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The Original Science Fiction Stories 1957-05
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Transcript of The Original Science Fiction Stories 1957-05
THE ORIGINAL MAY
FICTION M,
STORIES
h
Z00L0GIC
SPECIMENA. Bertram
Chandler
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THE ORIGINAL 35<
SCIENCFICTIO
Volume 7
Number 6
May, 1957
NOVELETS700T OCxICAL SPECIMEN A Bertram Chandler 23
No one ifked thfVdea of a space-voyage with a corpse -and this was a most unusual corpse...
TTYTRA 9PACE PERCEPTION Russ Winterbotham 72EXKRthere£ such a thingV "telepathy", perhaps it w,l
operate more along these lines, than on the traditional
ones. ..
SHORT STORIES
SUNRISE ON MERCURY (mustrated ^X^V K^i 2
It was bad enough at* any time — but when it came
early. .
.
THE DEMANCIPATOR G. C. Edmondson 16
Wherein the advertising industry discovers progress-in-
reverse!
FULFILLMENT -.Thomas N. Seortiu 49
Two beings with the same desire...
THE INNOCENTS' REFUGE Theodore L. Thomas 63
The law was downright brutal — for a very good reason.
THE JANUS CITY Irving Cox Jr. 104
There's Equality and Equality, and the twain had better
not meet.
PLEASURE ORBIT ....Winston K.Marks 121
Moral: don't try to play a practical joke on a spaceman.
HUNTING MACHINE Carol Emshwiller 133
A vignette of the mighty sportsmen of tomorrow...
DEPARTMENTS
THE EDITOR'S PAGE Robert W. Lowndes 45
Wherein we look into the matter of science fiction and"Prophecy".
THE LAST WORD » The Readers 62
INSIDE SCIENCE FICTION Robert A. Madle 67
INDEX TO VOLUME 7 uo
Editor: ROBERT W. LOWNDES MARIE A. PARK. Asso. Eci.
COVER BY EMSH DOROTHY B. SEADOR. Asso. Ed.
Illustrations by Emsh, Freas, and Orban
SCIENCE FICTION STORIES, May, 1957, published bi-monthly by COLUMBIAPUBLICATIONS, INC., 1 Appleton Street. Holyoke, Mass. Ed ' to™al and «£"
ecutive offices at 241 Churcii Street, New York 13. New York ^mer^ as sec-
ond class matter at the Post Office at Holyoke, Mass under the act of MaichJ,1879. Entire content* copyright 19S7 by Columbia Publications, Inc. 35c per copy,
yearly subscriptions $2.10. Printed in the U. S. A.
I
The tractor was racing toward the s&ip as the dome melted <Ww» intoa shapeless mass.
SUNRISE ONMERCURY
by Calvin M. Knox
The question was: why was the stm rising a week
ahead oj schedule?
illustrated by EMSH
NINE MILLION miles
to the sunward of
Mercury, with the
Leverrier swinging into the
series of spirals that wouldbring it down on the Solar
System's smallest world, Sec-
ond Astrogator Lon Curtis
decided to end his life.
Curtis had been lounging in
a webfoam cradle waiting for
the landing to be effected;
his job in the operation wasover, at least until the Lever-
rier's landing-jacks touched
Mercury's blistered surface.
The ship's efficient sodium-
coolant system negated the
efforts of the swollen sun
visible through the rear
screen. For Curtis and his
seven shipmates, no problems
presented themselves ; they
had only to wait while the
autopilot brought the ship
down for Man's second land-
ing on Mercury.Flight Commander Harry
Ross was sitting near Curtis
when he noticed the sudden
momentary stiffening of the
astrogator's jaws. Curtisabruptly reached for the con-
trol nozzle. From the spin-
nerets that had spun the web-
foam, came a quick green
burst of dissolving fluoro-
chrene; the cradle vanished.
Curtis stood up.
"Going somewhere?" Ross
asked.Curtis' voice was harsh.
SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"Just — just taking a walk."Ross returned his attention
to his microbook for a mo-ment as Curtis walked away.There was the ratchety soundof a bulkhead dog beingmanipulated, and Ross felt amomentary chill as the cool-er air of the superrefrigerat-ed reactor-compartment drift-ed in.
He punched a stud, turningthe page. Then
—
What the hell is he doingin the reactor compartment?
npHE AUTOPILOT would*- be controlling the fuelflow, handling it down to themilligram, in a way no hu-man system could. The reac-tor was primed for the land-ing, the fuel was stoked, thecompartment was doggedshut. No one—least of all aSecond Astrogator—had anybusiness going back there.Ross had the foam cradle
dissolved in an instant, andwas on his feet in another.He dashed down the compan-ionway and through the openbulkhead door into the cool-ness of the reactor compart-ment.
Curtis was standing by theconverter door, toying withthe release-tripper. As Rossapproached, he saw the as-trogator get the door openand put one foot to the chutethat led downship to the nu-clear pile.
"Curtis, you idiot! Getaway from there! You'll killus all!"
The astrogator turned,looked blankly at Ross for aninstant, and drew up his oth-er foot. Ross leaped.
He caught Curtis' bootedfoot in his hands and, despitea barrage of kicks from theastrogator's free boot, man-aged to drag Curtis off thechute. The astrogator tuggedand pulled, attempting tobreak free. Ross saw theman's pale cheeks quivering;Curtis had cracked, but thor-oughly.
^Grunting, Ross yanked Cur-
tis away from the yawningreactor chute and slammedthe door shut. He draggedhim out into the main sectionagain, and slapped him, hard.
"Why'd you want to dothat? Don't you know whatyour mass would do to theship if it got into the con-verter? You know the fuelintake's been calibrated al-ready; a hundred eighty ex-tra pounds and we'd arc rightinto the sun. What's wrongwith you, Curtis?"The astrogator fixed un-
shaking, unexpressive eyes onRoss. "I want to die," he saidsimply. "Why couldn't youlet me die?"
TTE WANTED to die. Ross« * shrugged, feeling a coldtremor run down his back.There was no guardingagainst this diesease.
Just as acqualungers be-neath the sea's surface suf-fered from l'ivresse des gran-des profondeurs—rapture of
SUNRISE ON MERCURY
the deeps—and knew no cure
for the strange, depth-in-
duced drunkenness that in-
duced them to remove their
breathing-tubes fifty fath-
oms below, so did spacemenrun the risk of this nameless
malady, this inexplicable urge
to self-destruction.
It struck anywhere. A re-
pairman wielding a torch on
a recalcitrant strut of an or-
biting Wheel might abruptly
rip open his facemask and
drink Vacuum; a radioman
rigging an antenna on the
skin of his ship might sud-
denly cut his line, fire his
directional-pistol, and send
himself drifting away sun-
ward. Or a Second Astroga-
tor might decide to climb
into the converter.
Psych Officer Spangler ap-
peared, an expression of con-
cern fixed on his smooth pink
face. "Trouble ?"
Ross nodded. "Curtis. Tried
to jump into the fuelchute.
He's got it, Doc."
SCOWLING, Spanglerrubbed his cheek, then
said: "They always pick the
best times, dammit. It's swell
having a psycho on a Mer-
cury run.""That's the way it is," Ross
said wearily. "Better put himin statis till we get home. I'd
hate to have him running loose
looking for different ways of
doing himself in.
"Why can't you let medie?" Curtis asked. His face
was bleak. "Why'd you have
to stop me?""Because, you lunatic, you'd
have killed all the rest of us
by your fool dive into the
converter. Go walk out the
airlock if you want to die
—
but don't take us with you."
Spangler glared warningly
at him. "Harry—
"
"Okay," Ross said. "Takehim away."
The psychman led Curtis
within. The astrogator wouldbe given a tranquilizing in-
jection, and locked in an in-
soluble webfoam jacket for
the rest of the journey. There
was a chance he could be re-
stored to sanity, once they
returned to Earth, but Ross
knew that the astrogator
would make a beeline for the
nearest method of suicide the
moment he was let loose in
space.
BROODING, Ross turned
away. A man spends his
boyhood dreaming about
space, he thought, spends four
years at the Academy and
two more making dummyruns. Then he finally gets upwhere it counts, and he cracks
up. Curtis was an astrolgation
machine, not a normal humanbeing; and he had just dis-
qualified himself permanent-
ly from the only job he knewhow to do.
Ross shivered, feeling chill
despite the bloated bulk of
the sun filling the rear screen.
It could happen to anyone. .
.
even him. He thought of Cur-
tis, lying in a foam cradle
SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
somewhere in the back of theship, blackly thinking overand over again / want to die,while Doc Spangler mutteredsoothing things at him. A hu-man being was really a frailform of life, Ross reflected.Death seemed to hang over
the ship; the gloomy aura ofCurtis' suicide-wish pollutedthe atmosphere.Ross shook his head and
punched down savagely onthe signal to prepare for de-celeration. The unspinningglobe that was Mercurybobbed up ahead. Ke spottedit through the front screen.
HTHEY WERE approachingA the tiny planet middle-on.He could see the neat divi-sion now: the brightness ofSunside, the unapproachableinferno where zinc ran in riv-ers, and the icy blackness ofDarkside, dull with its unlitplains of frozen C02.Down the heart of the plan-et ran the Twilight Belt, thatnarrow area of not-cold andnot-heat where SuiiGide andDarkside met to provide athin band of barely-tolerableterritorv, a ring nine thousandmiles in circumference andten or twenty miles wide.The Leverrier plunged
downward. "Downward" wasactually a misnomer—spacehas no ups or downs—but it
was the simplest way for Rossto visualize the approach. Heallowed his jangled nerves tocalm. The ship was in thehands of the autopilot; the
orbit was precomputed andthe analog banks in the drivewere happily following thetaped program, bringing theship to rest smack in the mid-dle of—My God!Ross went cold from head
to toe. The precomputed tapehad been fed to the analogbanks—had been prepared by—had been the work of
—
Curtis.
A suicidal madman hadworked out the Leverrier'slanding program.
TOOSS HANDS began to*^ shake. How easy it wouldhave been, he thought, fordeath-bent Curtis to work outan orbit that would plant theLeverrier in a smoking riverof molten lead—or in themortuary chill of Darkside.His false security vanished.
There was no trusting theautomatic pilot; they'd haveto risk a manual landing.Ross jabbed down on the
communicator button. "I wantBrainerd," he said hoarsely.The First Astrogator ap-
peared a few seconds later,
peering in curiously. "Whatgoes, Captain ?"
"We've just carted your as-sistant Curtis off to thepokey. He tried to jump intothe converter.""He— ?"
Ross nodded. "Attemptedsuicide; I nabbed him in time.But in view of the circum-stances, I think we'd betterdiscard the tape you had him
SUNRISE ON MERCURY
prepare and bring the ship
down manually, yes?"
The First Astrogator moist-
ened his lips. "Maybe that's a
good idea/' he said.
"Damn right it is," Rosssaid, glowering.
AS THE SHIP touched
down, Ross thought,Mercury is two hells in one.
It was the cold, icebound
kingdom of Dante's deepest
pit—and it was also the brim-
stone empire of another con-
ception. The two met, fire
and frost, each hemisphere its
own kind of hell.
He lifted his head andflicked a quick glance at the
instrument panel above his
deceleration cradle. The dials
all checked : weight placementwas proper, stability 100%,external temperature a man-ageable 108F., indicating they
had made their landing a lit-
tle to the sunward of the Twi-light Belt's exact middle. It
had been a sound landing.
He snapped on the commun-icator. "Brainerd?"
"All OK, Captain."
"How was the landing? Youused manual, didn't you?"
"I had to," the astrogator
said. "I ran a quick check on
Curtis' tape and it was all
cockeyed. We'd have grazed
Mercury's orbit by a whisker
and kept going— straight for
the sun. Nice?"
"Sweet," Ross said. "Butdon't be too hard on the kid;
it's not his fault he went psy-
cho. Good landing, anyway.We seem to be pretty close to
the center of the Twilight
Belt, give or take a mile or
two."
He broke the contact andunwebbed himself. "We'rehere," he announced over the
shipwide circuit. "All handsto fore double pronto."
The men got there quickly
enough—Brainerd first, then
Doc Spangler, followed byAccumulator Tech Krinskyand the three crewmen. Rosswaited until the entire grouphad assembled.
THEY WERE lookingaround curiously for Cur-
tis, all but Brainerd andSpangler. Crisply, Ross said,
"Astrogator Curtis won't be
with us. He's aft in the psy-
cho bin; luckily, we can shift
without him on this tour."
He waited till the implica-
tions of that statement hadsunk in. The men adjusted
to it well, he thought, judg-
ing from the swiftness with
which the horror faded fromtheir faces.
"All right," he said. "Sched-
ule calls for us to spend a
maximum of thirty-two hours
on Mercury before departure.
Brainerd, how does that check
with our location?"
The astrogator frowned and
made same mental calcula-
tions. "Current position is a
trifle to the sunward edge of
the Twilight Belt; but as I
figure it, the sun won't be
high enough to put the Fahr-
8 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
enheit much above 120 for atleast a week. Our suits canhandle that sort of tempera-ture with ease/'
"Good. Llewellyn, you andFalbridge break out the radarinflaters and get the towerset up as far to the east asyou can go without roasting.Take the crawler, but be sureto keep an eye on the ther-mometer. We've only got oneheatsuit, and that's for Krin-sky."
Llewellyn, a thin, sunken-eyed spaceman, shifted un-easily. "How far to the eastdo you suggest, sir?"
"The Twilight Belt coversabout a quarter of Mercury'ssurface," Ross said. "You'vegot a strip 47 degrees wide tomove around in—but I don'tsuggest you go much morethan twenty-five miles or so.It starts getting hot afterthat, and keens going: up."
"Yes, sir."
pOSS TURNED to Krin-«*• sky. The AccumulatorTech was the key man of theexpedition; it was his job tocheck the readings on the pairof Solar Accumulators thathad been left here by the firstexpedition. He was to meas-ure the amount of stress cre-ated by solar energies here,so close to the source of radi-ation, study force-lines oper-ating in the strange magneticfield of the little world, andre-prime the Accumulatorsfor further testing at a laterdate*
Krinsky was a tall, power-fully-built man, the sort ofman who could stand up tothe crushing weight of a heaV-suit almost cheerfully. Theheat-suit was necessary forprolonged work in the Sun-side zone, where the Accum-ulators were—and even agiant like Krinsky could standthe strain only for a few hoursat a time.
"When Llewellyn and Fal-bridge have the radar towerset up, Krinsky, get into yourheat-suit and be ready tomove. As soon as we've gotthe Accumulator Station lo-cated, Dominic will drive youas far east as possible anddrop you off. The rest is upto you. We'll be telemeteringyour readings, but we'd like tohave you back alive."
"Yes, sir."
"That's about it," Rosssaid. "Let's get rolling."
pOSS' OWN job was pure-*^ ly administrative—and, asthe men of his crew movedbusily about their allottedtasks, he realized unhappilythat he himself was con-demned to temporary idle-ness. His function was that ofoverseer; like the conductorof a symphony orchestra, heplayed no instrument him-self, and was on hand mostlyto keep the group moving inharmony toward the finish.
Now, he had only to wait.
Llewellyn and Falbridge de-parted, riding the segmented.
SUNRISE ON MERCURY
thermo-resistant crawler car-
ried in the belly of the Lev-errier. Their job was simple:
they were to erect the inflat-
able plastic radar tower far
to sunward. The tower that
had been left by the first ex-
pedition had long since librat-
ed into a Sunside zone andbeen liquefied; the plastic
base and parabola, coveredwith a light reflective surface
of aluminum, could hardlywithstand the searing heat of
Sunside.
Out there, it got up to 7OO
when the sun was at its clos-
est; the eccentricities of Mer-cury's orbit accounted for
considerable Sunside tempera-ture variations; but the ther-
mometer never showed lowerthan 300* on Sunside, evenduring aphelion. On Dark-side, there was little varia-
tion; temperature hung downnear absolute zero, and froz-
en drifts of heavy gases cov-
ered the surface of the land.
From where he stood, Rosscould see neither sunside norDarkside. The Twilight Belt
was nearly a thousand miles
broad, and as the planet
dipped in its orbit the sunwould first slide above the
horizon, then dip back. For a
twenty-mile strip through the
heart of the Belt, the heat of
Sunside and the cold of Dark-side cancelled out into a fair-
ly stable temperate climate;
for five hundred miles oneither side, the Twilight Beltgradually tricked toward the
areas of cold and raging heat.
IT WAS A strange and for-
bidding planet. Humanscould endure it only for shorttimes; the sort of life that
would be able to exist per-manently on Mercury was be-
yond his conception. Stand-ing outside the Leverricr in
his spacesuit, Ross nudgedthe chin control that lowereda pane of optical glass. Hepeered first toward Darkside,where he thought he saw athin line of encroachingblack—only illusion, he knew—and then toward Sunside.
In the distance, Lewellynand Falbridge were erectingthe spidery parabola that wasthe radar tower. He could see
the clumsy shape outlinedagainst the sky now—and be-hind it? A faint line ofbrightness rimming the bor-dering peaks? Illusion also,
he knew. Brainerd had cal-
culated that the sun's radi-
ance would not be visible herefor a week. And in a week'stime they'd be back on Earth.
He turned to Krinsky."The tower's nearly up.
They'll be back with the
crawler any minute. You'dbetter get ready to make yourtrip."
Krinsky nodded. "I'll suit
up, sir."
As the technician swung upthe handholds and into the
ship, Ross' thoughts turnedto Curtis. The young astro-
gator had prattled of seeingMercury, all the way out
—
and now that they were act-
ually here, Curtis lay in a
web of foam deep within the
10 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
ship, moodily demanding theright to die*
KRINSKY returned, nowwearing the insulating
bulk of the heat-suit over hisstandard rebreathing outfit.
He looked like a small tankrather than a man. "Is thecrawler approaching, sir?"
'Til take a look:"
Ross adjusted the lensplatein his mask and narrowed hiseyes. It seemed to him thatthe temperature had risensomewhat. Another illusion,
he thought, as he squintedinto the distance.
His eyes picked out the ra-
dar tower far off toward Sun-side. His mouth sagged open."Something the matter,
sir?"
"I'll say!" Ross squeezedhis eyes tight shut and lookedagain. And—yes—the newly-erected radar tower wasdrooping soggily, and begin-ning to melt. He saw two tinyfigures racing madly over theflat, pumice-covered groundto the silvery oblong that wasthe crawler. And—impossibly—the first glow of an unmis-takeable brightness was be-ginning to shimmer on themountains behind the tower.The sun was rising—a week
ahead of schedule!
pOSS GASPED and ran** back into the ship, fol-lowed by the lumbering Krin-sky. In the airlock, mechan-ical hands descended to helphim out of his apacesuit; he
signalled to Krinsky to re-main in the heat-suit, anddashed through into the maincabin.
"Brainerd ! B r a i n c r d
!
Where in hell are you?"The senior astrogator ap-
peared, looking puzzled. "Yes,Captain?"
"Look out the screen,"Ross said in a strangled voice,"Look at the radar tower!""It's—melting," Brainerd
said, astonished. "But that's—that's—"
"I know. It's impossible."Ross glanced at the instru-ment panel. External temper-ature had risen to 112—
a
jump of four degrees. Andas he watched it clicked upto 114.
It would take a heat of atleast 500° to melt the radartower that way. Ross squint-ed at the screen, and saw thecrawler come swinging diz-zily toward them: Llewellynand F a 1 b r i d g e were still
alive, then—t hough theyprobably had had a goodcooking out there. The temp-erature outside the ship wasup to 116. It would probablybe near 2C0 by the time thetwo men returned.
Angrily, Ross faced the as-trogator. "I thought you werebringing us down in the safe-ty strip," he snapped. "Checkyour figures again and findout where the hell we reallyare. Then work out a blastingorbit. That's the sun comingup over those hills."
"I know," Brainerd said.
SUNRISE ON MERCURY II
THE TEMPERATUREreached 120. The ship's
cooling system would be able
to keep things under control
and comfortable until about
250; beyond that, there wasdanger of an overload. Thecrawler continued to drawnear; it was probably hellish
in the little landcar, he
.thought.
His mind weighed alterna-
tives. If the external temper-
ature went much over 250, he
would run the risk of wreck-ing the ship's cooling system
by waiting for the two in the
crawler to arrive. He decided
he'd give them until it hit
275 to get back and then clear
out. It was foolish to try to
save two lives at a cost of
five. External temperature
had hit 130. Its rate of in-
crease was jumping rapidly.
The ship's crew knew whatwas going on now. Withoutdirect orders from Ross, they
were readying the Leverrier
for an emergency blastoff.
The crawler inched for-
ward. The two men weren't
much more than ten miles
away now; and at an average
speed of forty miles an hour
they'd be back within fifteen
minutes. Outside it was 133.
Long fingers of shimmeringsunlight stretched toward
them from the horizon.
Brainerd looked up fromhis calculations. "I can't
work it. The damned fingers
don't come out."*
"Huh?""I'm computing our loca-
tion—and I can't do the arith-
metic. My head's all foggy/'
What the hell, Rossthought. This was when a
captain earned his pay. "Getout of the way," he snapped.
"Let me do it."
HE SAT DOWN at the
desk and started figur-
ing. He saw Brainerd's hasty
notations scratched out eve-
rywhere. It was as if the as-
trogator had totally forgot-
ten how to do his job.
Let's see, now. If we're—His pencil flew over the
pad—but as he worked he
saw that it was all wrong.
His mind felt bleary, strange;
he couldn't seem to handle
the computations. Lookingup, he said, "Tell Krinsky to
get down there and be ready
to help those men out of the
crawler when it gets here.
They're probably half-crook-
ed."
Temperature 146. He looked
back at the pad. Damn; it
shouldn't be that hard to do
simple trig, he thought.
Doc Spangler appeared. "I
cut Curtis free," he an-
nounced. "He isn't safe dur-
ing takeoff in that cradle."
From within came a steady
mutter. "Just let me die...
just let me die. .
."
"Tell him he's likely to
have his wish," Ross mur-mured. "If I can't work out a
blastoff orbit we'll all roast
here.""How come you're doing it?
What's the matter with Brain-
erd?""Choked up. Couldn't do
the figures, And come to
12 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
think of it, I feci pretty fun-ny myself."
Fingers of fog seemed towrap around his mind. Heglanced at the dial. Tempera-ture 152 outside. That gavethe boys in the crawler 123degrees to get back here. . .orwas it 321? He was confused,utterly bewildered.Doc S p a n g 1 e r looked
strange too. The psych offi-cer was frowning curiously."I feel very lethargic sudden-ly," Spangler declared. "Iknow I really should get backto Curtis, but—
"
HPHE MADMAN was keep-
f ing up a steady babble in-side. The part of Ross' mindthat could still think clearlyrealized that if left unattend-ed Curtis was capabe of al-most anything.Temperature 158. The
crawler seemed nearer. Onthe horizon, the radar towerwas becoming a crazy sham-bles.
There was a shriek. "It'sCurtis!" Ross yelled, his mindreturning to awareness hur-riedty, and peeled out frombehind the desk. He ran aft,followed by Spanger, but it
was too late.
Curtis lay on the floor ina bloody puddle. He hadfound a pair of shears some-where.
Spangler bent. "He's dead.""Of course. He's dead."
Ross echoed. His brain felttotally clear now; at the mo-ment of Curtis' death, the fog
had lifted. Leaving Spanglerto attend to the body, he re-turned to the desk andglanced at the computations.With icy clarity he deter-
mined their location. Theyhad come down better thanthree hundred miles to sun-ward of where they thoughtthey had been. The instru-ments hadn't lied—but some-one's eyes had. The orbitBrainerd that had so solemn-ly assured him was a "safe"one was actually almost asdeadly as the one Curtis hadcomputed.He looked outside. The
crawler was almost there;temperature was 167. Therewas plenty of time. Theywould make it with a fewminutes to spare, thanks tothe warning they had receivedfrom the melting radar tower.But why had it happened?
There was no answer to that.
/^XGANTIC in his heat-suit,*J Krinsky brought Llewel-lyn and Falbridge aboard.They peeled out of theirspacesuits and wobbled un-steadily, then collapsed. Theylooked like a pair of just-boiled lobsters.
"Heat prostration," Rosssaid. "Krinsky, get them intotakeoff cradles. Dominic, youin your suit yet?"The spaceman appeared at
the airlock entrance and nod-ded.
"Good. Get down there anddrive the crawler into thehold. We can't afford to leave
SUNRISE ON MERCURY 13
it here. Doubl e-quick, andthen we'll blast off. Brainerd,that new orbit ready?"
"Yes, sir/'
The thermometer grazed200. The cooling system wasbeginning to suffer—but its
agonies were to be shortlived.
Within minutes, the Lever-rier had lifted from Mercury'ssurface—minutes ahead ofthe relentless advance of thesun—and swung into a tem-porary planet-circling orbit.
As they hung there, virt-
ually catching their breaths,
just one question rose in
Ross' mind: why? Why didBrainerd's orbit bring themdown in a danger zone in-
stead of the safety strip?
Why had both Brainerd andRoss been unable to computea blasting-pattern, the sim-plest of elementary astroga-tion techniques? And why hadSpangler's wits utterly failed
him—just long enough to let
the unhappy Curtis kill him-self?
Ross could see the samequestion reflected on every-one's face: why?He felt an itchy feeling at
the base of his skull. Andsuddenly, an image forcedits way across his mind in
answer.
IT WAS A great pool of
molten zinc, lying shim-mering between two jaggedcrests somewhere on Sunside.It had been there thousandsof years; it would be there
thousands, perhaps millionsof years from now.
Its surface quivered. Thesun's brightness upon the poolwas intolerable even to themind's eye.
Radiation beat down on thezinc pool—the sun's radia-tion, hard and unending, andthen a new radiation, an elec-
tromagnetic emanation withit a meaningful commutation:
I want to die.
The pool of zinc stirred
fretfully with sudden impuls-es of helpfulness.
THE VISION passed as
quickly as it came.Stunned, Ross looked up hes-
itantly. The expression onthe six faces surrounding himtold him what he wanted to
know.
"You felt it too," he said.
Spangler nodded, thenKrinsky and the rest of them."Yes," Krinsky said. "What
the devil was it?"
Brainerd turned to Spang-ler. "Are we all nuts, Doc?"The psych officer
shrugged. "Mass hallucina-
tion. . .collective hypnosis. .
.
"No, Doc." Ross leaned for-
ward. "You know it as wellas I do. That thing was real;
it's down there, out on Sun-side."
"What do you mean?""I mean that wasn't any
hallucination we had. That'sliie—or as close to it as Mer-cury can come." Ross' handsshook; he forced them to sub-side. "We've stumbled over
14 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
something very big/' he said.
Spangler stirred uneasily.
"Harry—
"
"No, I'm not out of myhead ! Don't you sec—that
thing down there, whateverit is, is sensitive to ourthoughts! It picked up Cur-tis* godawful caterwauling the
way a radar set grabs electro-
magnetic waves. His were the
strongest thoughts comingthrough; so it acted on themand did its damndest to helpCurtis' wish come true."
"You mean by fogging ourminds, and deluding us into
thinking we were in safe ter-
ritory, when actually we wereright near sunrise territory?"
"But why would it go to
all that trouble?" Krinsky ob-
jected. "If it wanted to helppoor Curtis kill himself, whydidn't it just fix it so wecame down right in Sunside?We'd cook a lot quicker that
way."
ROSS SHOOK his head. "It
knew that the rest of us
didn't want to die. The thingdown there must be a multi-valued thinker. It took the
conflicting emanations of
Curtis and the rest of us, andfixed things so that he'd die,
and we wouldn't." He shiv-
ered. "Once Curtis was out ofthe way, it acted to help thesurviving crewmembers getoff to safety. If you'll re-
member, we all thought andmoved a lot quicker the in-
stant Curtis was dead."'Damned if that's not so,"
Spangler said. "But—""What I want to know is,
do we go back down?" Krin-sky asked. "If that thing is
what you say it is, I'm notso sure I want to go withinreach of it again. Who knowswhat it might make us dothis time?"
"It wants to help us," Rosssaid stubbornly. "It's not hos-tile. You're not afraid, areyou? I was counting on youto go out and scout for it inthe heat-suit."
"Not me!" Krinsky saidhastily.
Ross scowled. "But this is
the first intelligent life-formwe've hit in the Solar Sys-tem yet. V/e can't simply runaway and hide!" To Brain-erd he said, "Set up an orbitthat'll take us back downagain—and this time put usdown where we won't melt."
"I can't do it, sir," Brain-erd said flatly. "I believe thesafety of the crew will be bestserved by returning to Earthat once."
Facing the group of them,Ross glanced quickly fromone to the next. There wasfear evident on the faces ofall of them. He knew whateach of them was thinking:I don't want to go back toMercury.
Six of them; one of him.And the helpful thing below.
THEY HAD outnumberedCurtis seven to one—'but
unmixed death-wish. Rossknew he could never generate
"
SUNRISE ON MERCURY 15
enough strength of thoughtto counteract the fear-riddenthoughts of the other six.
This is mutiny, he thought,but somehow he did not careto speak the thought aloud.Here was a case where a su-perior officer might legiti-
mately be removed from com-mand for the common good,and he knew it.
The creature below wasready to offer its services.But, multi-valued as it mightbe, there was still only onespaceship, and one of the twoparties—either he or the restof them—would have to bedenied its wishes.
Yet, he thought, the poolhad contrived to satisfy boththe man who wished to dieand those who wished to stayalive. Now, six wanted to re-
turn—but could the voice ofthe seventh be ignored?You're not being fair to me,Ross thought, directing hisangry outburst toward theplanet below. I want to seeyou. I want to study you.Don't Jet them drag me backto Earth.
WHEN THE Leverrier re-
turned to Earth, a weeklater, the six survivors of theSecond Mercury Expeditioncould all describe in detail
how a fierce death-wish hadovertaken Second AstrogatorCurtis and caused his suicide.But not one of them couldrecall what had happened toFlight Commander Ross, orwhy the heat-suit had beenleft behind on Mercury.
The Dreams department was supposed to give people the dreamsof their choice, to put them into a world of their own. But some-thing- was wrong-; Dreams clients were not getting what theypaid for. And Norman Blaine had to find out the how and whyof the mystery, before scandal broke!
Here is on intensely Moving Novel
WORLDS WITHOUT ENDby Clifford D. Simak
plus outstanding stories by
Robert Silverberg, TJiomas 2V. Scortia
and Carol Emshwiller
These, and FUTURE SCIENCE FICTIONothers are
in Issue now on sa e a* dl stands
#31 of
Memo from Associate Editor: This story is downright
reactionary! Memo from Editor to Associate: Yes, isn't it?
The
Demancipator
hv G. C Edmondson
r"T ^ HE LITTLE mansmiled like a mail-
JL order Mephistophelesand crossed his legs, givingcareful attention to thecreases. He tossed anotherpinch of chickenfeed to thepigeons before answering."Hardly a year goes by that
somebody doesn't dig it upand do a rehash. I'm used to
it by now." He shrugged. "It's
a living."
"A living !" the young mangushed. "A living, you call it!
Sir, you are a living legend!Others have conquered em-pires; others have invented
—
but who among living men cansay he has created an era?"
"I suppose I can," the othersaid. Again the smile flitted
over his lined face like sum-
mer lightning. "I think it's
time to puncture a few myths,though," he added, quietly.
"You mean there's an insidestory?" The young man's nos-trils began quivering.
The older man uncrossedhis legs and tossed the rest ofthe grain to pigeons whichfluttered at his feet. "Whynot?"
FOR ONE not born in thefirst half of our century, a
description of it is as mean-ingless as color to the con-genially blind. The rise
of technology, the gradualdisappearance of privacythe hot, cold, and lukewarmwars—all these contributed,
but the hallmark of the agewas a general tendency to
16
The cornucopia of time saving devices was no longer greeted withdelight . . .
Blow the whistle,Ring the bell
!
Run in circles.
Scream and yell.
Now, of course, the problemhas been solved. In those days
17,
18 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
we didn't even know what theproblem was.One of the unhappier men
of that era was Carson Jones,last year's model of the
young-man-to^-bc-watched. Inthe two years since he hadjoined the Klein-Schmidtagency, he had watched with a
detached and sardonic amuse-ment as one bad guess after
another created lumber for
the skids which Sid Vorshakwas busily building underhim.
"Morning, Jones," Vorshaksaid with an effusive bon-homie.
"Morning, Vorshak,'* Jonesreplied with even greater unc-tuousness. Vorshak's voice an-noyed him. It was an ordinaryenough midwestern voice, butsomewhere along the line it
had been channeled throughHarvard and toward a spuri-ous gentility. They sat facingeach other across the mahog-any table. Vorshak whipped a
notebook from his pocket andbegan a furious scribbling ashe hummed to himself
•
CROMLEIGH came in. Hereminded Jones of an old
school-tie, knotted and pulledtight several times too many.They exchanged banalitieswhile Vorshak hummed andscribbled. For the barestfraction of a second Jonesglanced at the scribbler andback to Cromleigh. Crom-leigh's face took the cast ofone who has unwittingly swal-lowed emetic instead of
orange juice, and for a mo-ment communion flowed be-tween them.The Old Man entered. They
rose and chorused, "GoodMorning, Mr. Klein-Schmidt.**The Old Man harrumphed andthe conference got under way.
It was soon obvious that thesession wasn't going to getvery far away. The scribblerflipped pages and quoted sta-
tistics, but his Harvardslurred into South Chicagoesewhen he saw that the Old Manknew he didn't have a freshidea this morning, either. Asecretary entered and silently
poured four cups of coffee.
The Old Man took a sipwith a loud slurping noise.
"What we need is somethingnew," he said. He stood withone foot on his chair in whatJones secretly called StanceNo. 3 and went into SpeechNo. 4 which began, "When Istarted this business, thirty
years ago. all I had was eightydollars and an idea*'
The money had reproducedbut the idea remained sterile.
Jones daydreamed, noddingand yessing at automatic in-
tervals. Crorrj^ei^h was alsonoddincr Vorshak gave peri-
odic "yes, Chief" while hescribbled.
THE OLD MAN got to
where he had made a for-
tune on the cake mix account,and Jones began losing touch.
He wished he'd gotten a little
more sleep last night. Fivehours just wasn't enough. He
THE DEMANCIPATOR 19
came to with a start. Theroom was filled with silence;
all eyes were on him.
"Five hours/' Jones saidautomatically.
"Not feeling well?" Vor-shak asked solicitously.
"Cake mix," Jones said,
playing by ear and hopingfrantically for a ciue.
"Are you sleepy, Jones?"the Old Man asked.
"No, sir!" Jones said posi-tively. "I was thinking/ 7 Helooked at Cromleigh, butCromleigh could only radiatesympathy; he'd been dozing,too. "Five hour cake mix/'Jones said with a sureness hedidn't feel.
"Drunk," V o r s h a k mut-tered.
"Like hell I am," Jones saidangrily. He blustered a mo-ment, trying to think seme-thing up. The Old Manglared, and Jones felt theskids slowly starting to move.Vorshak smiled maliciously,and prepared a parting shot.
Jones glared back at him
—
then suddenly relaxed r.s
Vorshak's face dissolved intoa view of six months on LongIsland, interrupted only byweekly visrts to the unem-ployment office.
UJ SAID FIVE hour cake
the ai::
r
one who noIon hr.d abrain in
it's the ;
idea since theSchweppesman."
"Explain yourself," the OldMan said.
"It's simple. Americanwomen are surrounded by au-tomatic machinery; they havenothing to do all day but pushbuttons and watch TV. Whensuppertime comes, it's minutethis and instant that. In fiveminutes, supper's ready andthen they settle down to anevening of boredom."
"So?" the Old Man saidnon-committally.
"So we change all that. Wesell a packaged cake mix thattakes five hours of hard workto prepare. Absolutely guar-anteed to shoot the hell outof a dull afternoon."
"Not drunk—crazy," Vor-shak muttered."Hmmmm," the Old Man
hmmmmed.Vorshak looked sideways at
the Old Man and began hedg-ing his bets. Jones waited forthe Old Man to come to andshout, "You're fired
!"
