WHOSE
WORLD IS THIS?
He
was a tall man, well-muscled and tough, with the strong intelligent face of a
leader. But his mind was as blank as a newborn baby*s.
The Foragers had rescued him and brought him
to Archon; now the Controllers were teaching him, as they would a child,
forming his mind. But one day they would send him Outside
again, out of the safe runnels of Archon to face the terrors that existed in
the land of the legendary Demons.
Somewhere out there was the clue to his lost
memory, his otherworldly past, and somewhere out there, too, was the hint of a
future that could bring disaster and a hideous death.
Turn this book over for second complete novel
KENNETH
BULMER
Novels in Ace editions include
THE
SECRET OF ZI (D-331) THE CHANGELING WORLDS (D-369) THE EARTH GODS ARE COMING
(D-453) BEYOND THE SILVER SKY (D-507) NO MAN'S WORLD (F-104)
THE
WIZARD OF STARSHIP POSEIDON (F-209) THE MILLION YEAR HUNT (F-285)
DEMONS
WORLD
Kenneth Bulmer
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the
Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
DEMONS
WORLD
Copyright ©, 1964, by Ace Books, Inc. All Rights Reserved
I
WANT THE STARS
Copyright ©, 1964, by Ace Books, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
CHAPTER
ONE
They
found htm sprawled
on the edge of a projecting aerial platform, white, lax, unconscious and as
helpless as a baby.
"Push
him over the edge," counseled Old Chronic, the veteran Forager. His pouchy
eyes moved restlessly in the unceasing survey of all Foragers, his leathery
neck creasing and uncreasing like an animated concertina.
"We-el,"
said Thorburn, hesitantly. This was his first trip as lead Forager and the onus
of responsibility had fallen on him with unwelcome surprise. Now he shook his
massive head, trying to think and plan, conscious of the six others and
contriving not to show the uncertainty he felt was a personal weakness.
Tentatively he reached out for assurance from the others, and all the time his
eyes moved up and down, left and right, around the back, searching, watching,
apprehensive. A Forager out on a trip scarcely ever looked at his companions.
Old Chronic cackled, clicking his dentures,
his eyes bright with gleeful malice. "What frightens you, Thorburn? He
won't step on you."
The
five others—three men and two girls—nodded and laughed at the sally. There was
truth in that. Old Chronic might be past leading a foraging group,1 but he had lived a long time in a trade where
men and women died frequently and they saw the wisdom of his words. All the
time their eyes were moving, moving, moving.
Without
looking at it, Thorburn jerked a horny thumb at the strange shining machine,
lying mute and dumb beside the equally quiescent figure on the cold marble.
"And what about
that?"
Julia,
the blonde with the big body and agile, slender limbs, glanced down over the
edge of the platform, her camouflage cape rustling in the breeze. She turned
lithely, looked back at the others, raised a quizzical
eyebrow at Old Chronic.
"Go on," he said,
wheezing a little in the fresh air.
Thorburn
said, "Hold on, now—" and stopped. His eyes, in their ceaseless
roaming, had glanced up at the Outer Sky, all a dazzling white-blue glare, far
away and infinitely remote. A mile or so away across the concrete plain other
buildings rose, black-outlined, colored cliffs of metal and stone and plastic.
Every shape lay clearly before him in the brilliant light; yet every outline was encrusted in a blue mist of distance, a soft haze that
subdued color and detail, lent the usual blurring to visual inspection. "I
don't know—"
The
marble aerial platform trembled suddenly, a gentle, skin-felt vibration, a
sensation of bodily swinging movement.
At once the Foragers
reacted.
The
four men and two women flung their camouflage capes more securely about them
and dashed with scuttling speed for the shadow behind the doorway towering into
dizzy perspective two hundred feet above.
Thorburn
hesitated. The tight knot of puzzlement chaining these people had been
dissipated and unraveled by that gentle vibration. His way, it seemed to him,
had been marked out for him. Effortlessly, he picked up the man lying still and
twisted by his strange machine, slung him over his shoulder, raced after his
comrades with the long sure stride of an athlete in perfect training.
He
reached the concealing shadows of the architrave as the Demon stepped out onto
the balcony.
The
stranger wore no camouflage cape and the odd material of his one piece
coverall that had so puzzled the Foragers gave no clue to his origin, but its
color, a drab greeny-gray, blended well enough with the shadows to give
concealment from the enormous but erratic eyes of the Demon.
Holding
himself perfectly still a few yards from his rigid
companions, Thorburn watched the Demon stride out into the sunshine.
Displaced
wind buffeted him as one gigantic leg swished by. He was thankful to see that
Julia's cape now clipped tightly to her without any betraying flutter. The
noise of a monstrous foot descending sent shock waves
through the feet-thick solid marble; a rushing wall of bright crimson going
past, seemingly unending, slithering and scraping across the floor, drew
excruciating pangs from his eardrums. The very air shivered as the Demon
passed.
Thorburn did not look up now, did not move, stood graven, huddled,
holding in~lhe screaming panic within him, fighting the ages-old fear of the
Demons that had haunted Mankind from the Beginning.
Thud, thud, thud, crashed
the Demon's feet. At each gigantic blow, sound blasted at Thorburn's eardrums.
Then that rippling avalanche of glowing crimson passed and he could flicker his
eyes furtively within the shelter of his cape, and stare at Honey's white,
tensed, panic-drawn face; the rigidity of her pose told eloquently of deep
primordial fear rather than an ordered and controlled stillness.
He shivered a little. Honey was young, on her
second Forage; he should have stayed at her side. But this stranger who now so
laxly hung over his arm had claimed his first attention. Why, he didn't know.
Rules of conduct were arbitrary enough for no one to misunderstand and a
Forager's first duty was to his comrades. If once a Demon caught sight of a man
or a woman, the story might be different.
On the thought Thorburn swiveled an eye at
the Demon.
Enormous,
crushingly huge, the Demon stepped out onto the aerial platform, and leaned on
the balustrade that lofted eighty feet. Something bright glinted up from a corner;
a subdued splintering crash sounded.
Slowly
a black shadowed foot lifted, rising like the black belly of a thundercloud swept
down in ponderous might. The stranger's queerly shining machine vanished over
the edge of the platform. Before it shattered into meaningless fragments on
the ground beneath, it must have fallen through three thousand feet of
nothingness.
An
explosive, blustering snort exploded from the Demon, a rolling, rushing tornado
of sound that dwarfed anything that had gone before. Thorbum clenched his teeth
and waited through the paroxysm. Staring in that swift, fleeting,
camera-efficient, comprehensive glance of all Foragers, Thorburn checked that
the Demon was not looking their way, flicked the retire signal to his
companions and, on the instant, sprang from the architrave shadow to the shadow
of the wall within.
The
others joined him, six explosively moving and then stone-still people, in a
line, sheltering in the shadows beneath the fifteen-foot-high skirting board.
At
their leader's imperious gesture Sims and Wallas, both young
and agile, quick-witted, fleet-limbed, moved out ahead along the floor
paralleling the crack where wooden skirting board and tiled floor untidily met.
As well as an eye for the Demons, roaring and striding ponderously in the upper
air, a Forager must spare an eye for every dark crack and cranny, every crevice
and corner of his own world.,
Bringing
up the rear of the group, Cardon, a little older than Sims and Wallas, a little
younger than Thorburn, a fierce, dark-eyed black-browed man with a notoriously
filthy temper marched, it seemed, with a permanent crook in his neck, his head
tilted back, his eyes forever searching the way they had come. The group
depended on the rear marker.
Now that the Daemon had been left behind
Honey had regained some color; her dark eyes flashed no less swiftly and
intelligently as she, like everyone else, maintained a constant vigil. She
pushed a hand beneath her cape, touched the warm metal of the walkie-talkie strapped to
her back. The touch reassured her. Her job this trip as radioman gave her an
importance, at least in her own eyes, and a task to which she could devote her
attention and try, albeit with indifferent success, to shut out those screaming
primordial fears that would not be denied in the actual physical, dreaded
presence of a Demon.
Julia
said, "Hold it. That's the entrance; we came through flattened out.
There's a beam full-width a foot above the floor. Everybody
down."
"You
first, Sims, Wallas," ordered Thorburn to make no mistake about who was
running this party. Julia, as radarop, tended to get above herself. "When
you give the all clear we'll follow. Julia, you and Old Chronic give me a hand
with the stranger." Thorburn laid the limp form out flat on the floor a
foot from the beam, watched as Julia re-checked her meters. He quizzed her with
a glance.
"Still the same." Julia phrased the query beginning to dominate all men's minds.
"They aren't any better yet—the beam's still too
high—but when are they? Our grandparents didn't have detector beams to worry
about—"
"But
we have," Thorburn said, cutting her off. "Come on, there's the
signal from Sims."
Julia
flashed him a glance which said eloquently, Go get trodden on! And then
obediently flattened out—with her figure it was no easy task—and squashed
through. Pushing and pulling, the three eased the stranger under the detector
beam.
Why
was he bothering with this man? Thorburn didn't know the full answer to that,
but he saw clearly that some of the answers were bound up in that quick glance
from Julia.
Apprehensively but quite firmly, Honey
squeezed through, her lissome figure finding the task simple, and then Cardon,
with a last long look back, followed.
Outside
the door they skirted the tiled landing, and saw their goal, the
banister-flanked head of the stairs, remote and yawning, three hundred feet
away. They took time negotiating the shadow-fringed skirting board, checking
each point and then clearing it in a controlled rush that ended in frozen
immobility.
"This
is a small house," Thorburn said irritably. "And
poor. I'm surprised the Demons have a detector beam here at all.
And," he finished with the age-old sarcasm of the Forager for his
commanders, "H.Q. briefed us entirely incorrectly. Not a scrap of steel in
the whole place."
Sims
and Walls, being young, automatically patted their empty sacks. "Steel
weighs heavy," Sims said. "Make an easier touchdown without it,"
said Wallas.
Both smiled as though they
had said something profound.
Old
Chronic cackled at them, clicking his dentures. "We live in a poor empire,
my lads. Every scrap of whatever it may be is useful. Don't be gleeful over
empty sacks."
Only
half repentant, Sims and Wallas led out to the head of the stairs. Here
Thorburn, as regulations demanded, checked batteries. This time it was a mere
formality; he knew that they'd only used their antigravs once on the incoming
trip to ascend the stairs down which they must now drop. "All right,"
he said, grasping the stranger more firmly over a shoulder. "Honey, you're
the lightest. Give me a hand with him."
Help
in dropping down with a burden on antigrav was not really necessary—they could
drop under adequate control with a three hundred pound sack—but he felt the
need to give orders. This trip had not resulted in any way as he had expected.
And Old Chronic, almost in abandon from what a proper Forager should do, kept
watching him, cackling and mumbling to himself. Let the old fool get stepped
onl
The
seven Foragers and the inert passenger dropped,
plummetting past the floor levels, even this long plunge unable to give them a
comprehensive outline of what this place was like. It was far too big to be
understood as a single unit. This house—they knew it to be that from careful
architectural drawings by their leading geographers—appeared to them as a\
vast number of individual places—a dark comer, a beamed doorway, a landing, a
long plunge downwards on antigrav, a convenient hole, a whole succession of
convenient holes—into which they could dart the moment the snorting and blowing and ground
vibration of a Demon warned them.
You
could not grasp the entire scene. Only if you stood off—preferably in a high
vantage nook—and surveyed a distant prospect, could you understand that the
world was a succession of buildings. Not many people ever had that opportunity
and fewer of those really understood, as Thor-burn had only recently understood,
just what the world really was.
A
man labored his life away at his task down below; only the Foragers and the
Hunters were ever likely to see a
Demon and many a man and woman was bom, lived and died without once hearing or
seeing a Demon. Thorburn knew that he was glad he was not one of those, but the
price came high.
The
group landed in the shadow of the lowest stair, checked, froze, then sprinted hard for the slot beneath the five hundred
foot tall front door. Vague and misty that doorway towered up, the glow of
Outer Sky shining through vast areas of colored glass. All seemed quiet. They
tumbled through the slot where wood and tile failed to meet with precision,
stumbled down in faint reflected light. A man could see in almost
pitch-darkness just so long as there was light enough to strike back from
corners and projections. Now Thorburn ordered their lamps switched on,
alternately, each two men stepping along in the radiance from one headlamp. He
wanted to get this limp stranger home. The responsibility so rashly undertaken
now weighed him down, to add to the loss he felt at the failure of the trip.
H.Q. was bound to have nasty things to say about that.
The
light of Outer Sky had not been bright today and the Foragers had not worn
their dark glasses as, usually, they were forced to do. Even so, it was a
relief to return from the stark nakedness of outside to the safe runnels of the
familiar human world.
"Keep closed up," Thorburn said.
The order was unnecessary; still that compulsion lay on him. He had been chosen leader and as leader he had taken the decision to bring
this stranger in. He wanted the others to know and keep on knowing that he was
leader.
So far there had been no real time to examine
the stranger. He lay, white and breathing shallowly, a limp weight on
Thorburn's shoulder. Old Chronic voiced the doubt preying in Thorbum's mind.
"He's
not one of us," Old Chronic said, sucking a tooth so that his dentures
palpitated clickingly. "He's an enemy, sure as sure. What you going to do
when he wakes up, Thorburn?"
Thorburn
hadn't really thought. Fumblingly, he groped for an answer.
"He
may be an enemy," he said slowly as they marched through the dark runnels.
"Or he may . . . may not be. But he's a man. I
couldn't leave him for the Demons to step on and kick over the edge."
"You're
a fool, Thorburn," said old Chronic with the liberty of age.
Surprisingly, Julia turned
on the old man.
"You
keep a civil tongue, Old Chronic. Thorbum's the leader. Remember that."
Thorburn,
studiously, did not look at Julia. He felt a strange
warmth in him, and, failing at first to recognize it for what it was, denied it
for weakness.
"Checkpoint coming
up," Wallas called back.
The
dim blue light welcomed them. They marched in with a swagger, the swagger and
panache that all Foragers cultivated at home, their eyes still roving, roving, roving. The steel-helmeted guard lowered his gun. He saluted
Thorburn. Behind him a sergeant pulled the switch and the barrier rose.
"Hullo,"
said the sergeant, a brass-voiced, barrel-bodied man, huge in his armor.
"What have you got there?"
"A stranger." Thorburn was short with the soldier.
"We're taking him to Forager H.Q."
That was quite enough to silence the
loquacious sergeant.
Very
soon Thorburn was able to lower his burden onto a sofa in the Forager anteroom.
He had not felt the strain of carrying the man, but a weight lifted from him as
the stranger flopped back, a weight that was not physical. Wil-kins walked up
and stood pensively looking down.
"Tell me," said Wilkins in his soft
voice.
Thorbum swallowed. Wilkins, whilst a Forager,
was a Controller. And Controllers ran all of life, everything, when they felt
impelled to do so. Controllers did not speak like the lower classes, did not
think like them; Controllers represented an achievement in humanity
bewildering and yet perfectly accepted by men in Thorbum's position. Thorbum
told Wilkins, watching furtively the Controller's ascetic face and slender
hands, watching the faint frown gathering between those aristocratic eyes,
watching the full mouth pucker.
"I
see. Well, we'd better make a report. When he comes around I'll talk to
him." Wilkins had seen the empty sacks, of course, the moment the party
marched in. "Empty, Thorbum? If you can't do better than that we will
have to think again about your leadership."
"But, sir—"
"Enough of that. Dictate your report to a scribe."
