About the Author
Robert Anson Heinlein
was born in Butler, Missouri, in 1907. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, he
was retired, disabled, in 1934. He studied mathematics and physics at the
graduate school of the University of California and owned a silver mine before
beginning to write science fiction, in 1939. In 1947 his first book of fiction,
ROCKET SHIP GALILEO, was published. His novels include DOUBLE STAR (1956),
STARSHIP TROOPERS (1959), STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND (1961), and THE MOON IS A
HARSH MISTRESS (1966), all winners of the Hugo Award. Heinlein was guest
commentator for the Apollo 11 first lunar landing. In 1975 he received the
Grand Master Nebula Award for lifetime achievement. Mr. Heinlein died in 1988.
THE THIN AIR of Mars was
chill but not really cold. It was not yet winter in southern latitudes and the
daytime temperature was usually above freezing.
The queer creature
standing outside the door of a dome shaped building was generally manlike in
appearance, but no human being ever had a head like that. A thing like a
coxcomb jutted out above the skull, the eye lenses were wide and staring, and
the front of the face stuck out in a snout. The unearthly appearance was
increased by a pattern of black and yellow tiger stripes covering the entire
head.
The creature was armed
with a pistol-type hand weapon slung at its belt and was carrying, crooked in
its right arm, a ball, larger than a basketball, smaller than a medicine ball.
It moved the ball to its left arm, opened the outer door of the building and
stepped inside.
Inside was a very small
anteroom and an inner door. As soon as the outer door was closed the air
pressure in the anteroom began to rise, accompanied by a soft sighing sound. A
loudspeaker over the inner door shouted in a booming bass, "Well? Who is
it? Speak up! Speak up!"
The visitor placed the
ball carefully on the floor, then with both hands grasped its ugly face and
pushed and lifted it to the top of its head. Underneath was disclosed the face
of an Earth-human boy. "It's Jim Marlowe, Doc," he answered.
"Well, come in.
Come in! Don't stand out there chewing your nails."
"Coming." When
the air pressure in the anteroom had equalized with the pressure in the rest of
the house the inner door opened automatically. Jim said, "Come along,
Willis," and went on in.
The ball developed three
spaced bumps on its lower side and followed after him, in a gait which combined
spinning, walking, and rolling. More correctly, it careened, like a barrel
being manhandled along a dock. They went down a passage and entered a large
room that occupied half the floorspace of the circular house plan. Doctor
MacRae looked up but did not get up. "Howdy, Jim. Skin yourself. Coffee on
the bench. Howdy, Willis," he added and turned back to his work. He was
dressing the hand of a boy about Jim's age.
"Thanks, Doc.
Oh—hello, Francis. What are you doing here?"
"Hi, Jim. I killed
a water-seeker, then I cut my thumb on one of its spines."
"Quit
squirming!" commanded the doctor.
"That stuff
stings," protested Francis.
"I meant it to.
Shut up."
"How in the world
did you do that?" persisted Jim. "You ought to know better than to
touch one of those things. Just burn 'em down and burn 'em up." He zipped
open the front of his outdoor costume, peeled it off his arms and legs and hung
it on a rack near the door. The rack held Francis's suit, the headpiece of
which was painted in bright colors like an Indian brave's war paint, and the
doctor's suit, the mask of which was plain. Jim was now stylishly and
appropriately dressed for indoors on Mars—bare naked save for bright red jockey
shorts.
"I did burn
it," explained Francis, "but it moved when I touched it. I wanted to
get the tail to make a necklace."
"Then you didn't
burn it right. Probably left it full of live eggs. Who're you making a necklace
for?"
"None of your business.
And I did so burn the egg sac. What do you take me for? A tourist?"
"Sometimes I
wonder. You know those things don't die until sundown."
"Don't talk
nonsense, Jim," the doctor advised. "Now, Frank, I'm going to give
you an anti-toxin shot. 'Twon't do you any good but it'll make your mother
happy. Long about tomorrow your thumb will swell up like a poisoned pup; bring
it back and I'll lance it."
"Am I going to lose
my thumb?" the boy asked.
"Nope. But you'll
do your scratching with your left hand for a few days. Now, Jim, what brings
you here? Bellyache?"
"No, Doc. It's
Willis."
"Willis, eh? He
looks pert enough to me." The doctor stared down at the creature. Willis
was at his feet, having come up to watch the dressing of Frank's thumb. To do so
he had protruded three eye stalks from the top of his spherical mass. The
stalks stuck up like thumbs, in an equal-sided triangle, and from each popped a
disturbingly human eye. The little fellow turned around slowly on his tripod of
bumps, or pseudopeds, and gave each of his eyes a chance to examine the doctor.
"Get me a cup of
Java, Jim," commanded the doctor, then leaned over and made a cradle of
his hands. "Here, Willis— upsi-daisy!" Willis gave a little bounce
and landed in the doctor's hands, withdrawing all protuberances as he did so.
The doctor lifted him to the examining table; Willis promptly stuck out legs
and eyes again. They stared at each other.
The doctor saw a ball
covered with thick, close-cropped fur, like sheared sheepskin, and featureless
at the moment save for supports and eye stalks. The Mars creature saw an
elderly male Earthman almost completely covered with wiry gray-and-white hair.
The hair was thin on top, thick on chin and cheeks, moderately thick to sparse
on chest and arms and back and legs. The middle portion of this strange,
un-Martian creature was concealed in snow-white shorts. Willis enjoyed looking
at him.
"How do you feel,
Willis?" inquired the doctor. "Feel good? Feel bad?"
A dimple showed at the
very crown of the ball between the stalks, dilated to an opening. "Willis
fine!" he said. His voice was remarkably like Jim's.
"Fine, eh?"
Without looking around the doctor added, "Jim! Wash those cups again. And
this time, sterilize them. Want everybody around here to come down with the
pip?"
"Okay, Doc,"
Jim acknowledged, and added to Francis, "You want some coffee, too?"
"Sure. Weak, with
plenty of cow."
"Don't be
fussy." Jim dipped into the laboratory sink and managed to snag another
cup. The sink was filled with dirty dishes. Nearby a large flask of coffee
simmered over a Bunsen burner. Jim washed three cups carefully, put them
through the sterilizer, then filled them.
Doctor MacRae accepted a
cup and said, "Jim, this citizen says he's okay. What's the trouble?"
"I know he says
he's all right, Doc, but he's not. Can't you examine him and find out?"
"Examine him? How,
boy? I can't even take his temperature because I don't know what his
temperature ought to be. I know as much about his body chemistry as a pig knows
about patty-cake. Want me to cut him open and see what makes him tick?"
Willis promptly withdrew
all projections and became as featureless as a billiard ball. "Now you've
scared him," Jim said accusingly.
"Sorry." The
doctor reached out and commenced scratching and tickling the furry ball.
"Good Willis, nice Willis. Nobody's going to hurt Willis. Come on, boy,
come out of your hole."
Willis barely dilated
the sphincter over his speaking diaphragm. "Not hurt Willis?" he said
anxiously in Jim's voice.
"Not hurt Willis.
Promise."
"Not cut
Willis?"
"Not cut Willis.
Not a bit."
The eyes poked out
slowly. Somehow he managed an expression of watchful caution, though he had
nothing resembling a face. "That's better," said the doctor.
"Let's get to the point, Jim. What makes you think there's something wrong
with this fellow, when he and I can't see it?"
"Well, Doc, it's
the way he behaves. He's all right indoors, but outdoors— He used to follow me
everywhere, bouncing around the landscape, poking his nose into everything."
"He hasn't got a
nose," Francis commented.
"Go to the head of
the class. But now, when I take him out, he just goes into a ball and I can't
get a thing out of him. If he's not sick, why does he act that way?"
"I begin to get a
glimmering," Doctor MacRae answered. "How long have you been teamed
up with this balloon?"
Jim thought back over
the twenty-four months of the Martian year. "Since along toward the end of
Zeus, nearly November."
"And now here it is
the last of March, almost Ceres, and the summer gone. That suggest anything to
your mind?"
"Uh, no."
"You expect him to
go hopping around through the snow? We migrate when it gets cold; he lives
here."
Jim's mouth dropped
open. "You mean he's trying to hibernate?"
"What else?
Willis's ancestors have had a good many millions of years to get used to the
seasons around here; you can't expect him to ignore them."
Jim looked worried.
"I had planned to take him with me to Syrtis Minor."
"Syrds Minor? Oh,
yes, you go away to school this year, don't you? You, too, Frank."
"You bet!"
"I can't get used
to the way you kids grow up. It was just last week I was painting your thumb to
keep you from sucking it."
"I never sucked my
thumb!" Francis answered.
"No? Then it was
some other kid. Never mind. I came to Mars so that the years would be twice as
long, but it doesn't seem to make any difference."
"Say, Doc, how old
are you?" inquired Francis.
"Mind your own
business. Which one of you is going to study medicine and come back to help me
with my practice?"
Neither one answered.
"Speak up, speak up!" urged the doctor. "What are you going to
study?"
Jim said, "Well, I
don't know. I'm interested in aerography*, but I like biology, too. Maybe I'll
be a planetary economist, like my old man."
"That's a big
subject. Ought to keep you busy a long time. You, Frank?"
Francis looked slightly
embarrassed. "Well, uh—shucks, I still think I'd like to be a rocket
pilot."
"I thought you had
outgrown that." Doctor MacRae looked almost shocked.
"Why not?" Francis
answered doggedly. "I might make it."
"That's just what
I'd be afraid of. See here, Frank, do you really want to live a life bound
around with rules and regulations and discipline?"
"Mmmm... I want to
be a pilot. I know that."
"On your own head
be it. Me, I left Earth to get away from all that nonsense. Earth has gotten so
muscle-bound with laws that a man can't breathe. So far, there's still a
certain amount of freedom on Mars. When that changes—"
" 'When that
changes' what. Doc?"
"Why, I'll go find
another planet that hasn't been spoiled, naturally. Speaking of such things,
you younkers go to school before the colony migrates, don't you?" Since
Earth-humans do not hibernate, it was necessary that the colony migrate twice
each Martian year. The southern summer was spent at Charax, only thirty degrees
from the southern pole; the colony was now about to move to Copals in Utopia,
almost as far to the north, there to remain half a Martian year, or almost a
full Earth year.
There were year-around
establishments near the equator— New Shanghai, Marsport, Syrtis Minor,
others—but they were not truly colonies, being maimed mainly by employees of
the Mars Company. By contract and by charter the Company was required to
provide advanced terrestrial education on Mars for colonials; it suited the
Company to provide it only at Syrtis Minor.
"We go next
Wednesday," said Jim, "on the mail scooter."
"So soon?"
"Yes, and that's
what worries me about Willis. What ought I to do. Doc?"
Willis heard his name
and looked inquiringly at Jim. He repeated, in exact imitation of Jim,
"What ought I to do, Doc?'"
"Shut up,
Willis—"
" 'Shut up,
Willis.'" Willis mutated the doctor just as perfectly.
"Probably the
kindest thing would be to take him out, find him a hole, and stuff him in it.
You can renew your acquaintance when he's through hibernating."
"But, Doc, that
means I'll lose him! He'll be out long before I'm home from school. Why, he'll
probably wake up even before the colony comes back."
"Probably."
MacRae thought about it. "It won't hurt him to be on his own again. It's
not a natural life he leads with you, Jim. He's an individual, you know; he's
not property."
"Of course he's
not! He's my friend."
"I can't see,"
put in Francis, "why Jim sets such store by him. Sure, he talks a lot, but
most of it is just parrot stuff. He's a moron, if you ask me."
"Nobody asked you.
Willis is fond of me, aren't you, Willis? Here, come to papa." Jim spread
his arms; the little Martian creature hopped into them and settled in his lap,
a warm, furry mass, faintly pulsating. Jim stroked him.
"Why don't you ask
one of the Martians?" suggested MacRae.
"I tried to, but I
couldn't find one that was in a mood to pay any attention."
"You mean you
weren't willing to wait long enough. A Martian will notice you if you're
patient. Well, why don't you ask him He can speak for himself."
"What should I
say?"
"I'll try it.
Willis!"
Willis turned two eyes
on the doctor; MacRae went on, "Want to go outdoors and go to sleep?"
"Willis not sleepy."
"Get sleepy
outdoors. Nice and cold, find hole in ground. Curl up and take good long sleep.
How about it?"
"No!" The
doctor had to look sharply to see that it was not Jim who had answered; when
Willis spoke for himself he always used Jim's voice. Willis's sound diaphragm
had no special quality of its own, any more than has the diaphragm 6f a radio
loudspeaker. It was much like a loudspeaker's diaphragm, save that it was part
of a living animal.
"That seems
definite, but we'll try it from another angle. Willis, do you want to stay with
Jim?"
"Willis stay with
Jim." Willis added meditatively, "Warm!"
"There's the key to
your charm, Jim," the doctor said dryly. "He likes your blood
temperature. But ipse dixit—keep him with you. I don't mink it will hurt him.
He may live fifty years instead of a hundred, but he'll have twice as much
fun."
"Do they normally
live to be a hundred?" asked Jim.
"Who knows? We
haven't been around this planet long enough to know such things. Now come on,
get out. I've got work to do." The doctor eyed his bed thoughtfully. It
had not been made in a week; he decided to let it wait until wash day.
"What does 'ipse
dixit' mean. Doc?" asked Francis.
"It means, 'He sure
said a mouthful.'"
"Doc,"
suggested Jim, "Why don't you have dinner with us tonight? I'll call
mother. You, too, Frank."
"Huh uh,"
Frank denied. "I'd better not. My mother says I eat too many meals with
you folks."
"My mother, if she
were here, would undoubtedly say the same thing," admitted the doctor.
"Fortunately I am free of her restraining influence. Call your mother,
Jim."
Jim went to the phone,
tuned out two colonial housewives gossiping about babies, and finally reached
his home on an alternate frequency. When his mother's face appeared on the
screen he explained his wish. "Delighted to have me doctor with us,"
she said. 'Tell him to hurry along. Jimmy."
"Right away.
Mom!" Jim switched off and reached for his outdoor suit.
"Don't put it
on," advised MacRae. "It's too chilly out. We'll go through the tunnels."
"It's twice as
far," objected Jim.
"We'll leave it up
to Willis. Willis, how do you vote?"
"Warm," said
Willis smugly.
SOUTH COLONY WAS
arranged like a wheel. The administration building was the hub; tunnels ran out
in all directions and buildings were placed over them. A rim tunnel had been
started to join the spokes at the edge of the wheel; thus far a forty-five
degree arc had been completed.
Save for three Moon huts
erected when the colony was founded and since abandoned, all the buildings were
shaped alike. Each was a hemispherical bubble of silicone plastic, processed
from the soil of Mars and blown on the spot. Each was a double bubble, in fact;
first one large bubble would be blown, say thirty or forty feet across; when it
had hardened, the new building would be entered through the tunnel and an inner
bubble, slightly smaller than the first, would be blown. The outer bubble,
"polymerized"—that is to say, cured and hardened, under the rays of
the sun; a battery of ultra-violet and heat lamps cured the inner. The walls
were separated by a foot of dead air space, which provided insulation against
the bitter sub-zero nights of Mars.
When a new building had
hardened a door would be cut to the outside and a pressure lock installed; the
colonials maintained about two-thirds Earth-normal pressure indoors for comfort
and the pressure on Mars is never as much as half of that. A visitor from
Earth, not conditioned to the planet, will die without a respirator. Among the
colonists only Tibetans and Bolivian Indians will venture outdoors without
respirators and even they will wear the snug elastic Mars suits to avoid skin
hemorrhages.
Buildings had not even
view windows, any more than a modem building in New York has. The surrounding
desert, while beautiful, is monotonous. South Colony was in an area granted by
the Martians, just north of the ancient city of Charax—there is no need to give
the Martian name since an Earthman can't pronounce it—and between the legs of
the double canal Strymon. Again we follow colonial custom in using the name
assigned by the immortal Dr. Percival Lowell.
Francis accompanied Jim
and Doctor MacRae as far as the junction of the tunnels under city hall, then
turned down his own tunnel. A few minutes later the doctor and Jim—and
Willis—ascended into the Marlowe home. Jim's mother met them; Doctor MacRae
bowed, a bow made no less courtly by bare feet, and a grizzled, hairy chest:
"Madame, I am again imposing on your good nature."
"Fiddlesticks, Doctor.
You are always welcome at our table."
"I would that I had
the character to wish that you were not so superlative a cook, that you might
know the certain truth: it is yourself, my dear, that brings me here."
Jim's mother blushed.
She was wearing a costume that a terrestrial lady might choose for sunbathing
or gardening and was a very pretty sight, although Jim was certainly not aware
of it. She changed the subject, "Jim, hang up your pistol. Don't leave it
on the sofa where Oliver can get it."
Jim's baby brother,
hearing his name, immediately made a dash for the pistol. Jim and his sister
Phyllis both saw this, both yelled, "Oilie!"—And were immediately
mimicked by Willis, who performed the difficult trick, possible only to an
atonal diaphragm, of duplicating both voices simultaneously.
Phyllis was nearer; she
grabbed the gun and slapped the child's hands. Oliver began to cry, reinforced
by Willis.
"Children!"
said Mrs. Marlowe, just as Mr. Marlowe appeared in the door.
"What's all the
ruckus?" he inquired mildly.
Doctor MacRae picked up
Oliver, turned him upside down, and sat him on his shoulders. Oliver forgot
that he was crying. Mrs. Marlowe added, "Nothing darling. I'm glad you're
home. Children, go wash for dinner, all of you."
The second generation
trooped out. Phyllis said, "Take the charges out of your gun. Jimmy, and
let me practice with it."
"You're too young
for a gun."
"Pooh! I can't
outshoot you." This was very nearly true and not to be borne; Phyllis was
two years younger than Jim and female besides.
"Girls are just
target shooters. If you saw a water-seeker, you'd scream."
"I would, huh?
We'll go hunting together and I'll bet you two credits that I score
first."
"You haven't got
two credits."
"I have, too."
"Then how was it
you couldn't lend me a half credit yesterday?"
Phyllis changed the
subject. Jim hung up his weapon in his cupboard and locked it. Presently they
were back in the living room, to find that their father was home and dinner
ready.
Phyllis waited for a
lull in grown-up talk to say, "Daddy?"
"Yes, Puddin'? What
is it?"
"Isn't it about
time I had a pistol of my own?"
"Eh? Plenty of time
for that later. You keep up your target practice."
"But, look,
Daddy—Jim's going away and that means that Oilie can't ever go outside unless
you or mother have time to take him. If I had a gun, I could help out."
Mr. Marlowe wrinkled his
brow. "You've got a point. You've passed all your tests, haven't
you?"
"You know I
have!"
"What do you think,
my dear? Shall we take Phyllis down to city hall and see if they will license
her?"
Before Mrs. Marlowe
could answer Doctor MacRae muttered something into his plate. The remark was
forceful and probably not polite.
"Eh? What did you
say, Doctor?"
"I said,"
answered MacRae, "that I was going to move to another planet. At least
that's what I meant."
"Why? What's wrong
with this one? In another twenty years we'll have it fixed up good as new.
You'll be able to walk outside without a mask."
"Sir, it is not the
natural limitations of this globe that I object to; it is the pantywaist
nincompoops who rule it— These ridiculous regulations offend me. That a free
citizen should have to go before a committee, hat in hand, and pray for
permission to bear arms—fantastic! Arm your daughter, sir, and pay no attention
to petty bureaucrats."
Jim's father stirred his
coffee. "I'm tempted to. I really don't know why the Company set up such
rules in the first place."
"Pure copy-cattism.
The swarming beehives back on Earth have similar childish rules; the fat clerks
that decide these things cannot imagine any other conditions. This is a
frontier community; it should be free of such."
"Mmmm... probably
you're right, Doctor. Can't say that I disagree with you, but I'm so busy
trying to get on with my job that I really don't have time to worry about
politics. It's easier to comply than to fight a test case." Jim's father
turned to his wife. "If it's all right with you, my dear, could you find
time to arrange for a license for Phyllis?"
"Why, yes,"
she answered doubtfully, "if you really think she's old enough." The
doctor muttered something that combined "Danegeld" and the
"Boston Tea Party" in the same breath. Phyllis answered:
"Sure, I'm old
enough. Mother. I'm a better shot than Jimmy."
Jim said, "You're
crazy as a spin bug!"
"Mind your manners,
Jim," his father cautioned. "We don't speak that way to ladies."
"Was she talking
like a lady? I ask you. Dad."
"You are bound to
assume that she is one. Drop the matter. What were you saying. Doctor?"
"Eh? Nothing that I
should have been saying, I'm sure. You said something earlier about another
twenty years and we could throw away our respirators; tell me: is there news
about the Project?"
The colony had dozens of
projects, all intended to make Mars more livable for human beings, but the
Project always meant the atmosphere, or oxygen, project. The pioneers of the
Harvard-Carnegie expedition reported Mars suitable for colonization except for
the all-important fact that the air was so thin that a normal man would
suffocate. However they reported also that many, many billions of tons of
oxygen were locked in the Martian desert sands, the red iron oxides that give
Mars its ruddy color. The Project proposed to free this oxygen for humans to
breathe.
"Didn't you hear
the Deimos newscast this afternoon?" Mr. Marlowe answered.
"Never listen to
newscasts. Saves wear and tear on the nervous system."
"No doubt. But this
was good news. The pilot plant in Libya is in operation, successful operation.
The first day's run restored nearly four million tons mass of oxygen to the
air— and no breakdowns."
Mrs. Marlowe looked
startled. "Four million tons? That seems a tremendous lot."
Her husband grinned.
"Any idea how long it would take that one plant at that rate to do the job,
that is, increase the oxygen pressure by five mass-pounds per square
inch?"
"Of course I
haven't. But not very long 1should think."
"Let me see—"
His lips moved soundlessly. "Uh, around two hundred thousand years—Mars
years, of course."
"James, you're
teasing me!"
"No, I'm not. Don't
let big figures frighten you, my dear;
of course we won't
depend on one plant; they'll be scattered every fifty miles or so through the
desert, a thousand mega horsepower each. There's no limit to the power
available, thank goodness; if we don't clean up the job in our lifetimes, at
least the kids will certainly see the end of it."
Mrs. Marlowe looked
dreamy. "That would be nice, to "walk outside with your bare face in
the breeze. I remember when I was a little girl, we had an orchard with a
stream running through it—" She stopped.
"Sorry we came to
Mars, Jane?" her husband asked softly.
"Oh, no! This is my
home."
"Good. What are you
looking sour about. Doctor?"
"Eh? Oh, nothing,
nothing! I was just thinking about (he end result. Mind you, this is fine work,
all of it—hard work, good work, that a man can get his teeth into. But we get
it done and what for? So that another two billion, three billion sheep can
fiddle around with nonsense, spend their time scratching themselves and baaing.
We should have left Mars to the Martians. Tell me, sir, do you know what
television was used for when it first came out?"
"No. How would
I?"
"Well, I didn't see
it myself of course, but my father told me about it. It seems—"
"Your father? How
old was he? When was he bom?"
"My grandfather,
then. Or it may have been my great grandfather. That's beside the point. They
installed the first television sets in cocktail bars—amusement places—and used
them to watch wrestling matches."
"What's a 'wresting
match'?" demanded Phyllis.
"An obsolete form
of folk dancing," explained her father. "Never mind. Granting your
point. Doctor, I see no harm—"
"What's 'folk
dancing'?" persisted Phyllis.
"You tell her,
Jane. She's got me stumped."
Jim looked smug.
"It's when folks dance, silly."
"That's near
enough," agreed his mother.
Doctor MacRae stared.
"These kids are missing something. I think I'll organize a square-dancing
club. I used to be a pretty good caller, once upon a time."
Phyllis turned to her
brother. "Now I suppose you'll tell me that square dancing is when a
square dances."
Mr. Marlowe raised his
eyebrows. "I think the children have all finished, my dear. Couldn't they
be excused?"
"Yes, surely. You
may leave, my dears. Say 'Excuse me, please,' Ollie." The baby repeated
it, with Willis in mirror chorus.
Jim hastily wiped his
mouth, grabbed Willis, and headed for his own room. He like to hear the doctor
talk but he had to admit that the old boy could babble the most fantastic
nonsense when other grown-ups were around. Nor did the discussion of the oxygen
project interest Jim; he saw nothing strange nor uncomfortable about wearing
his mask. He would feel undressed going outdoors without it.
From Jim's point of view
Mars was all right the way it was, no need to try to make it more like Earth.
Earth was no great shakes anyway. His own personal recollection of Earth was
limited to vague memories from early childhood of the emigrants' conditioning
station on the high Bolivian plateau —cold, shortness of breath, and great
weariness.
His sister trailed after
him. He stopped just inside his door and said, "What do you want,
shorty?"
"Uh, Jimmy—I'm
sorry I said I could shoot better than you can. I can't really."
"Huh? What are you
leading up to?"
"Well.... Lookie,
Jimmy, seeing as I'm going to have to take care of Willis after you're gone
away to school, maybe it would be a good idea for you to sort of explain it to
him, so he would do what I tell him."
Jim stared.
"Whatever gave you the notion I was going to leave him behind?"
She stared back.
"But you are! You'll have to. You can't take him to school. You ask
mother."
"Mother hasn't
anything to do with it. She doesn't care what I take to school."
"You just ask her.
They don't allow pets at school. I heard her talking with Frank Sutton's mother
about it just yesterday."
"Willis isn't a
pet. He's a, he's a—"
"He's a what?"
"He's a friend,
that's what he is: a friend!"
"Well, he's a
friend of mine, too—aren't you, Willis? Anyhow, I think you're mean."
"You always think
I'm mean if I don't cater to your every wish!"
"Not to me—to
Willis. This is Willis's home; he's used to it. He'll be homesick away at
school."
"He'll have
me!"
"Not most of the
time, he won't. You'll be in class. Willis wouldn't have anything to do but sit
and mope. You ought to leave him here with me—with us—where he'd be
happy."
Jim straightened himself
up. "I'm going to find out about this, right away." He walked back
into the living compartment and waited aggressively to be noticed. Shortly his
father turned toward him.
"Yes? What is it,
Jim? Something eating on you?"
"Uh, weU—look. Dad,
is there any doubt about Willis going with me when I go away to school?"
His father looked
surprised. "It had never occurred to me that you would consider taking
him."
"Huh? Why
not?"
"Well, school is
hardly the place for him."
"Why?"
"Well, you wouldn't
be able to take care of him properly. You'll be awfully busy."
"Willis doesn't
take much care. He never makes messes. Just feed him every month or so and give
him a drink about once a week and he doesn't ask for anything else. Why can't I
take him, Dad?"
Mr. Marlowe looked
baffled; he turned to his wife. She started in, "Now, Jimmy darling, we
don't want you to—"
Jim interrupted,
"Mother, every time you want to talk me out of something you start out,
'Jimmy darling'!"
Her mouth twitched but
she kept from smiling. "Sorry, Jim. Perhaps I do. What I was trying to say
was this: we want you to get off to a good start at school. I don't believe
that having Willis on your hands will help any. As a matter of fact Mrs. Sutton
was telling me just the other day that she had heard that pets were not
allowed. She said—"
"How does she know
anything about it?"
"Well, she had been
talking with the Resident's wife."
Jim was stumped for the
moment. The wife of the Resident Agent of the Mars Company for South Colony
undoubtedly had better sources of information than he had. But he was not ready
to give up. "Look, Mother. Look, Dad. You both saw the pamphlet the school
sent me, telling me what to do and what to bring and when to show up and so
forth. If either one of you can find anything anywhere in those instructions
that says I can't take Willis with me, I'll shut up like a Martian. Is that
fair?"
Mrs. Marlowe looked
inquiringly at her husband. He looked back at her with the same appeal for help
in his expression. He was acutely aware that Doctor MacRae was watching both of
them, not saying a word but wearing an expression of sardonic amusement.
Mr. Marlowe shrugged.
"Take Willis along, Jim. But he's your problem."
Jim's face broke out in
a grin. "Thanks, Dad!" He left the room quickly in order not to give
his parents time to change their minds.
Mr. Marlowe banged his
pipe on an ashtray and glowered at Doctor MacRae. "Well, what are you
grinning at, you ancient ape? You think I'm too indulgent, don't you?"
"Oh, no, not at
all! I think you did perfectly right."
"You think that pet
of Jim's won't cause him trouble at school?"
"On the contrary. I
have some familiarity with Willis's peculiar social habits."
"Then why do you
say I did right?"
"Why shouldn't the
boy have trouble? Trouble is the normal condition for the human race. We were
raised on it. We thrive on it."
"Sometimes, Doctor,
I think that you are, as Jim would put it, crazy as a spin bug."
"Probably. But
since I am the only medical man around, I am not likely to be committed for it.
Mrs. Marlowe, could you favor an old man with another cup of your delicious
coffee?"
"Certainly,
Doctor." She poured for him, then went on. "James, I am not sorry you
decided to let Jim take Willis. It will be a relief."
"Why, dear? Jim was
correct when he said that the little beggar isn't much trouble."
"Well, he isn't
really. But—I just wish he weren't so truthful."
"So? I thought he
was the perfect witness in settling the children's squabbles?"
"Oh, he is. He'll
play back anything he hears as accurately as a transcriber. That's the
trouble." She looked upset, then chuckled. "You know Mrs. Pottle?"
"Of course."
The doctor added,
"How can one avoid it? I, unhappy man, am in charge of her 'nerves'."
Mrs. Marlowe asked,
"Is she actually sick. Doctor?"
"She eats too much
and doesn't work enough. Further communication is forbidden by professional
ethics."
"I didn't know you
had any."
"Young lady, show
respect for my white hairs. What about this Pottle female?"
"Well, Luba Konski
had lunch with me last week and we got to talking about Mrs. Pottle. Honest,
James, I didn't say much and I did not know that Willis was under the
table."
"He was?" Mr.
Marlowe covered his eyes. "Do go on."
"Well, you both
remember that the Konskis housed the Pottles at North Colony until a house was
built for them. Sarah Pottle has been Luba's pet hate ever since, and Tuesday
Luba was giving me some juicy details on Sarah's habits at home. Two days later
Sarah Pottle stopped by to give me advice on how to bring up children.
Something she said triggered Willis—I knew he was in the room but I didn't
think anything of it—and Willis put on just the wrong record and I couldn't
shut him up. I finally carried him out of the room. Mrs. Pottle left without
saying good-bye and I haven't heard from her since."
"That's no
loss," her husband commented.
"True, but it got
Luba in Dutch. No one could miss Luba's accent and Willis does it better than
she does herself. I don't think Luba minds, though—and you should have heard
Willis's playback of Luba's description of how Sarah Pottle looks in the
morning—and what she does about it."
"You should
hear," answered MacRae, "Mrs. Pottle's opinions on the servant
problem."
"I have. She thinks
it's a scandal that the Company doesn't import servants for us."
The doctor nodded.
"With collars riveted around their necks."
"That woman! I can't
see why she ever became a colonist."
"Didn't you
know?" her husband said. "They came out here expecting to get rich in
a hurry."
"Hummph!"
Doctor MacRae got a
far-away look. "Mrs. Marlowe, speaking as her physician, it might help me
to hear what Willis has to say about Pottle, distaff. Do you suppose he would
recite for us?"
"Doctor, you're an
old fraud, with a taste for gossip."
"Granted. I like
also eavesdropping and window peeping."
"You're
shameless."
"Again granted. My
nerves are relaxed. I haven't felt ashamed in years."
"Willis may just
give a thrilling account of the children's chit-chat for the past two
weeks."
"Perhaps if you
coaxed him?"
Mrs. Marlowe suddenly
dimpled. "It won't hurt to try." She left the room to fetch Jim's
globular friend.
WEDNESDAY MORNING DAWNED
clear and cold, as mornings have a habit of doing on Mars. The Suttons and the
Marlowes, minus Oliver, were gathered at the Colony's cargo dock on the west
leg of Strymon canal, ready to see the boys off.
The temperature was
rising and the dawn wind was blowing firmly, but it was still at least thirty
below. Strymon canal was a steel-blue, hard sheet of ice and would not melt
today in this latitude. Resting on it beside the dock was the mail scooter from
Syrtis Minor, its boat body supported by razor-edged runners. The driver was
still loading it with cargo dragged from the warehouse on the dock. The two
families waited nearby.
The tiger stripes on
Jim's mask, the war paint on Frank's, and a rainbow motif on Phyllis's made the
young people easy to identify. The adults could be told apart only by size,
shape, and manner; there were two extras. Doctor MacRae and Father Cleary. The
priest was talking in low, earnest tones to Frank.
He turned presently and spoke
to Jim. "Your own pastor asked me to say good-bye to you, son.
Unfortunately the poor man is laid up with a touch of Mars throat. He would
have come anyhow had I not hidden his mask." The protestant chaplain, as
well as the priest, was a bachelor; the two clergy shared a house.
"Is he very
sick?" asked Jim.
"Not that sick.
He'll not die till I convert him. But take his blessing—and mine too." He
offered his hand.
Jim dropped his travel
bag, shifted his ice skates and Willis over to his left arm and shook hands.
There followed an awkward silence. Finally Jim said, "Why don't you all go
inside before you freeze to death?"
"Yeah," agreed
Francis. "That's a good idea."
"I think the driver
is about ready now," Mr. Marlowe countered. "Well, son, take care of
yourself. We'll see you at migration." He shook hands solemnly.
"So long.
Dad."
Mrs. Marlowe put her
arms around him, pressed her mask against his and said, "Oh, my little
boy—you're too young to go away from home!"
"Oh, mother,
please!" But he hugged her. Then Phyllis had to be hugged. The driver
called out:
'"Board!"
" 'Bye
everybody!" Jim turned away, felt his elbow caught.
It was the doctor.
"Keep your nose clean, Jim. And don't take any guff off of anybody."
"Thanks, Doc."
Jim turned and presented his school authorization to the driver while the
doctor bade Francis good-bye.
The driver looked it
over. "Both deadheads, eh? Well, seeing as how there aren't any pay
passengers this morning you can ride in the observatory." He tore off his
copy; Jim climbed inside and went up to the prized observation seats behind and
above the driver's compartment. Frank joined him.
The craft trembled as
the driver jacked the runners loose from the ice, then with a roar from the
turbine and a soft, easy surge the car got under way. The banks flowed past
them and melted into featureless walls as the speed picked up. The ice was
mirror smooth; they soon reached cruising speed of better than two hundred
fifty miles per hour. Presently the driver removed his mask; Jim and Frank,
seeing him, did likewise. The car was pressurized now by an air ram faced into
their own wind of motion; it was much warmer, too, from the air's compression.
"Isn't this
swell?" said Francis.
"Yeah. Look at
Earth."
Their mother planet was
riding high above the Sun in the northeastern sky. It blazed green against a
deep purple background. Close to it, but easy to separate with the naked eye,
was a lesser, pure white star—Luna, Earth's moon. Due north of them, in the
direction they were going, Deimos, Mars' outer moon, hung no more than twenty
degrees above the horizon. Almost lost in the rays of the sun, it was a tiny
pale disc, hardly more than a dim star and much outshone by Earth.
Phobos, the inner moon,
was not in sight. At the latitude of Charax it never rose more than eight
degrees or so above the northern horizon and that for an hour or less, twice a
day. hi the daytime it was lost in the blue of the horizon and no one would be
so foolhardy as to watch for it in the bitter night. Jim did not remember ever
having seen it except during migration between colonies.
Francis looked from
Earth to Deimos. "Ask the driver to turn on the radio," he suggested.
"Deimos is up."
"Who cares about
the broadcast?" Jim answered. "I want to watch." The banks were
not so high now; from the observation dome he could see over them into the
fields beyond. Although it was late in the season the irrigated belt near the
canal was still green and getting greener as he watched, as the plants came out
of the ground to seek the morning sunlight.
He could make out, miles
away, an occasional ruddy sand dune of the open desert. He could not see the
green belt of the east leg of their canal; it was over the horizon.
Without urging, the
driver switched on his radio; music filled the car and blotted out the
monotonous low roar of the turbo-jet. It was terrestrial music, by Sibelius, a
classical composer of another century. Mars colony had not yet found time to
develop its own arts and still borrowed its culture. But neither Jim nor Frank
knew who the composer was, nor cared.
The banks of the canal
had closed in again; there was nothing to see but the straight ribbon of ice;
they settled back and daydreamed.
Willis stirred for the
first time since he had struck the outer cold. He extended his eye stalks,
looked inquiringly around, then commenced to beat time with them.
Presently the music
stopped and a voice said: "This is station D-M-S, the Mars Company,
Deimos, circwn Mars. We bring you now by relay from Syrtis Minor a program in
the public interest. Doctor Graves Armbruster will speak on 'Ecological
Considerations involved in Experimental Artificial Symbiotics as related
to—'"
The driver promptly
switched the radio off.
"I would like to
have heard that," objected Jim. "It sounded interesting."
"Oh, you're just
showing off," Frank answered. "You don't even know what those words
mean."
"The deuce I don't.
It means—"
"Shut up and take a
nap." Taking his own advice Frank lay back and closed his eyes. However he
got no chance to sleep. Willis had apparently been chewing over, in whatever it
was he used for a mind, the program he had just heard. He opened up and started
to play it back, woodwinds and all.
The driver looked back
and up, looked startled. He said something but Willis drowned him out. Willis
bulled on through to the end, even to the broken-off announcement. The driver
finally made himself heard. "Hey, you guys! What yuh got up mere? A
portable recorder?"
"No, a
bouncer."
"A what?"
Jim held Willis up so that
the driver could see him. "A bouncer. His name is Willis."
"You mean that
thing is a recorder?"
"No, he's a
bouncer. As I said, his name is Willis."
"This I got to
see," announced the driver. He did something at his control board, then
turned around and stuck his head and shoulders up into the observation dome.
Frank said, "Hey!
You'll wreck us."
"Relax,"
advised the driver. "I put her on echo-automatic. High banks for the next
couple o' hundred miles. Now what is this gismo? When you brought it aboard I
thought it was a volleyball."
"No, it's Willis.
Say hello to the man, Willis."
"Hello, man,"
Willis answered agreeably.
The driver scratched his
head. "This beats anything I ever saw in Keokuk. Sort of a parrot,
eh?"
"He's a bouncer.
He's got a scientific name, but it just means 'Martian roundhead'. Never seen
one before?"
"No. You know, bud,
this is the screwiest planet in the whole system."
"If you don't like
it here," asked Jim, "why don't you go back where you came
from?"
"Don't go popping off,
youngster. How much will you take for the gismo? I got an idea I could use
him."
"Sell Willis? Are
you crazy?"
"Sometimes I think
so. Oh, well, it was just an idea." The driver went back to his station,
stopping once to look back and stare at Willis.