N A MOMENT the OldMan hummmmed again and
loo'red speculatively at Tones."It's your baby," he said. "Letme see a roueh layout tomor-
7 m o r n i n g." He har-Vned and walked out oi
the room.
Vorshak rounded the table.
"Congratulations, Jones," he; "count on me for anyyou need."
"You've . helped enough al-
Tones sa^'d. "Come on,
Cro-^lgh, I'll buy you somelunch."
20 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Cromleigh looked nervouslyfrom one to the other, mum-bled something about ulcers,
and pointed apologetically to
his carton of milk. Joneswalked down the hall to his
office. "Don't clear my things
out just yet," he said.
"Why, Mr. Jones, were youthinking of leaving?" the girl
asked."Silly girl don't yc-u read
the grapevine?"
He worked most of the
night on the rough layout andthe next day, to his infinite
surprise, the Old Man liked it.
He rushed the layout to the
magazines, and spent the in-
tervening time working upTV and radio coverage. Vor-shak kept a distance nicely
calculated to permit him to
jump on or off the bandwagonas circumstances dictated.
Meanwhile, the Old Man ini-
tialed roughs with a speed andlack of meddlesome sugges-
tions which was positively
amazing.
A MONTH passed. Hintsdribbled out via radio and
TV. After a month of hinting,
which had the public (theo-
retically) frantic to be let in
on the secret, came broaderhints. Former Miss Americaspredicted a new day in the
kitchen. Three months fromits conception, the outragewas perpetrated on an unsus-pecting public.
The reaction was, as usual,shocked silence then uproari-ous laughter. They laughed at
Columbus, and they laughedat Maidenform. But on Madi-son Avenue nobody waslaughing at Jones—they weretoo busy imitating him. Twoweeks after D-day, the OldMan was jubilant.
"Biggest thing since DavyCrockett," he announced glee-
fully.
"Yes, sir, Chief, we certain-
ly put that one over", Vorhsaksaid; he had finally decidedwhich way to jump."Oh, did you work on it
too?" the Old Man asked.
"His greatest contribution
was keeping out of my way,"Jones put in.
Vorshak's mouth snappedshut, and he began scribbling
in his notebook."I've been thinking of
branching out a little," Jonescontinued.
"Fine! What did you havein mind?"
"I've been thinking.Couldn't we have somebodydevelop a recipe for an all daypudding? How about some-thing that has to cook eighthours over a double boiler?
Ought to be stirred constant-ly, too; have it lump if youleave it alone for a minute.""By the way, Jones," the
Old Man said, "I've beenmeaning to speak to you abouta partnership."
"It it's all the same to you,Mr. Klein-Schmidt, I'll settle
for a cash bonus."
THE KLEIN-SCHMIDTagency prospered for four
THE DEMANCIPATOR 21
"The oldtime fashions are comingback."
months ; meanwhile, everyother agency hastened to get
into the act. The five hourcake mix was followed bythree day fudge. Jones' all
day pudding was a smashingsuccess. Some unsung geniusrevived an angel food recipe,
where the eggs had to be beat-
en by hand ; and before peopleknew it things were out of
control.
The Federated Women'sClubs of America slowly col-
lapsed. A cadre of the ParentTeacher Association was pre-
served only by the persistence
of a few fathers who contin-
ued attending meetings.Queen for a Day fizzled andwas ultimately revived as
King for a Day. The womenwere in the kitchen and toobusy to be bothered.
Man began to worry. At themorning conference he said,
"Boys, we've milked the slow-down movement about to the
end of its course. Now's the
time to get on the ball withsomething new. Got to keepahead of the competition, youknow." He essayed a chucklewhich didn't quite go over.
"Yes sir, Chief," Vorshaksaid eagerly.
Cromleigh hemmed a non-committal haw.
Carson Jones said nothing.
At that very moment, a bill
was getting its first readingin the lower house. It was in-
troduced very quietly, and not
too many people were on handto listen. At the second read-
ing, a bored reporter heard it
through and did a double take.
He rushed to a phone with the
scoop of the century, and wassomewhat miffed when hefinalljr found it on page 16B,
between the snorts page andthe want ads in the eveningedition. The morning edition
didn't carry it at all.
That was how women weredisenfranchised. When theyheard about it the general re-
action was, so what? Theywent back to kneading breaddough. Even the authors of
the bill were amazed at the
way women ignored the fact
that they'd just lost the vote.
W/HENW heard
NEAR THE end of the
fourth month, the Old
THE Old Manheard about it he didn't
take it so quietly. "This'll
ruin us," he said.
22 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"How so, Chief ?" Vorshakasked.
Carson Jones stroked an e w 1 y-s t a r t e d mustache."Can't you guess? What's thebackbone of this business?"
"Sales, of course," Vorshakexplained, as if to a child.
The Old Man shook his
head sadly.
"And who controls the mon-ey?*' Jones persisted. "Whosquanders the family pay-check on the idiotic fripperies
we dream up from week to
week?"Vorshak was beginning to
get it.
"We put them back in the
kitchen," Jones said. "Andnow they haven't time to readads or watch TV.""What can we do?" Vor-
shak asked.
"I don't know about you,but I've already done it."
"What?" the Old Manasked.
Jones pointed enigmaticallyat his mustache. "Have younoticed how many of thesethere are on the streets late-
ly?"
"Of course!" the Old Manexclaimed. "It's obvious. Manblossoms out in whiskerswhenever he gets the upperhand. Gad, what a name youcould have made for yourselfin this business!" he said re-
gretfully.
"Still room for anybodywho wants in," Jones said.
"Cromleigh's with me."
"Thanks," the Old Mansaid. "I'm a little too old to
change. Guess I'll pull outand go fishing. If I'm quick,I might even sell the businessyet," he added with a smirk.
"I don't get it," Vorshaksaid.
"Cromleigh and I are in thecomb and brush business;thinking of branching out in
mustache cups soon."
THE GREYING little manstroked his beard and
muckatooed at the pigeons.
"And that's about all there is
to it?" he said.
"One more thing," his com-panion asked, "What ever
happened to Vorshak?"
"Ah, Vorshak," the old mansaid sadly. "Never did ad-
just; poor fellow was killed
in a riot at a suffragetteparade."
"Suffragette parade?"
"Oh we had a few in the
first year or two. I under-stand that Vorshak was oneof the leaders. The move-ment never gained muchheadway though. Most of theadvertising men died ofbroken hearts when theycalled protest meetings, andno women showed up."
"Do you think women will
ever vote again, sir?" theyoung man asked.
"Not a chance," Joneslaughed. "We're back in thedriver's seat. We won't makethe same mistake twice."
ZOOLOGICAL
SPECIMENby A. Bertram Chandler
illustrated by ORBAN
23
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN
Novelet by A. BERTRAM CHANDLER
The term was an euphemism, because spacemen and space
passengers — like seamen in earlier days — were inclined
to be superstitious. And people still didn't like the idea of
sailing shipmates with a corpse. But this specimen was
something more than a cadaver . . .
THE DRIVE had beencut, the ship had beenput into her slow spin
around her longitudinal axis,
the passengers were settlingdown nicely, and everythingin the garden, I thought, v/as
lovely. Eight months of freefall lay ahead—eight monthsin which to square up the in-
evitable paper work (and this
should take only a week at
the outside), in which to keepthe passengers happy with or-
ganised fun and games, in
which to read all the variousclassics which, so far, I'd nev-er gotten around to reading.
(I still haven't.)
At 0800 hours Twayne, myNumber Two, took over the
watch, "Here you are," I told
him. "Here we are. Deep
Space conditions. Screensblank as a first trip cadet's
mind—except for Mars, of
course, but what's astern
won't worry us. Nary a comet,
nary a meteor. Spin set for
half a G; if in doubt, call the
Master. O.K.?"
"O.K.," he said.
I waited until he hadstrapped himself into the oth-
er chair, then knocked up the
clips that held me into mine.
I dropped through the well to
officers' flat level, pulled my-self into the radial alleywayleading to my room. Once in-
side I stripped off, went into
the little shower cubicle. I en-
joyed the shower. The waterhad a sting, a freshness, that's
altogether lacking whenyou're a month out from port,
24
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 25
when you're using waterthat's been used and re-used
thousands of times before. Oh,I know that there's no differ-
ence in theory, I know that
distilled water is much better
for washing, anyhow, I knowthat any lack of freshness, or
seeming lack of freshness, is
psychological rather than
physical, but. . .
ANYHOW, I enjoyed myshower, and I had my
shave, and was just about to
climb into a fresh uniformwhen Captain Gale came in.
He had a sheaf of flimsy pa-
pers in his hand and a look of
grave reproach on his normal-
ly good-humoured face. Hesat down heavily in my chair,
the springs creaking in pro-
test. He said, in a bad tem-
pered voice, "Mr. West, you
should have told me.""Told you what, sir?" 1
asked.
"This:' He took one of the
sheets—it was, I saw, part of
the Manifest—threw it downon to my desk. Leaning for-
ward in the chair he indicated
one of the items with a stubby
forefinger.
I looked over his shoulder.
One zoological specimen, I
read. Weight: 20 kilo-
grammes. Measurements: 2.5
x 1.25 x 1.25 metres.
"Oh, yes," I said. "I had it
stowed in Number 6 bin, and
had the springs rigged. Judg-
ing by its size, it could be a
sand hog. I don't know how
it's been prepared— I'd say
it's stuffed, it wasn't freezer
cargo—but the bones are flim-
sy. I...""Sand hog!" said the Old
Man. "Sand hogT"But the size. .
."
"Mr. West," he said, "if it
were a sandhog, it would be
declared as such on the Mani-fest. Don't those dimensions
suggest anything else to
you r*
"No. Unless. . . It could be
a whole crate of sand worms."
"Sand worms!" he snarled.
I buttoned my shirt,
climbed into my shorts.
"I don't see. .."
"Y o u wouldn't. Puppies
flapping around Deep Space
before they're weaned. Well,
I suppose I have to tell you
—
and I warn you now that if
you let out so much as a
squeak of this to the other of-
ficers or the cadets—or the
passenger s—I, personal-
ly, will have you blcwn out
through the drivers in small
pieces.
"Mr. West—do you know
what a euphemism is?"
"Yes. The use of a nice ex-
pression for one not so nice."
U/^OOD 'Zoological Speci-
VJ men' is a euphemism.
It's been used aboard ships
ever since Noah's Ark—al-
though I don't suppose that
Noah himself used it—his car-
go was nothing else but Zoo-
logical Specimens. It's used
bemuse seamen, and space-
26 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
men, and passengers, are aptto be superstitious. It's usedbecause, for some absurd rea-son, people don't like sailingshipmates with a corpse; anda corpse is what weVe got.You and I, West, are the onlytwo who know about it; andwe'll keep it that way."
"But the weight, sir. .."
"They usually use lead cof-fins for these jobs," he said.
"But the freight. .."
"Somebody," said the OldMan, "whose relations havemore money than sense, diedon Mars. Somebody has to betucked away in the familyvault, expense no object.
Somebody has to wait untilpoor old Muggins Gale blowsin with his decrepit old Mar-sova so that the disgustingcadaver can be wished on tohim. Somebody has to wait un-til Muggins Gale goes away tothe Green Mountains for afew days hard-earned leave,knowing full well that hisdim-witted Mate will takeevery gramme of cargo, nomatter how objectionable,that's wished on to him. Some-body. .."
"The Agent should havetold me, sir," I pointed out.
"He should have done. Andnext time in Braunport I'mhaving a very large piece ofhim. Well—you'll know in fu-ture."
"That sounded like thebreakfast gong, sir."
"It was. Remember, West,
not a word of this to any-body."
"Not a word, sir," I prom-ised.
\MY THREE passengersiV* were at my table when Igot aft to the saloon. Kenne-dy, the newsman, I had metbefore—in about every bar inMarsopolis. Trainer, a miningengineer, was a stranger tome, as was Lynn Davies. Shelooked like one of those long-legged blondes who, in scantyattire, hand top hats and mag-ic wands and such to conjur-ors, the while distracting theattention of the customersfrom any sleight of hand. Andthat, I learned, was just whatshe was—she had been in-volved in some disagreementwith the manager of thetroupe of entertainers, withwhom she was touring theMartian cities and settlementsand, at his expense, was beingshipped back to Earth.
"Hiya, West!" Kennedygreeted me. He introduced meto the others. "That was anice, quiet getaway," he said.
"You're to be congratulated;hardly felt a thing."
'7 did," grumbled Trainer.His thin, lined face had a yel-lowish pallor. "And I reallycan't see why the air has to beso thick."
"Trainer's a local boy," saidKennedy; "a real Martian.Born and bred on the celestialdust bowl. What about you,Miss Davies ?"
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 27
"It didn't worry me," she
said.
UrjRANKLY," Kennedyfwent on, "I was sur-
prised. We have a deadly
combination here—C a p t a i n
Gale and Chief Pilot West.
Their blasting off technique
has been described—and just-
ly—as a westerly gale. Wouldit have been something in the
cargo, West. Something—fra-gile? I was nosing round the
ship, you know, while she was
loading, and I saw your boys
rigging the accelerationsprings in one of the bins."
"Did you? Well, I'm peck-
ish, folks. Shall we see what
they have for us?"
We picked up our trays,
walked to the long cafeteria
bar, made our choices. "Makethe most of the fresh food," 1
told the others. "We'll be get-
ting vegetables and salads all
through the trip—but in a
week or so we shall be relying
upon the processed yeasts and
algae for protein."
"One would think that these
ships could carry meat," said
Kennedy. I didn't like the
way that he accented the last
word.
SPACESHIPS have often
been likened to sailing
ships—mainly, I think, be-
cause both made long voyag-
es. But it is, in many ways, a
false analogy. When the old
windjammer pulled out on her
long drag round the Horn,
those on board knew that they
had a sporting chance of mak-ing a quick passage—a combi-nation of skillful Captain andsheer, blind luck could short-
en the trip by weeks. Then,too, those on board—crew andpassengers—had much moreto break the monotony thanhas the interplanetary voyag-er. There was the occasional
passing ship, now and again
the sight of land, and alwaysthe changing sea and sky. Thespacefarer is better housed,
better fed and far more pam-pered than was ever the sea-
farer—but the oft-breathed air
is stale, the too-often-used wa-ter is flat, and there is no oth-
er scenery than metal bulk-
heads, and ship fittings, and
the emptiness outside at
which it is not good to look.
People, in the spaceship, bulk
bigger than ever they did in
any other form of transport.
The ship, for most of her voy-
age, is no more than a hugeprojectile, dumbly obeying
the laws of ballistics, over the
movements of which tine crew
exercise a very limited d*^*of control.
Much of my time was taken
up by organising, in conjunc-
tion with Helen Rand, our
Chief Hostess, various sports
and games to alleviate the
boredom of both passengers
and staff. There was a darts
tournament, and a table tennis
tournament, and all the usual
card games. There was the in-
evitable moment—it comes onevery voyage—when our Chefdowned tools and said that
23 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
he'd like to see some of thepeople who were so fond ofcriticising do any better withthe limited range of materialsto hand. There was the cook-ing competition, open to any-body, but for which therewere surprisingly few en-trants—cooking for a familyis one thing, cooking for oversixty people is something elseagain. There were concerts.There were bull sessions atthe bar. There was the forma-tion and the breaking up ofcliques. There was gossip, andthere was scandal. And, un-knowing—uncaring, the shipfell on and down to Earth'sorbit.
pQR THE first few weeks* Kennedy kept out of myhair. He had innumerablenotes, made on his Martiantour, to lick into shape. Ex-cept for meals, he kept to hiscabin, and the faint clickingof his lightweight portabletypewriter could be heard atall hours of the arbitrary dayand night. Trainer, the miningengineer at my table, was avery dull manger companion;his conversation consisted oflittle else but complaints.J^ynn Davies was more inter-esting—her stories of showpeople were always entertain-ing. She threw a wicked dartand, with her as a partner, Igot as far as the semi-finals inthe table tennis tournament.
Then, one day before lunch,Kennedy walked into myroom. Twayne was there, and
Vera Kent—one of the Assis-tant Hostesses—and LynnDavies. We were enjoying aquiet pink gin.
"Any for me?" asked Ken-nedy, helping himself to aglass and the gin bottle."We're rationed, you
know," I told him."Have one with me at the
bar before dinner," he said."Here's to crime."
"Have there been any goodones lately?" I asked.
"Funny you should ask," hesaid. "As a matter of fact I'vebeen sorting out my notes, asyou know. This affair—theone that I'm telling you about—was rather outside my am-bit, but I was knockingaround a great deal with myMartian opposite numbers—
>
do you know Graham of thePress? He's their crime re-porter—and looked in on thewhole business. It had allblown over by the time thatyou got in—but perhaps youremember the Latimer case,Miss Davies?"
"I do," she said.
*<HpHIS LATIMER," Ken-* nedy went on, "was an
archaeologist."
"He wrote 'The SleepingCities', didn't he?" I asked."Yes. Queer book; disturb-
ing, rather. I suggested to mybig white chiefs that since Iwas coming all the way toMars I might interview Lati-mer, and they told me thatshould they ever consider set-ting up a stall in the nut mar-
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 29
ket they'd let me know, bait
until such time I came about,
I should try not to confuse
the news pages with the com-
ic strips. Anyhow—this Lati-
mer got himself knocked off
—on the site of one of his
digs. No injuries, either ex-
ternal or internal ; no blunt in-
struments ; nothing to suggest
a dicky ticker; no expression
of frozen horror on the face
or in the staring eyes. Just-dead. Stopped. It hadn't been
sudden. He'd had time to
scrawl a few words in the
sand with his gloved finger.
He'd written, in clumsy block
capitals, THEY ARE GO...And then somebody, or some-
thing, had brushed out the
rest of it. His assistant says
he saw, or thought he saw, a
shadowy sort of creature scut-
tling away into the ruins."
"A sand hog?" suggested
Twayne.
"No; not according to the
account. It was too small,
much too small. And it wasn't
a sand worm, either; it had
legs."
"Imagination," I said.
"Wasn't there something
funny about the autopsy?"
asked Lynn Davies.
UV^EAH. WHAT was fun-
I ny about it was that
there wasn't one. Old Wallis,
the Chief of Police, wantedLatimer taken apart to see
what had made him stop tick-
ing. But there was a frantic
message from Earth, from the
old boy's only surviving sis-
ter, making it plain that she
wished to receive her dear
brother's corpse intact so that
he could be laid to rest in the
family vault. There was somesilly business about a mess upat the Resurrection if parts of
him were on Mars and parts
on Earth. And you know, as
well as I do, how much powerthese minority religiousgroups have these days. Sopoor old Latimer was shoved
into one of those fancy, her-
metically sealed containers,
just as he was, and there he'll
stay in his nice, inert atmos-
phere of morticon gas until
such time as he is delivered at
his sister's front door and she
opens the casket up to gaze
for the last time on the fea-
tures of her beloved brother."
"W hat was the sister's
name?" I asked casually.
"Let me see, now. Hendrik-son. Mrs. Phoebe Hendrik-son."
"Would she be a zoologist?"
burbled Twayne. "We've a
specimen, special stowage,
consigned to her."
I nudged him hard enough
to spill his gin, but too late to
stop him from spilling the
beans.
"I don't see why you had to
bother with those acceleration
springs," said Kennedy. "I
don't think that Latimer is
going to feel any jolts."
SO THE CAT was partly
out of the bag. Twayneand the Assistant Hostess
could be told to keep quiet
30 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
about it all, Kennedy andLynn Davies could only beasked. And then I had to goand tell Captain Gale about itall. He took it rather betterthan I had anticipated, seemedpleased, rather than other-wise, to learn the identity ofthe corpse."You know, Mr. West," he
said, "I should have countedit a very great honour to havecarried Howard Latimer, werehe still with us...""He is with us, sir; very
much so."
"You know what I mean,West." He indicated a bookon his desk. "Oddly enoughI'm in the middle of readinghis 'The Sleeping Cities'. Hehad something, you know; hisinterpretation of the hiero-glyphs, fantastic though itmay sound, seems to make bet-ter sense than the more ortho-dox ones. After all—we'vefound the ruins, and we'vefound the artifacts, but nevera fossil, never a mummy, noth-ing at all to let us know whatthe old Martians were like.They're sleeping: somewhere,Latimer said. They're sleep-ing, waiting until some un-heard-of climatic cycle re-stores air and water toMars . . .
*
"Once the air and waterhave gone," I said, "they'regone'9
"Well, then, waiting untilcom- mugs of outsiders re-store the air and water forthem.
"If their science was as
good as all that, sir, thensurely they could have builtthemselves rockets and madethe voyage to Earth or Ve-nus."
"Perhaps their science ranon different lines to ours. Justfor the sake of argument
—
suppose that they specialised,say, in biology and psycholo-gy. What use would thatknowledge be in developingspace flight?"
"We had to use plenty oteach."
y
"M'm. Yes. Anyhow—im-press upon Twayne and MissKent that they aren't tobreathe a word of this Lati-mer business to anyone. I'llsee Kennedy and Miss Daviesmyself."
STILL DON'T know whowas responsible for the
leakage—but leakage therewas. I don't think that it wasKennedy, I'm almost certainthat it wasn't Twayne. Itwasn't Lynn Davies. For mymoney it was Vera Kent.Whoever it was didn't reallymatter; it was the Chief Pilot—me—who was blamed.At first, the Old Man didn't
think that it was such a badthing after all. It gave thepassengers—and the staff-something to talk about, tooktheir minds off the maliciousgossip and scandal. And itprovided material for at leastthree Brains Trust sessions onthe old Martian civilisation,in the course of w" aegood sense and a deal of fan-
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 3!
tastk nonsense was talked.
So, for a white, for an arbi-
trary week or so, all wentwell. And then, subtly yet un-
mistakably, morale began to
deteriorate. One cause of this
was a silly woman among the
passengers, a psychic, she said
—a charlatan, I would say.
Madame Kapitaa she called
herself (Lynn Davies, whoknew people on the fringes of
snow business as well as the
legitimates, said that her real
name was Smith). Anyhow,this Madame Kapitza insisted
on holding a seance. And with
whom should she get in touch
—after, of course, formal in-
troductions by her Spirit
Guide—but the ghost of How-ard Latimer.
Yes, said Mr. Latimer, it
was beautiful where he was,
and he was very happy. Eve-
rybody—or every spirit—wasvery happy. But. . . He didn't
like his sister, he was alleged
to have said. He didn't like
the family vault. He had been
taken away from his life
work, on Mars; he would sug-
gest, respectfully, that Cap-
tain Gale turn the ship
around, build up acceleration
in the general direction of the
Red Planet, then consign the
coffin and its contents to the
deeps of space. He, Latimer,
would see to it that it made a
landing on Mars, in the vicin-
ity of one of the Sleeping
Cities.
NONE OF the staff attend-
ed the absurd attempt at
ghost raising— I got the
whole silly story from Kenne-
dy and Lynn Davies. "I could
have done better myself," said
Lynn. "I may be only a con-
juror's assistant, but I've
learned a few tricks. Youshould have seen it! That
phoney ectoplasm! She'd nev-
er have gotten away with it
on the stage F
The Old Man wasn't at all
pleased when I told him of
what had been going on. Hecouldn't very well stop it—as
I have said before, the laws
protecting religious minori-
ties are very stringent; Ma-
dame Kapitza had only to
raise the cry of "Persecu-
tion r to get us all into very
serious trouble. All that he
could do was to invite the big,
fat "medium" up to his roomfor cocktails and try to per-
suade her that she must, some-
how, have got the wires
crossed and that it was Lati-
mer's dearest wish to be bur-
ied on his home planet. Thedoubling of her personal liq-
uor ration helped to persuade
her that this was so. "Thank
God/' said Captain Gale to meafterwards, "that there [re
more than one kind of spirit P
THE NEXT piece of minor
unpleasantry was the dele-
gation of passengers, led by
Trainer, who maintained that
the body carried the germs of
some hitherto unknown Mar-
tian plague, and that it should
be incontinently dumped, in
the interests of both the ship
32 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
and of the human race in gen-eral. The answer to this de-mand was an uncompromisingNo—and there weren't anyfree drinks involved, either.
Then, as was reported byour Surgeon, there was an out-break of unidentified and un-identifiable aches and pains,all of which must be, so saidthe sufferers, symptoms ofthe unknown plague.
Still—we coped ; we had to.
We crammed more organisedfun and games into a day thanthe average passenger shipsees in a week. We posted apermanent watch of cadets onthe door leading aft to thecargo space—this was afterTrainer, accompanied by Ken-nedy and Madame Kapitza,had been caught trying topick the lock with a piece ofcunningly bent wire.
Kennedy was unrepentant."After all," he said, "this is
news. Or it's the nearest weget to news in this tin coffindangling in hard vacuum. Ijust wanted to see the ol3boy, slung there in his casketin his spider web of springs."
"You could have asked," Isaid.
"All right. I am asking."
^"I'm having my weekly rou-
tine inspection of the cargospace tomorrow. Subject tothe Master's approval, you cancome with me. You won't seeanything."
"I'll come, all the same.""Subject to the Master's ap-
proval."
RATHER to my surprise,the Master did approve.
And so, at 1000 hours, car-rying keys and torches, Ken-nedy and I pulled ourselvesaft along the well to the big,circular door. The duty cadethelped us to open it, to hookit back.
There wasn't much to beseen. From the central shaft,the radial alleyways ran out tothe skin of the ship; betweenthe alleyways were the cargobins. Kennedy showed inter-est in the shipment of whisky,the securely lashed andchocked casks whose contents,having made the round Earth-Mars voyage, would be sold atfantastic prices in the moreritzy bars of Earth.
"I never could tell the dif-ference," he said; "but it's agood racket."
"So are these dried sandworms," I told him. "They'reworth their weight in plati-num in Shanghai. Pickledones in this bin—it's claimedthat acceleration, decelera-tion, radiation and all the restof it complete the maturingprocess."
"To hell with pickled sandworms. I want to see a pickledarchaeologist."
"All right. Number 6 Bin-where are the keys? Ah, herewe are."
I unlocked and opened thedoor, switched on the lights.There wasn't much to see;there was just a wooden case,with stencilled marks andnumbers, suspended in the
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 33
cunningly devised network of
fine, steel springs.
UJ DON'T like the way it's
Aquivering," said the news-
man.
"It's bound to quiver.There's always vibration in a
ship—generators and othei
auxiliary machinery, evenpeople walking around.
Look!" I stamped hard on the
web frame on which we werestanding; the big case shook
in its web like an infuriated
spider.
"What was that noise ?"
"Come off it, Kennedy;you're as bad as that old witch
Kapitza. Haven't you ever
heard springs creaking be-
fore?""M'm. Yes. But...""Whoever oiled the springs
last didn't make a very good
job of it," I said. "Well, that's
all."
"O.K.," said Kennedy."Thanks."
We locked the door—and I
don't mind admitting that I
wasn't sorry to hear the click-
ing of the wards. I'd rational-
ised the quivering mentioned
by Kennedy—but I'd failed to
convince myself that it wasdue to ship vibration. I'd car-
ried cargo in special stowagebefore—but never before had
I noticed that much motion in
the spring webbing. Thatmust have been, I told myself,
because I'd never been looking
for it.
As we pulled ourselves back
forward along the central wall
I had to fight hard to preventmyself from looking behind.
My feeling of unease lasted
until I was invited to stop at
the bar by Kennedy. A secondstiff whisky chased the form-
less fears out of my mind
—
for the time being.
THEN THERE was the
business of Minnie. She
was the ship's cat and was, I
think, senior to any of the hu-
man staff in years of service
in the one vessel. In spite of
her habit of having her kit-
tens in both unsuitable and
highly improbable places, she
was regarded with both toler-
ation and affection. She was—as cats can be—a person.
It was at 0430 hours, Green-
wich and Ship's Time. I'd tak-
en over the watch from youngWelby, the Third Pilot, and
was relaxed in the pilot's
chair, sipping a bulb of hot,
sweet tea. There was nothing
on the screens—nothing of
immediate interest, that is
—
and all the meters were show-
ing just what they should
show. Rawson, Senior Cadet
and my junior watchkeeper,
was making his rounds and
would shortly be along to re-
port all well.
He was along shortly, but
not to report all well. Helooked upset about something.
"Well?" I asked.
"It's Minnie, sir."
"What about her? She can't
be having any more kittens;
not yet. The current issue's
only just got its eyes open."
34 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"She's...dead.""What? Dead? Minnie
dead?""Yes, sir. You know that lit-
tle alleyway by the linen lock-er, where Minnie has the box<vith the kittens in it. I lookedin there, just to speak to her,and I found her dead.""Who did it? If I find
out...""I don't think it was any-
body, sir;- there weren't anymarks. But it looked asthough she'd been fightingsomething, trying to keep it
away from the kittens.""Were they all right?""Yes."
I finished my tea, filled andlit my pipe. I remembered,suddenly, Trainer and his ab-surd story about unknownMartian plagues. It scared me."Rawson," I said, "go to
your room, and scrub yourhands— I suppose that youtouched the poor brute. Scrubyour hands thoroughly; thengo and give the Surgeon mycompliments, ask him to ex-amine the body. I'll call theOld Man,"
CAPTAIN GALE awoke al-
most as soon as I buzzedhim. "Yes?" came his irritablebark through the telephone."Yes? What is it, West?"
I told him.
He didn't waste any time bywanting to know what the hellI meant by calling him out atthis hour of the morning overa dead cat. He just said thathe'd be on the bridge at once.
Clad in his dressing gown,he was with me in a matter ofseconds. He took the otherchair. He told me to carry onsmoking, poked tobacco intothe bowl of his own pipe witha stubby forefinger and lit up.I told him what had happened,what I had done."You were right," he said.
"No matter what the cause ofdeath, we can't afford to takeany risks. This much we know—Latimer died the same way.Unluckily, there was no sus-picion of foul play and, there-fore, no autopsy. Even so, Ithink that the Police fell
down very badly in not havinga proper examination. Latimerdied and now M i n n i e'sdead..."
The buzzer sounded, andthe Old Man picked up thehandset. "Yes, Surgeon? Nota mark, you say? Well, takeher apart, man ; find out whatit was, if you can." He re-placed the instrument. Heasked half-seriously, "Havewe any Egyptians among thestaff or passengers? We don'twant any religious minoritiesto interfere with this dissec-tion."
TT WAS A little after 0630A hours when the Surgeon re-ported to the bridge in per-son.
"I'm not a vet.," he said,"but I think I should be ableto find out how, or why, anyanimal died. Regarding Min-nie—I can't. She just
—
stopped. I even shaved her.
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 35
There's a tiny puncture at the
base of the right ear, but no
swelling or discolouration/*
"Poison ?" asked the Old
Man."It could be; it just could
be. But there's the lack of
symptoms. And, unluckily, I
haven'f a fully-equipped labo-
ratory. .
."
"Come to that," I said, "she
could have made this puncture
herself. Scratching."
"Come that that," agreed
the Surgeon, "she could."
"Have her passed out
through the garbage shutc,"
said the Old Man."It'd be better," said the
Surgeon, "if we found room
for her in the domestic freez-
er."
"It would not," said Cap-
tain Gale. "If it is some sort
of fancy plague, her body'll
carry the germs of it. .
."
The Surgeon paled. "I dis-
sected her," he said.
1 LOOKED at the Old Manand he looked at me. The
Old Man drew deeply on his
pipe, then took it out of his
mouth. He said—"My apolo-
gies, Surgeon; I should have
thought of that. But we don t
know that it is plague. Andsurely, in all the years that
we've been on Mars, any local
disease would have struck
long before now. And it'd
take a tough germ to break
out of Latimer's hermetically
sealed casket. Nobody's who's
touched or handled the case
has been ill-**
"No," I said.
"Even so," said Captain
Gale, "we'll consign the body
to Space. I may be oldfash-
ioned—but I just don't fancy
the idea of having skinned,
eviscerated cat, even Minnie,
stowed amonw. such frozen
meats as we have carefully
conserved for the Farewell
Dinner. It'd put me off myturkey. Furthermore—wehave the kittens. II mother
had some rare disease, the
odds are that they will have
caught it, too, that they will
succumb long before anv of
the human beings. So, Sur-
geon, as and from now, you
are O.C. cats. Treat Minnie's
children as you would your
own. And if any of 'em kick
the bucket, let me know at
once."
"Don't you think, sir," I
suggested, "that we should
pass Latimer's body over-
side?""No. Please bear in mind,
Mr. West, that the Line is
being paid a considerable sum
in freight for the transporta-
tion of Latimer's corpse. We_or you—accepted liability
for it, and we're liable. If wejettison, and if they ask us
why, we'll say, 'Oh the cat
died'. Well?""General Average?" I mut-
tered.
"I can just see Lloyd s pay-
ing out their share, let alone
anybody else. No, Mr. West,
just dismiss any wild
thoughts you might have of
jettison."
36 SCIENCE RCTJON STORIES
"I think you're right there,"said the Surgeon. "After all—mvrticon gas has been provedlethal to every known type ofmicroorganism.
"
He looked a lot happier,until I muttered, "Everyknown type ..."
"Come and see me afterbreakfast," said the Old Manto the mdical officer. "Andbring your Surgeons Logwith you."
J^ENNEDY came up for a*V drink before lunch thatday.
"You know," he said, "weof the Press develop our ownspecial variety of E.S.P.There's some kind of a flapin progress—I can feel it inmy water. Where's thatcharming cat, by the way, andher charming kittens?"
"She was sleeping in one ofthe cross alleyways," I lied."Young Rawson was makinghis rounds this morning; hetrod on her."
"That's not lethal, surely?""In this case it was.""And the kittens?""The Surgeon's looking af-
ter them."
"Lots of people," I said,don't like cats, but like kit-
tens."
"I've got a hunch," saidKennedy. "Shall you and Itake a stroll down to the careospace?"
6
«TT'S NEITHER the timeA nor the day for inspec-tion." Then I realised that
Kennedy was deadly serious,was badly scared about some-thing. His hand, as put theglass down, was quiveringperceptibly, and I remem-bered that quivering case inits network of steel springs.
"The Time Capsules," saidKennedy suddenly. "You'veheard of them? They've found'em in all the ruined cities,assumed that they were on thesame lines as the ones weleave loafing around—rollsof microfilm, specimen news-papers and all the rest of it.
All the ones they've managedto open so far have had noth-ing but dust inside—Latimerreckoned that this was be-cause of faulty workmanshipon the part of the manufac-turers. There were the twohalves of one of the capsuleswhere Latimer's body wasfound—and I've heard thatthere wasn't any dust in-side. .
."
"The wind blew it out," Isaid.
"Maybe. But I shouldn'tmind betting, West, that if wego aft now, and break openthe case, open the casket, weshan't find much left ofLatimer.""Rubbish."
"It's not rubbish. You'veread 'The Sleeping Cities/You know what Latimer reck-oned the old Martians werelike—something on the linesof arthropods rather thanmammals something living ina sort of symbiosis with thesand hogs . .
.
"
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 37
"All theories," I said. "Alltheories. Not an atom ofproof."
"I lied to you/' said Ken-nedy slowly, "when I said thatI had a hunch. I've more thana hunch." With his left handhe tapped the little presscamera that he wore always onhis right wrist. "I alwayskeep Betsy loaded and ready.You never know, do you? Andlast night I thought I saw. .
.
something, flickering alongthe alleyway outside myroom. I shot from the cuff."He pulled his notecase fromhis pocket, took from it a sin-
gle, tiny print. From anotherpocket he pulled a magnifier."No facilities on board forenlarging," he said. "But,look."
I looked.
THERE WAS something in
the alleyway. It wasblurred, and it seemed to be at
least semi-transparent. Per-haps it was the semitrans-parency that made it look, to
my eyes, like something that
should have been driftingaround in the clear water of arock pool rather than alongan alleyway of an interplane-tary ship. The body was indis-
tinct, but seemed to be cov-ered with chitinous armour.There was a bundle of fea-
thery appendages that couldhave been legs, tentacles, an-tennae—or all three. Therewas a pair of stalked eyes.