Wilkins
turned away. A little cry from Honey brought his head around, ominously, a
frown of annoyance beginning to cloud that aristocratic face.
"Look!"
said Honey, quite forgetting herself. "The stranger!
He's coming to!"
Thorbum
bent above the green clad figure. Blue lips moved feebly; ■ the eyelids fluttered like curtains in a
draft. The mouth opened, the throat jerked; words, a word, struggled garglingly
to be born.
"Stead,"
said the stranger and, again, with an agonized energy, a frightful toll of
energy pouring out into the single, meaningless word. "Stead. . . ."
They
stood looking down on him as he lay, white, lax, no longer unconscious, but
staring up with the utter helplessness of a baby.
CHAPTER
TWO
"But
he is a baby!"
"Amnesia,
my dear," said Simon, thin fingers cupping his chin. "Everything has
gone. Everything. And that is strange. A man usually
remembers language, habits, generalized in-
13
formation
when he loses his memory. Usually all that is lost is personal history."
"His
brain just isn't working." Delia put one slender finger to her lips,
mentally correcting that flat statement. "I mean, his upper conscious
brain isn't working. The thalamus, the automotive controls, they're all right.
He's a husky brute, isn't he? She turned under the lights of the austere, bare
room with its single table and chair, stared down on the stranger who lay,
naked and unsmiling, upon the table. The bandage around his head struck a hard
blow of whiteness against the tawny flush of his skin. His eyes, wide open, a
pale distant blue, regarded the ceiling without knowledge, without
intelligence, without any flicker of self.
The
stranger lay there on the table; a single glance told anyone that here lay a
tough, competent, ruthless, dedicated man with yet a wide streak of sympathy
and humor. The face, lax now and revealed, was hard and well-formed, the nose
nobly beaked, the lips wide and thin, the chin stubborn yet pliant—a strong
face, a face used to handling men and situations and forcing them to the will
of the brain dominating that skull and body. Yet now that efficient human
machine was informed and animated by no intelligence, no understanding, no pride of self.
"Just
a baby," said Delia, a tiny quirk pulling one corner of her soft mouth
down in a smile she knew Simon would not altogether approve. "What did you
call him?"
"Stead,"
said Simon. He looked up at his assistant, the redoubtable and beautiful Delia,
with her red curls cut barbarously short, her wide gray eyes that, as yet, no
man had seen turn violet, her tall lissomness that shook a man's guts with
sudden savage power. Simon looked at her and sighed and, as he had done a
thousand times, wished he were twenty years younger.
"Stead,"
he said again. "That was the first word he spoke with he regained
consciousness. The first and the only word."
"Stead. Well, it means nothing in any language I know. It could be his
name—" Delia stopped. Then she said, "The reports you handed me
seemed rather confused. I'd like to see Forager Leader Thorbum myself, if you
don't mind. If we knew just what had happened to the stranger, to Stead, in the moments before he became unconscious,
we might have a clue to the—"
"He
most probably was in danger. So the word might be a cry for help, a warning to
comrades."
"I thought the report
indicated he was alone."
"So
he was." Simon turned as a low bubbly gasp came from the lax figure on the
table. "But before you essay any further guesses, Delia, I'd like you to
examine the artifacts found on his body. They form a most singular collection.
Ah, he's going to cry again."
Going
towards the door, Delia said with that dimpling smile, "All babies cry. At
least, that's what I've been told."
Simon
couldn't bear to watch her as she left the room. His dead youth cried out in
wrath that the merciless progress of time had irreparably separated them. Then,
with a visible effort of his scrawny body and\ scraggy features, he banished
Delia from his mind, turned to the oversize baby on the table.
Stead's
face creased. His eyes closed and the lids bulged. His mouth opened.
"Baawwll" said Stead.
"Flora,"
called Simon. He felt suddenly alone, there with a crying baby. The quick sense
of desperate urgency, that the baby's crying should be investigated and stopped
in the appropriate manner, filled him with alarm.
"All
right, sir." Flora bustled in, broad and smiling arid comforting, her
stiff white apron rustling with every breath. "Don't worry about him, Controller
Simon, sir. I'll soon give him his feed. Then he'll be as right as a square
meal." She chuckled. "And I haven't got to burp him. Fancy me trying
to stroke his back!"
Simon
left her to her ministrations with bottle and glass and feeding tube, ignoring
the nurse's joke. The problem of this stranger had been thrust onto him and
while all his scientific ardor leaped at the challenge, his essential bachelor
shyness cowered at these infant mysteries and filled him with a faint disgust.
He'd never married because he had not found any woman he considered suitable,
and now that Delia had come as his assistant, it was too late.
In the next room of the warren where the
stranger's clothes had
been spread out on a workbench, Delia examined Stead's strange one-piece outer
garment.
"Practical,"
she said, turning its greeny-gray, smoothly sliding material over in her hands.
"No buttons, just this ingenious litde sliding thing that opens it from
neck to ankle. Somebody had to think twice before they invented that one."
The
man's underclothes lay in a neat pile to one side: white, hygienically clean,
again woven of some material with which she was not familiar; they were
recognizably a man's undergarments. She dropped them back quickly. She had
touched them only with the tips of her slender, delicate fingers.
He
had apparently worn no helmet. At least, none had been brought in. He didn't
seem to have worn any armor at all. Delia thought that strange. Her work had
brought her into contact with Foragers, rough uncouth men and women with
athletic bodies and ferocious instincts and brains of unsuspected resilience,
and she knew that no human being ventured outside without all the safeguards he
could command. Even here, home inside the warren, the safeguards were
sometimes necessary.
The electric light shone steadily upon the
hand weapon. Someone had wired up the trigger so that it could not be pulled. A
label had been tied on: Dangerous. Not to be operated without permission.
Characteristically of one class of secretary,
no indication of what authority was needed to give permission was indicated.
Delia touched her lips again with a finger, stirred
the gun gently with the other.
It
did not seem heavy. A ridged butt, a trigger and guard, a
barrel, slender at the muzzle, heavily masked around the square magazine
section. She assumed that must be the magazine although no sign of
hopper or ejector met her interested gaze. Well, Tony or somebody like htm over
at Physics would have to sort that one out.
For
the rest, there were a writing implement, a pad of blank paper, a wrist watch
that had no winding knob, a box of extraordinarily thin and tough tissue paper,
a leather wallet that wasn't leather, containing papers and small books filled
with line after line of impossibly neat printing in a language that meant nothing to Delia. In a
little transparent sheath was a photograph of Stead.
The
photograph differed little from any photograph Delia had seen before of a
handsome, tough young man, not smiling, level eyes gray-blue, fixed in
watchful, grave regard. And there, of course, lay the one difference. For this
photograph, if it was a photograph, was colored. And the color was not a
photographic water tint, but gleamed and sparkled from the paper itself.
"Somewhere,"
Delia said to herself, "somewhere or other on earth there is a_i empire or federation a little in advance of us."
The
thought did not please her. Like any young woman with a scientific training,
she was proud of her own Empire of Archon, believing in her own psychological
work, only half believing in the tales of Demons. Moreover, she was conscious
of an upward destiny for mankind that might end anywhere, or at any rate far
beyond the walls that confined the human race now.
A
slip of paper lay among the items, bright pink with heavy printing that had
deeply indented the thick paper. Delia recognized it at once. These receipt
forms had been issued by her many times when confiscating some item from a
worker or cleric or Forager or Soldier; she flicked it around with one
manicured fingernail and saw that it had been signed by Shardiloe.
"Funny,"
she mused. "If he took this gadget which they believe to be an antigrav,
why didn't he take the gun? I'd have thought that to be more important. Oh,
well." She turned to the last item on the workbench.
This
was a small box, again constructed from the unfamiliar material of the gun
butt, with a slender but recognizable aerial telescoping out from one corner.
A dial was set in the center, marked with weird hieroglyphs, and a couple of
switches appeared to be the only controls. One end of the box was sadly broken
in to reveal a myriad of tiny wires and glistening beads. Radio was a field
somewhat outside Delia's experience. But she knew, with a little moue of
anticipatory unpleasantness, that Belle would be along to collect the radio
soon.
A tiny secret satisfaction titillated her
that Belle, too, would be in for a shock when she tried to fathom the mystery.
This radio, along with the buttonless coverall, the gun, the printing and the
missing antigrav, posed problems the scientists of Archon were not yet equipped
to solve.
She
turned away from the bench with a quick, decisive movement. These, after all,
were mere artifacts, the outward symbols of a civilization. Her job was vastly
more complicated, exciting and important: to pry into the mind of this strange
man, strip away all the appurtenances of his way of life and reach down through
the man's mind to the core of his being. Once she knew that, the rest would
follow inevitably.
Or so she thought.
Unfortunately,
the stranger had received a severe head injury, a blow that had jolted all
memory from him, to leave him as receptive to impression and as aware of the
past as a newborn baby. Delia's face became taut and unconsciously drew itself
into a dedicated mask.
"I'll
teach him," she said softly. "I'll reach down to him, show him who he
is and what he is, and then I'll stretch past that new self and pluck his old
self, his real self, out from its crippled skull and hold it up and know!"
The
door opened. Delia turned, guiltily, as though caught pilfering. Belle stood
there, laughing at her, hazel locks tumbled about her elfin, urchin face, her
snub nose lifted defiantly, her merry eyes shining with the knowledge that here
she trespassed on the sacred precincts of Delia's laboratory.
"Hullo, Delia, dear," Belle said,
advancing with both hands outstretched. "You do look solemn!"
"Do I? I'd have said you looked as
though you'd just come in from a tumble in a corner."
"And suppose I had? Isn't that
fun?"
"For those who like it." Delia took Belle's hands, feeling the quick
warmness of them, knowing that Belle was feeling the
cool composure of her own hands.
"Well, I do. Now, where's the
body?"
"Next door. Simon is still making preliminary observations." "Is it true
he can't remember a thing?"
"Quite true."
"My dear, how wonderful! He can meet me—us—without any prior
complications."
"Why,
Belle dear, I didn't know you were frightened of competition."
"I was thinking of
you, dear."
"You came for the
radio? Well, here it is."
Delia
fumed and kept a bright smile as Belle walked across to the bench. These
cheerfully catty, insulting matches meant nothing to Belle, but Delia sometimes
really meant what she said. And Belle could be so infuriating at times.
Delia
topped Belle by a good head and so far Belle, in a world of Belle-sized women,
hadn't brought out her most crushing remark. Delia quivered inwardly as she
awaited its inevitable occurrence.
Belle
looked at the stranger's radio. She bent closer and a frown knit her beautiful eyebrows.
She glanced at Delia and a pink tongue wetted her beautiful lips. Taking all
this in, Delia felt glee.
The
words Belle and beautiful belonged together somehow, and they could
never be separated by any act of rationalism. Belle said slowly, "This is
a radio—of sorts—all right. But hardly any valves. In
fact—what are all these beads? And some of the wiring joins up with
circuit-directions printed on the— Or are they solid
transparent blocks? This is going to be a tough one."
"You'll
understand it well enough," Delia said sweetly. "One day."
"Thank
you for that kind thought, Delia, dear." Belle picked up the radio and
stood, cradling it, looking hard at Delia. "But then, you always were such
a big girl. . . ."
Delia writhed all over the inside of her face
at the way, this time, Belle had done it. But the smile rigidly adhering to her
face did not slip; the pegs of her self-control had been well rammed home.
Simon
walked in, breaking the blue haze of the moment. "Hullo, Belle! Come for
your part of the loot?"
"Yes,
Simon. And if you're faced with a nut like this one, you're welcome."
"The stranger poses problems right
enough. Care to have a peep at him?" "Try to stop
me."
"I
don't think," Simon said in his dry, deliberate way, "it would pay
anyone to try."
They
all walked through the connecting door. Flora wiped the table where much of the
stranger's food had found its way and smiled at Belle. She picked up a pair of
men's undergarments and began methodically to put them on Stead. Belle stood,
face attentive, her bosom moving a little faster than when she and Delia had
slanged each other.
"But," Belle
said. "But he's so masculine!"
For
some obcure but vital reason, Delia let that go. She felt some indecorousness
about scratching at Belle in the presence, however unconscious, of this man,
when he was not aware. He was asleep now. When he woke up she might forget that
momentary jab of inner conflict and understanding.
"You
have your radio," she said brusquely. "Simon and I have work to do,
real work."
"Tinkering
about with people's brains, and you call it work. Now
if you had the problem of maintaining wireless communication with all this
infernal new howling that's hitting the air these days, you'd find that real work."
Simon,
ready to enter into a discussion of the interference that had so recently begun
on the air, said, "But some wavebands are free of it, and that could
mean—"
"We
don't want to keep Belle," interrupted Delia, pushing the shorter girl to
the door with a genteel controlling wave of her hand. "She is so busy."
"I'm
going, Delia, dear. I'll look forward to seeing you again." And Belle,
with a quick-blown kiss to Simon, went out.
"The cat." said Delia.
Simon
looked at her, frowned, smiled, put a hand on her arm.
His profession had little need to show him what was needed here. "Oh, Delia. We'd better begin a chart of Stead's
reactions right away. We can teach him what we want him to know, but only he
can tell us what we want to know."
Delia
responded easily. "Right, Simon. I'll open a fresh chart right away."
She glanced down at Stead's sleeping form which Flora had now clothed in a
bright scarlet wrap. "We'd better put him in a proper bed. And I'll need a
whole slew of children's toys, teaching blocks, the ^whole bag of tricks. He's
going to be a tough pupil, I feel that." "But you'll teach him,
Delia."
"I'll
teach him, all right. Of course, I shall be giving him the education received
by a Controller's child. Perhaps, Simon, he isn't a Controller. Maybe he's a
Forager or a Hunter, maybe a soldier."
"That
doesn't matter. We want to know what he is and everything we can give him to
make him remember will help. You fill him up, Delia, until he flows over."
"I'll
teach him," Delia said again. Her slender finger touched those ripe lips, her tiny secret smile flowered again. "Of course,
he'll fall in love with me during the process. I only hope that doesn't hurt
him too much."
CHAPTER
THREE
"The
growth of intelligence in a
human child is not a steady upward curve; as understanding and knowledge and
learning are assimilated, they coalesce and force the native intelligence
onward in spurts and starts. Sometimes, when units of information appear to
contradict, the child's brightness wanes; he is called stupid and in clumsy
hands much harm may be done by barbarous punishments." Simon leaned
forward, his creased serious face returning Stead's calm regard. "But you
are not physically a baby; your brain has already developed. The cells and
synapses and general structure needed for memory and understanding on a higher
plane than mere automatic living are already in existence."
Delia
nodded, flipping the page over to a new algebraic problem. "What Simon is
saying, Stead, is that you learn so fast because you have superior equipment at
hand. But you are still liable to the flux of learning as new factors
interact."
"So that's why I was
so stupid yesterday?"
"Yes, and why you're so bright today and may be as stupid
again tomorrow. The cycles in your case are more rapid and violent, simply
because you are an adult. We've been pumping you full of information for the
past sixty days, two thirds of a quarter, and you are now educationally on a
level with the Hunters and Soldiers."
"But
I feel confident in going on." Stead spoke slowly, using the refined
accents of a Controller because that was the way he had been taught the
language. "The world is a large and wonderful place and, much as I feel my
debt to you, I need to go and know more, to find a place for myself in the
world—perhaps find out who I was."
"I
don't really think you could have been a Forager," Delia said.