The boys dug sandwiches
out of their travel bags and munched them. After mat Frank's notion about a nap
seemed a good idea. They slept until wakened by the car slowing down. Jim sat
up, blinked, and called down, "What's up?"
"Coming into Cynia
Station," the driver answered. "Lay over until sundown."
"Won't the ice
hold?"
"Maybe it will.
Maybe it won't. The temperature's up and I'm not going to chance it." The
car slid softly to a stop, then started again and crawled slowly up a low ramp,
stopped again. "All out!" the driver called. "Be back by
sundown—or get left." He climbed out; the boys followed.
Cynia Station was three
miles west of the ancient city of Cynia, where west Strymon joins the canal
Oeroe. It was merely a lunchroom, a bunkhouse, and a row of pre-fab warehouses.
To the east the feathery towers of Cynia gleamed in the sky, seemed almost to
float, too beautifully unreal to be solid.
The driver went into the
little inn. Jim wanted to walk over and explore me city; Frank favored stopping
in the restaurant first. Frank won out. They went inside and cautiously
invested part of their meager capital in coffee and some indifferent soup.
The driver looked up
from his dinner presently and said, "Hey, George! Ever see anything like
that?" He pointed to Willis.
George was the waiter.
He was also the cashier, the hotel keeper, the station agent, and the Company
representative. He glanced at Willis. "Yep."
"You did, huh?
Where? Do you suppose I could find one?"
"Doubt it. You see
'em sometimes, hanging around the Martians. Not many of 'em." He turned
back to his reading— a New York Times, more than two years old. The boys finished, paid their bills, and
prepared to go outside. The cook-waiter-station-agent said, "Hold on.
Where are you kids going?"
"Syrtis
Minor."
"Not that. Where
are you going right now? Why don't you wait in the dormitory? Take a nap if you
like."
"We thought we
would kind of explore around outside," explained Jim.
"Okay. But stay
away from the city."
"Why?"
"Because the Company
doesn't allow it, that's why. Not without permission."
"How do we get
permission?" Jim persisted.
"You can't. Cynia
hasn't been opened up to exploitation yet." He went back to his reading.
Jim was about to
continue the matter but Frank tugged at his sleeve. They went outside together.
Jim said, "I don't think he has any business telling us we can't go to
Cynia."
"What's the
difference? He thinks he has."
"What'U we do
now?"
"Go to Cynia, of
course. Only we won't consult his nibs."
"Suppose he catches
us?"
"How can he? He
won't stir off that stool he's warming. Come on."
"Okay." They
set out to the east. The going was not too easy; there was no road of any sort
and all the plant growth bordering the canal was spread out to its greatest
extent to catch the rays of the midday sun. But Mars' low gravity makes walking
easy work even over rough ground. They came shortly to the bank of Oeroe and
followed it to the right, toward the city.
The way was easy along
the smooth stone of the bank. The air was warm and balmy even though the
surface of the canal was still partly frozen. The sun was high; they were the
better part of a thousand miles closer to the equator than they had been at
daybreak.
"Warm," said
Willis. "Willis want down."
"Okay," Jim
agreed, "but don't fall in."
"Willis not fall
in." Jim put him down and the little creature went skipping and rolling
along the bank, with occasional excursions into the thick vegetation, like a
puppy exploring a new pasture.
They had gone perhaps a
mile and me towers of the city were higher in the sky when they encountered a
Martian. He was a small specimen of his sort, being not over twelve feet tall.
He was standing quite still, all three of his legs down, apparently lost in
contemplation of the whichness of what. The eye facing them stared
unblinkingly.
Jim and Frank were, of
course, used to Martians and recognized that this one was busy in his
"other world"; they stopped talking and continued on past him, being
careful not to brush against his legs.
Not so Willis. He went
darting around the Martian's peds, rubbing against them, then stopped and let
out a couple of mournful croaks.
The Martian stirred,
looked around him, and suddenly bent and scooped Willis up.
"Hey!" yelled
Jim. "Put him down!"
No answer.
Jim turned hastily to
Frank. "You talk to him, Frank. I'll never be able to make him understand
me. Please!" Of the Martian dominant language Jim understood little and
spoke less. Frank was somewhat better, but only by comparison. Those who speak
Martian complain that it hurts their throats.
"What'U I
say?"
"Tell him to put
wills down! Or, so help me, I'll burn his legs off!"
"Oh, now, Jim, you
wouldn't do anything like that. It would get your whole family in
trouble."
"If he hurts
Willis, I sure will!"
"Grow up. Martians
never hurt anybody."
"Well, tell him to
put Willis down, then."
"I'll try."
Frank screwed up his mouth and got to work. His accent, bad at best, was made
worse by the respirator and by nervousness. Nevertheless he clucked and croaked
his way through a phrase that seemed to mean what Jim wanted.
Nothing happened.
He tried again, using a
different idiom; still nothing happened. "It's no good, Jim," he
admitted. "Either he doesn't understand me or he doesn't want to bother to
listen."
Jim shouted,
"Willis! Hey, Willis! Are you all right?"
"Willis fine!"
"Jump down! I'll
catch you."
"Willis fine."
The Martian wobbled his
head, seemed to locate Jim for the first time. He cradled Willis in one arm;
his other two arms came snaking suddenly down and enclosed Jim, one palm flap
cradling him where he sat down, the other slapping him across the belly. Jim
was unable to get at his gun, which was just as well.
He felt himself lifted
and held and then he was staring into a large liquid Martian eye which stared
back at him. The Martian "man" rocked his head back and forth and let
each of his eyes have a good look.
It was the closest Jim
had ever been to a Martian; he did not care for it. Worse, the little
supercharger on the top of Jim's mask compressed not only the thin air, but
also the body odor of the native; the stench was overpowering. Jim tried to
wiggle away, but the fragile-appearing Martian was stronger than he was.
Suddenly the Martian's
voice boomed out from the top of his head. Jim could not understand what was
being said although he spotted the question symbol at the beginning of the
phrase. But the Martian's voice had a strange effect on him.
Croaking and uncouth
though it was, it was filled with such warmth and sympathy and friendliness
that the native no longer frightened him. Instead he seemed like an old and
trusted friend. Even the stink of his kind no longer troubled Jim.
The Martian repeated the
question.
"What did he say,
Frank?"
"I didn't get it.
Shall I burn him?" Frank stood uneasily by, his gun drawn, but apparently
unsure what to do.
"No, no! He's
friendly, but I can't understand him."
The Martian spoke again;
Frank listened. "He's inviting you to go with him, I think."
Jim hesitated a split
second. Tell him okay."
"Jim, are you
crazy?"
"It's all right. He
means well. I'm sure of it."
"Well—all
right." Frank croaked the phrase of assent.
The native gathered up
one leg and strode rapidly away toward the city. Frank trotted after. He tried
his best to keep up, but the pace was too much for him. He paused, gasping,
then shouted, "Wait for me," his voice muffled by his mask.
Jim tried to phrase a
demand to stop, gave up, then got an inspiration. "Say, Willis—Willis boy.
Tell him to wait for Frank."
"Wait for Frank?"
Willis said doubtfully.
"Yes. Wait for
Frank."
"Okay." Willis
hooted at his new friend; the Martian paused and dropped his third leg. Frank
came puffing up.
The Martian removed one
arm from Jim and scooped up Frank with it. "Hey!" Frank protested.
"Cut it out."
"Take it
easy," advised Jim.
"But I don't want
to be carried. Judas—what a smell! Pew!"
"Smell? Don't be a
sissy. He smells better than you do."
Frank's reply was
disturbed by the Martian starting up again. Thus burdened, he shifted to a
three-legged gait in which at least two legs were always on the ground. It was
bumpy but surprisingly fast. Finally Frank managed to say, "Repeat that
last crack when we get down and I'll show you who smells bad."
"Forget it,"
urged Jim. "Where do you suppose he is taking -is?"
"To the city I
guess." Frank added, "We don't want to miss the scooter."
"We've got hours
yet. Quit worrying."
The Martian said nothing
more but continued slogging toward Cynia. Willis was evidently as happy as a
bee in a flower shop. Jim settled down to enjoying the ride. Now that he was
being carried with his head a good ten feet above ground his view was much
improved; he could see over the tops of the plants growing by the canal and
beyond them to the iridescent towers of Cynia. The towers were not like those
of Charax; no two Martian cities looked alike. It was as if each were a unique
work of art, each expressing the thoughts of a different artist.
Jim wondered why the
towers had been built, what they were good for, how old they were?
The canal crops spread
out around them, a dark green sea in which the Martian waded waist deep. The
broad leaves were spread flat to the sun's rays, reaching greedily for
lifegiving radiant energy. They curled aside as the native's body brushed them,
to spread again as he passed.
The towers grew much
closer; suddenly the Martian stopped and set the two boys down. He continued to
carry Willis. Ahead of them, almost concealed by overhanging greenery, a ramp
slanted down into the ground and entered a tunnel arch. Jim looked at it and
said, "Frank, what do you think?"
"Gee, I don't
know." The boys had been inside the cities of Charax and Copais, but only
in the abandoned parts and at ground level. They were not allowed time to fret
over thendecision; their guide started down the slope at a good clip.
Jim ran after him,
shouting, "Hey, Willis!"
The Martian stopped and
exchanged a couple of remarks with Willis; the bouncer called out, "Jim
wait."
"Tell him to put
you down."
"Willis fine. Jim
wait." The Martian started up again at a pace that Jim could not possibly
match. Jim went disconsolately back to the start of the ramp and sat down on
the ledge thereof.
"What are you going
to do?" demanded Frank.
"Wait, I suppose.
What else can I do? What are you going to do?"
"Oh, I'll stick.
But I'm not going to miss the scooter."
"Well, neither am
I. We couldn't stay here after sundown anyhow."
"You aint
whistling!" The precipitous drop in temperature at sunset on Mars is
almost all the weather there is, but it means death by freezing for an Earth
human unless he is specially clothed and continuously exercising.
They sat and waited and
watched spin bugs skitter past. One stopped by Jim's knee, a little tripod of a
creature, less than an inch high; it appeared to study him. He touched it; it
flung out its limbs and whirled away. The boys were not even alert, since a
water-seeker will not come close to a Martian settlement; they simply waited.
Perhaps a half hour
later the Martian—or, at least, a Martian of the same size—came back. He did
not have Willis with him. Jim's face fell. But the Martian said, "Come
with me," in his own tongue, prefacing the remark with the question
symbol.
"Do we or don't
we?" asked Frank.
"We do. Tell him
so." Frank complied. The three started down. The Martian laid a great hand
flap on the shoulders of each boy and herded them along. Shortly he stopped and
picked them up. This time they made no objection.
The tunnel seemed to
remain in full daylight even after they had penetrated several hundred yards
underground. The light came from everywhere but especially from the ceiling.
The tunnel was large by human standards but no more than comfortably roomy for
Martians. They passed several other natives; if another was moving their host
always boomed a greeting, but if he was frozen in the characteristic
trance-like immobility no sound was made.
Once their guide stepped
over a ball about three feet in diameter. Jim could not make out what it was at
first, then he did a double take and was still more puzzled. He twisted his
neck and looked back at it. It couldn't be—but it was!
He was gazing 'at
something few humans ever see, and no human ever wants to see: a Martian folded
and rolled into a ball, his hand flaps covering everything but his curved back.
Martians—modem, civilized Martians—do not hibernate, but at some time remote
eons in the past their ancestors must have done so, for they are still
articulated so that they can assume the proper, heat-conserving,
moisture-conserving globular shape, if they wish.
They hardly ever so
wish.
For a Martian to roll up
is the moral equivalent of an Earthly duel to the death and is resorted to only
when that Martian is offended so completely that nothing less will suffice. It
means: I cast you out, I leave your world, I deny your existence.
The first pioneers on
Mars did not understand this, and, through ignorance of Martian values,
offended more than once. This delayed human colonization of Mars by many years;
it took the most skilled diplomats and semanticians of Earth to repair the
unwitting harm. Jim stared unbelievingly at the withdrawn Martian and wondered
what could possibly have caused him to do that to an entire city. He remembered
a grisly tale told him by Doctor MacRae concerning the second expedition to
Mars. "So this dumb fool," the doctor had said, "a medical
lieutenant he was, though I hate to admit it—this idiot grabs hold of the
beggar's flaps and tries to unroll him. Then it happened."
"What
happened?" Jim had demanded.
"He
disappeared."
"The Martian?"
"No, the medical
officer."
"Huh? How did he
disappear?"
"Don't ask me; I
didn't see it. The witnesses—four of 'em, with sworn statements—say there he
was and then there he wasn't. As if he had met a boojum."
"What's a 'boojum'?"
Jim had wanted to know.
"You modern kids
don't get any education, do you? The boojum is in a book; I'll dig up a copy
for you."
"But how did he
disappear?"
"Don't ask me. Call
it mass hypnosis if it makes you feel any better. It makes me feel better, but
not much. All I can say is that seven-eighths of an iceberg never shows."
Jim had never seen an iceberg, so the allusion was wasted on him— but he felt
decidedly not better when he saw the rolled up Martian.
"Did you see
that?" demanded Frank.
"I wish I
hadn't," said Jim. "I wonder what happened?"
"Maybe he ran for
mayor and lost."
"It's nothing to
joke about. Maybe he— SssM" Jim broke off. He caught sight of another
Martian, immobile, but not rolled up; politeness called for silence.
The Martian carrying
them made a sudden turn to the left and entered a hall; he put them down. The
room was very large to them; to Martians it was probably suitable for a cozy
social gathering. There were many of the frames they use as a human uses a
chair and these were arranged in a circle. The room itself was circular and
domed; it had the appearance of being outdoors for the domed ceiling simulated
Martian sky, pale blue at the horizon, increasing to warmer blue, then to
purple, and reaching purple-black with stars piercing through at the highest
point of the ceiling.
A miniature sun, quite
convincing, hung west of the meridian. By some trick of perspective the
pictured horizons were apparently distant. On the north wall Oeroe seemed to
flow past.
Frank's comment was,
"Gee whiz!"; Jim did not manage that much.
Their host had placed
them by two resting frames. The boys did not attempt to use them; stepladders
would have been more comfortable and convenient. The Martian looked first at
them, then at the frames, with great sorrowful eyes. He left the room.
He came back very
shortly, followed by two others; all three were carrying loads of colorful
fabrics. They dumped them down in a pile in the middle of the room. The first
Martian picked up Jim and Frank and deposited them gently on the heap.
"I think he means,
'Draw up a chair,'" commented Jim.
The fabrics were not
woven but were a continuous sheet, like cobweb/and almost as soft, though much
stronger. They were in all hues of all colors from pastel blue to deep, rich
red. The boys sprawled on them and waited.
Their host relaxed
himself on one of the resting frames; the two others did the same. No one said
anything. The two boys were decidedly not tourists; they knew better than to
try to hurry a Martian. After a bit Jim got an idea; to test it he cautiously
raised his mask. Frank snapped, "Say! What 'cha trying to do? Choke to
death?"
Jim left his mask up.
"It's all right. The pressure is up."
"Huh? It can't be.
We didn't come through a pressure lock."
"Have it your own
way." Jim left his mask up. Seeing that he did not turn blue, gasp, nor
become slack featured, Frank ventured to try it himself. He found himself able
to breathe without trouble. To be sure, the pressure was not as great as he was
used to at home and it would have seemed positively stratospheric to an
Earthling, but it was enough for a man at rest.
Several other Martians
drifted in and unhurriedly composed themselves on frames. After a while Frank
said, "Do you know what's going on, Jim?"
"Uh—maybe."
"No 'maybes' about
it. It's a 'Growing-together.'"
"Growing
together" is an imperfect translation of a Martian idiom which names their
most usual social event—in bald terms, just sitting around and saying nothing.
In similar terms, violin music has been described as dragging a horse's tail
across the dried gut of a cat. "I guess you're right," agreed Jim.
"We had better button our lips."
"Yeah."
For a long time nothing
was said. Jim's thoughts drifted away, to school and what he would do there, to
his family, to things in the past. He came back presently to personal
selfawareness and realized that he was happier man he had been in a long time,
with no particular reason that he could place. It was a quiet happiness; he
felt no desire to laugh nor even to smile, but he was perfectly relaxed and
content.
He was acutely aware of
the presence of the Martians, of each individual Martian, and was becoming even
more aware of them with each drifting minute. He had never noticed before how
beautiful they were. "Ugly as a native" was a common phrase with the
colonials; Jim recalled with surprise that he had even used it himself, and
wondered why he ever had done so.
He was aware, too, of
Frank beside him and thought about how much he liked him. Staunch—that was the
word for Frank, a good man to have at your back. He wondered why he had never
told Frank that he liked him.
Mildly he missed Willis,
but was not worried about him. This sort of a party was not Willis's dish;
Willis liked things noisy, boisterous, and unrefined. Jim put aside the thought
of Willis, lay back, and soaked in the joy of living. He noted with delight
that the unknown artist who had designed this room had arranged for the
miniature sun to move across the ceiling just as the true Sun moved across the
sky. He watched it travel to the west and presently begin to drop toward the
pictured horizon.
There came a gentle
booming behind him—he could not catch the words—and another Martian answered.
One of them unfolded himself from his resting stand and ambled out of the room.
Frank sat up and said, "I must have been dreaming."
"Did you go to
sleep?" asked Jim. "I didn't."
"The heck you
didn't. You snored like Doc MacRae."
"Why, I wasn't even
asleep."
"Says you!"
The Martian who had left
the room returned. Jim was sure it was the same one; they no longer looked
alike to him. He was carrying a drinking vase. Frank's eyes bulged out.
"Do you suppose they are going to serve us waterT'
"Looks like,"
Jim answered in an awed voice.
Frank shook his head.
"We might as well keep this to ourselves; nobody'll ever believe us."
"Yeah. You're
right."
The ceremony began. The
Martian with the vase announced his own name, barely touched the stem of the
vase and passed it on. The next Martian gave his name and also simulated
drinking. Around the circle it came. The Martian who had brought them in, Jim
learned, was named "Gekko";
it seemed a pretty name
to Jim and fitting. At last the vase came around to Jim; a Martian handed it to
him with the wish, "May you never suffer thirst." The words were
quite clear to him.
There was an answering
chorus around him: "May you drink deep whenever you wish!"
Jim took the vase and
reflected that Doc said that the Martians didn't have anything that was
catching for humans. "Jim Marlowe!" he announced, placed the stem in
his mouth and took a sip.
As he handed it back he
dug into his imperfect knowledge of the dominant language, concentrated on his
accent and managed to say, "May water ever be pure and plentiful for you."
There was an approving murmur that warmed him. The Martian handed the vase to
Frank.
With the ceremony over
the party broke up in noisy, almost human chatter. Jim was trying vainly to
follow what was being said to him by a Martian nearly three times his height
when Frank said, "Jim! You see that sun? We're going to miss the
scooter!"
"Huh? That not the
real Sun; mat's a toy."
"No, but it matches
the real Sun. My watch says the same thing."
"Oh, for Pete's
sake! Where's Willis? Gekko—where's Gekko?"
Gekko, on hearing his
name, came over; he clucked inquiringly at Jim. Jim tried very hard to explain
their trouble, tripped over syntax, used the wrong directive symbols, lost his
accent entirely. Frank shoved him aside and took over. Presently Frank said, "They'll
get us there before sunset, but Willis stays here."
"Huh? They can't do
that!"
"That's what the
man says."
Jim thought. "Tell
them to bring Willis here and ask him."
Gekko was willing to do
that. Willis was carried in, placed
upon the floor. He
waddled up to Jim and said, "Hi, Jim boy!
Hi, Frank boy!"
"Willis," said
Jim, earnestly, "Jim is going away. Willis come with Jim?"
Willis seemed puzzled.
"Stay here. Jim stay here. Willis stay here. Good."
"Willis," Jim
said frantically, "Jim has got to go away.
Willis come with
Jim?" "Jim go?"
"Jim go."
Willis almost seemed to
shrug. "Willis go with Jim," he said sadly.
"Tell Gekko."
Willis did so. The Martian seemed surprised, but there was no further argument.
He gathered up both boys and the bouncer and started for the door. Another
larger Martian—tagged "G'kuro" Jim recalled—relieved Gekko of Frank
and tailed along behind. As they climbed the tunnel Jim found suddenly that he
needed his mask; Frank put his on, too.
The withdrawn Martian
was still cluttering the passageway; both their porters stepped over it without
comment.
The sun was very low
when they got to the surface. Although a Martian cannot be hastened his normal
pace makes very good time; the long-legged pair made nothing of the three miles
back to Cynia station. The sun had just reached the horizon and the air was
already bitter when the boys and Willis were dumped on the dock. The two
Martians left at once, hurrying back to the warmth of their city.
"Good-bye,
Gekko!" Jim shouted. "Good-bye, G'kuro!"
The driver and the
station master were standing on the dock; it was evident that the driver was
ready to start and had been missing his passengers. "What in the
world?" said the station master.
"We're ready to
go," said Jim.
"So I see,"
said the driver. He stared at the retreating figures. He blinked and turned to
the agent. "We should have left that stuff alone, George. I'm seeing
things." He added to the boys, "Well, get aboard."
They did so and climbed
up to the dome. The car clumped down off the ramp to the surface of the ice,
turned left onto Oeroe canal and picked up speed. The Sun dropped behind the
horizon; the landscape was briefly illuminated by the short Martian sunset. On
each bank the boys could see the plants withdrawing for the night. In a few
minutes the ground, so lush with vegetation a half hour before, was bare as the
true desert.
The stars were out,
sharp and dazzling. Soft curtains of aurora hung over the skyline. In the west
a tiny steady light rose and fought its way upwards against the motion of the
stars. "There's Phobos," said Frank. "Lookie!"
"I see it,"
Jim answered. "It's cold. Let's turn in."
"Okay. I'm
hungry."
"I've got some
sandwiches left." They munched one each, then went down into the lower compartment
and crawled into bunks. In time the car passed the city Hesperidum and turned
west-northwest onto the canal Erymanthus, but Jim was unaware of it; Jim was
dreaming that Willis and he were singing a duet for the benefit of amazed
Martians.
"All out! End of
the line!" The driver was prodding them.
"Huh?"
"Up you come,
shipmate. This is it—Syrtis Minor."
"Dear Mother and
Dad,
"The reason I
didn't phone you when we got in Wednesday night was that we didn't get in until
Thursday morning. When I tried to phone on Thursday the operator told me that
Deimos had set for South Colony and then I knew it would be about three days
until I could relay a call through Deimos and a letter would get there sooner
and save you four and a half credits on a collect phone call. Now I realize
that I didn't get this letter off to you right away and maybe you're not going
to get it until after I would have been able to make a phone call if I had made
it but what you probably don't realize is how busy they keep you at school and
how many demands there are on a fellow's time and anyhow you probably heard
from Frank's mother that we had gotten here all right and anyway you look at it
I still saved you four and one half credits by not making that phone call.
"I can just hear
Phyllis saying that I am just hinting that the half-and-four I saved should be
turned over to me but I am not doing anything of the sort because I wouldn't do
anything like that and besides I've still got some of the money left that you
gave me before I left as well as part of my birthday money and with careful
management I will not need any more until you all come through here at
Migration even though everything costs more here than it does at home. Frank
says it's because they always jack the prices up for the tourist trade but
there aren't any tourists around now and won't be until the Albert Einstein
gets in next week. Anyway if you simply split the difference with me you would
still be a clear two and a quarter credits ahead.
"The reason we
didn't get here Wednesday night was because the driver decided the ice might
not hold so we laid over at Cynia Station and Frank and I just fooled around
and killed time until sunset.
"Frank and I have
been allowed to room together and we've got a dandy room. It was meant for just
one boy and only has one study desk but we're mostly taking the same subjects
and lots of time we can use the projector together. I am talking this letter
into the study desk recorder because tonight is Frank's night to help out in
the kitchen and all I've got left to study is a little bit of history and I'm
saving that to do it with Frank when he comes back. Professor Steuben says that
he does not know what they are going to do if they keep getting more students
here with no more room, hang them on hooks maybe but he is just joking. He
jokes a lot and everybody likes him and will be sorry when he leaves on the
Albert Einstein and the new headmaster takes over.
"Well that's all
for now because Frank just got back and we had better get to work because
tomorrow we have a quiz on system history.
"Your loving son,
"James Madison
Marlowe, Jr. "P.S. Frank just told me that he didn't write his folks
either and he wonders if you would mind phoning his mother and telling her that
he is all right and would she please send his camera right away, he forgot it.
P.P.S. Willis sends his love. I just asked him. P.P.P.S. Tell Phyllis that the
girls here are dyeing their hair in stripes. I think it looks silly.
"JIM"
* *
#
If Professor Otto
Steuben, M.A., Ll.D., had not retired, Jim's life at Lowell Academy would have
been different. But retire he did and went back to San Femando Valley for a
well-earned rest. The entire school went to Marsport to see him off. He shook
hands all around and wept a little and commended them to the care of Marquis
Howe, recently arrived from Earth and now taking over.
When Jim and Frank got
back from the space port they found the first arrivals gathered around the
bulletin board. They crowded in and read the item that was drawing the crowd:
SPECIAL NOTICE
All students are
required to keep themselves and thenquarters neat and orderly at all times. The
supervision of these matters by student monitors has not proved satisfactory.
Therefore formal inspections by the Headmaster will be held each week. The
first such inspection will be at ten hundred, Saturday, the 7th of Ceres.
(signed) M. Howe, Headmaster
"Well, for crying
out loud!" Frank burst out. "What d'you think of that, Jim?"
Jim stared at it darkly.
"I think that today is the sixth of Ceres."
"Yeah, but what's
the idea? He must think that this is a school of correction." Frank turned
to one of the older students, who had, until now, been monitor of their
corridor. "Anderson, what do you think about it? Can he do that?"
"I don't know. I
really don't know. It seems to me that our rooms and so forth are our private
business."
"What do you intend
to do about it?"
"Me?" The
young man thought a while before replying, "I've got just one more semester
to my degree, then I'm out of here. I think I'll just sit tight, keep my mouth
shut, and sweat it out."
"Huh? That's easy
enough for you to say but I've got twelve semesters staring me in the face.
What am I? A criminal?"
"That's your
problem, fellow." The older student left.
One of the boys in the
crowd seemed undisturbed by the notice. He was Herbert Beecher, son of the
Company's Resident Agent General and a newcomer both to Mars and to the school.
One of the other boys noticed his smirk. "What are you looking smug about,
tourist?" he demanded. "Did you know about this ahead of time?"
"Certainly I
did."
"I'll bet you
thought it up."
"No, but my old man
says you guys have been getting away with it for a long time. My old man says
that Stoobie was too soft to put any discipline into this school. My old man
says that—"
"Nobody cares what
your old man says. Beat it!"
"You better not
talk about my old man that way. I'll—"
"Beat it before I
clip you one!"
Young Beecher eyed his
antagonist—a red-headed lad named Kelly—and decided that he meant it. He faded
out of sight.
"He can afford to
grin," Kelly said bitterly, "he lives in his old man's quarters. This
thing only gets at those of us who have to live in the school. It's rank
discrimination, that's what it is!" About a third of boys were day
students, mostly sons of Company employees who were stationed at Syrtis Minor.
Another third were migratory colonials and the balance were the children of
terrestrials at the outlying stations, especially those employed on the
atmosphere project. Most of these last were Bolivians and Tibetans, plus a few
Eskimos. Kelly turned to one of them. "How about it, Chen? Are we going to
put up with this?"
The Asiatic's broad face
showed no expression. "It is not worth getting excited about."
"Huh? You mean you
won't stand up for your rights?"
"These things
pass."
Jim and Frank went back
to their room but continued to discuss it. "Frank," asked Jim,
"what's behind this? Do you suppose they're pulling the same stunt over in
the girls' school?"
"I could call up
Dolores Montez and find out."
"Mmm... don't
bother. I don't suppose it matters. The question is: what are we going to do
about it?"
"What can we do
about it?"
"I don't know. I
wish I could ask Dad about this. He always told me to stand up for my rights...
but maybe he would say that this is just something I should expect. I don't
know."
"Look,"
suggested Frank, "why don't we ask our fathers?"
"You mean call 'em
up tonight? Is there relay tonight?"
"No, don't call 'em
up; that costs too much. We'll wait till our folks come through here at
migration; that's not so very long now. If we're going to make a fuss, we've
got to have our folks here to back us up, or we won't get any place with it.
Meantime, we sit tight and do what he asks us. It may not amount to
anything."
"Now you're talking
sense." Jim stood up. "I suppose we might as well try to get this
dump tidied up."
"Okay. Say, Jim, I
just thought of something. Isn't the chairman of the Company named Howe?"
"John W.
Howe," agreed Jim. "What about it?"
"Well, the head is
named Howe, too."
"Oh." Jim
shook his head. "Doesn't mean anything. Howe is a very common name."
"I'll bet it does
mean something. Doc MacRae says you have to be somebody's cousin to get any of
the juicy Company appointments. Doc says that the Company setup is just one big
happy family, playing-you-tickle-me-and-I'U-kiss-you and that the idea that it
is a non-profit corporation is the biggest joke since women were
invented."
"Hmm... Well, I
wouldn't know. Where shall I put this junk?"
Slips were distributed
at breakfast the next morning giving what was described as "Official
Arrangement of Rooms for Inspection"; the job the boys had done the night
before had to be done over. Since Headmaster Howe's instructions failed to
consider the possibility that two boys might be living in a one-boy room the
rearranging was not easy; they were not ready by ten o'clock. However it was
nearly two hours later that the Headmaster got around to their cubicle.
He poked his head
inside, seemed about to leave, then came inside. He pointed to their outdoors
suits, hanging on hooks by the clothes locker. "Why haven't you removed
those barbaric decorations from your masks?"
The boys looked
startled; Howe went on, "Haven't you looked at the bulletin board this
morning?"
"Er—no, sir."
"Do so. You are
responsible for anything posted on the bulletin board." He shouted toward
the door. "Orderly!" One of the older students appeared in the
doorway. "Yes, sir."
"Weekend privileges
suspended for these two pending satisfaction of inspection requirements. Five
demerits each." Howe looked around. "This room is unbelievably
cluttered and untidy. Why didn't you follow the prescribed diagram?"
Jim stuttered,
tongue-tied by the evident unfaimess of the question. Finally he got out,
"This is supposed to be a single room. We did the best we could."
"Don't resort to
excuses. If you don't have room to store things neatly, get rid of the excess
baggage." For the first time his eye lit on Willis, who, at the sight of
strangers, had retreated to a comer and hauled in all out-rigging. Howe pointed
at him. "Athletic equipment must be stored on tops of lockers or left in
the gymnasium. It must not be thrown in comers."
Jim started to answer;
Frank kicked him in a shin. Howe went on lecturing as he moved toward the door.
"I realize that you young people have been brought up away from
civilization and have not had the benefits of polite society, but I shall do my
best to remedy that. I intend that this school shall, above all other things,
turn out civilized young gentlemen." He paused at the door and added,
"When you have cleaned up those masks, report to my office."
When Howe was out of
earshot Jim said, "What did you kick me for?"
"You dumb idiot, he
thought Willis was a ball."
"I know; I was just
about to set him right."
Frank looked disgusted.
"Don't you know enough to let well enough alone? You want to keep Willis,
don't you? He would have whipped up some rule making him contraband."
"Oh, he couldn't do
that!"
"The heck he
couldn't! I'm beginning to see that Stoobie kept our pal Howe from exercising
his full talents. Say, what did he mean: 'demerits'?"
"I don't know, but
it doesn't sound good." Jim took down his respirator mask, looked at the
gay tiger stripes. "You know, Frank, I don't think I want to become a
'civilized young gentleman'."
"You and me
both!"
They decided to take a
quick look at the bulletin board before they got into any more trouble, rather
than fix the masks at once. They went to the entrance foyer and did so. On the
board was pinned:
NOTICE TO STUDENTS
1. The practice of
painting respirator masks with socalled identification patterns will cease.
Masks will be plain and each student will letter his name neatly in letters one
inch high across me chest and across the shoulders of his outdoors suit.
2. Students are required
to wear shirts and shoes or slippers at all times and places except in their
own rooms.
3. Pets will not be kept
in dormitory rooms. In some cases, where the animals are of interest as
scientific specimens, arrangements may be made to feed and care for pets in the
biology laboratory.
4. Food must not be kept
in dormitory rooms. Students receiving food packages from parents will store them
with the commissary matron and reasonable amounts may be withdrawn immediately
after meals, except Saturday morning breakfast. Special permission may be
obtained for "sweets parties" during recreation hours on occasions
such as birthdays, etc.
5. Students denied
weekend privileges for disciplinary reasons may read, study, compose letters,
play musical instruments, or listen to music. They are not permitted to play
cards, visit in other students' rooms, nor leave the school area for any
reason.
6. Students wishing to
place telephone calls will submit a written request on the approved form and
will obtain key to the communications booth at the main office.
(signed) M. Howe,
Headmaster
Jim whistled. Frank
said, "Would you look at that, Jim? Would you, now? Do you suppose we have
to get permission to scratch? What does he take us for?"
"Search me."
"Frank, I haven't
got a shirt."
"Well, I can lend
you a sweat shirt until you can buy some. But take a look at paragraph
three—you'd better get busy."
"Huh? What about
it?" Jim reread it.
"You'd better go
butter up the bio teacher, so you can make arrangements for Willis."
"What?" Jim
simply had not connected the injunction concerning pets with Willis; he did not
think of Willis as a pet.
"Oh, I can't do that,
Frank. He'd be terribly unhappy."
"Then you had
better ship him home and let your folks care for him."
Jim looked balky.
"I won't do it. I won't!"
"Then what are you
going to do?"
"I don't
know." He thought about it. "I won't do anything about it. I'll just
keep him under cover. Old lady Howe doesn't even know I've got him."
"Well... you might
get away with it, so long as nobody snitches on you."
"I don't think any
of the fellows would do that."
They went back to their
room and attempted to remove the decorations from their masks. They were not
very successful; the paint had bitten into the plastic and they succeeded only
in smearing the colors around. Presently a student named Smythe stuck his head
in the door. "Clean up your masks for you?"
"Huh? It can't be
done; the colors have soaked in."
"You're the
umpteenth to find that out. But, from the goodness of my heart and a
willingness to be of public service, I will paint your mask over to match the
original shade —at a quarter credit per mask."
"I thought there
was a catch in it," Jim answered.
"Do you want it, or
don't you? Hurry up, my public is waiting."
"Smitty, you would
sell tickets to your grandmother's funeral." Jim produced a quarter
credit. .
"That's an idea.
How much do you think I could charge?" The other boy produced a can of
lacquer and a brush, rapidly painted out Jim's proud design, using a pigment
that was a fair match for the olive-drab original shade. "There! It'll dry
in a couple of minutes. How about you, Sutton?"
"Okay,
bloodsucker," Frank agreed.
"Is that any way to
talk about your benefactor? I've got a heavy date over on the girls' side and
here I am spending my precious Saturday helping you out." Smythe made
equally rapid work of Frank's mask.
"Spending your time
raising money for your date, you mean," amended Jim. "Smitty, what do
you think of these trick rules the new Head has thought up? Should we knuckle
under, or make a squawk?"
"Squawk? What
for?" Smythe gathered up his tools. "There's a brand-new business opportunity
in each one, if you only had the wit to see it. When in doubt, come see Smythe
—special services at all hours." He paused at the door. "Don't
mention that deal about tickets to my grandmother's funeral; she'd want a cut
on it before she kicks off. Granny is a very shrewd gal with a credit."
"Frank,"
remarked Jim when Smythe was gone, "there is something about that guy I
don't like."
Frank shrugged. "He
fixed us up. Let's check in and get off the punishment list."
"Right. He reminds
me of something Doc used to say. 'Every law that was ever written opened up a
new way to graft.'"
"That's not
necessarily so. My old man says Doc is a crackpot. Come on."
They found a long line
waiting outside the Headmaster's office. They were finally ushered in in groups
of ten. Howe gave their masks a brief glance each, then started in to lecture.
"I hope that this will be a lesson to you young gentlemen not only in
neatness, but in alertness. Had you noticed what was posted on the bulletin
board you would have been, each of you, prepared for inspection. As for the
dereliction itself, I want you to understand that this lesson far transcends
the matter of the childish and savage designs you have been using on your face
coverings."
He paused and made sure
of their attention. "There is actually no reason why colonial manners
should be rude and vulgar and, as head of this institution, I intend to see to
it that whatever defects there may have been in your home backgrounds are
repaired. The first purpose, perhaps the only purpose, of education is the
building of character—and character can be built only through discipline. I
flatter myself that I am exceptionally well prepared to undertake this task;
before coming here I had twelve years experience as a master at the Rocky
Mountains Military Academy, an exceptionally fine school, a school that
produced men."
He paused again, either
to catch his breath or let his words soak in. Jim had come in prepared to let a
reprimand roll off his back, but the schoolmaster's supercilious attitude and
most especially his suggestion that a colonial home was an inferior sort of
environment had gradually gotten his dander up. He spoke up. "Mr.
Howe?"
"Eh? Yes? What is
it?"
"This is not the
Rocky Mountains; it's Mars. And this isn't a military academy."
There was a brief moment
when it seemed as if Mr. Howe's surprise and anger might lead him to some
violence, or even to apoplexy. After a bit he contained himself and said
through tight lips, "What is your name?"
"Marlowe, sir.
James Marlowe."
"It would be a far,
far better thing for you, Marlowe, if it were a military academy." He
turned to the others. "The rest of you may go. Weekend privileges are
restored. Marlowe, remain behind."
When the others had left
Howe said, "Marlowe, there is nothing in this world more offensive than a
smart-aleck boy, an ungrateful upstart who doesn't know his place. You are
enjoying a fine education through the graciousness of the Company. It ill
behooves you to make cheap wisecracks at persons appointed by the Company to
supervise your training and welfare. Do you realize that?"
Jim said nothing. Howe
said sharply, "Come! Speak up, lad—admit your fault and make your apology.
Be a man!"
Jim still said nothing.
Howe drummed on the desk top; finally he said, "Very well, go to your room
and think it over. You have the weekend to think about it."
When Jim got back to his
room Frank looked him over and shook his head admiringly. "Boy, oh
boy!" he said, "aint you the reckless one."
"Well, he needed to
be told."
"He sure did. But
what are your plans now? Are you going to cut your throat, or just enter a
monastery? Old Howie will be gunning for you every minute from here on out.
Matter of fact, it won't be any too safe to be your roommate."
"Confound it,
Frank, if that's the way you feel, you're welcome to find another
roommate!"
"Easy, easy! I
won't run out on you. I'm with you to the end. 'Smiling, the boy fell dead.'