"Kennedy, You swear thatthis isn't a trick photograph?"
"I swear it," he said grimly.I believed him, and said so.
"Then what are we waitingfor?" he asked."We must see the Old Man,
now.""It's wasting time.""Don't be absurd. You were
long enough coming to seeme after you got the photo-graph developed, and youwere long enough coming tothe point after you did seeme."
"I suppose I was. I've beentrying to convince myselfthat the camera wasn't lying.I've been trying to find otherevidence—but I haven't doneso yet. The only way to findout for sure is to open upthat casket."
"You mean," I said bitterly,
"that Jake Kennedy, our starreporter has been trying tosolve the case singlehandedwhile the poor, ignorantspacemen bumble around all
unknowing of the dreadfulfate from which the pride ofthe press is trying to savethem."He had the grace to blush."All right. Bring your pho-
tograph, and we'll go and seethe Captain."
WAS SURPRISED bythe Old Man's reception of
Kennedy's story. But then, hewas an admirer of Latimer's,must have at least half be-lieved the man's theories. Hewent to his safe, took outthree five millimetre automa-tics, each with a full clip offorty rounds. He said, briefly,
i
33 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"Mr. West—how often is the
door to the cargo space
opened?""Once daily, sir, when Raw-
son checks the temperatures."
"And it's hooked back, of
course, when he's inside...
And Number Six bin—is
there any way in or out whenthe door is locked ?"
"Yes, sir. A cranked venti-
lating shaft."
"H'm. Get your keys, andthree torches. You and Ken-nedy had better take a pistol
each—here. Oh—get two of
your cadets along with the
tools for opening a case."
IWENT, THEN, to get the
keys and to organise the
cadets for the working party.
The Old Man and Kennedywere waiting for us, in the
central well, when we got aft.
We opened the door, dropped
aft to the correct radial alley-
way, clambered down the lad-
der to the most convenient
web frame. I unlocked the
door of Number Six bin,
swung it open and hooked it
tack. "The case was still there,
hanging quietly in the accel-
eration springs.
"It's not quivering now,"whispered Kennedy. "It's not
quivering. .."
"Unhook it," ordered Cap-tain Gale. "Unhook it. Lift
it down and out."
We unhooked it, carefully
lifted it out into the narrowalleyway. It was then that wesaw that the back of it, the
side of it that had been hid-
den from view, was riddled
with holes, large, raggedholes, each about two inches
in diameter. The three of us
stood with pistols ready whilethe two cadets stripped the
weakened woodwork from the
casket. The casket was still
there—but it, too, had beendamaged in the same way as
had been its wooden casing. I
switched on my torch, shonethe beam in through the holes.
So far as I could see, the cas-
ket was empty.
The Old Man laughed—
a
bitter, humourless sound.
"You've proved your theories,
Latimer," he said. "Pity that
you had to do it in my ship.
Mr. West!""Sir?"
"We'll hold an officers'
conference, at once, on the
bridge. On your way forwardget hold of the Senior Host-ess, tell her to have all the
passengers, and all the staff
who aren't at the conference,gathered in the saloon—and to
keep the doors shut. And you,
as soon as you get up to the
bridge, shut all the air-tight
doors/'
IT WAS WHILE we weredis-cussing ways and means
on the bridge that the real
trouble started. By closing
the airtight doors, we hadmerely succeeded in shuttingup the Martians in the samesection of the ship as our ownpeople. They must have beenhiding in the ventilating
shafts—in any case, it was
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 39
from the trunking that theydropped down into the crowd-ed saloon. There was panicwith that first attack, blindfear as the flimsy monstrosi-ties drifted through thecrowded compartment, lash-
ing right and left with their
hair thin cilia.
There was the crackling ofelectrical discharge, the acridodour of ozone. There was theChef running berserk with hiscarving knife, avoiding elec-
trocution by a miracle, andthe retreat of the invaders to
the trunkways. All this wemissed, hearing the shoutingand the screaming but arriv-
ing on the scene too late to
play any part in the initial
skirmish. When we droppedinto the saloon from the cen-
tral well we found seven hu-man dead stretched out on thedeck and, a little way fromthem, two slashed and tattered
things with crumpled, trans-
parent armour, flimsy, brokenlegs and antennae sprawled in
a pool of sour smelling bodyfluids.
"I got them," shouted theChef wildly, waving his longknife. "I got them ; they weretrying to drag her away withthem." He pointed to one of
the bodies. It was that of Ma-dame Kapitza.
Suddenly the Old Man wasan old man. He called theChief Hostess from the hud-dled crowd, said, "Tell uswhat happened.*'
SHE WAS badly shaken,but she told us, wasting no
words, omitting nothing. Shestressed the seemingly elec-
trical nature of the Martians*natural weapons, supportedthe Chef in his assertion thatthere had been an attempt to
capture at least one of thevictims.
"See if artificial respirationis any good," said the Captainto the Surgeon. "You, West,and you, Kennedy keep yourpistols handy watch the ven-tilators." He walked to thetwo Martian bodies andstirred one with the toe of
his shoe. "They're flimsybrutes. Mr. Twayne, comewith me back to the bridge.
Mr. West—you're in chargehere in my absence. I'm goingto cut the spin, then I'm goingto slam on five gravities ac-
celeration—so make sure that
everybody's prone when I doso.
I started to consider whatorders I should have to give.
First, with the spin cut, therewould be weightlessness to
contend with. Then, when thedrive started, what had beenthe after bulkhead would be-
come the deck. I should belucky if we completed themanouevre without any bro-
ken bones. But to send passen-gers and personnel to their
cabins, to their accelerationcouches, would be out of thequestion.
Meanwhile—what freedomof movement had the Martiansgot? In our hasty scramble
40 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
from the bridge to the saloon
we had opened the airtight
doors again. Until they wereshut once more, all the ven-
tilation system was a highwayto the invaders—a highwaythat they would not be able
to use when crushed by acce-
leration.
IWATCHED the Captain,
followed by Twayne, mountthe flimsy folding staircase
that led "up" to the central
well. I saw him pause at the
head of it as he opened the
door. I saw the shadowy formin the near darkness, and the
lashing cilia, and I fired—butI was too late. For a long mo-ment Twayne clung desper-
ately to the handrails, but the
Captain's weight had caughthim off balance and, together,
they fell. Twayne got to his
feet uninjured. The Old Mandidn't move."Mr. Twayne," I said, "get
on the blower to the bridge.
See if Welby's all right."
Twayne walked slowly to
the intercom telephone,dialled, held the hand set to
his ear. "There's no reply,"
he said.
"Do something!" screameda woman. "You're in charge.Do something!''"Has anybody got any sug-
gestions?" I asked.Lynn Davies came to my
side. She must have comestraight from the sports roomwhen the initial alarm wasgiven—her costume, whatthere was of it, left very little
to the imagination. Shegrinned and said, "I couldhand you a top hat, and youcould pull a white rabbit
from it."
"Thanks, Lynn," I said;
"but I'm afraid that whiterabbits wouldn't be muchgood right now."
But I was glad to have herwith me, glad to find that one,
at least, of the passengers wascool enough to joke aboutwhat was a very nasty pre-
dicament.
"We could parley," said
Trainer.
"Parley? How?""They must have a lang-
uage."
"And they know it," I said,
"and we don't."
"Yes. You could parley"said a new voice.
ALL OF US turned to starein amazement at the after
ventilating shaft. It was darkinside, and we could see little
but vague movement, a stir-
ing of shadows. 4(You couldparley," said the voice again.The voice? It was more like
the sound of the wind in trees,
somehow shaping itself intosyllables and words rustling,
expressionless.
"Who are you?" I asked."What are you?"
"J am the. . .mother. Thequeen. As a larva I fed on thecells of the being you call
Latimer. I fed on the cells; ofhis brain—and ate his knowl-edge and his memories. .
."
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN
"Impossible !" barked theSurgeon.
"J am the queen, and theothers are my. . .slaves. I car-ry in me the seed of the race,and the memories and theknowledge of all our hostsfrom the beginning. The wiseones said that we were tosleep, and that some day new,young beings would dropdown from the stars and thatwe would start anew. We arestarting anew."
"You're not," I said.
"But we are. We hold thislittle flying world you cell
a ship. You cannot move fromthis ceil in which we hold youcaptive."
"All right. What do youwant?"
"We want one of the tinyships, the lifeboats, youcall them. We know that yourrace holds our world and is
too strong to be evicted. Weknow that we could never con-quer your world. But thereare other worlds among thestars and we shall find one."
T FELT A stab of sympathy-• for the strange being, for its
pitiful naivity, for its foolishdream of making an inter-
stellar voyage in a lifeboat. It
was plain to see that Latimerhad known little of astro-nautics.
"How will you navigate?"asked Twayne."Navigate? Oh yes. The
young being who was at thecontrols of this ship has
41
been. . .stopped, and now car-ries our seed. The mother,when she is mature will holdall his memories and knowl-edge. But we must have morehosts. The ones we . . . killed inthe fight are no longer freshenough""How many?" I asked,
hoping that by prolongingthis crazy, nightmarish con-versation I should learn some-thing which would aid us inour fight against the Mar-tians.
"Six. They must be young,and half of either sex.""Agreed !" shouted some-
body. "Take the six hosts, andgo!"
I turned to see who it wasthat had spoken. It was anold man, someone who knewthat he would not be required.I said coldly, "I'm in chargehere. I haven't capitulated;I'm trying to find out whatwe're up against.""You make treaties," said
the voice. "You make treaties,
and you honour them. Surelywhat I ask is not much.""All right," I said; "wc
make treaties. But I'd like tosee what I'm making a treatywith."
"You shall. But you arearmed. Have I your word thatyou will not use your weap-ons?""You have," I said, after a
long hesitation. "Have I
yours?""Don't be a fool, West,"
cried Twayne."Let him play it his own
42 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
way," whispered Kennedy."You have our word" said
the voice.
SLOWLY, slowly the thing
lowered itself from the
ventilator. It was like the
beings that had already been
killed, but far larger. I stared,
fascinated, at the internal or-
gans which, clearly visible
through the transparent ar-
mour swelled and pulsed.
That must be the heart, I de-
cided, and that the brain. . .
Somebody screamed, andLynn Davies' fingers dugpainfully into my arm. Theworst part of all was the ex-
posed vocal chords of the
brute, and the way in whichthey quivered when it spoke.
"I find you repulsive, too"it said.
"Drop that!" I heard Ken-nedy say.
I turned to see that Kenne-dy had caught Twayne's armbefore he could bring his pis-
tol to bear.
"You are not to be trusted"
said the Martian. Swiftly it
pulled itself back inside the
ventilator.
"I gave my word/' I said to
Twayne. "I'm in the habit of
keeping it.1 '
"You gavea. . .a prawn!"Second Pilot.
"Stalemate,"geon.
your word to
spluttered the
said the Sur-
CiTT WILL beA before they
a long timehave their
navigator, anyhow," I re-
marked.. ."Not long" said the Mar-
tian. "Our seed grows fast. Al-
ready my mind talks to the
mind of my daughter queen.
Already I am learning, fromher, more and more about this
flying world of yours."
"Bluff," I said—then re-
membered how Latimer's bodyhad been preserved. It maywell have been that the mor-ticon gas had slowed down the
growth of the seed. Anyhow,there was one comfortingthought. The Martiansseemed to have telepathy—butonly among themselves.
"I grow impatient," said the
Martian. "I shall be in the ad-
joining cell. Send in your six
hosts one by one, that I mayplant the seed in their bodies""And if we refuse?"
"/ told you, I talk with mydaughter queen. I learn howthe flying world is built. I
know that I can shut all doors
to your cell, and let the air
blow out into the emptiness
outside. One by one, I say, to
the number of six, three maleand three female, and with novseapons. Should any try to
attack mo—then the order
goes to my slaves to openthe. . .valves. And I do not
wish to be kept waiting."
Abruptly, a clanging soundcame from the orifice of the
ventilator. I saw that the air
tight seal had slid into place
It was obvious that the Mar-tian had not been bluffing.
"Are you calling for volun-
ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN 43
teers?" asked Twayne. "Orcasting lots?"
THERE WAS a painfulsinging in my ears. I swal-
lowed, and it ceased. "A re-
minder/' I said—and even to
myself my voice sounded thin
and faint. When the airtight
door into the Sports Roomslid open the sudden restora-
tion of normal pressure mademe giddy.
"Someone has to be first,"
said Lynn Davies. She lookeddown at herself with a ruefulsmile. "At least, they'll neverthink that I'm armed. I
couldn't hide a penknife in
this rig!"
Her face pale, but with headheld high, she walked to the
partly open door. "Lynn!" I
cried, putting out a futile
hand to stop her.
"Let her go," snarledTwayne.
I shook him off, started
after the girl. I felt in the
waistband of my shorts for
the pistol, but it was gone. It
didn't matter; fists and feet
would be more satisfying.
In the doorway stood twoof the smaller Martians, cilia
waving. I'd have blundered in
to them, been electrocuted, if
Kennedy hadn't caught me."You can't do anything!" heshouted. "You can't do any-thing!"Something in the tone of
his voice calmed me down. Heknew something, I could tell.
But what?Together we watched the
girl walk slowly to the mon-strosity that squatted—andthe incongruiy almost sent meino a fit of hysterical laugh-ter—on the tennis table. Wewatched the waving antennae,the slow unsheathing of whatmust be the oviposter. Ken-nedy's gun was out and ready—and then the door shut.
"She'll make out," said Ken-nedy.
"What do you mean?*'
In answer, muffled by themetal of the door, there camethe sound of five rounds rapidfire. Then, after a pause, threesingle shots. Then silence.
When the telephone buzzedI ran to it, snatched the in-
strument out of its rest.
"Lynn here," said the voice.
"All the doors are shut. Howdo I get out of here?"
WE GOT HER out, even-tually, and got ourselves
out of the saloon. We had to
force our way into the ven-tilating system—doing irre-
parable damage to the sealing
plates, and work our way to
the bridge. We found several
of the smaller Martians, butthey were all dead. We found,too, Welby's body—and it wasnot a pleasant sight stirring
and . .rippling as it was withalien life. I had it carried at
once to the nearest airlock
and jettisoned without cere-
mony.When it was all over, when
the ship had settled downonce more to an approxima-tion of normal routine, I sat
44 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
with Lynn and Kennedy, try-
ing to piece together an ac-
count of what had happenedfor the Official Log."And now, Lynn/' I said,
"let's have your side of it."
"Well," she said "it seemedto me to be fairly obvious that
the queen was running thewhole show by telepathic con-trol. I thought that once shewas dead the workers—or theslaves, as she called them
—
would be pretty helpless. It
so happens that they wereeven more helpless than I
thought—too helpless to go
on living. Anyhow, I had to
kill the queen.""But how?""With your automatic, of
course."
"But you were unarmed ; I'd
swear to that."
"I told you once," she said,
"that I was hoping to start myown magic show. How could I
hope to pull the wool over the
eyes of an intelligent, humanaudience if I couldn't fool
just one, stupid cross betweena prawn and a queen bee?"
Next Time Around
When I typed the copy for this department last time, I wasin a slate of most nnblissful ignorance. I had no idea what a jobit would be to get Science Fiction Stories on to a monthly sched-ule. It's going to take a little longer than I thought — but bar-
ring utter disaster, you'll see the change in 1957.
Meanwhile, Frank Kelly Freas has painted a delightful cover
for our next issue from an as-yet untitled story by Robert Silver-
berg.o
The July issue will mark the return to our pages of a gentlemanwho's made quite a mark in science fiction, but who hasn't been
very frequently of late. I refer to Fritz Leiber, who offers usanother one of those short stories with a punch. The title is "Fern-
mequin 973".
frdlfaMal
PROPHECY
THE WORD "prophecy"makes you think ofbearded patriarchs,
lean, ascetic men crying in thewilderness, a turbaned figure
peering into a crystal globe, ayoung woman in a trance, anold woman with a deck of
cards or a dish of tea leaves, asharp-featured figure atop asoap box. Prophets, seers, for-
tunes e 1 1 e r s, visionaries . .
.
some assuring that all is well
—
there will be good luck, love,
happiness . . . some crying hav-oc. . .
Then perhaps you think of
the "inside" man who makesinformed predictions. . .a newscommentator, a statistician
outlining trends, predictions of
the way an election will go,
choices for the finishing lineup
of the major league baseball
teams, the daily weather fore-
casts . .
.
And someone will say, now
and then, that science fiction is
—or ought to be—prophecy.An oldtime fan with a good,though highly selective, mem-ory may start reeling off the
various wonders that science
fiction predicted: ocean-cross-
ing dirigibles; air conditioning;
the superiority of heavier-than-
air over lighter-than-air flying
machines; television; transat-
lantic telephones; the tank;
pneumatic tubes; magneticlights; Musak; aircraft-as-a-
devastation weapon; limita-
tions of aircraft as a conquer-ing weapon; labor unions as
big business; socialist imperial-
ism; control of pupulations bypropaganda machines; radar;
teaching one in one's sleep—all
these, and many others before
the first issue of Amazing Sto-
ries appeared on the news-stands. Most of the stories, of
course, merely described whatthe devices did—they didn't go
45
46 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
into the theoretical principles.
Hugo Gernsback was a notable
exception.
Then, after we get into the
magazine era, our selcctivc-
memoried fan will go on into
atomic power, rocketry, and so
on.
¥ EMPHASIZE the selective
-^ aspect of memory in this
connection, because most fans
forget, when they're off onsuch a track, that no science
fiction author (by adoption,
since the term didn't exist be-
fore 1929) described the auto-
mobile, the motion picture, or
radio before the fact—three of
the most fundamental indus-
tries and social forces in our
century.
L. Sprague de Camp pointed
out, some five years ago, that
if you ratio the realized predic-
tions to the wrong guesses, as
well as consider important de-
velopments that were not fore-
seen at all, then the record of
science fiction as prophecy is
no better than any other meansof visioning things to come. I
think Sprague was being ex-
tremely charitable; considering
the fact that science fiction au-
thors (supposedly) have been
speculating on the basis of ex-
trapolation from the "knowTn"
at the moment, my impression
is that science fiction writers,
as a whole, do not compare fa-
vorably with any competent
palmist. (A competent palmist
starts out by telling you vari-
ous generalities about yourself,
a number of which will be star-
tlingly accurate—enough to
impress you and make youtend to overlook wrong guesses
and significant omissions. The"prophecies" come later. Just
how the palmist does it is be-
side the point.)
Science fiction writersshould be better prophets than
they seem to have been.
What's wrong? Well, there are
a number of things.
CROM THE time that Amaz-* ing Stories started using newmaterial instead of "classic"
reprints, the scientific compe-tence of the fiction began to
decline, while the literary com-petence—after a rather grue-
some transition period—in-
creased. Only a minority of sci-
entists are even tolerably goodfiction writers; only a minori-
ty of good writers are tolerably
competent in any field of sci-
ence.
2) Most science fiction writ-
ers haven't been particularly
interested in getting a sound
foundation in general science.
Of the few that started with it,
or who managed to get it none-
theless, only a minority were
able to keep up with the latest
developments.
3) In the last decade, even
PROPHECY 47
the most dedicated couldn't
keep up with discoveries anddevelopments in their ownfield, let alone with science in
general. Too much basic infor-
mation is restricted.
4) All-around, sound specu-
lation on possible futures, evenwhere the author has sufficient
foundation in a wide variety of
fields, runs headlong into so
many tabus (tacit as well as
explicit) that the odds are too
great against the author's sell-
ing his story. Even if readers
were not shocked, or someoneimportant didn't think it wassubversive, such stories wouldbe good runners-up to "Finne-
gans Wake" for incomprehensi-
bility on the mass level. More-over, it's a very human ten-
dency to assume that when anauthor indulges in speculations,
he is stating his personal be-
liefs. And the more generally
"popular" science fiction be-
comes, the less rein for free
speculation into social effects
and possibilities the authors
will have.
•V7-ET DESPITE all this, I
•* contend that science fiction—"good" science fiction—is
mostly "prophecy", or should
be. When I say "is prophecy"I mean "has the function of
prophecy".
Because, you see, there's an-
other meaning to "prophet"and "prophecy".
The Old Testament pro-
phets, for the most part, did
not predict coming events, norwere they trying to. A "pro-phet" in those days, true,
might make an occasional pre-
diction (which, on the basis of
a sound appraisal of then-cur-
rent trends might turn out to
be all too accurate), but that
wasn't his major function andno one expected it to be. Theprophet was an interpreter, anadmonisher, an exhorter, awarner, a testifier, a witn
He described fearlessly, andrecklessly, how miserable the
human moral situation was at
present, what in the light of
God's laws it ought to be, andwhat people ought to do aboutit. He testified to the Law andthe Commandents as they hadbeen given; bore witness to the
way in which they had beenflouted, forgotten, become in-
crusted with ritual and amony that perverted and or
buried their spirit, namednames and pointed a finger.
His manner was anything butingratiating, and he was exces-
sively unpopular with the au-
thorities.
Prophets who operate this
way usually are. Very few of
them know enough science to
be aware of the facts of inertia
as related to physics, let alone
the realities of inertia as relat-
ed to human behavior. Their
empathy rating is close to zero.
48 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
So when I say that I think
science fiction should be pro-
phecy in the sense of interpret-
ing science-in-society, in por-
traying what might be, or
should be, based upon sound
scientific speculation, I don't
mean that science fiction au-
thors should try to be contem-
porary versions of Isaiah, Jere-
miah, or John the Baptist.
WE HAVE learned a little
about psychology. Weknow that if we point a finger
at our fellow man, or fellow
men as a whole, and give forth
with sonorous denunciations—
however obvious and true
—
we're not going to accomplish
anything desirable.
When fiction is written with
the definite purpose of edify-
ing and uplifting, the result is
usually transparent propagan-
da and poor fiction. It was this
approach that made so manyof H. G. Wells 7
later works
humorless and tiresome lec-
tures and sermons. They were
the type of prophecy that de-
feats its intentions.
If you want to move a sta-
tionary freight car, as Dr.
Macklin pointed out, you have
to overcome the inertia. Theo-
retically, you can do it in two
ways: you can apply slow,
steady pressure, or you can
charge into it headlong again
and again and again. Actually,
if you try the latter method,
your head will be homogenized
long before there's any percep-
tible effect upon the freight
car.
The writer who takes "sci-
ence fiction is or should be
prophecy" to mean that "sci-
ence fiction should be written
with the purpose of reforming
whatever" is using his skull as
a battering ram. Let me put it
in plain terms: science fiction
should NOT be any kind of
propaganda.
There's a fundamental dif-
ference between propagandaand serious entertainment.
Propaganda has a specific
purpose: to inculcate specific
attitudes and inaugurate speci-
fic kinds of action.
Serious entertainment can
have the effect of making peo-
ple think. The creator of seri-
ous entertainment has workedout various intellectual andemotional ideas as thoroughly
and convincingly as he can.
He hasn't been lecturing or
preaching, even though the ef-
fect may be present.
Science fiction is, or should
be, serious entertainment;
when and where it is, the ef-
fect will be prophecy.
illustration by ORBAN
In a sense, Mover and Miss
Rose were both seeking the
same thing . # ,
FulfillmentJby JlwmaA 71. SooAiia
(author of "One Small Room")
THE HUNTER washere!In this system!
Mover diffused his tenuoussubstance through the stonefoundations of the old houseon Fourteenth Street andrested without form or move-ment. . .listening only. If hehad been capable of thoughtquite apart from the complexprotein molecules and the bio-chemical energy reactionsthat he normally activated, hemight have been alarmed atthe swiftness with which they
had found him. As it was heexisted as a passive receiveronly.
Mover did not think of es-
cape. The concept was com-pletely foreign to his nature.Fulfillment, yes; that was theimportant object. Fulfillmentand completeness. The an-droid creatures that his kindhad been created to activatewere his sole reason for ex-istance, the emotional sym-biosis in which he participat-ed his only purpose of being.There had been a ship, he
49
50 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
dimly remembered, and an-
other host. Then the suddenblossoming of fire from the
engines and the severing of
thought from limb as his
counterpart dissolved in in-
candescence.
Vaguely he missed the un-ion of love and hate and sub-
dued chemical passions. With-out them there was nothing.
But. ..
In the instant he was awareof that indefinable magnet-ism, the awareness of vacuum,of need, his essence churnedthrough the porous rock ofthe house's foundation, seek-ing. There was no barrier to
his passage. He was not really
matter, not as one generallyunderstands the term. Hewas as amorphous as groundmist, shaping himself to thedesires of that distant need.He began to diffuse up-
ward, probing at a distance,emotion by hidden emotion,analysing. At length, satis-
fied, he rested again, waitingfor the exact moment.He knew that he would not
have long to wait.
IT WAS ALWAYS thesame, Miss Rose thought.
Each weekday there was thedelicious monotony of schooland moist-eyed, tiny facesstaring up at her, pink cheeksflushed, hands fluttering like
small birds, never still. Andeach Thursday evening, thecard games with Mrs. Murge-son, the landlady, and MissQuinn, the other boarder.
When Mr. Langtree had beenwith them, she remembered,they had occasionally playedbridge; but Mr. Langtree hadmoved to Milwaukee three
weeks ago, and now there wasonly herself and the twoother women in the old house.
Instead of bridge, they sat
dully and played innummer-able variations of Rummy.And now this pattern
—
which was the sum of herlife—was soon to shatter
about her, she thought withan uneasy wavering of fear.
"My dear," Mrs. Murgesonsaid in her bull voice, as she
completed the seven-carddeal, "it must seem strange
to look forward after June to
sleeping late, and not goingto work.""Although, I confess, I'd
feel a little lost, Miss Rose/'Miss Quinn said, blinkingnear-sightedly at her hand."What do you plan to do?Travel?"Miss Rose folded her seven
cards thoughtfully. "Do?"she said. "Why, I hadn't giv-
en it much thought; after all,
I've just heard of it. AndJune is so far away.""Five months," Mrs. Mur-
geson said.
Five months! A tiny sparkof dread burned briefly in
her, and she hurriedly pressedit below the level of herthoughts. Miss Rose hadknown in a matter-of-fact
way, of course, that the in-
evitable day was approach-ing; but even the knowledge
FULFILLMENT 51
that the County School Boardhad finally voted on sixty as
the compulsory retirementage had not really disturbedthe continuity of her life. It
was something quite proper,
she had supposed, but of noimmediate personal conse-
quence.
TODAY, WHEN Miss Ben-son, the principal, had
asked her to drop by after herlast class tomorrow, so that
they might discuss arrange-ments for her retirement at
the end of the semester, it
seemed hardly possible that
the day had finally arrived.
At first she accepted the idea
with the same ease and dis-
tant composure with whichshe had accepted the manytimes the principalship of
Humboldt had passed her by.
After all, the second semesterhad barely started and shecould not find it in herself to
be alarmed at such a distant
event. There was that mo-ment, though—just beforethe three-thirty bell—when afaint thrill of anxiety hadswept over her; but she hadmastered the feeling with thecalm and weight of years ofself-containment.
"It will be an adjustment,"Miss Rose admitted. She drewa five of spades from the deckand arranged it with the sev-
en and eight she held. "Afterthirty-five years," she said,
"and thirty-five times fortychildren.**
"Don't tell me you remem-
ber them all?" Miss Quinnasked.Remember? No, Miss Rose
thought, children of eight andnine were very much of akind, with no sufficiently
bold character differences to
stand out over the years. Eventhe unusual child, after alapse of time, blended into
the anonymous child mass ofthirty-five years.
"No, I can't say that I do,"
she said. "I honestly don't
believe I could name morethan a score from those years,
and then I'd be hard put to
describe them."Mrs. Murgeson drew from
the deck and slapped the carddisgustedly on the discard
pile.
"As a matter of fact," MissRose said, "I suppose I havea sort of superimposed imageof all the children I've taught,not that they aren't very real
persons while they're in myclass."
"With your love for chil-
dren, I'm surprised you'venever married," Miss Quinnsaid.
"Marry?. . .Well, there wasa time..." Miss Rose smiledself-consciously. There was atime, so long ago. . .but hewas probably married now,and besides, Miss Rose'smother had been so ill at the
time that she couldn't leave
her.
UV^CHJ KNOW," she saidA abruptly, "I have a sil-
ly little secret that I really
shouldn't tell; but over the
52 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
years, I've developed a sort
of personal composite in mymind of all the little boys
and girls I've taught. I even
named them once. The little
boy was 'Jimmy*.
"Isn't that a foolish no-
tion?""I think it's rather pretty,"
Miss Quinn said, discarding
the ace of spades, which Mrs.
Murgeson immediately seized.
"Perhaps we all have our ownsecret ideal people who are
blends of the many people
we've known and liked."
"Yes," Miss Rose said
dreamily, "and Jimmy is such
a nice name, don't you think?
It has a boyish masculine
quality, young and yet
strong."
"My sister's husband's nameis Jim," Mrs. Murgeson said.
"He doesn't like it."
"Rummy," she added, drop-
ping her hand to the table.
MOVER WAITED, the
currents of manythoughts flowing through his
being. He felt the presence,
of the Hunter, and another of
the Hunter's race; and the
knowledge of their nearness
mingled with his awarenessof another within the house.
The Hunter was of the race
that had constructed Mover'skind, and there had to be a
point of contact. That con-
tact for the moment workedin Mover's favor.
"Somewhere. .." the near
thought came.
"Where?" Far away, light
years far away."Somewhere near...** Feel-
ing of no knowledge. . .un-
ease. . .perhaps, yes, fear. .
.
"Biped humanoids. . .similar
body chemistry . . .capable of
the necessary symbiosis. ..*'
A distorting pattern thenfrom the house, trembling,wavering.
.
.
"Special conditions. . .a dis-
intergrating personality for
full realization. .
."
"Find him before...** Ur-gency, impression of terrible
urgency. .
.
And again the pattern nearat hand, the emptiness, the
need of consummation . .
.
Instinctively, he found the
source and probed, emotionby emotion, seeking somepoint of fusion.
Mover stirred. He began to
diffuse through the stone.
Upward.
AS USUAL, the game brokeup at eleven and Miss
Rose went upstairs to the
small sitting room and bed-
room that comprised herapartment. For some momentsshe fussed about the sitting
room, eying the ancient oakbookcase with its bubbledgreen glass doors. A fadedprint of the Acropolis bymoonlight hung above. Therewas a yellowed normal school
diploma, and trie brown-stained permit from the Coun-ty Board of Education. Shecould not say why, but the
sight of these brouptt a sad-
FULFILLMENT 53
ness that she had never felt
before.
After she had turned offthe lights, she lay wide-eyedon her side in the half-dark-ness of the bedroom andstared at the floor beside thebed, seeing the way the yel-
low moonlight puddled on theworn carpet outlining the un-even boards beneath. The par-allel pattern, as she watched,became sharply accented andalmost hypnotic in its eye-straining regularity. In thenight's stillness the old housewas filled with small rust-lings and tiny creakings andscurring and. .
.
Suddenly she knew she wasnot alone!
With the thought came achill tingling about her limbs,
and her heart seemed to fill
the room with its violentthumping. She sat up, draw-ing the thin blanket abouther, and waited for somesound from the splotchydarkness. She felt the intan-gible aura of some secretwatcher in the room, andfear seemed to drain thestrength from her body.
SHE CALLED out softly,
but there was no answer.She fumbled for the lamp be-side her. As the shadows re-
treated from the bed, shesought her slippers withtrembling feit and made herway into the sitting room.
But there was nothing...No one.
As she returned to the bed-room, she thought she heardthe faintest whistling—morea sigh of air than anythingelse—tuneless, and yet reach-ing for a tune. It was verymuch, she realized, like thesound of a small boy who hasnot yet learned how to whis-tle, and can only make smallwhooshing sounds.The thought was somehow
pleasant to consider, and shesmiled at the image of a roundchild face frowning overpursed lips from which thedesired sound just would notcome. She turned out thelight and, as she lay staringat the scaling ceiling, the con-viction of a second presencereturned. She was sleepilysurprised to find that she wasno longer afraid; and beforeshe could consider the matterfurther, she slipped easily in-
to slumber, part of her mindfollowing the formless whis-tle patiently, until she heardnothing more.
FRIDAY morning, MissRose awoke with the stran-
gest feeling of time hangingin tight abeyance upon someaction of hers. The memoryof the previous night wasstill with her; she knew thatif she listened closely, shewould still be able to hearthat distant whistling. Sheate breakfast with Mrs. Mur-geson and Miss Quinn, andlistened without speaking asthe conversation followed de-vious routes from the price
54 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
of groceries, through the lat-
est experience of MissQuirm's clairvoyant sister in
California, to speculation onthe prospective new boarderwho had been referred to Mrs.Murgeson, and whom she ex-
pected today.
Miss Rose left the houseat seven thirty and walkedslowly down FourteenthStreet. As she passed the
drugstore on the corner, she
noticed that someone hadscraped the gilt letters that
spelled W. Sommerville, R.Ph. from the glass door, andshe guessed that the rumorshe had heard about Mr. Som-merville's selling the store
was correct. She arrived at
Humboldt at seven forty five.
Her morning was occupiedwith the routine happeningsof a Friday. In the afternoon,
she supervised the childrenin the making of a paper flow-
er basket, without really be-
ing fully aware of what washappening about her. Whenthe harsh vibration of the
three-thirty bell cut throughher reverie, she dismissed the
children and watched thescurrying flood of small bod-ies pour through the cloak-
room and into the hall.
Then she went to see MissBenson, the Principal.
AGAIN AN impression of
terrible urgency. Nearernow."Can you be sure?" the far
thought asked.
"Detection. . .by effect on-
ly.""
. . .must be sure."
"Yes. . .as one of them. .
*
". . . the problems . . . such a
masquerade . .
."
"...must be done . . . surethe substitution can't be de-tected. .
."
"Find him . . . horrible, dead-ly danger. . . uncontrolled . .
."
".. .but I must be sure. .
."
The contact shimmered like
a heat-distorted image. Amidthe fragments eddied the un-controlled emotions of thehost, the anxieties, the innersomesthetic feelings of fearand longing and. .
.
Now there was anticipa-tion.
Mover knew only that therewas a need he must fill. Thatwas his function. The pres-ence of the Hunter was un-important at the moment.And consummation was
near. .
.
THE INTERVIEW withMiss Benson was vague
and somehow alarming; MissRose had great difficulty in
concentrating on what theyounger woman was saying.
The half-awareness of some-one else in the office, and atiny nagging impatience in-
truded on her attention;
when she finally left thePrincipal's office, she wasnot completely sure of any of
the arrangements that theyhad agreed upon.The walk home was a thin
economy of motion. Her feet
FULFILLMENT 55
moved with an automaton re-
gularity as she found herself
considering the growing con-
striction of a formless dreadin her vitals. She told herself
that all this was nonsense;there was no reason for this
sudden apprehension aboutthe future. After all, it had to
happen someday, and there
was much to be said for hav-ing one's time entirely one's
own after all these years.
As she closed the front
door, she heard Mrs. Murge-son's loud fog-horn voice say,
"Oh, that must be Miss Rose."There was a deep mascu-
line rumble.
"Miss Rose," Mrs. Murge-son called.
Miss Rose walked to the
door of the living room andsaid, "Yes?" Mrs. Murgesonwas rising from the battered
leather chair by the bay win-dow; her companion, a lean,
middle-aged man with highsharp cheekbones and oddly-
hued brown hair followed her
example."Come in for a moment,"
Mrs. Murgeson said. "I wantyou to meet our new guest."
Mrs. Murgeson always called
her boarders "guests."
"This is Miss Rose," shesaid.
Miss Rose said, "How doyou do?" and extended herhand.
"Oh," Mrs. Murgeson said,
"that wasn't right, was it?...
I mean, this is Mr. Hunter,Miss Rose."
MISS ROSE felt a suddeninexplicable flutter of
fear; the man looked so cold
and menacing. For a momentshe felt as if those dark eyeswere dissecting her, fiber byfiber. He smiled bleakly as hetook her hand awkwardly.For a moment, it appeared as
if he were not quite sure of
what to do with it. Miss Rosefelt in that instant an almostoverpowering desire to turn
and flee from the room.