"Why not, Delia?" Stead had given up trying not to look at this girl with her clipped red
curls, her face that haunted him, her figure that maddened him in a way he
could not understand. She was a woman and he was a man; so far that was all he
understood. Frankly, he couldn't understand why there had to be two sorts of
human beings. He felt annoyed that this evolution Simon talked about hadn't
been wise enough to insure just one sort of human being, a man, like himself
and Simon. He got on with men. He couldn't— for some strange and probably
absurdly childish reason-feel comfortable in the presence of women, especially
of Delia.
"I
don't think you were a Forager, Stead, because you're rather large. Hunters and
Foragers are usually small men and women, relatively speaking. That's just a
quirk of evolution, I expect."
"Evolution!" said Stead.
"Well, if I wasn't a Forager, what was I. A
Soldier?"
"Possibly." Simon pulled forward a book, angled it on the
table so that the electric light fell full on it. The room contained many books
in shelves, a table, chairs; a functional room, it was, for the teaching of
facts. "Here are pictures of soldiers from other Empires and Federations.
You were not, we have found out, a soldier of Archon."
"Perhaps," Stead
said, taking the book, "I was a worker."
"Oh, no!" said Delia,
and paused.
Stead
glanced at her. Her cheeks were flushed. He wondered what was wrong with her, then he bent to the book.
The
pictures leaped out at him from the page, colored drawings, black and white
photographs, illustrated detail of uniform and weapons. A general similarity
ran through the ideas governing what a soldier should be. A helmet, varying in
size and complexity; a suit of armor, metal, leather, padded; weapons—guns,
arbalests, spears, axes, swords—a whole gamut of lethal hardware. But beneath
it all, the same human form stood out—two-armed, two-legged; the same sorts of
face stared out—grim and lined, with narrowed eyes and thinned lips, harsh and
uncompromising, the faces of men who knew the job to which they had been called
and were dedicated in its performance.
Slowly,
Stead shook his head. "No," he said, "no. I don't think I was a soldier."
"Well,
you can't be sure of anything yet." Simon put the book away, revealing the
algebraic tract beneath. "Now, this problem—"
"I
heard you call those soldiers 'enemies'." Stead stayed his hand and
flicked back the page to a man wearing uniform and armor that almost—almost,
but not quite—paralleled the equipment of Archon's soldiers. "What makes
this man an enemy?"
"But
he's a soldier of the Federation of Trychos!" Delia was astonished.
"Of course, you've forgotten everything. You could not be from Trychos; we
know them too well. We've fought six great wars with them and still they raid,
stealing our women, stealing our food and raw materials. Why should we not call them enemies!"
Solemnly,
Simon nodded. "The same facts apply to all outsiders. Only the Empire of
Archon, our empire, has stayed the barbaric hordes. We fight in a noble cause,
but these others are power mad."
Stead
took all this in with a growing feeling that if he had to lose his memory then
he had been profoundly, gloriously fortunate to be found by men of Archon.
"Suppose," he said on a breath, staring up at Simon, "suppose
I'd been found by some Foragers out of Trychos!"
"Don't fret over it,
Stead," Delia said. "You weren't."
"One
thing you must remember, Stead," amplified Simon. "You do not, as far
as we know, come from Archon. Certain items were found with you which you will be shown when the time is ready. But you must
have come from somewhere."
"I'm glad I did!" said Stead
fervently. "How thankful I am that I'm now in Archon!"
Simon
stood up and walked a little way towards the bookshelves. Then he turned to
stare back at Stead.
"The
Captain has asked to see you, Stead, as soon as you can converse coherently. I
think that time has come."
"The Captain?" Stead felt once again the rushing sense of fresh discoveries opening
up, the heady sense of there being worlds of learning behind each new opening
door. Life promised so much; there was so much to grasp and understand. "The Captain? Who is he?"
"The
Captain is the chief man of the Empire of Archon. It is he who rules and
directs—who Controls. There is a hereditary Crew who have only the well-being of Archon at heart. You see, Stead,
Archon is the only true civilization on Earth. Our Captain and our Crew are the
only true leaders. Try-chos and the other Empires and Federations own their own
Captains and Crews, but they are shams, frauds, mere ordinary men built up with
their own importance and counterfeit titles. In Archon resides the only truth!
We are the depository of the ancient truths!"
"That
is so," Delia nodded solemnly. "For our Astroman is the true lineal
descendant of the first Astroman in the Beginning. Through him Archon keeps
alive the lights of the eternal truths."
"When do I meet the
Captain?"
"In a few days. But first you must learn a great deal more of life."
"Teach
me everything you can," said Stead fervently. "I wish to know
everything!"
The
education of Stead went on smoothly. He learned that the Earth had been born
from the condensation of tears from an immortal being weeping for the sins of
mankind to come. The animals of the land had grown from a tiny scrap of
immortal tissue falling among the thickening tears and slowly, as the Earth
assumed its present shape of great buildings scattered over the face of the
land, constructed in a single night of immortal compassion, they had
diversified and adapted into their present innumerable forms.
"And man?" Stead had
asked.
"Man was placed on the buildings of
Earth by the immortal being in a spirit of contrition. He differs physiologically
and mentally from all animals. In the beginning a Garden was brought to the
Earth containing the Captain and his Crew. But the Captain's children's
children quarreled and the light of the immortal being was withdrawn from them
and a hideous night fell across the land. From that time the Empire of Archon
has been trying to bring together the graceless children of the other nations,
to bring them back into a state of grace, to unify with Archon because that is
the only path by which the favor of the immortal being may once again be
assured."
"These
things are very deep," said Stead. He frowned. "But if only the
Captain and his Crew came in the Garden to Earth, where have all the other
people come from?"
Delia glanced at Simon and
took a breath.
Simon
said, "That you will learn in due course, Stead. The facts of Life and
Death will be told you when . . . when you are ready for them."
"But I want to know
now!"
"When
you are ready."
"Life and Death, just
what are they?"
"One
thing I must impress upon you most firmly," Simon said with a new gravity
which impressed the stranger, "is that humanity, mankind, all human
beings—even the benighted heretics of other nations—are superior beings. We
did not evolve from any higher type of animal—simple comparative anatomy will
show that—and we are as a consequence the highest form of life on Earth."
"Cats," prompted
Delia simply. "Cats and dogs."
"But
they are a special case." Simon rubbed his chin. "Even our most
eminent philosophers do not entirely agree. As there is evolution so there must
be atavism. Cats and dogs, like men, have four limbs. It could be that some
unfortunate human beings degenerated into cats and dogs. I tend to doubt the
idea that these animals, charming and friendly though they be,
are men in the making."
"The
best we can say is that the immortal being created them alongside man to be his
helpmates and companions," Delia said with a sincerity that wanned Stead.
This girl
used her brains and Stead very much wanted to use his. He was thirsty for
knowledge.
'The
basic fact to remember," Simon went on, reverting to his original theme,
"is that mankind is unique. We are the guardians and controllers of the
world, set down here on Earth by the immortal being—we scientists seldom use
the word God these days—in order to fulfill our destiny." He looked
unhappy. "I, personally, deplore our schisms. No one any longer can say
with utmost clarity what that mission is. The Captain professes to know and he
is the custodian, but scientific thought, in which the Captain stands at the
forefront, declines now to accept as absolute the values of the old
teachings."
"What
it amounts to in your education," Delia said, "is that mankind is in
a Demonized mess. New ideas are beginning to challenge what we have accepted
for decades. But through it all every man, woman, and child remains firmly
convinced, knows, that their destiny on this planet is secure.
We were sent here for a purpose, however mystical that may sound, and by
striving that purpose will be found."
Simon
chuckled, and slapped Stead on the back. "Cheer up, lad. We're in a muddle
but we'll fight our way through. Now, you're going on a tour of the country
and, so you won't get into any mischief, young Lieutenant Cargill will go
along."
Lieutenant
Cargill turned out to be nearly as tall as Stead, barrel-bodied, fresh and
scrubbed and eager, with the lines of habitual command already forming around
his eyes and mouth, a young dedicated soldier ready to lose his life for
Archon.
Stead
had no suspicion that Cargill was there for any other purpose than the one
stated by Simon; Stead was in many things a baby. Stead accepted Cargill
uncritically; more, he tended to admire, and revere him for the work he did.
Just
before he and Cargill, together with Delia, set out from Simon's laboratory,
the old scientist called Cargill to one side. Standing uncomfortably close to
Delia, Stead watched Cargill with all his attention, saw the soldier in earnest
conversation with Simon. What they said he couldn't hear, but Cargill shot a
quick, surprised look at him, a look of baffled wonder and amusement, a pitying look. Simon clutched the young officer's sleeve—he
was not wearing armor—and spoke with a passionate sincerity.
Cargill's reply was loud
enough for Stead to hear.
"You
mean he really doesn't know about that? But,
by the Demons, this is rich! Wait until Delia—" He lowered Ins voice.
And
then Delia herself, richly imperious, spoke over the soldier's careless words,
in her turn catching Stead's sleeve. "Come on, Stead. There's a lot of
country to cover. Lieutenant Cargilil Are you ready?"
"I
shall be with you, immediately,
Delia." And Cargill, after a last throaty chuckle with Simon, joined the
party for the country.
Very
little time elapsed before Cargill showed that he regarded this task in the
primary light of the freedom it gave him and the chance offered to better his
acquaintance with the glorious Delia. Stead, walking along in front like a
little boy out for a treat, couldn't understand why Cargill was acting as he
was—puffing out his chest as he talked, rolling his eyes, continually looking
long at Delia—and all with an expression indicating he had eaten something that
did not agree with him.
Stead said, "Don't you
feel well, Cargill?"
"I am perfectly all right, thank you."
And
Delia laughed and took Stead's arm, to his intense discomfort, and walking on ahead,
left the soldier to stare after them and fume, then sprint to catch up, sword
jangling.
The
country through which Stead was conducted that day differed considerably in
detail from that he was to see later but in general the outlines were the same.
The warrens, neatly subdivided into class sections where people lived, lay concentrated
around a number of axial corridors. Once you left the control points with their
blue lights, you stepped outside the normal world of electric lights and busy
people, of commerce and factory production and all the civilized pursuits.
At first there was a long sloping ramp of
concrete, broken away at the edges, surrounded on all sides by plaster walls.
At the side of the twenty-foot rampway, a
number of excessively thick and clumsy wires ran in long rolling loops.
"What are those?"
"Electric
cables," Delia said at once, before Cargill could open his mouth.
"They are part of the construction made by the immortal being for the
Outside. We tap them for our own power when necessary, but the Regulations expressly
forbid too great a drawing-off of current."
"Oh,"
said Stead. He walked on in the light of their three headlamps. He'd heard a
lot about these Regulations. But no one seemed ever to have read them; they
merely were,
handed on by word of mouth.
"We're
not going far today," Cargill told them tartly. He walked now at Delia's
other side and he seemed to want to keep touching her at the slightest obstacle
in their way. When Stead leaped lightly down a six-foot break in the paving,
where far below he glimpsed a curious silver reflection, he saw Cargill
holding up his arms to Delia, above.
"Jump, Delia,"
said Cargill. "I'll catch you."
Delia
jumped, but she jumped easily and lithely to avoid the soldier. He moved
swiftly sideways in the path of her descent; they crashed together breast to
breast and his arms went about her. He laughed in a curious, high-pitched way
that irritated Stead.
"You
oaf!" blazed Delia, stumbling sideways. Cargill's Tiands were upon her,
her body caught up to his.
"You nearly
fell," he said with that odd husk in his voice.
"I did not, and take
your beastly hands off me!"
Cargill
stepped back, reluctantly. His face flushed with color and he licked his lips.
Delia brushed her long blue dress back into place, ignoring Cargill, took
Stead's arm, and said unsteadily, "We'd better get back."
"Look,
Delia," Cargill's voice held a note that Stead dimly realized was
pleading, "I'm a soldier. You know that. And he doesn't understand."
"Of course he doesn't!" blazed
Delia. "You imbecile, you Demon-fodder. You
deserve to be stepped on! He's got to learn in the right way—when we say so—and
not before! Now we're going back. And I'm going—"
"No, please, Delia! Don't report mel I couldn't help itl By all the Demons, Delia, I'm crazy
about you. I only—" "Shut up!"
The words cracked from Delia like the lash of
a whip.
Stead
looked on dumbly, not understanding, sensing mysteries glowing with awful
secrecy and wanting more than anything on the Earth to know.
Delia's
face had tautened, her mouth expressed her complete disdain for this oafish
soldier; she swung Stead violently away. "We'll have to go around the
other way to avoid that gap," she said coldly. "All right,
Cargill."
Cargill
was not listening. He was staring along the beam of his headlamp, staring into
the far darkness of the concrete roadway. His gun slithered from the holster in
a metallic sigh.
"Keep quiet," he
said in a soft, controlled voice.
Delia
looked; her hands flew to her face and their pressure stifled the scream her
nerves could not suppress.
Stead
looked. His body suddenly crawled with revulsion. He did not know at what he
stared with such horror; he had never seen anything like it in his limited new
experience. The thing was perhaps twice the size of a man, but bulky, with a
multitude of legs stemming from its middle. The head, small and furry with two
long horny projections forming a beak, stared at them unblinkingly from four
small, hooded eyes. He felt a great sickness in his stomach. Car-gill's gun
came up as the horrific monster charged.
CHAPTER FOUR
Stead
could not be
sure of his impressions in that chaotic moment. Something incredibly hard and
horny lashed him across the back and he fell. A monstrous bloated shadow reared
above him. From the corner of his eye he glimpsed Delia reeling, a long hairy something wrapped around her waist. The blue dress ripped upwards. A vast and
sudden booming concussion hit him, the sound of a great explosion.
Struggling
to rise, he saw the hairy thing around Delia slacken, then lopped and writhed
away spouting a blasphemous
ichor. A sword, gleaming in parts not covered by a glistening
thick syrup, slashed again.
Delia
toppled free. Stead reached for her, and Cargill's hand raked down, took the
girl by her back, hefted her, and carried her away.
Numbly, Stead crawled after
them.
Cargill
dropped Delia, turned, and grabbed Stead by the hand, dragging him free.
Something soft and warm and furry had enveloped Stead's legs. The touch of that
abhorrently caressing softness brought a sickness again into his stomach, made
his jaws ache with a revulsion of reaction.
"If you want to vomit,
vomit," Cargill said.
The
soldier turned at once to Delia, propped her head against a knee, his hands
very gentle, and felt her pulse. Her eyes flickered open.
"Thank you, Cargill!
You saved—"
"Forget that," he said, quite
normally. "That's my job. I'm good at that." "Is Stead all
right?"
"Yes. He looks green,
but hell recover."
"What," said
Stead weakly, "was that?"
Cargill
stood up, helping Delia to her feet, holding her hand. Fleetingly Stead
wondered why, if the soldier wanted to put his hands on Delia's body, he hadn't
done so then. There was a lot more to the soldier than appeared. "We call
those beasts Scunners. No brains. Pretty fierce with those
sixteen legs. You saw how the brute used 'em on Delia. But a gun will
usually see 'em off, unlike the Rangs."
Stead did not particularly
look forward to meeting a Rang.
Delia
had regained her composure and, not without a shuddery glance back at the
ghastly thing that lay in its own blood, the three set off for the warrens. Now
Stead understood more clearly the reason for Cargill's alertness. If things
like that Scunner infested the outer darkness, then a man's total attention and
courage was needed to leave the warren.