I'm glad you told him off. I wouldn't have had the courage to do it
myself."
Jim threw himself across
the bunk. "I don't think I can stand this place. I'm not used to being
pushed around and sneered at, just for nothing. And now I'm going to get it
double. What can I do?"
"Demed if I
know."
'This was a nice place
under old Stoobie. I thought I was going to like it just fine."
"Stoobie was all
right. And Howe is a prime stinker. But what can you do, Jim, except shut up,
take it, and hope he will forget it?"
"Look, nobody else
likes it either. Maybe if we stood together we could make him slow up."
"Not likely. You
were the only one who had the guts to speak up. Shucks, / didn't even back you
up—and I agreed with you a hundred per cent."
"Well, suppose we
all sent letters to our parents?"
Frank shook his head.
"You couldn't get them all to—and some pipsqueak would snitch. Then you
would be in the soup, for inciting to riot or some such nonsense. Anyhow,"
he went on, "just what could you say in a letter that you could put your
finger on and prove that Mr. Howe was doing something he had no right to? I
know what my old man would say."
"What would he
say?"
"Many's the time
he's told me stories about the school he went to back Earthside and what a
rough place it was. I think he's a little bit proud of it. If I tell him that
Howie won't let us keep cookies in our room, he'll just laugh at me. He'd
say—"
"Dawggone it,
Frank, it's not the rule about food in our rooms; it's the whole picture."
"Sure, sure. / know
it. But try to tell my old man. All we can tell is little things like that.
It'll have to get a lot worse before you could get our parents to do
anything."
Frank's views were
confirmed as the day wore on. As the news spread student after student dropped
in on them, some to pump Jim's hand for having bearded the Headmaster, some
merely curious to see the odd character who had had the temerity to buck vested
authority. But one two-pronged fact became apparent: while no one liked the new
school head and all resented some or all of his new "disciplinary"
measures, no one was anxious to join up in what was assumed to be a foregone
lost cause.
One of the senior boys
summed it up. "Get wise to yourself, kid. A man wouldn't go into school
teaching if he didn't enjoy exercising cheap authority. It's the natural
profession of little Napoleons."
"Stoobie wasn't
like that!"
"Stoobie was an
exception. Most of them like rules just for the sake of rules. It's a fact of
nature, like frost at sundown. You have to get used to it."
On Sunday Frank went out
into Syrtis Minor—the terrestrial settlement, not the nearby Martian city. Jim,
under what amounted to room arrest, stayed in their room, pretended to study
and talked to Willis. Frank came back at supper time and announced, "I
brought you a present." He chucked Jim a tiny package.
"You're a pal! What
is it?"
"Open it and
see."
It was a new tango
recording, made in Rio and direct from Earth via the Albert Einstein, titled
iQuien Es La Senorita? Jim was inordinately fond of Latin music; Frank had
remembered it.
"Oh, boy!" Jim
went to the study desk, threaded the tape into the speaker, and got ready to
enjoy it. Frank stopped him.
"There's the supper
bell. Better wait."
Reluctantly Jim
complied, but he came back and played it several times during the evening until
Frank insisted that they study. He played it once more just before lights-out.
The dormitory corridor
had been dark and quiet for perhaps fifteen minutes when ^Quien Es La Senorita?
started up again. Frank sat up with a start. "What the deuce? Jim—don't
play that now!"
-"I'm not,"
protested Jim. "It must be Willis. It has to be Willis."
"Well, shut him up.
Choke him. Put a pillow over his head."
Jim switched on the
light. "Willis boy—hey, Willis! Shut up that racket!" Willis probably
did not even hear him. He was standing the middle of the floor, beating time
with his eye stalks, and barrelling on down the groove. His rendition was
excellent, complete with marimbas and vocal chorus.
Jim picked him up.
"Willis! Shut up, fellow."
Willis kept on beating
it out.
The door bust open and
framed Headmaster Howe. "Just as I thought," he said triumphantly,
"no consideration for other people's rights and comforts. Shut off that
speaker. And consider yourself restricted to your room for the next
month."
Willis kept on playing;
Jim tried to hide him with his body. "Didn't you hear my order?"
demanded Howe. "I said to shut off that music." He strode over to the
study desk and twisted the speaker switch. Since it was already shut off full,
all he accomplished was breaking a fingernail. He suppressed an unschoolmasterly
expression and stuck the finger in his mouth. Willis worked into the third
chorus.
Howe turned around.
"How do you have this thing wired?" he snapped. Getting no answer, he
stepped up to Jim and said, "What are you hiding?" He shoved Jim
aside, looked at Willis with evident disbelief and distaste. "What is
thatT
"Uh, that's
Willis," Jim answered miserably, raising his voice to be heard.
Howe was not entirely
stupid; it gradually penetrated that me music he had been hearing came out of
the curious-looking, fuzzy sphere in front of him.
"And what is
'Willis', may I ask?"
"Well, he's a... a
bouncer. A sort of a Martian." Willis picked this moment to finish the
selection, breathe a liquid contralto buenas noches, and shut up—for the
moment.
"A bouncer? I've
never heard of one."
"Well, not very
many have seen one, even among the colonists. They're scarce."
"Not scarce enough.
Sort of a Martian parrot, I assume."
"Oh, no!"
"What do you mean,
'Oh, no'?"
"He's not a bit
like a parrot. He talks, he thinks—he's my friend!"
Howe was over his
surprise and recalling the purpose of his visit. "All that is beside the
point. You saw my order about pets?"
"Yes, but Willis is
not a pet."
"What is he,
then?"
"Well, he can't be
a pet. Pets are animals; they're property. Willis isn't property; he's... well,
he's just Willis."
Willis picked this time
to continue with the next thing he had heard after the last playing of the
tango. "Boy, when I hear that music," he remarked in Jim's voice,
"I don't even remember that old stinker Howe."
"I can't forget
him," Willis went on in Frank's voice. "I wish I had had the nerve to
tell him off the same time you did, Jim. You know what? I think Howe is nuts, I
mean really nuts. I'll bet he was a coward when he was a kid and it's twisted
him inside."
Howe turned white.
Frank's arm-chair psychoanalyzing had hit dead center. He raised his hand as if
to strike, then dropped it again, uncertain what to strike. Willis hastily
withdrew all protuberances and became a smooth ball.
"I say it's a
pet," he said savagely, when he regained his voice. He scooped Willis up
and headed for the door.
Jim started after him.
"Say! Mr. Howe—you can't take Willis!"
The Headmaster turned.
"Oh, I can't, can't I? You get back to bed. See me in my office in the
morning."
"If you hurt
Willis, I'll.. I'll..."
"You'll what?"
He paused. "Your precious pet won't be hurt. Now you get back in that bed
before I thrash you." He turned again and left without stopping to see
whether or not his order had been carried out.
Jim stood staring at the
closed door, tears streaming down his cheeks, sobs of rage and frustration
shaking him. Frank came over and put a hand on him. "Jim. Jim, don't take
on so. You heard him promise not to hurt Willis. Get back into bed and settle
it in the morning. At the very worst you'll have to send Willis home."
Jim shook off the hand.
"I should have burned him," he muttered. "I should have burned
him down where he stood."
"Suppose you did?
Want to spend the rest of your life in an asylum? Don't let him get your goat,
fellow; if he gets you angry, you'll do something silly and then he's got
you."
"I'm already
angry."
"I know you are and
I don't blame you. But you've got to get over it and use your head. He was
laying for you—you saw that. No matter what he does or says you've got to keep
cool and outsmart him—or he gets you in wrong."
"I suppose you're
right."
"I know I'm right.
That's what Doc would say. Now come to bed."
Neither one of them got
much sleep that night. Toward morning Jim had a nightmare that Howe was a
withdrawn Martian whom he was trying to unroll—against his better judgment.
There was a brand-new
notice on the bulletin board at breakfast time. It read:
IMPORTANT NOTICE
All students possessing
personal weapons will turn them in at the main office for safekeeping. Weapons
will be returned on request whenever the student concerned is leaving the
limits of the school and the adjoining settlement. The practice of wearing
sideanns in areas where there is no actual danger from Martian/cMna will cease.
(signed) M. Howe, Headmaster
Jim and Frank read it
together. "This is the worst one yet," said Jim. "The right to
bear arms is guaranteed. Doc says it's the basis of all freedom."
Frank studied it.
"Do you know what I think?"
"No. What?"
"I think he's
afraid of you personally."
"Me? Why?"
"Because of what
happened last night. There was murder in your eye and he saw it. I think he
wants to pull your teeth. I don't think he gives a hoot about the rest of us
hanging on to our heaters."
"You really think
so?"
"I do. The question
is: what are you going to do about it?"
Jim thought about it.
"I'm not going to give up my gun. Dad wouldn't want me to. I'm sure of
that. Anyhow, I'm licensed and I don't have to."
"Neither will I.
But we had better mink up a wrinkle before you have to go see him this
morning."
The wrinkle showed up at
breakfast—the student named Smythe. Frank spoke to Jim about it in a low voice;
together they accosted the student after breakfast and brought him to their
room. "Look, Smitty," began Jim, "you're a man with lots of
angles, aren't you?"
"Mmm... could be.
What's up?"
"You saw that
notice this morning?"
"Sure. Who didn't?
Everybody is grousing about it."
"Are you going to
turn in your gun?"
"I did before
breakfast. What do I need a gun for around here? I've got a brain."
"In that case you
won't be called in about it. Now just supposing that you were handed two
packages to take care of. You won't open them and you won't know what's in them.
Do you think you could find a safe, a really safe place to keep them and still
be able to give them back on short notice?"
"I don't suppose
you want me to tell anybody about these, uh, packages?"
"Nope.
Nobody."
"Hmm... this sort
of service comes high."
"How high?"
"Well, now, I
couldn't afford to do it for less than two credits a week."
"That's too
much," Frank put in sharply.
"Well—you're
friends of mine. I'll make you a flat rate of eight credits for the rest of the
year."
"Too much."
"Six credits then,
and I won't go lower. You've got to pay for the risk."
"It's a deal,"
Jim said before Frank could bargain further.
Smythe left with a
bundle before Jim reported to the Headmaster's office.
HEADMASTER HOWE KEPT Jim
waiting thirty minutes before admitting him. When he was finally let in, Jim
saw that Howe seemed to be quite pleased with himself. He glanced up.
"Yes? You asked to see me?"
"You told me to see
you, sir."
"I did? Let me see
now, what is your name?"
He dam well knows my
name, Jim said savagely to himself; he's trying to get my goat. He recalled
Frank's solemn warning not to lose his temper. "James Marlowe, sir,"
he answered evenly.
"Oh, yes." The
headmaster picked up a list from his desk.
"I suppose you have
come in to surrender your gun. Turn it over."
Jim shook his head.
"I didn't come in for that."
"You didn't? Well,
mat's beside the point. You've seen the order; give me your gun."
Jim shook his head
again. "I don't have a gun."
"Why did you come
here without it? Go back to your room and fetch it. Quickly—I give you three
minutes."
"No," said Jim
slowly, "I've already told you that I haven't got a gun."
"You mean you
haven't one in your room?"
"That's what I
said."
"You're
lying."
Jim counted slowly to
twenty, then answered, "You know that I have no gun, or you wouldn't dare
say that."
Howe stared at him for
what seemed a long time, then stepped into his outer office. He returned
shortly and appeared to have regained his cockiness. "Now, Marlowe, you
said you wanted to see me about something else?"
"You told me to see
you. About Willis."
"Willis? Oh, yes,
the Martian roundhead." Howe smiled with his lips. "An interesting
scientific specimen."
Howe added nothing more.
The silence kept up so long that Jim began to realize that the Headmaster
intended to force him to make any moves. Jim had already resigned himself to
the idea that it would be impossible to keep Willis at the school any longer.
He said, "I've come to get him. I'm going to take him out in town and
arrange to send him home."
Howe smiled more
broadly. "Oh, you are? And pray tell me how you are going to do that when
you are restricted to the school for the next thirty days?"
Frank was still warning
him; Jim could almost hear him. He answered, "All right, sir, I'll get
somebody to do it for me—today. Now, please, can I have Willis?"
Howe leaned back and
crossed his fingers over his stomach. "You bring up a most interesting
point, Marlowe. You said last night that this creature is not a pet."
Jim was puzzled.
"Yes?"
"You were quite
emphatic about it. You said that he wasn't your property, but your friend.
That's right, isn't it?"
Jim hesitated. He could
feel that a trap was being built for him, but he was not sure what sort.
"What if I did?"
"Did you say that,
or didn't you? Answer me!"
"Well—yes."
Howe leaned forward.
"In that case, what are you doing in here demanding that I turn this
creature over to you? You have no claim on him."
"But— but—"
Jim stopped, at a loss for words. He had been tricked with words, slippery
words; he did not know how to answer them. "You can't do that!" he
blurted out. "You don't own him, either! You have no right to keep him
locked up."
Howe carefully fitted
his finger dps together. "That is a matter still to be determined.
Although you have waived all claim to him, it may be that the creature is
property nevertheless—in which case he was found on the school grounds and I
may take title to him on behalf of the school, as a scientific specimen."
"But— You can't do
that; that's not fair! If he belongs to anybody, he belongs to me! You've got
no right to—"
"Silence!" Jim
shut up; Howe went on more quietly, "Don't tell me what I can or cannot
do. You forget that I am in loco parentis to you. Any rights that you may have
are vested in me, just as if I were your own father. As to the disposition of
this creature, I am looking into it; I expect to see the Agent General this
afternoon. In due course you will be informed of the outcome."
The Latin phrase
confused Jim, as it was intended to; but he did catch one point in Howe's
statement and snatched at it. "I'm going to tell my father about this. You
can't get away with it."
"Threats, eh?"
Howe smiled sourly. "Don't bother to ask for the key to the communications
booth; I don't propose to have students phoning their parents every time I tell
them to wipe their noses. Send your father a letter—but let me hear it before
you send it." He stood up. "That is all. You may go. No—wait."
He went again to his outer office, to return almost immediately. He seemed
quite angry. "Where did you hide that gun?" he demanded.
Jim had had time to
regain some portion of calm. He said nothing. "Answer me!" insisted
the Headmaster.
Jim answered slowly,
"You've already called me a liar once on that subject; I won't say
anything."
Howe looked at him.
"Get to your room!" Jim got out.
Frank was waiting,
"I don't see any blood," he announced, looking Jim over. "How
did it go?"
"Oh, that
so-and-so! That filthy, filthy so-and-so!"
"Bad, eh?"
"Frank, he won't
let me have Willis."
"He's going to make
you send him home? But you expected that."
"No, not that. He
won't let me have him at all. He used a lot of double-talk but all it meant was
that he had him and meant to keep him." Jim seemed about to break down and
blubber. "Poor little Willis—you know how timid he is. Frank, what'll I
do?"
"I don't get
it," Frank answered slowly. "He can't keep Willis, not for keeps.
Willis belongs to you."
"I told you he used
a lot of double-talk—but that's what he means to do just the same. How am I
going to get him back? Frank, I've just got to get him back."
Frank did not answer;
Jim looked around disconsolately and noticed the room for the first time.
"What happened here?" he asked. "The place looks like you had
tried to wreck it."
"Oh, that. I
started to tell you. While you were gone, a couple of Howie's stooges searched
the joint."
"Huh?"
'Trying to find our
guns. I just played dumb."
"They did, did
they?" Jim appeared to make up his mind.
"I've got to find
Smythe." He headed for the door.
"Hey, wait—what
d'you want to find Smitty for?"
Jim looked back and his
face was very old. "I'm going to get my gun and go back there and get
Willis."
"Jim! You're
crazy!"
Jim did not answer but
continued toward the door.
Frank stuck out a foot,
tripped him and landed on his back as he went down. He grabbed Jim's right arm
and twisted it behind his back. "Now you just rest there," he told
Jim, "until you quiet down."
"Let me up."
"You got some sense
in your head?"
No answer.
"Okay," Frank went on, "I can sit here just as long as you want
to. Let me know when you've quieted down." Jim started to struggle; Frank
twisted his arm until he yelped and relaxed.
"That's
better," said Frank. "Now listen to me: you're a nice guy, Jim, but
you go off half-cocked. Suppose you do get your gun and suppose you manage to
scare old Howie into coughing up Willis. How long are you going to keep him?
You know how long? Just long enough for him to call in some Company police.
Then they lock you up and take Willis away from you again. And you'll never see
Willis again, not to mention the trouble and grief you'll cause your
folks."
There followed a
considerable silence. Finally Jim said, "Okay, let me up."
"You've given up
the idea of waving your gun around?"
"Yeah."
"On your honor?
Solemn promise?"
"Yes, I
promise."
Frank let him up and
brushed him off. Jim rubbed his arm and said, "You needn't have twisted it
so hard."
"You're a fine one
to complain; you ought to thank me. Now grab your notebook; we're going to be
late to chemistry lab."
"I'm not
going."
"Don't be silly,
Jim. No use to pile up a bunch of cuts and maybe flunk just because you're sore
at the Head."
"That's not the
idea. I'm quitting, Frank. I won't stay in this school."
"What? Don't be
hasty, Jim. I know how you feel, but it's here or nowhere. Your folks can't
afford to send you back to Earth for school."
"Then it's nowhere.
I won't stay here. I'm going to hang around just long enough to find some way
to get my hands on Willis, then I'm going home."
"Well..."
Frank stopped to scratch his head. "It's your problem. But see here—you
might as well come on to chem lab. It won't hurt you any and you don't intend
to leave this minute anyhow."
"No."
Frank looked worried.
"Will you promise me to stay right here and not do anything rash till I
get back?"
"Why should you
worry?"
"Promise me, Jim,
or I cut lab, too."
"Oh, all right, all
right! Go ahead." "Right!" Frank dashed away.
When Frank got back he
found Jim sprawled on his bunk.
"Asleep?"
"No."
"Figured out what
you are going to do?"
"No."
"Anything you
want?"
"No."
"Your conversation
is brilliant," Frank commented and sat down at the study desk.
"Sorry."
Nothing was heard from Howe the rest of that day. Frank managed to persuade Jim
to attend classes the next day by pointing out that he did not want to invite
attention to himself while he was waiting for an opportunity to grab Willis.
Tuesday also passed
without word from Howe. Tuesday night, perhaps two hours after lights-out,
Frank suddenly woke up. Someone was stirring in the room. "Jim!" he
called out softly.
Dead silence. Keeping
quiet himself Frank reached out and switched on the light. Jim was standing
near the door. "Jim," complained Frank, "why didn't you answer
me? You trying to scare me to death?"
"Sony."
"What's up? What
are you doing out of bed?"
"Never mind. You go
on back to sleep."
Frank climbed out of
bed. "Oh, no! Not while you've got that wild look in your eye. Now tell
papa."
Jim waved him away.
"I don't want to mix you up in this. Goon back to bed."
"Think you're big
enough to make me? Now cut out the foolishness and give. What are your
plans?"
Reluctantly Jim
explained. It seemed likely to him that Headmaster Howe had Willis locked up
somewhere in his office. Jim planned to break in and attempt a rescue.
"Now you go back to bed," he finished. "If they question you,
you don't know anything; you slept all night."
"Let you tackle it
alone? Not likely! Anyhow you/need somebody to jigger for you." Frank
started fumbling around in their locker.
"I don't want any
help. What are you looking for?"
"Laboratory
gloves," answered Frank. "You're going to get help whether you want
it or not, you thumb-fingered idiot. I don't want you caught."
"What do you want
gloves for?"
"Ever hear of
fingerprints?"
"Sure, but he'll
know who did it—and I don't care; I'll be gone."
"Sure, he'll know,
but he may not be able to prove it.
.Here, put these
on." Jim accepted the gloves and with them he tacitly accepted Frank's
help in the adventure.
Burglary is not common
on Mars and locks are unusual items. As for night watchmen, manpower is not
transported through millions of miles of space simply to be used to watch the
silent corridors of a boys' school. The principal hazard that Jim and Frank
faced in getting to the school's offices was the chance of running into some
restless student going to the washroom after hours.
They moved as silently
as possible and scouted each stretch of corridor before entering it. In a few
minutes they were at the outer door of the offices without—they hoped—having
been seen. Jim tried the door; it was locked. "Why do they bother to lock
this?" he whispered.
"On account of guys
like you and me," Frank told him.
"Go back to the
comer and keep your eyes peeled." He attacked the latch with his knife.
"Okay." Jim
went to the passageway intersection and kept lookout. Five minutes later Frank
hissed at him; he went back
"What's the matter?"
"Nothing's the
matter. Come on." Frank had the outer door open.
They tiptoed through the
outer office, past recording desks and high stacked spool files to an inner
door marked: Marquis Howe—HEADMASTER—Private.
The lettering on the
door was new—and so was the lock. The lock was no mere gesture, capable of
being picked or sprung with a knife; it was a combination type, of titanium
steel, and would have looked more at home on a safe.
"Think you can open
it?" Jim asked anxiously.
Frank whistled softly. "Don't
be silly. The party is over, Jim. Let's see if we can get back to bed without
getting caught."
"Maybe we can get
the door off its hinges."
"It swings the
wrong way. I'd rather try to cut a hole through the partition." He moved
aside, knelt down, and tried the point of his knife on the wall.
Jim looked things over.
There was an air-conditioning duct running from the corridor through the room
they were in and to the wall of the headmaster's office. The hole for the duct
was almost as wide as his shoulders; if he could unscrew the holding flanges
and let the duct sag out of the way—
No, he could not even
get up to it; there was nothing to use as a ladder. The file cabinets were
fastened to the floor, he found.
There was a small grille
set in the bottom of the door, to permit the exhaust air to escape from the
inner office. It could not be removed, nor would the hole left be large enough
to be of use, but he lay down and tried to peer through it. He could see
nothing; the room beyond was dark.
He cupped his hands over
it and called out, "Willis! Oh, Willis! Willis boy—"
Frank came over and said
urgently, "Cut that out. Are you trying to get us caught?"
"Sh!" Jim put
his ear to the grille.
They both heard a
muffled reply: "Jim boy! Jim!"
Jim replied,
"Willis! Come here, Willis!" and listened. "He's in there,"
he said to Frank. "Shut up in something."
"Obviously,"
agreed Frank. "Now will you quiet down before somebody comes?"
"We've got to get
him out. How are you making out with the wall?"
"No good. There's
heavy wire mesh set in the plastic."
"Well, we've got to
get him out. What do we do?"
"We don't do a dam
thing," asserted Frank. "We're stymied. We go back to bed."
"You can go back to
bed if you want to. I'm going to stay here and get him out."
"The trouble with
you, Jim, is that you don't know when you are licked. Come on!"
"No. Sh!" He
added, "Hear anything?"
Frank listened, "I
hear something. What is it?"
It was a scraping noise
from inside the inner office. "It's Willis, trying to get out," Jim
stated.
"Well, he can't.
Let's go."
"No." Jim
continued to listen at the grille. Frank waited impatiently, his spirit of
adventure by now more than satisfied. He was stretched between a reluctance to
run out on Jim and an anxiety to get back to his room before they were caught.
The scraping noise continued.
After a while it
stopped. There was a soft plop! as if something soft but moderately heavy had
fallen a foot or so, then there was a slight scurrying sound, almost beyond
hearing.
"Jim? Jim
boy?"
"Willis!"
yelped Jim. The bouncer's voice had come to him from just beyond the grille.
"Jim boy take
Willis home."
"Yes, yes! Stay
there, Willis; Jim has to find a way to get Willis out."
"Willis get
out." The bouncer stated it positively.
"Frank," Jim
said urgently, "if we could just find something to use as a crowbar, I
could bust that grille out of its frame. I think maybe Willis could squeeze
through."
"We've got nothing
like that. We've got nothing but our knives."
"Think, fellow,
think! Is there anything in our room, anything at all?"
"Not that I know
of." The scraping noise had resumed;
Frank added,
"What's Willis up to?"
"I guess he's
trying to get the door open. We've got to find some way to open it for him.
Look, I'll boost you up on my shoulders and you try to take the collar off that
air duct."
Frank looked the
situation over. "No good. Even if we get the duct down, there'll be a
grille set in the other side of the wall."
"How do you
know?"
"There always
is."
Jim shut up. Frank was
certainly correct and he knew it. The scraping sound had continued, still
continued. Frank dropped on one knee and put his head close to the grille. He
listened.
'Take it easy," he
advised Jim after a moment. "I think maybe Willis is making out all right
by himself."
"What do you
mean?"
"That's a cutting
sound if I ever heard one."
"Huh? Willie can't
get through a door. Many's the time I've locked him up, back home."
"Maybe. Maybe not.
Maybe he just didn't want to get out bad enough." The scraping sound was
more distinct now.
A few minutes later a
fine circular line began to show around the grille, then the portion of the
door enclosed by the line fell toward them. For an instant Willis could be seen
through the hole. Sticking out from his tubby body was a clawed pseudohmb eight
inches long and an inch thick.
"What's that?"
demanded Frank.
"Darned if I know.
He never did anything like that before." The strange limb withdrew,
disappeared inside his body, and the fur closed over the spot, leaving no sign
that it had ever existed. Willis proceeded to change his shape, until he was
more nearly watermelon-shaped than globular. He oozed through the hole.
"Willis out," he announced proudly.
Jim snatched him up and
cradled him in his arms. "Willis! Willis, old fellow."
The bouncer cuddled in
his arms. "Jim boy lost," he said accusingly. "Jim went
away."
"Yes, but not ever
again. Willis stay with Jim."
"Willis stay.
Good."
Jim rubbed his cheek
against the little fellow's fur. Frank cleared his throat. "If you two
love birds are through necking, it might be a good idea to pop back into our
hole."
"Yeah, sure."
The trip back to their room was made quickly and, so far as they could detect,
without arousing attention. Jim dumped Willis on his bed and looked around.
"I wonder just what I should try to take? I'll have to get hold of Smitty
and get my gun."
"Hold on,"
said Frank. "Don't get ahead of yourself. You don't really have to go, you
know."
"Huh?"
"I didn't hurt the
outer lock; we never touched Stinky's private lock. All there is to show for
Willis' escape is a hole that we obviously couldn't get through—and another one
like it, probably, in Stinky's desk. He can't prove a thing. You can arrange to
ship Willis back and we can just sit tight."
Jim shook his head.
"I'm leaving. Willis is just part of it. I wouldn't stay in a school run
by Howe if you paid me to."
"Why be hasty,
Jim?"
"I'm not being
hasty. I don't blame you for staying; in another year you can take the rocket
pilot candidate exams and get out. But if you should happen to bust the exams,
I'll bet you don't stick here until graduation."
"No, I probably
won't. Have you figured out how you are going to get away without Howe stopping
you? You don't dare leave until daylight; it is too cold until then."
"I'll wait until
daylight and just walk out. If Howe tries to stop me, so help me, I'll blast
him."
"The idea,"
Frank said dryly, "is to get away, -not to stir up a gun battle. What you
want to do is to pull a sneak. I think we had a better find a way to keep you
under cover until that can be arranged. The chances ought to be good after
noon."
Jim was about to ask
Frank why he thought the chances would be good after noon when Willis repeated
the last three words. First he repeated them in Frank's voice, then he said
them again in rich, fruity accents of an older man. "Good afternoon!"
he intoned.
"Shut up,
Willis."
Willis said it again,
"Good afternoon. Mark. Sit down, my boy. Always happy to see you."
"I've heard that
voice," said Frank, puzzlement in his tones.
"Thank you.
General. How do you do, sir?" Willis went on, now in the precise, rather
precious tones of Headmaster Howe.
"I know!" said
Frank. "I've heard it on broadcast; it's Beecher, the Resident Agent
General."
"Sh—" said
Jim, "I want to listen." Willis continued, again in the fruity voice:
"Not bad, not too
bad for an old man."
"Nonsense, General,
you're not old."—Howe's voice again.
"Kind of you to say
so, my boy," Willis went on. "What have you in the bag? Contraband?"
Willis repeated Howe's
sycophantic laugh. "Hardly. Just a scientific specimen—a rather
interesting curiosity I confiscated from one of the students."
There was a short pause,
then the fruity voice said, "Bless my boots! Mark, wherever did you find
this creature?"
"I just told you,
sir," came Howe's voice. "I was forced to take it away from one of
the students."
"Yes, yes—but do
you have any idea of what you've got?"
"Certainly, sir; I
looked it up. Areocephalopsittacus Bron—"
"Spare me the
learned words, Mark. It's a roundhead, a Martian roundhead. That's not the
point. You say you got this from a student; do you think you could buy it from
him?" the fruity voice continued eagerly.
Howe's voice answered
slowly, "I hardly think so, sir. I am fairly sure he wouldn't want to
sell." He hesitated, then went on, "Is it important?"
"Important? That
depends on what you mean by 'important'," answered the voice of the
Resident Agent General. "Would you say that sixty thousand credits was
important? Or even seventy thousand? For that is what I am sure the London zoo
will pay for him, over and above the cost of getting him there."
"Really?"
"Really. I have a
standing order from a broker in London at fifty thousand credits; I've never
been able to get him one. I'm sure the price can be boosted."
"Indeed?" Howe
agreed cautiously. "That would be a fine thing for the Company, wouldn't
it?"
There was a brief
silence, then a hearty laugh. "Mark, my boy, you slay me. Now see here—you
are hired to run the school, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"And I'm hired to
look out for the interests of the Company, right? We put in a good day's work
and earn our pay; that leaves eighteen hours a day that belong to each of us,
personally. Are you hired to find strange specimens?"
"No."
"Neither am I. Do
you understand me?"
"I think I
do."
"I'm sure you do.
After all, I know your uncle quite well; I'm sure he wouldn't have sent his
nephew out here without explaining the facts of life to him. He understands
them very well himself, I can assure you. The fact is, my boy, that there are
unlimited opportunities in a place such as this for a smart man, if he will
just keep his eyes and ears open. Not graft, you understand." Willis
paused.
Jim started to say
something; Frank said, "Shut up! We don't want to miss any of this."
The Resident's voice
continued, "Not graft at all. Legitimate business opportunities that are
the natural concomitants of our office. Now about this student: what will it
take to convince him he should sell? I wouldn't offer him too much or he will
become suspicious. We mustn't have that."
Howe was slow in
replying. "I am almost certain he won't sell. General, but there is
another way, possibly."
"Yes? I don't
understand you."
The boys heard Howe
explain his peculiar theory of ownership with respect to Willis. They could not
see Beecher dig Howe in the ribs but they could hear his choked laughter.
"Oh, that is rich! Mark, you slay me, you really do. Your talents are
wasted as a schoolteacher; you should be a Resident."
"Well," Howe's
voice replied, "I hardly expect to teach school all my life."
"You won't, you
won't. We'll find an agency for you. After all, the school will be smaller and
of less importance after the non-migration policy goes into effect."
("What's he talking
about?" whispered Frank—"Quiet!" Jim answered.)
"Is there any news
about that?" Howe wanted to know.
"I expect to hear
from your uncle momentarily. You might stop in again this evening, my boy; I
may have news."
The remainder of the
conversation was of no special interest, but Willis plowed on with it
nevertheless. The boys listened until Howe had made his farewell, after which
Willis shut up.
Jim was frothing.
"Put Willis in a zoo! Why, the very idea! I hope he does catch me leaving;
I'd welcome an excuse to take a shot at him!"
"Easy, fellow! I
wonder," Frank went on, "what that business was about a
'non-migration' policy?"
"I thought he said
'immigration'."
"I'm sure it was
'non-migration'. What time is it?"
"About three."
"We've got three
hours, more or less. Jim, let's see what else we can coax out of Willis. I've
got a hunch it may be important."
"Okay." Jim
picked the fuzz ball up and said, "Willis old fellow, what else do you
know? Tell Jim everything you've heard—everything."
Willis was happy to
oblige. He reeled off bits of dialog for the next hour, most of it concerned
with unimportant routine of the school. At last the boys were rewarded by
hearing again the unctuous tones of Gaines Beecher:
"Mark, my
boy—"
"Oh—come in,
General. Sit down. Happy to see you."
"I just stopped by
to say that I have gotten a despatch from your dear uncle. He added a
postscript sending his regards to you."
"That's nice. Thank
you, sir."
"Not at all. Close
that door, will you?" Willis put in sound effects of a door being closed.
"Now we can talk. The despatch, of course, concerned the non-migration
policy."
"Yes?"
"I am happy to say
that the board came around to your uncle's point of view. South Colony will
stay where it is; this next ship load and the one following it will go to North
Colony, where the new immigrants will have nearly twelve months of summer in
which to prepare for the northern winter. What are you chuckling about?"
"Nothing important,
sir. One of the students, a great lout named Kelly, was telling me today what
his father was going to do to me when he came through here at migration. I am
looking forward to seeing his face when he learns that his father will not show
up."
"You are not to
tell him anything of the sort," the Resident's voice said sharply.
"Eh?"
"I want all this
handled with the least possible friction. No one must know until the last
possible moment. There are hotheads among the colonials who will oppose this
policy, even though it has already been proved that, with reasonable
precautions, the dangers of a Martian winter are negligible. My plan is to
postpone migration two weeks on some excuse, then postpone it again. By the
time I announce the change it will be too late to do anything but comply."
"Ingenious!"
"Thank you. It's
really the only way to handle colonials, my boy. You haven't been here long
enough to know them the way I do. They are a neurotic lot, most of them
failures back on Earth, and they will drive you wild with their demands if you
are not firm with them. They don't seem to understand that all that they are
and all that they have they owe directly to the Company. Take this new policy:
if you let the colonists have their own way, they would continue to follow the
sun, like so many rich playboys—and at the Company's expense."
Willis shifted to Howe's
voice. "I quite agree. If their children are any guide, they are a
rebellious and unruly lot."
"Really
shiftless," agreed the other voice. "You must be firm with them. I
must be going. Oh, about that, uh, specimen: you have it in a safe place?"
"Yes indeed, sir.
Locked in this cabinet."
"Hmm... it might be better to bring it
to my quarters."
"Hardly
necessary," Howe's voice denied. "Notice the lock on that door? It
will be safe."
There were good-byes
said and Willis shut up. Frank cursed steadily and bitterly under his breath.
JIM SHOOK HIM by the
shoulder. "Snap out of it and help me. I'm going to be late."
"That fat
slug," Frank said softly, "I wonder how he would like to tackle a
winter at Charax? Maybe he'd like to stay inside for eleven or twelve months at
a time—or go outside when it's a hundred below. I'd like to see him freeze to
death —slowly."
"Sure, sure,"
agreed Jim. "But give me a hand."
Frank turned suddenly
and took down Jim's outdoors suit. He flung it at him, then took down his own
and started climbing rapidly into it. Jim stared. "Hey—what yuh
doin'?"
"I'm going with
you."
"Huh?"
"Think I'm going to
sit here and do lessons when somebody is planning to trick my mother into being
forced to last out a high-latitude winter? My own mother? Mom's got a bad
heart; it would kill her." He turned and started digging things out of the
locker. "Let's get moving."
Jim hesitated, then
said, "Sure, Frank, but how about your plans? If you quit school now
you'll never be a rocket pilot."
"The deuce with
that! This is more important."
"I can warn
everybody of what's up just as well as two of us can."
"The matter is
settled, I tell you."
"Okay. Just wanted
to be sure you knew your own mind. Let's go." Jim climbed into his own
suit, zipped it up, tightened the straps, and then started picking over his
belongings. He was forced to throw away a large part, as-he wanted Willis to
travel in his bag.
He picked up Willis.
"Look, fellow," he said, "we're going home. I want you to ride
inside here, where it's nice and warm."
"Willis go for
ride?"
"Willis go for
ride. But I want you to stay inside and not say one word until I take you out.
Understand?"
"Willis not
talk?"
"Willis not talk at
all, not till Jim takes him out."
"Okay, Jim
boy." Willis thought about it and added,
"Willis play
music?"
"No! Not a sound,
not a word. No music. Willis close up and stay closed up."
"Okay, Jim
boy," Willis answered in aggrieved tones and promptly made a smooth ball
of himself. Jim dropped him into the bag and zipped it.
"Come on,"
said Frank. "Let's find Smitty, get our guns, and get going."
"The Sun won't be
up for nearly an hour."
"We'll have to risk
it. Say, how much money have you got?"
"Not much.
Why?"
"Our fare home,
dope."
"Oh—" Jim had
been so preoccupied with other matters that he had not thought about the price
of a ticket. The trip to the school had been free, of course, but they had no
travel authorization for this trip; cash would be required.
They pooled
resources—not enough for one ticket, much less than enough for two.
"What'll we do?" asked Jim.
"We'll get it out
of Smitty."
"How?"
"We'll get it. I'll
tear off his arm and beat him over the head with it if I have to. Let's
go."
"Don't forget your
ice skates."
Smythe roomed alone, a
tribute to his winning personality. When they shook him, he wakened quickly and
said, "Very well, officer, I'll go quietly."
"Smitty," said
Jim, "we want our—we want those packages."
"I'm closed for the
night. Come back in the morning."
"We got to have
them now."
Smythe got out of bed.
"There's an extra charge for night service, of course." He stood on
his bunk, removed the grille from his air intake, reached far inside, and
hauled out the wrapped guns.
Jim and Frank tore off
the wrappings and belted their guns on. Smythe watched them with raised
eyebrows. Frank added, "We've got to have some money." He named the
amount.
"Why come to
me?"
"Because I know
you've got it."
"So? And what do I
get in return? A sweet smile?"
"No." Frank
got out his slide rule, a beautiful circular instrument with twenty-one
scales."How much for that?"
"Mmm—six
credits."
"Don't be silly! It
cost my father twenty-five."
"Eight, then. I
won't be able to get more than ten for it."
"Take it as
security for fifteen."
'Ten, cash. I don't run
a pawn shop." Jim's slide rule went for a smaller amount, then both their
watches, followed by lesser items at lower prices.
At last they had nothing
left to sell but their skates, and both boys refused the suggestion although
they were still twelve credits short of what they needed. "You've just got
to trust us for the rest, Smitty," Frank told him.
Smythe studied the
ceiling. "Well, seeing what good customers you've been, I might add that I
also collect autographs."
"Huh?"
"I'll have both of
yours, on one I.O.U., at six per cent— per month. The security will be the
pound of flesh nearest your heart."
"Take it,"
said Jim.
Finished, they started
to leave. Smythe said, "My crystal ball tells me that you gentlemen are
about to fade away. How?"
"Just walk
out," Jim told him.
"Hmm... it does not
seem to have come to your attention that the front door is now locked at
nights. Our friend and mentor, Mr. Howe, unlocks it himself when he arrives in
the morning."
"You're
kidding!"
"Go see for
yourself."
Frank tugged Jim's arm.
"Come on. We'll bust it down if we have to."
"Why do things the
hard way?" inquired Smythe. "Go out through the kitchen."