"Mr. Hunter's just boughtSommerville's Drug Store,"
Mrs. Murgeson was saying,
"and he'll be with us until hecan bring his family east."
"Though, of course," she
said, "it'll be Hunter's now . .
the drug store, I mean."
Mr. Hunter smiled againand said, "That's right," in alow vibrant voice.
Miss Rose made polite noi-
ses, and excused herself
quickly. As she climbed the
stairs, Mrs. Murgeson yelled
after her, "Dinner in twentyminutes now."
In her bedroom she deposi-
ted her hat on the bureau andsecured a towel and washclothfrom the top drawer. As she
turned, her eyes rested on the
bed; she saw the rumpledcoverlet and the indentationin the pillow, as if someonehad just that moment arisen
from an afternoon nap.
Someone quite small, shesaw, from the size of the de-
pression in the pillow. Asmall boy, perhaps.
56 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Unhurriedly she straight-
ened the coverlet and fluffed
the pillow. As she leanedclose to the bed she becameaware of a faint odor, com-pounded of soap and perspir-ation and lingering candyfragrance. It was an odor shehad come to know quite wellthrough her years of teach-ing.
AT DINNER, she ate quite
slowly, savoring thegrowing realization of this
thing which a rational partof her insisted could not be.
The dinner conversation ed-died about her, and she wasdimly aware that Miss Quinnhad embarked upon a longrambling account of anotheradventure of her clairvoyantsister.
"What do you think, MissRose?" Miss Quinn asked.
"Oh," she said, Tin sor-ry ; I wasn't really payingclose attention."
"I was telling about mysister's experience with a real
poltergeist, and Mrs. Murge-son said she didn't see howa spirit or anything else thatwasn't material could movematerial objects."
"Well, I honestly don'tknow," Miss Rose said.
"Of course," Mr. Huntersaid, looking at Miss Rose,"we would have to understandexactly what this spirit was.It's quite possible that theremight be other things in theuniverse that do not conform
to our strict ideas of matterand energy.""Why, yes," Miss Quinn
said, brightening, "that's al-
most exactly what that arti-
cle in the Sunday paper saidlast week.""One might speculate,"
Mr. Hunter said, "on... say aprinciple that caused thingsto happen without having areal independent existance ofits own—that is, apart fromthe matter it activated.""Oh, posh," Mrs. Murgeson
said. "What would you call
this thing?""As for that," Mr. Hunter
said, "why not call it by its
function? Why not call it an'Activator' or, perhaps evenbetter, simply a 'Mover'?""Miss Rose," Mrs. Murge-
son exclaimed as Miss Rose'sfork clattered to her plate,"are you ill?"
"No, no," she said. "I... it
felt like a shock from thefork."
Miss Rose moistened herlips and wished that Mr. Hun-ter would look in the otherdirection.
"I'm just tired, I guess,"she said and excused herself.She climbed the stairs slow-ly to her apartment, closedthe door behind her, andleaned weakly against it. Asshe turned to key the lightswitch on the wall, she sawthe faint smudge on thecracked white enamel of thedoor.
It looked very much like
the smudge a small boy might
FULFILLMENT 57
leave... a small boy whose had not, she was quite sure,
hands were not too clean, even been cut.
ALTHOUGH she was usu-
ally up before eight onSaturday, Miss Rose did not
awaken until ten. She camedownstairs and, seeing that
Mrs. Murgeson had already
left for the market where she
did her Saturday shopping,
Miss Rose prepared a light
breakfast and then returned
to her rooms. There was nosign of Mr. Hunter, and she
presumed that he was keepingthe same hours in the drugstore on Saturdays and Sun-
days as had Mr. Sommerville.
As she usually did on Sat-
urday morning, Miss Rosebegan to clean and dust her
rooms. She ran the dustcloth
over the aged furniture andlistened to the soft burr of
the veined varnish of the oakbookcase under her hand. Sherarely dusted the books in
the bookcase for the glass
doors excluded most of the
dirt of the room, but this
morning she opened the
creaking doors and ran her
hands lovingly along the
faded volumes in the case,
feeling a quiet nostalgia.
On impulse she pulled the
copy of "Huckleberry Finn,*'
with its bright red dust cover,
from the second shelf andheld it lightly in her hand. It
was a book she had purchasedmany years before as a gift
for the son of a now-deadfriend; but somehow it hadfound its way to the shelf and
UNDER HER hand, the
book seemed to fall openof its own, as if one favorite
selection had been r«ad andreread until the spine of the
book bore a permanent fold
which pulled the pages apart
at this section. On the mar-gin of the page, she saw the
childish scrawl, written iii
smudged pencil in bold un-
even letters, not at all like
her own even mathematicalscript. She wasn't really sur-
prised, for some volatile al-
chemy of intuition had al-
ready fitted the penciled
word into the earlier chain of
events, giving it the samefeeling of anticlimax that the
reception of a calling card
gives after one has througha curtained window seen the
caller approaching. She easi-
ly deciphered the blurredsi ^nature.
It said "Jimmy"And that was as it should
be, she realized, as the daypassed. There was always a
hidden compensation in life
for dear things lost and, as
fantastic as it might seem,this was hers. There was still
that part of her analytical
self that said, "This is not
so," but that objection waseasily confounded with the
unanswerable reply of, "Butit is. Just look and see."
That afternoon she foundtime for a walk, her bodymoving for the first time in
58 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
years down the street with apeculiar youthful lightnessthat filled her with a quietpleasure. She rememberedthat she must buy some tooth-paste as she approached thedrugstore and, feeling some-how defiant of her earlier
fears, she entered the store.
OHE SAW Mr. Hunter at
V* the rear counter as shethreaded her way through theline of floor displays in theaisle. There were countersbearing heaps of amazingtrivia; stacked displays ofcherry chocolates ; uneasypyramids of cleansing tis-
sues and paper napkins ; a be-wildering mechanical jungleof toy tractors; red fire en-gines; ray guns and bright-painted metal marionettesthat rolled hoops, turnedsommersaults, beat stiffly ondrums, or merely hoppedmindlessly from one foot to
the other.
She accepted Mr. Hunter'sgreeting with a nod, thinkingof the tight-locked energycontained in those many toysprings on the counter behindher. It gave her a most un-comfortable feeling, a sort offrustration, as though it
would be much better if thathidden potential were toburst into kinetic action. Shehad a mental image for a mo-ment of tiny metal hordesswarming over the countersauto the floors and stiffly
conquering the littered aisles.
There was a strange satisfac-
tion in the thought.She heard her voice ask for
a tube of toothpaste and sheheard Mr. Hunter discuss themerits of the large economysize. She wondered how hewould react if she were tosay "Look, I have a little boywho's come to stay with me,but you can't see him. Hisname is Jimmy and I do wantyou to meet him and tell mehe's such a nice little boy."But she knew that this wouldnever do, that rather in someunexplained manner thiswould be the formula of ex-orcism; once Mr. Hunterknew of his existence, Jim-my would leave her.
She saw Mr. Hunter look-ing at her very oddly. Hiseyes were wide and probingand for a moment she hadthat same feeling that thoseeyes were dissecting her cell
by cell.
"Miss Rose," he said final-
ly as though he had justreached a decision, "could I
speak to you later this even-ing? Privately?"
"Oh, no," she said, feelinga quick panic. "Oh, no, I
won't be home this evening.""Tomorrow," he insisted.
"It must be tomorrow at thelatest."
Sh« nodded, not knowingquite how to refuse.
SHE WALKED quicklyback to th« house. When
five o'clock arrived, shewashed and went down to din-
ner. Only Mrs. Murgeson andMiss Quinn were there, andMrs. Murgeson remarked thatMr. Hunter must be workinglate. Miss Rose breathed asmall sigh of relief. She atevery little and Mrs. Murge-son asked if she were well."You look so pale/' the
landlady said.
"No, no, I'm just not hun-gry/' Miss Rose said.
It was while they werewaiting for Mrs. Murgeson toserve dessert that Miss Roseheard the footsteps overheadand she remembered that hersitting room was above thedining room. She must havelooked up, for Miss Quinnasked if anything was wrong.As she shook her head, sheheard a distant rolling soundlike small wheels hitting theboards of the floor above andscraping over their unevenedges. She looked quickly atMiss Quinn, but she did notseem to notice the sound, eventhough it was quite loud."I'm not feeling very well
after all/' she said and rosefrom her chair. A- she leftthe room, she heard Mrs.Murgeson enter with the des-sert and she called from thestairs that it wasn't anything,just a headache, and she wasgoing to lie down.When she entered, there
was no one in the sittingroom. It was several momentsbefore she noticed the toyfire truck in the far corner ofthe room. It was lyi \g on its
side, and one blacl wooden
FULFILLMENT 59
wheel was still spinning laz-ily.
TJOLLOWING the tropism*> of his kind, Mover blend-ed himself with the image thehost had created, seekingonly final fusion, completerealization.
Now he could feel fear.The decaying personality ofthe host echoed it.
And there was the menaceof the Hunter.And the thought from afar
that told the Hunter, "Hur-ry .. .hurry .. .before it is toolate..."9
And again the feeling ofmenace. .
.
Menace that must be dealtwith, before. .
.
DEMEMBERING her pro-A^mise to Mr. Hunter thatSunday morning, she wond-ered how she might avoidhim. She went out early andbought two wrapped sand-wiches, and a bottle of soda,so that she would not have toappear for dinner. She spentthe remainder of the morningin her apartment, floating ina kind of delicious reveriewithout thought.At noon, Mrs. Murgeson
called up the stairs to tell herthat dinner was ready. Whenshe did not answer, she heardheavy footsteps and a momentlater a knock on her door.Smothering her annoyance,Miss Rose let the woman inand explained that she wasnot at all hungry and that
60
she might come down for a
snack later in the afternoon.
She did not ask Mrs. Mur-geson if she heard the soft
footsteps in the next room,
or if she saw the drapes of
the connecting doorway swayas they would if a shy small
boy were peering out at a
visitor, and fearful of discov-
ery.
After Mrs. Murgeson hadleft, Miss Rose napped for
awhile in the bedroom until
the knock on the door awak-ened her. She lay very still,
hearing the heavy breathing
on the other side of the door.
For a moment she feared he
might try the knob, but then
she heard the heavy sound of
footsteps retreating to his
room. Shortly thereafter, she
heard him descend the stairs
and she heard the front door
open and close.
She went into the sitting
room and sat in the uphol-
stered chair near the window.It was a moment before the
warmth registered as she rest-
ed her sleeveless arm against
the smooth fabric of the chair
back, but then she realized
that there was a discrete
patch of cloth which held a
lingering body heat at just
about the level of a small
boy's head. As she leaned
back and closed her eyes, the
strangest other-world feeling
of pleasant lassitude invaded
her arms and legs and for the
briefest finger-pinch of an
instant, she felt the light
brush of fingers on her lips.
SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
SHE KNEW then that this
most precious invisible
presence existed insubstan-
tially before the menace of
the outside world. A newfeeling of freedom and com-pleteness held her; she felt
an unexplainable hatred for
the world, and particularly
for Mr. Hunter with his in-
sistent presence. She knewthen that only he was a real
danger to her and to Jimmy.
She rose, pulled on her
light coat and left the house
without a hat. On the way to
the drugstore, she felt warmand pulsating amid the
scents of gestating spring
that swirled about her in
tightening filaments. Sheheard the distant sound of
auto horns and she heard the
cries of playing children andoccasionally she could feel
the brushing touch of a small
hand on hers.
She saw Mr. Hunter before
the store, rolling up the can-
dy-striped awning and heard
his greeting; but a muffling
barrier seemed to blot out his
words. When he asked her
how b' r nephew had liked
the toy fire truck she hadbought the day before, she
covdd only shake her head in
confusion. She heard him in-
vite her into the deserted
store and she moved past his
colorless figure silently.
"Of course, you mustknow..." she heard him say-
ing and, "There's nothing to
be frightened about now..."
FULFILLMENT 61
but the words were meaning-less syllables.
"...had to find you. . .host
destroyed with the ship off
the moon ...an emotionalsymbiote . . . terribly danger-ous uncontrolled. .
."
"Now," he said, "I can eas-
ily. .." and there was an hia-
tus in which she was awareof moving and then...
SHE WAS winding all of
the toys on the counterand tripping their levers,
feeling a tense joy at setting
so many beings moving at
once. She saw the slowlygrinding tractors move acrossthe floor and she watched a
mechanical kangaroo makeidiot flopping hops until it
collided with a metal soldier
that beat its drum andmarched in endless circles.
The soldier pushed the kan-garoo aside and continued onits march, its tiny steel feet
making red tracks on the dir-
ty floor as it retraced its
steps again and again throughthe widening pool of liquid
that spread from Mr. Hunt-er's prone figure.
She walked from the store,
and her steps led her to thehouse, in the hall, an unim-portant figure said eveningmeal would be ready in a fewminutes and she depositedher coat on the bed and wentdownstairs. There was a ta-
ble, and human objects aboutit whose features were hewedin painful detail; but the
items of those fea^ves, the
inventory of chin anw eyeand nose and moving lip
failed to register except as ameaningless jumble. She ate,
and she heard a voice fromthe shifting angles and planesof light speak to her but shemanaged to leave the table
without answering and walkthrough the morass of shad-ows in the hall and on thestairs to her rooms.The walls of the apartment
were suddenly close and warmand, as she sat in the chairby the window, Jimmy cameand sat on the arm and his
small warm hand was on herface and his small voicesaid, "N ever mind. Nowthere's only you and me."
SHE HEARD the far
shuffling in the hall andMiss Quinn saying that shehoped Miss Rose was all
right ; there was the soundof a key in the door and shefelt the aura that was MissRose retreat before theknife-edge yellow light that
streamed into the room."Go away," she sobbed. "I
don't want any of youagain . . . Ever.**
And it was done.
Like an inturning spiral,
consciousness became a hardkernel outside of whichnothing existed and sheheard him say, "That wasfine and now I can be withyou forever. .
."
She heard Mrs. Murgcsonsay, "We'd better call thedoctor." Then even that was
62 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
lost in the wash of soft
waves that swept over herand she was enfolded in ayielding gelatinous black-
ness that compressed her es-
sential self into i tiny knot,
sealing off all light, all
awareness of any stimulusoutside the sha?p bounda-
ries of her tingling body . . .
And there was the little
boy odor in her nostrils andthe thin corded little boyarms about her, and the highlittle boy voice, growingever louder, saying, "AndI'll be with you forever andever and ever, and. .
."
Dear Bob:
I want you to know that
Randy Garrett's illustration
for my "How To Succeed AtScience Fiction Without ReallyTrying" was terrific. I've goneover it half a dozen times andfound something new eachtime. Furthermore, he catches
my spirit in that caricature of
me, my bow-tie, my double-
chin, the fiendish glitter in myeyes, my grin, etc.
Only one thing: I don't keepten dollar bills lying around onmy desk and under books. I
bale them neatly and stowthem in my study closet.
—ISAAC ASIMOV
Dear Bob:
How do you do. I'm RogerWear.
In my opinio \ sir, SFS has
become an example of what a
S. F. magazine can, with a
good editer at the helm, bring
itself up to.
Issue after issue Science Fic-
tion Stories has shown small
but steady improvements. TheSept. 1956 issue of SFS is
right here beside me, and be-
side it is the Sept. 1955 issue
of SFS. Improvement: sixteen
more pages, better percentage
of enjoyable stories, covers are
both good.
I am finding Simaksome of the best now bei
written. He is at the present
time in the 8th place in myrating of the ten top S.F. wri-
ters. Ted Sturgeon is number7.
I have nearly all 1937, 1938
and 1939 issues of National
Magazine that I
[Ti » ige 139]
illustration by Oi ban
The strangest thing about what !
seemed to be a needlessly brutal '
regulation was that no one couldthink of an instance in which it
actually been applied!
The guard's back was turned.
THE INNOCENTS'REFUGE
by Theodore L Thomas
(Author of "Trial Without Combat")
r W ^HE DOOR slid shutbehind him and he
JL leaned against it, hishead tilted back, his breathsounding loud in the stillness
of the house.The woman stepped into the
hall and saw him against thedoor. Silently she crossed thehall and flung herself on him.
His arms encircled her and hepressed her to his breast.For a long moment the two
stood holding each other. Andthen side by side but still
clinging together they walkedinto the great room. Gently heplaced her on a divan. Hecupped her chin in his handand tipped her head *p and
63
64 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
23«fa*d into her tear-dimmedeyes. His other hand strokedthe shimmering waves ofgolden hair that fell acrossher shoulders.
"It is all right," he said.
"Lyon is in good hands; theywill take good care of him/'She tried to smile but could
not; instead the tears cameagain. She struggled to herfeet and said, half-crying,
"Why must they do this to
us? Why must they take mybaby away? Have they noheart? Have they no under-standing?"
HE SLIPPED an armaround her shoulders and
said, "Yes, my darling, theyhave. But our little boy was
—
well, you know how he was.There is no place for him in
our civilization."
"No place." She spat the
words. "How do they know?He was only two weeks old;he was a fine, strapping hand-some baby boy. How can theybe sure ha was—he was dif-
ferent*
He dropped his arm fromaround her and said, "Mydarling, we have been overthis before. They can tell;
they do not make mistakes.His brain is just not there.Much of it is missing and cannever grow in. No, my dear;there can b* no doubt that ourchild was subnormal."She raised her head and
•aid, "I don't care. He is mybaby, and I would have takencare of hmi if they had let me.
Why do they want to kill
him? It wasn't his fault."
He passed his hand acrosshis face. "I know," he said,
"And I feel much as you do.
But they have reasons. Theysaid that our boy couldn't be-gin to cope with the problemof modern living. Someonewould have to watch him eve-
ry minute of his life. If youand I were to care for him, wewould have time for little
else. We would grow embit-tered, resentful of a societyinto which our son could notfit. So they say it is better for
us to be hurt sharply nowthan to watch our child growup."
"I don't care what they say.
After forty thousand years ofcivilization I still think theyare beasts. I am glad youhave taken Lyon where theycan not get him and murderhim."
HE SLOWLY took off his
robe and tossed it overthe divan. He walked to a
glass wall and gazed out into
the deep night. "You know,"he said softly, "I had thestrangest feeling tonightwhen I took Lyon back; I
had the feeling that the waywas being smoothed for me.It was uncanny."She sat down on the divan
and said, "What do youmean?"
"Well, I am not certain.
But everything happened formy benefit. The guardsaround the Time Machine
THE INNOCENTS' REFUGE 65
were unusually lax. Just be-fore I got in, Lyon began to
cry. You know how loud hiscry is, but the guards fifty
feet away didn't even seem to
hear it. Furthermore, the ma-chine had already beenwarmed up ; all I had to dowas give the dial a randomspin and hit the switch. Andcoming back was the samething. The guards never hap-pened to look where I washiding when I came out of thebuilding. It shouldn't be that
easy; those Time Machinesare the best guarded things in
the country.
She looked at him quietlyfor a moment. "Well, what doyou think it means?"
"I don't know," he said. Hestared out into the night andthen continued. "Now that
I've been through it, every-thing is beginning to makesense." Ke turned to face her.
"Look. A subnormal child
—
let's face it, an idiot—is bornonce in about ten million
births. The policy states that
they should be put to sleep.
But have we ever heard of
that happening?"
She stiffened at the wordidiot, but she said simply,"No."
"On the other hand, every-
one has heard how the par-
ents of those children take
them back in time in the
Machine, and leave the child
among the primitives. Yet noone has ever heard of any cit-
izens being able to use the
Machine for any other pur-pose. Now doesn't that seemstrange ?"
SLOWLY she nodded. "Yes.It does. Do you—do you
think—is it on purpose?"
"I don't know." He beganpacing about the spaciousroom. "Look. No one knowsexcept us, and the doctors,
that our child was not nor-
mal. We certainly will nevertell anyone what we havedone, except our close
friends. It must be the samewith other parents. Wellthen, why is it that this par-
ticular use of the Time Ma-chine is so widely known?There are so few subnormalchildren that you would thinkno one would know of it. Andwhen you balance that withthe fact that an ordinary fel-
low like me can walk into themost closely-guarded Machineon Earth, use it, and walk outagain—darling, you must beright. They let me do it sothat they would not have to
put Lyon to sleep. They areon our side after all." And heswiftly crossed to her side
and swept her up in his arms.
She held him tightly, thensuddenly pushed him away."But why? Why torment usthis way? Why make us thinkthey want to kill our baby?All they need do is tell eve-
rybody that subnormal chil-
dren will be sent back in timeto the primitives. Why mustthey cause such anguish?"
66 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
HE DROPPED his armsand stepped away and
pulled reflectively at his low-
er lip. He said, "That is right;
there seems no need—wait."
He stepped up to her andgrasped her shoulders andlooked into her eyes. "Tell
me. If Lyon were not faced
with death, would you agree
to sending him back to the
primitives? Think, now;would you?"
Her head fell and she stared
at the floor. Finally she shook
her head. "No," she said. "No.
It is too uncertain. The prim-
itives are idiots themselves
—
savages, too. I know too little
about them for me to agree to
send my child back amongthem. No, I would never agree
unless my child were facedwith death."
He dropped his hands andsmiled at her. "That is the an-
swer, my darling. By pretend-ing to want to destroy oursubnormal children, theymade it possible for us to
achieve the courage to sendour child back to the ancient
peoples."
Wearily he sat down andleaned back and closed his
eyes. She sat alongside himand gently pulled his head to
her shoulder. "I feel muchbetter," she said softly. "Eventhough our Lyon must growup among savages, it can't be
so bad. They are not so muchhis mental superiors that they
will harm him. He should be
able to hold his own in their
civilization."
"Yes, my darling," he said
sleepily. "I'm certain he will.
I saw his foster parents dur-
ing the hour I was there.
They seemed to love our lit-
tle Lyon almost as much as
we do. In fact they were so
impressed with his fine
strong body that they are
going to keep his first name.
They are going to call himLeonardo—Leonardo da Vin-
ci."
Coming Soon — Watch Your Newsstands!
An unusual tale of tomorrow
SOLITARY by Robert Silverberg
An Absorbing Novelet
MAAE TO ORDER by Frank Belknap Long
These, tmd many others, will be featured
m the big Issue Number 32 of
FUTURE SCIENCE FICTION
A Department For The
Science - Fictionist
INSIDE
SCIENCE
FICTION
Reports and Reminiscences
By Robert A. MadSe
TTJHEN HUGOW GERNSBACKformed the Science
Fiction League back in 1934,
one of the first to rally to the
cause was the Los Angeles
group, forming a local chapter
erf the League. Now, more
than twenty years later, this
club is on the brink of 1000.
Yes, by the time this is print-
ed, the Los Angeles Science-
Fantasy Society will have cel-
ebrated its 1000th meeting—
a
science fiction club record
which will prove quite diffi-
cult to surpass.
Fans in the LA area whoare not members of this, the
oldest stf club extant, will do
well to investigate its activi-
ties by attending a meeting,
most of which are frequented
by prominent writers in the
field. For instance, at the
most recent gathering, SamMerwin Jr. was the guest
speaker. Merwin, who also
writes under the names of
Matt Lee and Carter Sprague,
and who has been connectededitorially with ThrillingWonder Stories, Startling
Stories, Galaxy and the new
67
68 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Satellite, reminisced extempo-raneously about the demise of
Sgt. Saturn and answeredmany questions about themagazine publishing business.Among the other writers pres-
ent were Mark Clifton, FrankQuattrocchi, Frank Riley,Helen Urban and Kris Nev-ille.
A postcard addressed to
Forrest J. Ackerman will
bring you details of futuremeetings. His address is 915S. Sherbourne Drive, Los An-geles 35.
BACK IN 1910, Hugo Gerns-back wrote a novel which
has become a landmark in
science fiction history
—
"Ralph 124C41 Plus." In thisnovel, Gernsback visualizedthe world of the futureand, among numerous otherextrapolations on 1910 sci-
ence, conceived of a combi-nation telephone-televisionNow it has been announcedby Bell Telephone Companythat such a gadget is prob-ability for the near future.
They already have the work-ing model perfected, thescreen of which, however, is
quite small—merely two bythree inches. Before Bellgoes into production, theyplan to initiate an attitude
survey to discover if such agadget will be popular with asufficient number of tele-
phone users to make it prac-ticable to commence large-
scale manufacturing.
T^ODAY THE trend is away» from colonialism, and weread daily of many downtrod-en areas either receiving their
independence as a grant fromtheir colonial rulers, or tak-
ing some of their own voli-
tion. Now the President ofthe American Rocket Society,speaking before an astronaut-ical congress in Rome, haslaid down the rules of con-duct we should observe whenlanding upon another planet.
No flag-raising or colonizingshould be practiced—and wecertainly should not landupon Mars or Venus aswould-be conquerors. It is nottoo early to give such matterssome thought and, as the edi-
tor of the Cleveland Presscommented. "We have, andare justly proud of, our Billof Rights. It ought to goright along with us intospace."
Another delegate to thesame International Astro-nautical Conference, Argen-tina's top-ranking scientist,
Teofilo Tabanera, says thatman can reach the moon in
twenty years at the most, if
we make any sort of con-certed effort to get there.
The effort, however, will haveto be primarily financial, saysMr. Tabanera. And, along thesame line as the statements ofPresident Andrew G. Haley,Mr. Tabanera said, "Spaceshould belong to everyone.Venus and Mars should not
INSIDE SCIENCE HCTION 49
belong to any one nation."
Among the 400 delegates pres-
ent was Professor Fred
Whipple of Harvard. Profes-
sor Whipple is responsible
for the latest concept of the
universe which makes it al-
most double the previously
conceived size.
THE 19 5 7 Transatlantic
Fan Fund is now getting
into full operation. Donald E.
Ford informs us that eight
American s-f fans have been
nominated, one of whom will
be voted the official repre-
sentative of American science
fiction to attend the 1957 Lon-
don World Science Fiction
Convention. Those nominated
are Forrest J. Ackerman,George Nims Raybin, Stuart
Hoffman, Ed McNulty, Dick
Ellington, Dick Eney, BoydRaeburn, and Robert A. Ma-dle. The one receiving the
most votes from qualified
members of the science fic-
tion world will receive an
expense-paid round-trip to
London, and will have the
honor and privilege of repre-
senting all of American fan-
dom. Information concerning
the TAFF fund can be ob-
tained by writing to DonFord, Box 19-T, RR 2, WardsCorner Road, Loveland, Ohio.
And while we're on the sub-
ject of the London WorldConvention, let's not forget to
get your membership in as
soon as possible. The commit-tee is working hard to make
this, the first real world con-vention, a big success. All ad-
vance information and prog-ress reports will be sent to
members, along with an at-
tractive membership card. Thefee is only $1 this time andthe address is 204 Wellmead-ow Road, Catford, London,SE6, England.
IMMEDIATELY followingthe New York convention of
1956, a writer's conference washeld in Milford, Pa., spon-sored by Damon Knight, CyrilKornbluth and others. Thisyear, following the Londonaffair, the "Biggercon" will
be held—in Germany! It will
be known as the "Big GermanConvention," and will besponsored by the Science Fic-
tion Club, "Deutschland," led
by Walter Ernsting, rabid
German fan. Forrest J. Acker-man, who is Honorary Presi-
dent of the German group,will be Guest of Honor. Forrywas previously Guest of Hon-or at the First International
S-F Convention of 1951, held
in London.
THE FANZINES
SCIENCE FICTION PA-RADE (10£ a copy from
Len J. Moffat, 5969 Lanto St.,
Bell Gardens, California). Pa-rade, a newcomer, is a maga-zine which can unhesitatingly
be recommended to the "out-
er-circle" reader—that reader
whose knowledge of fandomis slight or non-existant. It is
70 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
a well-mimeographed publica-tion, covering the entire fieldof science fiction. Ron Ellikpens an interesting report onthe recent New York WorldConvention—"N y c o n 1 1
—
Floperoo?" As can be deducedfrom the title, Mr. Ellik didnot wax enthusiastic in his re-
porting; but even so, he still
had a few nice things to sayabout the convention. Frompersonal experience, it can bestated that sponsoring a worldconvention is a vast and com-plex operation—s u b j e c t to
many heartaches and disap-
pointments. It is a job whichwe would, personally, prefer
to have nothing to do with in
the future. However, con-
versely, there is nothing welike better than to attend aconvention after all the workhas been done.
A regular feature in Paradeis George W. Fields' "Pro-zines on Parade," a columndevoted to criticism of cur-
rent issues of the various mag-azines. Mr. Fields usually de-
votes his time to what he calls
the top seven
—
Astounding,Fantasy & SF, Galaxy, Infin-ity, IF, Fantastic Universe,and Original Science FictionStories. We've mentioned this
before, but it bears repeating.
Columns of this nature arenot overly-abundant in theamateur i-f field, and we'reglad to see several of the pub-lications feature them. Afterall, they are science fictionfan magazines.
There are several other reg-ular features, such as film andfanzine reviews, as well as anoccasional book review. Pa-rade is the type of fanzinewhich is a requisite if moregeneral readers are to bebrought from the nacrocosminto the microcosm, and it is
hoped that its circulationzooms ever-upwards.
id
ATA(10c*
ILLUSTRATEDfor a sample from
Don Adkins, PO Box 258,Luke Air Force Base, Glen-dale, Arizona). There are vari-ous types of fan publicationsissued with some degree ofregularity. Parade, reviewedabove, is primarily a news anddiscussion magazine. Thenthere is the type which fea-tures articles on various fac-ets of s-f, sometimes offeringan occasional short story aspart of its fare. There is alsothe complete newszine, andthere have been fanzines de-voted exclusively to fiction
—
although the latter type hasmet with little success be-cause the fiction publishedwas, in many cases, not worthpublishing. We now have afanzine which exists, from allintents and purposes, to pop-ularize the artwork of its verytalented editor, Dan Adkins.Previous issues of Sata pub-lished a general potpouri ofmaterial, but this issue it is
primarily a "picturczine." Infact, Adkins anonunced thatthe current issue would be of
INSIDE SCIENCE FICTION 71
a type never before issued. Hehad planned to turn Sara into
an all-art magazine, but, after
partially completing this is-
sue, decided against it. (As anaside, we would like to men-tion that even if Adkins hadfulfilled his original plan,
Sata would not have been
the first all artzine. Back in
1939, John V. Baltadonis—then known as the "Paul of
the Fan Artists,"—published
several issues of Fantasy Pic-
torial which, we believe, wasthe only all art fanzine.)
The current Sata contains
several full-page drawings,with the remainder of the is-
sue being consumed primarily
by a readable short story,
"The Martian Bauble/' byCharles L. Morris. At anyrate, the story is replete with
well-done illos by Adkins, de-
picting the ironic fate whichbefalls three Martian explor-
ers. There is also an article onElvis Pressly which, it is
felt, is somewhat incongruous
in Sata. Published via the
Bitto process, Sara is a kalei-
doscope of color an an ex-
ample of what can be done
with this process when it is
adeptly utilized.
CRY OF THE NAMELESS(10£, $1 a dozen, from
Wally Weber, Box 92, 920
3rd Avenue, Seattle 4, Wash-ington). Now in its ninety-
fourth issue, Cry is the pub-
lication of The NamelessOnes, the Seattle science fic-
tion club. (Interested parties
are cordially invited to write
Weber for information con-
cerning the club.) Again wehave what is a comparativerarity, a magazine which is de-
voted primarily to the "pro-
zinc" field. In each issue Crypublishes Renfrew Pember-ton's "Science Fiction Field
Plowed Under/' which criti-
cally analyzes the latest is-
sues of s-f magazines. Pem-berton's wife, Amelia, takesthe fanzines apart, while Bur-nett R. Toskey is in the midstof writing a history of Amaz-ing Stories. Terming this a"history," is somewhat inac-
curate, for each installment
consists of Toskey's opinion
of a single year of AmazingStories. This time the year1936 is analyzed. There is also
an "S-F Report/' in which all
of the members pool their
opinions, and a rating guide
for all s-f magazines is
evolved. Those of you whohave insufficient time to read
all of the s-f published could
merely pick out the A's andB's from this monthly list
and probably read most of the
better stories.
NITE CRY (100 from DonChappell, 547 S. 79th Ave-
nue E., Tulsa, Oklahoma).This little mimeod zine is is-
sued primarily for membersof the Fantasy Amateur Press
Association (FAPA), a mag-azine interchange group, but
[Turn To Vage 140]
The bleak surface of the wxm didn't change from century to century • «
n
EXTRASPACEPERCEPTIONNovelet by Buss WEnterboHam
(author of "Time's A Gorilla")
Telepathy, in itself, is jar from a new theme in sc}erlce
futton; but since no one is quite sure exactly how it would
work, new ideas are always springing up. We thmk yotrU
j'md the present story s slant on the subject both jascmatmg
and convinc'mg on its own terms.
A SCRAWNY, shriv- Ace knew the dice were
eled-faced crater dig- odd in the same way people
ger named Mike Lor- seem to sense all kinds of
raine left a couple of odd- things on the moon. Ace
looking rocks at the Casa measured the cubes with cali-
Conon, and as a result the pers. He gave them balance
moon was crazier than than tests and he stared at them
yesterday's mistakes. till he almost fell asleep.
The rocks were shaped like Every last measurement said
a pair of dice ; in fact, they they were true, but when Ace
were dice. And there was threw the dice, they turned
nothing odd in leaving a pair up exactly what he was
of dice at the Casa Conon, thinking. When he didn t
because this was the moon's think, they turned up ace-
ritziest gambling casino, ace, which was Ace himself,
where tourists from earth de- He'd never seen anything
fied boldly what Ace Crosbi like it.
called percentage. Ace left his office, lock-
73
74 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
ing the door behind it. Hewalked to the far corner ofthe mezzanine of his casinoand passed into an incon-spicuous corridor that led to-
ward a door of solid, glassybasalt. Ace walked with thepeculiar glide of men whohad long lived on the moon.In fact, Ace had been born inCrater Conon, where CasaConon was located, andtwelve generations of moondwellers lay behind him. It
was Ace's ancestors who hadcolonized the crater, cappedit and help build it into thelittle metropolis it is today.Only then it wasn't a tour-
ist resort; men went to themoon to mine and exploreand grow rich from lunar re-
sources.
It had taken Ace's fatherto discover that there wereeasier ways to prosper. Andso Crater Conon blossomedforth with fine hotels, gam-ing palaces, and even mineralbaths kept fresh by repurify-ing precious water. FromCrater Conon, caravans ofpressure cars took sight-seersthrough the Lunar Alps, tosee the sealed caverns whereminers worked their lives
away. Other safaris sometimesheaded south and eastwardacross Sinus Medii to Cop-ernicus and Lansberg, wherea magnificent observatoryhad been set up on the lunarequator. And once each lun-ar day—which, of course,meant a terrestrial month—
a
really deluxe caravan made atour around the moon.
IN ALL these things AceCrosbi shared the profits.
He had stock in every lunarenterprise that attractedtourists. Ace was the Moon'shost. He welcomed the fa-
mous and the humble, andtook their money graciously.
In doing so, he became manythings to many men—a crook,a cheat, a shrewd businessman, a genius. Actually, Acewas none of these things. Hewas a moon man, with a phil-
osophy that had grown upwith a crazy world. He kepthis games scrupulously hon-est at Casa Conon. He dir-
ected his safaris so that any-one, from scientist to giddydebutante, would enjoy somepart of it. He put medicalmen in charge of his mineralbaths, and his hotels werethe best in the solar system.Perhaps his food was not sogood, but fresh food is seenseldom on the moon. How-ever, when the Moon Nikebrought fresh food, Ace's ho-tels served it.
While people called Acemany things—some compli-mentary, some not—few peo-ple realized that he was ascientist. His science was hu-manity, whether it came fromthe earth, or was bred on themoon. He had inherited hiswealth only five years ago,at the age of twenty-two. Hisfather had died while Acewas in college on the earth*
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 75
Instead of completing his
work, Ace took the Nike back
to Mare Vaporum and Crater
Conon.
