one only, namely, bopamagilvies. It seemed that they'd
been playing for hours with his samples, had achieved nothing except
some practise in acting daft, and were not happy about it.
On what
principle did a bopamagilvie work? Did it focus telepathic output
into a narrow, long-range beam? At what distance did his Eustace get
beyond range of straight conversation and have to be summoned with
the aid of a gadget? Why was it necessary to make directional search
before obtaining a reply? How did he know how to make a coiled- loop
in the first place?
"I can't
explain. How does a bird know how to make a nest? The knowledge is
wholly instinctive. I have known how
to call my
Eustace ever since I was old enough to shape a piece of wire."
"Could
it be that your Eustace implants the necessary knowledge in your
mind?"
"Frankly,
I've never given that idea a thought. But it is possible."
"Will
any kind of wire serve?"
"So long
as it's non-ferrous."
"Are all
Terran loops of exactly the same construction and dimensions?"
"No,
they vary with the individual."
"We've
made careful and thorough search of Terran prisoners held by the
Lathians. Not one of them owns a similar piece of apparatus. How do
you account for that?"
"They
don't need one."
"Why
not?"
"Because
when more than four hundred of them are imprisoned together they can
always count on at least a few of their Eustaces being within easy
reach at any given time.
Somehow he
beat them off, feeling hot in the forehead and cold in the belly.
Then the Commandant took over. "The Allies have flatly refused
to accept Terran prisoners ahead of other species, or to exchange
them two for one, or to discuss the matter any further. What have you
to say to that?"
Steeling
himself, Leeming commented; "Look, on your side there are more
than twenty lifeforms of which the Lathians and the Zebs are by far
the most powerful. Now if the Allies had wanted to give priority of
exchange to one. species do you think the Combine would agree? If,
for example, the favoured species happened to be the Tansites, would
the Lathians and Zebs vote for them to get home first?"
A tall,
authoritative civilian chipped in. "I am Daverd; personal aide
to Zangasta. He is of your own opinion. He believes that the Terrans
have been outvoted. Therefore I am commanded to ask you one
question."
"What is
it?"
"Do your
allies know about your Eustaces?"
"No."
"You
have succeeded in hiding the facts from them?"
"There's
never been any question of concealing anything from them. With
friends the facts just don't become apparent. Eustaces take effective
action only against enemies and that is something that cannot be
concealed for ever."
"Very
well." Daverd came closer, put on a conspiratorial air. "The
Lathians started this war and the Zebs went with them by reason of
their military alliance. The rest of us got dragged in for one reason
or another. The Lathians are strong and arrogant but, as we now know,
they are not responsible for their actions."
"What's
this to me?"
"Separately
we numerically weaker lifeforms cannot stand against the Lathians or
the Zebs. But together we are strong enough to step out of the war
and maintain our right to be neutral. So Zangasta has consulted the
others."
"Lord!
isn't it amazing what can be done with a few yards of copper wire?
"He has
received their replies today," Daverd went on. "They are
willing to make a common front for the sake of enjoying mutual
peace-providing that the Allies are equally willing to recognise
their neutrality and exchange prisoners with them."
"Such
sudden unanimity among the small fry tells me something pretty good,"
observed Leeming with malice. "It tells you what?"
"Allied
forces have won a major battle lately. Somebody has been given a hell
of a lambasting."
Daverd
refused to Confirm or deny it. "You are the only Terran we hold
on this planet. Zangasta thinks he can make, good use of you."
"How?"
"He has
decided to send you back to Terra: It will be your task to persuade
them to agree to our plans. If you fail, a couple of hundred thousand
hostages will suffer - remember that!"
"The
prisoners have no say in this matter, no hand in it, no
responsibility for it. If you vent your, spite upon them a time will
surely come when you'll be made to pay - remember that!"
"The
Allies will know nothing about it," Daverd retorted. "There
will be no Terrans and no Eustaces here to inform them by any
underhanded method. Henceforth we are keeping Terrans out. The Allies
cannot use knowledge they do not possess."
"No,"
agreed Leeming. "It's quite impossible to employ something you
haven't got."
They provided
a light destroyer crewed by ten Zangastans. With one stop for
refuelling and the fitting of new tubes it took him to a servicing
planet right on the fringe of the battle area. This dump was a
Lathian outpost but those worthies showed no interest in what their
smaller allies were up to, neither did the' realise that the one
Terranlike creature really was a Terran. They got to work relining
the destroyer's tubes in readiness for its journey home. Meanwhile,
Leeming was transferred to an unarmed one-man Lathian scoutship. The
ten Zangastans officiously saluted before they left him. From this
point he was strictly on his own. Take-off was a heller. The seat was
far too big and shaped to fit the Lathian backside, which meant that
it was humped in the wrong places. The controls were unfamiliar and
situated too far apart. The little ship was fast and powerful but
responded differently from his own. How he got up he never knew, but
made it.