"You mean the back
door's not locked?" demanded Frank.
"Oh, it's locked
all right."
"Then quit making
silly suggestions."
"I should be
offended at that," Smythe answered, "but I consider the source. While
the back door is locked, it did not occur to brother Howe to install a lock on
the garbage dump."
"The garbage
dump," exploded Jim.
"Take it or leave
it. It's your only way to sneak out."
"We'll take it,
" decided Frank. "Come on, Jim."
"Hold on," put
in Smythe. "One of you can operate the dump for the other, but who's going
to do it for the second man? He's stuck."
"Oh, I see. "
Frank looked at him. "You are."
"And what am I
offered?"
"Confound you,
Smitty how would you like a lump on the head? You've already taken us for
everything but our eye- teeth."
Smythe shrugged.
"Did I refuse? After all, I told you about it. Very well, I'll chalk it up
to overhead—good will, full measure, advertising. Besides, I don't like to see
my clients fall afoul of the law."
They went quickly to the
school's large kitchen. Smythe's cautious progress through the corridors showed
long familiarity with casual disregard of rules. Once there, Smythe said,
"All right, who
goes first?"
Jim eyed the dump with
distaste. It was a metal cylinder, barrel-size, laid on its side in the wall.
It could be rotated on its main axis by means of a lever set in the wall; a
large opening in it permitted refuse to be placed in it from inside the
building, then removed from the outside, without disturbing the pressurization
of the building—the simplest sort of a pressure lock. The interior showed ample
signs of the use for which it was intended. "I'll go first," he
volunteered and settled his mask over his face.
"Wait a
second," said Frank. He had been eyeing the stocks of canned foods racked
around the room. Now he dumped spare clothing from his bag and started
replacing it with cans.
"Hurry up,"
Smythe insisted. "I want to get back to my beddy-bye before the morning
bell rings."
"Yes, why
bother?" protested Jim. "We'll be home in a few hours."
"Just a hunch.
Okay, I'm ready."
Jim climbed into the
dump, drawing up his knees and clutching his bag to his chest. The cylinder
rotated around him; he felt a sudden drop in pressure and a bitter cold draft.
Then he was picking himself up from the pavement of the
alley behind the school.
The cylinder creaked
back to the loading position; in a moment Frank landed beside him. Jim helped
him up. "Boy, are you a mess!" he said, brushing at a bit of mashed
potato that clung to his chum's suit.
"So are you, but
there's no time to worry about it. Gee, but it's cold!"
"It'll be warmer
soon. Let's go." The pink glow of the coming Sun was already lighting the
eastern sky, even though the air was still midnight cold. They hurried down the
alley to the street in back of the school and along it to the right. This
portion of the city was entirely terrestrial and could have been a city in
Alaska or Norway, but beyond them, etched against the lightening sky, were the
ancient towers of Syrtis Minor, denying the Earthlike appearance of the street.
They came, as they had
planned, to a tributary canal and sat down to put on their skates. They were
racers, with 22inch razoriike blades, intended for speed alone. Jim finished
first and lowered himself to the ice. "Better hurry," he said. "I
almost froze my behind."
"You're telling
me!"
"This ice is almost
too hard to take an edge."
Frank joined him; they
picked up their bags and set out. A few hundred yards away the little waterway
gave into the Grand Canal of the city; they turned into it and made speed for
(he scooter station. Despite the exercise they were tingling with cold by the
time they got to it.
They went through the
pressure door and inside. A single clerk was on duty there. He looked up and
Frank went to him. "Is there a scooter to South Colony today?"
"In about twenty
minutes," said the clerk. "You want to ship those bags?"
"No, we want
tickets." Frank handed over their joint funds.
Silently the clerk
attended to the transaction. Jim heaved a sigh of relief; scooters to the
colony did not run every day. The chance that they might have to keep out of
sight for a day or more and then try to get away without encountering Howe had
been eating at him.
They took seats in the
back of the station and waited. Presently Jim said, "Frank, is Deimos
up?"
"I didn't notice.
Why?"
"Maybe I can get a
call through to home."
"No money."
"I'll put it
through collect." He went to the booth opposite the clerk's desk; the
clerk looked up but said nothing. Inside, he signalled the operator. Subconsciously
he had been worrying about getting word to his father ever since Willis had
spilled the secret of the so-called non-migration policy.
The screen lighted up
and a pleasant-appearing young woman with the fashionable striped hair appeared
therein. "I'd like to call South Colony," he said.
"No relay until
later this morning," she informed him.
"Would you like to
record a delayed message?"
He was stopped; delayed
messages were not accepted on a collect basis. "No, thank you, I'll try
later," he fibbed and switched off.
The clerk was tapping on
the booth's door. "The driver is ready for you," he told Jim. Jim
hurriedly settled his mask in place and followed Frank out through the pressure
door. The driver was just closing the baggage compartment of the scooter. He
took their tickets and the two boys got aboard. Again they were the only
passengers; they claimed the observation seats.
Ten minutes later, tired
of staring almost into a rising Sun, Jim announced, "I'm sleepy. I think
I'll go down."
"I think I'll ask
the driver to turn on the radio," said Frank.
"Oh, the heck with
that. We've both had a hard night.
Come on."
"Well—all
right." They went into the lower compartment, found bunks, and crawled in.
In a few minutes they both were snoring.
The scooter, leaving
Syrtis Minor at sunrise, kept ahead of the daily thaw and did not have to lay
over at Hesperidum. It continued south and reached Cynia about noon. So far
advanced was the season that there was no worry about the ice holding from Cynia
south to Charax; Strymon canal would not thaw again until the following spring.
The driver was pleased
to have kept his schedule. When Deimos rose toward the end of the morning's run
he relaxed and switched on his radio. What he heard caused him to make a quick
check of his passengers. They were still asleep; he decided not to do anything
about it until he reached Cynia station.
On reaching there he
hurried inside. Jim and Frank were awakened by the scooter stopping but did not
get out. Presently the driver came back and said, "Meal stop. Everybody
out."
Frank answered,
"We're not hungry."
The driver looked
disconcerted. "Better come in anyhow," he insisted. "It gets
pretty cold in the car when she's standing still."
"We don't
mind." Frank was thinking that he would dig a can of something out of his
bag as soon as the driver had left; from suppertime the night before until noon
today seemed a long time to his stomach.
"What's the
trouble?" the driver continued. "Broke?" Something in their
expressions caused him to continue, "I'll stake you to a sandwich
each."
Frank refused but Jim
interceded. "Don't be silly. Frank. Thank you, sir. We accept."
George, the agent and
factotum of Cynia station, looked at them speculatively and served them
sandwiches without comment. The driver bolted his food and was quickly through.
When he got up, the boys did so, too. "Just take it easy," he advised
them. "I've got twenty, thirty minutes' work, loading and checking."
"Can't we help
you?" asked Jim.
"Nope. You'd just
be in the way. I'll call you when I'm ready."
"Well—thanks for
the sandwich."
"Don't mention
it." He went out.
Less than ten minutes
later there came faintly to their ears the sound of the scooter starting up.
Frank looked startled and rushed to the traffic-checking window. The car was
already disappearing to the south. Frank turned to the agent. "Hey, he
didn't wait for us!"
"Nope."
"But he said he'd
call us."
"Yep." The
agent resumed reading.
"But— but
why," insisted Frank. "He told us to wait."
The agent put down his
newspaper. "It's like this," he said, "Clem is a peaceable man
and he told me that he wasn't a cop. He said he would have no part in trying to
arrest two strapping, able-bodied boys, both wearing guns."
"What!"
"That's what I
said. And don't go to fiddling around with those heaters. You'll notice I ain't
wearing my gun; you can take the station apart for all of me."
Jim had joined Frank at
the counter. "What's this all about?" he asked.
"You tell me. All I
know is, there's a call out to pick you up. You're charged with burglary,
theft, truancy, destruction of company property—pretty near everything but
committing a nuisance in the canal. Seems like you are a couple of desperate
characters—though you don't look the part."
"I see," said
Frank slowly. "Well, what are you going to do about it?"
"Nothing. Nothing
at all. 'Long about tomorrow morning a special scooter will arrive and I
presume there will be force enough aboard her to subdue a couple of outlaws. In
the meantime do as you please. Go outside. Wander around. When you get chilly,
come back inside." He went back to his reading.
"I see. Come along,
Jim." They retreated to the far comer of the room for a war conference.
The agent's attitude was easily understood. Cynia station was almost literally
a thousand miles from anywhere; the station itself was the only human
habitation against the deadly cold of night.
Jim was almost in tears.
"I'm sorry. Frank. If I hadn't been so darned anxious to eat, this
wouldn't have happened."
"Don't be so tragic
about it," Frank advised him. "Can you imagine us shooting it out
with a couple of innocent bystanders and hijacking the scooter? I can't."
"Uh—no. I guess
you're right."
"Certainly I am.
What we've got to decide is what to do next."
"I know one thing;
I'm not going to let them drag me back to school."
"Neither am I.
What's more important, we've got to get word to our folks about the deal that's
being cooked up against them."
"Say, look—maybe we
can phone now!"
"Do you think
he—" Frank nodded toward the agent
"—would let
us?"
"Maybe. Maybe not.
We've still got our guns—and I can be pushed just so far." Jim got up and
went to the agent. "Any objection to us using the phone?"
The agent did not even
glance up. "Not a bit. Help yourself."
Jim went into the booth.
There was no local exchange; me instrument was simply a radio link to the relay
station on the outer moon. A transparency announced that Deimos was above the
horizon; seeing this, Jim punched the call button and asked for linkage to
South Colony.
There was an unusually
long delay, then a sweetly impersonal voice announced, "Due to
circumstances beyond our control calls are not being accepted from Cynia
station to South Colony."
Jim started to ask if
Deimos were visible at South Colony, since he knew that line-of-sight was
essential to radio transmission on Mars—indeed, it was the only sort of radio
transmission he was familiar with—but the relay station had switched off and
made no answer when he again punched the call button. He left the booth and
told Frank about it.
"Sounds like Howe
has fixed us," Frank commented. "I don't believe there is a
breakdown. Unless—"
"Unless what?"
"Unless there is
more to it than that. Beecher may be rigging things to interfere with messages
getting through until he's put over his scheme."
"Frank, we've got
to get word to our folks. See here, I bet we could hole up with the Martians
over at Cynia. After all, they offered us water and—"
"Suppose we could.
Where does that get us?"
"Let me finish. We
can mail a letter from here, giving our folks all the details and telling them
where we are hiding. Then we could wait for them to come and get us."
Frank shook his head.
"If we mail a letter from here, old frozen face over there is bound to
know it. Then, when the cops show up and we are gone, he turns it over to them.
Instead of our folks getting it, it goes back to Howe and Beecher."
"You really think
so? Nobody has any right to touch private mail."
"Don't be a little
innocent. Howe didn't have any right to order us to give up our guns—but he
did. No, Jim, we've got to carry this message ourselves."
On the wall opposite
them was a map of the area served by Cynia station. Frank had been studying it
idly while they talked. Suddenly he said, "Jim, what's that new station
south of Cynia?"
"Huh? Where do you
mean?"
"There." Frank
pointed. Inked on the original map was a station on west Strymon, south of
them.
"That?" said
Jim. "That must be one of the shelters for the Project." The grand
plan for restoring oxygen to Mars called for setting up, the following spring,
a string of processing plants in the desert between Cynia and Charax. Some of
the shelters had been completed in anticipation of the success of plant number
one in Libya.
"It can't be much
over a hundred miles away."
"A hundred and ten,
maybe," Jim commented, looking at the scale. Frank got a far-away look in his eyes. "I think I can skate
that far before dark. Are you game?"
"What? Are you
crazy? We'd still be better than seven hundred miles from home."
"We can skate
better than two hundred miles a day," answered Frank. "Aren't there
more shelters?"
"The map doesn't
show any." Jim thought. "I know they've finished more than one; I've
heard Dad talking about it."
"If we had to, we
could skate all night and sleep in the daytime. That way we wouldn't
freeze."
"Hmm... I think
you're kidding yourself. I saw a man once who was caught out at night. He was
stiff as a board. All right, when do we start?"
"Right now."
They picked up their
bags and headed for the door The agent looked up and said, "Going
somewhere?"
"For a walk."
"Might as well
leave your bags. You'll be back."
They did not answer but
went on out the door. Five minutes later they were skating south on west
Strymon. * * *
"Hey, Jim!"
"Yeah?"
"Let's stop for a
minute. I want to sling my bag."
"Just what I was
thinking." Their travel bags unbalanced them and prevented proper arm
motion and any real speed. But skating was a common form of locomotion; the
bags bad straps which permitted them to be slung as haversacks. Jim opened his
before he put it on; Willis extended his eye stalks and looked at him
reproachfully. "Jim boy gone long time."
"Sorry, old
fellow."
"Willis not
talk."
"Willis can talk
all he wants to now. Look, if I leave the bag open a little bit so that you can
see, will you manage not to fall out?"
"Willis want
out."
"Can't do that; I'm
going to take you for a fine ride. You won't fall out?"
"Willis not fall
out."
"Okay." He
slung the bag and they set out again.
They picked up speed.
With fast ice, little air resistance, and the low Martian gravity the speed of
a skater on Mars is limited by his skill in stroking. Both of the boys were
able. Willis let out a "Whee!" and they settled down to putting miles
behind them.
The desert plateau
between Cynia and Charax is higher than the dead sea bottom between Cynia and
the equator. This drop is used to move the waters of the southern polar cap
across the desert to the great green belt near the equator, hi midwinter the
southern ice cap reaches to Charax; the double canal of Strymon, which starts
at Charax, is one of the principal discharge points for the polar cap when it
melts in the spring.
The boys were starting
at the lower end of the canal's drop; the walls of the canal reached high above
their heads. Furthermore the water level—or ice level—was low because the
season was late autumn; the water level would be much higher during spring
flood. There was nothing to see but the banks of the canal converging ahead of
them, the blue sky beyond, and the purple-black sky overhead. The Sun was
behind them and a bit west of meridian; it was moving north toward northern
summer solstice. Seasons do not lag on Mars as much as they do on Earth; there
are no oceans to hold the heat and the only "flywheel" of the climate
is the freezing and melting of the polar caps.
With nothing to see the
boys concentrated on skating, heads down and shoulders swinging.
After many miles of
monotonous speed Jim grew careless; the toe of his right runner caught on some
minor obstruction in the ice. He went down. His suit saved him from ice bums
and he knew how to fall safely, but Willis popped out of his bag like a cork
from a bottle.
The bouncer, true to
instinct, hauled in all excrescences at once. He hit as a ball and rolled; he
traveled over the ice for several hundred yards. Frank threw himself into a
hockey stop as soon as he saw Jim tumble. He stopped in a shower of ice
particles and went back to help Jim up. "You all right?"
"Sure. Where's
Willis?"
They skated on and
recovered the bouncer who was now standing on his tiny legs and waiting for
them. "Whoopee!" yelled Willis as they came up. "Do it
again!"
"Not if I can help
it," Jim assured him and stuffed him back in the bag. "Say, Frank how
long have we been traveling?"
"Not over three
hours," Frank decided, after a glance at the Sun.
"I wish I had my
watch," complained Jim. "We don't want to overrun the shelter."
"Oh, we won't come
to it for another couple of hours, at least."
"But what's to keep
us from passing right by it? We can't see over these banks."
"Want to turn
around and go back?"
"No."
"Then quit
worrying."
Jim shut up but
continued to worry. Perhaps that was why he noticed the only indication of the
shelter when they came to it, for Frank skated on past it. It was merely a ramp
down the bank. There were such ramps every few miles, as ancient as the canals
themselves, but this one had set above it an overhanging beam, as if to support
a hoist. Jim spotted it as terrestrial workmanship.
He stopped. Frank skated
on ahead, noticed presently that Jim was not following him and came back.
"What's up?" he called out.
"I think this is
it."
"Hmm... could
be." They removed their skates and climbed the ramp. At the top, set back
a short distance from the bank, was one of the bubble-shaped buildings which
are the sign anywhere on Mars of the alien from Earth. Beyond it a foundation
had been started for the reducing plant. Jim heaved a big sigh. Frank nodded
and said, "Just about where we expected to find it."
"And none too
soon," added Jim. The Sun was close to the western horizon and dropping
closer as they watched.
There was, of course, no
one in the shelter; no further work would be done at this latitude until the
following spring. The shelter was unpressurized; they simply unlatched the
outer door, walked through the inner door without delay. Frank groped for the
light switch, found it, and lighted up the place —the lighting circuit was
powered by the building's atomicfuel power pack and did not require the
presence of men.
It was a simple shelter,
lined with bunks except for the space occupied by the kitchen unit. Frank
looked around happily. "Looks like we've found a home from home,
Jim."
"Yep." Jim
looked around, located the shelter's thermostat, and cut it in. Shortly the
room became warmer and with it there was a soft sighing sound as the building's
pressure regulator, hooked in with the thermostat, started the building's
supercharger, hi a few minutes the boys were able to remove their masks and
finally their outdoors suits as well.
Jim poked around the
kitchen unit, opening cupboards and peering into shelves. "Find
anything?" asked Frank.
"Nary a thing.
Seems like they could have left at least a can of beans."
"Now maybe you're
glad I raided the kitchen before we left. Supper in five minutes."
"Okay, so you've
got a real talent for crime," acknowledged Jim. "I salute you."
He tried the water tap. "Plenty of water in the tanks," he announced.
"Good!" Frank
answered. "That saves me having to go down and chip ice. I need to fill my
mask. I was dry the last few miles." The high coxcomb structure on a Mars
mask is not only a little supercharger with its power pack, needed to
pressurize the mask; it is also a small water reservoir. A nipple in the mask
permits me wearer to take a drink outdoors, but this is a secondary function.
The prime need for water in a Mars mask is to wet a wick through which the air
is forced before it reaches the wearer's nose.
"You were? Well,
for crying out loud—don't you know better than to drink yourself dry?"
"I forgot to fill
it before we left."
"Tourist!" "Well, we left in kind of a hurry, you
know."
"How long were you
dry?"
"I don't know
exactly," Frank evaded.
"How's your throat?"
"All right. A
little dry, maybe."
"Let me see
it," Jim persisted, coming closer.
Frank pushed him away.
"I tell you it's all right. Let's eat."
"Well—okay."
They dined off canned
corned beef hash and went promptly to bed. Willis snuggled up against Jim's
stomach and imitated his snores.
Breakfast was more of
the same, since there was some hash left and Frank insisted that they not waste
anything. Willis had no breakfast since he had eaten only two weeks before, but
he absorbed nearly a quart of water. As they were about to leave Jim held up a
flashlight. "Look what I found."
"Well, put it back
and let's go."
"I think I'll keep
it," Jim answered, stuffing it in his bag. "We might have a use for
it."
"We won't and it's
not yours."
"For criminy's sake,
I'm not swiping it; I'm just borrowing it. This is an emergency."
Frank shrugged.
"Okay, let's get moving." A few minutes later they were on the ice
and again headed south. It was a beautiful day, as Martian days almost always
are; when the Sun was high enough to fill the slot of die canal it was almost
balmy, despite the late season. Frank spotted the tell-tale hoisting beam of a
Project shelter around midday and they were able to lunch inside, which saved
them the tedious, messy, and unsatisfactory chore of trying to eat through the
mouth valve of a respirator mask. The shelter was a twin of the first but no
foundation for the plant had as yet been built near it.
As they were preparing
to leave the shelter Jim said, "You look sort of flushed, Frank. Got a
fever?"
"That's just the
bloom of health," Frank insisted. "I'm fine." Nevertheless he
coughed as he put on his mask.
"Mars throat," Jim thought but said nothing as there was
nothing that he could do for Frank.
Mars throat is not a
disease in itself; it is simply an extremely dry condition of the nose and
throat which arises from direct exposure to Martian air. The humidity on Mars
is usually effectively zero; a throat dehydrated by it is wide open to whatever
disease organisms there may be present in the human throat at the time. The
result is usually a virulent sore throat.
The afternoon passed
without incident. As the Sun began to drop toward the skyline it seemed
possible that home was not much more than five hundred miles away. Jim had watched
Frank closely all afternoon. His chum seemed to be skating as strongly as ever;
perhaps, he decided, the cough was just a false alarm. He skated up alongside
Frank. "I guess we had better start watching for a shelter."
"Suits me."
Soon they passed another
of the ramps built by long-dead Martians, but there was no hoisting beam above
it nor any other sign of terrestrial activity. The banks, though somewhat lower
now, were still too high to see over. Jim stepped up the stroke a bit; they
hurried on.
They came to another
ramp, but again there was nothing to suggest that a shelter might be above it.
Jim stopped. "I vote we take a look up on the bank," he said.
"We know they build the shelters by the ramps and they may have taken the
hoist down for some reason."
"It would just be
wasting valuable time," Frank protested. "If we hurry, we can get to
another ramp before dark."
"Well, if you say
so—" Jim shoved off and picked up speed.
The next ramp was the
same story; Jim stopped again. "Let's take a look," he pleaded.
"We can't possibly reach the next one before sundown."
"Okay." Frank
stopped over and tugged at his skates.
They hurried up the bank
and reached the top. The slanting rays of the Sun showed nothing but the
vegetation bordering the canal.
Jim felt ready to bawl
through sheer weariness and disappointment. "Well, what do we do
now?" he said.
"We go back
down," Frank answered, "and keep going until we find it."
"I don't think we
could spot one of those hoist beams in the dark."
"Then we keep going,"
Frank said grimly, "until we fall flat on our faces."
"More likely we'll
freeze."
"Well, if you want
my opinion," Frank replied, "I think we're washed up. I, for one,
can't keep going all night, even if we don't freeze."
"You don't feel
good?" "That's putting it
mildly. Come on."
"All right."
Willis had climbed out
of the bag and up on Jim's shoulder, in order to see better. Now he bounced to
the ground and rolled away. Jim snatched at him and missed. "Hey! Willis!
Come back here!"
Willis did not answer.
Jim started after him. His progress was difficult. Ordinarily he would have
gone under the canal plants, but, late in the day as it was, most of them had
lowered almost to knee height preparatory to withdrawing into the ground for
the night. Some of the less hardy plants were already out of sight, leaving
bare patches of ground.
The vegetation did not
seem to slow up Willis but Jim found it troublesome; he could not catch the
little scamp. Frank shouted, "'Ware water-seekers! Watch where you put
your feet!" Thus warned, Jim proceeded more carefully—and still more
slowly. He stopped. "Willis! Oh, Willis! Come back! Come back, dawggone
it, or we'll go away and leave you." It was a completely empty threat.
Frank came crashing up
and joined him. "We can't hang around up here, Jim."
"I know it.
Wouldn't you know that he would pull a stunt like this just at the wrong
time?"
"He's a pest,
that's what he is. Come on."
Willis's voice—or,
rather, Jim's voice as used by Willis— reached them from a distance. "Jim
boy! Jim! Come here!"
Jim struggled through
the shrinking vegetation with Frank after him. They found the bouncer resting
at the edge of an enormous plant, a desert cabbage quite fifty yards across.
The desert cabbage is not often found near the canals; it is a weed and not
tolerated in the green sea bottoms of the lower latitudes, though it may be
found in the deserts miles from any surface water.
The western half of this
specimen was still spread out in a semicircular fan, flat to the ground, but
the eastern half was tilted up almost vertically, its flat leaves still
reaching greedily for the Sun's rays to fuel the photosynthesis by which plants
live. A hardy plant, it would not curl up until the Sun was gone completely,
and it would not withdraw into the ground at all. Instead it would curl into a
tight ball, thus protecting itself from the cold and incidentally simulating,
on giant scale, the Earth plant for which it was named.
Willis sat by the edge
of the half that was flat to the ground. Jim reached for him.
Willis bounced up on the
edge of the desert cabbage and rolled toward the heart of the plant. Jim
stopped and said, "Oh, Willis, dam your eyes, come back here. Please come
back."
"Don't go after
him," warned Frank. "That thing might close up on you. The Sun is
almost down."
"I won't. Willis!
Come back!"
Willis called back,
"Come here, Jim boy."
"You come
here."
"Jim boy come here.
Frank come here. Cold there. Warm here."
"Frank, what'll I
do?"
Willis called again.
"Come, Jim boy. Warm! Stay warm all night."
Jim stared. "You
know what, Frank? I think he means to let it close up on him. And he wants us
to join him/"
"Sounds that
way."
"Come, Jim! Come,
Frank!" Willis insisted. "Hurry!"
"Maybe he knows
what he's doing," Frank added. "Like Doc says, he's got instincts for
Mars and we haven't."
"But we can't go
inside a cabbage. It would crush us."
"I wonder."
"Anyhow, we'd
suffocate."
"Probably."
Frank suddenly added, "Do as you like, Jim. I can't skate any
farther." He set one foot on a broad leaf— which flinched under the
contact—and strode steadily toward the bouncer. Jim watched him for a moment
and then ran after them.
Willis greeted them
ecstatically. "Good boy, Frank! Good boy, Jim! Stay nice and warm all
night."
The Sun was slipping
behind a distant dune; the sunset wind whipped coldly at them. The far edges of
the plant lifted and began to curl toward them. "We still could get out if
we jumped, Frank," Jim said nervously.
"I'm staying."
Nevertheless Frank eyed the approaching leaves apprehensively.
"We'll
smother."
"Maybe. That's
better than freezing."
The inner leaves were
beginning to curl faster than the outer leaves. Such a leaf, four feet wide at
its widest and at least ten feet long, raised up back of Jim and curved in
until it touched his shoulder. Nervously he struck at it. The leaf snatched
itself away, then slowly resumed its steady progress toward him.
"Frank," Jim said shrilly, "they'll smother us!"
Frank looked
apprehensively at the broad leaves, now curling up all around them.
"Jim," he said, "sit down. Spread your legs wide. Then take my
hands and make an arch."
"What for?"
"So that we'll take
up as much space as possible. Hurry!"
Jim hurried. With elbows
and knees and hands the two managed to occupy a roughly spherical space about
five feet across and a little less than that high. The leaves closed down on
them, seemed to feel them out, then settled firmly against them, but not,
however, with sufficient pressure to crush them. Soon the last open space was
covered and they were in total darkness. "Frank," Jim demanded,
"we can move now, can't we?"
"No! give the
outside leaves a chance to settle into place."
Jim kept still for quite
a long while. He knew that considerable time had passed for he spent the time
counting up to one thousand. He was just starting on his second thousand when
Willis stirred in the space between his legs. "Jim boy, Frank boy—nice and
warm, huh?"
"Yeah,
Willis," he agreed. "Say, how about it. Frank?"
"I think we can
relax now." Frank lowered his arms; the inner leaf forming the ceiling
immediately above him at once curled down and brushed him in the dark. He.
slapped at it instinctively; it retreated.
Jim said, "It's
getting stuffy already."
"Don't worry about
it. Take it easy. Breathe shallowly. Don't talk and don't move and you'll use
up less oxygen."
"What difference
does it make whether we suffocate in ten minutes or an hour? This was a crazy
thing to do, Frank; any way you figure it we can't last till morning."
"Why can't we? I
read in a book that back in India men have let themselves be buried alive for
days and even weeks and were still alive when they were dug up. Fakers, they
called them."
"'Fakers' is right!
I don't believe it."
"I read it in a
book, I tell you."
"I suppose you
think that anything that's printed in a book is true?"
Frank hesitated before
replying, "It had better be true because it's the only chance we've got.
Now will you shut up? If you keep yapping, you'll use up what air there is and
kill us both off and it'll be your fault."
Jim shut up. All that he
could hear was Frank's breathing. He reached down and touched Willis; the
bouncer had withdrawn all his stalks. He was a smooth ball, apparently asleep.
Presently Frank's breathing changed to rasping snores.
Jim tried to sleep but
could not. The utter darkness and the increasing deadness of the air pressed
down on him like a great weight. He wished again for his watch, lost to
Smythe's business talent; if he only knew what time it was, how long it was
until sunrise, he felt that he could stand it.
He became convinced that
the night had passed—or had almost passed. He began to expect the dawn and with
it the unrolling of the giant plant. When he had been expecting it "any
minute now" for a time that he estimated at two hours, at least, he became
panicky. He knew how late in the season it was; he knew also that desert
cabbages hibernated by the simple method of remaining closed through the
winter.. Apparently Frank and he had had the enormous bad luck to take shelter
in a cabbage on the very night on which it started its hibernation.
Twelve long months from
now, more man three hundred days in the future, the plant would open to the
spring Sun and release them—dead. He was sure of it.
He remembered the
flashlight he had picked up in the first Project shelter. The thought of it
stimulated him, took his mind off his fears for the moment. He leaned forward,
twisted around and tried to get at his bag, still strapped to his shoulders.
The leaves about him
closed in; he struck at them and they shrank away. He was able to reach the
torch, drag it out, and turn it on. Its rays brightly illuminated me cramped
space. Frank stopped snoring, blinked, and said, "What's the matter?"
"I just remembered
this. Good thing I brought it, huh?"
"Better put it out
and go to sleep."
"It doesn't use up
any oxygen. I feel better with it on."
"Maybe you do, but
as long as you stay awake you use up more oxygen."
"I suppose
so." Jim suddenly recalled what had been terrifying him before he got out
the light. "It doesn't make any difference." He explained to Frank
his conviction that they were trapped forever in the plant.
"Nonsense!"
said Frank.
"Nonsense yourself!
Why didn't it open up at dawn?"
"Because,"
Frank said, "we haven't been in here more than an hour."
"What? Says
you."
"Says me. Now shut
up and let me sleep. Better put out that light." Frank settled his head
again on his knees.
Jim shut up but did not
turn out the light. It comforted him. Besides, the inner leaves which had shown
an annoying tendency to close in on the tops of their heads now had retreated
and flattened themselves firmly against the dense wall formed by the outer
layers of leaves. Under the mindless reflex which controlled the movements of the
plant they were doing thenbest to present maximum surface to the rays from the
flashlight.
Jim did not analyse the
matter; his knowledge of photosynthesis and of heliotropism was sketchy. He was
simply aware that the place seemed roomier in the light and that he was having
less trouble with the clinging leaves. He settled the torch against Willis, who
had not stirred, and tried to relax.
It actually seemed less
stuffy with the light on. He had the impression that the pressure was up a
little. He considered trying to take off his mask but decided against it.
Presently, without knowing it, he drifted off to sleep.
He dreamed and then
dreamt that he was dreaming. Hiding in the desert cabbage had been only a
fantastic, impossible dream; school and Headmaster Howe had merely been
nightmares; he was home, asleep in his bed, with Willis cuddled against him.
Tomorrow Frank and he would start for Syrtis Minor to enter school.
It had simply been a
nightmare, caused by the suggestion that Willis be taken away from him. They
were planning to take Willis away from him! They couldn't do that; he wouldn't
let them!
Again his dream shifted;
again he defied Headmaster Howe; again he rescued Willis and fled—and again
they were locked away in the heart of a desert plant.
He knew with bitter
certainty that it would always end like this. This was the reality, to be
trapped and smothering in the core of a hibernating giant weed—to die there.
He choked and muttered,
tried to wake up, then slipped into a less intolerable dream.
TINY PHOBOS, INNER moon
of Mars, came out of eclipse and, at breakneck speed, flew west to east into
the face of the rising Sun. The leisurely spin of its ruddy primary,
twenty-four and a half hours for each rotation, presently brought the rays of
that Sun to east Strymon, then across the bank of desert between the twin
canals and to the banks of west Strymon. The rays struck a great ball perched
near the eastern bank of that canal, a desert cabbage closed against the cold.
The plant stirred and
unfolded. The sunward half of the plant opened flat to the ground; the other
half fanned itself open like a spread peacock's tail to catch the almost
horizontal rays. In so doing it spilled something out of its heart and onto the
flat portion—two human bodies, twisted and stiff, clad garishly in elastic
suits and grotesque helmets.
A tiny ball spilled out
with them, rolled a few yards over the thick green leaves, and stopped. It
extended eye stalks and little bumps of legs and waddled back to the sprawled
bodies. It nuzzled up against one.
It hesitated, nuzzled
again, then settled back and let out a thin wailing in which was compounded
inconsolable grief and an utter sense of loss.
Jim opened one bloodshot
eye. "Cut out that infernal racket," he said crossly.
Willis shrieked,
"Jim boy!" and jumped upon his stomach, where he continued to bounce
up and down in an ecstasy of greeting.
Jim brushed him off,
then gathered him up in one arm. "Calm down. Behave yourself. Ouch!"
"What's the matter,
Jim boy?"
"My arm's stiff.
Ooo—ouch!" Further efforts had shown Jim that his legs were stiff as well.
Also his back. And his neck.
"What's the matter
with you?" demanded Frank.
"Stiff as board.
I'd do better to skate on my hands today. Say—"
"Say what?"
"Maybe we don't
skate. I wonder if the spring floods have started?"
"Huh? What are you
gibbering about?" Frank sat up, slowly and carefully.
"Why, the spring
floods, of course. Somehow we lasted through the winter, though I don't know
how. Now we—"
"Don't be any
sillier than you have to be. Look where the Sun is rising."
Jim looked. Martian
colonials are more acutely aware of (he apparent movements of the Sun than any
Earthbound men, except, possibly, the Eskimos. All he said was,
"Oh..." then added, "I guess it was a dream."
"Either that or you
are even nuttier than usual. Let's get going." Frank struggled to his feet
with a groan.
"How do you
feel?"
"Like my own
grandfather."
"I mean, how's your
throat?" Jim persisted.
"Oh, it's all right."
Frank promptly contradicted himself by a fit of coughing. By great effort he
controlled it shortly; coughing while wearing a respirator is a bad idea.
Sneezing is worse.
"Want some
breakfast?"
"I'm not hungry
now," Frank answered. "Let's find a shelter first, so we can eat in
comfort."
"Okay." Jim
stuffed Willis back into the bag, discovered by experiment that he could stand
and walk. Noticing the flashlight, he tucked it in with Willis and followed
Frank toward the bank. The canal vegetation was beginning to show; even as they
walked the footing grew more tangled. The green plants, still stiff with night
cold, could not draw away quickly as they brushed through them.
They reached the bank.
"The ramp must be about a hundred yards off to the right," Frank
decided. "Yep—I see it. Come on."
Jim grabbed his arm and
drew him back. " 'Smatter?" demanded Frank.
"Look on up the
canal, north."
"Hub? Oh!" A
scooter was proceeding toward them. Instead of the two hundred fifty miles per
hour or more that such craft usually make, this one was throttled down to a
minimum. Two men were seated on top of it, out in the open.
Frank drew back hastily.
"Good boy, Jim," he approved. "I was just about to walk right
into them. I guess we had better let them get well ahead."
"Willis good boy,
too," Willis put in smugly.
"Let them get
ahead, my foot!" Jim answered. "Can't you see what they're
doing?"
"Huh?"
"They're/allowing
our tracks!"
Frank looked startled
but did not answer. He peered cautiously out. "Look out!" Jim
snapped. "He's got binoculars." Frank ducked back. But he had seen
enough; the scooter had stopped at approximately the spot where they had
stopped the night before. One of the men on top was gesturing through the
observation dome at the driver and pointing to the ramp.
Canal ice was, of
course, never cleaned of skate marks; the surface was renewed from time to time
by midday thaws until me dead freeze of winter set in. However, it was unlikely
that anyone but the two boys had skated over this stretch of ice, so far from
any settlement, any time in months. The ice held scooter tracks, to be sure,
but, like all skaters, Jim and Frank had avoided them in favor of untouched
ice.
Now their unmistakable
spoor lay for any to read from Cynia station to the ramp near them.
"If we head back
into the bushes," Jim whispered. "We can hide until they go away.
They'll never find us in this stuff."
"Suppose they don't
go away. Do you want to spend another night in the cabbage?"
"They're bound to
go away eventually."
"Sure but not soon
enough. They know we went up the ramp; they'll stay and they'll search, longer
than we can hold out. They can afford to; they've got a base."
"Well, what do we
do?"
"We head south
along the bank, on foot, at least as far as the next ramp."
"Let's get going,
then. They'll be up the ramp in no time."
With Frank in the lead
they dog-trotted to the south. The plants along the bank were high enough now
to permit them to go under; Frank held a course about thirty feet in from the
bank. The gloom under the spreading leaves and the stems of the plants
themselves protected them from any distant observation.
Jim kept an eye out for
snake worms and water-seekers and cautioned Willis to do likewise. They made
fair time. After a few minutes Frank stopped, motioned for silence, and they
both listened. All that Jim could hear was Frank's rasping breath; if they were
being pursued, the pursuers were not close.
They were at least two
miles south of the ramp when Frank stopped very suddenly. Jim bumped into him
and the two almost tumbled into the thing that had caused Frank to stop—
another canal. This one ran east and west and was a much narrower branch of the
main canal. There were several such between Cynia and Charax. Some of them
joined the east and west legs of Strymon canal; some merely earned water to
local depressions in the desert plateau.
Jim stared down into the
deep and narrow gash. "For the love of Mike! We nearly took a
header."
Frank did not answer. He
sank down to his knees, then sat and held his head. Suddenly he was overcome by
a spasm of coughing. When it was over, his shoulders still shook, as if he were
racked by dry sobs.
Jim put a hand on his
arm. "You're pretty sick, aren't you, fellow?"
Frank did not answer.
Willis said, "Poor Frank boy," and tut-tutted.
Jim stared again at the
canal, his forehead wrinkled. Presently Frank raised his head and said,
"I'm all right. It just got me for a moment—running into the canal and all
and realizing it had us stopped. I was so tired."
Jim said, "Look
here. Frank, I've got a new plan. I'm going to follow this ditch off to the
east until I find some way to get down into it. You're going to go back and
give yourself up-"
"No!"
"Wait till I
finish! This makes sense. You're too sick to keep going. If you stay out here,
you're going to die. You might as well admit it. Somebody's got to get the word
to our folks—me. You go back, surrender, and then give them a song and dance
about how I went that way—any way but this way. If you make it good, you can
stall them and keep them chasing their tails for a full day and give me that
much head start. In the mean time you lay around in the scooter, warm and safe,
and tonight you're in bed in the infirmary at school. There—doesn't that make
sense?"
"No."
"Why not? You're
just being stubborn."
"No," repeated
Frank, "it's no good. In the first place I won't turn myself over to them.
I'd rather die out here—"
"Nuts!"
"Nuts yourself. In
the second place, a day's start will do you no good. Once they are sure you
aren't where I say you are, they'll just go back to combing the canal, by
scooter. They'll pick you up tomorrow."
"But—well, what is
the answer then?"
"I don't know, but
it's not that." He was seized again by coughing.
Neither one of them said
anything for several minutes. At last Jim said, "What kind of a scooter
was that?"