Reaching the door, Ace put
his key to the lock. Therewas only one key to this
door, although it could be
opened from the inside.
As he turned the key, a buz-
zing alarm sounded beyondthe door. Ace called softly:
"Ace Crosbi, coming in."
Then he pushed the door
and as it swung, he looked
straight into the muzzle of a
snub-nosed pistol. Behind the
gun was a swarthy, black
haired man, who was slight-
ly overweight.
"Put that thing away, Dag,"
said Ace.
Dag%Scanlon grinned. An-
other young man, of slender
build, but with cold black
eyes, turned away from the
lattice work that overlooked
the^Casa Conon's game roomentrance and nodded to Ace:"Hello, Ace."
This little room, only a fewfeet square, was Ace's pro-
tection against the lack of
law in Crater Conon.
"Didn't you know it was I,
Dag?" Ace said after nodding
to the slender youth, whosename was Zack Wood.
"I had a hunch, but I don't
take no chances."
"You learn to know those
hunches on the moon," said
Ace. He looked old for his
years as he seated himself in
the chair beside a table on
which Scanlon was cleaning
a sub-machinegun.
ACE KNEW it was useless
to attempt to explain Espto Scanlon. Extra sensory
perception would have been
received with the same in-
credulity that Dag gave eve-
rything but his paycheck, his
hourly shot of whisky andMyrna, the housegirl who op-
erated the chuck-luck game.This trinity was the total of
Dag's reality, save his ability
to fight for those things;
everything else was dream-stuff.
How could Ace explain
telepathy to a man who wroteit off as a hunch? Telepathydid take a little skill, though,
and it was vaguely possible
that it would always remainimpossible for Dag Scanlon.
"Did you ever feel as
though someone was peekinginto your brain, Dag?" Aceasked.
Scanlon scratched his head.
"I guess nobody'd see
much if they did."
"You can say that again,"
put in Sabine.
Dag laughed, because it was
a good joke. He was never in-
sulted at anything Zack or
Ace or any of the night
guards of Casa Conon said to
him. As a matter of fact,
Wood hadn't meant to be in-
sulting; that was his idea of
humor, too.
"But if they looked in your
brain, boss—" Scanlon wenton, looking at Crosbi.
76 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"Podus osculation is notwhat you're paid for, Dag,"said Ace.
"I didn't mean to hurt yourfeeiin's, boss," said Scanlon,sensing that the words Aceused meant that he had saidsomething wrong. "All I
meant is that you went toschool on earth. You're abrain !"
"And so I waste a good ed-ucation running a high classcrap game on the moon.""Well, it's an honest game."
aHHELL ME about theA hunch, Dag," Ace said.
"What made you think it
was me?""I knew even before you
said your name, boss, but I
don't truGt even a hunch. It
just came to me: 'Here comesAce, and he's mad about some-thin'.' Are you mad, boss?What's eatin' you?""A little old scarecrow of
a miner's trying to pull some-thing, and I can't figure hisangle."
Wood turned away from thelattice work. "I don't like thelooks of that fellow downthere, boss."
Ace rose and went to thelattice. Just inside the en-trance locks of the gameroom stood a young man ina plaid tuxedo. He was aboutCrosbi's slender build, but alittle taller. His bearing wasthat of a man who believedthat nothing was quite goodenough for his taste. He had
a supercilious, half-amusedsmile on his lips, a patroniz-ing stare in his eyes as hesurveyed the three crap ta-bels, the roulette table, andthe chuck-luck bird cage. Itwas early, and only the roul-ette table and one crap gamewas in operation.The young man lit a ciga-
ret and walked toward one ofthe cashier's cages. From hisglide it was easy to see thathe had spent many years onthe moon. Earthmen boundwith each step, never seem-ing quite able to control theirmuscles which are in tunewith a much greater weightand gravitational attraction."Why don't you like him?"
Crosbi asked, squinting at theyoung man."Just a feeling I got," said
Zack Wood. "Maybe the lookin his eye, like he was up tono good."
"I got it, too," said Crosbi.And he knew why; the manwas here to pull something.
^TELEPATHY isn't words.A You don't get a sentence,or a thought, when you readsomeone's mind; you get animpression. It's not spreadout so that you can read it,
it is a slap in the brain. Af-ter a little practice, a personlearns to analyze the differ-ent feelings. He can distin-guish an emotion from a factand an idea from a sneer. Butit took no expert to Esp thisman. He hated everybody andhe was looking for Ace Cros-
EXTRA, SPACE PERCEPTION 77
bi in particular; Crosbi had
the feeling that he was very
important in that young man's
mind right then.
"Ever see him before?"Wood shook his head. "Not
a regular, anyhow ; and not a
tourist, judging from his
walk. Maybe he's from the
Alps. They've got quite a set-
tlement around the tin minesdown there. Some talk about
capping Calippus. If they did,
we'd have competition. Any-how this guy's new to me.
And he's up to no-good mon-keyshines."
Scanlon was pouring him-
self a drink. It was nine
o'clock. Every hour, on the
hour, Ace allowed Dag one
drink—and that was all that
Scanlon took. Dag was anobedient employee.As he finished, the tele-
phone rang. Scanlon took the
phone from a wall hook andanswered. He held the instru-
ment out to Crosbi: "Foryou."Ace took the phone. "Hel-
lo..."Higgins said a young man
named Judd Beecher wantedto see Crosbi, and wouldn't
take no for an answer. "Says
it's business. Shall I call one
of the boys?""Ever seen him before?"
"No. Not that I recall. Buthe's a mooner."
"Find out what his business
is, and if it's legit, send himup." Ace waited and finally
Higgins came back an the
phone.
"He says he's a gambler."
"So's everybody; but send
him up anyhow."Ace replaced the phone and
turned to Scanlon. "Theyoung fellow that Zack andI didn't like is coming up to
see me. He may be okay, but
I've got one of your hunches
that he's not. Don't be far
away, in case I need you."
"Okay, Ace.""Another thing, if you see
a dried-up little miner hang-
ing around the mezzanine, sit
on him till I have a chance
to talk to him.""Sure thing."
THE YOUNG man in the
plaid tux stood at the door
of Aces office, looking at
Crosbi as if he had just vom-ited.
"I'm Ace Crosbi," said the
gambler as he came to a stop
in front of the young man.
The young man extended
his palm with an oh-hell at-
titude. "I'm Judd Beecher."
Ace took the limp hand,
noted that it had no calousses
;
Beecher might be a gambler
at that. Certainly this fellow
was not a miner.
"I'd like to talk business
with you privately, if you
can spare a few moments."
"Certainly," said Ace. "But
my business will pick up in
an hour or so, and I have
things to do. So make it
short."
Crosbi took his keys from
his pocket and unlocked his
office door. He waved his
SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
guest through, then followedhim. Before closing the door,Ace let his eyes travel to thefar corner of the lounge andhe saw Dag Scanlon's bulkyfigure emerging from the lit-
tle corridor.
Crosbi invited the visitor tobe seated in a chair acrossfrom the desk, and Ace satdown behind the desk. Aceoffered the young man a ci-
gar, then a cigaret, and theyoung man refused both.
"Then what's your bus-iness ?" Ace inquired, settlingback into his chair. "Do youhave a new game to sell, ordo you want a job?"
"Neither," said the youngman. "I'll come right to thepoint, though. I want to buyCasa Conon"
ACE'S FACE did not** change expression."You're wasting your time. I
won't say the place isn't forsale, but I doubt if you'veenough money to buy it.**
"You didn't mention aprice," said Beecher. "Itmight be that I have enoughmoney."
"One million, five hundredthousand credits," said Cros-bi. "My bottom price."
"A little high, but no doubtfair. I'll take it."
Ace stared in disbelief atJudd Beecher. "You're crazy;and so am I, for even men-tioning a price. Casa Cononisn't for sale for any price. IfI sold it, I'd have nothing to
do; I might even have to goto work."As Crosbi spoke, his eyes
fastened on a small glitteringornament, a stud in the frontof Beecher's shirt. It gleamedwith a brown, amber coloredlight that spelled caution.Ace was familiar with thematerial, for the dice thatMike Sublette had left withhim were made of it.
"Would you have it saidthat you agreed to sell thisplace and chickened out?"Beecher spoke disdainfully,but somehow it didn't makeCrosbi angry. "What if it is
worth a few credits less thanyou asked? Surely you don'tcare if I want to squander mymoney !"
"I won't sell!" Ace spokewith less emphasis now."Two million," said Beech-
er. "Think] You could go toEarth and retire!"
"I want to live on themoon !"
"You can live here." Beech-er's voice seemed far off anddistant, like a voice in adream. "I can see you aretired of working, Mr. Crosbi.You need a rest. Why don'tyou put your head down onyour desk and go to sleepwhile I take the money out ofmy wallet. I also have thepapers for you to sign. Sleep,Crosbi. Sleep." Crosbi's headlowered itself to his arms onthe desk. Somewhere, deep inhis subconscious was the feel-ing that he shouldn't, but Acedid not heed. He even wanted
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 79
to sell Casa Conon—after he
slept.
He was conscious of the
young man opening a wallet
and putting two stacks of bills
on the table. "A million in
each pile," said Judd Beech-
er. "Now here are the pa-
pers
—
n
ACE CROSBI heard an ex-
plosion ; his subsconscious
caught hold and dragged himback. His eyes focussed on
the two piles of bills, but they
weren't bills. They were little
flat discs made of amber crys-
tal.
And the explosion had
been the violent opening of
Crosbi's office door. In the
doorway was Dag Scanlon,
holding his little pistol in
his hand. Beecher rose, unruf-
fled, and faced Dag.
"Your time's up, wise guy,"
said Scanlon. "The boss has
got a busy night and he can't
waste it on jerks."
Judd Beecher disregarded
the gun. His voice was soft as
velvet. "Doesn't that heavy
thing in your hand make you
feel tired? Why don't you put
it down? I'll bet Crosbi works
you to death—
"
Scanlon's little eyes were
focussed on Judd Beecher's
shirt front.
Crosbi's subconscious mindyelled again. Ace rose sud-
denly, reached across the
desk and grabbed Beecher's
shoulder. Whirling the youngman around, his fingers
reached out and seized the
ambercolored stud and tore it
away; then he dropped the
object in his desk drawer.
Judd Beecher smiled dis-
dainfully. "Are you sure
you've changed your mindabout selling, Mr. Crosbi?" he
asked. "If you're smart, you'll
sell to avoid additional over-
head." He paused andlaughed. "Perhaps that's the
wrong term; it should be un-
derground. You might be un-
derground if you persist in
this stubborn attitude."
"Scram," said Dag, who had
ceased feeling tired.
JUDD BEECHER smoothed
the wrinkles in his jacket
and straightened his shoul-
ders as he turned to face
Scanlon. "You're part of the
underground overhead too.
Two funerals at one time."
"Get out, or it's your fu-
neral," said Crosbi.
Beecher shrugged and
walked straight toward Scan-
lon, who jumped aside, keep-
ing his gun well out of reach.
Beecher continued on to the
door, where he halted, turned
and smiled with all the com-
posure of a society matron at
the conclusion of a slumming
tour. "I'll see you later." he
said.
"Not if we see you first,"
said Scanlon."Thats what I mean. You
may not be seeing when I see
you again.**
"You're outlining your wel-
come," said Crosbi. "Wemight change that."
80 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
The door closed softly be-hind Judd Beecher.
Ace picked up the ambercolored discs. They were coldand hard. He walked to thedisposal chute and droppedthem inside. A few minutesbefore, he had thought themto be stacks of currency,worth a million credits apiece.
II
AFTER SCANLONleft, Ace Crosbi satfor a few minutes
thinking of the things thathad transpired. What couldmake Judd Beecher want theCasa Conon so badly that hewas willing to pay twicewhat it was worth? Thethree story, windowlessbuilding, with all of its
modern air purifying andwater conservation equipmentwasn't worth that. It was truethat Ace cleared nearly aquarter of a million a year,and he grossed maybe twomillion; but his overhead v/asterrific. Twenty-eight em-ployees, all drew top wages;and the atomic pile in thebasement that supplied heatas well as power cost a smallfortune to maintain.
All Crosbi knew was thatcertain things were takingplace on the moon and hedidn't like them a bit. Hesearched his mind for a"hunch," but even extra sen-sory perception failed to helphim. His mind felt confused,as if too many thoughts were
rushing through it, thoughtshe didn't understand andcouldn't comprehend.
It came back to him nowthat Esp sometimes made thelaws of chance obsolete.Years ago, his father hadabolished card games. Lots ofpatrons had won plenty atblackjack and poker in theearly days when his fatherhad opened Casa Conon. Thereason wasn't marked cards orskill, but because the gamblerssensed what was in the otherfellow's hand.In college on earth, Crosbi
had spent a great deal of timein psychological research,trying to determine what Espwas and how it worked. Butthe curious thing was that, onEarth, Esp wasn't consistent.A few people showed abilityto read minds, but most peo-ple didn't. Many scientistsscoffed at Esp; others wereconvinced that it lay, partlyat least, beyond man's powers.But on the moon, no onedoubted—no one with senseanyhow. Dag Scanlon doubt-ed almost everything, excepthis paycheck, his whisky, andhis girl-friend in whom Cros-bi would not have place quiteso much faith. But Dag hadno sense.
And so Crosbi had to trusthis own observations in thematter of extra-sensory per-ception. He discarded clair-voyance, prophecy, and untilrecently he had doubted psy-cho-kinesis. Telepathy, ac-cording to Crosbi's defini-
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 8!
tion, was somewhat different
from the definition given byterrestrial scientists. Aceknew that it was next to im-
possible for two people to car-
ry on a conversation by tele-
pathy. Two people might ex-
change thoughts, but it wouldbe a single contact of minds.
Even then, it might be possi-
ble for one mind to grasp
what was on the other, whilethe*second mind missed. Tele-
pathy was like a fleeting
glimpse, a muffled sound or
an elusive odor. It was present
at one instant, then gone; a
mind had to grasp the thoughtinstantly and retain it, or it
was lost.
And now vague thoughts,which Ace Crosbi was unableto grasp, were flowingthrough his mind.
ANOTHER point abouttelepathy seemed to both-
er him: It was the law of the
square of the distance. Tele-
pathy was not spiritual; it
was as material as electricity,
or light. Thoughts did not
transmit themselves on noth-
ing; there had to be somekind of energy. The humanbrain, apparently, was the
only instrument delicateenough to detect this energy.
But if there was an energywhich radiated thought, whywas a feeling transmitted for
long distances with the sameintensity as a feeling fromclose by?There had been one gray-
m& psychologist on earth
who had supplied the answerto that one. He even had a
name for the energy: Tele-
pathic Energy Quanta, or
Teq.
Of course, the whole thing
was theory, but to Crosbi, it
sounded more logical thananything he could supplyfrom his own mind.
Teq was like light—it al-
most had to be. Ail forms of
energy have certain commonproperties or sources of ori-
gin. Just because Teqcouldn't be pinned down, wasno reason for believing it to
be different.
Light became less intense
the farther away one wentfrom the source, yet eachlight quantum fell on the
eye with the same intensity
that it started. The reasonlight diminished was becausethe number of quanta wasspread out. Could thought bepacked away in something as
small as a quantum?
Ace knew that a lot of
thought could be put in a
small space. There was the
phenomena of dreams. Adream that seems hours in
duration, actually lasts only a
brief instant. Certain drugscan expand time to a seem-ingly-infinite extent, andthough t—albeit distorted
thought—runs rampant. AndCrosbi's sensations of tele-
pathy—the hunches, to use
Scanlon's term—were instan-
taneous. Thought had no lat-
eral measurement, it was
82 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
small and spaceless, like aquantum.
BUT WHY was telepathyreal on the moon and only
a theory on earth? What wasit the moon had that Earthdidn't have? More than like-
ly, it was something themoon didn't have that madetelepathy possible. Crosbicouldn't believe that atmos-phere, gravity, water or cer-tain minerals had anything todo with telepathy, or thelack of it. Even the ambercrystals that had inducedhypnosis probably had nobasic connection with Teq.Perhaps they modfied it, butthey certainly did not pro-duce it. Many elements andminerals had certain proper-ties of this sort. Selenium re-acted to light, Germanium toelectricity, galena to radio,some elements conductedheat better than others. Thebrownish crystals must besensitive to Teq.
Ostensibly, that was whyJudd Beecher wanted CasaCotton. In any line of busi-ness, thought-reading couldbe valuable, but in gamblingit would be devestating. Thelaws of chance allowed anhonest gambler only twoways to win: percentage andskill in betting. Betting skillis based almost entirely onmanipulating percentage byknowing what's on the otherf e 1 1 o w 's mind. As thingsstood now, a better had justas much chance of reading a
gambler's mind as a gamblerhad in reading the mind ofthe better. But somethinglike those crystals wouldgive a man the upper hand.Or would it?
Ace Crosbi had to find out.He left his office, locking
it behind him. He descendedto the bar because he knewthat it was time for DianeWallace to be on relief fromher operation of Crap TableNo. 3.
SHE WAS seated on a barstool, sipping an Alpetra-
gius cocktail. Diane, beauti-ful as an earth-lit night, wasan unusual housegirl. Shehad been born on the moonand educated on the earth, ashad Crosbi, and had returnedwith high hopes of raisingthe intellectual standard ofthe earth's satellite. But shehad found that the moon wasfilled with miners and tour-ists, neither of whom seemedmuch interested in broaden-ing their philosophical hori-zons. And so she became agambler.Without looking at him,
she said, "Hello, Ace. What'son your mind."
Crosbi smiled. People bornon the moon, and thus ex-posed to Teq throughouttheir lives, were much moresensitive to telepathic im-pulses. She had sensed thathe had been looking for her.From his pocket, Ace took
a pair of dice that Mike Sub-lette had given him. "These."
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 82
"Naturally," said Diane."Those are your business."
Hector, the senior bartend-
er, stepped up and Ace or-
dered a whisky Imbrium, the
favorite drink of prospectors
in the Spitzenberg moun-tains, north of Beer crater.
Crosbi shook the dice and
rolled them on the bar. Theycame up ace-ace.
"Craps," said Diane "This
must be your night."
"Funny thing," he said. "I
was thinking of my troubles.
Of myself, Ace. The dice
came up Ace-Ace, the waythey always do when I think
of myself.""Psycho-kinesis yet."
Crosbi did not laugh. Heheld the dice between his
sensitive fingers, turningthem over out of habit. His
fingers could distinguish
flats from true dice this way.
But he already knew these
were true.
"These are made of a spe-
cial crystal. Supposing youthink of a point, but think of
it as four-four, six-deuce,
three-deuce. Don't think of it
of eight or six or five or
what-have-you."Diane nodded. "Got it."
ACE SHOOK and rolled.
They came up four-
deuce."Lucky," said Diane. "Do
it again and 111 buy your
drink."
Crosbi shook his head. "I
wouldn't take advantage of
you, girl; these dice always
do right. Now we'll try andeach of us think of a point.
We'll see who has the strong-
est mind."Diane nodded. "Ready."
Ace rattled and rolled. Thedice came up six-five. "I ye
got the strongest mind," said
Diane."Funny, but that's what I
picked. Eleven.""Coincidence. Try it
again."They rolled again. Once
more, both of them picked
the same point, this time,
two-two. "It must be tele-
pathy," said Diane.
"Could it be hypnotism?"She looked at him. "You
mean the dice hypnotised us
so we guessed what they in-
tended to do? Don't be silly.
That would presuppose con-
sciousness and intelligence
on the part of an inanimate
object; that's animism.""We rule out animism?""Intelligence anyhow," said
Diane. "Sometimes it's hard
to tell where life starts, anddeath ends, or the other wayaround. But I don't see any
viruses doing tricks with
non-E u c 1 i d e a n geometry.
Multiplication maybe, but
nothing that requiresthought."
"Okay," said Crosbi. "But
how about us being hypno-
tised—auto—h ypnosi s
—
and suggesting the point to
each other by telepathy?"
DIANE PICKED up the
dice and looked at them
84 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
closely. "There is a certainhypnotic quality in dice.Auto-hypnotism is possible,of course, but difficult. Hyp-notism is easiest when youpull a little trickery. Youhave to have a hypnotist, oran operator, to get the bestresults. And because trickeryhelps, the professionals, orstage hypnotists, can some-times get more astonishingresults than the scientists.The stage hypnotists arepracticing psychologists; thescientists know the theory,but not the art. Actually,though, if there is any hyp-notising going on here, it
might be, we did it to eachother by telepathy.""That opens up a lot of
lines for speculation."
"Too many," said Diane."Dag Scanlon entered the
bar, squatted on a stool andordered a shot of whisky. Itwas 10 o'clock, time for hishourly medicine. Ace shookthe dice. "Think of a point,Dag." Ace winked at Diane."Let's see if I can roll it
without your telling me.""Okay, boss."Crosbi rolled the dice.
They came up five-five."Chee," said Dag. "I'm hot
tonight."
Crosbi glanced at Diane,who nodded; three of themhad picked the same point."Take a good look at those
dice." Crosbi handed the diceto Scanlon. "Ever see any-thing like them before."Dag; picked up the dice,
and his eyelids seemed heavyas he looked at them. "Sure.They're made of the samestuff that that guy had in hisshirt stud."
Crosbi nodded. "Those dicewill roll any point you wantthem to. Try it and see." Hesipped his drink and watchedDag.Scanlon shook the dice.
"Seven," he said. The dicecame up six-ace.
"They'll do better if yousay six-ace, five-deuce, andso on," Diane told him."Ten, the hard way," said
Scanlon. The dice came upfive-five.
"Let's all pick a differentpoint," Crosbi said, "and sayit out loud before Dag rolls."
"Five-four," said Diane."Deuce-deuce," said Scan-
lon.
"Ace-Ace," said Crosbi.Dag rolled, and the dice
came up blank."Hey, these cubes ain't on
the level!"
"Yes, I think we caughtthem c h e a t i n g." Crosbilooked at Diane. "How doesthe hypnotism theory hold upnow?""Worse than ever."Another figure entered the
bar and moved toward Cros-bi, smiling. Ace rose and lefthis unfinished drink on thebar. "You're the man I wantto see!" he exploded.Mike Lorraine's brown
face cracked along its creas-es, "I sorta figured youwould, son. I sorta figured."
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 85
ACE CROSBI and MikeLorraine sat in the
lounge adjoining the bar.
Lorraine was puffing on a
black cigar made of tar-free
synthetic tobacco. He looked
like an owl, now that he had
put on glasses. His hair,
which seemed all cowlicks,
stood out like ruffled feath-
ers and his nose looked like
a beak.
"I call it Staghorn crystal
because I found the stuff in
the Stag's Horn Mountains,"
he said. "1 only know two
things about the stuff. First,
the crystals do what you
want 'em to do."
"Not always," said Crosbi.
"Sometimes they make me do
what I don't want to do—be-lieve in things that aren't
there, for example."
"That's the second thing
about 'em. They're a kind of
a drug. Not habit-formin', but
you can get a whale of a jag
off a fistful of Staghorn."
"You mean like marijuana
or something?"
"Or something," said Lor-
raine. "When I first found
the lode, I went sound asleep.
I woke up runnin' around
outside the cave without mypressure suit on."
"Good heavens! You can't
expect me to believe that.
You'd dieT"Nope," said Mike. "I
ain't dead; leastwise, I don't
think I am."-You shouldn't have lasted
five minutes. Even a minute T
"I must've been without air
for at least fifteen."
ACE STUDIED the cry-
stals. He'd heard stories
before of men out on the
moon who had torn their
pressure suits, and who had
lived. Since all the air of all
lunar dwellings is tempered
with helium instead of nitro-
gen, the difficulty arising
from bends was eliminated.
However, a man's blood pres-
sure would cause erupted
veins and arteries. Apoplexy,
blindness, and other things
should result from unprotect-
ed exposure to the vacuum on
the moon's surface. Yet, there
were stories of men who had
survived. Crosbi had always
written them off as legends.
"It wasn't long before I
learned how to handle the
crystals," Lorraine went on.
"Keep away from it. A little
bit won't hurt you, unless it's
polished up. Then it sorta
puts you to sleep. But if youcarry a lot of it, you gotta
shield it, like uranium. I hap-
pened to have an ore bag
with me, so I got a coupte of
crystals and brought 'em
back. I made them dice out
of some of it."
"What else did you make?"Lorraine reached under his
coat and pulled out a knife
with an amber handle madeof Staghorn crystal. "It was
sorta decorative," he said,
half apologetically.
"Is that all?"
Mike nodded.
86 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
"You didn't make any flatdiscs, or a shirt stud, or any-thing ?"
"I told you, I didn't bringback much of the stuff. I'vegot to be careful. I'm too oldto go on dream jags.''
"Why did you bring thesedice to me?"Mike laughed. "I made 'em
just for the helluvit. Then Ifound out I couldn't misswith 'em, and I thought I'dgive you somethin' to worryabout."
ACE CROSBI held the** dice out to Lorraine. "Iwon't have the things in myplace."
"Why not? They're goodfor a laugh."
"They're not legit."Mike laughed again, very
loudly. "Since when has acold-hearted gambler gotscruples? You take more offthe tourists than the lunarpeep shows and give 'em lessin return."
"I give entertain me nt,thrills. Sometimes a customereven wins."
"Tain't often.""No," Crosbi agreed. "Not
often. Anyone who gambleswith a professional is boundto lose eventually. That's notbecause I'm crooked, or over*ly skilled; the percentagestake care of me.Lorraine rose to his feet.
"I don't want 'em back. Folkstell me that besides bein' agambler, you're smart; you
want to know why things dolike they do. Well, here'syour chance, son. There's no-body else on the moon thatgives a hang about science,so you figure out what's inStaghorn crystals. The mooncould do with a man who'sgot brains."Before Crosbi could stop
him, Mike Lorraine hadshuffled off toward the exitlocks.
Ill
ACE SIGNALED DagScanlon as he passedthe bar. Dag, who had
been chatting with Myrna,rose and followed Ace to theexit locks.
"I'm going out," Crosbisaid. "I want you to comealong."
Scanlon nodded. The bossneeded protection after thatscene with Judd Beecher.Dag realized that the youngfellow who had been dressedso fancy hadn't been justmouthing off when he talkedabout funerals.The two men passed
through the locks and out onthe lunar street. It was welllighted by a full earth whichhung almost directly south-ward about forty-five de-grees between horizon andzenith. There were only afew pale street lamps and thestreet was empty of traffic.Most people used the sub-
terranean tunnels and themonorail cars in travelingfrom place to place in Crater
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 87
Conon. Although only twometeors had ever hit the pro-
tecting dome with enoughforce to crack it, there wasalways a possibility of beingcaught outside a buildingwhen the air escaped. All
buildings and all caves in the
crater were sealed, and main-tained with independent air
supplies, but outside, underthe dome there was only a
thin atmosphere.But Mike Lorraine, who
claimed he had lived fifteen
minutes on the moon withouta pressure suit, apparently
had no fear of a stray meteor.
He was walking the streets.
It wasn't hard to locate
Mike by telepathy; the old
miner sprayed his thoughts all
over the crater. He was in ex-
tra good humor, possibly be-
cause he thought he hadplayed an immense joke onAce Crosbi. Thus Ace trailed
Mike, and soon caught upwith him; but by this time,
Lorraine had reached the
north crater entrance.
The locks that opened up on
a tunnel through the crater
walls, were in a huge, oblong
building that housed scores of
pressure cars. Some of these
were privately owned, others
were rented to tourists, or
prospectors who sought to
travel over the surface of the
moon.These pressure cars, look-
ing like a glass bullet onwheels, were powered by fis-
sion-generated electricity, andcould move at terrific speeds
over the lunar flatlands, andcould climb at impossible an-
gles over the lunar hills.
There was no need for road-
building on the moon; evencrater walls were remarkablysmooth. There had never beenerosion, and the only dangerswere cracks and rough ridges,
both the result of shrinkagewhen the moon had cooled
some two billion years ago. Alayer of meteoric dust madetraction good on the glassy
surface of basaltic areas, but
this dust was not thick
enough to impede progress
nor lessen the impression that
the entire surface of the moonwas paved.
WHEN Ace Crosbi andDag Scanlon reached the
entrance of the building, Lor-
raine had already entered the
locks. They could not follow
him till the inside doors hadopened and closed; by the
time Crosbi reached the in-
terior, Mike had disappeared.
A red light over the exit
locks that led to the tunnel,
told Ace where Lorraine had
gone. He was in his car, head-
ed for the lunar surface.
The attendant was sleeping,
but Crosbi roused him long
enough to rent a pressure car
and presently, with Scanlon
riding beside him, they weremoving through the tunnel
toward the cold silence of lu-
nar night.
The locks opened up in
Aratus pass, which got its
name from Crater Aratus at
88 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
its northwestern terminus. It
was not a canyon by terrestri-
al standards, for it had notbeen created by erosion. It
was simply a cleft between theHaemus range of mountainsand the Lunar Apennines,which crossed them like a T.Overhead, the earth shed a
greenish light over the weirdmoonscape ; headlights wereunnecessary, and Crosbi didnot turn his on. Ahead, theycaught the gleam of Mikelights, and that was enou^'Lorraine might have sensedthat Crosbi was following himearlier; but now Ace couldpick up only bits of Mike'sthoughts, and he doubted if
Lorraine could receive his.
A SUDDEN thought struckAce. Why wasn't he able
to get those gleeful bits ofTeq from Mike Lorraine?Was something intercepting
'
And why hadn't Mike shownconcern at being followed?Could it be that Crosbi had re-
ceived and Mike had not? If
so, why hadn't Lorraine beenas sensitive as Crosbi? Mikehad been born on the moon;he should be as keen as Cros-bi. The explanation might lie
in Scanlon. Could Dag havegobbled up Ace's Teq radia-tion? It might be, under spe-cial circumstances, that athought could be intercepted.The more Ace Crosbi
thought, the more he became^rtain this was the case. Such«n explanation would go fartoward revealing why there
was a dearth of telepathy ontxie earth. Earth had life inabundance. If Teq were somesort of life energy, then therewould be a myriad of livingtilings, from viruses to whalesciiat would gobble it up. Smallchance for any wanderingquantum of Teq to get veryxar. Most thoughts would beatterly incomprehensible toche creature that intercepted.hem. On the moon, where life
was scant, a thought had achance to drift a long dis-tance before it was intercept-ed. The entire population ofthe moon, excluding tourists,
probably was less than a hun-dred thousand. There wasscarcely any livestock, butthere were some plants, andprobably a few microbes.More living individuals couldbe found in a square mile ofgood rich land on Earth thanexisted on the entire lunar-surface !
And the speculation ledAce Crosbi to suspect why hewasn't receiving much fromMike Lorraine. Mike wasn'talone.
Suddenly, the lights aheadswerved directly north. Onthe left was Crater Aratus,and about twenty miles direct-ly north was the huge bulk ofMt. Hadley, a crater some-what larger than Conon. Be-yond Mt. Hadley lay thesmooth floor of Mare Sereni-tatis, a lake of solid glasswhich lay between AratusPass and the outlying rangesof the Lunar Alps.
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 89
ACE TOUCHED the throt-
tle as Mike Lorraine in-
creased his speed. The cars
were traveling close to 180
miles an hour now, but this
was not fast on the moon,
which had no hazards for the
motorists, in fact not even
roads. The only danger was
collision, which was practical-
ly impossible on the empty
surface of the plains.
Suddenly the headlights
ahead swerved again and
slowed. The car was pulling
into the shadows of Mt. Had-
ley. Crosbi cut his speed and
stopped. Quickly Ace
squirmed into one of the two
pressure suits that werestowed under the car seat. Heclosed the helmet, tuned up
the radio with low power and
spoke to Scanlon, who was
trying to pull a pressure suit
over his bulky frame.
'Tm going ahead on foot,"
said Ace. "Something's wrongup there. You stay here; I'll
signal if I need you."
Ace climbed out of the car
while Scanlon closed his hel-
met.He stood on the lunar plain,
his eyes focused on the head-
lights of the car parked near-
ly a mile ahead.
Then a surge of Teq swept
his brain ; it was a mental cry
of fear, anguish and pain. Ace
Crosbi jumped forward.
No earthman can run on the
moon, for it takes more skill
than ski-jumping. But Crosbi,
who had lived his life on the
satellite, was no longer a man
of Earth, and he had mastered
the technique. The secret wasbalance; by keeping balance,
he was able to land on his feet
after strides of eighty to a
hundred feet across the
ground.Crosbi traveled the mile in
less than a minute and arrived
scarcely panting.
The car was there and its
door was open. In the front
seat, at the wheel sat MikeLorraine, without a space suit.
Ace climbed into the car,
slammed the door. As he
turned on the air pressure he
knew it was no use; Lorraine
was as dead as the other side
of the moon.But it was not the lack of
air that had killed Lorraine,
who had boasted of living fif-
teen minutes in the vacuum of
the moon's surface withoutloosing consciousness. Mike'sknife, the one with the handleof Staghorn Crystal, protrud-
ed from his side.
ACE STARED into the
dark shadows of Mt. Had-
ley. Somewhere out there was
the murderer. He had fled at
Crosbi's approach, both be-
cause he did not know wheth-
er Ace was armed and because
he was unarmed himself. Thefact that he had used Lor-
raine's own knife for murderwas evidence that he had no
other weapon.A strong wave of Teq swep*
Crosbi's mind, a feeling o*
contempt, a feeling of hatred
and a feeling that Ace did
90 SCIENCE HCHON STORIES
l
not understand. He couldidentify the quantum. Hehad felt it once before thatday; it came from a strangernamed Judd Beecher.Ace turned up the power in
his helmet radio. "Go back toCrater Conon and get thecops, Dag. Mike's been mur-dered.
"
He heard Scanlon's startledgasp and then a flood of ques-tions. Ace cut him off, toldhim to hurry, then sat downbeside Mike's car to wait.
r\N THE MOON there is
^^ little movement in theskies that allow a man tomeasure time. Even when thesun is in the sky, the periodbetween sunrise and sunset is
so long that the sun's slowcrawl is almost impercepti-ble. At night, Earth and thestars hang in the same posi-tion, seemingly, for hours onend; the movement as thestars rise and set can hardlybe detected in the space ofseveral hours.
Ace Crosbi sat by the pres-sure car, his eyes trying topierce the shadow cast by thelunar peak. Someone wasthere; he could tell by fleet-ing flashes of Teq. The manwas Judd Beecher, eventhough the telepathic signalcould never reveal a name.Beecher was watching, wait-ing; for he wanted something.What? What did he want?Crosbi felt sure there had
been no battle here. The at-tack on Mike Lorraine had
been a surprise move; andwhatever it was that Beecheiwanted, he had not been ableto obtain, because Crosbi hadappeared on the scene.Ace stood up, looked into
the car. He shivered as he sawthe dried-up face of the little
old miner in the driver's seat.Mike had been in high spiritsas he walked through Cononon his way to a rendezvouswith death.
Crosbi moved around thecar, searching it. As he did so,he felt confused, as if he hadforgotten something, some-thing he had to do and hadnot done.
Crosbi turned his head.Telepathy is seldom directionin the thought, but somehowAce turned in the rightdirection. Emerging from thedarkness was the figure of aman, a man without a pres-sure suit!
Ace shouted, but his voicecould not carry in the vacuum.The man had no radio unitand could not hear. He sprangand dashed away into thedarkness.
The distance was too far forCrosbi to recognize the maIt might well be Judd Beech-er. The fellow ran like amoon-man, which Beechercertainly was; but no onecould live long in the moun-tains of the moon without apressure suit. Even Mike Lor-raine, who boasted of livingfifteen minutes without one,could never survive. It wouldtake more than fifteen min-
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION CI
utes, even in a fast car, to
reach the locks of CononCrater. On foot it would take
an hour!Ace swung open the door of
the car, and found what he
was after sewed in the lining
of Lorraine's coat. A small,
fibre bag, lined with lead foil.
In it were seven rough shaped
stones, unpolished bits of
Staghorn Crystal.