After that
there was the constant risk of being tracked by Allied detector
stations and blown apart in full flight. He charged among the stars
hoping for the best and left his beam transmitter severely alone;
calls on an enemy frequency might make him a dead duck in no time at
all.
He arrowed
straight for Terra. His sleeps were restless and uneasy. The tubes
were not to be trusted despite that flight-
duration
would be only a third of that done in his own vessel. The strange
autopilot was not to be trusted merely because it was of alien
design. The ship itself was not to be trusted for the same reason.
The forces of his own side were not to be trusted because they'd tend
to shoot first and ask questions afterward.
More by good
luck than good management he penetrated the Allied front without
interception. It was a feat that the foe could accomplish, given the
audacity, but had never attempted because the risk of getting into
Allied territory was as nothing to the trouble of getting out again.
In due time
he came in fast on Terra's night side and plonked the ship down in a
field a couple of miles west of the main spaceport. It would have
been foolish to take a chance by landing a Lathian vessel bang in the
middle of the port. Somebody behind a heavy gun might have stuttered
with excitement and let fly.
The moon was
shining bright along the Wabash when he approached the front gate
afoot and a sentry bawled, "Halt! Who goes there?"
"Lieutenant
Leeming and Eustace Phenackertiban."
"Advance
and be recognised."
He ambled
forward thinking to himself that such an order was manifestly
dunderheaded. Be recognised. The sentry had never seen him in his
life and wouldn't know him from Myrtle McTurtle. Oh, well, baloney
baffles brains.
At the gate a
powerful cone of light shone down upon him. Somebody with three
chevrons on his sleeve emerged from a nearby hut bearing a scanner on
the end of a thin, black cable. He waved the scanner over the arrival
from head to foot, concentrating mostly on the face.
A loudspeaker
in the hut ordered, "Bring him into Intelligence H.Q."
They started
walking.
The sentry
let go an agitated yelp. "Hey, where's the other guy?"
"What
guy?" asked the sergeant, stopping and staring around. "Smell
his breath," Leeming advised.
"You
gave me two names," asserted the sentry, full of resentment.
"Well, if you ask the sergeant nicely he'll give you two more,"
said Leeming. "Won't you, Sarge?"
"Let's
get going," growled the sergeant, displaying liverish
impatience.
They reached
Intelligence H.Q. The duty officer was Colonel Farmer. He gaped at
Leeming and said, "Well!" He said it seven times.
Without
preamble, Leeming demanded, "What's all this about us refusing
to make a two-for-one swap for Terran prisoners?"
Farmer
appeared to haul himself with an effort out of a fantastic dream.
"You know of it?"
"How
could I ask if I didn't?"
"All
right. Why should we accept such a cockeyed proposition? We're in
our right minds, you know!"
Bending over
the other's desk, hands splayed upon it, Leeming said, "All we
need do is agree upon one condition."
"What
condition?"
"That
they make a similar agreement with respect to Lathians. Two of our
men for one Lathian and one Willy."
"One
what?"
"One
Willy. The Lathians will take it like birds. They have been
propaganding all over the shop that one Lathian is worth two of
anything else. They're too conceited to refuse such an offer. They'll
advertise it as proof positive that even their enemies know how good
they are."
"But-"
began Farmer, slightly dazed.
"Their
allies will fall over themselves in their haste to agree also.
They'll do it from different motives to which the Lathians will wake
up when it's too late. Try it for size. Two of our fellows for one
Lathian and his Willy."
Farmer stood
up, his belly protruding, and roared, "What the blue blazes is a
Willy?" "You can easily find out," assured Leeming.
"Consult your Eustace."
Showing
alarm; Farmer lowered his tones to a soothing pitch and said as
gently as possible, "Your appearance here has been a great shock
to me. Many months ago you were reported missing and believed
killed."
"I
crash-landed and got taken prisoner in the back of beyond. They were
a snake-skinned bunch called Zangastans. They slung me into the jug."
"Yes,
yes," said Colonel Farmer, making pacifying gestures. "But
how on earth did you get away?"
"Farmer,
I cannot tell a lie hexed them with my bopamagilvie."
"Huh?".
"So I
left by rail," informed Leeming, "and there were ten
faplaps carrying it." Taking the other unaware he let go a
vicious kick at the desk and made a spurt of ink leap across the
blotter. "Now let's see some of the intelligence they're
supposed to have in Intelligence. Beam the offer. Two for a
cootie-coated Lathian and a Willy Terwilliger." He stared
around, a wild look in his eyes. "And find me somewhere to sleep
- I'm dead beat."
Holding
himself in enormous restraint, Farmer said, "Lieutenant, is that
the proper way in which to talk to a colonel?"
"One
talks in any way to anybody. Mayor Snorkum will lay the cake. Go
paddle a poodle." Leeming kicked the desk again. "Get busy
and tuck me into bed."
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