"The usual cargo
sort, a Hudson Six Hundred I think. Why?"
"Could it turn
around on that ice down there?"
Frank looked down into
the small canal. Its sides sloped in toward the bottom; the water level was so
low that the ice surface was barely twenty feet across. "Not a
chance," he answered.
"Then they won't
try to search this branch by scooter—at least not in that scooter."
"I'm way ahead of
you," put in Frank. "You figure we'll cross to east Strymon and go
home that way. But how do you know this cut runs all the way through? You
remember the map that well?"
"No, I don't. But
there is a good chance it does. If it doesn't, it will run most of the way
across and we'll just have to hoof it the rest of the way."
"After we get to
the east leg it will still be five hundred miles or so to Charax. This leg has
shelters on it, even if we did miss the one last night."
"We've got just as
good a chance of finding project shelters on east leg as on west leg," Jim
answered. "The Project starts next spring on both sides. I know—Dad's
talked about it enough. Anyhow, we can't use this leg any further; they're
searching it—so why beat your choppers about it? The real question is: can you
skate? If you can't, I still say you ought to surrender."
Frank stood up.
"I'll skate," he said grimly. "Come on."
They went boldly along
the stone embankment, convinced that their pursuers were still searching the
neighborhood of the ramp. They were three or four miles further east when they
came to a ramp leading down to the ice. "Shall we chance it?" asked
Jim.
"Sure. Even if they
send a man in on skates I doubt if he would come this far with no tracks to
lead him on. I'm tired of walking." They went down, put on their skates,
and started. Most of the kinks from their uncomfortable night had been smoothed
out by walking; it felt good to be on the ice again. Jim let Frank set the
pace; despite his illness he stroked right into it and pushed the miles behind
them.
They had come perhaps
forty miles when the banks began to be noticeably lower. Jim, seeing this, got
a sick feeling that the little canal was not cross-connecting from west to east
leg, but merely a feeder to a low spot in the desert. He kept his suspicion to
himself. At the end of the next hour it was no longer necessary to spare his
chum; the truth was evident to them both. The banks were now so low that they
could see over them and the ice ahead no longer disappeared into the blue sky
but dead-ended in some fashion.
They came to the dead
end presently, a frozen swamp. The banks were gone; the rough ice spread out in
all directions and was bordered in the distance by green plants. Here and
there, canal grass, caught by the freeze, stuck up in dead tufts through the
ice.
They continued east,
skating where they could and picking their way around bits of higher ground. At
last Frank said, "All out! End of the line!" and sat down to take off
his skates.
"I'm sorry,
Frank."
"About what? We'll
leg it the rest of the way. It can't be so many miles."
They set out through the
surrounding greenery, walking just fast enough to let the plants draw out their
way. The vegetation that surrounded the marsh was lower than the canal plants,
hardly shoulder high, and showed smaller leaves. After a couple of miles of
this they found themselves out on the sand dunes.
The shifting, red,
iron-oxide sands made hard walking and me dunes, to be climbed or skirted, made
it worse. Jim usually elected to climb them even if Frank went around; he was
looking for a dark green line against the horizon that would mark east Strymon.
It continued to disappoint him.
Willis insisted on
getting down. First he gave himself a dust bath in the clean sand; thereafter
he kept somewhat ahead of Jim, exploring this way and that and startling the
spin bugs. Jim had just topped a dune and was starting down the other side when
he heard an agonized squeak from Willis. He looked around.
Frank was just coming
around the end of the dune and Willis was with him, that is to say, Willis had
skittered on ahead. Now the bouncer was standing dead still. Frank apparently
had noticed nothing; he was dragging along in a listless fashion, his head
down.
Charging straight at
them was a water-seeker.
It was a long shot, even
for a match marksman. The scene took on a curious unreality to Jim. It seemed
as if Frank were frozen in his tracks and as if the water-seeker itself were
strolling slowly toward his victims. Jim himself seemed to have all the time in
the world to draw, take a steady, careful bead, and let go his first charge.
It burned the first two
pairs of legs off the creature; it kept coming.
Jim sighted on it again,
held the stud down. His beam, held steadily on the centeriine of the varmit,
sliced it in two as if it had run into a buzz saw. It kept coming until its two
halves were no longer joined, until they fell two ways, twitching. The great
scimitar claw on the left half stopped within inches of Willis.
Jim ran down the dune.
Frank, no longer a statue, actually had stopped. He was standing, blinking at
what had been a moment before the incarnation of sudden and bloody death. He
looked around as Jim came up. "Thanks," he said.
Jim did not answer but
kicked at a trembling leg of the beast. "The filthy, filthy thing!"
he said intensely. "Cripes, how I hate them. I wish I could burn every one
on Mars, all at once." He walked on up along the body, located the egg
sac, and carefully blasted every bit of it.
Willis had not moved. He
was sobbing quietly. Jim came back, picked him up, and popped him in the travel
bag. "Let's stick together from here on," he said. "If you don't
feel like climbing, I'll go around."
"Okay."
"Frank!"
"Uh? Yes, what is
it, Jim?" Frank's voice was listless.
"What do you see
ahead?"
"Ahead?" Frank
tried manfully to make his eyes focus, to chase the fuzz from them. "Uhh,
it's the canal, the green belt I mean. I guess we made it."
"And what else?
Don't you see a tower?"
"What? Where? Oh,
there— Yes, I guess I do. It's a tower all right."
"Well, for heaven's
sake, don't you know what that means? Martians!"
"Yeah, I suppose
so."
"Well, show some
enthusiasm!"
"Why should
I?"
"They'll take us
in, man! Martians are good people; you'll have a warm place to rest, before we go
on."
Frank looked a bit more
interested, but said nothing. "They might even know Gekko," Jim went
on. "This is a real break."
"Yeah, maybe
so."
It took another hour of
foot-slogging before the little Martian town was reached. It was so small that
it boasted only one tower, but to Jim it was even more beautiful than Syrtis
Major. They followed its wall and presently found a gate.
They had not been inside
more than a few minutes when Jim's hopes, so high, were almost as low as they
could be. Even before he saw the weed-choked central garden, the empty walks
and silent courts had told him the bad truth: the little town was deserted.
Mars must once have held
a larger native population than it does today. Ghost cities are not unknown and
even the greater centers of population, such as Charax, Syrtis Major and Minor,
and Hesperidum, have areas which are no longer used and through which tourists
from Earth may sometimes be conducted. This little town, apparently never of
great importance, might have been abandoned before Noah laid the keel of his
ship.
Jim paused in the plaza,
unwilling to speak. Frank stopped and sat down a metal slab, its burnished face
bright with characters that an Earthly scholar would have given an arm to read.
"Well," said Jim, "rest a bit, then I guess we had better find a
way to get down onto the canal."
Frank answered dully,
"Not for me. I've come as far as I can."
"Don't talk that
way."
"I'm telling you,
Jim, that's how it is."
Jim puzzled at it.
"I tell you what—I'll search around. These places are always honeycombed
underneath. I'll find a place for us to hole up over night."
"Just as you
like."
"You just stay
here." He started to leave, then suddenly became aware that Willis was not
with him. He then recalled that the bouncer had jumped down when they entred
the city. "Willis—where's Willis?"
"How would I
know?"
"I've got to find
him. Oh, Willis! Hey, Willis! Come, boy!" His voice echoed around the dead
square.
"Hi, Jim!"
It was Willis, rightly
enough, his voice reaching Jim from some distance. Presently he came into
sight. But he was not alone; he was being carried by a Martian.
The Martian came near
them, dropped his third leg, and leaned down. His voice boomed gently at Jim.
"What's he saying, Frank?"
"Huh? Oh, I don't
know. Tell him to go away."
The Martian spoke again.
Jim abandoned the attempt to use Frank as a translator and concentrated on
trying to understand. He spotted the question symbol, in the inverted position;
the remark was an invitation or a suggestion of some sort. Following it was the
operator of motion coupled with some radical that meant nothing to Jim.
He answered it with the
question symbol alone, hoping that the native would repeat himself. Willis
answered instead. "Come along, Jim boy—fine place!"
Why not? he said to
himself and answered, "Okay, Willis." To the Martian he replied with
the symbol of general assent, racking his throat to produce the unEarthly
triple guttural re- quired. The Martian repeated it, inverted, then picked up
the leg closest to them and walked rapidly away without turning around. He had
gone about twenty-five yards when he seemed to notice that he was not being
followed. He backed up just as rapidly and used the general inquiry symbol in
the sense of "What's wrong?"
"Willis," Jim
said urgently, "I want him to carry Frank."
"Cany Frank
boy?"
"Yes, the way Gekko
carried him."
"Gekko not here.
This K'boomch."
"His name is
K'boomk?"
"Sure—K'boomch,"
Willis agreed, correcting Jim's pronunciation.
"Well, I want
K'boomch to carry Frank like Gekko carried him."
Willis and the Martian
mooed and croaked at each other for a moment, then Willis said, "K'boomch
wants to know does Jim boy know Gekko."
"Tell him we are
friends, water friends."
"Willis already
tell him."
"How about
Frank?" But it appeared that Willis had already told his new acquaintance
about that, too, for K'boomch enlosed Frank in two palm flaps and lifted him
up. Frank opened his eyes, then closed them. He seemed indifferent to what
happened to him.
Jim trotted after the
Martian, stopping only to grab up Frank's skates from where he had abandoned
them on the metal slab. The Martian led him into a huge building that seemed
even larger inside than out, so richly illuminated in glowing lights were the
walls. The Martian did not tarry but went directly into an archway in the far
wall; it was a ramp tunnel entrance, leading down.
The Martians appear
never to have invented stair steps, or more likely never needed them. The low
surface gravity of Mars, only 38% of that of Earth, permits the use of ramps
which would be disastrously steep on Earth. The Martian led Jim down a long
sequence of these rapid descents.
Presently Jim
discovered, as he had once before under Cynia city, that the air pressure had
increased. He raised his mask with a feeling of great relief; he had not had it
off for more than twenty-four hours. The change in pressure had come abruptly;
he knew from this that it had not resulted from descent alone, nor had they
come deep enough to make any great difference in pressure.
Jim wondered how the
trick was accomplished. He decided that it had pressure locks beat all hollow.
They left the ramps and
entered a large domed chamber, evenly lighted from the ceiling itself. Its
walls were a continuous series of archways. K'boomch stopped and spoke again to
Jim, another inquiry in which he used the name Gekko.
Jim reached into his
memory and carefully phrased a simple declaration: "Gekko and I have
shared water. We are friends."
The Martian seemed
satisfied; he led the way into one of the side rooms and placed Frank gently on
the floor. The door closed behind them, sliding silently into place. It was a
smallish room, for Martians, and contained several resting frames. K'boomch
arranged his ungainly figure on one of them.
Suddenly Jim felt heavy
and sat down rather unexpectedly on the floor. The feeling persisted and with
it a slight giddiness; he stayed seated. "Are you all right, Frank?"
he asked.
Frank muttered
something. His breathing seemed labored and rough, Jim took off Frank's mask
and touched his face; it was hot.
There was nothing that
he could do for Frank at the moment. The heavy feeling continued. The Martian
did not seemed disposed to talk and Jim did not feel up to attempting a
conversation in the dominant tongue in any case. Willis had withdrawn into a
ball. Jim lay down beside Frank, closed his eyes, and tried not to think.
He felt a moment of
lightness, almost of vertigo, then felt heavy again and wondered what he was
coming down with. He lay still for a few more minutes, to be disturbed
presently by the native bending over him and speaking. He sat up and discovered
that he felt fine again. K'boomch scooped up Frank and they left the room.
The great domed chamber
outside looked the same, except that it now held a crowd of Martians, thirty or
more of them. When K'boomch and his two burdens, followed by Jim, came out the
archway one of them separated himself from the group and stepped forward. He
was rather short as Martians go.
"Jim-Marlowe,"
he stated, with the vocative symbol.
"Gekko!"
yelled Jim, echoed by Willis.
Gekko bent over him.
"My friend," he boomed softly in his own tongue. "My little,
crippled friend." He raised Jim up and carried him away, the other
Martians retreating to make way.
Gekko moved rapidly
through a series of tunnels. Jim, looking back, could see that K'boomch and the
rest of his party were close behind, so he let matters drift. Gekko turned
presently into a medium-sized chamber and put Jim down. Frank was deposited by
him. Frank blinked his eyes and said "Where are we?"
Jim looked around. The
room held several resting frames, set in a circle. The ceiling was domed and
simulated the sky. On one wall a canal flowed past, in convincing miniature.
Elsewhere on the curved wall was the silhouette of a Martian city, feathery
towers floating in the air. Jim knew those towers, knew of what city they were
the signature; Jim knew this room.
It was the very room in
which he had "grown together" with Gekko and his friends.
"Oh, my gosh,
Frank—we're back in Cynia."
"Huh?" Frank
sat up suddenly, glared around him—then lay back down and shut his eyes
tightly.
Jim did not know whether
to laugh or to cry. All that effort! All their striving to escape and to get
home, Frank's gallant refusal to give up in the face of sickness and body
weariness, the night in the desert cabbage—and here they were not three miles
from Cynia station.
JIM SET UP
housekeeping—or hospital-keeping—in the smallest room that Gekko could find for
him. There had been a "growing together" immediately after their
arrival. On its conclusion Jim had found, as before, that his command of the
dominant tongue was improved. He had made Gekko understand that Frank was sick
and needed quiet.
Gekko offered to take
over Frank's care, but Jim refused. Martian therapy might cure Frank—or it
might kill him. He asked instead for a plentiful supply of drinking water—his
right, now that he was a "water friend," almost a tribal brother—and he
asked for the colorful Martian silks that had been used by the boys in place of
resting frames. From these silks Jim made a soft bed for Frank and a nest
nearby for himself and Willis. He bedded Frank down, roused him enough to get
him to drink deeply of water, and then waited for his friend to get well.
The room was quite
comfortably warm; Jim took off his outdoors suit, stretched, and scratched. On
second thought he peeled off Frank's elastic suit as well and covered him with
a layer of flame-colored cloth. After that he dug into Frank's travel bag and
looked over the food supply. Up to now he had been too busy and too tired to
worry about his stomach; now the very sight of the labels made him drool. He
picked out a can of synthetic orange juice, vitamin fortified, and a can of
simulated chicken filet. The latter had started life in a yeast tank at North
Colony, but Jim was used to yeast proteins and the flavor was every bit as
tempting as white breast of chicken. Whistling, he got out his knife and got
busy.
Willis had wandered off
somewhere but he did not miss him. Subconsciously he was not disposed to worry
about Willis while they were both in a native city; the place was filled with
an atmosphere of peace and security. In fact Jim hardly thought about his patient
until he had finished and wiped his mouth.
Frank was still sleeping
but his breathing was noisy and his face still flushed. The air in the room,
though warm and of satisfactory pressure, was Mars dry. Frank got a
handkerchief from his bag, wet it, and put it over Frank's face. From time to
time he moistened it again. Later he got another handkerchief, doused it, and
tied it around his own face.
Gekko came in with
Willis tagging along. "Jim-Marlowe," he stated and settled himself.
"Gekko," Jim answered and went on with moistening Frank's face cloth.
The Martian remained so quiet for so long that Jim decided that he must have
retreated into his "other world" but, when Jim looked at him, Gekko's
eyes showed lively, alert interest.
After a long wait he
asked Jim what he was doing and why.
Jim tried to explain
that his kind must breathe water as well as air but his Martian vocabulary,
despite the "growing together," was not up to the strain it placed on
it. He gave up and there was another long silence. Eventually the Martian left,
Willis with him.
Presently Jim noticed
that the face cloths, both his and Frank's, were not drying out rapidly.
Shortly they were hardly drying at all. He took off his, as it made him
uncomfortable, and decided that it must be uncomfortable for Frank as well; he
stopped using them entirely.
Gekko returned. After
only ten minutes of silence he spoke, showing thereby almost frantic haste for
his kind. He wanted to know if the water that flies with the air was now
sufficient? Jim assured him that it was and thanked him. After twenty minutes
or so of silence Gekko again left. Jim decided to go to bed. It had been a
long, hard day and the previous night could hardly be called a night of rest.
He looked around for some way to switch off the light but could find none.
Giving up, he lay down, pulled a polychrome sheet up to his chin, and went to
sleep.
Sometime during his
sleep Willis returned. Jim became aware of it when the little fellow snuggled
up against his back. Sleepily, Jim reached behind and petted him, then went
back to sleep.
"Hey, Jim—wake
up."
Blearily Jim opened his
eyes, and closed them. "Go away."
"Come on. Snap out
of it. I've been awake me past two hours, while you snored. I want to know some
things."
"What do you want
to know? Say—how do you feel?"
"Me?" said
Frank. "I feel fine. Why shouldn't I? Where are we?"
Jim looked him over.
Frank's color was certainly better and his voice sounded normal, the hoarseness
all gone. "You were plenty sick yesterday," he informed him. "I
think you were out of your head."
Frank wrinkled his
forehead. "Maybe I was. I've sure had the damedest dreams. There was a
crazy one about a desert cabbage—"
"That was no
dream."
"What?"
"I said that was no
dream, the desert cabbage—nor any of the rest of it. Do you know where we
are?"
"That's what I was
asking you."
"We're in Cynia,
that's where we are. We—"
"Cynia?"
Jim tried to give Frank
a coherent account of the preceding two days. He was somewhat hampered by the
item of their sudden translation from far up the canal back to Cynia, because
he did not understand it clearly himself. "I figure it's a sort of a
subway paralleling the canal. You know—a subway, like you read about."
"Martians don't do
that sort of engineering."
"Martians built the
canals."
"Yes, but that was
a long, long time ago."
"Maybe they built
the subway a long time ago. What do you know about it?" "Well—nothing, I guess. Never mind. I'm
hungry. Anything left to eat?"
"Sure." Jim
got up. In so doing he woke Willis, who extended his eyes, sized up the
situation, and greeted them. Jim picked him up, scratched him, and said,
"What time did you come in, you tramp?" then suddenly added,
"Hey!"
"'Hey' what?"
asked Frank.
"Well, would you
look at thatT' Jim pointed at the tumbled silks.
Frank got up and joined
him. "Look at what? Oh—"
In the hollow in which
Willis had been resting were a dozen small, white spheroids, looking like so
many golf balls.
"What do you
suppose they are?" asked Jim.
Frank studied them closely.
"Jim," he said slowly, "I think you'll just have to face it.
Willis isn't a boy; he's a she."
"Huh? Oh, no!"
"Willis good
boy," Willis said defensively.
"See for
yourself," Frank went on to Jim. "Those are eggs. If Willis didn't
lay them, you must have."
Jim looked bewildered,
then turned to Willis. "Willis, did you lay those eggs? Did you?"
"Eggs?" said
Willis. "What Jim boy say?"
Jim set him down by the
nest and pointed. "Did you lay those?"
Willis looked at them,
then figuratively shrugged his shoulders and washed his hands of the whole
matter. He waddled away. His manner seemed to say that if Jim chose to make a
fuss over some eggs or whatever that just happened to show up in the bed, well,
that was Jim's business; Willis would have none of it.
"You won't get
anything out of him," Frank commented. "I suppose you realize this
makes you a grandfather, sort of."
"Don't be
funny!"
"Okay, forget the
eggs. When do we eat? I'm starved."
Jim gave the eggs an
accusing glance and got busy on the commissary. While they were eating Gekko
came in. They exchanged grave greetings, then the Martian seemed about to
settle himself for another long period of silent sociability— when he caught
sight of the eggs.
Neither of the boys had
ever seen a Martian hurry before, nor show any signs of excitement. Gekko let
out a deep snort and left the room at once, to return promptly with as many
companions as could crowd into the room. They all talked at once and paid no
attention to the boys.
"What goes on
here?" asked Frank, as he crowded against a wall and peered through a
thicket of legs.
"Blessed if I
know."
After a while they
calmed down a little. One of the larger Martians gathered up the eggs with
exaggerated care and clutched mem to him. Another picked up Willis and they all
trooped out.
Jim stood hesitantly at
the door and watched them disappear. "I'd like to find Gekko and ask him
about it," he fretted.
"Nuts," said
Frank. "Let's finish breakfast."
"Well... all
right."
Once the meal was over.
Frank opened the larger question. "Okay, so we are in Cynia. We've still
got to get home and fast. The question is: how do we go about it? Now as I see
it, if these Martians could bring us back here so fast, they can turn around
and put us back where they found us and then we can head home up the east leg
of Strymon. How does that strike you?"
"It sounds all
right, I guess," Jim answered, "but—"
"Then the first
thing to do is to find Gekko and try to arrange it, without fiddling
around."
"The first thing to
do," Jim contradicted, "is to find Willis."
"Why? Hasn't he
caused enough trouble? Leave him; he's happy here."
"Frank, you take
entirely the wrong attitude toward Willis. Didn't he get us out of a jam? If it
hadn't been for Willis, you'd be coughing your lungs out in the desert."
"If it hadn't been
for Willis, we wouldn't have been in that jam in the first place."
"Now that's not
fair. The truth is—"
"Skip it, skip it.
Okay, go find Willis."
Jim left Frank to clean
up the litter of breakfast and set out. Although he was never able thereafter
to give a fully coherent account of just what happened to him on this errand,
certain gross facts are clear. He started by looking for Gekko, asking for him
of the first Martian he met in the corridors by the barbarous expedient of
voicing the general inquiry followed by Gekko's name.
Jim was not and probably
never would be a competent linguist, but his attempt worked. The first Martian
he encountered took him to another, as an Earthly citizen might lead a
foreigner to a policeman. This Martian took 'him to Gekko.
Jim had no great trouble
in explaining to Gekko that he wanted Willis returned to him. Gekko listened,
then explained gently that what Jim wanted was impossible.
Jim started over again,
sure that his own poor command of me language had caused misunderstanding.
Gekko let him finish, then made it quite clear that he understood correctly
what it was that Jim wanted, but that Jim could not have it—could not have
Willis. No. Gekko was sorrowful to have to refuse his friend with whom he had
shared the pure water of life, but this thing could not be.
Under the direct
influence of Gekko's powerful personality Jim understood most of what was said
and guessed the rest. Gekko's refusal was unmistakable. It is not important
that Jim did not have his gun with him; Gekko could not inspire the hatred in
him that Howe did. For one thing Gekko's warm sympathy poured over him in a
flood; nevertheless Jim was thunderstruck, indignant, and quite unable to
accept the verdict. He stared up at the Martian for a long moment. Then he
walked away abruptly, not choosing his direction and shouting for Willis as he
did so. "Willis! Oh, Willis! Here, Willis boy —come to Jim!"
The Martian started
after him, each stride three of Jim's. Jim ran, still shouting. He turned a
comer, came face-to-face with three natives and darted between their legs and
beyond. Gekko got into a traffic jam with them which required the time-wasting
exercise of Martian protocol to straighten out. Jim got considerably ahead.
He stuck his head into
every archway he came to and shouted. One such led into a chamber occupied by
Martians frozen in that trancelike state they call visiting the "other
world." Jim would no more have disturbed a Martian in a trance, ordinarily,
than an American western frontier child would have teased a grizzly—but he was
in no shape to care or notice; he shouted in there, too, thereby causing an
unheard-of and unthinkable disturbance. The least response was violent
trembling; one poor creature was so disturbed that he lifted abruptly all of
his legs and fell to the floor.
Jim did not notice; he
was already gone, shouting into the next chamber.
Gekko caught up with him
and scooped him up with two great hand flaps. "Jim-Marlowe!" he said.
"Jim-Marlowe, my friend—"
Jim sobbed and beat on
the Martian's hard thorax with both his fists. Gekko endured it for a moment,
then wrapped a third palm flap around Jim's arms, securing him. Jim looked
wildly up at him. "Willis," he said in his own language, "I want
Willis. You've got no right!"
Gekko cradled him and
answered softly, "I have no power. This is beyond me. We must go to the
other world." He moved away. Jim made no answer, tired by his own
outburst. Gekko took a ramp downward, then another and another. Down and down
he went, much deeper than Jim had ever been before, deeper perhaps than any
terrestrial had ever been. On the upper levels they passed other Martians;
farther down there were none.
At last Gekko halted in
a small chamber far underground. It was exceptional in that it was totally
without decoration; its plain, pearl-grey walls seemed almost unMartian. Gekko
laid Jim on the floor here and said, "This is a gate to the other
world."
Jim picked himself up.
"Huh?" he said. "What do you mean?" and then carefully
rephrased the question in the dominant tongue. He need not have bothered; Gekko
did not hear him.
Jim craned his neck and
looked up. Gekko stood utterly motionless, all legs firmly planted. His eyes
were open but lifeless. Gekko had crossed over into the "other
world."
"For the love of
Mike," Jim fretted, "he sure picks a sweet time to pull a stunt like
that." He wondered what he ought to do, try to find his way to upper
levels alone or wait for Gekko. Natives were reputed to be able to hold a
trance for weeks at a time, but Doc MacRae had pooh-poohed such stories.
He decided to wait for a
while at least and sat down on the floor, hands clasped around his knees. He
felt considerably calmed down and in no special hurry, as if Gekko's boundless
calm had flowed over into him while the native had carried him.
After a while, an
indefinitely long while, the room grew darker. Jim was not disturbed; he was
vastly content, feeling again the untroubled happiness that he had known in his
two experiences of "growing together."
A tiny light appeared at
a great distance in the darkness and grew. But it did not illuminate the small
pearl-grey room; it built up an outdoor scene instead. It was as if a
stereo-movie projector were being used to project New Hollywood's best work, in
full, natural color. That it was not an importation from Earth Jim knew, for
the scene, while utterly realistic, had no slick commercial finish, no plot.
He seemed to be seeing a
grove of canal plants from a viewpoint about a foot off the ground. The
viewpoint shifted steadily and erratically as if the camera were being trucked
on a very low dolly here and there through the stalks of the canal plants. The
viewpoint would shift quickly for a few feet, stop, then change direction and
move again, but it never got very far off the ground. Sometimes it would wheel
in a full circle, a panorama of three hundred and sixty degrees.
It was during one of
these full rotations that he caught sight of a water-seeker.
It would not have been
strange if he had not recognized it as such, for it was enormously magnified.
As it charged in, it filled the entire screen. But it was impossible not to
recognize those curving scimitar claws, the grisly horror of the gaping sucker
orifice, those pounding legs—and most particularly the stomach-clutching
revulsion the thing inspired. Jim could almost smell it.
The viewpoint from which
he saw it did not change; it was frozen to one spot while the foul horror
rushed directly at him in the final death charge. At the last possible instant,
when the thing filled me screen, something happened. The face—-or where the
face should have been—disappeared, went to pieces, and the creature collapsed
in a blasted ruin.
The picture was wiped
out completely for a few moments, replaced by whirling colored turmoil. Then a
light, sweet voice said, "Well, aren't you the cute little fellow!"
The picture built up again as if a curtain had been lifted and Jim stared at
another face almost as grotesque as the faceless horror it replaced.
Although this face
occupied the whole screen and was weirdly distorted, Jim had no trouble in
placing it as a colonial's respirator mask. What startled him almost out of the
personal unawareness with which he was accepting this shadow show was that he
recognized the mask. It was decorated with the very tiger stripes that Smythe
had painted out for a quarter credit; it was his own, as it used to be.
He heard his own voice
say, "You're too little to be wandering around by yourself; another one of
those vermin might really get you. I think I'll take you home."
The scene went swinging
through the canal growth at a greater height, hobbling up and down to the boy's
steps. Presently the point of view came out into open country and showed in the
distance the star-shaped layout and bubble domes of South Colony.
Jim adjusted to the idea
of watching himself, hearing himself, and accepted the notion of seeing things
from Willis's viewpoint. The record was quite unedited; it pushed forward in a
straight line, a complete recollection of everything Willis had seen and heard
from the time Jim had first taken him under his protection. Willis's visual
recollections were not entirely accurate; they seemed to be affected by his
understanding of what he saw and how used to it he was. Jim—the "Jim"
in the shadow show—at first seemed to have three legs; it was some time before
the imaginary excrescence vanished. Other actors, Jim's mother, old Doc MacRae,
Frank, developed from formless shapes to full, though somewhat distorted,
representations.
On the other hand, every
sound was heard with great clarity and complete accuracy. As Jim listened and
watched he found that he was savoring sounds of every sort and most especially
voices with a new and rich delight.
Most especially he
enjoyed seeing himself as Willis saw him. With affection and warm humor he saw
himself stripped of dignity but clothed in a lively regard; he was loved but
not respected. He, Jim himself, was a great bumbling servant, helpful but
maddeningly unreliable in his attentions, like a poorly trained dog. As for
other human beings, they were curious creatures, harmless on the whole, but
unpredictable traffic hazards. This bouncer-eye view of people amused Jim
mightily.
Day by day and week by
week the account unfolded, even to the periods of dark and quiet when Willis
chose to sleep or was shut up. It carried on to Syrtis Minor and into a bad
time when Jim was missing. Howe appeared as a despised voice and a pair of
legs; Beecher was a faceless nonentity. It continued, step by step, and somehow
Jim was neither tired nor bored. He was simply in the continuity and could no
more escape from it than could Willis—nor did it occur to him to try. At last
it wound up in the Martian city of Cynia and ended in a period of dark and
quiet.
Jim stretched his
cramped legs; the light was returning. He looked around but Gekko was still
deep in 'his trance. He looked back and found that a door had opened in what
had appeared to be blank wall. He looked through and into a room beyond,
decorated as Martian rooms so frequently are in careful imitation of an outdoor
scene—lush countryside more like uie sea bottoms south of Cynia than like the
desert.
A Martian was in the
room. Jim was never able afterwards to visualize him completely for his face
and particularly his eyes compelled attention. An Earthling has no good way to
estimate the age of a Martian yet Jim had the unmistakable impression that this
Martian was very old—older than his father, older even than Doc MacRae.
"Jim Marlowe,"
the native said in clear tones. "Welcome, Jim Marlowe, friend of my people
and friend of mine. I give you water." He spoke in Basic English, in an
accent vaguely familiar.
Jim had never heard a
Martian speak an Earthly tongue before, but he knew that some of them did speak
Basic. It was a relief to be able to answer in his own speech. "I drink
with you. May you ever enjoy pure and plentiful water."
"I thank you, Jim
Marlowe." No actual water was used and none was needed. There followed a
polite period of quiet, during which Jim thought about the Martian's accent. It
was oddly familiar; it put him in mind of his father's voice, again it sounded
like Doc MacRae.
"You are troubled,
Jim Marlowe. Your unhappiness is ours. How may I help you?"
"I don't want
anything," Jim answered, "except to go home and take Willis with me.
They took Willis away. They shouldn't have done that."
The silence that
followed was even longer than before. At last the Martian answered, "When
one stands on the ground, one may not see over the horizon—yet Phobos sees all
horizons." He hesitated a moment before the word "Phobos." As if
in afterthought he added, "Jim Marlowe, I have but lately learned your
tongue. Forgive me if I stumble."
"Oh, you speak it
beautifully!" Jim said quite sincerely.
"The words I know;
the pictures are not clear. Tell me, Jim Marlowe, what is the london-zoo?"
Jim had to ask him to
repeat it before it was clear that the Martian asked about the London Zoo. Jim
tried to explain, but broke off before he had finished elaborating the idea.
The Martian radiated such cold, implacable anger that Jim was frightened.
After a time the
Martian's mood changed abruptly and Jim was again bathed in a warm glow of
friendliness that poured out of his host like rays from the Sun and was as real
as sunshine to Jim. "Jim Marlowe, twice you have saved the little one whom
you call 'Willis' from—" He used first a Martian term not known to Jim,
then changed it to "waterseekers." "Have you killed many
such?"
"Uh, quite a few, I
guess," Jim answered, then added, "I kill 'em whenever I see 'em.
They're getting too smart to hang around the colonies much."
The Martian appeared to
be thinking this over, but when he got around to answering he had again changed
the subject. "Jim Marlowe, twice, perhaps three times, you have saved the
little one; once, perhaps twice, our little one has saved you. Each time you
have grown closer together. Day by day you have grown together until neither
one of you is complete without the other. Do not leave here, Jim Marlowe. Stay.
You are welcome in my house, a son and a friend." He had said
"daughter" first, instead of "son," then corrected it
without any comic effect nor loss of emphasis.
Jim shook his head.
"I have to go home. In fact I have to go home right away. It's a mighty
kind offer and I want to thank you but—" He explained as clearly as he
could the threat to the welfare of the colony and the urgent need for him to
carry the message. "If you please, sir, we—my friend and I—would like to be
taken back where K'boomch found us. Only I want Willis back before we go."
"You wish to go
back to the city where you were found? You do not wish to go home?"
Jim explained that Frank
and he would go home from there. "Now, sir, why don't you ask Willis
whether or not he wants to stay or to go home with me?"
The old Martian sighed
exactly as Jim's father had been known to sigh after a fruitless family
discussion. "There is a law of life and a law of death and both are the
law of change. Even the hardest rock is worn away by the wind. You understand,
my son and friend, that even if the one you call Willis returns with you, there
will come a time when the little one must leave you?" "Uh, yes, I guess so. You mean Willis
can come home with me?"
"We will speak to
the one you call Willis."
The old one spoke to
Gekko, who stirred and muttered in his sleep. Then the three of them wound back
up the ramps, with Gekko carrying Jim and the old one following a little
behind.
They stopped in a
chamber about halfway up to the surface. The room was dark when they reached it
but it became illuminated as soon as the party entered. Jim saw that the place
was lined, floor to ceiling, with little niches and each niche contained a
bouncer, as similar, each to the other, as identical twins.
The little fellows
raised their eye stalks when the light came on and peered interestedly around.
From somewhere in the room came a shout of "Hi, Jim boy!"
Jim looked around but
could not pick out the bouncer that had spoken. Before he could do anything
about it the phrase had echoed around the room, "Hi, Jim boy! Hi, Jim boy!
Hi, Jim boy!" each time in Jim's own voice, as borrowed by Willis.
Jim turned back to Gekko
in bewilderment. "Which one is Willis?" he demanded, forgetting to speak
in the dominant tongue.
The chorus started up
again, "Which one is Willis? Which one is Willis? Which— Which— Which one
is Willis?"
Jim stepped out into the
middle of the room. "Willis!" he commanded, "come to Jim."
Off to his right a
bouncer popped out from a middle tier, landed on the floor, and waddled up to
him. "Pick up Willis," it demanded. Gratefully, Jim did so.
"Where Jim boy
been?" Willis wanted to know.
Jim scratched the
bouncer. "You wouldn't understand if I told you. Look, Willis—Jim is about
to go home. Does Willis want to go home with him?"
"Jim go?"
Willis said doubtfully, as if the unrelenting echoing chorus had made it hard
for him to undertsand.
"Jim go home, right
away. Is Willis coming or is Willis going to stay here?"
"Jim go; Willis
go," the bouncer announced, stating it as a law of nature.
"Okay, tell Gekko
that."
"Why?" Willis
asked suspiciously.
"Tell Gekko that,
or you'll get left behind. Go on, tell him."
"Okay." Willis
addressed Gekko in a series of clucks and croaks. Neither the old Martian nor
Gekko made any comment; Gekko picked up the two smaller creatures and the
procession continued on up toward the surface. Gekko put them down outside the
room assigned to Frank and Jim. Jim carried Willis inside.
Frank looked up as they
came in. He was sprawled on the silks and, arranged beside him on the floor,
was a meal, as yet untouched. "Well, I see you found him," he
commented. "It sure took you long enough."
Jim was suddenly
overcome with remorse. He had been gone goodness knows how long. Days? Weeks?
That movingpicture thing had covered months, in detail. "Gee, Frank, I'm
sorry," he apologized. "Were you worried about me?"
"Worried? What for?
I just didn't know whether or not to wait lunch on you. You must have been gone
at least three hours."
Three hours? Jim started
to object that it had been more like three weeks, then thought better of it. He
recalled that he had not eaten while away, nor did he feel anything more than
normally hungry.
"Uh— Yeah, sure.
Sony. Look, do you mind waiting lunch a bit longer?"
"Why? I'm
starved."
"Because we're
leaving, that's why. Gekko and another native are wailing to take us back to
that town where K'boomch found us."
"Well— Okay!"
Frank stuffed his mouth full and started to pull on his outdoors suit.
Jim imitated him, both
as to eating and dressing. "We can finish lunch in the subway
dingus," he said, mumbling with his mouth full. "Don't forget to fill
your mask reservoir."
"Don't worry. I
won't pull that stunt twice." Frank filled his tank and Jim's, took a big
drink of water, and offered the rest to Jim. Moments later they slung their
skates over their shoulders and were ready to leave. The party filed through
ramps and corridors to the "subway station" hall and stopped at one
of the archways.
The old Martian went
inside, but, somewhat to Jim's surprise, Gekko bade them good-bye. They parted
with ritualistic exchange of courtesies appropriate to water friends, then
Frank and Jim, with Willis, went inside and the door closed behind them.
The car started up at
once. Frank said, "Wups! What is this?" and sat down suddenly. The
old Martian, secure on the resting frame, said nothing. Jim laughed.
"Don't you remember
the last ride?"
"Not very well.
Say, I feel heavy."
"So do I. That's
part of the ride. Now how about a bite to eat? It may be a long time before we
get another decent meal."
"You ain't
whistlin'." Frank got out the remainder of their lunch. When they had
finished Frank thought about it and opened another can. Before they had had a
chance to eat its contents—cold baked beans and surrogate pork—his stomach
suddenly did a flip-flop. "Hey!" he yelped. "What's
happened?"
"Nothing. It was
like that last time."
"I thought we had
plowed into something."
"Nope, it's all right,
I tell you. Hand me over some of those beans." They ate the beans and
waited; after a time the feeling of extra weight left them and Jim knew that
they had arrived.
The door of the car
compartment opened and they stepped out into a circular hall exactly like the
one they had left. Frank looked around in disappointment. "Say, Jim—we
haven't gone anyplace. There's some mistake."
"No, there's
not." He turned, intending to speak to the old Martian, but the archway
door behind them was already closed. "Oh, that's too bad," he said.
"What's too bad?
That they gave us a run-around?"
"They didn't give
us a run-around; it's just that this room looks like the one back in Cynia.
You'll see when we get up to the surface. No, I was saying 'too bad' because I
let—" Jim hesitated, realizing that he had never gotten the old Martian's
name. "—because I let the old fellow, not Gekko, the other one, get away
without saying good-bye."
"Who?"
"You know, the
other one. The one that rode with us."
"What do you mean,
the other one? I didn't see anybody but Gekko. And nobody rode with us; we were
in there by ourselves."
"Huh? You must be
blind."
"You must be
nuts."
"Frank Sutton, do
you mean to stand there and tell me you didn't see the Martian that rode with
us?"