THERE WASN'T a great
deal of law in Crater Co-
non. Captain Opewell investi-
gated and said Mike Lorraine
was dead, probably murdered
by parties unknown. Ace
Crosbi couldn't say who he'd
seen running around on the
moon without a pressure suit,
and Opewell didn't believe it
anyhow. They found a few
tracks in meteor dust, but
these might have been there
for centuries. Anyhow, you
couldn't tell whether the
wearer had a pressure suit or
not from the tracks.
So the little old miner was
buried in the Haemus Moun-
tains and Crater Conon went
back to its enjoyment of life.
Lorraine's sole possessions,
which included his mining
tools, about fifty credits in
cash and seven Staghorn
Crystals were auctioned off to
pay his outstanding debts and
the incident would have been
closed, except that Opewell
had a hunch.A few years ago, when
Crosbi's father ran the Casa
Conon, Captain Opewell had
found somebody smugglingsynthetic dope into the crater
from the Spitzbergen Moun-tains. Therefore, Opewellconsidered himself an expert
on dope.
It was only natural that he
should try the dope angle for
size in the Lorraine killing,
and he came up with a solu-
tion that was more weird than
the killing itself.
He told Crosbi about it. Ac-
cording to the police captain,
the Staghorn crystals were
habit-forming. Crosbi had ad-
mitted that one almost put
him to sleep, and Ace had il-
lustrated with the dice that
they had some sort of hyp-
notic power that made blank
sides look like spots on dice.
A fellow who looked at Stag-
horn crystals often enough,
couldn't do without them.
"This mysterious JuddBeecher is a fiend," Opewellsaid. "He killed Lorraine for
the crystals Mike had on
him.""He didn't get the crystals."
"That's because you scared
him away. And those crystals
made you think you sawsomebody running aroundwithout a pressure suit."
ACE TURNED the idea
over in his mind. Heknew what he'd seen. Hemight have been mistaken, of
course, and something might
have befuddled him, just as
Lorraine's dice had befuddled
him. But Crosbi remembered
that Mike himself had claimed
92 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
to have been running aroundon the moon without a pres-sure suit.
Ace Crosbi wondered if it
were possible. Environmentdid strange things to plants,why not to men? Certainplants transplanted into dif-ferent soil become different.There are even fish that arepoisonous in some waters andquite edible in other waters.The moon had been colonizedfor some three hundred years.Some people living on themoon had never been onEarth. A few had visitedEarth briefly, and even fewer,like Diane Boyer and AceCrosbi, had been educatedthere. It was a fact that moonmen seldom remained on theearth. With all the disadvan-tages of living on the moon,the native moon-men liked it
better than gravity-boundEarth.
Crosbi wondered if men onthe moon had, after 300 yearsof colonization, somehow pre-pared themselves to live onthe airless surface. But howcould this be done by menwithout exposing themselvesto these conditions? Surelythere was no telepathy fromthe moon itself to the pitui-tary gland, telling how thebody should be conditionedfor life in an airless world !
On the other hand, therewas a reason why men on themoon consumed less waterthan the average earth-bredman. On the moon, water isprecious and it is purified and
repurified over and overagain. Men used it sparinglyand made every drop count.And possibly moon-men couldget along on less air, becausethe streets had low-pressureatmosphere that often causedearthmen to halt to catchtheir breath. But the air inthe streets of Crater Cononwas no more rarified than thatof the Andes and people livedthere.
And this certainly was notliving without any air at all.
Slowly Ace Crosbi came toa decision. He would attemptto survive without a pressuresuit, outside the protectingdome of the crater.
TJE CHOSE the early1 A morning, soon after thesun rose for its fourteen-dayvoyage across the sky. With apressure car, and Dag Scan-Ion, he went deep into AratusPass. Dag wore a pressure suitand he carried an extra hel-met for Crosbi. Ace wore thesuit and no helmet ; he was tobe allowed to lapse into un-consciousness and Dag was torevive him. There was specialequipment for expandingCrosbi's lungs, in case theycollapsed in the vacuum,which they probably would.
If something happened toAce's heart, nothing muchcould be done.
And so Crosbi stepped outof his pressure car and lookedaround. He had seen the lunarlandscape, and there was noth-ing new to see, but he was
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 93
surprised that his vision was
so clear. He had half expected
to be blinded by the bursting
of blood vessels in his eyes.
But he could see clearly. Hecould taste nothing, because
there was no air ; his sense of
smell and hearing also were
useless, but he could see.
He dropped to one knee and
ran his bare hand over the
rock. It was intensely cold,
and his hand was half-
numbed.But his senses were alert;
he felt no discomfort, save
from a frantic idea that he
must breathe or die. But he
wasn't breathing. The air had
gushed out of his lungs the
moment he stepped from the
car.
Ace turned, looked at Scan-
Ion. Dag was seated in the car
like a man of stone. He was
staring straight ahead, not
watching Crosbi. His eyes
were fixed on a bright, shiny
piece of stone that flashed the
early sun's light in his eyes.
Ace still could see. That
stone was Staghorn Crystal,
and it was not lying on the
ground. It was held in the
hand of a man who strode to-
ward him—a man as naked,
for all vacuum purposes, as
Ace himself.
The man was Judd Beecher.
AN OMINOUS feeling of
impending doom swept
over Crosbi. It was not Ace's
own feeling, but a telepathic
urge hurled at him by Beech-
er.
Ace opened his mouth to
call to Scanlon. But Dag sat
motionless, seemingly hypno-
tised by the brightness of
Beecher's bit of crystal. Ace's
mouth worked silently, for he
could not make a sound in the
vacuum.
Crosbi turned, and JuddBeechei leaped to intercept
Ace's plunge toward the car.
It was Beecher's anticipation
that Ace would seek safety in
a place where air could be
found, that saved Crosbi that
moment.Seeing his way to safety
blocked, Ace swung his fist.
It struck Judd Beecher on the
cheek, driving him backagainst the side of the pres-
sure car. The crystal fell from
his hand.
Ace stepped forward, gave
it a kick and sent the bright
stone dancing over the glassy
rock of the canyon floor.
Beecher snarled, glancing
at Scanlon, still motionless in
the car. Slowly Dag's head
turned. With seeming effort
he started to lift his hand.
Beecher bent low, reached
toward a pitted meteor frag-
ment that lay nearby. Heseized this, lifted it in his
hand and hurled it at Crosbi.
His aim was bad, and Ace
ducked to one side. Wagginghis mouth with silent curses,
Beecher turned and fled back
among the spires and yawning
holes that decorated the walls
of the canyon.
94 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
TN HIS CAR Scanlon had*•managed to pull his pistolfrom his holster. He emergedslowly from the car, and thenfitted the helmet over Cros-bi's head.
To his surprise, Ace foundthat he was not suffering al-though he had been outsidethe pressure car, with no pro-tecting equipment for almostten minutes.
His hands and cheeks werenumb with cold, but thesewere the only effects. Hefilled his collapsed lungs eas-ily, without help from Dag.But he had learned some-
thing else, too. Scanlon sat inthe pressure car holdingsomething in his gloved hand—an unpolished crystal."Where'd you get that?" Acedemanded.
"I bought it at auction,"said Scanlon. "It belonged toMike Lorraine. ,,
Ace Crosbi grabbed therock and dropped it into therefuse chamber of the car. Amoment later it was droppedout onto the lunar surface.
"The day that Beecher putme to sleep, I had those dicein my pocket," Ace said. "To-day you had a bit of crystal.Somehow, Beecher knew therewas a crystal in the car and heattacked, hoping that I had it.
He figured that as long as itwas one against one, he'd havethe advantage, because he feltsuperior. But we surprisedhim. He wasn't P
"I don't get k, bo**," said
you'd
ry. He
T
Scanlon. "I thoughtdrown without air."
Ace Crosbi had a theory. Hewasn't sure everything fitted,but they seemed to. He knewwhat the crystals did; heknew why men could livewithout air, and why telepa-thy was so keen on the moon.He also sensed who JuddBeecher was, and where hecame from.He would have to go to the
Seven Craters region to getall the answers.
IV
HEY LEFT the car atthe entrance and wentback to the casino. Ta-
ble 3 was busy, but Myrna,not Diane, was running thegame.Ace Crosbi went directly to
his office. He opened the deskdrawer to search for the shirtstud he had taken fromBeecher that first day he metthe young man.
It was gone. He called inScanlon. Dag hadn't seen it.
Neither had Zack Wood. Norany of the men who had beenin his office recently."Find out who's got it,"
Ace said. "It's more danger-ous than anything on themoon."Dag started his search and
Crosbi sank into the chair be-hind his desk. Esp didn't an-swer the problem. Nor didPK, hypnotism, clairvoyanceand prophecy. It was some-thing that was similar to, yetdifferent from, all of these. It
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 95
would prove the existence of
Teq.And suddenly Crosbi had
an answer that fitted. Teq,
thought energy quanta, did
not originate in the humanmind. It was a radiant energy
of space, like light, like cos-
mic radiation, like the radio
waves that stars transmit. It
continually flowed, and was
absorbed by living creatures
throughout the universe.
When a being absorbed
Teq, he released some. This
energy, modulated and condi-
tioned, gave an impression of
the sender's mind. It wasn't a
matter of transmitting one's
thoughts—it was releasing old
energy that had been replaced
by new.
No wonder Earth was con-
servative, and held onto its
old ideas. New Teq was pre-
cious there. There was compe-
tition for every quantum. Nowonder there were living fos-
sils, animals which went on
following the same pattern of
life for millions of years.
They lacked Teq, the energy
that made them change. Teq
bred mutations.
Here on the moon, in the
space of 300 years, man had
acquired an ability to live for
a brief space of time without
air. How long, Ace Crosbi did
not know. He doubted that
man could equal the endur-
ance of a whale, which lives
under water for as much as
two hours or more. But manwas becoming a hybrid ani-
mal, one that could live in and
out of an atmosphere. Chil-
dren of pioneer moon menwere mutants of a sort.
THE DOOR swung open. "I
know who got that thing,"
Scanlon announced."Where is it?"
"Ain't here. Diane picked
it up when she was going
through your desk for somecalipers to check dice."
"Where's Diane? We've got
to find her! As long as^JuddBeecher's around, she's in
danger!"
"Diane has gone. Nobodyknows where she went—she's
supposed to be at No. 3 table,
but Myrna, who knew about
Diane finding that crystal,
said she walked out like she
was in a dream."Crosbi stood motionless. A
wave of feeling passed over
him. Somewhere Beecher waslaughing at him. He had
Diane, and was carrying her
away. One thing Beecher did
not know, or even suspect,
was that Ace Crosbi knewwhere he was going.
"Get a gun for me," Crosbi
said, "and a case of concen-
trated food. We're going on
a trip."
THERE'S no blue haze on
the mountains of the
moon. They stand out clear,
shining with all the colors of
the rainbow, without the haze
that comes from air and all
air contains.
Crosbi's pressure car speed-
ed southward across Sinus
96 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
i
Medii. To the west the bulkyCrater Triesnecker, fully fif-ty miles in diameter, stoodlike an ugly sore on the sur-face of the moon. Ahead laythe smaller Bruce Crater,which was even smaller thanCrater Conon. Not far beyondbut just over the horizon layPtolemaeus, the first of theSeven Craters.
"Years ago," said Ace, "longbefore my great grandfather'stime, there was an attempt tosettle the Southern Hemis-phere. Craer Conon had beensuch a success in the norththat a group decided to builda another city south of theequator. They had a particu-lar crater in mind, one calledBirt, which was really twocraters in one. In some waysit was a better location thanConon, except that it was lessaccessible to Nikes from theearth. About forty familiesset out, and that was the lastanyone ever heard of them.""You think, their descen-
dants are alive?"
Crosbi nodded. He knewthey were, at least one oftheir descendants. But theyhadn't settled in Birt. Peoplehad visited Birt later andfound no trace of life. Buteven on the moon, a caravanof more than 150 people can'tvanish into thin vacuum. Theexplanation was that some-thing happened that madethem go somewhere else.
Ptolemaeus came into view,looking remarkably closeeven though it was nearly a
hundred miles away. Crosbiswerved to the left to goaround it, keeping his carmoving at an even three hun-dred miles an hour.
Directly beyond Ptolema-eus lay Alphons, and then Ar-zachel. Flanking the commonwall of the two craters weretwo small craters, only one ofwhich was named, and Acehad forgotten that. And thenthe country appeared to be adense mass of broken moun-tain ridges, the straight wall,unnamed gullies, vast fissuresand ugly rock domes. Itlooked all the world like thesurface of a bubbling witches'brew, frozen at its most vio-lent stage.
A CE CROSBI swung the** car far to the east andapproached Crater Thebit, thesmallest of the Seven Craters,from the northeast betweenthe Straight Wall and theNorthern End of the Stag'sHorn Mountains. And thenat the base of Thebit, hebrought the car to a halt.
"Is this it?" Scanlon askedlooking at the high walls ofthe fifty-mile crater.Ace shook his head. "No,
this is the path taken by theLost Settlers. You see, theygot into trouble because theydidn't realize lunar maps aredifferent from maps of theearth."
"Huh?" Day looked blank."On an Earth map, the top
is the north; the right is east;the left is west, and the bot-
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 97
torn is south. On lunar maps,
east and west are in their
right places, only if you put
South at the top and north
at the bottom."
"I don't get it," said Scan-
Ion. "How can north and
south get twisted around?"
"It isn't north and south
that are twisted. It would be
okay then just to turn a moonmap upside down. But east
and west are also transposed.
You see, the first maps of the
moon were made centuries be-
fore man ever set foot on the
satellite. The maps naturally
were drawn for use in study
with a telescope, therefore the
image was reversed. Whenmen came to the moon, the
new areas were charted in the
same way maps were drawnon the Earth, but the old
maps remained a telescopic
image."
When the Lost Settlers
started out on their trip they
were going into a new terri-
tory, which was unexplored.
Their charts were the old
lunar maps made by telescope.
They could see that north and
south were transposed, but
they did not realize that east
and west also were in the
wrong places.
In order to reach Birt, a
traveler must circle eastward
around Stag's Horn Moun-tains. But the Lost Settlers
went west, because they
didn't know how to read a
lunar map."Instead of winding up at
Birt, they went through the
pass between Thebit and Ar-
zachel," Ace said. "There arc
four or five craters beyond,
all about the the same size as
Crater Conon. Some probably
are double craters. I know of
at least two double craters
farther south."
ACE WENT on with his
story. The Lost Settlers
were forgotten. And then one
day, generations later, an old
prospector named Mike Lor-
raine stumbled onto some-
thing in the Stag's HornMountains. Mike knew it
wasn't a strike, for he never
filed a claim. He found some-
thing there that had been of
value to the Lost Colony of
the moon. He brought it to
Crater Conon. He didn't knowexactly what it was, except
that it possessed a strange
hypnotic power over man that
varied in intensity, almost as
if it directed itself.
How was Lorraine to knowthat he had discovered a Teqlodestone? That this stuff
drew Teq from space and ex-
uded it just like living crea-
tures, although the crystals
themselves were not alive.
Minerals do that: Germaniumdoes the work of a complicat-
ed vacuum tube. Most of
man's inventions are compli-
cated ways of doing things
that nature does almost with-
out exertion.
The Stag's Horn mountains
are a long distance from the
Lost Colony. Possibly Lor-
raine's theft, for it was a kind
98 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
of a theft, was not discovereduntil after Mike had returnedto Conon. But the Lost Colo-nists knew where to look.Crater Conon had forgottenabout the settlers, but the sel-lers had not forgotten aboutConon.
Generations of proximity toa focal point of Teq hadchanged them. They wereaware that they had qualitiesman did not have before hecame to the moon. Already,they knew they could existfor comparatively long peri-ods in the vacuum of the lu-nar surface. They visualizedthemselves as superior beings.One of their number wouldbe enough to track down thestolen crystals.
And so Beecher set out forConon. Arriving there he setout to locate Lorraine, and in-stead he was captivated bythe civilized life of the tour-ist center. He tried to buyCasa Conon, so that he couldlive on in the crater, afteraccomplishing his mission.Having no money, he attempt-ed to get it by using the crys-tals. But Day Scanlon hadfrustrated him, and this wasa blow to Beecher's ego. Hehad two missions to accom-plish now, one of them a scoreof his own.
X/JIKE PROBABLY never1V1 knew he was a huntedman. Possibly after he leftCasa Conon, he was hypno-tised by Beecher. He ledJudd, as well as C r o s b i and
Scanlon, to his car, stored atthe crater locks, where hekept a quanity of the crystalsin a lead lined bag. Beecherkilled Mike; then he waitedto kill Crosbi. Again he wasfrustrated, but in the mean-time he discovered thatDiane meant somethingto Crosbi. Ace had stored thissecret away in his subcon-scious, but Judd Beechercould sense by telepathy whatCrosbi would not admit tohimself.
Judd made his plans care-fully, and when Diane stum-bled onto the hypnotising bitof crystal in Crosbi's drawer,he could direct her move-ments. It is possible that heforced Diane to drop a clueso that Crosbi would knowwhere to look for her.
And now Crosbi was in atrap. Ace knew the trap wasset and baited with Diane,but he had one advantage thatJudd Beecher did not realize.Beecher believed that only
the Lost Colonists had beenable to absorb the Teq, toadopt themselves to the moon.He did not know that Teq isenvironment. The life forcedirect living organisms to-ward a goal of survival. InCrater Conon moon men hadevolved, just as the Lost Col-onists had evolved, into or-ganisms well on the road tosurvive even on an airlesssatellite.
Crater Conon people didnot realize it. Mike Lorrainehad discovered by accident
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION 99
he could live without a pres-
sure suit. Crosbi had discov-
ered it by experiment. Others
could do it, but did not knowit.
Crosbi knew that, in most
physical respects, he wasBeecher's equal. If Ace could
guard against surprise, he
would have an even chance to
met Judd Beecher on even
terms, even though he waswalking into a trap. And as a
means of guarding against
surprise, Ace had Dag Scan-
Ion.
Dag was not a moon man,
but he could guard Crosbi
from surprise attack.
ACE SLIPPED into his
pressure suit and crawled
out of the car, and Dag, also
protected against the lunar
vacuum by a pressure suit,
crawled after him.
Already the sun was warm-ing the moon's surface to a
temperature hot enough to
boil water at the earth's sea
level, but heat resistant shoes
protected their feet.
Ace Crosbi did not head
toward the craters that might
be the home of the Lost Set-
tlers. Something drew bimeastward—perhaps the sameforce that had drawn the Lost
Settlers to the spot, and the
force that had lured MikeLorraine to make the discov-
ery that led to his doom.
Crosbi approached the Y-shapes spread that looks so
much like a stags horn
through a telescope. It was
this formation that^ gave the
mountain range its namewhen astronomers first start-
ed mapping the moon.
Perhaps the mistake of the
maps had been rectified, per-
haps the Lost Settlers wereencamped in one of the Sev-
en Craters. There was a fair-
ly large settlement in Coper-
nicus, wThere tunnels and cav-
erns had been sealed off to
hold air. Similar work could
have been done in any of the
Seven Craters that spanned
nearly half of the southern
radius of the moon.
But Crosbi did not think so.
Convinced that the settlers,
like all pioneers, were stub-
born men who held to their
purpose, Ace believed they
would have traveled west-
ward, instead of east.
The thing that drew Aceeast now had added some-
thing else. It was an e:
sensory impulse that see:
to come from someone he
knew.
AHEAD WAS a si
mound, a lunar counter-
part of a foothill. Actually it
was simply a bubble that had
not burst to form a crater.
Scaling its glassy walls,
Crosbi locked ahead, toward
a fully formed crater not a
mile in diameter. At the bot-
tom yawned a large hole, a
pit. But it was not a natural
cavern. It was one that manhad dug with small powerful
drills.
100 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Ace signaled for Dag Scan-Ion to keep out of sight.
The glass bubble on whichAce stood was taller than thelip of the crater and Crosbicould see almost the entirearea, except for a small partnearest to where he stood.There was no sign of life.
"Come on," Ace spoke intohis microphone.Using the peculiar gliding
walk of a moon-man, Crosbiwent down the hillside andclimbed the crater wall."Ace!"It was not a sound, not a
signal in the earphones of hisradio. It was a thought. Itwas not a word,, spoken, buta feeling. Someone wantedAce. Needed him.This was followed by a
wave of contempt, a sensa-tion of derision. This too wasTeq, a telepathic transmissionthat Crosbi had known before.It was the same sensed im-pulse that had come to him onhis first meeting with JuddBeecher.Ace slid down the crater
side toward the black hole.Above the stars gleamed, al-though it was daylight be-yond the shadow. He sawtracks in the meteoric dust,but these might have beenmade a few minutes ago, yes-terday or a hundred yearsago. Nothing changes on themoon, except when manpasses by.
Crosbi walked into thehole; Dag Scanlon, with hisgun already drawn, came be-
hind him. His wheezingbreath whistled in Ace's ear-phones.
"Turn off your radio,"Crosbi said, and then realizedhis own was on. He switchedit off and saw Dag doing like-wise as he was silhouettedmomentarily in the entranceto the cave.
]~\ARKNESS slid around*^* them. Crosbi put hisgloved hand against the coldwalls of the moon cave. Thesides were rough, chopped outby terrestrial machines. Thenthe roughness stopped and thewalls were smooth as glass.They had entered a naturalcavern. But it was not sealed,like the caves of Copernicusand Archimedes.Suddenly Ace saw light
ahead, and he stepped into alarge chamber, fully a hun-dred feet across, lighted by abrilliant flourescence.
In the center was a hugeStaghorn crystal, seeming topulsate as it breathed forththe energy that lit the flour-escent material in the walls.Here v/as indeed proof of anenergy man had neverdreamed of, the energy Acecalled Teq. For Crosbi knewnow that the crystals v/erelodestones of a sort, a magne-tism of life energy seemed togive them power. They hyp-notised by drawing forth Teqfrom the eyes of anyone wholooked too long.Ace turned away, but Scan-
lon was not so fortunate.
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION
Caught like a luckless fly in
a web, he slid to the floor in
hypnotic sleep. His finger
pulled the trigger of his pis-
tol and fire spouted from its
snout.
There was no noise, but the
bullet struck the hugh crys-
tal, cracking it through the
center.
A wave of Teq anger swept
over Crosbi, but it did not
come from the crystal. Be-
yond the crystal stood JuddBeecher, without pressure
suit, without even a helmet.
His hands were gloved, his
face muffled to protect hold
his body heat to his skin. Hewore heavy clothing, of the
type called windproof on
earth, but in an airless world,
it was radiation proof, keep-
ing the body heat from pass-
ing out into space.
And Beecher was not alone.
His hand held Diane Boyer's
chained wrists. She was
space-suit clad, and the win-
dow of her helmet was foggy
with fear.
SEEING Crosbi, she jerked
backward and the motion
seemed to catch Beecher by
surprise. For a second she
was free; in that second, she
started to run.
Then Beecher held up his
left hand, the hand that had
been free as he held the girl.
In it was a flat, disc-shaped
crystal; he turned it toward
the girl.
It was a reflector, with
which he caught the radiated
101
Teq from the crystal. It
flashed into her back like the
stream from a fire hose, hurl-
ing the girl upward off the
floor.
At that moment Ace Crosbi
drew his own pistol.
The disc turned down,
caught Crosbi in the chest
and he too was bowled off his
feet. Diane came to the floor
nearby, falling with feather-
slowness as she was pulled by
lunar gravity.
Ace crawled to his knees.
Again the beam seized him,
catching his shoulder,wrenching his arm back.
Crosbi's scream of pain
inside the helmet almost deaf-
ened him as he dropped his
pistol. His shoulder hit the
cavern wall and he somehowmanaged to stay on his feet.
Across the room came Judd
Beecher, leaping as only a
man on the moon can leap.
His second bound brought
him near Crosbi, and he
stooped to pick up the pistol.
Ace gave himself a shove
off the cavern wall. He dove
straight at Beecher, bowling
him to the floor. The crystal
disc struck the basalt and
shattered, but it was no long-
er a needed weapon. The
hands of both men sought the
gun.
Crosbi's wrenched arm was
screaming pain. He could not
use it, and Beecher had two
fighting hands. Seizing his
wrist with one hand. Beecher
reached for the gun with the
other His fing.?rs touched it,
102 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
slid over the grip and thenAce kicked.
TJTIS KNEE caught Judd* * Beecher in the groin.Had there been air in Beech-er's lungs it would have comeout with the single agonizingscream, but Beecher had noair. Leaving Beecher, AceCrosbi kicked the gun acrossthe cave.
His face was red with exer-tion and pain now as hedropped on all fours ready tospring at his foe. Ace hadrisen now and stood legs farapart, ready to receive thecharge. His right arm hunguseless, already swollen fromthe wrenching sprain that thebeam had given him.Beecher sprang. His body
came like a bullet, scarcelytwo feet off the floor, for aman can dive far and straightwithout falling when gravitydoes not drag him down as itdoes on earth.
Crosbi dodged; his left armsnaked out, caught Beecher'sflying wrist in a relentlessgrip. And slowly Ace turned,whirling Judd Beecher outlike a weight on a string.
Around and around heturned, whirling Judd Beech-er out like a weight on astring.
Around and around heturned, for Beecher weighedless than thirty pounds toCrosbi's muscles, which stillhad the strength of an Earth-*tan's.
Then Ace released his one-
armed grip. Judd's bodyhurtled through the air,straight toward the crackedcrystal that still fed floures-cence into the cavern walls.
It struck silently and againsomething cracked ; but it wasnot the crystal. Judd Beech-er's spine bent like a hairpinand broke like dried wood.Ace Crosbi dropped to
Diane's side. She opened hereyes and Ace pulled her toher feet. He saw her lipsmove and realized his radiowas off. As it clicked on, heheard his own name repeatedover and over.
"Come on, girl, let's get outof here!" said Ace.He pulled her to her feet.
At the entrance to the largecavern they found Dag Scan-Ion, still sleeping, his handtightly clenching his pistol.Crosbi took the gun, thenstirred Dag with his foot. Thegunman opened his eyes.Ace reached down and
turned Scanlon's radio switch."It's all over, Dag; let's go."
CORE AND weary, they^ tramped back to the pres-sure car. It was only whenthey reached it and had re-moved their helmets inside,did anyone talk.
"We ought to fill up thathole," said Diane.Ace Crosbi shook his head.
"Staghorn crystals can beuseful," he said. "Somehowman has always known therewas something on the moonthat made men mad. The an-
EXTRA SPACE PERCEPTION ICO
cients weren't so far off base,
but they'd never heard of a
crystal that puts men to sleep
like a narcotic. Not farther
off than Opewell, when he
said they were dope. Theyare dope, in a way; and like
dope, they can help heal or
help kill. The moon does
make men do strange things,
it makes men different, it
modifies by environment. Youmight say that the Staghorn
Crystals are the resources of
the moon."Diane nodded agreement.
Yes, life forms were carried
on by heredity, but it was en-
vironment that gave birth to
evolution. It is environment
that makes mutations and en-
vironment that makes life
seek its level.
"The crystals are dangerous
to man," said Crosbi, "but
they are also necessary. Mandoes not fight electricity, be-
cause it is deadly. Nor does
he call heat an enemy because
it can burn. Man harnesses all
other energy and somedayhe'll harness Teq."
"But until then," fa id
Diane, "let's not play with
fire."
"Right," said Crosbi. Heheld out his hand. From a
pocket of her pressure suit,
Diane pulled out a tiny, glit-
tering object that looked like
a shirt stud. Crosbi took it
and dropped it into the dis-
posal chute of the pressure
car.
"Want me to drive, Ace?"
asked Scanlon. "I don't think
you can manage with a bumrirht arm."
"Sure," said Crosbi. Til sit
in the back. Diane, flo^you
mind sitting on my left" Hepaused an instant, then add-
ed: "You can sit real close
on that side."
It seemed simple enough; the jet-powered Calypso
would land on this icebound planet and pick up the
passengers and crew of the wrecked hyperhner.
However, Captain Werner had forgotten a few ele-
mentary matters in the excitement.
don 7 miss
QUICK FREEZEby Robert Silverberg
// leads off the May issue of
SCIENCE FICTION QUARTERLY'Still only 25* — at all stands
The idea of Equality is a noble one, but it can lead togruesome errors when it's misinterpreted. After all, there'sa vast difference between asserting thai all should be equalbefore the law, that no man should be denied theopportunity to improve himself or his position, and con-tending that every man is as good as every other man!
THE JANUS CITYby Irving Cox Jr.
(author of "Mission To The Enemy")
"M AY I come in?"He looked up
from the console,smiling hospitably. "Surething, Ma'am."
"The supervisor said youwouldn't mind helping me."She glided along the catwalk,the most dazzlingly beautifulwoman he had ever seen."We don't have visitors
very often; I'll be glad toshow you around." His tonewas an honest reflection ofdeep pride in his responsibi-lity. To him the Machinewas god, the beginning andthe end of all things; hisreason for being. Beyond thecatwalk he could see theturning shaft—a thousandtons of polished metal; a cyl-inder that sored throughthe roof of the caverns intothe upper levels, even as far
as the Creative City itself.The City lived as long asthat shaft turned; it was herresponsibility to make cer-tain that the Machine neverstopped.
"I'm Marcia Pell," shesaid, "from the CreativeCity. I'm writing a book—
a
historical novel-^and I needbackground material. Youknow: the intimate feel ofa worker's life in the caverns--all that sort of thing."
"I don't know much aboutbooks, Ma'am," he said awk-wardly, a little embarrassedby the forthright display ofher^ physical beauty in theskimpy, semi-transparentworksuit that she wore.She laughed comfortably.
"Oh, I only want you togive me reality of detail. Ipride myself on the factual
104
!05
accuracy of my books. Myhero will be Sven Lang'don.
He's a somewhat legendary
figure, you know—the leader
of the last cavern revolt, be-
fore we developed our pre-
sent Classification System/'
Sven Langdon. . . legend-
ary figure . . . cavern revolt
:
the words were meaningless.
He remembered something he
had learned long ago in the
General School, but an ac-
curate chronology of the
past had always been beyond
him.
UAS OF COURSE you
know," Marcia Pell
went on, "Langdon's revolt
took place about two hundred
years ago. However, the typ-
ical life in the caverns—the
overall emotional atmos-
phere—will have changedvery little." She flipped
open a tiny, black notebook
and smiled at him brightly.
'Til want the usual statistics
first, I think. Your name, if
I remember correctly, is
Roger Brillen. Classification
Bracket 60-65?"
"Yes, Ma'am. My average
specific is 64, but I'm a 91 in
mechanics.""Excellent, Roger ! Sven
Langdon's specific was a 66.
Faulty, of c o u r s e—whichwas the basic cause of the
revolt. At least I'm assuming
that for my plot motivation.
And how old are you,
Roger?""Thirty-three in March.'
"Ideal for my purposes.
106 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Langdon was thirty-four atthe time of the revolt." Shestudied h i m thoughtfully,tapping her pencil againsther teeth. "I imagine heresembled you, too—broad-shouldered, sandyhairedgood-looking. You know,we've only one picture ofLangdon in the archives, andthat's a miserable print. I'll
have to build him up fromscratch. You won't mind serv-ing as a kind of model,Roger?"
"I guess not, Miss Pell."He agreed because he had anagreeable nature, but hedidn't quite know what shemeant.
"Let's not be so formal.I'm Marcia and you're Rog-er. After all, we're going tobe collaborators for the nextfew weeks."
"Anything you say—Mar-cia." He blushed. Marcia Pellwas the first woman he hadever spoken to with any inti-
macy. Roger had not oftengone to the RecreationHouses. The Machine had al-
ways been enough to satisfythe unsophisticated patternof his emotional needs.Women embarrassed h i m,made him shy and tongue-tied. But not Marcia Pell; hefelt at ease with her, as hedid with the Machine. Hebegan subconsciously to cou-ple them in his mind.
A RED CONSOLE light** winked on; Roger madean adjustment of the dials
while she watched him. Thethrob of the turbineschanged subtly. He lookedanxiously at the whirlingshaft and opened the automa-tic lube valves.
"What was all that for?"she asked when he hadfinished.
"The interior pressure haddecreased on one of theupper levels—the Engineers',I think—and I had to cut ina new turbine bank.""Then you actually con-
trol the nuclear reactorsfrom here?""No, Ma'am—no, Marcia, I
mean. The power-maker is inthe lower cavern. Only theEngineers know how to makeit go." As always there wasawe in his voice, deep respect,when he spoke of the incom-prehensible process whichgave life to his Machine."You could learn."
"But this is my job, here.I don't understand the restof it."
"Nonsense, Roger. It's sim-ply a matter of reading theproper books."
"No, I can't—" He lookedaway from her, ashamed be-cause he had somehow losther respect. "You see, Marcia,this work is what I like. Idon't want to do anythingelse."
CHE SNAPPED her note-^ book shut and glancedalong the catwalk which cir-cled the metal walls of thecavern. "And you have never
THE JANUS CITY 107
worked at anything else
,
Roger?1 '
"No!" Even the idea of
change frightened him. "I
took the Classifications whenI was ten—as soon as I left
the General School—and IVebeen here ever since." Headded, with obvious pride,
"Nearly twenty-three years,
Marcia."An expression of horror
came into her face. "Twenty-three years in this hole—inthis heat! Smelling the hot
oil and hearing nothing but
the grinding of these tur-
bines! It would drive memad."
"I have the greatest re-
sponsibility in the City. MyMachine makes the air and
controls the pressure on all
the levels. If it stopped for
as much as a minute—
" Heshuddered."In a way, our lives are in
your hands—Roger Brillen,
Specific Classification 64
with a 91 in mechanics. Theirony, I hope, doesn't escape
you?"
He nodded vaguely, be-
cause he knew she expected
him to; but he had no idea
what she was talking about.
"You're not the only Pres-
surizer attendant, are you,
Roger?""I'm the senior," he an-
swered. "I've been here long-
est. There are none others;
we alternate, in four hour
shifts."
"The ten men who rule the
city," she said languidly, "if
they had the sense to knowit. An intelligent man wouldbe able to—Roger, you've
given me the theme for mybook. I know why Langdonrevolted
!"
THE CONSOLE lights
blinked again. He said,
over his shoulder as he
turned the dials, "My shift
will be over in twenty min-
utes. If you like, we can go
up to one of the lounges and
talk."
"Not today. Jake said he'd
come by for me ; he hated meto keep him waiting. But I'll
be back tomorrow, Roger.
Your supervisor said it wasyour free day. I want you to
show me everything in the
caverns—how you live; whatyou do to amuse yourself.
And I want to meet all your
friends, especially the other
men who service the Pres-
surizer. That is, if you don't
mind?""Sure, Ma'am—M a r c i a.
You just come whenever you
want. I'll show you the
works."
She touched his handgracefully as she departed;
he blushed again.
When Rogers relief came,
he went up into the entry to
si^n out. Marcia Pell wasstill there, talking bitterly to
a stranger whose sleek beam-
car was racked at the land-
ing in the ascent tube. Thenewcomer was a thin, stiff-
backed man of middle age.
103 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
His graying hair was cutclose to his head; and histanned, sharpboned faceseemed very troubled. Hewore, as Roger did, the ty-pical City costume—close-fitting trunks and plastic-soled boots. On the waist-band of his trunks was thegolden insignia of a govern-ing Delegate.
[ARCIA SMILED at1 Roger, but her voice was
still sharp with ill-suppress-ed anger. "This is Jake, Rog-er—Jake Amaron. He's sud-denly come up with the pre-posterous notion that I oughtto give up my new book—trysomething less controversial,he tells me."
Amaron frowned. "Mustwe discuss it here, Marcia, infront of—in front of him?""Why not?" she demanded
furiously. "He's a man, nodifferent from you— notreally. And all men are equal.Have you forgotten, Jake?We brought that doctrinewith us when we founded theCity."
"N one has mentioned theClassifications, Marcia." Am-aron sighed wearily. "You al-ways oversimplify, my dear.That's natural, I suppose,since you're a Creative. But
fp
"Now, I suppose, you in-tend to criticise my
—
n
"I made a simple state-ment, Marcia; no more andno less. I want you to soft-peddle your crusading this
time. Write about anythingyou please, but don't try tocreate another parliamentaryissue."