"There are many animals inhabiting the
world," Delia told him as they passed the barrier beneath its blue light
and re-entered once more the warm brightness of home. "As you can see,
physiologically we have no relationship with the Scunner, nor
with any other animal of the country."
They
had entered a different control point from the one they had left and their way
led past a series of cubicles lining the main street. In each cubicle a man or
youth, a woman or girl, sat engrossed before a whirring, glinting machine.
"Who are they?"
asked Stead. "What are they doing?"
"They
are workers," Delia told him. "This is the street of the tailors and
they are making clothes for us to wear. Each street has its own trade, all
under the direct supervision of a street Controller, and each contributes
something to the wealth of Archon."
But
Stead found it difficult to concentrate on the economic system of Archon. He
saw workers laboring to produce all the things needed, saw electric and
dog-drawn carts distributing the products, saw the
great markets with their blazing never quenched electric lights, heard the
bustle and hum of commerce, smelt the scents of the factories where foraged
food was brought to be processed. But his imagination darted restlessly
outside the warrens.
The
revelation of the animals to be found outside, the Scunner he had seen, excited
him with the wonder and awe of it all. He wanted to go out and explore, to
know, to learn more and more of this world in which he had been flung with the
careless inconsequence of a workman rejecting a scrap of unwanted material.
Over
it all, like the haze he had been told enveloped the Outside, the blurred
longings for revelations of self wilted and died. He had long since given up
trying to cudgel his reluctant brain into yielding up the secret of his
personality, his memories, his hidden lore.
Now all that lay in the past, in another
world into which he had no desire to return. He had not been a man of Archon
but the immortal being had been kind and had given him a second chance, a
second birth, and he was now privileged to be one of Archon. And the humble
gratitude he felt sustained him at the fading thoughts of any losses he might
have suffered.
No other race could be so
well-favored as the people of Archon. He believed that implicitly.
His schooling proceeded apace. Not without a
smile, Delia had decreed he should work completely through a standard school
course normally occupying an Archon child for six years. Stead completed the
whole in the course of a quarter, one hundred and nineteen days.
"And now you can begin
to learn about life."
"Learn
about life ... or about Life?"
said Stead, who had begun to find his feet in this new world.
"All
in due time.
Don't forget the Scunner."
"I'm not likely to. I
must say, Cargill acted his part well."
"It's
his job," Delia said offhandedly. But Stead had not failed to notice the
warmth with which she greeted the soldier these latter days, the unquestioning
acceptance of his presence on every walk they took together. "He's just
doing a job, looking after you."
On
the one hundred and twentieth day after his discovery, Stead was summoned to
the Captain's presence.
Despite
his growing confidence, he could not repress a quick appreciative shiver of
alarm. After all, the Captain was as much above mere mortal men as the
Controllers were above the workers. Delia had patiently explained that the
Captain, and his Crew were mortal, but to Stead the notion that in some way
they survived the normal decay of the human body could not be dismissed in
simple rational belief. Death, he now understood, was a nastily permanent
thing, except for those of the people of Archon who acted blamelessly in the
support of Archon and the Captain.
The
others, of course—all the peoples of other empires and federations—were doomed
from the moment of their birth. Only the people of Archon could be saved, but
saved for what, even Delia was not sure. "A greater
world with greater^ buildings and without the necessity to forage and work.
That is what is believed by the lower classes."
"And you? The Controllers?"
She
pouted prettily. "Some Controllers, in these sinful days—Simon for one—do
not believe anything any longer. When you are dead, you're dead, they
say."
"And
a perfectly reasonable and hygienic belief it is, too," said Simon, bustling
in, his wrinkled face beaming with news. "We call it Scientific
Rationalism. It will sweep away the mystical beliefs of our forefathers, and it
will not make us one whit the less good or noble men!"
"We-ell,
I don't know," said Delia. Her parents had been strict about the ritual
observance of the niceties, the proper rendition of praise and thanks to the
immortal one, the strict keeping of the Dates. "There must be some rhyme
and reason behind the world we know."
"Well,
if there is it must wait," said Simon briskly. "Stead, dress yourself
most carefully, shave meticulously, a slight touch of perfume, clean
fingernails. You're still a grubby-necked schoolboy in many ways. The Captain
has summoned you for this afternoon!"
Preparations
passed in a whirl. He had no premonitions of what to expect, or of what was
expected of him. All his attempts to draw out Delia or Simon were met with a
silence, an amused, tolerant silence imposed by their scientific training. He
even tried to pump Cargill and was met with a silence that was more rigid, more
military, less amused.
A
brightly painted electric car, adorned with the personal insignia of the
Captain—an upright wedge with two smaller wedges depending at forty-five degree
angles below—took them silently and with despatch through the streets of the
warren, down descending man-made spiral ramps, deep below and out into a
spacious expanse where moss grew greenly under the flood of almost unbearably
bright illumination from massed electric lights.
"Down
here we are in the lowest, most important and luxurious part of the
warren," Simon said. Even his imperturbable scientific detachment sparked
visibly at the majesty of the surroundings. The walls rose sheer for a hundred
feet and almost—almost but not quite, so Cargill said-induced that panicky
feeling of rooflessness that could reduce the strongest of men to
babbling idiocy. "Only Foragers seem able to throw it off for a time, and
even they cannot stand too many trips Outside."
Stead
had read about the disease called rooflessness in
the medical books and had no wish to experience it at first hand, if at all.
They alighted and walked between splashing
fountains toward an oval
archway through which
electric lights blazed orange and
blue. The masonry here showed all the art and beauty and aspiration of the
human race at its most magnificent flowering. The buttresses and pillars, the
supporting arches and columned majesty of the building spoke eloquently of
years of painstaking labor, of an infinitude of small
devotions. Here one could feel and see the man-made structure crouching,
upholding on broad scientific and architecturally grand designs all the weight
and pressure the world could bring to bear. Here there would never be a
cave-in. Here the ceiling could never collapse. Here man had built himself the
safest, snuggest, most magnificent and daring retreat in the world.
"My
spirit glows within me whenever I see the Captain's Cabin," said Simon,
his face, too, glowing with more than the reflected electric radiances.
They walked through that
oval door.
Here
luxury reigned. Swiftly and yet with a decent decorum they were led through
many chambers, softly carpeted, glowing with myriad lights, adorned with paintings
and murals and frescoes that dazzled the eye and, at the end, almost wearying
the senses, satiating one in un-plumbed depths of pleasure.
Before
them doors of solid bronze clanged back like twin strokes of a gong.
Beyond,
they had time for one chaotic glimpse of light, of a mass of faces turned to
them, of clothes rioting in color, of jewels and feathers and the glint of
weapons; the scent of a great throng of Controllers with its thousand different
nuances rose up before them; the sound of the discreet murmur of a thousand
throats dinned mellowly in their ears, and then they were walking down the
unreeling length of purple carpet towards the Control Chair set on its dais
beneath the regal splendor of lights above. Emotion caught at Stead's throat.
Stewards
dressed all in white brought tiny gilt chairs, placed them three in a row.
"You may sit
down," said the presence in the Control Chair.
Sitting
obediently, Stead glanced upward. The aura of light blazing in refulgent
lightnings around the presence rendered detailed observation difficult, and his
own emotion clouded his
view. But he saw that the Captain was an old man, white haired, white bearded,
fierce of face, leaning forward slightly and with his two penetrating blue
eyes fixed unswervingly upon them.
Stead lowered his own gaze,
feeling blasphemous.
"Repeat your
log," said the Captain.
Obediently,
Simon began his recitation of the work they had done with Stead. As the old
voice droned on nothing of importance or significance was overlooked, and not
one whit of tension and grandeur in the scene was lost. Two thousand ears
listened in the great hall. Stead remained with his eyes fixed on the carpet
beneath his feet. These matters were grave and vast beyond his comprehension.
And the light blinded him.
At last
Simon reached the present. "After this report, sir, Stead should go, as
your Crew recommends, to some practical work that may—"
"Yes,"
said the Captain, and Simon fell silent. "We have decided he will become
a Forager."
Utter silence.
Then Delia lifted her head. "A Forager, sir? But—" She could not go on.
"When
he has completed a first tour of duty with the Foragers, we will see him again.
Only then will the artifacts known to you be shown him. That is all. You may
return to your stations."
At the ritual words ending an audience, Simon
and Delia stood up and, as he had been told, Stead stood up too. His mind was
in turmoil. Being a Forager meant that much of the painstaking work of Simon
and Delia became, at one stroke, meaningless. Of what need algebra, the theory
of Recurring Buildings, the Evolutionary Theory and its inapplicability to Man
The Unique? A Forager needed a quick eye and hand, the
ability to run faster than a Scunner and then to freeze into the stillness of
inert matter, an expertise with weapons and the knack of filling a sack with
forage.
"By all the Demons of Outside!" Simon was muttering and mumbling to himself,
rubbing his chin with a shaking hand. "I never dreamed of this outcome! It
is almost—"
"Think, Simon!" said Delia, her
face white under the lights.
They passed out of the Captain's Cabin,
retraced their steps through the grandiloquent chambers, were
taken by the electric car back to Simon's laboratory in the higher levels of
the warren. All the journey was passed in silence.
Then
Simon, the free-thinking scientist, could contain himself no longer.
"I
have never questioned the edicts of the Captain," he said, throwing
himself into a chair, his hair tousled. "And I never shall. But this—this
almost gives me grounds for agreeing with the dissidents. My father would have
put away his wife had the Captain ordered it. I would not, because I firmly
believe the Captain could never give such an order. Times have changed and we
set less store by the old ideas and regimens. But this!"
"Suppose
we think what best to do," said Delia. Her manner had grown brittle and
irritable since the audience of the Captain. She tapped her slender fingers on
the arm of her chair in a rhythm that annoyed Stead.
"What
can we do but prepare Stead in the best way we can to be a Forager?"
Slowly,
Stead said, "The Captain said that this was for one trip. That he would
see me after that. Perhaps—"
"Of course!" Simon sat up, again eager and alert. "To succeed in our task you
must experience every part of modern life. But the shock has been—is still—an
emotional upheaval. To me, at least."
In Archon the day, divided into three equal
periods of eight hours each, was demarcated by a one-second flickering of the
lights. Then the workers changed watches, the sleepers awoke, the pleasure
seekers retired to bed, the guards changed, the whole breathing life of the
warrens turned over in a smooth and organized turmoil.
But for the scientists trying to bring the
empty husk that had been the stranger, Stead, into the living, breathing, thinking
adult that he so obviously was, time meant nothing. There was so much to learn.
"Our
society of Archon, we now know," Simon told him, "is not perfect.
Only a few years ago such a statement could not have been made."
"You mean society was
perfect then?" asked Stead.
Simon smiled indulgently. That would follow
from my remark. But, no. I meant that although society
was no better than it is today, it had no one to impel it to change. Men thought they lived in a perfect society. Only recently have we begun to question
the basic foundations of our way of life, largely impelled by a great thinker
and writer, called B. G. Wills. He explained that as the animals of the world
evolved—always excepting Man—so society was evolving. If only we could change
society we would improve man himself."
"And
what does the B. G. mean?" asked Stead. It had sounded odd.
"They
were his off-watch names. We all have more than one name, although sometimes I
tend to forget that. I am Simon Bonaventura and Delia is Delia Hope. But we use
our ofl-watch names nearly all the time. Wills, for some odd reason, simply
used the abbreviated form, an affectation. But don't mistake me. He was a
great man."
"So
if we all changed the society in which we live, then
we, ourselves, would be changed." Stead thought about that. Then he said,
"Yes. That sounds reasonable."
"I'm
glad," Simon said with a flashing ripple of sarcasm softened by his eager
old smile, "that you agree with our greatest minds."
"Oh,
do come on," said Delia. "The party's due to begin in an hour and
both of you look as though you've been wrestling with a Scunner."
"By
all the Demons, woman!" thundered Simon. "A party has no significance
next to trying to teach Stead."
"And
that, my dear Simon, is where you are wrong. A party will show Stead in half an
hour more about human nature than these books are
likely to tell him in a year."
"Impractical
flibbertigibbet," Simon rumbled away to himself. But he went off to his
suite of rooms to change and make himself presentable.
Stead had been using a small suite, bedroom,
anteroom, lounge and study, a very modest establishment compared with some
Controllers' cubicles. He went off to change, chuckling at Simon's antics.
Everyone, it seemed, had turned out for
Stead's going away party.
"In
reality," Simon vtold him as they entered the packed and
stifling hall, aswim with movement and color and scent, "they are doing
you an immense favor, doing you honor. You see, Controllers normally have no
social intercourse with Foragers. But you have been educated as a Controller.
Up until today you were one of us and, I hope, after your probationary period
as a Forager, you will be one of us again."
"I
hope so, too," said Stead vehemently. "I feel dishonor, a horrible
sense of dirt, at leaving the society of Controllers for that of the
Foragers."
CHAPTER
FIVE
The
going away party
for Stead blossomed under the electrics.
The
colorful personalities of off-watch Controllers flowered before his eyes; the
bewildering variety of costume, the glitter of jewels, the laughing, painted
faces, the noise of music, the rich streams of flowing wine spouting in bounty
from ranked faucets into shell-shaped basins, the tables piled with cunningly
made appetite-teasing dainties, the roaring clamor of voices and laughter,
shrieks, greetings, snatches of song, the whole seething picture of gaiety
struck him dizzily.
Banked electric heaters around the walls
poured volumes of radiant warmth that progressively disrobed men and women
alike. The People of Archon lived in a coldish world; they liked heat and
Controllers could afford as much as they wanted.
A remarkable feeling assailed Stead, a sensation
he had not previously experienced but one which in its essentials he recognized
as being akin to the feeling that so troubled him in his dealings with Delia.
The dictionary had defined that for him as embarrassment. But why should he
feel embarrased when all these people had come to wish him well and say
good-bye?
Prodded forward he allowed himself to be mounted upon a table, a drink
to be thrust into his hand. Looking down he saw a flowerbed of flushed,
upturned faces, eyes glinting, mouths smiling, teeth gleaming. Glasses were
raised to him, a forest of white arms, reaching up.
A
man shouted, high and powerfully, "Safe nook and cranny to SteadI Long
lifel And may he soon return home to the warren
safely!" It was a toast.
They
all drank. Drinking with them, not knowing any different, Stead felt again,
strongly, how fine a class of people were the Controllers of Archon.
He
jumped off the table and was immediately caught up in strange ritualistic
dances, all gyrations and hand clappings and sinuous snaky lines; he tumbled
around the hall, flushed and laughing and happy. This, indeed, was life, the
full and free life promised him by Simon and Delia.
Cargill was not at the
party.
A
quick commotion took Stead's attention. The dancing line fragmented into laughing,
spinning individuals. Women screamed. Men rushed away from Stead, coalescing
into a melee of pressing backs in a corner. Here the electric lights had been
discreetly dimmed.
"Kill
the beastly thing!" "There it goes!" "Ugh!" "What
a filthy brute." Cries and commotion filled the air. Peering over
straining backs, Stead looked down, and saw the cause of the trouble.
Cowering
beneath an upturned chair, a small animal peered out with large, frightened
eyes. It was perhaps half the size of his shoe. Its sixteen legs moved
erratically, not propelling the tiny, shrunken body in any settled direction,
its four feelers waving in mocking parody of the human dancers' gesticulating
arms.
"What is it?"
asked Stead.
"A filthy rat!" A woman, far enough away to be brave, caught
Stead's arm. "Kill it quick!"