"You heard me the
first time."
Jim took a deep breath.
"Well, all I've got to say is: if you hadn't had your face buried in your
food the whole time and had looked around you occasionally, you'd see more. How
in—"
"Forget it, forget
it," Frank interrupted, "before you get me sore. There were six
Martians, if you like it that way. Let's get on up and outside and see what the
score is. We're wasting time."
"Well, all
right." They started up the ramps. Jim was very silent; the incident
bothered him more than it did Frank.
Partway up they were
forced to adjust their masks. Ten minutes or so thereafter they reached a room
into which the sunlight came flooding; they hurried through it and outdoors.
A moment later it was
Frank's turn to be puzzled and uncertain. "Jim, I know I was light-headed
at the time but wasn't, uh—wasn't that town we started from just a onetower
burg?"
"It was."
"This one
isn't."
"No, it
isn't."
"We're lost."
"That's
right."
TTffiy WERE IN a large
enclosed courtyard, such as characterizes many Martian buildings. They could
make out the tops of the towers of the city, or some of them, but their view
was much restricted.
"What do you think
we ought to do?" asked Frank.
"Mmm... try to find
a native and see if we can find out where we've landed. I wish I hadn't let the
old fellow get away from us," Jim added. "He spoke Basic."
"You still harping
on that?" said Frank. "Anyway I don't think our chances are good;
this place looks utterly deserted. You know what I think? I think they've just
dumped us."
" 'I think they've
just dumped us,'" agreed Willis.
"Shut up. They
wouldn't do that," Jim went on to Frank in worried tones. He moved around
and stared over the roof of the building. "Say, Frank—"
"Yeah?"
"You see those
three little towers, just alike? You can just make out their tips."
"Yeah? What about
them?"
"I think I've seen
them before."
"Say, I think I
have, too!"
They began to run. Five
minutes later they were standing on the city wall and there was no longer any
doubt about it; they were in the deserted part of Charax. Below them and about
three miles away were the bubble domes of South Colony.
Forty minutes of brisk
walking, varied with dog-trotting, got them home.
They split up and went
directly to their respective homes. "See you later!" Jim called to
Frank and hurried away to his father's house. It seemed to take forever for the
pressure lock to let him through. Before the presssure had equalized he could
hear his mother, echoed by his sister, inquiring via the announcing speaker as
to who was at the door, please?—he decided not to answer but to surprise them.
Then he was inside,
facing Phyllis whose face was frozen in amazement—only to throw herself around
his neck while shouting, "Mother! Mother! Mother! It's Jim! It's
Jim!" and Willis was bouncing around the floor and chorusing "It's
Jim! It's Jim!" and his mother was crowding Phyl aside and hugging him and
getting his face wet with her tears and Jim himself wasn't feeling any too steady.
He managed to push them
away presently. His mother stood back a little and said, "Just let me look
at you, darling. Oh, my poor baby! Are you all right?" She was ready to
weep again.
"Sure, I'm all
right," Jim protested. "Why shouldn't I be? Say, is Dad home?"
Mrs. Marlowe looked
suddenly apprehensive. "No, Jim, he's at work."
"I've got to see
him right away. Say, Mom, what are you looking funny about?"
"Why, because— Uh,
nothing. I'll call your father right away." She went to the phone and
called the ecological laboratory. He could hear her guarded tones: "Mr.
Marlowe? Dear, this is Jane. Could you come home right away?" and his
father's reply, "It wouldn't be convenient. What's up? You sound
strange."
His mother glanced over
her shoulder at Jim, "Are you alone? Can I be overheard?" His father
answered, "What's the matter? Tell me." His mother replied, almost in
a whisper, "He's home."
There was a short
silence. His father answered, "I'll be there right away."
In the meantime Phyllis
was grilling Jim. "Say, Jimmy, what in the world have you been
doing?"
Jim started to answer,
thought better of it. "Kid, you wouldn't believe me if I told you."
"I don't doubt
that. But what have you been doing? You've sure got folks in a stew."
"Never mind. Say,
what day is it?"
"Saturday."
"Saturday the
what?"
"Saturday the
fourteenth of Ceres, of course."
Jim was startled. Pour
days? Only four days since he had left Syrds Minor? Then as he reviewed it in
his mind, he accepted it. Granting Frank's assertion that the time he had spent
down under Cynia was only three hours or so, the rest added up. "Gee! I
guess I'm in time then."
"What do you mean,
'in time'?"
"Huh? Oh, you
wouldn't understand it. Wait a few years."
"Smarty!"
Mrs. Marlowe came away
from the phone. "Your father will be right home, Jim."
"So I heard.
Good."
She looked at him.
"Are you hungry? Is there anything you would like?"
"Sure, fatted calf
and champagne. I'm not really hungry, but I could stand something. How about
some cocoa? I've been living on cold stuff out of cans for days."
"Cocoa there shall
be."
"Better eat what
you can now," put in Phyllis. "Maybe you won't get what you want to
eat when—"
"Phyllis!"
"But, Mother, I was
just going to say that—"
"Phyllis—keep quiet
or leave the room."
Jim's sister subsided
with muttering. Shortly the cocoa was ready and while Jim was drinking it his
father came in. His father shook hands with him soberly as if he were a grown
man. "It's good to see you home. Son."
"It feels mighty
good to be home. Dad." Jim gulped the rest of the cocoa. "But look.
Dad, I've got a lot to tell you and there isn't any time to waste. Where's
Willis?" He looked around. "Anybody see where he went?"
"Never mind Willis.
I want to know—"
"But Willis is
essential to this. Dad. Oh, Willis! Come here!" Willis came waddling out
of the passageway; Jim picked him up.
"All right; you've
got Willis," Mr. Marlowe said. "Now pay attention. What is this mess
you are in, son?"
Jim frowned. "It's
a little hard to know where to start."
"There's a warrant
out for you and Frank!" blurted out Phyllis.
Mr. Marlowe said,
"Jane, will you please try to keep your daughter quiet?"
"Phyllis, you heard
what I said before!"
"Aw, Mother,
everybody knows it!"
"Possibly Jim did
not know it."
Jim said, "Oh, I
guess I did. They had cops chasing us all the way home."
"Frank came with
you?" asked his father.
"Oh, sure! But we
gave 'em the slip. Those Company cops are stupid."
Mr. Marlowe frowned.
"See here, Jim—I'm going to call up the Resident and tell him you are
here. But I'm not going to let you surrender until something a lot more
definite is shown to me than I have seen so far, and certainly not until we've
had your side of the matter. When you do surrender, Dad will go along with you
and stick by you."
Jim sat up straight.
"Surrender? What are you talking about. Dad?"
His father suddenly
looked very old and tired. "Marlowes don't run away from the law. Son. You
know I'll stick by you no matter what you've done. But you've got to face up to
it."
Jim looked at his father
defiantly. "Dad, if you think Frank and I have beaten our way across
better than two thousand miles of Mars just to give up when we get here—well,
you've just got another think coming. And anybody that tries to arrest me is going
to find it a hard job." His right hand, almost instinctively, was hovering
around the place where his holster ordinarily hung. Phyllis was listening
round-eyed; his mother was quietly dripping tears.
His father said,
"Son, you can't take that attitude."
Jim said, "Can't I?
Well, I do. Why don't you find out what the score is before you talk about
giving me up?" His voice was a bit shrill.
His father bit his lip.
His mother said, "Please, James— why don't you wait and hear what he has
to say?"
"Of course I want
to hear what he has to say," Mr. Marlowe answered irritably. "Didn't
I say that? But I can't let my own son sit there and declare himself an
outlaw."
"Please,
James!"
"Speak your piece.
Son."
Jim looked around.
"I don't know as I'm so anxious to, now," he said bitterly.
"This is a fine homecoming. You all act like I was a criminal or
something."
"I'm sorry,
Jim," his father said slowly. "Let's keep first things first. Tell us
what happened."
"Well... all right.
But wait a minute— Phyllis said there was a warrant out for me. For what?"
"Well...
truancy—but that's not important. Actions to the prejudice of good order and
discipline at the school and I myself don't know what they mean by mat. It
doesn't worry me. But the real charges are burglary and theft—and another one
they tacked on a day later, escaping arrest."
"Escaping arrest?
That's silly! They never caught us."
"So? How about the
others?"
"Theft is silly,
too. I didn't steal anything from him— Howe, I mean. Headmaster Howe—he stole
Willis from me. And then he laughed at me when I tried to get him back! I'll
'theft' him!" If he ever shows up around me, I'll burn him down!"
"Jim!"
"Well, I
will!"
"Go on with your
story."
"The burglary
business has got something to it. I busted in to his office, or tried to. But
he can't prove anything. I'd like to see him show how I could crawl through a
ten-inch round hole. And we didn't leave any fingerprints." He added,
"Anyhow, I had a right to. He had Willis locked up inside. Say, Dad, can't
we swear out a warrant against Howe for stealing Willis? Why should he have it
all his own way?"
"Wait a minute,
now. You've got me confused. If you have a cause for action against the
headmaster, I'll certainly back you up in it. But I want to get things straight.
What hole? Did you cut a hole in the headmaster's door?"
"No, Willis
did."
"Willis! How can he
cut anything?"
"Darned if I know.
He just grew an arm with a sort of a claw on the end and cut his way out. I
called to him and out he came."
Mr. Marlowe rubbed his
forehead. "This gets more confusing all the time. How did you boys get
here?"
"By subway. You
see—"
"By subway!"
Jim looked thwarted. His
mother put in, "James dear, I think perhaps he could tell his story better
if we just let him tell it straight through, without interrupting."
"I think you are
right," Mr. Marlowe agreed. "I'll reserve my questions. Phyllis, get
me a pad and pencil."
Thus facilitated, Jim
started over and told a reasonably consecutive and complete story, from Howe's
announcement of military-school inspections to their translation via Martian
"subway" from Cynia to Charax. When Jim had done, Mr. Marlowe pulled
his chin. "Jim, if you didn't have a life-time reputation for stubborn
honesty, I'd think you were romancing. As it is, I have to believe it, but it
is the most fantastic thing I ever heard."
"You still think I
ought to surrender?"
"Eh? No, no—this
puts it in a different light. You leave it up to Dad. I'll call the Resident
and—"
"Just a second,
Dad."
"Eh?"
"I didn't tell you
all of it."
"What? You must.
Son, if I am to—"
"I didn't want to
get my story fouled up with another issue entirely. I'll tell you, but I want
to know something. Isn't the colony supposed to be on its way by now?"
"It was supposed to
have been," agreed his father. "Migration would have started
yesterday by the original schedule. But there has been a two-week
postponement."
"That's not a
postponement, Dad; that's a frame-up. The Company isn't going to allow the
colony to migrate this year. They mean to make us stay here all through the
winter."
"What? Why, that's
ridiculous, Son; a polar winter is no place for terrestrials. But you are
mistaken, it's just a postponement; the Company is revamping the power system
at North Colony and is taking advantage of an unusually late winter to finish
it before we get there."
"I'm telling you.
Dad, that's just a stall. The plan is to keep the colony here until it's too
late and force you to stay here through the winter. I can prove it."
"How?"
"Where's
Willis?" The bouncer had wandered off again, checking up on his domain.
"Never mind Willis.
You've made an unbelievable charge. What makes you think such a thing?"
"But I've got to
have Willis to prove it. Here, boy! Come to Jim." Jim gave a rapid summary
of what he had learned through Willis's phonographic hearing, following which
he tried to get Willis to perform.
Willis was glad to
perform. He ran over almost all of the boys' conversation of the past few days,
repeated a great amount of Martian speech that was incomprehensible out of
context, and sang iQuien Es La Sefiorita? But he could not, or would not,
recall Beecher's conversation.
Jim was still coaxing
him when the phone sounded. Mr. Marlowe said, "Phyllis, answer that."
She trotted back in a
moment. "It's for you. Daddy."
Jim shut Willis up; they
could hear both ends of the conversation. "Marlowe? This is the Resident
Agent. I hear that boy of yours has turned up."
Jim's father glanced
over his shoulder, hesitated. "Yes. He's here."
"Well, keep him
there. I'm sending a man over to pick him up."
Mr. Marlowe hesitated
again. "That's not necessary, Mr. Kruger. I'm not through talking with
him. He won't go away."
"Come, come,
Marlowe—you can't interfere with orderly legal processes. I'm executing that
warrant at once."
"You are? You just
think you are." Mr. Marlowe started to add something, thought better of
it, and switched off. The phone sounded again almost at once. "If that's
the Resident," he said, "I won't speak to him. If I do, I'll say
something I'll regret."
But it was not; it was
Frank's father. "Marlowe? Jamie, this is Pat Sutton." The
conversation showed that each father had gotten about to the same point with
his son.
"We were just about
to try to get something out of Jim's bouncer," Mr. Marlowe added. "It
seems he overheard a pretty damning conversation."
"Yes, I know,"
agreed Mr. Sutton. "I want to hear it, too. Hold it till we get
there."
"Fine. Oh, by the
way—friend Kruger is out to arrest the kids right away. Watch out."
"How well I know
it; he just called me. And I put a flea in his ear. 'Bye now!"
Mr. Marlowe switched
off, then went to the front door and locked it. He did the same to the door of
the tunnels. He was none too soon; the signal showing that someone had entered
the pressure lock came on shortly. "Who is it?" called out Jim's
father.
"Company
business!"
"What sort of
Company business and who is it?"
"This is the
Resident's proctor. I've come for James Marlowe, Junior."
"You might as well
go away again. You won't get him." There was a whispered exchange outside
the door, then the lock was rattled.
"Open up that
door," came another voice. "We have a warrant."
"Go away. I'm
switching off the speaker." Mr. Marlowe did so.
The pressure lock
indicator showed presently that the visitors had left, but shortly it indicated
occupancy again. Mr. Marlowe switched the speaker back on. "If you've come
back, you might as well leave," he said.
"What sort of a
welcome is this, Jamie my boy?" came Mr. Sutton's voice.
"Oh, Pat! Are you
alone?"
"Only my boy
Francis and that's all."
They were let in.
"Did you see anything of proctors?" Mr. Marlowe inquired.
"Yep, I ran into
'em."
"Pop told them that
if they touched me he'd burn their legs off," Frank said proudly,
"and he would, too."
Jim caught his father's
eye. Mr. Marlowe looked away. Mr. Sutton went on, "Now what's this about
Jim's pet having evidence for us? Let's crank him up and hear him talk."
"We've been trying
to," Jim said. "I'll try again. Here, Willis—" Jim took him in
his lap. "Now, look, Willis, do you remember Headmaster Howe?"
Willis promptly became a
featureless ball.
"That's not the way
to do it," objected Frank. "You remember what set him off before.
Hey, Willis." Willis extended his eyes. "Listen to me, chum. 'Good
afternoon. Good afternoon, Mark,' Frank continued in a fair imitation of the
Agent General's rich, affected tones. " 'Sit down, my boy.'"
"'Always happy to
see you,'" Willis continued in exact imitation of Beecher's voice. He went
on from there, reciting perfectly the two conversations he had overheard
between the headmaster and the Resident Agent General, and including the
meaningless interlude between them.
When he had finished and
seemed disposed to continue with all that had followed up to the present
moment, Jim shut him off.
"Well," said
Jim's father, "what do you think of it. Pat?"
"I think it's
terrible," put in Jim's mother.
Mr. Sutton screwed up
his face. "Tomorrow I am taking myself down to Syrtis Minor and there I
shall take the place apart with my two hands."
"An admirable
sentiment," agreed Mr. Marlowe, "but this is a matter for the whole
colony. I think our first step should be to call a town meeting and let
everyone know what we are up against."
"Humph! No doubt
you are right but you'll be taking all the fan out of it."
Mr. Marlowe smiled.
"I imagine there will be excitement enough to suit you before this is
over. Kruger isn't going to like it—and neither is the Honorable Mr. Gaines
Beecher."
Mr. Sutton wanted Dr.
MacRae to examine Frank's throat and Jim's father decided, over Jim's protest,
that it would be a good idea to have him examine Jim as well. The two men
escorted the boys to the Doctor's house. There Mr. Marlowe instructed them,
"Stay here until we get back, kids. I don't want Kruger's proctors picking
you up."
"I'd like to see
them try!"
"Me, too."
"I don't want them
to try; I want to settle the matter first. We're going over to the Resident's
office and offer to pay for the food you kids appropriated and, Jim, I'll offer
to pay for me damage Willis did to Headmaster Howe's precious door. Then—"
"But, Dad, we
oughn't to pay for that. Howe shouldn't have locked him up."
"I agree with the
kid," said Mr. Sutton. 'The food, now, that's another matter. The boys
took it; we pay for it."
"You're both
right," agreed Mr. Marlowe, "but it's worth it to knock the props out
of these ridiculous charges. Then I'm going to swear out a warrant against Howe
for attempting to steal, or enslave, Willis. What would you say it was. Pat?
Steal, or enslave?"
"Call it 'steal';
you'll not be raising side issues, then."
"All right. Then I
shall insist that he consult the planet office before taking any action. I
think that will stop his clock for the time being."
"Dad," put in
Jim, "you aren't going to tell the Resident that we've found out about the
migration frame-up, are you? He would just turn around and call Beecher."
"Not just yet,
though he's bound to know at the town meeting. He won't be able to call Beecher
then; Deimos sets in two hours." Mr. Marlowe glanced at his watch.
"See you later, boys. We've got things to do."
Doctor MacRae looked up
as they came in. "Maggie, bar the door!" he called out. "We've
got two dangerous criminals."
"Howdy, Doc."
"Come in and rest
yourselves. Tell me all about it."
It was fully an hour
later that MacRae said, "Well, Frank, I suppose I had better look you
over. Then I'll have a look at you, Jim."
"There's nothing
wrong with me. Doc."
"How would like a
clout in the head? Start some more coffee while I take care of Frank." The
room was well stocked with the latest diagnostic equipment, but MacRae did not
bother with it. He tilted Frank's head back, told him to say aaaah!, thumped
his chest, and listened to his heart. "You'll live," he decided.
"Any kid who can hitchhike from Syrtis to Charax will live a long
time."
"'Hitchhike'?"
asked Frank.
"Beat your way.
It's an expression that was used way back when women wore skirts. Your turn,
Jim." He took even less time to dispose of Jim. Then the three friends
settled back to visit.
"I want to know
more about this night you spent in the cabbage head," Doc announced.
"Willis I can understand, since any Martian creature can tuck his tail in
and live indefinitely without air. But by rights you two laddie bucks should
have smothered. The plant closed up entirely?"
"Oh, yes," Jim
assured him, then related the event in more detail. When he got to the point
about the flashlight MacRae
stopped him.
"That's it, that's
it. You didn't mention that before. The flashlight saved your lives, son."
"Huh? How?"
"Photosynthesis.
You shine light on green leaf and it can no more help taking in carbon dioxide
and giving off oxygen than you can help breathing." The doctor stared at
the ceiling, his lips moving while he figured. "Must have been pretty
stuffy, just the same; you were short on green leaf surface. What kind of a
torch was it?"
"A G.E. 'Midnight
Sun.' It was stuffy, terribly."
"A 'Midnight Sun'
has enough candle power to do the trick. Hereafter I'll carry one if I'm going
further than twenty feet from my front stoop. It's a good dodge."
"Something that
still puzzles me," said Jim, "is how I could see a movie that covered
every bit of the time I've had Willis, minute by minute, without missing anything,
and have it turn out to be only three or four hours."
"That," Doc
said slowly, "is not nearly so mysterious as the other matter, the matter
of why you were shown this."
"Huh?"
"I've wondered
about that, too," put in Frank. "After all, Willis is a pretty
insignificant creature—take it easy, Jim! What was the point in running over
his biography for Jim? What do you think. Doc?"
"The only
hypothesis I've got on that point is so wildly fantastic that I'll keep it to
myself, thank you. But on the point of time, Jim—can you think of any way to
photograph a person's memories?"
"Uh, no."
"I'll go further
and state flatly that it is impossible. Yet you described seeing what Willis
remembered. That suggest anything to you?"
"No," admitted
Jim, "it's got me stumped. But I did see it."
"Sure, you
did—because seeing takes place in the brain and not in the eye. I can close my
eyes and 'see' the Great Pyramid shimmering in the desert heat. I can see the
donkeys and hear the porters yelling at the tourists. See 'em? Shucks, I can
smell 'em—but it's just my memory.
Jim looked thoughtful
but Frank looked incredulous. "Say, Doc, what are you talking about? You
never saw the Great Pyramid; it was blown up in World War III." Frank was,
of course, correct as to his historical facts; the eastern allies should never
have used the Pyramid of Cheops as a place to stockpile atom bombs.
Doctor MacRae looked
annoyed. "Can't you permit a man a figure of speech? You tend to your own
business. Now back to what I was saying, Jim. When only one hypothesis covers
the facts, you've got to accept it. You saw what the old Martian wanted you to
see. Call it hypnosis."
"But— But—"
Jim was wildly indignant; it felt like an attack on his very inner being.
"But I did see it, I tell you. I was there."
"I'll string along
with Doc," Frank told him. "You were still seeing things on the trip
back."
"How would you like
a punch in the nose? The old boy did so make the trip back with us; if you had
kept your eyes open, you would have seen him."
"Easy, there,"
cautioned Doc, "if you lugs want to fight, go outside. Has it occurred to
you that both of you might be right?"
"What? How could we
be?" objected Frank.
"I don't like to
put words to it, but I can tell you this: I've lived long enough to know that
man does not live by bread alone and that the cadaver I perform an autopsy on
is not the man himself. The most wildly impossible philosophy of ail is
materialism. We'll leave it at that."
Frank was about to
object again when the lock signalled visitors; the boys' patents were back.
"Come in, come in, gentlemen," the doctor roared. "You're just
in time. We were having a go at solipsism. Pull up a pulpit and take part.
Coffee?"
"Solipsism, is
it?" said Mr. Sutton. "Francis, pay no mind to the old heathen. You
listen to what Father deary tells you."
"He'll pay no mind
to me anyhow," MacRae answered.
"That's the healthy
thing about kids. How did you make out with the Lord High Executioner?"
Mr. Marlowe chuckled.
"Kruger was fit to be tied."
The called meeting of
the colonists took place that evening in the town hall, central building of the
star-shaped group. Mr. Marlowe and Mr. Sutton, having sponsored the meeting,
arrived early. They found the meeting-room doors closed and Kruger's two proctors
posted outside. Mr. Marlowe ignored the fact (hat they had been attempting to
arrest Frank and Jim only a few hours ago; he offered them a civil good evening
and said, "Let's get the place opened up. People will be arriving any
minute now." The proctors did not
move. The senior of diem, a man named Dumont, announced, "There'll be no
meeting tonight."
"What? Why
not?"
"Mr. Kruger's
orders."
"Did he say
why?"
"No."
"This
meeting," Mr. Marlowe told him, "has been properly called and will be
held. Stand aside."
"Now, Mr. Marlowe,
don't make things tough for yourself. I've got my orders and—"
Mr. Sutton crowded
forward. "Let me handle him, Jamie." He hitched at his belt. Behind
me men, Frank glanced at Jim with a grin and hitched at his belt. All four of
them were armed, as were the proctors; the two fathers had decided not to
depend on Kruger's self-restraint while waiting for instructions from Syrtis
Minor about the warrant.
Dumont looked nervously
at Sutton. The colony had no real police force; these two were clerks in the
Company's office and proctors only by Kruger's deputization. "You people
have got no call to be running around armed to the teeth, inside (he
colony," he complained.
"Oh, so that's
it?" Mr. Sutton said sweetly. "Well, this job calls for no gun. Here,
Francis—hold my heater." With empty holster he advanced on them. "Now
would you like to be tossed out gently or would you prefer to bounce?"
For years before coming
to Mars Mr. Sutton had used something other than his engineering degree to
dominate tough construction gangs. He was not much bigger than Dumont but
immeasurably tougher. Dumont backed into his cohort and stepped on his toes.
"Now see here, Mr. Sutton, you've no— Hey! Mr. Kruger!"
They all looked around.
The Resident was approaching. He took in the scene and said briskly,
"What's this? Sutton, are you interfering with my men?"
"Not a bit of
it," denied Mr. Sutton. "They were interfering with me. Tell them to
stand aside."
Kruger shook his head.
"The meeting is canceled."
Mr. Marlowe stepped
forward. "By whom?"
"Icanceled
it."
"By what authority?
I have the approval of all councilors and will, if necessary, get you the names
of twenty colonists." Twenty colonists could call a meeting without
permission from the council, under the colony's rules.
"That's beside the
point. The rule reads that meetings are to consider matters 'of public
interest'; it cannot be construed as 'of public interest' to agitate about
criminal indictments in advance of trial—and I won't let you take advantage of
the rules to do so. After all, I have the final word. I do not intend to
surrender to mob rule and agitation."
A crowd was forming,
colonists come to me meeting. Marlowe said, "Are you through?"
"Yes, except to say
that these others and you yourself should return to your quarters."
"They will do as
they please—and so will I. Mr. Kruger, I am amazed to hear you say that a
civil-rights case is not of public interest. Our neighbors here have boys who
are still under the care, if you call it that, of Headmaster Howe; they are
interested in how their sons are treated. However, that is not the purpose of
the meeting. I give you my word that neither Mr. Sutton nor I intend to ask the
colony to take any action about the charges against our sons. Will you accept
that and withdraw your proctors?"
"What is the
purpose, then?"
"It's a matter of
urgent interest to every member of the colony. I'll discuss it inside."
"Hummph!"
By this time several
councilors were in the crowd. One of them, Mr. Juan Montez, stepped forward.
"Just a minute. Mr. Marlowe, when you called me about this meeting, I had
no notion that the Resident objected."
"The Resident has
no option in the matter."
"Well, that's never
come up before. He does have a veto over actions of meetings. Why don't you
tell us what tire meeting is for?"
"Don't give in,
Jamie!" It was Doctor MacRae; he shouldered forward. "What kind of
nincompoop are you, Montez? I'm sony I voted for you. We meet when it suits us,
not when Kruger says we may. How about it, folks?"
There was a murmur of
approval. Mr. Marlowe said, "I wasn't going to tell him. Doc. I want
everybody here and the doors closed when I talk."
Montez went into a
huddle with other councilors. Out of it came Hendrix, the chairman. "Mr.
Marlowe, just to keep things regular, will you tell the council why you want
this meeting?"
Jim's father shook his
head. "You okayed the meeting. Otherwise I would have collected twenty
signatures and forced a meeting. Can't you stand up to Kruger?"
"We don't need
them, Jamie," MacRae assured him. He turned to the crowd, now growing
fast. "Who wants a meeting? Who wants to hear what Marlowe has to tell
us?"
"I do!" came a
shout.
"Who's mat?
Oh—Kelly. All right, Kelly and I make two. Are there eighteen more here who
don't have to ask Kruger for permission to sneeze? Speak up."
There was another shout
and another. "That's three—and four." Seconds later MacRae called off
the twentieth; he turned to the Resident. "Get your stooges out of that
doorway, Kruger."
Kruger sputtered.
Hendrix whispered with him, then motioned the two proctors away. They were only
too happy to treat this as a relayed order from Kruger; the crowd poured into
the hall.
Kruger took a seat in
the rear; ordinarily he sat on the platform.
Jim's father found that
none of the councilors cared to preside; he stepped to the platform himself.
"Let's elect a chairman," he announced.
"You run it,
Jamie," It was Doc MacRae.
"Let's have order,
please. Do I hear a nomination?"
"Mr.
Chairman—"
"Yes, Mr.
Konski?"
"I nominate
you."
"Very well. Now
let's have some others." But there were none; he kept the gavel by
unanimous consent.
Mr. Marlowe told them
that news had come to him which vitally affected the colony. He then gave the
bald facts about how Willis had come into Howe's hands. Kruger stood up.
"Marlowe!"
"Address the chair,
please."
"Mr.
Chairman," Kruger acceded sourly, "you said this meeting was not to
stir up sympathy for your son. You are simply trying to keep him from having to
take his medicine. You—"
Mr. Marlowe pounded his
gavel. "You're out of order. Sit down."
"I won't sit down.
You had the bare-faced gall to—"
"Mr. Kelly, I
appoint you sergeant-at-anns. Keep order. Pick your own deputies."
Kruger sat down. Mr.
Marlowe went on, "This meeting has nothing to do with the charges against
my son and Pat Sutton's boy, but the news I have came through them. You've all
seen Martian roundheads—bouncers, the kids call them, and you know their
amazing ability to repeat sounds. Probably most of you have heard my son's pet
perform. It happened that this particular roundhead was within hearing when
some things were discussed that we all need to know about. Jim—bring your pet
here."
Jim, feeling
self-conscious, mounted the platform and sat Willis on the speaker's table.
Willis looked around and promptly battened down all hatches. "Jim,"
his father whispered urgently, "snap him out of it."
"I'll try,"
agreed Jim. "Come on, boy. Nobody's going to hurt Willis. Come out; Jim
wants to talk to you."
His father said to the
audience, "These creatures are timid. Please be very quiet," then,
"How about it, Jim?"
"I'm trying."
"Confound it, we
should have made a recording."
Willis chose this minute
to come out of hiding. "Look, Willis boy," Jim went on, "Jim
wants you to talk. Everybody is waiting for Willis to talk. Come on, now. 'Good
afternoon. Good afternoon. Mark.'"
Willis picked it up.
" 'Sit down, my boy. Always happy to see you.'" He went on, reeling
off the words of Howe and Beecher.
Somebody recognized
Beecher's voice; there was a muffled exclamation as he passed his knowledge on.
Mr. Marlowe made frantic shushing signs.
Presently, as Beecher
was expounding by proxy his theory of "legitimate graft," Kruger got
up. Kelly placed hands on his shoulders and pushed him down. Kruger started to
protest;
Kelly placed a hand over
Kruger's mouth. He then smiled; it was something he had been wanting to do ever
since Kruger had first been assigned to the colony.
The audience got
restless between the two significant conversations; Mr. Marlowe promised by
pantomime that the best was yet to come. He need not have worried; Willis, once
wound up, was as hard to stop as an after-dinner speaker.
There was amazed silence
when he had finished, then a murmur mat became a growl. It changed to uproar as
everyone tried to talk at once. Marlowe pounded for order and Willis closed up.
Presently Andrews, a young technician, got the floor.
"Mr. Chairman... we
know how important this is, if it's true—but how reliable is that
beastie?"
"Eh? I don't think
it's possible for one of them to repeat other than verbatim. Is there a
psychological expert present who might give us an opinion? How about you, Dr.
Ibanez?"
"I agree, Mr.
Marlowe. A roundhead can originate speech on its mental level, but a speech
such as we just heard is something it has listened to. It repeats
parrot-fashion exactly what it has heard. I doubt if such a 'recording,' if I
may call it that, may be modified after it has been impressed on the animal's
nervous system; it's an involuntary reflex—complicated and beautiful, but
reflex nevertheless."
"Does that satisfy
you, Andy?"
"Uh, no. Everybody
knows that a bouncer is just a superparrot and not smart enough to lie. But is
that the Resident General's voice? It sounds like it, but I've only heard him
over the radio."
Someone called out,
"It's Beecher. I had to listen to his drivel often enough, when I was
stationed at Syrtis."
Andrews shook his head.
"Sure, it sounds like him, but we've got to know. It could be a clever
actor."
Kruger had been quiet,
in a condition resembling shock. The revelation had come as a surprise to him,
too, as Beecher had not dared trust anyone on the spot. But Kruger's con-
science was not easy; there were tell-tale signs in his own despatch file that
Willis's report was correct; migration required a number of routine orders from
the planet office. He was uncomfortably aware that none of the proper
groundwork had been laid if, as was the official claim, migration were to take
place in less than two weeks.
But Andrews's comment
gave him a straw to clutch. Standing, he said, "I'm glad somebody has
sense enough not to be swindled. How long did it take you to teach him that,
Marlowe?"
Kelly said, "Shall
I gag him, chief?"
"No. This has to be
met. I suppose it's a matter of whether or not you believe my boy and his chum.
Do any of you wish to question them?"
A long, lean, lanky
individual unfolded himself from a rear seat. "I can settle it."
"Eh? Very well, Mr.
Toland, you have the floor."
"Got to get some
apparatus. Take a few minutes." Toland was an electronic engineer and
sound technician.
"Oh— I think I see
what you mean. You'll need a comparison model of Beecher's voice, won't
you?"
"Sure. But I've got
all I need. Every time Beecher made a speech, Kruger wanted it recorded."
Volunteers were found to
help Toland, then Marlowe suggested that it was time for a stretch. At once
Mrs. Pottle stood up. "Mr. Marlowe!"
"Yes, Mrs. Pottle.
Quiet, everybody."
"I for one will not
remain here one minute longer and listen to this nonsense! The idea of making
such charges against dear Mr. Beecher! To say nothing of what you let that
awful man Kelly do to Mr. Kruger! And as for that beast—" She pointed to
Willis. "It is utterly unreliable, as I know full well." She paused
to snort, then said, "Come, dear," to Mr. Pottle, and started to
flounce out.
"Stop her,
Kelly!" Mr. Marlowe went on quietly, "I had hoped that no one would
try to leave until we reached a decision. If the colony decides to act it may
be to our advantage to keep it as a surprise. Will the meeting authorize me to
take steps to see that no scooter leaves the colony until you have made up your
minds about the issue?"
There was just one
"no," from Mrs. Pottle. "Conscript some help, Mr. Kelly,"
Marlowe ordered, "and carry out the will of the meeting."
"Right,
chief!"
"You can go now,
Mrs. Pottle. Not you, Mr. Kruger." Mr. Pottle hesitated in bewilderment,
then trotted after his wife.
Toland returned and set
up his apparatus on the platform. With Jim's help, Willis was persuaded to
perform again, this time into a recorder. Shortly Toland held up his hand.
"That's enough. Let me find some matching words." He selected
"colony," "company," "afternoon," and
"Martian" because they were easy to find in each recording, Willis's
and an identified radio speech of the Resident General. Each he checked with
care, throwing complex standing waves on the bright screen of an oscilloscope,
waves that earmarked the peculiar timbre of an individual's voice as certainly
as a fingerprint would identify his body.
At last he stood up.
"It's Beecher's voice," he said flatly.
Jim's father again had
to pound for order. When he had got it, he said, "Very well—what is your
pleasure?"
Someone shouted,
"Let's lynch Beecher." The chairman suggested that they stick to
practical objectives.
Someone else called out,
"What's Kruger got to say about it?"
Marlowe turned to
Kruger. "Mr. Resident Agent, you speak for the Company. What about
it?"
Kruger wet his lips.
"If one assumes that that beast is actually reporting statements of the
Agent General—"
"Quit
stalling!"
"Toland proved
it!"
Kruger's eyes darted
around; he was faced with a decision impossible for a man of his temperament.
"Well, it's really no business of mine," he said angrily. "I'm
about to be transferred."
MacRae got up. "Mr.
Kruger, you are custodian of our welfare. You mean to say you won't stand up
for our rights?"
"Well, now, Doctor,
I work for the Company. If this is its policy—and I'm not admitting it—you
can't expect me to go against it."
"I work for the
Company, too," the Doctor growled, "but I didn't sell myself to it,
body and soul." His eyes swept the crowd. "How about it, folks? Shall
we throw him out on his ear?"
Marlowe had to bang for
order. "Sit down. Doctor. We haven't time to waste on trivia."
"Mr.
Chairman—"
"Yes, Mrs.
Palmer?"
"What do you think
we ought to do?"
"I would rather
that suggestions came from the floor."
"Oh,
nonsense—you've known about it longer than we have; you must have an opinion.
Speak up."
Marlowe saw that her
wish was popular. "Very well, I speak for myself and Mr. Sutton. By
contract we are entitled to migrate and the Company is obligated to let us. I
say go ahead and do so, at once."
"I so move!"
"I second!"
"Question!"—"Question!"
"Is there
debate?" asked Marlowe.
"Just a moment, Mr.
Chairman—" The speaker was one Humphrey Gibbs, a small precise individual.
"—we are acting hastily and, if I may say so, not in proper procedure. We
have not exhausted our possible reliefs. We should communicate with Mr.
Beecher. It may be that there are good reasons for this change in policy—"
"How are you going
to like a hundred below!"
"Mr. Chairman, I
really must insist on order."
"Let him have his
say," Marlowe ordered.
"As I was saying,
there may be good reasons, but the Company board back on Earth is perhaps not
fully aware of conditions here. If Mr. Beecher is unable to grant us relief,
then we should communicate with the board, reason with them. But we should not
take the law into our own hands. If worst comes to worst, we have a contract;
if forced to do so, we can always sue." He sat down.
MacRae got up again.
"Anybody mind if I talk? I don't want to hog the proceedings."
Silence gave approval; he went on, "So this pantywaist wants to sue! With
the temperature outside a hundred and thirty below by the time he has
'exhausted his means'—and us!—and with the rime frost a foot deep on the ground
he wants it put on some judge's calendar, back on Earth, and hire a lawyer!
"If you want a
contract enforced, you have to enforce it yourself. You know what lies behind
this; it showed up last season when the Company cut down on the household
allowance and started charging excess baggage. I warned you then —but the board
was a hundred million miles away and you paid rather than fight. The Company
hates the expense of moving us, but more important they are bloody anxious to
move more immigrants in here faster than we can take them; they think they see
a cheap way out by keeping both North Colony and South Colony filled up all the
time, instead of building more buildings. As Sister Gibbs put it, they don't
realize the conditions here and they don't know that we can't do effective work
in the winter.
"The question is not
whether or not we can last out a polar winter, the Eskimo caretakers do that
every season. It isn't just a matter of contract; it's a matter of whether we
are going to be free men, or are we going to let our decisions be made for us
on another planet, by men who have never set foot on Mars!
"Just a minute—let
me finish! We are the advance guard. When the atmosphere project is finished,
millions of others will follow. Are they going to be ruled by a board of
absentee owners on Terra? Is Mars to remain a colony of Earth? Now is the time
to settle it!"
There was dead silence,
then scattered applause. Marlowe said, "Is there more debate?"
Mr. Sutton got up.
"Doc has something there. It was never in my blood to love absentee
landlords."
Kelly called out, "Right
you are. Pat!"
Jim's father said,
"I rule that subject out of order. The question before the house is to
migrate, at once, and nothing else. Are you ready for the question?"
They were—and it was
carried unanimously. If any refrained from voting, at least they did not vote
against. That matter settled, by another ballot they set up an emergency
committee, the chairman to hold power subject to review by the committee, and
the committee's decisions to be subject to review by the colony.
James Marlowe, Senior,
was elected chairman. Dr. MacRae's name was proposed but he refused to let it
be considered. Mr. Marlowe got even with him by sticking him on the committee.