She drew herself up haugh-tily. "I write from my heart,Jake ; I call my shots as I seethem. If I hit a raw nerve,the government deserves tobe embarrassed."
"The only embarrassment,my dear, has been mine. I'ma politician; I can't have mycareer wrecked in this per-petual comedy of misappliedgood intentions. The otherDelegates are beginning towonder why I can't imposeat least a minimum of res-traint on what you write."
"Try it, Jake—just once.And I'll dissolve our marri-age so fast you won't knowwhat hit you."
"That isn't what I want,Marcia; you know that. Ilove you; I always will. Butthis lack of responsibility—
"
"Restraint!" She spat 'outthe word furiously and tearswere in her eyes. "I'm ACreative, Jake. I write as Iplease; I think as I please."
"I'm sorry, Marcia. I wan-ted to talk this over quietly,calmly." He tried to put hisarm around her waist, but shepulled away from him. "Comehome with me now. Whenyou're feeling rested—
"
<£T'M GLAD this came up,-SLJake; I'm glad Roger
heard what you think of me.Perhaps he'll understand the
THE JANUS CITY 109
sort of thing I go throughwhen I'm writing a book. Thelife of a Creative is a tor-
ment, with so few satisfac-
tions! How often I wish I'd
been born in another Classif-
ication. If only I could ful-
fill myself in something less
complex—tending a machine,as Roger does; or supervis-
vising government finances,
like you do, Jake."
"We both understand, Mar-cia." This time when Amarondrew her into his arms shedid not resist. He led hergently toward the door.
Roger watched as their
beam-car slid into the ascent
tube. He had listened withamazement to their wran-gling, but he had actually
comprehended very little of
it. The undercurrents escapedhim. Their argument con-
veyed the superficial impres-sion that Marcia was severely
tormented by her husband,who blindly condemned andcriticised her work. She boreher suffering with obviousnobility. Roger's heart wentout to her in sympathy. If
he could, he would have doneanything to ease Marcia's
burden.
And he disliked Amaronintensely. The reaction wasshaded with jealousy andhope—jealousy, because Am-aron was her husband; hope,
because ' she had not yet
taken Amaron's name. Thatmeant the marriage was still
conditional; either Jake or
Marcia could dissolve it
simply by publishing a for-
mal notice to that effect.
ROGER TOOK the pedes-
trian slideway to the cav-
ern residential area, on the
first level above the Machine.
The area was still under-ground, but the walls and the
roof broadened out to create
an illusion of openness. Theconcealed artificial lighting,
the continuous zephyr of fra-
grant, clean air, and the or-
namental trees and shrubscompleted the illusion. Rogernever felt dissatisfaction
with the place where helived; he never envied the
upper levels nor yearned to
see the actual out-of-doors
—
which here was a parched,
red desert, swept with gales
of chlorine and burned by the
white light of twin suns.
The atmosphere was a
breathable compound of oxy-gen, but the chlorine made it
almost unendurable. As a
consequence, the City wasbuilt beneath a protective
dome, and no man went out-
side without being masked.
The familiar beauty and com-fort of the City was an ideal-
ization of the parent world,
which Rogers ancestors hadleft more than a thousandyears ago.
A place called Earth: he
had learned that, too, in the
General School. It was the
only habitable planet in a sun
1(0 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
system twenty light yearsaway, on the fringe of thegalaxy. Roger had no ideawhat the astronomical termsactually meant, except thatthe distance was beyondunderstandable measurement.It had taken the originalcolonists two generations toreach their new world,granted to them in perpetualcharter by the earth govern-ment.
They had called their colo-ny Janus because of the twinsuns, and because of the two-faced nature of the terrain:a blazing surface of desertwaste which hid a core oflimitless natural resources.Janus had not been a commer-cial colony; their world wastoo far from the centers ofhuman population for profit-able exploitation. The colo-nists had come, rather, tobuild a City where their so-cial concepts might developin peace.
"In a very real sense, wewere like the Pilgrims whoestablished the Colony ofMassachusetts so very longago."
TTOW OFTEN the Gener-* * al School teacher hadmade that explanation toRoger's class! She had in-
tended to clarify a point, butshe had only increased hisconfusion. The colonists toRoger's world had crossedthrough the sky; the Massa-chusetts Pilgrims had floated
over an unimaginably widebody of water called an ocean.Roger could visualize nosimilarity between the two.
Since the sunlight neverwaned on Janus, the day inthe City was an arbitrary di-
vision of hours marked by thedimming or brightening ofthe artifical lights beneaththe dome. Night was simplyan eight hour period of dark-ness during which the colonyslept; morning was the des-ignation for the time whenthe lights came on again.Roger knew no other defini-tion.
The next day, after morn-ing, Roger was watching theStory-channel on the screen in
in his dormitory room whenMarcia Pell came to see him.He was sorry he had to snapoff the adventure before hesaw how it came out. Rogerhad no hobbies; he hated toread; and he never really en-joyed the Recreation Houses.The Story-channel was hischief form of free-time relax-ation.
But Marcia was here, andhe was pleased about that, too.He had been afraid that Ama-ron would persuade her to
e up her book. Then shewould have had no reason toreturn to the caverns; obs-curely Roger felt he wouldpersonally lose some^ng if
that happened.
jl/|ARCIA SEEMED to be*** in a happier mood. Ap-parently her differences with
THE JANUS CITY 111
Her husband had been settled.
She inspected Roger's roomminutely, jotting notes rapid-
ly in her black notebook.
"You've always lived here?"
she asked."Ever since I was appren-
ticed to the Machine. ,,
"But your room seems so
bare. So expressionless. Why,you've no scheme of decora-
tion at all; not a picture on
the walls!"
"Oh, I could put up somepaintings if I wanted to ask
Supply for them. But I don't
understand the pictures you
Creatives make, and they
bother me.""Are most of the other dor-
mitory rooms like yours?"
"I haven't seen any very
different."
She shuddered. "So Sven
Langdon lived in this sort of
cultural poverty! No wonder
he revolted."
She snapped on his screen
and the tail end of the adven-
ture sv/am into focus. "Surely
you weren't watching that,
Roger?"
"Yes; it was an awfully
good one this time."
Marcia shuddered again. "I
know precisely how good, myfriend : I had to write the dia-
logue. But how can you stom-
ach this tripe on the Story-
channel?"
"I never watch anything
else."
"The material on the A and
B programs is so much richer,
so much more informative."
He laughed uncomfortably.
"But I don't understandthem.""The Story-channel dishes
up nothing but childish pap,
Roger— a romantic opiate. It
keeps your mind in chains."
HE DIDN'T know how to
answer that one, so he
said nothing. But he was puz-
zled that she disapproved of
his taste. He would have
promised to change, if she
had asked it; but he knewthat no degree of determina-
tion would make the other
programs any clearer. Be-
sides, what difference did it
make? The Story-channel wasfun; it always held him en-
tranced. Why shouldn't he
watch it?
"I suppose, Roger, you've
never married?""You don't, when you work
in the caverns."
She was at once aroused:
her face flushed with anger.
"You mean they've actually
told you, you can't?"
"Oh, no, Marcia! There's no
law against it. We— we just
don't. There are cavern wom-en in the Recreation Housesfor us, of course
—
"
"It's psychological compul-
sion ; they've taken away your
rights as a free man." She
jammed her plastic writer so
furiously against the page of
her notebook that the imple-
ment broke in two. "I under-
stand Sven Langdon, now—thoroughly. Such brutality
must be exposed."
"I'm afraid I've given you
112 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
the wrong idea, M a r c i a.
There's nothing brutal aboutit. We're allowed to marry, if
we want to; some of us have.I'll show you the dorms wherethey live."
Impulsively she took his
hand and held it, gently cares*sing his fingers as if he werea little child. Enormous, glis-tening tears welled from thedepths of her blue eyes."Yes, dormitory marriage,where they can drug thefood; there are never anychildren, of course.
"
"Why, now that you men-tion it
—
"
"I promise you this, Roger,"she said huskily, "I'll writemy book. Nothing's going tostop me, not even Jake. It's
your book, too, Roger; it willgive you your freedom.""But I'm free now. We all
are. That's why the City wasbuilt, so men could— could—
"
He reached desperately intothe dim haze of his mind forthe phrase he had learned inthe General School, and hequoted it brightly, "Janus wasfounded so that all men couldrealize the ultimate potentialof individual creativeness* "
"Janus : sly, ambiguous,two-faced," she said bitterly."Our world was rightlynamed. With my own eyes Iwant t see the whole truth,Roger, so I can paint it accur-ately for my readers. Show meeverything in the caverns. Iwant to pull away the maskand show this terrible thingwe've done."
COR TWO WEEKS, Marcia* Pell spent the day withRoger whenever he had thetime free. She came frequent-ly to watch him while hetended his Machine, and hethought she had learned torespect it and worship it as hedid. Slowly his mind-pictureof Marcia fused with his ideaof the Machine. The two be-came identical. He would havedone anything within hispower to satisfy the demandsof either.
Marcia undertook whatshe termed his re-education.She talked interminably abouthis rights. To please her, hepretended t understand, butthe flood of abstractions lefthis mind in chaos. He wasquite satisfied with things asthey v/ere, but Marcia re-fused to believe that. SoRoger learned to parrot herphrases of discontent, becausethat was what she seemed towant.
As she became acquaintedwith Roger's friends, she at-tempted to re-educate them,too—particularly the othernine men who served Roger'sMachine. They listened andthey quoted what theylearned, because they wereall subconsiously in lovewith her. Her dazzling beau-ty, her sensitive emotionalreactions—like a synthesisof all the exciting heroineson the Story-channel—andthe dynamic glow of her per-sonality were incomprehcn-
THE JANUS CITY 113
sible to them, but delight-
fully narcotic.
MANY TIMES she took
Roger in a beam-car to
the upper levels of the City,
even to the Creative City at
the top of the Janus pyra-
mid. She persisted in believ-
ing he was not permitted to
go to the upper levels alone,
and eventually he believed
that, too—although, at the
same time, he knew he wasfree to roam where he
pleased and to use any City
facility he chose.
Suddenly, late at night,
Marcia fled to Roger in ter-
ror. She pounded on the
door of his dormitory roomuntil he admitted her. Thenshe clung in his arms, weep-ing hysterically.
"Don't let them take me,
Roger !"
"Who? Where ?"
"Jake. He betrayed me,
Roger, you have to find a
place for me to hide some-
where in the caverns."
Roger tried to shake the
fog of sleep out of his brain.
"I don't get it. Tell mewhat's happened."
"A week ago Jake brought
a friend home to live with
us. Such a nice man! So easy
to talk to. And friendly. Hewanted to know all about mywork. He even let me read
him the first two chapters of
my Langdon book. Now it
turns out this—this friend
is an alienist, he was testing
me. They've decided to send
me to a hospital. I heard
them talking tonight, whenthey thought I was asleep."
"You always go to the hos-
pital when you're hurt, Mar-cia. It's nothing to be afraid
of."
"Nothing's wrong with
me!" she screamed at him.
"Understand that, Roger."
"Well, you look all right.
What's an alienist?"
"A kind of doctor; a quack,
I've no time to explain. Youhave to find a place for me to
hide, so I can go on with mywork."Uli/fAYBE AL could help;lVl he's in Agricultural
Maintenance. He knows the
caverns like a book."
"Yes, get Al; he's a good
boy. We've talked a lot. Al
knows how much I'm trying
to help you people." Hertrembling fingers closed tight
on his upper arm. "Will youmake me one promise.Roger?"
"Sure, Marcia; anything
you ask.""When Jake comes for me,
don't give me up, whatever
happens. Jake and the others
—they'll make all sorts of
promises. Don't listen to
them, Roger! They'll tell
you anything just to get
their hands on me.""You'll be safe, Marcia."
"You've promised, Roger;
remember, you've promised!"
Her insistance affronted
him. With dignity he said, "I
have never broken my word.
Responsibility is the one duty
H4 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
we owe all men. When I saythat I will help you—""I'm doing it all for you.
You know that, don't you,Roger?"
"You'll be safe here, Mar-cia." Timidly he drew his armaround her waist. She madeno attempt to resist; she evenlet him kiss her.
WITH HIS soul singing,
he went to summon Al.As soon as Al knew it wasMarcia who was in trouble,he was more than eager tohelp. After some debate, theydecided to install her in anabandoned tool shed near oneof the Recreation Houses.But the shed was filled withdebris and filth: certainly nofit sanctuary for Marcia Pell.
Al awoke two of his fellow-
workers in AgriculturalMaintenance to help himclear it out. Again Marcia'sname was a magic sesame to
an immediate response. Laterothers had to be let into thesecret, in order to assureMarcia a suitable supply offood and necessities.
By morning the news wasmore or less general through-out the caverns. Nothing sodramatic had ever occurredbefore to any of them. Thosewho knew Marcia, or who hadattended her sessions of re-
education, were fanaticallyloyal to her. If she said herhusband was persecuting her,then unquestionably that waswhat had happened. Shedeserved their protection.The other people in the
caverns who knew of the con-spiracy entered into it withchildish delight. One of themexpressed the thinking of thegroup when he said to Roger,"It's like being in one of theStory-c h a n n e 1 adventures,isn't it?"
TV7HEN AMARON came he** was met by a united frontof stubborn silence. Roger re-fused t make even monosyl-labic answers to Amaron'squestions, for fear he wouldunwittingly betray Marcia'shiding place.
Amaron went away, but twohours later he returned withhalf a dozen other governmentDelegates. They controntedRoger while he worked at hisMachine. A stranger—intro-duced as Mr. Pike, Chairmanof the Council—acted asspokesman.
"The disappearance of MissPell has become a matter forgovernment intervention," hesaid stiffly.
^ "Why?" Roger demanded."She's done no harm. On Ja-nus each of us is always freeto—""Miss Pell is a sick woman
;
she needs medical aid.""I saw her. She wasn't hurt
anywhere, she didn't tell meshe was sick."
"All illness, I'm afraid, isn'tquite so easily diagnosed.Miss Pell's mind is sick. She'ssuffering a complex of—
"
"I never heard such non-sense!" Roger's lips curled ina sneer and he jabbed his
THE JANUS city 115
thumb at Amaron. "You're ly-
ing, because he wants you to."
Mr. Pike sighed. "We'vetalked to the others, Roger.
You're our last resort. Youknow her better than they do.
Surely you must realize that
her thinking isn't quite nor-
mal."
"What's wrong with it? She
talks just like all the Crea-
tives."
"Then you refuse to help
us?""I gave Marcia my pro-
mise.""Then listen to our ultima-
tum; it might change your
mind. Unless you surrender
her within an hour, the Coun-
cil will deputize an Emergen-cy Guard to search the ca-
verns by force. We'll take
legal measures, then, against
any man who opposes us."
THE DELEGATIONturned and departed.
Roger was paralyzed by their
threat. "Legal measures" in
the City of Janus meant one
thing: expulsion from the
City. An outlaw was driven
from the protection of the
dome and never readmitted.
It was not a death sentence—
which, perhaps, made it
worse. A man could find
brackish water in the depths
of the desert canyons, and the
unpalitable fungus v/hich
o-rew on the shaded rocks was
both edible and nourishing.
But the criminal was con-
demned to breathe the chlo-
rine atmosphere for the rest
of his life—condemned to
bleary, smarting eyes, to a
parched throat and an un-
quenchable thirst.
Roger summoned an emer-
gency relief and went out into
the caverns. The ultimatum
had left the others as para-
lyzed with fear as he was. Noone knew what to do. Theywere still loyal to Marcia;
they all shared subtly in the
responsibility of the promise
Roger had made to her. Yet
now they w. osed by
full authority of the govern-
ment; they had an equival
responsibility to obey the law.
>OGER WENT to see Mar-
~^cia. She was a Creative.
She could think clearly in
any situation; certainly she
would know a way out of the
impasse. Since she had alv/ays
been so noble, he fully expect-
ed her to release him from
his promise. But instead she
declared, "Perfect, Roger!This is precisely what wewant."
"A government ultimatum?
I don't see how that can help
you, Marcia."
"I'm not important, Roger.
I'm simply a means to an end
—an instrument of justice. If
they actually deputize an
Emergency Guard, you peo-
ple in the caverns must resist
them." _
He was frankly shocked
"You're suggesting that wedefy the law?""The law is your enemy
j
the law keeps you in chains."
She put her hand on his
I lb SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
shoulder. "Remember yourheritage
: you are a man, andmen have always been willingto fight—to die, if need be—for liberty and justice."
"The Guard will be issuedweapons, Marcia; we havenothing."
"Every cause needs mar-tyrs; Sven Langdon said thatlong ago."
"Oh, I don't think so, Mar-cia. Langdon didn't—
"
"He will in my book," shesnapped, "and that amounts tothe same thing."
"He didn't want anyone tobe hurt. That's why he keptthe Machine running, evenduring the revolt."She looked into his face and
slowly she began to smile."I'd overlooked that, Roger:you do have a weapon—thePressurizer. You can go onstrike. Force them to makeconcessions."
He was bewildered."Strike? Concessions? I don'tknow the words."
"It was always the worker'sweapon, back on Earth. We'vetried to breed it out of youhere. We'll meet Jake's threatwith one of our own. I'm go-ing to the Pressurizer room,Roger. You call the others to-gether—the men who servicethe Machine with you—andbring them there. Hurry!They've given us only anhour."
Y
JN TWENTY minutes thex men were assembled on thecatwalk beside the console.
Slowly hundreds of otherworkers flocked curiouslyinto the cavern outside theentry room. In a shrill, excit-ed, almost breathless voiceMarcia addressed the throng.From the catwalk Rogerheard only snatches of herspeech, but it must have beeninspiring because the crowdcheered her repeatedly.
When Marcia returned tothe catwalk, her face wasflushed with excitement; hereyes blazed with a cold, sap-phire fire. She radiated a feel-ing of crisis, a hypnotic con-viction. What she said, whatshe did would be right. Rogerfelt that instinctively, as theother men did. Marcia wassuddenly something morethan human. For Roger, heridentification with the Ma-chine was complete.
"Jake will come any min-ute," she said. Her voice wasstill high-pitched, as if shewere addressing a throng. Shelooked at the men blindly, hereyes fixed on a distant hori-zon, an inner vision of herown. "He will bring an Emer-gency Guard. They will bearmed. They will threaten tokill us all." She gestured to-ward the console. "There'sour answer. If they make onemove against us, we'll shutthe valves on every level.We'll cut the City pressure
"Stop the Machine?" Rogerasked hoarsely. "The domewould collapse. It would de-stroy the City!"
THE JANUS CITY 117
"Not the caverns, Roger;
they're underground."
"But it's our responsibili-
"They've taught you this
sacred worship of responsibil-
ity in order to make things
easy for themselves. Face re-
ality, Roger! This is our op-
portunity to achieve equality
—fredom, liberty ! Besides,
we're only making a threat;
we wouldn't really shut off
the Machine."
One of the men said slow-
ly, "We have to fight for our
rights; you've always told us
that, Marcia.""For justice; for equality!"
THE MEN caught the in-
fection of her ringing en-
thusiasm. Roger was almost
carried with them, but he
glanced up at the whirling
shaft of the Machine and he
felt the cold, knife-edge of
doubt. Even to suggest stop-
ping the Machine was a be-
trayal of his trust, of himself.
A denial of the only god he
knew. His life was the Ma-chine, the beginning and the
end of all things; his reason
for being.
None of the other men had
ever felt Roger's sense of
dedication. He tried to ex-
plain, but the right words did
not come ; and Marcia slashed
his bumbling argument with
ridicule. She created such
confusion in his mind that
Roger began to question his
own conviction.
It was then that Amaron
and the armed EmergencyGuard appeared at the far end
of the catwalk.
"Stay where you are," Mar-
cia called out Imperiously,
"or we shall shut down the
Pressurizer."
"Don't be ridiculous," Ama-ron answered. "These menhave been taught since child-
hood—
"
"I've done some re-educa-
tion." Marcia's voice bubbled
with triumph. "The men are
with me." She glanced toward
the console, and one by one
the men—e v e n Roger—nod-
ded their agreement.
AMARON wrung his hands.
"Marcia, this is utterly
fantastic. What can you pos-
sibly hope to gain?"
"For myself—" She lifted
her head proudly, "—nothing.
A footnote, perhaps, in the fu-
ture history of Janus. I ask
no other reward. But for these
poor, downtrodden souls in
the caverns, I will settle for
nothing less than equality."
"Freedom and liberty," the
men echoed in a dutiful chor-
us.
"They have that now!'
"Your lies won't work,
Jake ; the men know the truth,
is it equality when they must
slave here in the caverns to
keep the City alive, while the
Creatives live in ease and
comfort?"Amaron turned toward the
men. "Tell me precisely what
you want that you don't have
now?"
118 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
After a long silence, Rogerwhispered, "Concessions." Itwas the word he had learnedfrom Marcia; it should havebeen the right answer.But Amaron demanded
scornfully, "What kind ofconcessions, Roger ?"
Roger was lost. Ke shot anappealing glance at Marcia ashe replied, "Equality. Wewant to be equal. All men areequal. It's our right as men.""Marcia, your re-education
seems to have bogged down onthe level of abstractions,"Amaron said dryly. "Let's seeif we can make any of thisspecific. Do you want shorterhour shifts, Roger?""Oh, no!" Roger thought
he was on safe ground here."I'd rather spend more timewith the Machine."
Y7ET EVEN that seemed toA be the wrong answer, be-cause Marcia cut in angrily,"Of course they do, Jake.And they want the right to goanywhere in the City theyplease.*
"They have that now.""To marry and bear chil-
dren."
There'* no law—""But psychological pres-
sure. I understand that, Jake,even If these poor peopledon't" Marcia had found atangible fcaue, and for thefirst time Amaron seemedfrightened.
Tow'r* a fool," he said
lation."
"At the expense of thesepeople."
"Of all of us, Marcia. Thesame Classification is appliedto^every child on every level.""Then the Classification
System must be abolished."Amaron appealed directly
to the men again. "You'rehappy; you're successful;you're doing what you enjoy.Can't you see that this wom-an's trying to destroy allthat? Her mind is sick. Sur-render her to us so we can "
"He's lying," Marcia saidcoldly. "You know he's lying.He wants to take me away be-cause I'm trying to help you."Amaron glared at the men
;
no one spoke. Then Jakeasked slowly, "You won't eiveher up?" s
"No," Roger answered;without hesitation the othernine men echoed the same re-sponse.
Jake dropped his handshelplessly. "When I camehere, I was empowered to do acertain amount of bargaining,but not on as fundamental apoint as this. Janus would bein chaos if we abandoned theClassifications."
"We'll settle for nothingless," Marcia declared.
quickly. *Yaa know we have1» maiataia a balanced popu-
COR A MOMENT Amaronx conferred in whispers withthe Guard. One of the armedmen left: the others gatheredclose behind Amaron and thegroup began to move imper-ceptibly along the catwalk
THE JANUS CITY 119
toward the console,
"I've sent for Mr. Pike. In
the meantime, perhaps we can
work out a basic agreement."
"The Classification System
must go," Marcia repeated.
"Naturally, my dear. Wecan't let you destroy the
City." Amaron looked at Rog-
er, and his face seemed
strangely twisted with emo-
tional pain. "You men are all
in the 60-65 Bracket. That
means you don't readily grasp
the significance of abstracts,
but I'm going to try to ex-
plain the Classification to
you."
Marcia laughed. "You don't
dare, Jake ! Would you tell a
man to his face that he's a—
'
"The Bracket numbers,
Amaron went on doggedly,
"tell us at a glance what your
average intellectual potential
is. The Classification System
is a refinement of a primitive
intelligence test which menworked out centuries ago on
Earth. We've made ours so ex-
act that we've been able to
build a functioning society
from it. The normal man
would be in the 95-105 Brack-
et. The Creatives rate above
140."
"He's saying you're a Mo-
ron," Marcia said to Roger.
"Can you bargain with a manwho holds that opinion of
you?""You know," Roger replied
slowly, "he's right about some
of it, as nearly as I can under-
stand. I don't grasp compli-
cated ideas very quickly.
Many times, not at all. That's
why I don't watch the A or Bprograms, I think."
AMARON continued to
move toward them, with
his men packed close behind
him.
"A Classification is nothing
to be ashamed of, Roger,"
Amaron explained persuasive-
ly. "We administer the tests
in the General School. They
tell us exactly what you're
like, what kind of work you
will do with the greatest per-
sonal satisfaction. You see, all
men aren't created equal. But
that doesn't matter, if we see
to it that you don't learn am-
bitions for a status you can
never achieve. Our objective
on Janus is maximum individ-
ual satisfaction. Do you un-
derstand what I'm trying to
say?""Yes, I think so."
"Then you must also under-
stand that the Classification
System has given you happi-
ness and a feeling of accom-
plishment. Wouldn't^ it be
foolish to give it up?"
"Don't listen to him!" Mar-
cia cried hysterically. "Jake
can twist anything to make it
look right. You're men ;never
forget it. It's your privilege
to live where you please, do
any kind of work you please.
You could be Creatives, if you
chose!"
"I—I'm not sure," Roger
answered. "I'd rather be here
with my Machine. I#
don t
know how to be a Creative."
120 SCIENCE RCHON STORIES
Ske began to weep. "You'rebetraying me—all of you!People always have. You,Jake: you brought that filthydoctor into the house, and youlet him read my book. And
v you, Roger. I would haveg ven my life to—my life
"
Marcia'* voice trailed off.y languidly she turned
and looked at the console.Am- '/on and the Guard werestill twenty feet away. Theybegan to run toward her.
"Stop her!" Amaron cried.
OUT NEITHER Roger nor
**fany of the nine men with
him had the wit to grasp, atonce, what Marcia intended todo. Roger watched incredu-lously while she darted to theconsole and twisted the bankof dials. The rows of warninglights winked on.
One of the EmergencyGuard raised his weapon andfired at her.
Marcia whirled as she fell.There was a smile on her face—a smile of satisfaction andtriumph. She collapsed acrossthe console. The glass shat-tered. Her dead hand draggedat the network of wires, and ashattering blue flame lit theroom. The churning shaftground to a stop.
The turbines on the levelbelow began to turn faster.The throb became a hum, thehum a siren scream. Rogerwas caught in a tidal wave ofblind panic. He turned andfled, fighting viciously toreach the entry.
The ascent tunnel was emp,ty. Roger reached the firstlevel cf the upper city beforehe plunged into chaos. Peoplewere streaming toward theairlocks. Overhead the enor-mous girders were buckling,while great blocks of thedome broke loose and crashedinto the screaming throng.
nOGER WAS swept along*^ with the throng and, be-cause the mouth of the tunnelwas close to the lock, he i
caped. Escaped into the blaz-ing sunlight and the acrid,chlorine gale.
He stood rubbing his eyesand coughing, while behindhim the City of Janus crum-bled into ruin.
The handful of survivorshad all come from the firstlevel or the caverns. Helpless,choking, bleary eyed theypicked through the debris,trying to comprehend thedisaster. It was too great.Magnitude destroyed its sig-nificance. In a moment theirworld had been lost. Why?How? No one quite knew, noteven Roger.
Dazed and choking, hestumbled upon a tunnel thatwas not clogged with debris.Instinctively he worked hisway down into the caverns.That was where he belonged.That was home. He would besafe there, secure. The night-mare would be over.But it wasn't. The chlorine
had penetrated even into the[Turn To Page 139]
illustration by ORBAN
PLEASUREORBIT
by Winston K. Marks
Wherein a pair of Hollywood gals on a scavenger hunt tryto bring back a pair of spacemen . . .
MANTHE MAN in thegreen tux mountedthe grand piano and
held up his hands for atten-tion. The revelers focussed onhim through a fog of cham-pagne and cigaret smoke."Time for the scavenger
hunt/' green tux announced.There were moans and a fewimpolite sighs. "The assign-ments are very easy, so theprize will go to the couplethat shows the most imagina-tion in the selection of theirspecimens. Since we are all
engaged in the business ofmake-believe, let's see youhold up the tradition ofHollywood and bring in somelulus!"
He went on, "For a change,we will pair off men togetherand ladies together. HectorFord and Clifton Montgom-ery, your assignment is tobring back two—lady wrest-lers. Now, you see, that'sstrictly a man's job, isn't it?"The little wave of boredom
vanished from the movie colo-nists. When Harry Hope gave
121
122
a party, the saying went, if
nothing else it was different.
"And our first team of lady
scavengers will consist of
Gloria Gruen and Alata
Smythe—" A ripple wentthrough the group. The twoAcademy Award winners,fiery, lean Gloria "the
Blonde Whip" Gruen and
flame-haired, voluptuous Ala-
ta "Miss Sine Wave of '96"
Smythe, each stepped for-
ward in her own patented
method of locomotion and
displayed the considerable
"talents" of limb and torso
that had contributed so
heavily in the winning of
their Oscars.
"Girls, you have only to
round up two drunken sail-
ors. Let's see what kind of
news you can make without
the help of your publicity
agents—and no fair using
knockout drops."
EVERYONE laughed. Thetacit reason for a working
picture personality's attend-
ing these affairs was to pro-
vide the cosy, intimate little
morsels of human interest and
gossip that were the life's
blood of successful publicity.
So Gloria and Alata smiled
grimly and retired to dis-
charge their obligation to the
party.
Outside the pretentious
Hollywood mansion Gloria
asked worriedly, "What'll wedo? We can't just go down to
Vine and cruise around."
Alata exhaled contemptu-
SC1ENCE FICTION STORIES
ously. "Not on your life, sis-
ter. I have an idea. Do youhave your boat here?"
Gloria nodded."Good ! No salt-water swab-
bies for us. Now over in Neva-
da..."
THE NEW VEGAS airport
was separated from the
spaceport by a single long
narrow building through
which filtered all human traf-
fic connected in any way with
space travel from the WesternHemisphere.
Somewhere near the center
of the mile-long structure wasa magnificent bar, and amonghalf a thousand others patron-
izing the expensive potables
were two intrepid officers of
the spaceship Orion. Exceptfor a difference of one gold
bar on their expensively tail-
ored, maroon uniforms they
were practically interchange-
able. They were small, deep-
chested little fellows withcorded necks, broad, intelli-
gent brows and the quick, ath-
letic appearance of bantam-weight boxers.
They were sharing a fifth
of Scotch and mild despond-
ency of the pre-flight blues
at the moment. Their two-
week's leave was over whenthe Orion blasted off at 0800,
the following morning."We shouldn't bitch," said
First Officer Casey Fuller.
"We have had a very pleasant
fortnight, I would say."
Second Officer Wally Bra-
dy refilled their Old-fashion
PLEASURE ORBIT 123
glasses with straight Scotch."Oh it's this checking in 12
hours early that gets me. Aman can do a lot of living in
half a day."
"Oh, I don't know," Caseyreplied. "I'm pretty well
caught up, I guess. Of course,
I wouldn't mind getting a lit-
tle ahead. 'Sa shame you can't
store up that stuff."
They bent their elbows in
unison and stared at their dis-
torted images through the
heavy-bottomed glasses. Cas-
ey brought his down first. Themirror in the back-bar re-
vealed something that
looked good even distorted.
He spun on his stool. "Well,good evening!"
WALLY SNAPPED his
head around. The red-
headed vision behind himturned to a blonde companionand said. "They're cute."
The blonde appraised themwith a faintly bloodshot eye.
"Rather small, don't youthink?"
Casey intruded into the
conversation. "Five-foot-six
is max in our profession, hon-ey. Name is Casey Fuller, call
me Casey. Small but potent."
Alata argued, "And obvi-
ously they're drunk. Theyqualify."
"Very well," Gloria said.
"We'll take these two."
"By all means, take these'two," Wally said, sliding to
his feet. The men were barelyeye-to-eye with the girls, but
this was a common point of
view for the space-men. "Yougirls look familiar," Wallysaid. "Haven* we met? Veryfamiliar."
Casey grinned. "Theyshould. Wally, meet the
Blonde Whip, also known as
Gloria-the-Gorgeous Gruen.And this is Miss Alata Sine-
wave Smythe. Girls, meetWally Brady, master space-mechanic and second officer,
ship's company, the Orion."
"Yes," said Alata vaguely,then she turned it on. "Boys,let us take you away from all
this for a few hours. We havea boat."
"Let's cut an orbit IV Gloriacontributed somewhat syn-thetically.
Wally winked at Casey."See, we're not as haggard-looking as you thought."Then his face fell.
GLORIA said, "What'sthe matter, sailors? Don't
we stack up?""Sure, sure, you're stacked
—I mean you check out fine
with us," Casey said sadly.
"But we ship out at 0800 to-
morrow.""We'll be back in 90 days,
though," Wally said hopeful-iy.
"Come," said Alata. "It's
not even midnight yet. We'llhave you back in plenty oftime; just a little ride in themoonlight?" She made a tiny,three-dimensional motionabout her famous center-of-
gravity. Not to be outdone,Gloria launched a faint rip-
(24 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
pie from her internationally
acclaimed knees. It workedits way up her sinuous bodyand culminated in a naughtyflip of her platinum head.Casey followed every cen-
timeter of the ripple with in-
tense interest. It was evenmore effective off the screen.Her body held the charms,but he liked best what he sawat the end—the invitation
was in her eyes.
"Bartender," he roaredwith an amazing voice forhis stature, "a full one, to
go. Scotch, and on the dou-ble !" Ke stripped a tennerfrom his tunic and thrust it
back over the bar without re-
moving his eyes from thefeast before them. The notewas replaced with the neckof a wrapped bottle, and theparty moved to the airport-
side exit.
Two paces ahead withAlata, Wally weaved slight-
ly and turned his head. "Cas-ey, I think I fell into thelast double Scotch. But don't
pull me out. Don't resushit-
ate me—let me drown !" Helooked into Alata's eyes that
were green even in the palelight of the stars and cresentmoon.
A S THEY moved out on** the paved strip the mid-night ship for Mars blossom-ed over the roof of the build-ing behind them, and the bil-
lowing crimson set fire toAlata's hair. The ponderousship rose majestically with
the roar of a hundred hur-ricanes. The red faded to a
yellow dot that winked outsuddenly, and a few secondslater came the thunderclapas the mighty vessel crackedinto hyper-drive.
"Minutes to Mars," Gloriabreathed. "I don't understandit at all. Maybe you can ex-plain it to me—Casey?"
"Sorry, baby. No shop talk
tonight," he grinned. "Andincidentally, in what are wetaking our little ride? I
hope she's gyroed."She pointed ahead to her
sleek, twenty-footer on theedge of the strip. She squeez-ed his arm and assured,"She's gyroed."
In the pleasant confusionhanding in the ladies and do-ing a lot of unnecessary jostl-
ing in the small quarters,Casey and Wally unexpect-edly found themselves in therear lounge deck, and thegirls occupying the two pilotseats ten feet forward in thebow. Before they could pro-test, Gloria touched the doorswitch, it plopped shut witha rubbery thud and she hadthe tiny vessel in the airscudding up and into theWest.Counting on the heavy ac-
celeration to pin her passen-gers to the cushions, Gloriadid not figure on the space-men's steel-spring construc-tion.
CASEY whispered to Wal-ly, "Maybe they're just
PLEASURE ORBIT 125
being coy, but I have thestrange feeling we are beingdelivered rather then escort-
ed. Let's see just what is theorbit."
With easy effort hegrasped the corded horizon-tal rope that rimmed the in-
terior and hauled himself for-
ward quietly. Very gently heraised the little shimmer of
platinum hair and fasteneda kiss on the smooth napeof Gloria's neck.
Be it recorded for poster-ity and to the credit of space-men's legendary virility, this
particular kiss was the sole
cause of what happened.Gloria's smoothly tapered
fingers clutched on the con-trols and one quivering kneejerked convulsively againstthe leg-throttle. First OfficerCasey Fuller did a back-flip
and whumped into the stom-ach of his prostrate shipmate,as the pleasure craft dishedup through the stratosphere.