"But why?" Stead felt puzzlement. The little rat didn't
seem to be doing much harm. He had read about them, of course, but the
reactions of these people, especially the women, surprised him.
The
rat made a sudden despairing dart for safety. It scuttled in a blurring of
speed along the wall. A man threw a glass at it. Another threw a goblet. Then
two men trapped it. Stead saw a foot rise, go down. He heard—quite distinctly—a
squeak abruptly chopped off.
"Filthy things," said Delia, pulling him away from the
painted woman who had caught his arm. "They infest the
workers' cubicles, of course, but one seldom sees any as low
as this." i
"Horrible,"
quavered the woman, reluctantly releasing Stead. "They make me feel
itchy."
"I
want you to meet an old friend," said Delia. "Forget the rat. Even a
Controller's cubicle cannot be entirely free of animal pests." Looking at
her, feeling the pressure of her hand on his arm, Stead forgot the rat.
Delia
brought him wheeling round to face an old, wise, pretematurally aged,
white-whiskered countenance that beamed on him with profound joy.
"This
is Stead, Nav," Delia said. "Stead, you have the great privilege and
honor to meet Astroman Nav." She was obviously happy at this meeting.
"Nav is very high in the hierarchy of the Astromen. I'm sure he will be
able to help you a lot." She pouted at Nav. "You will, won't you,
Nav, dear?"
Nav's
pouched old eyes twinkled in the electrics. He lifted the hem of the long
garment he wore, sat down on a chair, politely indicating seats for Delia and
Stead, one on each side. Stead could not fail to notice the odd instrument dangling
at Nav's waist, but he decided that good manners demanded no comment.
"If
your grandfather had heard you talking to an Astro-man like that you wouldn't
have sat down for a week." Astroman Nav spoke in a gruff, shouty voice, a
voice suitable for declamations now hushed into the more mellow tones of
everyday conversation. "You young women. It's all
the fault of that fellow Wills. Filled
your heads with free-thinking nonsense."
"Now, Nav, dear!" Delia was exasperated at the old buffer. And
just how much of an act it was even she wasn't prepared to say. "I want
Stead to know all you can tell him. When he goes among the Foragers he won't
have much time or opportunity for spiritual affairs."
What Nav had to say absorbed Stead for an
hour as the party whooped and hollered and thumped on all around.
"We
Astromen are the custodians of the race's progress. We chart the future and
hold the people firmly to the ancient beliefs. It is an onerous occupation and
one taxing all our strength." He smiled a little ruefully. "This man
Wills who emancipated thought—or so the youngsters claim—was a little of a charlatan,
when you boil it all down. But, certainly, he brought changes. Religion doesn't
seem quite so potent a force as it was when I was a young Astro novice. And I
deplore that. Fine a girl as Delia is, she could be better if she took her
religion more seriously."
"But,"
said Stead with the acuteness of the newly-educated, "if the ancient
truths are true—I mean about the immortal being creating the world and the land
of buildings, placing mankind here among the animals, providing our food and
raw materials for the Foragers to bring home—if these are true, as they must
be, why should anyone seek to doubt it?"
"Go
and read Wills. But I like your fire. I believe you have the makings of an
Astro novice. Although you are old chronologically, spiritually you are as yet
newly born. I don't think Wills will harm you much."
"I ...
I don't know. I hadn't thought—"
"You'll
have to think about it after your Foraging tour of duty. If the Demons spare
you, that is."
"I beg your
pardon?"
"What? Hasn't Delia or that scientist
fellow—what's his name, BonaventuraP— told you about Demons?"
"No." Again that glorious feeling
of new worlds opening to him flooded through Stead. Here, unexpectedly, like
walking around a dark corner into a flood of light, fresh learning lay ready to
spring into his experience.
"Demons,"
said Astroman Nav, "were sent into the world by the anti-immortal one to
bring penance and suffering, to try us, to make us struggle to find the peace
of our own immortal souls through the bitter battles of conscience. Demons are
anti-human, opposed to the godhead, utterly abhorrent. To overcome the Demons
is to share in the eternal light of the immortal being."
Stead tried to sort out this spate of new
information. Demons? Well, everyone seemed to use the
term as a curse word, a swearing block to let off their feelings. Now Nav was
saying that Demons were in some way put into' the world to test mankind, to
serve as a practical yardstick to measure man's own goodness. It all sounded very
theoretical and religious.
Stead
turned to Delia, who had walked across the room toward him with Simon.
"Why didn't you tell me, Delia? Was it Demons that Cargill, Simon, and you
sniggered over that day?"
Simon laughed. A real,
boisterous belly laugh. "No, Stead. Though what we discussed is a
demon to many."
Stead
glanced at Delia as Simon's face and voice and personality changed
dramatically. The scientist suddenly took on the aspect of Cargill, and sheer
bewilderment crushed Stead. How could he ever be expected to understand if no
one would tell him?
Delia
said, "Remember you're a scientist, Simon, and not twenty years younger.
Now, Stead, what of Demons?"
"It's
rather confusing. They are a sort of phantom monster, sent to plague mankind,
to test our faith and worship of the immortal one."
"More
or less what we now believe," and Simon nodded,
back to his old wizened scientific self. "With all due deference to Nav as
an Astroman, the Demons do stand a strong possibility of actually
existing."
"Oh, nonsense, Simon!" That was Delia, beautifully annoyed.
"Well, the Foragers keep on talking
about the Demons they've seen. And you know how often Foragers never
return."
"Now
you just listen to me, Simon! The nerve of it! A foremost
scientist, talking like an ignorant Forager. Those cunning Foragers make
up these stories. It give them importance, in their
own foolish eyes, against the rest of humanity who do not venture Outside. Oh,
I know Forager Controllers who've been Outside have told us the same stories,
but a Forager Controller is really only half a Controller at bestl"
Delia looked prettily indignant, cherishing
her own beliefs and theories.
"But—"
began Simon.
"And,"
Delia rushed on, "the Foragers who don't return have simply been killed or
captured by enemies. And no Hunter is going to admit he was bested by an enemy,
by a lost soul not of Archonl You know how much our
soldiers resent being beaten."
Stead,
surprising himself, said, "That doesn't seem surprising."
And stopped.
They
all looked at him. Then Delia spoke again in a torrent of anger. She didn't
believe in Demons. Wills had said quite plainly that they were figments dreamed
up by the old hierarchy to keep the workers in their place. No worker would
dream of going Outside for fear of the Demons. Stead listened and again felt
bewilderment at the shifting strands of logic and belief.
Delia
was wearing a knee-length kilted garment of white cloth, embroidered around the
hem and sleeves and throat with jewelled arabesques that glittered and
glimmered in the lights. More than ever, wearing that garment in contrast to
Simon's yellow and green shirt and scarlet slacks and his own simple plain blue
shirt and slacks, Delia made it plain to him that women just weren't the same
shape as men. He'd put the question, of course, and both Simon and Delia had
told him that that was the way it had always been and the way it always, the
immortal being willing, would.
So
that when Belle, Delia's friend from the radio laboratories, danced up, cheeks
flushed, eyes aglow, holding out a goblet of wine, with an invitation to the
dance, Stead decided—without daring to look at Delia—to accept. Delia said,
"Be careful, Belle."
"Of course, dear. I always ami" And she giggled to herself as though an enormous
joke had been made.
Dancing
off into the laughing throng, forming a line, swaying to the music, Stead's
first impulse to slip away and think over this Demon talk faded. Something
happened to him. He looked at Belle. She wore a black dress with narrow cords
over the shoulders, thigh length skirt of thin material that, if he hadn't
thought the idea un-Controllerlike, he would have sworn showed the sheen of
flesh. She danced with her head tilted back, her mouth open, a pink tongue
showing, laughing, laughing, laughing.
Stead
let himself go. The music thumped a maddening rhythm in time with the best of
his blood. For the first time the presence of a woman did not disconcert him.
The feel of Belle's waist under his fingers as they danced to and fro brought
sensations wholly unrecognizable and wild, frightening and yet stimulating. At
one and the same time he wanted to go on dancing, go on holding Belle, and to
plunge off and away and cower in his cubicle, safe in the pages of a book.
"Enjoying yourself, Stead?"
"Very
much. And
you?"
"MMMmmm. I thought you said you couldn't—whoops-dance?" I can t.
"Well, you're doing
very nicely, thank you. . . ."
They
gyrated out of one line into another. On the next pas-sade Belle expertly
eluded the man's waiting grasp and, towing Stead, floated away on lightly
tapping feet. Magnetically drawn, Stead followed. A single, flashing glimpse
of Delia, standing with her red curls agleam over the bobbing head, almost
stayed him. But that taut, inward look lay over Delia's beautiful face . . .
and suddenly, to Stead, Belle's viviacious brown skin meant life and gaiety and
all the unknown joys and dark desires he had dreamed existed—knew existed—and
had never tasted. Whatever happened—he was going to learn something new.
Borne
on a buffet of expiring music they tumbled laughing through a narrow doorway.
Here the electrics had been shaded by rose colored glasses; a deep luster lay
on the small room and the cushion-scattered divan. The room smelt scented and
secret and . . . hungry.
"I
need a drink," Belle
said. She picked up a glass from a low table and, copying her, Stead took the
second goblet. Drinking, he felt the wine course through his body like fire. Belle
stared at him, her brown eyes seeming in that rosy light to grow larger. Stead
had thought her skimpy black dress a drab clothing
beside Delia's glorious white costume, but now he realized anew and with a
stunning impact that women's shapes were different from men's.
A knife-like pain took him
in the small of the back.
Belle pouted. "Don't you like me, then,
Stead?"
"Like you? Of course!
Why shouldn't I?"
She laughed,
a short throaty catching of her breath.
"Well, you don't show
it."
Stead
felt dismay. "But . . . but—" he stammered. "How can I? I mean,
I haven't done anything to displease you?"
"True,
lover boy, too true. You've done nothing."
She
walked toward him, a gliding, swaying dance rather than a walk, both her hands
outstretched, the glass spilling wine unheeded. She came close to him. She put
her arms around him, clamping in a sudden and shocking vice-like grip across
his back. Her body, soft and quite unmanlike, pressed against him.
For
a timeless instant Stead stood rigid. Something was happening. He was changing.
A feeling soaked through his body; his blood pounded. He knew he must do ... do what? Put his hands so, and so. . .
.
Belle
sighed. She lifted her head and her lips, red and ripe and, somehow quite
illogically, inviting pouted up at him.
"Aren't you going to
kiss me, Stead?"
"Kiss? What's that,
Belle?"
She
reached up on tip toe. He felt her against him. She reached her hands up,
caught the back of his neck, his head. She pressed his head down.
"This."
A number of things happened
simultaneously.
Of
those, three struck him with the greatest impact. And of the three his bodily
change seemed less important than the blinding vision that crashed across his
eyes.
And then Delia's hands wrenched Belle away, a
fist
cracked across her chin, and knocked her sprawling; Delia's
face swam before him, the mouth open, the eyes blazing, the
whole expression blistering contempt. f
"You fool!" Delia said, her voice like the spitting of a
cat. "You imbecile, Belle! I could have you sent
to the workers for this!"
Belle, her black dress ripped down from one
cord, groveled on the floor. Looking down on her white flesh, all rosy tinted
in the light, Stead felt a feeling for the girl flowing from him; she looked
crushed, beaten, stamped on like that rat out there.
"Delia
... I wanted to— I'm sorry. But . . .
he's so masculine—"
"I
know what you wanted. You're a radioman, not a psychologist. Don't you know
you're playing with fire, with gunpowder, with Stead? Now I'll have to—"
Delia suddenly realized that Stead was there, his ears wide open, drinking all
this into the naked and palpitating cells of his brain, learning.
"I'll
see you later, Belle. Stead, come with me. And forget this. Forget it, do you
hear!" Delia's movements were controlled, almost precise.
Incredibly,
from the floor, disheveled and panting, Belle cried, "You just want him
for yourself, Delia! Don't think I don't know what's going on—Psychology! A fine psychology that uses a bed for a laboratory bench!"
Delia
gasped. Stead noted with surprise how her upper body—that disturbing region so
different from a man's— rose and fell in a tumult. She turned wrathfully, body
strained, hands lifting with fingers clawed, then she
relaxed. She took a deep breath.
"Think
what little thoughts you like, Belle. I feel sorry for you. But you're wrong in
that dirty little mind of yours. Now, Stead." She grasped his arm in a
grip that, he felt with a wry understanding, was no different from a man's.
"You're coming home!"
CHAPTER SIX
Forager
Controller Wilkins
pursed his full lips, his
slender hands still on the papers before him on the wide desk. Wilkins was a
small, dapper man, neat with dark slicked hair, wearing dull green slacks and
shirt. Wilkins owned his own Foraging Corporation and was these days never
likely to venture Outside. A gaudy yellow and scarlet scarf loosely
knotted around his slender white throat was a scornful reminder of his
position.
Stead
stood before him, uneasy, trying to realize that this man was a Controller, and
therefore of the class into which Stead had been reborn, but finding the task
difficult and clouded by the irrational learning he had absorbed during his
quarter's training as a Forager.
The
training period had been strenuous, but in it Stead had come to realize that
his body had been retrained into a state of fighting fitness well -accustomed
to it. In his previous life he had been a tough and powerful athlete and he had
the muscles still to prove it.
Forager Leader Thorbum
stood at Stead's side.
Thorburn
had stared with genuine surprise when Stead had reported in. Stead, of course,
had no memory of meeting this massive-headed, grave, intense Forager, but an
immediate liking for him had warmed his greeting, firmed his handclasp.
Thorburn immediately forgot his notions of proprietorship, of patronage for
this man and responded with a deep and joyful acceptance of friendship.
Now
Wilkins tapped the papers. "I've agreed to take you on, Stead, through
friendship for Simon—uh, Controller Bonaventura—but I warn you that if you do
not act within the framework of a Forager's duties, I shall have no hesitation
in discharging you."
Wryly,
Stead heard the change in the man's voice. He didn't know Controller Wilkins'
off-watch name; he wondered what the man would say if, knowing it, he had used
it in his own Controller's accents before his future foraging mates. This world
had many barriers he must learn to hurdle in his own way.
"You have been trained, but that means
you are just beginning to learn how much you have to leam. Forager Leader1
Thorburn will show you. He may not welcome this assignment, but business is
pressing lately; I've lost a number of good Hunters, and I have no time to
mollycoddle you, Stead." Wilkins looked down again at the papers.
"You
have been issued a cape and it has been trained to your bloodstream. Uniform,
weapons, respirator, antigrav, sack—yes ...
I think that's all. The Regulations have been fully explained to you.
Understand me. You go Outside for one purpose and one
purpose only. To bring back to Archon the fruits of the world
so that the people may live. That is all. Everything else is subordinate
to that."
But,
being a Controller, Wilkins had the grace to add, "I
do not forget that
Thorburn, in bending that law, assured you of life, Stead. That is between the
two of you. But Thorbum has been warned. Full sacks, Stead, full sacks!"
When
they were outside Wilkin's control cubicle, Thorbum said, "Phew! Let's go
and meet the gang."
Down
in the Controller's section of the warren, Stead would have prefaced his remark
with a blistering, "By all the Demons of Outside!" and gone on to
express himself.
But
among the Foragers and Hunters he had learned after using the expression just
once, that they were not curse words. It wasn't even a blasphemy. It was so
much a part of everyday life that it had no significance, or so much deep
meaning that it became inexpressible.