South Colony held at the
time five hundred and nine persons, from the youngest baby to old Doc MacRae.
There were eleven scooters on hand; enough but barely enough to move everyone
at one time, provided they were stacked almost like freight and each person was
limited to a few pounds only of hand baggage. A routine migration was usually
made in three or more sections, with extra scooters provided from Syrtis Minor.
Jim's father decided to
move everyone at once and hope that events would permit sending back for
personal possessions. The squawks were many, but he stood by his guns, the
committee ratified and no one tried to call a town meeting. He set dawn Monday
as the zero hour.
Kruger was allowed to
keep his office; Marlowe preferred to run the show from his own. But Kelly, who
remained a sort of de facto chief of police, was instructed to keep a constant
watch over him. Kelly called Marlowe Sunday afternoon. "Hey, chief, what
do you know? A couple of Company cops just arrived by scooter to take your boy
and the Sutton kid back to Syrtis."
Marlowe considered it.
Kruger must have phoned Beecher the moment he heard that the boys were home, he
decided. "Where are they now?"
"Right here, in
Kruger's office. We arrested them."
"Bring them over.
I'd like to question them."
"Right."
They showed up shortly,
two very disgruntled men, disarmed and escorted by Kelly and an assistant.
"That's fine, Mr. Kelly. No, no need to stay—I'm armed."
When Kelly and his
deputy had left, one of the Company men said, "You can't get away with
this, you know."
"You're not
hurt," Marlowe said reasonably, "and you'll get your guns back
presently. I just want to ask you some questions." But all he had gotten
out of them, several minutes later, was a series of begrudged negative answers.
The intracolony phone sounded again; Kelly's face appeared on the screen. "Chief?
You wouldn't believe it—"
"Wouldn't believe
what?"
"That old fox
Kruger has skipped in the scooter those two birds came in on. I didn't even
know he could drive."
Marlowe's calm face
concealed his feelings. After a short time he answered, "Departure time is
stepped up to sundown, today. Drop everything and get the word around." He
consulted a chart. "That's two hours and ten minutes from now."
The squawks were louder
even than before; nevertheless as the Sun touched the horizon, the first
scooter got underway. The rest followed at thirty second intervals. As the Sun
disappeared the last one shoved off and the colony was headed north on its
seasonal migration.
FOUR OF THE scooters
were older types and slower, less than two hundred miles per hour top speed.
They were placed in the van as pacesetters. Around midnight one of them
developed engine trouble; the column had to slow down. About 3 a.m. it quit
completely; it was necessary to stop and distribute its passengers among the
other scooters—a cold and risky business.
MacRae and Marlowe
climbed back into the headquarters car, last in the column. The doctor glanced
at his watch. "Planning to stop in Hesperidum now. Skipper?" he asked
as the scooter started up. They had passed Cynia station without stopping;
Hesperidum lay a short distance ahead, with Syrtis Minor some seven hundred
miles beyond it.
Marlowe frowned. "I
don't want to. If we lay over at Hesperidum, that means waiting until sundown
for ice and a full day's loss of time. With Kruger ahead of us that gives
Beecher a whole day in which to figure out a way to stop us. If I were sure the
ice would hold after sunrise long enough for us to get there—" He stopped
and chewed his lip.
Back at South Colony it
was early winter and the canal ice would remain hard until spring, but here
they were already close to the equator; the canals froze every night and thawed
every day under the extreme daily changes in temperature permitted by Mars'
thin blanket of air. North of the equator, where they were headed, the spring
floods from the melting northern polar cap had already started; ice formed in
the flooding canal currents at night, but it was floe ice, riding with the
current, and night clouds helped to save the daytime heat.
"Suppose you do go
on through, what's your plan, Skipper?" MacRae persisted.
"Go straight to the
boat basin, ramp the scooters, and load whatever boats are there. As soon as
the ice is rotten enough for the boats to break through it, start them north.
I'd like to have a hundred and fifty or so of us out of Syrtis Minor and headed
north before Beecher recovers from his surprise. I haven't any real plan except
to keep forcing events so that he doesn't have time to plan, either. I want to
hand him a set of accomplished facts."
MacRae nodded.
"Audacity, that's the ticket. Go ahead with it."
"I want to, but I'm
afraid of the ice. If a scooter breaks through there'll be people killed—and my
fault."
"Your drivers are
smart enough to spread out in echelon once the Sun is up. Jamie, I found out a
long time ago that you have to take some chances in this life. Otherwise you
are just a vegetable, headed for the soup pot." He paused and peered out
past the driver. "I see a light ahead that ought to be Hesperidum. Make up
your mind, Jamie."
Marlowe did not answer.
After a time the light was behind them.
When the Sun came up
Marlowe had his driver cut out of column and take the lead. It was near nine
when they passed Syrtis Minor scooter station, without stopping. They ploughed
on past the space port and turned right into the boat basin that marked the
terminus of the main canal from the north. Marlowe's driver drove onto the ramp
while he was still lowering his crawling gear, with no respect for his runners.
The lead car crawled far along the ramp and parked; the others closed in behind
it.
Out of the headquarters
car climbed Marlowe, Kelly, and MacRae, followed by Jim, carrying Willis. Other
scooter doors opened and people started getting out. "Tell them to get
back into their cars, Kelly," Mr. Marlowe snapped. Hearing this, Jim
placed himself behind his father and tried to avoid attracting attention.
Marlowe stared angrily
at the basin. There was not a boat in it. Across the basin one small launch was
drawn up on skids, its engine dismounted. Finally Marlowe turned to MacRae.
"Well, Doc, I'm up a tree; how do I get down?"
"You are no worse
off than if you had stopped at Hesperidum."
"And no
better."
A man came out of one of
the row of warehouses ringing the basin and approached them. "What's all
this?" he inquired, staring at the parked scooters. "A circus?"
"It's the seasonal
migration."
"Wondered when you
folks were coming through. Hadn't heard anyting about it."
"Where are all the
boats?"
"Still spread out
here and there, at the Project camps mostly, I suppose. Not my responsibility.
Better call the traffic office."
Marlowe frowned again.
"At least you can tell me where the temporary quarters are." To take
care of the relays of colonists a warehouse was always set aside at each
migration and fitted up as a barracks; the one Company hostelry. Hotel
Marsopolis, had only twenty beds.
The man looked puzzled.
"Now that you mention it, I don't know of any such preparations being
made. Looks like the schedule was kind of fouled up, doesn't it?"
Marlowe swore, realizing
his question had been foolish. Beecher, of course, had made no preparations for
a migration he did not intend to permit. "Is there a phone around
here?"
"Inside, in my
office—I'm the warehouse storekeeper. Help yourself."
"Thanks," said
Marlowe and started off. MacRae followed him.
"What's your plan,
son?"
"I'm going to call
Beecher."
"Do you think
that's wise?"
"Confound it, I've
got to get those people out of those cars. There are young babies in there—and
women."
"They're
safe."
"Look, Doc, Beecher
has got to do something about it, now that we're here."
MacRae shrugged.
"You're the cook."
Marlowe argued bis way
past several secretaries and finally got Beecher on the screen. The Agent
General looked out at him without recognition. "Yes? Speak up, my good
man, what is this urgent business?"
"My name is
Marlowe. I'm executive chairman of the colonists from South Colony. I want to
know—"
"Oh, yes! The
famous Mr. Marlowe. We saw your tattered army coming through." Beecher
turned away and said something in an aside. Kruger's voice answered him.
"Well, now that we
are here, what are you going to do about us?"
"Do? Isn't that
obvious? As soon as the ice forms tonight you can all turn around and go back
where you came from. All except you—you stay here for trial. And your son, if I
recall correctly."
Marlowe held his temper.
"That isn't what I mean. I want living space, with cooking and toilet
accommodations, for five hundred people."
Beecber waved the
problem away. "Let them stay where they are. A day won't hurt them. Teach
them a lesson."
Marlowe started to
answer, thought better of it and switched off. "You were right. Doc. There
was no point in talking with him."
"Well—no harm done,
either."
They went outside, there
to find that Kelly had strung a line of his deputies around the scooters.
"After you went inside, Boss, I got uneasy, so I stationed some of the
boys around." "You're a better
general than I am," Marlowe told him.
"Any trouble?"
"One of Beecher's
cops showed up, but he went away
again."
"Why didn't you
grab him?" asked MacRae.
"Well, I wanted
to," Kelly answered, "but he kept going when I yelled at him. I
couldn't stop him without shooting, so I let him go."
"Should have winged
him," said MacRae.
"Should I
have?" Kelly said to Marlowe. "I was tempted to, but I didn't know
where we stood. Is this a shooting war, or is it just a row with the
Company?"
"You did
right," Marlowe assured him. "There will be no shooting unless Beecher
starts it." MacRae snorted. Marlowe turned to him. "You
disagree?"
"Jamie, you put me
in mind of a case I ran into in the American West. A respected citizen shot a
professional gunthrower in the back. When asked why he didn't give the other
chap a chance to draw, the survivor said, 'Well, he's dead and I'm alive and
that's how I wanted it to be.' Jamie, if you use sportsmanship on a known
scamp, you put yourself at a terrible disadvantage."
"Doctor, this is no
time to swap stories. I've got to get these people safely housed and at
once."
"That's my
point," persisted MacRae. "Finding housing isn't the first thing to
do."
"What is is,
then?"
"Set up a task
force of your best shots and send them over to grab Beecher and the Company
offices. I volunteer to lead it."
Marlowe gestured
angrily. "Out of the question. At present we are a group of citizens going
about our lawful occasions. One move like that and we're outlaws."
MacRae shook his head.
"You don't see the logic of the actions you've already taken. You know
that water runs downhill, but you think—praise God!—it'll never reach the
bottom. In Beecher's books you are an outlaw now. All of us."
"Nonsense, we're
just enforcing our contract. If Beecher behaves, we'll behave."
"I'm telling you,
son—the way to grasp a nettle is firmly."
"Doctor MacRae, if
you are so sure how this matter should be conducted, why did you refuse to
accept leadership?"
MacRae turned red.
"I beg your pardon, sir. What are your orders?"
"You know Syrtis
better than I do. Where is a building we can commandeer as a barracks?"
Jim decided that this
was a good time to come out of hiding. "Dad," he said, coming around
in front of him, "I know where we are and the school is—"
"Jim, I've no time
to chat. Get in me car."
"But, Dad, it's
only about ten minutes' walk!"
"I think he's got
something," put in the doctor. "The school will have real beds for
the kids, and a kitchen."
"Hmmm... very well.
Possibly we should use both schools and put the women and small children in the
girls' school."
"Jamie,"
advised the doctor, "at the risk of getting my ears batted down again, I
say 'no.' Don't divide your forces."
"I didn't really
want to. Kelly!"
"Yes, sir."
"Get them all out
and put a deputy in charge of each car party to keep them together. Ws're
moving out."
"Right."
There is very little
foot traffic in the streets of the Earth settlement at Syrtis Minor;
pedestrians prefer to go by tunnel. The few they did meet seemed startled but
no one bothered diem.
The pressure lock at the
school's front door could hold about twenty people at a time. As the outer door
opened after the second load, Howe stepped out. Even with his mask on it could
be seen that he was angry. "What is the meaning of this?" he
demanded.
Willis took one look at
him and closed up. Jim got behind his father. Marlowe stepped forward.
"We're sorry but we've got to use the school as an emergency
shelter."
"You can't do that.
Who are you, anyway?"
"My name is
Marlowe. I'm in charge of the migration."
"But—" Howe turned
suddenly, pushed his way through the crowd and went inside.
Nearly thirty minutes
later Marlowe, MacRae, and Kelly went inside with the last party. Marlowe
directed Kelly to station guards on the inside at each door, MacRae considered
suggesting a string of armed guards around the outside of the building, but he
held his tongue.
Mr. Sutton was waiting
for Marlowe in the entrance hall. "A news flash from Mrs. Palmer,
Chief—she says to tell you that chow will be ready in about twenty
minutes."
"Good! I could use
a bite myself."
"And the school's
regular cook is sulking in the dining room. She wants to talk to you."
"You deal with her.
Where is Howe?"
"Derned if I know.
He went through here like a destroying angel."
A man pressed forward
through the crowd—the entrance hall was jammed, not only with colonists but
with students, each of whom wanted to see the excitement. Reunions were going
on all around, between parents and sons. Kelly was pounding a slightly smaller
replica of himself on the back, and was himself being pounded. The babble was
deafening. The man who had forced his way forward put his mouth to Marlowe's
ear and said, "Mr. Howe is in his office. He's locked himself in; I've
just come from trying to see him."
"Let him
stay," decided Marlowe. "Who are you?"
"Jan van der
Linden, instructor here in natural sciences.
Who, may I ask, are
you?"
"Name's Marlowe.
I'm supposed to be in charge of this mad house. Look here, could you round up
the boys who live outside the school? We are going to have to stay here for a
day or two at least. I'm sorry but it's necessary. There can't very well be any
classes; you might as well send the town boys home—and the teachers, too."
The teacher looked
doubtful. "Mr. Howe won't like me doing it without his say-so."
"It's necessary.
I'm going to do it in any case but you can speed things up and help me put an
end to this riot. I take full responsibility."
Jim saw his mother
through the crowd and did not wait to hear the outcome. She was leaning against
the wall, holding Oliver and looking very tired, almost sick. Phyllis was
standing close to her. Jim wormed his way through the crowd.
"Mother!"
She looked up. "What is it. Jimmy?"
"You come with
me."
"Oh, Jimmy—I'm too
tired to move."
"Come on! I know a
place where you can lie down." A few minutes later he had the three in the
room abandoned by Frank and himself: it was, as he had guessed, still
unoccupied. His mother sank down on his bunk. "Jimmy, you're an
angel."
"You just take it
easy. Phyl can bring you something to eat when it's ready. Uh, there's a toilet
right across the hall. I'm going back and see what's going on." He started
to leave, then hesitated. "Phyl—would you take care of Willis for
me?"
"Why? I want to see
what's doing, too."
"You're a girl;
you'd better stay out from under foot."
"Well, I like that!
I guess I've got just as much business—"
"Stop it, children.
Jimmy, we'll take care of Willis. Tell your father where we are."
Jim delivered his
mother's message, then found himself rather late in the chow line. By the time
he had gone through for seconds as well, and eaten same, he discovered that
most of the colonists were gathered in the school auditorium. He went in,
spotted Frank and Doctor MacRae standing against the rear wall and squeezed
over to them.
His father was pounding
for order, using the butt of his gun as a gavel. "Mr. Linthicum has the
floor."
The speaker was a man
about thirty with an annoyingly aggresssive manner. "I say Doctor MacRae
is right; we shouldn't fool around. We've got to have boats to get to Copais.
Right? Beecher won't give 'em to us. Right? But all the actual force Beecher
has is a squad of cops. Right? Even if he deputizes every man in Syrtis he only
has maybe a hundred to a hundred and fifty guns. Right? We've got twice that
many or more right here. Besides which Beecher won't be able to get all the
local employees to fight us. So what do we do? We go over and grab him by the
neck and force him to do right by us. Right?" He sat down triumphantly.
MacRae muttered,
"Heaven defend me from my friends."
Several tried to speak;
Marlowe picked one out. "Mr. Gibbs has the floor."
"Mr. Chairman...
neighbors... I have rarely heard a more rash and provocative speech. You
persuaded us, Mr. Marlowe, to embark on this reckless adventure, a project of
which, I must say, I never approved—"
"You came
along!" someone shouted.
"Order!"
called Marlowe. "Get to the point, Mr. Gibbs."
"... but in which I
acceded rather than oppose the will of the majority. Now the hasty and
ill-tempered would make matters worse with outright violence. But now that we
are here, at the seat of government, the obvious thing to do is to petition for
redress of grievances." "If
you mean by that to ask Beecher for transportation to Copais, Mr. Gibbs, I've
already done that."
Gibbs smiled thinly.
"Forgive me, Mr. Marlowe, if I say that the personality of the petitioner
sometimes affects the outcome of the petition? I understand we have here, Mr.
Howe, the Headmaster of this school and a person of some influence with the
Resident Agent General. Would it not be wise to seek his help in approaching
the Resident?"
Mr. Sutton shouted,
"He's the last man on Mars I'd let speak for me!"
"Address the chair.
Pat," Marlowe cautioned. "Personally, I feel the same way, but I
won't oppose it if that's what the crowd wants. But," he continued,
addressing the audience, "is Howe still here? I haven't seen him."
Kelly stood up.
"Oh, he's here all right; he's still holed up in his office. I've talked
to him twice through his ventilator, I've promised him a honey of a beating if
he will only do me the favor of coming out and standing up to me like a
man."
Mr. Gibbs looked
scandalized. "Well, really!"
"It's a personal
matter involving my boy," explained Kelly.
Marlowe banged the
table. "I imagine Mr. Kelly will waive his privilege if you folks really
want Howe to speak for you. Do I hear a
motion?" Gibbs proposed it; in the end only he and the Pottles voted for it.
After the vote Jim said,
"Dad?"
"Address the chair,
son. What is it?"
"Er, Mr. Chairman—I
just got an idea. I was wondering, since we haven't got any boats, just maybe
we could get to Copais the way Frank and I got back to Charax—that is, if the
Martians would help us." He added, "If folks wanted us to, I guess
Frank and I could go back and find Gekko and see what could be done about
it."
There was a moment of
silence, then murmurs of "What's he talking about?" and unresponsive
replies. Although almost all of the colonists had heard some version of the two
boys' story, it was the simple fact mat it had not been believed, as told, or
had been ignored or discounted. The report ran counter to experience and most
of the colonists were as bogged down in "common sense" as their
relatives back on Earth. The necessary alternative, that the boys had crossed
eight hundred and fifty miles of open country without special shelter
equipment, simply had not been examined by them; the "common sense"
mind does not stoop to logic.
Mr. Marlowe frowned.
"You've brought up an entirely new possibility, Jim." He thought a
moment. "We don't know that Hie natives have these conveyances between
here and Copais—"
"I'll bet they
have!"
"—and we don't know
that they would let us ride in mem even if they have."
"But, Dad, Frank and
I—"
"A point of order,
Mr. Chairman!" It was Gibbs again. "Under what rules do you permit
children to speak in the councils of adult citizens?"
Mr. Marlowe looked
embarrassed and annoyed. Doctor MacRae spoke up. "Another point of order,
Mr. Chairman. Since when does this cream puff—" He motioned at Gibbs.
"Order,
Doctor."
"Correction. I mean
this fine upstanding male citizen, Mr. Gibbs, get the notion that Frank and Jim
and the other guntoting men their age ain't citizens? I might mention in
passing that I was a man grown when this Gibbs party was still wetting his
diapers—"
"Order!" ,
"Sorry. I mean even
before he had reached that stage. Now as I see it, this is a frontier society
and any man old enough to fight is a man and must be treated as such—and any
girl old enough to cook and tend babies is an adult, too. Whether you folks
know it yet or not, you are headed into a period when you'll have to fight for
your rights. The youngsters will do most of the fighting; it behooves you to
treat them accordingly. Twenty-five may be the right age for citizenship in a
moribund, age-ridden society like that back on Earth, but we aren't bound to
follow customs that aren't appropriate to our needs here."
Mr. Marlowe banged his
gun. "I declare this subject out of order. Jim, see me after the meeting.
Has anyone any specific action to propose that can be carried out at this time?
Do we negotiate, or do we resort to force of numbers?"
Mr. Konski addressed the
chair and said, "I favor taking what we have to have, if necessary, but it
may not be necessary. Wouldn't it be well for you, Mr. Marlowe, to phone Mr.
Beecher again? You could point out to him that we have force enough to do as we
see fit; perhaps he will see reason. In fact, I so move."
The motion was put and
carried; Mr. Marlowe suggested that someone else speak for them, but was turned
down. He left the rostrum and went out into the hall to the communications
booth. It was necessary to break the lock Howe had placed on it.
Beecher seemed
excessively pleased with himself. "Ah, yes—my good friend, Marlowe. You've
called to give yourself up I assume?"
Marlowe glanced around
at the half dozen colonists crowded into the open door of the booth, then
explained civilly to Beecher the purpose of his call.
"Boats to
Copais?" Beecher laughed. "Scooters will be ready at nightfall to
take the colonists—back to South Colony. You may tell them that all who are
ready to go at that time will escape the consequences of their hasty actions.
Not you, of course."
"The purpose of
this call was to point out to you that we are considerably larger in numbers
than the largest force you can possibly drum up here in Syrtis Minor. We intend
to cany out the contract. If you crowd us into using force to get our rights,
force we will use."
Beecher sneered through
the TV screen. "Your threats do not move me, Marlowe. Surrender. Come out
one at a time and unarmed, hands up."
"Is that your last
word?"
"One more thing.
You are holding Mr. Howe a prisoner. Let him go at once, or I shall see to it
that you are prosecuted for kidnapping."
"Howe? He's not a
prisoner; he's free to leave at any time."
Beecher elaborated.
Marlowe answered, "That's a private matter between Kelly and Howe. You can
call Howe in his office and tell him so."
"You must give him
safe conduct out of the building," Beecher insisted.
Marlowe shook his head.
"I'm not going to interfere in a private quarrel. Howe is safe where he
is; why should I bother? Beecher, I am offering you one more chance to provide
boats peacefully."
Beecher stared at him
and switched off.
Kelly said, "Maybe
you should have thrown me to the wolves, Chief."
Marlowe scratched his
chin. "I don't think so. I can't conscientiously hold a hostage—but I have
a feeling that this building is safer with Howe in it. I don't know just what
Beecher has—so far as I know there isn't a bomb nor any other heavy weapon of
any sort in Syrtis—but I would like to know what makes him so confident."
"He's
bluffing."
"I wonder."
Marlowe went back in and reported the conversation to all the colonists.
Mrs. Pottle stood up.
"Well, we are accepting Mr. Beecher's gracious offer at once! As for
holding poor Mr. Howe a prisoner—why, the very idea! I hope that you are
properly punished, and that ungentlemanly Mr. Kelly as well. Come, dear!"
Again she made a grand exit, with Mr. Pottle trotting after her.
Marlowe said, "Any
more who want to surrender?"
Gibbs stood up, looked
around uncertainly, and followed them. No one spoke until he had left, then
Toland stood up and said, "I move that we organize ourselves for
action."
"Second!"—"Second
the motion!"
No one wanted to debate
it; it was carried. Toland then proposed that Marlowe be elected captain of the
forces, with power to appoint officers. It, too, was carried.
At this point Gibbs came
stumbling back into the room, his face white, his hands trembling.
"They're dead! They're dead!" he cried.
Marlowe found it
impossible to restore order. Instead he crowded into the circle around Gibbs
and demanded, "Who's dead? What happened?"
"The Pottles. Both
of them. I was almost killed myself." He quieted down enough to tell his
story; the three had assumed their masks and gone out through the lock. Mrs.
Pottle, without bothering to look around her, had stomped out into the street,
her husband a close shadow. As soon as they had stepped clear of the archway
they had both been blasted. Their bodies lay out in the street in front of the
school. "It's your fault," Gibbs finished shrilly, looking at
Marlowe. "You got us into this."
"Just a
moment," said Marlowe, "did they do the things Beecher demanded?
Hands up, one at a time, and so forth? Was Pottle wearing his gun?"
Gibbs shook his head and
turned away. "That's not the point," MacRae said bitterly.
"While we've been debating, Beecher has boxed us in. We can't get
out."
IT WAS MADDENINGLY true,
as a cautious investigation soon proved. Both the front and back exits were
covered by gunmen—Beecher's police, supposedly—who were able to blast anyone
emerging from the building without themselves being under fire. The air-lock
nature of the doors made a rush suicidal.
The school was at a
distance from the settlement's dwellings; it was not connected by tunnel. Nor
had it any windows. Men and women, boys and girls, the colony listed hundreds
of licensed gun wearers—and yet a handful of gun fighters outside, as few as
two, could keep them holed up.
Under the influence of
Doc MacRae's bellowing voice the assembly got back to work. "Before I go
ahead with organizing," Marlowe announced, "does anyone else want to
surrender? I'm fairly sure that the Pottles were shot because they blundered
out without notice. If you shout and wave something white, I think your
surrender will be accepted."
He waited. Presently a
man got up with his wife, and then another. A few more trickled out. They left
in dead silence. When they were gone Captain Marlowe went on with the details
of organizing. Mrs. Palmer he confirmed as head of commissary. Doc he
designated as executive officer, Kelly he appointed permanent officer of the
watch, responsible for the interior guard. Sutton and Toland were given the job
of devising some sort of a portable screen to block the enfilading fire that
had dropped Mr. and Mrs. Pottle. Jim followed all this with excited interest
until, after the appointment of platoon leaders, it became evident that his
father did not intend to use boys as combatants. The students from the school
were organized into two platoons, designated as reserve, and dismissed.
Jim hung around, trying
to get a word with his father. At last he managed to catch his eye.
"Dad—"
"Don't bother us
now, Jim."
"But, Dad, you told
me to see you about the business of getting the Martians to help us get to
Copais."
"The Martians?
Oh—" Mr. Marlowe thought about it, then said, "Forget about it, Jim.
Until we can break out of here, neither that scheme, nor any other, will work.
Now let us be. Go see how your mother is doing."
Thus brushed off, Jim
turned disconsolately away. As he was leaving Frank fell in step with him, and
locked arms. "Do you know, Jim, sometimes you aren't as full of guff as
you are other times."
Jim eyed him
suspiciously. "If that's a compliment— thanks."
"Not a compliment,
Jim, merely justice. Seldom as I approve of one of your weary notions, this
time I am forced to admit that you had a bright idea."
"Quit making a
speech and get to the point."
"Very well. Point:
when you suggested getting the Martians to help us you were firing on all
jets."
"Huh? Well, thanks
for the applause, but I don't see it myself. As Dad pointed out, there's
nothing we can do about it until we find some way to break out of here and slap
old Beecher down. Then I suppose we won't need their help."
"You're supposing
too fast. Let's, as Doc would say, analyse the situation. In the first place,
your father got us boxed in here—"
"You lay off my
father!"
"I wasn't picking
on your father. Your father is a swell guy and my old man says that he is a
swell scientist, too. But by behaving like a gentleman he got us cornered in
here and we can't get out. Mind you, I'm not blaming him, but that's the
situation. So what are they going to do about it? Your old man tells my old man
and that drip Toland to work out a shield, some sort of armor, that will let us
get out the door and into the open where we can fight. Do you think they'll
have any luck?"
"Well, I hadn't
thought about it."
"I have. They arc
going to get exactly no place. Now Dad is a good engineer with a lot of savvy.
You give him equipment and materials and he'll build you anything. But what's
he got to work with now? For equipment he's got the school workshop and you
know what a sad mess that is. The Company never spent any real money on
equipping it; it's about right for making book ends. Materials? What are they
going to make a shield out of? Dining-room tabletops? A heater would cut
through a tabletop like soft cheese."
"Oh, there must be
something around they can use."
"You name it."
"Well, what do you
want us to do?" Jim said in exasperation. "Surrender?"
"Certainly not. The
old folks are stuck in a rut. Here's where we show finesse—using your
idea."
"Quit calling it my
idea. I haven't got any idea." "Okay, I'll take all the credit. We
get word to Gekko that we need help. He's our water friend; he'll see to
it."
"How can Gekko help
us? Martians don't fight."
"That's right, but,
as it says in geometry, what's the corollary? Human beings never fight
Martians, never. Beecher can't risk offending the Martians. Everybody knows
what a terrible time the Company had persuading the Martians that it was all
right to let us settle here in the first place. Now just suppose that about
twenty or thirty Martians—or even one— came stomping up to the front door of
this place: what do Beecher's cops do?
"Huh?"
"They cease fire,
that's what they do—and we come swarming out. That's what Gekko can do for us.
He can fix it so that Beecher is forced to call off his gun toters."
Jim thought about it.
There was certainly merit in what Frank had to say. Every human who set foot on
Mars had it thoroughly drummed into him that the natives must not be interfered
with, provoked, nor their customs violated—nor, above all things, hurt. The
strange and distressing history of the first generation of contact with the
Martians had resulted in this being the first law of the extraterritorial
settlements on Mars. Jim could not imagine Beecher violating this rule—nor
could he imagine one of the Company police doing so. In normal times the
principal duty of the police was the enforcement of this rule, particularly
with respect to tourists from Earth, who were never allowed to come in contact
with natives.
"There is just one
thing wrong with your idea, Frank. Supposing Gekko and his friends were willing
to come to our rescue, how in the name of mud are we going to let him know that
we need help? We can't just call him on the phone."
"No, we can't—but
that is where you come in. You can send him a message."
"How?"
"Willis."
"You're
crazy!"
"Am I now? Suppose
you go out that front door—fsst! You're fertilizer. But suppose Willis goes
out? Who's going to shoot a bouncer?"
"I don't like it.
Willis might get hurt."
"If we just sit
tight and do nothing, you'll wish he was dead. Beecher will sell him to the
London Zoo."
Jim considered this
unpleasant probability, then answered, "Anyhow, your scheme is fall of
holes. Even if he gets outside safely, Willis couldn't find Gekko and couldn't
be depended on to deliver a message. He'd be just as likely to sing or recite
some of Doc's bum jokes. I've got a better idea."
"Convince me."
"I'll bet that
Beecher's plug-uglies didn't think to keep watch on the garbage dump. I'll
deliver the message to Cekko myself."
Frank thought it over.
"No good. Even if they aren't really watching the dump, they can see you
from the comer where they are watching the back door. They'd nail you before
you could scramble to your feet."
"I'll wait till
dark."
"Mmmm... could
work. Only I'll do it. I'm faster on my feet than you are."
"Look who's
talking!"
"All right, all
right! We'll both do it—an hour apart." Frank went on, "But that
doesn't cut Willis out of it. He'll try it, too. One of us might get through.
Now wait a minute— you underrate your little pal. We'll teach him just what
he's to say. That'll be easy. Then you tell him to go over into the native
city, and stop the first Martian he meets and recite his piece. The Martian
does the rest because we'll put it all into the message. The only question is
whether or not Willis is bright enough to do as you tell him and go over into
Syrtis Minor proper. I've got grave doubts about that."
Jim bristled.
"You're always trying to make out that Willis is stupid. He's not; you
just don't understand him."
"Okay, then he can
find his way over to the city and deliver the message. Or can't he?"
"Well—I don't like
it."
"Which do you
prefer, to take a small risk with Willis or to have your mother and your baby
brother have to spend the winter at South Colony?"
Jim chewed his lip in a
manner just like his father. "All right—we'll try it. Let's go get
Willis."
"Don't get in a
rush. Neither you nor I know the native language well enough to whip up just
what we want to say. But Doc does. He'll help us."
"He's the only one
of the grown-ups I'd want to trust with this anyhow. Come on."
They found MacRae easily
enough, but were not able to speak with him at once. He was in the
communications booth, bellowing at the screen. They could hear his half of the
conversation. "I want to talk to Doctor Rawlings. Well, get him, get him—don't
sit there chewing your pencil! Tell him it's Doctor MacRae.... Ah, good day.
Doctor!.. .No, I just got here... How's business. Doctor? Still cremating your
mistakes?... Well, don't we all... Sony, I can't; I'm locked up...Locked up, I
said...—L.. .0. ..C. ..K.. .E.. .D up, like a disorderly drunk... No reason,
none at all. It's that simian moron, Beecher... Yes, hadn't you heard? The
entire colony, penned up in the little red schoolhouse... shoots us down if we
so much as stick our noses out... No, I'm not joking. You know Skinny Pottle—he
and his wife were killed not two hours ago. Burned down in cold blood, never
had a chance... Damn it, man, I don't joke. Come see for yourself and find out
what kind of a madman you have ruling you here. The cadavers were still out in
the street in front of the school the last time I looked. We don't dare drag
mem in and lay them out decently... I said—" The screen suddenly went
blank. MacRae swore and fiddled with the controls. Nothing happened.
Presently, by experiment,
he realized the instrument had been cut off completely. He came out, shrugging.
"Well, they finally caught on to me," he remarked to the room in
general, "but I talked to three key men."
"What were you
doing. Doc?" asked Jim.
"Starting a little
backfire, some fifth column activity behind Beecher's lines. There are good
people everywhere, son, but you have to spell it out for them."
"Oh. Look, Doc,
could you spare us some time?"
"What for? Your
father has a number of things for me to do, Jim."
"This is
important." They got MacRae aside and explained to him their plans.
MacRae looked
thoughtful. "It just might work. It's worth a whirl. That notion of making
use of Martian inviolability is positively Machiavellian, Frank; you should go
into politics. However, about the other stunt—the garbage-can paratrooper
act—if you ask your father, he'll veto it."
"Can't you ask him?
He'll listen to you."
"I said 'If you ask
your father,' you idjut. Do I have to wipe your nose for you?"
"Oh. I get
you."
"About the other
matter—chase up the little beastie and meet me in classroom 'C'; I'm using it
as an office."
Jim and Frank left to do
so. Jim found his mother and Oliver asleep, his sister and Willis gone. He had
started to leave when his mother woke up. "Jimmy?"
"I didn't mean to
wake you. Mother. Where's Phyl? I want to find Willis."
"Your sister is in
the kitchen, I think, helping out. Isn't Willis here? He was here on the bed
with baby and me."
Jim looked around again,
but found no sign of Willis. "I'll go ask Phyl. Maybe she came back and
got him."
"He can't have
wandered far. I'm sorry, Jim."
"I'll find
him."
He went to the kitchen,
found his sister. "How would I know?" she protested. "He was
there with mother when I left."
"I asked you to
look out for him."
"And I left him
with mother—they wanted me to help out here. Don't go looking at me."
Jim joined Frank.
"Dam it, they've let him wander off. He might be any place. We'll just
have to search."
One hour and hundreds of
inquiries later they were convinced that, if the bouncer was in the school, he
had found a very special hiding place. Jim was so annoyed that he had forgotten
completely the essential danger that they were all in. "That's what comes
of trusting women," he said bitterly. "Frank, what'U I do now?"
"Search me."
They were in the far end
of me building from their former room. They started back toward it on the
chance that Willis might have come back. As they were passing through the
entrance hall, Jim stopped suddenly. "I heard him!"
They both listened.
"Open up!" came a replica of Jim's voice. "Let Willis in!"
The voice came through the door's announcing speaker.
Jim darted for the
pressure lock, was stopped by the guard. "Hey," he protested,
"open the lock. That's Willis." "More likely it's a trap. Stand
back." "Let him in. That's Willis, I tell you." The guard
ignored him, but threw the switch that caused the lock to cycle. He cleared
everybody back out of range, then cautiously watched the door from one side,
gun drawn.
The inner door opened
and Willis waddled through.
Willis was bland about
the whole thing. "Jim go away. Everybody go away. Willis go for
walk."
"How did you get
outdoors?"
"Went out."
"But how?"
Willis apparently could see nothing difficult about that; he did not amplify.
"Maybe he went out
when die Pottles did?" suggested Frank.
"Maybe. Well, I
guess it doesn't matter."
"Go see
people," Willis offered. He named off a string of native names, then
added, "Pine time. Water friends. Give Willis good water, big drink."
He made lipsmacking noises in imitation of Jim, although he had no lips
himself.
"You had a drink
just a week ago," Jim said accusingly.
"Willis good
boy!" Willis countered.
"Wait a
minute," said Frank. "He was with Martians."
"Huh? I don't care
if he was with Cleopatra; he shouldn't run away."
"But don't you see?
He can get to the natives; he already has. All we've got to do is to be sure he
carries a message for them to pass on to Gekko."
The point, relayed to
MacRae, increased his interest. The three composed a message in English for
MacRae to translate. "Greetings," it began, "this is a message
from Jim Marlowe, water friend of Gekko of the city of—" Here they
inserted the unspellable and almost unpronounceable Martian name of Cynia.
"Whoever you may be, friend of my friend, you are implored to send this
word at once to Gekko. I am in great trouble and I need your help." The
message went on to tell in detail the nature of the trouble, who was
responsible, and what they hoped would be done about it. Telegraphic simplicity
was not attempted, since Willis's nervous system could hold a thousand words as
easily as ten.
MacRae translated it,
then drilled Jim in reading it, after which they attempted to impress on Willis
what he was to do. Willis was willing, but his consistently slap-happy,
featherbrained approach to any problem exasperated them all almost to hysteria.
At last it seemed fairly likely that he might carry out his assignment; at
least (a) when asked what he was to do he would answer, "go see
friends," and (b) when asked what he would tell them he would (usually)
answer by reciting the message.
"It just might
work," decided MacRae. "We know the Martians have some means of rapid
communication, even though we've never known what sort. If our plump friend
doesn't forget what he is doing and why he is making the trip..."
Jim took him to the
front door. On MacRae's authorization (he guard let them through. Jim checked
Willis again while the lock was cycling; the bouncer appeared to be sure of his
instructions, although his answers showed his usual mental leapfrog.
Jim hung back in the
doorway, out of the line of fire, while Willis rolled off the stoop. The
Potties still lay where they had fallen; Willis looked at them curiously, then
took up a zig-zag course down the street and disappeared from Jim's view, cut
off as he was by the door frame. Jim wished mightily then that he had had the
foresight to bring along a mirror to use as a periscope. Finally he screwed up
his courage, lay down, and peeked around the edge of the door at the bottommost
part.
Willis was well down the
street and nothing had happened to him. Far down the street some sort of cover
had been set up. Jim stuck his head out an inch farther, trying to see what it
was, when the comer of the door frame above him gave off a puff of smoke and he
felt the electric tingle of a near miss. He jerked his head hastily back and
reentered the lock.
He had an all-gone
feeling at the pit of his stomach and a conviction that he would never see
Willis again.
THE REST OF the day
passed wearily for Jim and Frank. There was nothing they could do about their
own plan until after dark. In the meantime discussions were taking place among
colonial leaders, but they were held behind closed doors and the boys were
definitely not invited.'
Supper was a welcome
diversion, both because they were hungry and because it meant that the kitchen
would presently be deserted and the way left open to the garbage dump. Or so
they thought. They found that, in practice, the womenfolk running the kitchen
first took a leisurely time to clean the place up, then seemed disposed to sit
around all night, drinking coffee and talking.
The boys found excuses
to come into the kitchen, excuses that got thinner every trip and which began
to arouse Mrs. Palmer's suspicions.
Finally Jim followed
another boy in, wondering what he would say this time, when he heard the other
boy say, "Mrs. Palmer, Captain Marlowe sends his regards and wants to know
if it would be too much trouble to keep a night watch for coffee and sandwiches
for the men on guard."
"Why, no," Jim
heard her say, "we'll be glad to do that. Henrietta, will you go out and
find some volunteers? I'll take the first stint."
Jim backed out and went
to where Frank awaited him. "What's the chances?" asked Frank.