Wally was green, and Cas-ey choked the tongue out ofhis throat where the unex-
p e c t e d acceleration hadthrust it. The air grew alarm-ingly warm and the stars
ceased their twinkling. Sud-denly the straining craft
went limp, and the moviestars sank loosely in their
seats. The compressed cush-ions under the space-men ex-
panded and cast them gent-ly toward the overhead. Awisp of smoke gathered bud-like from a loose cushionthat had floated up and
touched the bare chromenear a rear port.
CASEY SWAM forward,squeezed between the two
unconcious women and tookreadings. They were still
boring a hole into space, butas he held a fix the curva-ture became apparent. Wal-ly came forward. "Ten hoursfuel in forty seconds," hemuttered. "Kind of impetu-ous, aren't they."
Casey checked distance
from the over-size basket-
ball darkly beneath and be-
hind them. "Better unwrapthe Scotch," he ordered."The girls will need some."
At that moment AcademyAward Winner Gloria Gruenopened her lustrous eyes, andeschewing the thousands of
dramatic and expensivelyproduced scenario lines mem-orized for just such occa-sions, gargled mundanely,44Where am I?"
In the act of touching thefull whiskey bottle to Alata's
lax mouth, Wally told her,
"You're one drink behind,beautiful." He took a jolt
himself and handed the flex-
ible crystal flask to Casey.Casey moistened Gloria's
lips with the liquor andthen helped himself—to the
Scotch. At the moment, thefull lips of his dream-com-panion were a somehow un-tempting purple, and the un-tempered moon-glow throughthe curved bow-plate was not
126 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
flattering in what it re-
vealed.
"Let's get them—comfor-table," Casey suggested.They floated the girls overthe seats and back among the
cushions and hovered overthem thoughtfully.
Wally said, "Fragilethings, aren't they?" Herubbed his hands together."Imagine, adrift in spacewith two—
*
"Hold it, goatboy! Not un-til they're fully concious."Casey insisted. He movedback to the control pit andchecked instruments andgauges. "Out of fuel," he an-nounced.
GLORIA'S voice came upto him weakly. "The re-
serve should be full."
"Oh, yeah." Casey cut in
the auxiliary line and tried
to fire off. "N dice! I'mafraid you sort of burntthings up. We were down in
the nice thick air when youopened up full jet." He gaveup and returned to the three-some.
Gloria was pinching Ala-ta's cheeks and shaking her.
The red-head stirred andopened her eyes. Wallyshowed them how to glug adrink out of the bottle in
free flight, and they all hada round. Alata rubbed theback of her neck tenderly andsurveyed things distasteful-ly. She stared at Wally andCasey in bewilderment for amoment then remembered.
"Oh, the drunken sailors!
Still with us, eh? Well, Gloriawe're a couple of effective
scavengers, but you sort offell down in the transporta-tion department. The plot is
fouled. What are we doingfloating around up here?Let's get back to the party.""Party?" Wally asked.
"Who's going to a party.
We're cutting an orbit, re-
member?" He reached downand touched her cheek light-
ly with the back of his fin-
gers.
"Getcher goddammed handsoffa me, you midget!" shecried, springing up and bang-ing her head ungently on thethinly upholstered roof.
GLORIA, meanwhile, wasfirmly untangling her-
self from Casey's arm andlosing her temper in the pro-cess. "Look, now, this wasall a little gag, but it's ice
cold now. Explain how wegot up here, please," she de-manded coldly. She pointedout a port that revealed eartha dusky ball just showing afaint corona to the East.''You were at the controls,"
Casey stated. "You tell us.""I was at—?" Then she re-
membered. "Oh, that was adirty, stinking trick. I wasn'texpecting—
"
Casey was puzzled. Helooked at her curiously. "Justwhat were you expecting?And what's this business of ascavenger hunt?"Alata had managed to stop
PLEASURE ORBIT 127
oscillating and hook oneshapely arm through a ceil-
ing grip-loop. Her diaphon-ous, emerald gown floatedout like a hoop skirt display-ing the limbs that launched amillion pin-ups. "You didn'tthink this joy-ride was onthe level, did you? You guysare just a couple of speci-mens—two drunken sailors
we were to bring back to aparty out in Hollywood
—
win a prize or some stupidthing. Give me another drink,and maybe I can rememberwhy it sounded like fun at
the time/'
CASEY'S eyes narroweda hair at the unpleasant
revelation but he pushed thebottle at her. She capturedit and sucked at it noisily.
"Wish somebody would turnon the gravity in here. I don'tlike it this way at all."
Gloria voiced a disturbingthought. "Are we driftingaway from earth?""No, dammit," he said, "but
it would serve you right. Weare cutting an orbit, but it
couldn't be any sloppier if
you'd have plotted it on pur-pose. I regret to announcethat your party will be overbefore you get back. Mean-while, it looks like you'repickelled in the same jar withyour specimens."
"Specimens, are we?" Wal-ly said, then he looked downat his chronometer. "Hey, wegotta get back before—
"
Casey's face lighted for a
moment then froze to an in-
scrutable mask. He interrupt-ed solemnly, "Let's concen-trate on the first part. Wegot to get back. The oxygenwon't last forever." Wallylooked at him with a raisedeyebrow, then he, too, com-posed his features.
Gloria stared from one tothe other. "Well fix things.Do something. Mr. Brady,you're a mechanic, aren't
you?"Before Wally could an-
swer, Casey cut in. "There'sonly one chance, and it in-
volves—going outside," hesaid dramatically."What's—wrong ?" Gloria
demanded.
"Those fancy, chrome jet-
pipes," Casey explained."They couldn't take that kindof abuse. The tips collapsedfrom the heat, melted andcrimped shut. What's more,"he wrenched at a short handleover the pilot's seat, "the seal
on the retractable antenna is
welded, so we can't even call
for help. So—one of us hasto go out and knock thatfused tip off the jet-pipe."
WITH THAT announce-ment, he unsnapped the
carpet and peeled back a por-tion to unlatch the door ofthe tool locker. He found aheavy wrench. "One good lick
with this should knock off thecrystallized metal," he saidconfidently. He stripped backmore carpet baring the cargo-dump lock.
123 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
It was a sort of one-way es-
cape hatch, designed so that
freight objects could bedropped or weight jettisoned
without disturbing the inter-
ior air-pressure seriously.
He lifted the inner, convexlid and gazed into the shal-
low, cylindrical space just
large enough for a small per-
son to curl up in it. The onlycatch being that once outside,
there was no provision for re-
entry.
Wally boggled, for it wasevident that Casey's proposalwas suicidal. "Are you drunk-er than you look, boy? That'sa one-way ticket. Anyway, thepatrol will
—
"
"Yes, I know!" Casey gaveWally a hard look. "The pa-trol may spot us up hereeventually, old friend. Butwhen? Even after the jet is
free, it will take time andoxygen to get down."The cabin air had cooled,
but a film of perspirationcovered the girls' faces. Caseynoted it and went on swiftlywith a note of urgency. "I'mreally responsible for this."
He looked at Gloria and thendropped his eyes to the deck."If I hadn't—well, it's toolate for apologies. I fouledthe works, so it's up to me."
HE RUMMAGED aroundunder the false deck and
came up with the standardlow-pressure emergency maskrequired by craft powered to
enter thin air.
Wally bleated, "You can't
go out there in that. We'rein space, fellow
!"
Alata was big-eyed andtense now. "What would hap-pen?" she asked, licking drylips. "Would he—smother?"Wally turned on her cross-
ly. "He'd get air, all right,
but he'd puff out like amarshmallow without a pres-
sure suit."
Casey nodded. "You'reright, old man. We'll have to
find something to bind me uptight—all over." He reachedout and felt of the hard-wov-en fabric of Wally's tunic.
He shook his head. "Too stiff.
If we just had some tape or
even some light fabric—
"
Gloria eyed him. "If youknow about that air lock, youknow that you can't get backin here if we let you out, un-less we dump all our air.
Then we'd all pop. So what'sthis business of going out-
side?"
CASEY PULLED himselfover to the rear port and
looked toward earth. "I un-derstand. But there's no needfor us all to die. I think I
have an even chance of break-ing that tip off before—I lose
conciousness." He looked at
Gloria and shrugged. "Afterthat, well, it's a quick way to
go. And it's better than stay-
ing in here and helping foul
up the air. It's no picnic to
smother in carbon dioxide,
either. You turn black!"
Her mouth opened and her
PLEASURE ORBIT 129
hands sought her throat. "Andyou're willing to
—
*
He looked down, bit his lip
and said softly, "What else is
there to do? Any spacemanwould do as much." He turnedand scanned the cabin again."But weVe got to find some-thing to bind me with. Other-wise I'll bloat and bleed outbefore I can do any good outthere."
"Bleed out?" Alata repeat-ed with a morbid tone.
"Bleed out?" Casy suckedhard on the back of his handand then showed them thecrimson welt that appeared."Space sucks at you like that,
all over, like a million leech-es. Ruptures the capillaries,
then your blood boils."
Gloria shivered. "What can
we do?"Casey suddenly discovered
the two girls with his search-ing eye. He let his gaze wan-der uncensored from slenderankles to bare shoulders. "I
—
I hate to suggest this, but
—
well, hell, it's up to you." Hefrowned, then he slipped his
hand under his tunic andbrought out his tiny serviceweapon that fit the palm ofhis hand. "Here," he said,
floating it over to Gloria,"just so you'll be sure wedon't get any ideas."
She picked it out of the air
and stared down at it. Caseysaid, "Now, if you'll let ushave your—clothes."
HE TURNED his back andsignalled Wally to imi-
tate him. He was made verybusy with the oxygen rigging.Alata recovered first. "What,"she asked weakly, "do youwant with our clothes?"
Casey told her, "For strips.
Tear them up into narrowstrips, a few inches wide forbinding."
There was a moment of si-
lence, then the soft rustlingof sheer fabric as Gloria be-gan peeling. Alata asked, "Me,too?"
Casey said, "I'm afraid so.
That stuff won't go far."
Wally caught the idea,
grasped the first garment andbegan tearing up the skirt.
Casey took the first strips as
they were produced and be-
gan binding up his leg, aroundand around. He made much ofthe application, testing thefabric carefully and pullingit tightly as it would go.
Gloria's dress disappearedquickly. She had her slip overher head when a thoughtstruck her. "Say, cloth isn't
air tight. What good will this
do?"
"Not much good at all,"
Casey said quickly, "—after
about twenty seconds or so.
But that should be longenough."
She finished removing theslip and shuddered again.
"You've got nerve, sailor. I
guess this isn't too much to
give to the cause. Come, Ala-ta. Give ! You want to be bur-ied in that thing?"
130 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
ALATA STARED from her
thirty-five-dollar slip to
the little pistol that waspressed between two cushions
to keep it from drifting off.
"But you've got panties on,
dammit I"
A moment later Gloria held
up the mentioned article be-
fore Alata. "Satisfied ?"
Casey was pulling strips of
the expensive cloth aroundhis belly. He looked up andmuttered, "Good girl! You'vegot the stuff to get you outof any jam."Wally glanced up and ut-
tered, "Amen!"Casey was well up his chest
with the second layer whenthey ran out of strips. "That's
it, eh? Well, it will have to
do." He glanced at the ship's
chronometer and then out the
rear port at earth for a longminute.
"Now, where's that mask?"Wally handed it to him, andhe held it up as if to put it
on. He paused and addressedthe ladies, who were nowdrawn back in a corner, eachwith a loose cushion for abelly-band.
"I want you to know that I
have no regrets for what is
about to happen to me." Hecreased a careless smile onhis young face. "Spacemenhave often died for less."
Then he turned and offereda bandaged hand to Wally,who took it, turned his face
toward the bow and strangledquietly. Casey looked like asecond-hand mummy redecor-
ated with a patchwork quilt,
and the expression of noble
sacrifice on his patch of bare
face was almost more thanthe second officer couldstand.
UYWALLY, TAKE care of* them," he commanded,
jutting his chin out manfully.He swam over to the port
again dragging ravellings, andthis time he looked out so
long that Gloria became cur-
ious.
"You—aren't going to
—
change your mind?"Casey turned and dropped
his long eyelashes. "I wasjust trying to find the cour-
age to—to ask you—for onegoodbye kiss, but—
"
The blonde's eyes tight-
ened at the corners. Shescrambled for footing, but in-
stead of throwing her armsaround Casey, she pulled her-
self over and looked out thestern port herself.
Alata said impatiently,"For godsakes, Gloria, kiss
the guy. He's going all outfor us."
Instead, the "whip" tookone look out the port, andclad only in her sandals, madea dive for the pistol. Caseyhad started to drift towardher with anticipation, butnow he hauled himself to astop, staring into the tinyparabolic business end of theweapon.
GLORIA'S eyes flashed the
fire that had ignited au-
PLEASURE ORBIT 131
diences from Siberia to Ven-us. "Stay put, you sawed-offCasanova!"Alata gasped, "Of all the
ungrateful—I'll kiss him my-self !" She cast the cushionaside and floated toward her
trussed hero just as the rear
ports blacked out. Then the
shadow engulfed the rest of
the ship in darkness so heavyit seemed furry.
Alata squealed, "What hap-pened?" Let me go ! Let me—
"
There was clank and a bumpthat rocked the ship, and sud-denly lights flooded throughall ports. Human headssheathed in bubbles knockedagainst the bow transparency,and others stared through the
peripheral ports. Then the
boat rocked as if buffeted bya heavy wind, and soundsbegan penetrating the hull.
There was a loud hammer-ing on the hatch. Casey float-
ed to the instrument panel
and flipped the door-switch.
It came open reluctantly witha sigh and a "thuck !" A white-
jacketed patrol officer withcaptain's rank on his shoul-
der-boards swam in up to his
waist. Such rescues in the
borders of space that requiredhis presence as a qualified
spaceman, were relatively
rare, and the displeasure wasevident in his flushed face
and bristling gray scalp.
"Yerunderarrest," he de-
clared bluntly, "violation 14
of the—
" He recognized Wal-ly's distinctive uniform. "Mis-ter, a spaceman should know
better than to take a little
craft like this off at—"Then he saw Casey.
He tilted his gold-plasteredcap to the back of his head,caught a stubby lock of his
gray hair between thumb andforefinger and twisted it
thoughtfully. "And what in
the misty hell of Venus might
3Tou be got up as?"
CASEY, WHO had given
Alata a charitable shoveback into the lounge at the
last moment, held out bothhands and fluttered the color-
ful fringe of his wrappings."I haven't the foggiest idea,
officer. The bartender at the
Nevada Spaceport will verify
that Mr. Brady and I wereaccosted by two strange la-
dies around midnight, andthey invited us for a little
ride. We had no warning that
—well, that this would hap-pen !"
"That what would happen?"the patrol captain shouted,and he nosed through the
bulkhead and looked aft. Hisgrizzled chin dropped, andhis ej'ebrows disappeared in
the wrinkles of his torturedforehead. Behind the tiny,
trembling hand-weapon wasa pile of velvet cushions, be-hind which was a floating
tumble of platinum hair anda very bare shoulder, behindwhich wras a veritable cascadeof flaming hair and consider-
ably more bare anatomy of
highest quality.
Casey pointed a shrouded
132 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
arm at the inarticulate girls,
"The blonde one got my pis-
tol away from me in a—scuf-fle. Then they drank up ourwhiskey and insisted on trus-sing me up like this. Claimedthey were inventing a newcharade called 'Daddy is aMummy' ".
He kicked a swaddled footat the bared escape hatch inthe deck. "When we tried toresist their—will—they keptthreatening to dump us bothout into the dark blue yon-der." He reached out and cap-tured the whiskey bottle andswished the remaining swal-low or two around to makehis point. "They probablywon't make much sense untilthey sober up.
WfALLY WAS staring anx-** iously at his chronome-
ter when the patrol captainsnapped him rigid with, "Andyou, mister! What do yousay?"
Wally shook his head sad-ly. "Never spent such a nightin my life. Would it be pro-per to file kidnapping chargesunder the circumstances?That Is, if we don't have tospend too much time about it.
The Orion blasts off in a fewhours. Mr. Fuller and I areship's company.""So we'd be obliged, sir, if
you could put us down soon aspossible," Casey added crisp-ly.
The captain looked fromCasey, to Wally, then backat the girls whose mouths
were opening and closingnoislessly. "You—ladies—youlook familiar," he said. Thenhe clenched his eyes and puta hand to his forehead. "Hol-lywood! I might have knownit!"
He turned back to Casey."I guess I'll have to believeyour story. No spaceman, let
alone an officer, would bedumb enough to take off froma spaceport of full jets, withall the radar gear we havescreening the place. You peo-ple looked like a berseck mailrocket. We got calls fromfour states, and half theNorth American Continentalradar posts were trackingyou. No," he decided, "if youhave your credentials withyou, I'll believe you. Youcouldn't get that drunk."
Casey turned to the ladiesand hiccuped solemnly. "Ifthere is undersirable publicityfrom this incident," he stated,
"you will hear from our at-
torneys. A spaceman's dignityis not lightly impugned."
He beckoned to his ship-mate. "Come, Wallace. Wemust prepare a statement forthe press, so there will be nomisunderstanding."
As an afterthought, hemoved back to Gloria andplucked the weapon from herlimp fingers. As he leanedover her he whispered, "Fare-well, gorgeous. See you in theheadlines.
ITSENSED Ruthie Mo
Alister's rapid heartbeat,
just as it sensed any otheranimal's. The palms of herhands were damp, and it felt
that, too—it also felt the
breathing, in and out. And it
heard, her nervous giggle.
She was watching her hus-
band, Joe, as he leaned overthe control unit of the thingthat sensed heartbeats the
grey-green thing they called
the hound, or Rover, or some-times the bitch.
illustration by EMSH
HUNTINGMACHINE
by
Carol
Emshwiller
(author of "The
Piece Thing")
"Hey," she said. "I guessit's OK, huh?"
Joe turned a screw with his
thumb nail and pulled out the
wire attached to it. "Gimmea bobby pin/'
Ruthie reached to the backof her head. "I mean it's notdangerous is it?"
"Naw.""I don't just mean about ft.*
She nodded at the grey-greenthing. "I mean, I know you're
good at fixing things like
this, like the time you got
A vignette of tomorrow, and its brave, brave sportsmen!,
133
134 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
beer for nothing out of thebeer vendor and, golly, I
guess we haven't paid for aTV show for years. I mean, I
know you can fix thingsright, only won't they knowwhen we bring it back to bechecked out?""Look, these wardens are
country boys, and besides, I
can put this thing back sonobody knows."The gray-green thing
squatted on its six legs whereJoe could lean over it; it
sensed that Ruthie's heart-beat had slowed almost nor-mal, to and it heard her sigh.
"I guess you're pretty goodat this, huh, Joe?" She wipedher damp hands on her greentunic. "That's the weight dial,
isn't it?" she asked, watchinghim turn the top one.He nodded. "Fifteen hun-
dred pounds," he said slowly."Oo, Wfes he really and true-
ly that big?""Bigger." And now the
thing felt Joe's heart andbreathing surge.
They had been landed daybefore yesterday, with themgeodesic tent, pnumaticforms beds, automatic camp-ing stove, and pocket air con-ditioner. Plus portable dis-
posal automatic blow-upchairs and tables, pocket TVset, four disposable huntingcostumes apiece (one for eachday), and two folding gunswith power settings.
In addition, there was thebug-scat, go-snake, sun-stop,and the grey-green hunter,
sealed by the warden and set
for three birds, two deer andone black bear. They had onlythe bear to go; now, Joe Mc-Alister had unsealed the con-trols, released the governerand changed the setting to
brown bear, 1500 pounds."I don't care," he said, "I
want that bear."
"Do you think he'll still bethere tomorrow?"
Joe patted one of the longjointed legs of the thing. "If
he's not, ol' bitch here willfind him for us."
NEXT DAY, was clear andcool, and Joe breathed
big, expanding breaths andpatted his beginning paunch."Yes sir," he said, "this is the
day for something big—some-thing really big, that'll putup a real fight."
He watched the red of the
sunrise fade out of the skywhile Ruthie turned on the
stove and then got out hermake-up kit. She put sun-stopon her face, then powderedit with a tan powder. Sheblackened her eyelids andpurpled her lips; after that,
she opened the stove and tookout two disposable plates
with eggs and bacon.They sat in the automatic
blow-up chairs, at the auto-
matic blow-up table. Joe said
that there was nothing like
North air to give you an ap-petite, and Ruthie said shebet they were sweltering backat the city. Then she giggled.
Joe leaned back in his chair
HUNTING MACHINE 135
and sipped his coffee. "Shoot-ing deer is just like shootinga cow," he said. "No fight to
'em at all. Even when ol'
hound here goads 'em, theyjust want to run off. But this
bear's going to be different.
Of course bears are shy too,
but ol' hound knows what to
do about that."
"They say it's getting to beso there aren't many of thebig kind left."
"Yes, but one more won'thurt. Think of a skin andhead that size in our livingroom. I guess anybody that
came in there would sure sit
up and take notice."
"It won't match the cur-
tains," his wife said.
"I think what I'll do is packthe skin up tight and leave it
somewhere up here, till the
warden checks us through.Then, maybe a couple of dayslater, I'll come back and getit."
"Good idea." Ruthie hadfinished her coffee and wasperfuming herself with bug-scat.
"\X7ELL 'X GUESS we 'd
vV better get started."
They hung their folded upguns on their belts. They puttheir dehydrated, self heatinglunch in their pockets. Theyslung on their cold-unit can-
teens. They each took a pack-et containing chair, table andsun shade; then Joe fastenedon the little mike that con-troled the hunter. It fit onhis shoulder where he could
turn his head tb the side andtalk into it.
"All right, houn' dog," hesaid, shoulder hunched andhead tilted, "get a move on,
boy. Back to that spot wherewe saw him yesterday. Youcan pick up the scent fromthere."
The hunting machine ranon ahead of them. It wentfaster than anything it mighthave to hunt. Two miles, three
miles—Joe and Ruthie wereleft behind. They followedthe beam it sent back to
them, walking and talking andhelping each other over the
rough spots.
About eleven o'clock, Joestopped, took off his red
hunting hat and mopped his
balding forehead with the newbandana he'd bought at Hunt-er's Outfitters in New York.It was then he got the signal.
Sighted, sighted, sighted...
Joe leaned over his mike."Stick on him boy. How far
are you? Well, try to movehim down this way if youcan." He turned to his wife,
"let's see, about three miles. .
.
we'll take half hour out for
lunch. Maybe we'll get there
a couple of hours from now.How's it going, kid?"
"Swell," R-uthie said.
THE BIG bear sat on the
rocks by the stream. Hisfront paws were wet almostto the elbows. There werethree torn fishheads lying be-
side him. He ate only the
best parts because he was a
136 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
good fisher; and he looked,now, into the clean coldwater for another dark blueback that would pause on its
way upstream.It wasn't a smell that made
him turn. He had a keen nose,
but the hunting machine wasmade to have no smell. It wasthe grey dead lichen's crack-el that made him look up. Hestood still, looking in the di-
rection of the sound andsquinting his small eyes, butit wasn't until it moved thathe saw it.
Three quarters of a ton, hewas; but like a bird, or a rab-bit, or a snake, the bear avoid-ed things that were largeand strange. He turned backthe way he always took, thepath to his rubbing tree andto his home. He movedquietly and rapidly, but thething followed.He doubled back to the
stream again, then, and wadeddown it on the opposite sidefrom the thing—but still it
followed, needing no scent.
Once the hunting machinesighted, it never lost its prey.
Heart beat normal respi-
ration normal, it sensed. Sizealmost 1600 pounds.
The bear got out on thebank and turned back, calling
out in low growls. He stoodup on his hind legs andstretched his full higth. Al-most two men tall, he stoodand gave warning.The hunting machine wait-
ed twenty yards away. Thebear looked at it a full min-
ute; then he fell back on all
fours and turned South again.He was shy and he wanted notrouble.
JOE AND Ruthie kept onwalking North at their lei-
surely pace until just noon.Then they stopped for lunchby the side of the same streamthe bear had waded, onlylower down. And they usedits cold water on their dehy-drated meal—beef and onions,mashed potatoes, a lettucesalad that unfolded in thewater like Japanese paperflowers. There were coffeetablets that contained a heat-ing unit too, and fizzled in
the water like firecrackerfuses until the water was hot,
creamy coffee.
The bear didn't stop to eat.
Noon meant nothing to him.Now he moved with morepurpose, looking back andsquinting his small eyes.The hunter felt the heart
beat faster, the breathingheavy, pace increasing. Di-rection generally South.Joe and Ruthie followed
the signal until it suddenlychanged. It came faster; thatmeant they were near.
They stopped and unfoldedtheir guns. "Let's have a cupof coffee first," Ruthie said.
"OK, Hon." Joe releasedthe chairs which blew them-selves up to size. "Good totake a break so we can reallyenjoy the fight."
Ruthie handed Joe a fiz-
zing cup of coffee. "Don't
HUNTING MACHINE 137
forget you want oV Rover to
goad some.""Uh huh. Bear's not much
better than a deer without it.
Good you reminded me." Heturned and spoke softly into
the little mike.The hunting machine short-
ened the distance slowly. Fif-
teen feet, ten, five. The bearheard and turned. Again herose up, almost two men tall,
and roared his warning soundto tell the thing to keep back.
Joe and Ruthie shiveredand didn't look at each other.
They hear it less with their
ears, and more with their
spines—with an instinct theyhad forgotten.
Joe shook his shoulder to
shake away the feeling of the
sound. "I guess the ol' bitch
is at him.""Good dog," Ruthie said.
"Get 'im, boy."The hunter's arm tips drew
blood, but only in the safe
spots—shoulder scratches at
the heavy lump behind his
head, thigh punctures. It
never touched the veins, or
arteries.
THE BEAR swung at the
thing with his great paw.His claws screetched downthe body section but didn't so
much as make a mark on the
metal. The blow sent the
thing thrity feet away, but it
got up and came back so fast
the bear couldn't see it until
it was there, thrusting at himagain. He threw it again andagain, but it came back every
time. The muscles, claws andteeth were nothing to it. It
was made to withstand easily
more than what one bearcould do, and it knew withits built-in knowledge, how to
make a bear blind-angry.
Saliva came to the bear's
mouth and flew out over his
chin as he moved his heavyhead sideways and back. It
splashed, gummy on his cheekand made dark, damp streaks
across his chest. Only his
rage was real to him now, andhe screamed a deep rasp of
frustration again and again.
Two hundred yards away,Joe said, "Some roar!"
"Uh huh. If noise meansanything, it sounds like he's
about ready for a real fight."
They both got up and fold-
ed up the chairs and cups.
They sighted along their gunbarrels to see that they werestraight. "Set 'em at medium,"Joe said. "We want to start
off slow."
They came to where the
bear was, and took up a goodposition on a high place. Joecalled in his mike to the
hunter thing. "Stand by,
houn' dog, and slip over hereto back us up." Then hecalled to the bear. "Hey, boy.
This way, boy. This way."
THE GREY-GREEN thing
moved back and the bear
saw the new enemy, two of
them. He didn't hesitate; he
was ready to charge anythingthat moved. He was onlyfive feet away when their
133 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
small guns popped. The forceknocked him down, and herolled out of the way, dazed;he turned again for anothercharge, and came at them,all claws and teeth.
Joe's gun popped again.This time the bear staggered,but still came on. Joe backedup, pushing at his gun dial to
raise the power. He bumpedinto Ruthie behind him andthey both fell. Joe's voice wasa crazy scream. "Get him."
The hunting machinemoved fast. Its sharp fore-
arm came like an upper cut,
under the jaw, and into thebrain.
He lay, looking smaller,somehow, but still big, hisragged fur matted with blood.Fleas v/ere alive on it, andflies already coming. Joe andRuthie looked down at himand took big breaths.
"You shouldna got behindme," Joe said as soon as hecaught his breath. "I couldakept it going longer if you'da just stayed out of the way."
"You told me to," Ruthiesaid. "You told me to stayright behind you."
"Well, I didn't mean thatclose."
Ruthie sniffed. "Anyway,"she said, "how are you goingto get the fur off it?"
"Hmmmph.""I don't think that moth-
eaten thing will make muchof a rug. It's pretty dirty,
too, and probably full ofgerms."
Joe walked around the bearand turned its head sidewayswith his toe. "Be a big messyjob, all right, skinning it. Upto the elbows in blood andgut, I guess."
"I didn't expect it to belike this at all," Ruthie said.
"Why don't you just forgetit. You had your fun."
Joe stood, looking at thebears head. He watched a flyland on its eye and then walkdown to a damp nostril.
"Well come on." Ruthietook her small pack. "I wantto get back in time to take abath before supper."
"O. K." Joe leaned over hismike. "Come on ol' Rover, ol'
hound dog. You did fine."
*
The Janus City
caverns, and the white sunblazed through gapping holesin the roof.
Roger came, at last, to his
Machine. The body of a wom-an lay across the console. Heflung it aside rudely, a thingwhich profaned the sanctity
of the temple.He bent over the console
and tried to knit the brokenwires together. A gust of
chlorine wind swirled into his
face, and agonizing tears cameinto his eyes. On the floor hesaw a black notebook. Hepicked it up and glanced at
the open page, smeared with
blood. The words were clear,
boldly written.
"The equality cf all men—
The Last word
would like to trade for back
issues of S. F. magazines. Pre-
ferred are 1940-1950 issues of
Thrilling Wonder Stories, Star-
tling Stories, Astounding,
Planet Stories ,and Super Sci-
ence Stories. Also I would like
to trade, for some mentioned,
or others, various issues of
National Geographic from the
middle 1940's and many Popu-
lar 'Mechanics, Mechanix II-
lus.f
etc. from the late 1940's
and from the early 1950's. All
magazines have covers and are
in good condition. I will also
trade Big Little Better books.
How about a debate topic
{continued from page 120)
we must fight for that, and
die for it if necessary."
The symbols conveyed no
meaning to Roger. He threw
the book aside.
Once again, driven by a
sudden fury of terror, he
tried to mend the shattered
wires. Everything would be
all right, if only the shaft
would turn again. He was cer-
tain of that ; he knew the Ma-chine was his responsibility.
He turned the dials and lis-
tened hopefully for the humof the turbines.
He heard, instead, the
scream of the chlorine gale
sweeping desert dust into the
City of Janus.
•
(continued from page 62)
in SFS. I say that time travel
(except mentally) is impossi-
ble. I think I can prove this.
Let's choose up sides. All cons
(not ex-) follow me toward
victory.
Roger A. Weir
My humble apologies,Roger, for (a) misplacing
your letter, and (b) losing
your address. Tell you what:
suppose you write me and let
me know your current address.
Anyone who'd like to trade
with you can write to this mag-
azine, and Vll forward their
letters.
139
140 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Inside Science Fiction {continued from page 71)
can be obtained by outsiders recommended to those of youalso. What we like in particu- who are interested in whatlar is Dan McPhail's feature, went on way back when."Smoke Signals," which is a All fanzines for reviewhistory of s-f, more or less, should be sent to Robert A.as seen by McPhail. Dan was Madle, in care of this maga-very active in the early days zine, since your reviewer willof science fiction, and is add- have left his former addressing invaluable information by the time this sees print,concerning that era. This is - ^
Index To Volume 7
July 1956—May 1957
•'All The Latest Improvements^ (parody)L. Sprague dc Camp March '57 66
ANDREWS, ALFRED McCOYMessiahs, the—Nov. '56
Artwork James Blish Ju ly '56 46ASIMOV, ISAAC"How To Succeed At Science Fiction Without Reallv Trvinz"
(parody)—Nov. '56
Male Strikebreaker—Jan. '57
BINDER, EANDOGalactic Gamble—March '57
BLISH, JAMESArtwork—July '56
Book Reviews (see "Readin' and Writhin' ")
BOOTH, IRWINCo-Incidence—Sept. '56
Bridey Murphy and the Martian Princess (article)L. Sprague de Camp Jan. '57 53
CHANDLER, A. BERTRAMZoological Specimen—May '57
CHRISTOPHER, JOHNOccupational Risk—Jan. '57
Co-Incidence Irwin Booth Sept. '56 121
INDEX TO VOLUME 7 141
Communication Problem (editorial)Consumership Margaret St. Clair Sept. '55 103
Robert W. Lowndes March '57 135COX Jr., IRVING
Janus City, the—May '57
Mission to the Enemy—Jan. '57
de CAMP, L. SPRAGUE"All The Latest Improvements" (parody)—March '57
Bridey Murphy and the Martian Princess(article)—Jan/57
Downfall of Alchemy, the—March '57
Stone of the Wise, the—Sept. '56
Dark of The Moon Bryce Walton March '57 68Demancipator, the G. C. Edmonson May '57 16DICK, PHILIP K.
Unreconstructed M, the—Jan. '57
DICKSON, GORDON R.Tempus Non Fugit—March '57
Downfall of Alchemy, the (article)
L. Sprague de CampEdmondson, G. C.
Demancipator, the—May '57
EMSHWILLER, CAROLHunting Machine—May '57
Extra Space PerceptionRuss Winterbotham May '57
Fact is a Fact is a Fact, a (editorial)
Robert W. LowndesThomas N. Scortia
Clifford D. SimakEando Binder
Robert Silverberg
March '57 105
Nov. '56
May '57
Sept. '56
March '57
Jan. '57
Fulfillment
Galactic Chest
Galactic GambleGodling, Go HomeGARRETT, RANDALL
Book Reviews—Jan. '57
"Lest Darkness Fall" (parody)—S^pt. '56
Saboteur, the—July '56
Saturnalia—March '57
Homecalling Judith jierrfl. Nov. '56
How to Count on Your Fingers (article)
Frederik Pohl Sept. '56
Hunting Machine Carol Emshwiller May '57
Innocents' Refuge, the
Theodore L. Thomas May '57
72
13749
20
58
62
85133
63
Sept. '56
INDEX TO VOLUME 7 143
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Prophecy (editorial)
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RANDALL, ROBERTTools of the Trade—Nov. '56
Readin' and Writhin' (book reviews)(see GARRETT, KNIGHT)
ROYALE, RICHARDSalt Lake Skirmish—March '57
ST. CLAIR, MARGARETConsumership—Sept. '56
Saboteur, the Randall Garrett July '56
Salt Lake Skirmish Richard Royale March '57
Saturnalia Randall Garrett March '57
SCORTIA, THOMAS N.Fulfillment—May '57
Secret Weapon of Titipu, theRalph Spencer July '56
SILVERBERG, ROBERTGodling, Go Home—Jan. '57
104115
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144 SCIENCE FICTION STORIES
Lonely One, the—July '56
Songs of Summer, the—Sept. '56
SIMAK, CLIFFORD D.
Galactic Chest—Sept. '56
SMITH, GEORGE HUDSONOther Army, the—Sept. '56
Social Climber Milton Lesser Sept. '56 46
SPENCER, RALPHSecret Weapon of Titipu, the—July '56
STERN, ABRAHAMQuest, the—March '57
Stretch, the Sam Merwin Jr. Nov. '56 127
Sunrise on Mercury Calvin M. Knox May '57 2
Tempus Non Fugit Gordon R. Dickson March '57 110
Third City, the Bryce Walton July '56 14
THOMAS, THEODORE L.
Innocents' Refuge, the—May '57
To Have and to Hold NotTools of the Trade Robert Randall Nov. '56 112
Unreconstructed M, the
Philip K. Dick Jan. '57 2
WALTON, BRYCEDark of the Moon—March '57
Third City, the—July '56
Wapshot's Demon Frederik Pohl July '56 3
What Makes Them Run? (editorial)
Robert W. Lowndes Sept. '56 1
WINTERBOTHAM, RUSSExtra Space Perception—May '57
Women's Work Murray Leinster Nov. '56 80
Zoological SpecimenA. Bertram Chandler May '57 23
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You TravelledThrough Timeto Taste FORBIDDENLOVE...
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"downwhen." You're here In the 20thCentury <>n 1 1 • * * most VITAL mission ofyour career. I>ut you can't del«y here,Harlan ! You've been ordered to board yourTime Kettle and . . .
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