Copying
the insolent swagger of Foragers when inside in the company of soldiers, Stead
did as Thorbum did and flicked his cape grandly behind him. The cape might have
been fully trained to his blood stream—getting used to the twin filaments
running into the back of his neck had been irksome and, at first, revolting—but
the thing's own life was still frolicsome and it had developed a cunning little
habit of drooping down and then licking gently between his legs. Four times,
now, he'd been ignominiously tripped on his nose. And how his comrades at the
training warren had laughed!
"You'll soon master your cape,
Stead," Thorbum told him. "It's a youngster. And a cape with ideas of
its own is a better bet than an old worn out rag. Changes
quicker. Old Chronic knows that. He's been through a dozen capes in his
time."
^'OldChronicP"
"You'll
meet 'em all. The gang. The Foraging party I am
privileged to lead into the Outside. I wouldn't change it. It's far better than
being cooped up as a worker."
Thorburn
had changed since the forage when he had found this man who now walked along so
lithely at his side, topping him by four inches or more. The changes had been
within his mind and he had welcomed them. The sureness had come of itself. He
no longer gave unnecessary orders on a forage; the
party knew what to do and they did it. Thorbum briefed them with any new or
particular instructions before they left.
Down
in the Hunters' rest rooms in the warren just inside the barrier and the blue
light, a room tucked neatly into a crevice between a water pipe and an electric
light conduit, Stead met them all.
Julia,
big and blonde, with a flashing smile and a warmth for the new man she spilled
out for everyone, proud of her prowess as a radarop, sleek limbed and gay.
Sims
and Wallas, brothers in all but parentage, young, tough, doltish looking but with
brains that held absolute competence in their alloted tasks.
Cardon, black browed, fierce-eyed, bitter, unrelenting, sudden, a man
with a sin troubling his conscience.
Old
Chronic—well, Old Chronic clicked his dentures and grinned and snorted and
spluttered and demanded a whole book to himself.
And
lastly, Honey. Honey of the soft, silky jet hair, the soft
eyes of innocence, the soft rosebud mouth and the blooming skin of satin.
Honey of the slender figure and shy smile, with a reserve of cold courage that
Thorburn had seen grow and strengthen in a hundred perilous moments since that
time she had cowered frightened by the window as she saw her first Demon. Honey, with the gentleness of girlhood, and a softness that
concealed a core of steel.
"And this is
Stead," said Thorbum.
What
were they making of him? Each in his or her own way
greeted the new man. Stead knew that he unbalanced the party, that he was an
added and extra risk, that through his presence all
their lives might be forfeit. But he smiled and shook hands and tried to hold
himself erect without arrogance. In these people's hands reposed his own life.
"One
to come, Thorbum," said the Forager Manager, old bald and short-sighted
Purvis. Once he'd tangled with a Rang single-handed and
brought the carcass in, not to prove his deed but because a good Forager always
came home with a full sack. "Feller called Vance. Comes from a firm of Foragers right on the other side of the
warrens."
"Yes,"
said Thorbum. "As soon as he gets here we'll step out."
But the gang were arguing
and protesting.
"No
foraging party takes out more than one new man!" exploded Cardon, savage
and black of brow. "What's H. Q. playing
at?"
Over
the babble of protests, Manager Purvis cut them short. "If you want to
argue with head office go and see Wilkins. When you're
out of a job you can starve. You know the Regulations. No job, no food. And
don't give me the old Forager tale of finding enough food Outside
to be independent of the warrens. You wouldn't last a sixth of a quarter."
"I don't know about
that," said Cardon darkly.
They
were all held in the ritual tension of a pre-forage waiting: the old jokes were
unwrapped and cracked and laughed at and put, dustily, away; the building-up
meal was eaten with a relish or lack of appetite peculiar to the individual
temperament; weapons were checked for the feel of something to occupy the
hands; last minute reports from other foraging parties were collated into their
own lead-out route.
Signals
orderlies passed the blue slips through pneumatic tubes into the Hunter-waiting
cubby; Old Chronic irritably read them and clicked his teeth and with his neat
precise hand inked in the symbols on his map, always with a complaint. But he
was a good Navigator, old as he was, or perhaps because he was old.
"I'd trust Old Chronic to find us a
route through a Demon's temple with everything in full swing," Thorburn
told Stead with an exasperated look at the old navigator. "He only just
failed the finals for his geographer's assistantship. He could never, coming
from the Foraging class, be an Architectural Geographer. But we hear how often
the assistants do the job while the lordly Controllers slope off."
"I've
never met an Architectural Geographer," Stead said, but his interest
concentrated on another thing that Thorbum had said. "You mentioned a
Demon's temple. You mean to tell me you really believe in Demons? I know Hunters and Foragers talk about them, but I'm going
outside now. Isn't it time to admit the truth?" "And what is the
truth?"
"Well, people are confused about the
reasons for the Demoniac stories, but the best scientific theories now are that
they were planted in men's minds to check our natural sinfulness, to act as
consciences."
"By
a Scunner's diseased intestines!" exploded Cardon. "What rubbish
they've been filling you with, Stead."
Stead
felt anger, anger and shame. "I only know what I've been told."
"Wait until we're
outside. Then you can talk."
Stead decided to take that advice; he shut
up.
Honey
picked up her wavelength log, and grimaced. "Enough changes to work my
fingers sore. It's this blasted static howling across the air that's doing
it."
"You've
got troubles," Julia said, polishing her set with an entirely feminine
duster. "This confounded howling is beginning to creep onto my radar
frequencies. If it fouls those up—"
"We cut a beam," Thorburn said
tartly. "We cut a beam. If any of you Hunters in my party can't scuttle
fast enough to elude a Demon, you don't belong with me."
Everyone,
as though their heads were on strings, swung to stare at Stead. He swallowed.
Truly, this was an entirely new world he'd been dumped into, a world where
values had been turned topsy-turvy and life, real and hot, meant more than ever
it could in the rarefied levels of the Controllers' warrens.
Purvis
called into the waiting cubby. "Here's your new man Vance, Thorbum."
Again
as though invisible strings drew them, everyone's head swiveled to the door.
This time Stead looked too.
Vance
strode in, glanced keenly about, approached Thorburn with a Forager's swagger.
He glanced coldly at Stead. "Thorburn? I'm Vance.
And this must be Stead."
The
new man reeked of toughness. His short, stocky body bulged
his dull green Hunter's uniform; his cape, a middleaged specimen in mature
condition, clung to him with all sixteen legs in a synthesis that told of long
and perfect association. His square, craggy face, dour and without humor,
seemed rather to glower out on life. Beneath tufted eyebrows his eyes lurked in
shadow, pitiless and unfathomable.
Stead felt an unaccountable
shiver at sight of the man.
"Welcome,
Vance," said Thorburn, holding out his hand. The handshake was brief,
perfunctory. Thorburn introduced the others. Even Stead, after so short an
acquaintance, appreciated the strange reluctance of the exuberant Julia's
greeting. This man knew his job, but he had time for no one but himself.
When
he shook hands with Stead, Stead said deliberately, "You won't be a
handicap to the party, Vance, unlike me."
Vance
did not laugh; but his thin lips moved with the ghost of what might have been a
sardonic smile. "That's why I'm here, Stead. Don't get out of my
sight."
And
the understanding that hit Stead then reduced his own stature,
humbled him. This man Vance was going along as a nursemaid!
"If
you're all set?" Thorburn, without waiting for an answer picked up his
gun, slung it, caught up his sacks and strode for the door. Everyone else
followed his example.
Stead
looked at the gun issued to him. It was not new but was less action-worn than
those he had trained with. Everyone called it
a splutter-gun. It fired a smallish projectile, the bullets arranged in the
clip in alternate explosive and solid coned rounds. A two-handed weapon, it
could be operated with one hand by any trained fighter. He hefted it, flung it.
He wondered, not without a twinge of apprehension, if he would have to use it.
Honey
strapped on her walkie-talkie, Julia her radar set. They slung their sacks. Old
Chronic finished sharpening a pencil and slung his logs and maps. With Thorburn
in the lead they stepped out of the Hunters' waiting cubby, boarded their
electric car. The soldier raised the barrier, his helmet shining under the blue
light, and saluted.
The
car purred away down a long echoing corridor. Stead was on his way Outside.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
The
electric car moved
smoothly, running on eight small rubber-tired wheels, its truck body swaying
gently. The Foragers sat around the truck on bench seats, their equipment,
strapped to them, part of their beings now. Following the car, another truck
filled with Forager Engineers kept pace with them. Overhead lights flashed
past, to dwindle and die. The driver switched on his headlights.
"What's the drill,
then, leader?" asked Vance formally.
"We're
going through a new hole. Beams have been appearing regularly across our major
exits."
"Yes. It's been
getting tough over on the other side."
"Foraging
is getting more difficult every day," growled Cardon, his dark face
savage. "Wilkins doesn't seem to understand, but then, he's only a
Controller. The last time he went Outside must have
been twenty years ago."
Stead
sat silent, listening avidly, conscious of the strangeness of this
conversation. These people didn't seem to appreciate the position of
Controllers, didn't seem to understand how fortunate the Empire of Archon was
in its ruling class.
But he did not say anything.
Thorburn
pulled out his leader's map, angled it so they all
could see. "I'm changing the route on my own initiative. Didn't want old
Purvis to know; he's a good man but—"
The others nodded
understandingly.
"Last
trip we opened up a new route straight into a fresh food store. Relatively
simple to fill our sacks and lug them back. However, although I want to get
back into that store again and that's the way we were routed, I figure that the
route will be beamed. There were traps there, all over."
"Traps," said
Vance contemptuously.
"One of 'em had caught a Scunner,"
said Cardon, and Vance raised one bushy eyebrow. "Nasty, then," he
said in a low voice.
The corridor debouched into an uneven, narrow
space with raw earth on one side and a flowing wall of concrete on the other.
The truck's headlights speared into the darkness ahead. The sound of running
water kept pace with their progress; the air smelt damp.
When,
at last, the truck slowed and stopped, they had covered at least five miles.
The driver looked up.
"End of the ride. All out."
The
engineers' truck pulled up behind. The engineers, Foragers with specialized
aptitudes, pulled their equipment out, strapped down to antigrav sleds. They
yoked themselves up and began hauling the sleds up a rubble-strewn ascending
passage that curved and jinked and gave them some trouble.
The
driver and his four guards, Foragers detailed for soldier duties, conversed
with the second driver and guards. Then the driver turned to Thorburn.
"Blane took his group out this way yesterday."
"Yes.
I don't expect we'll meet him, though." Thorbum was checking the
engineers' progress. "He was routed to return through that hole over on
the cable way."
"I
was going to say he dropped a hint he might come out this way. If you see him,
pass the word we'll wait for him, too. His own transport can be picked up
later."
"Right." Thorbum looked over his group. "Come
on."
These
men, decided Stead, following obediently, seemed to
take a lot for granted. And they made up their own minds, overriding the
definite orders of their superiors.
That
puzzled him, knowing what he did of the hierarchy of Archon.
Up
ahead the lights from the engineers bobbed and winked. In the illumination of
every other man's headlamp, Thorburn's party began the ascent.
The
world for Stead had always consisted of narrow passages and slots, and cubicles
cut from earth or concrete or brick, except for that one frightening experience
when he had gone down to the Captain's Quarters. As the party toiled on along
slits between earth and rock, negotiating thick cables and wires, brushing
through falls of dirt and leaping splits in the ground, he found the
surroundings familiar if more cramped. These alleyways through the foundations
of the world of buildings were little different from those immediately
surrounding the warrens. He began to breath with an
easier rhythm.
Thorbum
had them use their antigravs sparingly, checking, as Regulations demanded,
each time they were operated. The batteries gave only a certain operating
time; they must not go past the halfway mark before they had reached their
destination.
Presently,
after a long upward drift with the antigravs pulling them up a narrow slot
that extended sideways out of reach of their probing lights, they reached a
ledge, dusty and filled with the discarded husks of sixteen legged animals, as
large as dogs, shining and brittle.
"Flangs,"
explained Thorbum."As they grow they have to shed their skins. Stupid creatures. Don't waste a shell on them. Wave a light
in their eyes and they'll fracture their legs trying to get away."
He
looked up at the top of the ledge, ten feet above. "Lights
out!"
As the headlamps died to orange glows and
then blackness, the Foragers' eyes slowly adjusted. The engineers were quietly
unstrapping their equipment and setting it up, working by touch and feel.
Presently Stead felt, rather than saw, a dim illumination seeping over the top
of the ledge, a pale washed-out radiance that obscurely depressed him. It felt
cold.
"All ready,"
called the engineer leader. "Cutting."
Muffled
drills bit. An electric saw whined and then, at the swift curse of the leader,
hurtled down the cliff. Something banged, loud and shockingly.
"Whoever
built this ought to be stepped on!" said the engineer leader. "It
shattered on the metal. Dark glasses, everyone. We'll have to bum."
"Sims
and Wallas," ordered Thorbum. "Left flank.
Vance and Stead, right. Move!"
Stepping
carefully after Vance into the darkness, feeling the flangs' discarded skins
cracking beneath his feet, Stead felt the awful engulfing fear of the dark
swamping in on him. Yet mankind knew the darkness as a friendly cloak. Why
should it bother him?
Before he removed his dark glasses he stared
back. A fierce, ravening, man-made flame bumed viciously
against the metal of the wall, cutting and melting. That gave him heart,
and he turned to his guard duty with a feeling of stronger purpose. Nothing happened
until Thorburn called, "Check in. We're through."
The
engineers were already packing their equipment when Stead returned.
"Wait
until I've been through," said Thorbum. "If I'm right, we should be
able to pick up food at once. You can take some back."
The engineers didn't argue. They were
Foragers, and to a Forager full sacks meant a way of life.
"Stead!" Thorburn motioned. "Stand right behind me. Look over my shoulder.
Learn."
Quivering
with the excitement of the moment, Stead did as he was bidden. Thorburn climbed
purposefully through the hole, his cape not recoiling from the bumed edges
where the engineer's cooling liquid had brought the temperature of the metal
down. All Stead could see in the pale illumination was a shining metal wall,
rounded, going up out of sight. To one side of that Thorbum crouched, staring
about, his splutter-gun up. After a few moments Thorbum pointed. Stead looked.
The trap must have sprung on the animal just
as it had seized the scrap of food in its jaws. It wasn't a Scunner, but it had
sixteen legs, sprawled now and lax, and its body had been nearly cut in two by
a great shining blade.
"He
must have got in by a different route," said Old Chronic's voice in
Stead's ear. "Have to remember that."
"You mean—"
"Before you forage anything, Stead, have
a good look around. These infernal traps are clever." Stead felt sick.
Thorbum waved. With Stead pushed back into
the ranks, they all squeezed through the hole.
At
first, Stead had no real notion of where he was. He stood on a surface of wood,
partially covered by a thick and clumsy paper, surrounded by tall, shining,
rounded, metal walls, and great humped masses covered in more thick and clumsy
paper. The smell of food was overpowering.
"Fill up," called Thorbum.
"And be quick, about it. We could get in two trips."
Watching
the others swing their axes and machetes, Stead followed their example, and
began to hack huge odiferous hunks from the enormous masses of food. He worked
on a mountain of meat, slicing foot-thick strips away and stuffing them into
his sack, feeling the material bulge with the meat. They passed their first
loaded sacks through the hole and the engineers took them with little grunts
and piled them on the equipment sleds.
Stead,
busily chopping away at his meat mountain, became aware that Thorbum was
looking about keenly, obviously coming to a decision. At his side Sims ceased
carving, screwed his three-quarter-filled sack up tightly; on the other side
Wallas took a last chunk of cheese from his food mountain.