"Does it look like they're going to break up any time soon?"
Jim told him what the
chances were—or, rather, were not. Frank swore, using a couple of words that
Jim had not heard before, and noted down for future use. "What'U we do,
Jim?"
"I don't know.
Maybe when it's down to just one of them on duty, she'll go out
occasionally."
"Maybe we could get
her out with some song and dance."
"Maybe. Maybe we
could tell her that she's wanted in the headquarters room. That ought to do
it."
They were still
discussing it when the lights went out.
The place was suddenly
completely dark, as dark as the inside of a rock. Worse than that, there was a
disturbing utter silence. Jim had just realized that the complete emptiness of
sound resulted from the ending of the noise of circulating air, from the
stopping of the supercharger on the roof, when a woman began to scream.
She was joined by
another, in a higher key. Then there were voices everywhere in the darkness,
questioning, complaining, soothing.
Down the hall from where
the boys loitered a light sprang out and Jim heard his father's voice.
"Quiet, everybody. Don't get excited. It's just a power failure. Be
patient."
The light moved toward
them, suddenly hit them. "You boys get to bed." Jim's father moved
on. Down the passage in the other direction they could hear Doc's bellow,
ordering people to shut up and calm down.
Jim's father came back.
This time he was saying, "Into your suits, everybody. Have your
respirators on your head. We hope to correct this in a few minutes, but we
don't want anybody hurt. Now don't get excited; this building will hold
pressure for half an hour at least. There's plenty of time to get ready for
thin air, even if it takes a while to correct the trouble."
Other lights sprang up
here and there; shortly the passageways throughout the building, if not the
rooms, were adequately lighted. The corridors were crowded with dim shapes,
struggling into their outdoors suits. Jim and Frank, planning as they were to
attempt to go outside, had long been in their suits, armed, and with
respirators at the ready. "Maybe this is a good time," suggested
Frank.
"Nope," Jim
answered. "They're still in the kitchen. I can see a light."
MacRae came down the
corridor; Jim stopped him. "Doc, how long do you think it will be until
they get the lights on?"
MacRae said, "Are
you kidding?"
"What do you mean.
Doc?"
"The lights aren't
coming on. This is one of Beecher's stunts. He's pulled the switch on us, at
the power house."
"Are you
sure?"
"There's no
failure—we've checked it. I'm surprised Beecher didn't do it hours ago—in his
shoes, I would have done it five minutes after we moved in. But don't you birds
go blabbing, Jim; your Pop has his hands full keeping the custard heads from
blowing then- tops." He moved on.
In spite of Captain
Marlowe's reassuring words the true state of things was soon common knowledge.
The pressure dropped slowly, so slowly that it was necessary to warn everyone to
adjust their respirators, lest oxygen starvation sneak up on the unwary. After
that it was hardly possible to maintain the fiction that the power loss was
temporary, to be corrected any minute now. The temperature in the building fell
Slowly; there was no danger of them freezing in the closed and insulated
building—but the night chill penetrated.
Marlowe set up headquarters in the entrance hall in a circle of light
cast by a single torch. Jim and Frank loitered there, discreetly back in the
shadows, unwilling to miss what might be going on and quite unwilling to go to
bed as ordered.... as Frank pointed out to Jim, the only beds they had were
occupied, by Mrs. Marlowe, Phyllis, and Oliver. Neither of them had given up
the idea of attempting the garbage chute route, but they knew in their hearts
that the place was too stirred up to give them the privacy they would require.
Joseph Hartley, one of
the colony's hydroponists, came up to Marlowe. His wife was behind him,
carrying their baby daughter in a pressurized crib, its supercharger sticking
up above the clear plastic shell of it like a chimney. "Mr. Marlowe—I mean
Captain Marlowe—"
"Yes?"
"You've got to do
something. Our kid can't stand this. She's coming down with croup and we can't
get at her to help her."
MacRae crowded forward.
"You should have brought her to me, Joe." He looked the baby over,
through the plastic, then announced, "The kid seems to be doing all
right."
"She's sick, I tell
you."
"Hmmm—I can't make
much of an examination when I can't get at her. Can't take her temperature, but
she doesn't seem to be in any real danger."
"You're just trying
to soothe me down," Hartley said angrily. "You can't tell anything
about it when she is in a sealed crib."
"Sorry, son,"
the doctor answered.
"A fat lot of good
it does to be sorry! Somebody's got to do something. This can't—" His wife
plucked at his sleeve; he turned away and they went into a huddle. Shortly he
turned back. "Captain Marlowe!"
"Yes, Mr.
Hartley."
"The rest of you
can do as you like. I've had enough. I've got my wife and baby to think
about."
"The decision is
yours," Marlowe said stiffly and turned away in abrupt dismissal.
"But—" said
Hartley and stopped, aware that Marlowe was no longer paying any attention to
him. He looked uncertain, like a man who wants someone to argue him out of his
resolution. His wife touched has arm; he turned then and they went together to
the front entrance.
Marlowe said to MacRae,
"What do they expect of me? Miracles?"
MacRae answered,
"Exactly, boy. Most people never grow up. They expect papa to get 'em the
pretty Moon." The doctor went on, "Just the same, Joe accidentally
told the truth. We've got to do something."
"I don't see what
we can do until Sutton and Toland get some results."
"You can't wait any
longer for them, son. We've got to crush out of here anyway. Theoretically a
man can live for days in a respirator. Practically, it won't work and that is
what Beecher is counting on. You can't keep several hundred people crouching
here in the dark and the cold, wearing masks to stay alive, not indefinitely.
You're going to have a panic on your hands."
Marlowe looked weary,
even through his mask. "We can't tunnel out. We can't get out at all,
except through the doors. And they've got those doors zeroed. It's
suicide."
"It's got to be
done, son. I'll lead the rush."
Marlowe sighed.
"No, I will."
"m a pig's eye!
You've got a wife and kids. I've got nobody and I've been living on borrowed
time so long I've lost track."
"It's my privilege.
That's settles it."
"We'll see."
"I said that
settles it, sir!"
The argument was left
unfinished; the inner door to the pressure lock opened again and Mrs. Hartley
stumbled inside. She was clutching the tiny crib and sobbing wildly.
It was the case of the
Pottles and Gibbs all over again. When MacRae was able to make something out of
her sobs, it appeared that they had been very cautious, had waited, had shouted
their intention to surrender, and had displayed a light. There had been no
answer, so they had shouted again, then Hartley had stepped off the threshold
with his hands up and his wife shining the light on him.
He had been struck down
as soon as he stepped out the door.
MacRae turned her over
to the women, then went out to reconnoiter. He came back in almost at once.
"Somebody get me a chair," he demanded, and looked around. "You,
Jim— skedaddle."
"What's up?"
asked Marlowe.
"Let you know in a
moment. I suspect something."
"Be careful."
"That's why I want
the chair."
Jim came back with one;
the doctor went through the pressure lock again. He came back in about five
minutes later. "It's a booby trap," he stated.
"What do you
mean?"
"Beecher didn't try
to keep men outdoors all night—at least I don't think so. It's automatic.
They've put an electriceye grid across the door. When you break it, a bolt
comes across, right where you'd be if you walked through it." He displayed
half a dozen deep bums through the chair.
Marlowe examined them.
"But that's not the important point," MacRae went on. "It's automatic
but it's inflexible. It hits about two feet above the step and about four feet.
A man could crawl through it—if his nerves were steady."
Marlowe straightened up.
"Show me."
They came back, with the
chair still more burned, in a few minutes. "Kelly," Marlowe said
briskly, "I want twenty volunteers to make a sortie. Pass the word
around."
There were at least two
hundred volunteers; the problem was to weed them down. Both Frank and Jim tried
to get in on it; Jim's father refused to take any but grown, unmarried men
—except himself. MacRae he refused.
The doctor pulled Jim
back and whispered to him. "Hold your horses. In a few minutes I'll be
boss."
The raiding party
started into the lock. Marlowe turned to MacRae. "We'll head for me power
plant. If we are gone more than two hours, you are on your own." He went
into the lock and closed the door.
As soon as the door was
closed, MacRae said, "Okay, twenty more volunteers."
Kelly said, "Aren't
you going to wait two hours?"
"You tend to your
knitting! When I'm out of here, you're in charge." He turned and nodded to
Jim and Frank. "You two come along." MacRae had his party in short
order, had apparently selected them in his mind before Marlowe left. They filed
into the lock.
Once the outer door was
open MacRae flashed his torch into the street. The Pottles and the unfortunate
Joseph Hartley lay where they had fallen, but no other bodies littered the
street. MacRae turned around and said, "Ginune that chair. I'll
demonstrate the gimmick." He stuck it out into the door. Instantly two
bolts cut across the doorway, parallel to the ground. After they were gone and
the eye was still dazzled by their brilliance, two soft violet paths of
ionization marked where they had been and then gradually dispersed.
"You will
note," said the doctor, as if he were lecturing medical students,
"that it does not matter where the chair is inserted." He again
shoved the chair into the opening, moved it up and down. The bolts repeated at
split-second intervals, but always at the same places, about knee high and
chest high.
"I think it is
best," continued the doctor, "to maintain the attack. Then you can
see where you are. First man!"
Jim gulped and stepped
forward—or was shoved, he was not sure which. He eyed the deadly fence, stooped
over, and with awkward and infinite care stepped through. He went on out into
the street. "Get moving!" the doctor ordered. "Spread out."
Jim ran up the street,
feeling very much alone but terribly excited. He paused short of the end of the
building and cautiously looked around the comer. Nothing either way—he stopped
and waited in the darkness, ready to blast anything that moved.
Ahead of him and to the
left he could see the curious structure which had almost cost him the top of
his head many hours before. It was clear now that the bolts were coming from
it.
Some one came up behind
him. He whirled and heard a voice yelp, "Don't shoot! It's me—Frank."
"How about the
others?"
"They're coming—I
think."
A light flashed at the
building ahead, beyond the shield from which the bolts came. Frank said,
"I think somebody came out there."
"Can you see him?
Do you think we ought to shoot?"
"I don't
know."
Someone else was
pounding up the street behind them. Up ahead, from near the spot where Frank
had thought he had seen a man a heater flashed out in the darkness; the beam
passed them.
Jim's gun answered by
pure reflex; he nailed the spot from which the flash had come. "You got
him," said Frank. "Good boy!"
"I did?" said
Jim. "How about the guy behind me?" He found that he was trembling.
"Here he is
now."
"Who shot at
me?" the newcomer said. "Where are they?"
"Nowhere at the
moment," Frank answered. "Jim nailed him." Frank tried to peer
into the mask; the night was too dark. "Who is it?"
"Smitty."
Both Frank and Jim gave
exclamations of surprise—it was Smythe, the practical man. "Don't look at
me like that," Smythe said defensively. "I came along at the last
minute—to protect my investment. You guys owe me money."
"I think Jim just
paid it off," suggested Frank.
"Not on your life!
That's another matter entirely."
"Later,
later," said Frank. Others were coming up. Presently MacRae came puffing
up and roared, "I told you birdbrains to spread out!" He caught his
breath and said, "We tackle the Company main offices. Dogtrot—and don't
bunch together."
"Doc," said
Jim, "there are some in that building up ahead."
"Some what?"
"Somebody that
shoots at us, that's what."
"Oh. Hold it,
everybody." MacRae gave them hoarse instructions, then said, "Got it,
everybody?"
"Doc," asked
Frank, "how about the gun over there? Why don't we wreck it first?"
"I must be getting
old," said MacRae. "Anybody here enough of a technician to sneak up
on it and pull its teeth?"
A faceless figure in the
darkness volunteered. "Go ahead," Doc told him. "We'll cover you
from here." The colonial trotted ahead, swung around behind the shield
covering the stationary automatic blaster, and stopped. He worked away for
several minutes, then there was a white flash, intensely bright. He trotted
back. "Shorted it out. Bet I blew every overload breaker in the power
house."
"Sure you fixed
it?"
"You couldn't dot
an T with it now."
"Okay. You—"
MacRae grabbed one of his squad by the arm. "—tear back and tell Kelly
that allee allee out's in free. You—" He indicated the chap who had
wrecked the gun. "—go around in back and see what you can do with the
setup back there. You two guys cover him. The rest of you follow me—the
building ahead, according to plan."
Jim's assignment called
for sneaking along the face of the building and taking a covering position
about twenty feet short of the doorway. His way led him over the ground where
the man had been at whom he had shot. There was no body on the pavement; he
wondered if he had missed. It was too dark to look for blood.
MacRae gave his covering
troops time to reach their stations, then made a frontal assault with six to
back him up, among them Frank. The doctor himself walked up to the building
entrance, tried the outer door. It opened. Motioning the assault group to join
him, he went in. The outer door of the building's lock closed on them.
Jim huddled against the
icy wall, eyes wide, ready to shoot. It seemed a cold eternity that he waited;
he began to fancy that he could see some traces of dawn in the east. At last he
saw silhouettes ahead, raised his gun, then identified one as Doc's portly
figure.
MacRae had the situation
in hand. There were four disarmed prisoners; one was being half carried by two
others. 'Take 'em back to the school," Doc ordered one of his group.
"Shoot me first one of them who makes a funny move. And tell whoever is in
charge back there now to lock 'em up. Come on, men. We've got our real job
ahead."
There came a shout
behind them; MacRae turned. Kelly's voice called, "Doc! Wait for
baby!" He came running up and demanded, "What are the plans?"
Behind him, men were pouring out of the school and up the street.
MacRae took a few
minutes to recast things on the basis of more guns. One of the platoon leaders,
a civil engineer named Alvarez, was left in charge at the school with orders to
maintain a guard outside the building and to patrol the neighborhood with
scouts. Kelly was assigned the task of capturing the communications building
which lay between the settlement and the space port. It was an important key to
control of the whole situation, since it housed not only the local telephone
exchange but also the radio link to Deimos and thence to all other outposts on
Mars—and also the radar beacons and other aids for incoming ships from Earth.
MacRae reserved for
himself the job of taking the planet office—the main offices on Mars of the
Company, Beecher's own headquarters. The Resident Agent General's personal
apartment was part of the same building; the doctor expected to come to grips
with Beecher himself.
MacRae sent a squad of
men to reinforce Marlowe at the power house, then called out, "Let's go,
before we all freeze to death. Chop, chop!" He led the way at a ponderous
trot.
Jim located Frank in the
group and joined him. "What took you guys so long in that building?"
he asked. "Was there a fight?"
"Took so
long?" said Frank. "We weren't inside two minutes."
"But you must
have—"
"Cut out that
chatter back there!" called out Doc. Jim shut up and pondered it.
MacRae had them cross
the main canal on ice, avoiding the arching bridge as a possible trap. They
crossed in pairs, those behind covering those crossing; in turn they who had
crossed spread out and covered those yet to come. The crossing held a
nightmarish, slow-motion quality; while on the ice a man was a perfect
target—yet it was impossible to hurry. Jim longed for his skates.
On the far side the
doctor gathered them together in the shadow of a warehouse. "We'll swing
around to the east and avoid the dwellings," he told them in a hoarse
whisper. "From here on, quiet!—for your life. We won't split up because I
don't want you shooting each other in the dark." He set forth a plan to
surround the building and cover all exits, while MacRae himself and about half
their numbers tried to force an entrance at the main door.
"When you get
around in back and make contact," MacRae warned the two who were to lead
the flanking and covering moves, "you may have one deuce of a time telling
friend from foe. Be careful. The word is "Mars'; the answer is
'Freedom'."
Jim was in the assault
party. Doc stationed six of them in fan shape around the door, at an easy
twenty-five yards range, and had them take cover where available. Three of them
were on the open ramp in front of the door; he had them lie down and steady
their guns. "In case of doubt—shoot," he instructed them. "Come
on, the rest of you."
Jim was included in the
last order. MacRae walked up to the outer door and tried it; it was locked. He
pressed the signal switch and waited.
Nothing happened. MacRae
pressed the switch again and called out mildly to the speaker grille, "Let
me in. I have an important message for the Resident."
Still nothing happened.
MacRae changed his tone to pretended exasperation. "Hurry up, please! I'm
freezing to death out here."
The door remained dark
and silent. MacRae changed his manner to belligerence. "Okay, Beecher,
open up! We've got the place surrounded and we're ready to blast in the door.
You have thirty seconds till we set off the charge."
The seconds ticked away.
Doc muttered to Jim, "I wish it were the truth," then raised his
voice and said, "Time's up, Beecher. This is it."
The door hissed as the
compressed air in the lock began to escape to the outside; the lock was
starting to cycle. MacRae motioned them back a little; they waited, not
breathing, all guns drawn and aimed at the point where the door would begin to
open.
Then it was open and a
single figure stood in it, the lock's light shining behind him. "Don't
shoot!" said a firm, pleasant voice. "It's all right. It's all
over."
MacRae peered at the
figure. "Why, Doctor Rawlings'" he said. "Bless your ugly
face."
RAWUNGS HIMSELF HAD
spent half the night locked up, along with half a dozen other prominent
citizens who had attempted to reason with Beecher. As the story got around,
especially the matter of the deaths of the Pottles, Beecher found himself with
no support at all, save from his own clique of sycophants and toadies and the
professional, largely disinterested support of the Company's police.
Even Kruger cracked up
under the strain, tried to get Beecher to reverse himself—and was stuffed in
with the other dissidents, which by then included the chief engineer of the
power plant. But it was Doctor Rawlings who talked the guard placed over them
into risking his job and letting them go—the doctor was treating the guard's
wife.
"I don't think
Beecher would ever stand trial, even if we had him back on Earth," MacRae
remarked about the matter to Rawlings and Marlowe. "What do you think,
Doctor?" The three were seated in the outer offices of the planet office
building. Marlowe had come there after getting word at the power house from
MacRae and had gotten busy at once, writing despatches to the Project camps and
the other outlying activities, including North Colony itself, trying to round
up boats. He had then tried, red-eyed and uncertain from lack of sleep, to
compose a suitable report to Earth, until MacRae had interrupted him and
insisted that he rest.
"Paranoia?"
said Rawlings.
"A clear case.7'
"My opinion, too.
I've seen suggestive indications of it, but the case was not fully developed
until his will was crossed. He must be hospitalized—and restrained."
Doctor Rawlings glanced over his shoulder at a closed door. Behind it was
Beecher.
"Certainly,
certainly," agreed MacRae, "but speaking nonprofessionally, I'd
rather see the no-good so-and-so hang. Paranoia is a disorder contracted only
by those of fundamentally bad character."
"Now, Doctor,"
protested Rawlings.
"That's my
opinion," insisted MacRae, "and I've seen a lot of cases, in and out
of hospitals."
Marlowe put down his
coffee cup and wiped his mouth. "All that is as may be. I think I'll
stretch out on one of these desks for a couple of hours. Doc, will you see that
someone wakes me?"
"Certainly,"
agreed MacRae, having no intention of allowing the man to be disturbed until he
was fully rested. "Don't worry."
Jim and the others were
back at the school where they were to remain until boats could be gotten to
take them to Copais. Mrs. Palmer was bustling around with her assistants,
getting a mammoth breakfast for weary men and boys. Jim himself was dead tired
and hungry but much too excited to think about sleeping, even though dawn had
broken outside.
He had just received a
cup of coffee and was blowing on it when Smythe showed up. "Say, I
understand you really did kill mat cop that took a pot shot at me."
"No," Jim
denied, "he's in the infirmary now, just wounded. I've seen him."
Smythe looked troubled.
"Oh, shucks," he said finally, "it won't happen more than once
in a lifetime. Here's your I.O.U."
Jim stared at him.
"Smitty, you're sick."
"Probably. Better
take it."
Jim reached back into
his subconscious memory and quoted his father. "No, thanks. Marlowes pay
their debts."
Smythe looked at him,
then said, "Oh, the heck with you, you ungracious twerp!" He tore the
I.O.U. into small pieces
and stalked away.
Jim looked wonderingly
after him. "Now what was he sore about?" He decided to look up Frank
and tell him about it.
He found Frank but had
no time to tell him about it; a shout came through the crowd: "Marlowe!
Jim Marlowe!"
"Captain Marlowe's
at the planet office," someone answered.
"Not him, the
kid," the first voice replied. "Jimmy Marlowe! You're wanted up
front, right away."
"Coming,"
yelled Jim. "What for?" He pushed his way toward the entrance, Frank
behind him.
The man who had paged
him let him get close before he answered, "You won't believe it—I don't
myself. Martians."
Jim and Frank hurried
outside. Gathered in front of the school door were more than a dozen Martians.
Gekko was there, and G'kuro, but not K'booch. Nor could Jim make out the old
one whom he thought of as "head man" of Gekko's tribe. Gekko spotted them
and said in his own speech, "Greetings, Jim-Marlowe, greetings,
Frank-Sutton, friends sealed with water."
Another voice called out
from one of Gekko's palm flaps, "Hi, Jim boy!" Willis had come home
with the bacon, a little late perhaps, but successfully.
Another voice boomed
mellowly. Gekko listened, then said, "Where is he who stole our little
one?"
Jim, uncertain of the
dominant tongue, at best, was not sure that he had understood. "Huh?"
"He wants to know
where Howe is," said Frank and answered in fluent, fairly accurate
Martian. Howe was still where he had taken refuge, still afraid to face Kelly,
despite repeated invitations.
Gekko indicated that he
would come into the building. Amazed, but cooperative, the boys led him in.
Gekko was forced to fold himself into a shape resembling a hat rack to get into
the lock but he managed it; the lock was large. Inside, the sensation caused by
his appearance was like that which might have resulted from introducing an
elephant into a church. People gave way before him.
The door to the outer
office was even more of a squeeze man the air lock, but Gekko made it, with Jim
and Frank trailing him. Gekko handed Willis to Jim, then gently explored the
handle of the door to Howe's office with a hand flap. Suddenly he pulled and
the door came away, not only the lock broken but the door wrenched completely
off its hinges. He squatted down further, completely filling the door frame.
The boys looked at each
other; Willis closed up. They heard Howe saying "What's the meaning of
this? Who are—"
Then Gekko stood up as
well as he could in a room intended for humans and started for the outer door.
The boys hesitated; Frank said, "Let's see what he did to him." He
stepped to the wrecked door and looked in. "I don't see him. Hey, Jim—he's
not in here at all."
Nor was he.
They hurried after Gekko
and reached him at the air lock. No one stopped Gekko; no one stopped them. The
repeated indoctrination concerning Martians swept a path before them. Outside
Gekko turned to them. "Where is the other one, who would do harm to the
little one?"
Frank explained that
Beecher was some distance away and not available. "You will show us,"
announced Gekko and picked them both up. Another Martian relieved him of Frank.
Jim felt himself cradled
in the soft palm flaps, even as Willis was still cradled in Jim's arms. Willis
extended his eyes, looked around and remarked, "Fine ride, huh?" Jim
was not sure.
The Martians ambled
through town at an easy eight miles an hour, over the bridge, and to the planet
offices. The pressure lock there was higher and larger than that at the school;
the entire party went inside. The ceiling of the building's foyer was quite
high enough for even the tallest Martian. Once they were inside Gekko set Jim
down, as did the Martian carrying Frank.
There had been the same
scurrying surprise as at the school. MacRae came out and looked the situation
over without excitement. "What's all this jamboree?" he asked.
"They want to talk
to Beecher," Frank explained.
MacRae raised his
eyebrows, then spoke in clear Martian. One of them answered him; they conversed
back and forth.
"Okay, I'll get
him," agreed MacRae, then repeated it in Martian. He went into the
offices. He returned in a few minutes, pushing Beecher in front of him, and
followed by Rawlings and Marlowe. "Some people to see you," MacRae
said and gave Beecher a shove that carried him out onto the floor of the foyer.
"This is the
one?" inquired the Martian spokesman.
"This is verily the
one."
Beecher looked up at them.
"What do you want me for?" he said in Basic. The Martians moved so
that they were on all sides of him. "Now you get away from me!" he
said. They moved in slowly, tightening the circle. Beecher attempted to break
out of it; a great hand flap was placed in his way. They closed in further.
Beecher darted this way and that, then he was concealed completely from the
spectators by a screen of palm flaps. "Let me out!" he was heard to
shout. "I didn't do anything. You've got no right to—" His voice
stopped in a scream.
The circle relaxed and
broke up. There was no one inside it, not even a spot of blood on the floor.
The Martians headed for
the door. Gekko stopped and said to Jim, "Would you return with us, my
friend?"
"No—oh, no,"
said Jim. "I have to stay here," then remembered to translate.
"And the little
one?"
"Willis stays with
me. That's right, isn't it, Willis?"
"Sure, Jim
boy."
"Then tell Gekko
so." Willis complied. Gekko said farewell sadly to the boys and to Willis
and went on out the lock.
MacRae and Rawlings were
in whispered, worried conference at the spot where Beecher had last been seen;
Captain Marlowe was looking sleepy and confused and listening to them. Frank
said, "Let's get out of here, Jim."
"Right."
The Martians were still
outside. Gekko saw them as they came out, spoke to one of his kind, then said,
"Where is the learned one who speaks our speech? We would talk with
him."
"I guess they want
Doc," said Frank.
"Is that what he
meant?"
"I think so. We'll
call him." They went back inside and dug MacRae out of a cluster of
excited humans. "Doc," said Frank, "they want to talk with
you—the Martians."
"Eh?" said
MacRae. "Why me?"
"I don't
know."
The doctor turned to
Marlowe. "How about it. Skipper? Do you want to sit in on this?"
Mr. Marlowe rubbed his
forehead. "No, I'm too confused to try to handle the language. You take
it."
"Okay." MacRae
went for his suit and mask, let me boys help dress him, and then did not deny
them when they tagged along. However, once outside, they held back and watched
from a distance.
MacRae walked down to me
group standing on the ramp and addressed them. Voices boomed back at him. He
entered the group and the boys could see him talking, answering, gesticulating
with his hands. The conference continued quite a long time.
Finally MacRae dropped
his arms to his sides and looked tired. Martian voices boomed in what was
plainly farewell, then the whole party set out at a rapid, leisurely pace for
the bridge and their own city. MacRae plodded back up the ramp.
In the lock Jim
demanded, "What was it all about. Doc?"
"Eh? Hold your
peace, son."
Inside MacRae took
Marlowe's arm and led him toward the office they had pre-empted. "You,
too, Rawlings. The rest of you get about your business." Nevertheless the
boys tagged along and MacRae let them come in. "You might as well hear it;
you're in it up to your ears. Mind that door, Jim. Don't let anyone open
it."
"Now what is
it?" asked Jim's father. "What are you looking so grim about?"
"They want us to
leave."
"Leave?"
"Get off Mars, go
away, go back to Earth."
'^What? Why do they
suggest that?"
"It's not a
suggestion; it's an order, an ultimatum. They aren't even anxious to give us
time enough to get ships here from Earth. They want us to leave, every man jack,
woman, and child; they want us to leave right away—and they aren't
fooling!"
FOUR DAYS LATER Doctor
MacRae stumbled into the same office. Marlowe still looked tired, but this time
it was MacRae who looked exhausted. "Get these other people out of here.
Skipper."
Marlowe dismissed them
and closed the door. "Well?"
"You got my
message?"
"Yes."
"Is the
Proclamation of Autonomy written? Did the folks go for it?"
"Yes, it's
written—we cribbed a good deal from the American Declaration of Independence
I'm afraid, but we wrote one."
"I'm not interested
in the rhetoric of the thing! How about it?"
"It's ratified.
Easily enough here. We had quite a few startled queries from the Project camps,
but it was accepted. I guess we owe Beecher a vote of thanks on that; he made
independence seem like a fine idea."
"We owe Beecher
nothing! He nearly got us all killed."
"Just how do you
mean that?"
"I'll tell you—but
I want to know about the Declaration. I had to make some promises. It's gone
off?"
"Radioed to Chicago
last night. No answer yet. But let me
ask the questions: were
you successful?"
"Yes." MacRae
rubbed his eyes wearily. "We can stay. 'It was a great fight. Maw, but I
won.' They'll let us stay."
Marlowe got up and
started to set up a wire recorder. "Do you want to talk it into the record
and save having to go over it again?"
MacRae waved it away.
"No. Whatever formal report I make will have to be very carefully edited.
I'll try to tell you about it first." He paused and looked thoughtful.
"Jamie, how long has it been since men first landed on Mars? More than
fifty Earth years, isn't it? I believe I have teamed more about Martians in the
past few hours than was learned in all that time. And yet I don't know anything
about them. We kept trying to think of them as human, trying to force them into
our molds. But they aren't human; they aren't anything like us at all."
He added, "They had
interplanetary flight millions of years back... had it and gave it up."
"What?" said
Marlowe.
"It doesn't matter.
It's not important. It's just one of the things I happened to find out while I
was talking with the old one, the same old one with whom Jim talked. By the
way, Jim was seeing things; he's not a Martian at all."
"Wait a minute—what
is he, then?"
"Oh, I guess he's a
native of Mars all right, but he isn't what you and I mean by a Martian. At
least he didn't look like one to me."
"What did he look
like? Describe him."
MacRae looked puzzled.
"Uh, I can't. Maybe Jim and I each saw what he wanted us to see. Never
mind. Willis has to go back to the Martians and rather soon."
"I'm sorry,"
Marlowe answered. "Jim won't like that, but it's not a high price to pay
if it pleases them."
"You don't
understand, you don't understand at all. Willis is the key to the whole
thing."
"Certainly he's
been mixed up in it," agreed Marlowe, "but why the key?"
"Don't call Willis
'he'; call him 'she.' There—1 did it myself. Habit."
"I don't care what
sex the little beast is. Go on."
MacRae rubbed his temples.
"That's the trouble. It's very complicated and I don't know where to
start. Willis is important and it does matter that he's a she. Look, Jamie,
you'll go down in history as the father of your country, no doubt, but, between
ourselves, Jim should be credited for being the savior of it. It was directly
due to Jim and Willis—Willis's love for Jim and Jim's staunch befriending of
him—that the colonists are alive today instead of pushing up daisies. The
ultimatum to get off this globe represented a concession made to Jim; they had
intended to exterminate us."
Marlowe's mouth dropped
open. "But that's impossible! Martians wouldn't do anything like
that!"
"Could and
would," MacRae stated flatly. "They've been having doubts about us
for a long time. Beecher's notion of shipping Willis off to a zoo pushed them
over the edge—but Jim's relationship to Willis pulled them back again. They
compromised."
"I can't believe
that they would," protested Marlowe, "nor can I see how they
could."
"Where's
Beecher?" MacRae said bluntly.
"Mmm... yes."
"So don't talk
about what they can or can't do. We don't know anything about them... not
anything."
"I can't argue with
you. But can you clear up some of this mystery about Jim and Willis? Why do
they care? After all, Willis is just a bouncer."
"I don't think I
can clear it up," MacRae admitted, "but I can sure lace it around
with some theories. Do you know Willis's Martian name? Do you know what it
means?"
"I didn't know he
had one—I mean 'she'."
"It reads: 'In whom
the hopes of a world are joined.' That suggest anything to you?"
"Gracious, no!
Sounds like a name for a messiah, not a bouncer."
"Maybe you aren't
joking. On the other hand, I may have translated it badly. Maybe it means
'Young Hopeful,' or merely 'Hope.' Maybe Martians go in for poetical meanings,
like we do. Take my name, 'Donald.' Means 'World Ruler.' My parents sure muffed
that one. Or maybe Martians enjoy giving bouncers fancy names. I once knew a
Pekinese called, believe it or not, 'Grand Champion Manchu Prince of
Belvedere.'" MacRae looked suddenly startled. "Do you know, I just
remembered that dog's family-and-fireside name was Willis!"
"You don't
say!"
"I do say."
The doctor scratched the stubble on his chin and reflected that he should shave
one of these weeks. "But it's not even a coincidence. I suggested the name
'Willis' to Jim in the first place; I was probably thinking of the Peke.
Engaging little devil, with a pop-eyed way of looking at you just like
Willis—our Willis. Which is to say that neither one of Willis's names
necessarily means anything."
He sat so long without
saying anything that Marlowe said, "You aren't clearing up the mystery
very fast. You think that Willis's real name does mean something, don't
you?—else you wouldn't have brought it up."
MacRae sat up with a
jerk. "I do. I do indeed. I think Willis is sort of a Martian crown
princess. Now wait a minute —don't throw anything. I won't get violent. That's
a farfetched figure of speech. What do you think Willis is?"
"Me?" said Marlowe.
"I think he's an example of exotic Martian fauna, semi-intelligent and
adapted to his environment."
"Big words,"
complained the doctor. "I think he is what a Martian is before he grows
up."
Marlowe looked pained.
"There is no similarity of structure. They're as different as chalk and
cheese."
"Granted. What's
the similarity between a caterpillar and a butterfly?"
Marlowe opened his mouth
and closed it. "I don't blame you," MacRae went on, "we never
think of such metamorphosis in connection with higher types, whatever a 'higher
type' is. But I think that is what Willis is and it appears to be why
Willis has to go back to
his people soon. He's in the nymph stage; he's about to go into a pupal
stage—some sort of a long hibernation. When he comes out he'll be a
Martian."
Marlowe chewed his Up.
"There's nothing unreasonable about it—just startling."
"Everything about
Mars is startling. Another thing: we've never been able to find anything
resembling sex on this planet —various sorts of species conjugation, yes, but
no sex. It appears to me that we missed it. I think that all the nymph
Martians, the bouncers, are female; all of the adults are male. They change. I
use the terms for want of better ones, of course. But if my theory is
correct—and mind you, I'm not saying it is—then it might explain why Willis is
such an important personage. Eh?"
Marlowe said wearily,
"You ask me to assimilate too much at once."
"Emulate the Red
Queen. I'm not through. I think the Martians have still another stage, the stage
of the 'old one' to whom I talked—and I think it's the strangest one of all.
Jamie, can you imagine a people having close and everyday relations with
Heaven—their heaven—as close and matter of fact as the relations between, say,
the United States and Canada?"
"Doc, I'll imagine
anything you tell me to."
"We speak of the
Martian 'other world'; what does it mean to you?"
"Nothing. Some sort
of a trance, such as me East Indians indulge in."
"I ask you because
I talked, so they told me, to someone in the 'other world'—the 'old one' I
mean. Jamie, I think I negotiated our new colonizing treaty with a ghost.
"Now just keep your
seat," MacRae went on. "I'll tell you why. I was getting nowhere with
him so I changed the subject. We were talking Basic, by the way; he had picked
Jim's brains. He knew every word that Jim might know and none that Jim couldn't
be expected to know. I asked him to assume, for the sake of argument, that we
were to be allowed to stay —in which case, would the Martians let us use their
subway system to get to Copais? I rode one of those subways to the conference.
Very clever—the acceleration is always down, as if the room were mounted on
gymbals. The old one had trouble understanding what I wanted. Then he showed me
a globe of Mars—very natural, except that it had no canals. Gekko was with me,
just as he was with Jim. The old one and Gekko had a discussion, the gist of
which was what year was I at? Then the globe changed before my eyes, bit by
bit. I saw the canals crawl across the face of Mars. I saw them being built,
Jamie.
"Now I ask
you," he concluded, "what kind of a being is it that has trouble
remembering which millenium he is in? Do you mind if I tag him a ghost?"
"I don't mind
anything," Marlowe assured him. "Maybe we're all ghosts."
"I've given you one
theory, Jamie; here is another: bouncers are Martians and Old Ones are entirely
separate races. Bouncers are third class citizens, Martians are second class
citizens, and the real owners we never see, because they live down underneath.
They don't care what we do with the surface as long as we behave ourselves. We
can use the park, we can even walk on the grass, but we mustn't frighten the
birds. Or maybe the 'old one' was just hypnosis that Gekko used on me, maybe
it's bouncers and Martians only, with bouncers having some fanatical religious
significance to Martians, the way Hindus feel about cows. You name it."
"I can't,"
said Marlowe. "I'm satisfied that you managed to negotiate an agreement
that permits us to stay on Mars. I suppose it will be years before we
understand the Martians."
"You are putting it
mildly, Jamie. The white man was still studying the American Indian, trying to
find out what makes him tick, five hundred years after Columbus—and the Indian
and the European are both men, like as two peas. These are Martians. We'll
never understand them; we aren't even headed in the same direction."
MacRae stood up. "I
want to get a bath and some sleep.... after I see Jim."
"Just a minute.
Doc, do you think we'll have any real trouble making this autonomy declaration
stick?"
"It's got to stick.
Relations with the Martians are eight times as delicate as we thought they
were; absentee ownership isn't practical. Imagine trying to settle issues like
this one by taking a vote back on Earth among board members that have never
even seen a Martian."
"That's not what I
mean. How much opposition will we run into?"
MacRae scratched his
chin again. "Men have had to fight for their liberties before, Jamie. I
don't know. It's up to us to convince the folks back on Earth that autonomy is
necessary. With the food and population problem back on Earth being what it is,
they'll do anything necessary—once they realize what we're up against—to keep
the peace and continue migration. They don't want anything to hold up the
Project."
"I hope you're
right."
"m the long run I
have to be right. We've got the Martians pitching on our team. Well, I'm on my
way to break the news to Jim."
"He's not going to
like it," said Jim's father. "He'll get over it. Probably he'll find
another bouncer and teach him English and call him Willis, too. Then he'll grow
up and not make pets of bouncers. It won't matter." He looked thoughtful,
and added, "But what becomes of Willis? I wish I knew."
Jim took it well. He
accepted MacRae's much expurgated explanation and nodded. "I guess if
Willis has to hibernate, well, that's that. When they come for him, I won't
make any fuss. It was just that Howe and Beecher didn't have any right to take
him."
"That's the slant,
son. But it's right for him to go with the Martians because they know how to
take care of him, when he needs it. You saw that when you were with them."
"Yes." Jim
added, "Can I visit him?"
"He won't know you.
He'll be asleep."
"Well—look, when he
wakes up, will he know me?"
MacRae looked grave. He
had asked the old one the same question. "Yes," he answered
truthfully, "he'll have all his memory intact." He did not give Jim
the rest of the answer— that the transition period would last more than forty
Earth years.
"Well, that won't
be so bad. I'm going to be awfully busy in school right now, anyhow."
"That's the
spirit."
Jim looked up Frank and
they went to their old room, vacant of womenfolk at the moment. Jim cradled
Willis in his arms and told Frank what Doc had told him. Willis listened, but
the conversation was apparently over the little Martian's depth; Willis made no
comment.
Presently Willis became
bored with it and started to sing. The selection was the latest Willis had
heard, the tango Frank had presented to Jim: “Quien Es La Senorita?”
When it was over Frank
said, "You know, Willis sounds exactly like a girl when he sings
that."
Jim chuckled.
"Quien Es La Senorita?, Willis?"
Willis managed to look
indignant. "Willis fine boy'" she insisted.