"We've gone far enough here," said
Thorbum. "Wipe traces, everyone."
Stead
felt bemused. He looked at his half filled sack and from it to Thorburn's
massive head, outlined against the glow coming from the distant side of this
food quarry. Tentatively, Stead approached, aware of the bustle of efficiency
all about him, and said, "But my sack isn't full yet, Thorburn. Full
sacks—I thought."
"Regulations, Stead. Full sacks, yes. But
not too much from any one place. We've taken our quota; now we move
on."
"Regulations. I see," said Stead. But he didn't.
They
congregated by the hole, dragging their sacks, scarcely exchanging a word and
that in a furtive whisper.
Julia said, "I found
another trap around the back."
Thorburn glanced at his watch. "Days and
nights are different in the Outside world from our real world, Stead," he
said thoughtfully. "We've a little time yet. Come and learn
something."
With Thorburn in the lead, the sacks lying at
the hole, they all went toward Julia's trap. Massive it was, towering, gleaming
and dark with menace. On the floor a man-sized chunk of cheese rested like an
accidental crumb fallen from the main mountain. Thorburn unhitched his rope and
grapnel, swung it, let fly, sank it into the cheese. He looked around. Then he
pulled.
The
trap hissed. From the ceiling a glittering knife blade descended with the
violence of death, sliced across the cheese as the grapnel pulled it loose.
Below where the cheese had been, two springs, now touching, were revealed.
"By
the immortal onel" said Stead, shaken. The slashing crash of the
descending blade half numbed him. He felt the blood beating painfully through
his fingers, as though his hands had constricted all unaware.
"Pretty
little things," Vance said, kicking the still vibrating blade. "Same
sort we have over on the other side." He was quite casual about it.
"Do you have those beastly trapdoor things over here?"
Sims nodded. "Yes,
they're really tricky."
Vance
said with a casualness that Stead could not fault,
"Took me three hours to cut my way out of one once. Never
again."
The others looked at him with a new respect.
If he'd done that, he really was a
Forager. Thorburn retrieved his grapnel. The trapknife had sheered off one
prong. Wrapping the rope up, Thorburn said, "Just another lesson, Stead.
Check everything first; there are no second chances
Outside."
And that, reasoned Stead, ran counter to what
Vance had just told them about the trapdoor trap. Deliberately?
Out
of the hole the darkness crowded in more thickly than before. The engineers had
gone. The party moved sideways along the dusty, flang-shell littered ledge,
lights pooling ahead, thrusting back the dark.
"Should be lighter soon," Thorburn
said after another time check. "We can mine in here now and be clear
before the Outside day begins."
They
had reached a place where the cold faint illumination welled up from a
two-foot-high slit running along the floor. Above them, plaster walling towered
into dizzy heights, dark and creepy with the unknown.
"This is House
Five-Eight-Nine-Stroke-Charley," said Old Chronic, hands creasing his
maps. "Ground. Let me see, now . . . h'mm. Well,
Thorburn, you took a Regulation load from here—do you intend to go into the
open?"
"Must do to fill sacks." Thorbum treated the question with tolerance.
Old Chronic worried over trivialities at times and passed matters of grave
importance. "I'll go and take Stead."
"That means me,
too," said Vance.
"Sims
and Wallas. Rest of you, stay here."
The
five men slipped under the two foot high slot, stood up. Automatically, without
conscious thought, horrified, stricken with a panic he had never known he could
experience, Stead grasped with one hand for Thorbum, with the other covered
his eyes.
"No! no!" he said, his voice a gargling whisper of pain.
Thorbum
wrenched the hand covering his eyes away. He took his head between his
hands—Sims and Wallas and even Vance were there, holding him, forcing his head
back, pricking his eyes open with something sharp—making him look up.
Look up!
But . . . there was nothing up there!
Nothingness—a
vast white glaring expanse of emptiness, sucking the blood from his body,
drawing out the soul from his breast, tearing him, calling him, entreating him
to rise up and up and up.
"No!"
screamed Stead into the homy palm that clamped across his mouth. His eyes
bulged. He felt every inch of his body open and inflamed, excoriated by the
awful lack of substance above his head. "Don't. . . . Stop. . . . No! I
can't go out there!"
"Half a minute, Stead, that's all."
Vance spoke gratingly.
Thorbum said, "Feel
your feet, Stead."
Someone trod on his foot.
He yelped with the abrupt little pain, and
felt the ground beneath his feet. But still they held his head back, his face
up, still they pricked his eyes open, forcing him to look up to ... to what? Was there something there?
What horror really dwelt up there, wherever up there was?
"Yes,
Stead." Thorbum's rich voice burred in Stead's ears. "There is
something up there. But it's a long way off and it's painted white and it isn't
easy to see. But it's there, Stead, it's there. It's a ceiling, Stead, a roof.
Only it's a long way off. D'you understand?"
Understand?
Dimly in the cold and pallid illumination, Stead saw the white wide sweep of
roof, felt again the breath of rationality swing back as he realized that of
course, there must be something above. How could there not be?
"I'll
be all right. Sorry. Silly of me. For a half minute
there I thought the roof had fallen off the world—stupid. That couldn't
be."
No
one argued that. But Thorbum had to say, "We'll see you right, Stead.
We'll be going Outside one of these days." An uncomfortable silence. Then Honey poked her head through
the slot, stared up.
"Haven't
you gone yet? Well, that's good. Signal from Blane. He's somewhere near here;
he got twisted around somehow."
"He
never did have a good navigator," came Old
Chronic's sardonic whisper from the slot.
"Well,
Honey?" Thorbum slowly let his grip on Stead slacken. Stead took two great
lungsful of air.
"Blane reports a Rang
loose in this House."
At
once the electric stir of tension, of alarm, of an apprehension approaching
panic that shot through them was completely understandable to Stead.
Rangs meant sudden death, or, maybe, a death not so sudden but just as
sure.
"Step
on the beastly thing!" exclaimed Thorbum, as much enraged as frightened.
"This was a smooth operation up until now. This really fouls it up."
Inevitably,
it had to be Old Chronic who said, not without a tang of meaning,
"Orders, Thorbum?"
"I'm
not going back without full sacks." The stubborn set to Thorburn's mouth
chilled the watchers. "I went back with empty sacks that day we found you,
Stead, and since then I've never gone back without every sack being full. Right. Cardon, you and Old Chronic stand by the slot here.
We'll go in. You may have to cover us on our way out."
Vance ostentatiously unlimbered his gun and
checked the magazine.
"Make
sure your cape's tight," said Thorbum, sharply. "That'll be of more
use than a gun now." He turned to Stead. "You're an encumbrance I
can't risk. Stay here."
"But-"
Vance slung his gun.
"I stay with him too."
For
another moment of meaning no one said anything. Then Old Chronic smothered a
snigger and spread himself out under the slot. "Come and join me, big Hunter,"
he said, and the tone shot a stiff jolt into Vance's sullen face.
Thorbum
looked at Sims and Wallas. Then the three Foragers moved out into that pallidly
eerie illumination. Their figures dwindled with distance. Then they vanished
behind a tall cubical tower of wood that towered above, topped by a wide and
flat expanse like . . . like what? Stead thought he knew, but he couldn't bring
it into his mind.
With
a fierce thrill of longing he wished he had gone with the three out into that
great unknown.
Honey
crouched down with earphones clamped over one ear. Her face was twisted with
concentration.
"Blane's
calling again. . . . Hard to hear. He's in trouble . .
. but this interference is wicked. Howling all over the bands—"
Julia
interrupted in a firm voice. "Here come Thorbum and Sims and Wallas. Full sacks. Now maybe we can pull out of here."
The three were running fast. They panted
across the floor, heading for the slot, and ever and again they swiveled their
heads around to stare behind them.
Out there in the great emptiness that that
cold and chillingly eerie illumination made only a vast cavern of strange
shapes and tall distorted shadows, a form moved.
Something big and looming bearing down out of shadows pouncing down on
the running men.
Stead
heard a shrill, painful hissing, a gargantuan wrathful spitting, a clicking as though of metal on stone. Looking up in
appalled horror he saw a monstrous shape with four round and enormous eyes,
shining balefully in that strange radiance, a blasphemous form from nightmare,
lunging clumsily
forward on sixteen stubby legs that moved with a rippling repulsive unison.
"A rangl"
screamed Julia. "No . . . Thorbum—"
Cardon
and Vance were firing now, a lethal hammer of sound rolling from their guns.
Quickly Stead aimed his own splutter gun, cocked it, pressed
the trigger. He aimed for one of the four eyes. He saw the shining orb sprout
crimson and blackness, the shine shimmer with liquid and then dull and relapse
into a matted grayness.
His
lips were dry, his mouth sandpapery, his hands clammy.
Two other eyes went out. Three streams of lead struck the remaining eye and
blotted it out as a man stepped on a blood-sucking
pest. But still the rang hurtled on, spitting and snarling, great jaws opened
wide and streaming saliva, pounding on by sheer momentum.
A
long raking claw slashed. Sims, ducking, struck on the shoulder, stumbled and
fell. He did not release his stubborn grip on his sack. At once Wallas turned,
hoisted his comrade up, pulled him along.
Thorburn
brushed them both aside in a slithering
rush of action. The rang, sightless, screaming madly
in pain, raging, hurled itself full at the wall above the slot. A thick coarse
wall of fur sprang into life before the slot, blotting out the light.
"Along its side—hurry!"
That was Old Chronic.
The
men and women dashed aside, scrambling over the litter beneath the wall.
Thorburn appeared, staggering, waving his gun. Sims fell through and then
Wallas. They were snatched up, their sacks slung; eager hands propelled them
into the sheltering darkness of the cranny behind the wall.
Everyone
was gasping for air. A thick and miasmic cloud of dust had been blown up. Stead
felt the grains slick and furry on his tongue. He stumbled along after the
others, the blaze of their headlights switching and swathing the darkness
before them.
The
rush became a rout. Their feet slithered and slid, raking over the dust and
brick chippings, the plaster nodules fallen from the back of the wall. At each
gap in the wood
Stead
leaped with feet to spare; he was consumed by the desire to run and run and go
on running.
At last Thorbum, panting,
called a halt to the rout.
"That's
enough! You all know Rangs can't follow us through the crannies. Relax! It's
all over."
He
gave them five minutes for a breather. They sat all in a row, their backs
pressed against the wall, breathing heavily, eyes still glazed with the horror
of that last charge.
Then Old Chronic cackled
and clicked his dentures.
"Trust
a Rang to work you up! Wait until you've seen as many as I have."
Sunk
in his own thoughts Stead ignored the oldster. That Rang—that thing—had been twenty-five feet long from snout to
tail, with sixteen thick legs and fangs and claws; the scrabble of those homy
claws on the floor rang still in his memory. If monsters like that ravened in
the Outside world of buildings, no wonder no one volunteered to be a Forager!
And
this was the mad horrible world into which the Captain had so indifferently
cast him. A strange, grim, frightening and wholly animalistic anger built up in
Stead, one with his consuming desire to know more about the real Outside world
of buildings.
"Rangs," Vance was saying,
squatting next to Stead. "I
hate 'em. I've seen 'em.
I've seen the foul things catch a man and play with him, tossing him about
between their claws, letting him think he's going to escape and then pouncing
on him just when the poor fool thinks he's free. Rangs—we ought to begin a systematic
slaughter of them all!"
"Good
idea," said Thorburn. "But the Controllers won't spend resources on
it. You know that."
"All
they want," said Old Chronic with a morose flash strangely in contrast to
his usual sarcasm, "is for us to come home with full sacks and cheer,
boys, cheer! They don't care if we're all stepped on so long as they grow fat
and lazy."
Cardon
summed up in tones of such bitterness that Stead felt a shiver of dread,
"Controllers are no better than Rangs in human form."
He thought of Simon and Delia and Astroman Nav. Were they Rangs in human guise? Of course
not. They were gentle, civilized persons. But they accepted the order of
things; they expected Foragers to go out and risk their lives so that the
Controllers might continue theirs in all their luxury. Perhaps—
The Controllers had given him a party when
he'd left to train as a Forager. They'd wished him well. Did they know into
what sort of life he was going? Certainly, he felt confident they had no
inkling of the store of bitterness seething in the lower ranks, no notion at
all of the hatred with which they were regarded.
He'd
been sent here to learn. And, by the immortal being, he was learning!
He'd
wanted fervently to fit into life in the Empire of Archon—a term these Forager
comrades of his scarcely ever bothered to mention; he'd wanted to be a good
Controller, thankful of the opportunity. Being a good Forager, he had thought,
had been a part of his education.
But now, now he wasn't so
sure.
He
began to see two sides to life in Archon—two sides that had nothing to do with
inside and outside.
He
wondered, not without panic, where his loyalties would lie in the future.
"Come on," said Thorbum, rising.
"We've full sacks. The Controllers will love that. Let's get back
home."
CHAPTER
EIGHT
On the seventh day of his life with the Foragers a letter was
delivered to him along with the ordinary signals service mail. It was the first
letter he had received in his life, at least, of his life in Archon.
"I
do hope you are settling down nicely," Delia wrote. Simon and I often
think of you and wonder how you are faring. I expect you have made plenty of
new friends. We hope, Simon and I, that you won't
forget us. Astroman Nav asked after you the other day. If you do decide to
accept novitiatship, Stead, do not make a final decision until you have come
back to us. Remember, there are still the final educational motions to be gone
through."
The letter left him with mixed feelings.
^'Settling down," "how you are faring," "asked after
you." Pretty, empty phrases. He was quite likely to settle down to a meal
for a Rang.
"Ready, Stead?"
called Thorbum.
Lieutenant
Cargill, the soldier, he remembered had made a small prophecy about a Rang.
Now, as a Forager, he knew that Cargill almost certainly never had seen a Rang
with his own eyes. Like all the Controllers, it was hearsay talk. They lived in
the warrens. What did they really know of the world of buildings?
"Ready, Stead? Come
on, lad. The car's waiting."
"Sorry, Thorbum. All ready." Stead went out of the Foragers' waiting cubby and
climbed into the back of the truck. He sat down among comrades. As the soldier
at the barrier raised it, the antigás curtains
swishing up, Stead saw the action as symbolic. That barrier, that antigás curtain, that blue light cut a man off from
one world and ejected him into another.
Well,
he'd been ejected Outside; perhaps he had found his
niche in society here, after all. Perhaps, in that misty, forgotten,
un-dreamable earlier life, he had been a Forager. It would have been suitably
ironic.
The
truck jounced along the dirty corridor and left the lights behind. Six others
followed. This time the forage was going to be different, at least for Stead.
From
time to time, he had been told, when the immortal being had created a new fresh
and potentially rich quarry of food or raw materials, the Foragers and Hunters
set up an outside H.Q. They made their forages and returned to the temporary
H.Q. with their sacks, making the short journey a number of times, building up a depot which could be removed by a supply train
of trucks. Regulations still applied. Only certain amounts of food must be
taken at a time. All traces of the men's visit must be erased. They could show
themselves outside only in short periods, as usual.
The Regulations covered all
sorts of strange possibilities.
One,
which had flummoxed Stead, and in which he still saw elements of humor despite
the tall tales of his comrades, said quite clearly that no human being must
shoot at a
Demon.
"Shooting at phantoms, at figments of the imagination," Stead had
said. No one had laughed. They had scarcely heeded him. The Foragers clung to
their childish stories about Demons with a relish and love of circumstantial
detail that impressed and annoyed Stead. They should listen to Simon and Delia
for a half hour. That would soon knock the nonsense out of them.
The time scales had had to
be patiently explained to him.
"Our
twenty-four-hour day and its eight-hour divisions doesn't
apply outside." Thorbum touched his wrist watch. "Out there you have
an eight day period of darkness with only an occasional and erratic lightening.
Then a two-day period of steadily growing light—you recall that light on your
first trip—then an eight-day period of brighter and brighter light until, after
four days, you can't go out at all. That gradually wanes to another two day
period of slight light and so back to the darkness."
Old
Chronic nodded. "In my father's time that scale was different. Nearly all
dark, then, it was. Only about three days of
brightness."
Julia
struck into the conversation on the back of the jolting truck. "My
grandfather told me that his grandfather had told him that it used to be
nearly all bright outside, for days on end. Horrible, foraging was, in those
old days."
Stead had been calculating. "That means
the bright light is on the wane Outside?"
"Yes.
That accounts for our day or two's breather. But now we're off again." He
glanced back.
Following
the seven Forager trucks rolled another ten filled with soldiers. Up ahead as
point rode two more. Ar-chon meant to protect the wealth her Foragers would
bring in. And that had dropped another piece into place for Stead. There were
two sorts of outside, he had soon realized. The outside of
tunnels and corridors and crannies behind walls that lay outside the warrens.
This was the outside in which soldiers from rival Empires and Federations
fought over women and wealth. This was the outside the Controllers talked
about so grandly. But there existed another outside, outside the first—The Outside—the world of the Foragers and Hunters, a world
that the Controllers talked of again, but not so grandly. And there, Stead knew
with a sick feeling dread, was the land of rooflessness, of Rangs and . . . of Demons?
He
became aware that Honey was looking at him, and he smiled. She turned her face
away at once, fiddled with her radio set, sat stiff and unyielding to the bumpy
ride. Stead felt the usual mystification strike him and shrugged it off. Honey
was a woman. That explained that. A shy, timid little soul, she aroused in him
a feeling he found difficult to define—a different and yet allied feeling to
his attitude towards Delia and, yes, of his chaotic impressions of Belle.
Julia
now, well Julia could as well have been a man for all the difference it made to
Stead. Thorbum seemed to be interested in her, though. Stead had found an
unyielding wall of rectitude between him and his comrades whenever he had
carefully, casually, artfully, brought up the subject of men and women and why
they were different.
More
than once an odd expression had escaped one of them, usually Sims or Wallas,
and Thorburn had shut them up. Stead had gradually become voicelessly convinced
that Simon and Delia had given instructions to his comrades not to discuss the
question with him. That rankled at first, but then he thought of Delia and her
dedicated fire, and smiled and waited until the time came for her to explain.
Somehow, he wanted Delia to explain it all, not these Foragers, however strong
the ties of friendship now binding them.
For he felt now very much a Forager. The Hunter nom-clature, although still used,
was an archaism, from the days when Foragers and Hunters had been different
classes. The Foragers foraged and quarried; the Hunters hunted live game. Now a
Forager hunted what came to hand.
The journey this trip was longer, a good
twenty miles. At a halt the Commander—a Controller officer stiff and grim in
his armor—walked down the line of trucks. With him strode his Bosun, squat, tough,
craggy, merciless. The Foragers didn't think much of hun.
Cardon said fiercely, "Class traitor!"
The Commander reminded them all that they were now driving near the
border with the Empire of Trychos. Alertness. Anticipation. Ready weapons. On the ball.
"We
know," said Cardon blackly to the group when the soldier had stalked on.
"A Forager will spot an enemy, human or animal, miles before a
soldier!"
The
depths of class distinctions and hatreds within the single body politic
continued to astound Stead. If men faced the hazards he knew they faced
outside, surely, common sense said, they should stick together. Somehow, they
didn't. And, again somehow, the machinery of the state creaked on.
B.
G. Wills had said that it would not creak for very much longer.
The
convoy reached a narrow crack between two runnels made by a large, earth-boring
animal whose runs were frequently used by men. Driving through with whining
electrics, they came out onto a flat, low but wide expanse. A solid concrete
wall faced them. Down this ran a pipe some six feet in diameter, loud with
splashing water. Further along, cables looped down as though sagging through
rotten wood—the men had to fight and rout a small army of twelve-legged animals
two feet long, and clear away their nests and cocooned young—each cable about
eighteen inches thick, alive with electricity.
"The
immortal one provides us with light, heat and water," commented Thorburn
as the camp arose under the men's capable hands. "If only he'd made it all
a little easier!"
The
Commander told off pickets, guard details, duty rotas. On this important trip
Forager Manager Purvis had come along to supervise his men on the spot. Forage
parties went out on schedule, returned with bulging sacks. The pattern of life
developed its own rhythms in the advance depot.
Thorbum's
group had been allotted a sleeping area against the earth wall built at right
angles to the concrete wall of the world. They had their own electric light and
heater. Their sleeping bags lay neatly in two rows. Julia slept next to
Thorburn. Honey, for some odd reason uncompre-hended by Stead, slept a little
apart from the rest.
They
carried out three trips, very short, going through runnels well marked and
signposted, carrying back full sacks.
The
quarry they had mined staggered Stead in the proportions of its bounty. Food
lay heaped in quantities limitless to the eye. Regulations would wait long
before they called a halt to this gathering.
Four
more trips were completed, and now they marched the runnels as along familiar
streets in the warrens. The signposts became unnecessary. On their eighth trip
and halfway out, Honey called Thorbum. They stood beneath a signpost which
said: Quarry Nine and displayed an arrow, pointing onwards.
"Signal,
Thorbum," said Honey, looking up uneasily. At once their easiness, their
casualness, evaporated.
"It's
Rogers, up ahead. Some of the signposts have been torn down since he went in.
They've run across traps."
"Well,
this was too good to last," said Thorburn grimly. And then he said
something that, at first, unutterably shocked Stead. Only as the words rang in
his mind did he see how they fitted in with Simon's theories, only with
stunning force.
"The
Demons," Thorbum said. "They're trying to stop us again."
"But . . . but—" protested Stead
incoherently. "The Demons can't do anything
to a man with a rational mindl They are figments of
the imagination, controllers of the spirit to order our consciences. It is the
immortal being who provides us with food and who also sets the traps."
"Now
what sort of immortal one would that be," demanded Julia scornfully,
"who'd deliberately trap a man and mangle his body?"
"I see," said Stead unsteadily.
"The traps and the Rangs are facts of life, but it is not the immortal
one—who cannot be seen—who puts them there, but the Demons— who cannot be
seen—"
It all fitted.
Well, he was learning.
"Relay the signal back to depot, Honey,"
said Thorbum. "Purvis will have to know."
"There's an awful lot of clutter on the
air." Honey's silky black hair bent closer in automatic reflex as her
slender hands played with her dials delicately. "All right, I'm reaching
him."
The
secondary runnel seemed clear. No traps. But up ahead Sims and Wallas walked
with immense caution, and Cardon, rear marker, swung his head as though it
pivoted on a universal joint. They reached their exit hole without further
trouble. Rogers and his group marched past with full sacks, cheerily.
"The
Demons are on to us, Thorburn," said Rogers. "But
no Rangs. Is Purvis sending out any more parties?"
"Couldn't say. We came in by the secondary route. I'd advise you to try that."
"Thanks.
We tripped all the traps we could find. But you'll have to go in some way.
Regulations have been reached close to the exit hole."
Thorburn's
party groaned at this. It was a groan of affectation, mock dismal; Stead found
an amazement that they could joke in such gruesome ways when their every move
might bring their deaths.
"All
right," said Thorburn crisply. "All in.
We'll have to go to the far edge of the quarry. Keep closed up."
Julia
flashed him a glance. Thorburn nodded his head at her. "I know, my dear, I
know."
The
two Forager groups, standing by the hole their engineers had cut into the food
quarry beyond, shadowed and dimly illumined by a faint seeping light, turned
all as one as Rogers' point man called back sharply.
"Yobs! Action frontl Yobs!"
Everyone,
including Stead, who had been trained in this, flung furiously to the ground,
diving for cover, flattening out, snouting up their splutter-guns. Even so, one
of Rogers' group farthest out, was slow. He screamed,
staggering back, off balance. A long arrow protruded from his shoulder, artfully
penetrating between the junction of arm and shoulder leathers. Before he was
snatched down by a raking friendly arm four other arrows feathed into his
armor.
Eyes
slitted, Stead peered carefully out into the dusty crawling darkness behind the
wall of the world. His heart thudded painfully against the ground. His gun felt
suddenly cold to his fingers.
"See 'em, Cardon?" rumbled Thorbum.
"Not
yet. If there are more than a dozen they'll rush us in a second or two."
"I
hope they do." Julia's tones lashed the dark viciously. All their
headlamps had been turned off. "You can pick a Yob off then." She
glanced at Stead. "Don't let one get to close quarters, Stead."
Stead
gulped. "So I believe," he said in his Controller's voice that had
long since ceased to amuse his Forager comrades. He peered down the sights of
his gun and willed the tremble in his fingers out of existence.
"Here they
cornel" someone yelled.
Fire
and explosions rippled from the prostrate line of men. Bullets ripped and tore
into the charging mass ahead. Firing with the others, Stead tasted the acrid
stink of burnt powder, felt the sweat rilling down his face, heard the insane
hammer and clatter and the weird alien screams, saw the darting arrows striking
down all about.
Then
it was all over. Through the roaring in his ears and the streaking retinal
after-images in his eyes, Stead understood that another peril of outside had
been met and conquered. With the others, shakily, he stood up.
He walked across and looked
down on a Yob.
The
beast was more than a beast. Nine feet long, it propelled itself on six of its
legs, the front pair of this world's usual multiple-limbs being elevated like a
man's, the front portion of the Yob lifting up into a grotesque parody of a
man's chest. The head was flat and puffed and round, like a tureen, with four
hom-hooded eyes, a wide mouth, nostril slits and a cockscomb of flesh, bright
ochreous yellow, rising above. Furless was a Yob, like a man. The forelimbs
were clumsily manipulative, almost like a man's, the thumb not quite fully
opposed. And, like a man, a Yob clad itself in skins and furs, wore a wide
leather belt from which depended a knife, carried an ugly cudgel and a bow and
a quiver of long, wickedly barbed arrows.
Intelligent, after their
fashion, were Yobs.
"Now you've made the acquaintance of the
highest level of intelligent animal in the world," said Thorburn.
"And now I know why the Demons set those traps." He kicked the sprawled, riddled body of the Yob
contemptuously. "They are savages; they live by no Regulations. They
quarry and forage without check, leaving traces, telling the Demons everything.
No wonder the traps appeared."
"I lost a man,"
said Rogers. "Wilkins will be pleased."
"Take him back all the
Yob equipment. You deserve it."
Stead
was not surprised at Rogers' reaction of thanks. Yob artifacts fetched a great
price in service and resources among the Controllers. They were curios, objects
of an alien and strange culture, if culture it could be called.
"Right!" Thorburn grated the words deliberately. "All in."
Old
Chronic cackled. "Bring along the least damaged Yob. Usual
drill." Chuckling with a Forager's amazing resilience, cheerful
seconds after hideous danger, Sims and Wallas obeyed. The Yob was dragged
through the exit hole, bundled inside through the mountains of food.
"There's a trap,"
nodded Julia.
Quickly
the men draped the dead Yob artistically in the trap, grappled his naked left
hind foot, pulled. The trap swished horribly down. They undid their grapnel.
"Now the Demons might
be placated a little."
Stead
saw the wisdom of that. Working with the others, right over on the edge of the
quarry, hard up against a painted metal wall that reared upwards for thirty
feet, until the floor above created the ceiling to this shelf, he stuffed his
sack with round white eggs, each over half his own size. He worked with a will,
anxious to be off.
The
damp moss packing he rammed down between the eggs finished, and still the sack
was not full. He walked a few paces towards the metal wall, where one of the
mixed-up bread and fruit mountains lay, cut open and
crumbling. His axe sliced out neat wedges which he rammed gently down on top of
the eggs. Absorbed in his task he heard the click and whoosh of air as though
from a distance. He did not look up.
A vivid bar of light crashed down across the
floor.
"Stead! Run, man, run!"
Thorburn's
frantic yell brought Stead up, all blinking, his eyes closing against that
ferocious white light. He had seen no light so powerful, so actinic, so devastatingly blinding.
Fumbling,
he dropped his sack, reeled, tried to run, crashed
into the food mountain. Panting, he clung on, feeling it as the only solid
refuge in a world of merciless light.
Then
. . . horror.
Through
streaming eyes that he forced agonizingly to open he saw the floor drop away.
He felt his body rising, felt the movement as though his antigrav had been
switched on under full power, and had gone wrong.
Swaying,
sickeningly swooping, the section of food mountain
soared into the air, out into that blazing whiteness of light.
The
floor passed beneath his feet. Below that, incredibly far below that, dwindling
it seemed in impossible perspective, another floor appeared, so far below him that blueness edged its outlines. He clung
onto the food with all his strength. Something white and shiny appeared below.
His feet struck it jarringly. The food fragment tilted and, blessedly, its
shadow dropped over him. Now he could see.
Now he could see.
How
long he crouched there, dumb, numb, sick, filled with a horror that engulfed
his entire being, he did not know. It seemed to him like hours.
The
ground beneath his feet was hard and white and shiny, like china. It encircled
his vision. Beyond it stretched a great plain of brightly colored material.
Distantly, he made out two upright columns of wood and two cross bars joining
them. He was staring at these in wonder, in a maelstrom of fear and panic and
bowel-loosening terror, crouched down, unable to move, when the final horror
burst upon him.
Something appeared from the side. Something
so huge and vast it dwarfed his being. He did not, dared not,-
look up. He knew within his soul that there must be a roof up I here, but suppose there wasn't? And now, as he watched this
something move slowly, so slowly, across in front of the wooden structure, his
whole being and body screamed silently and his brain curdled in his skull.
The thing was vast. Impossibly
vast. It towered. And it moved. Slowly it moved, until it stopped in
front of the wood. Then, slowly, it sank down.
Stead stared up ... up ... at a vast, a world-filling, an
earth-shaking, snorting, breathing, moving Yob.
A
Yob so huge that it blotted out all vision, so de-vastatingly monstrous that
his overstrained mind could no longer accept the evidence of his senses.
Stead's
muscles collapsed. He slid down in the shadow of the fragment from the food
mountain.
The
Yob reached out an arm twelve feet thick. The fingers, eighteen inches thick,
held a bar of steel that winked and gleamed and reached above him with
monstrous purpose. The knife descended.
Then Stead knew what he
looked at was real.
He knew what it was.
He had met his first Demon.
CHAPTER
NINE
A hollow distant roaring beat at the air and vibrated it
heavily. Great sluggish waves of sound billowed about him, threateningly,
rolling in gargantuan echoes across his ears, dizzying him. He stared up,
unmoving, as that gleaming knife blade descended.
He
crouched pressed against the food mountain fragment. His cape wrapped itself
tightly about him, responding to the chemicals released into his blood stream
by panicky glands. Millions of tiny chromatophores on the cape's back rapidly
altered their pigment disposition by dispersion or concentration. The crumbly
yellow food against which he pressed was studded with large glistening
red-brown fruits. One showed under him. Where the yellow ceased and the brown
began a neat circular demarcation line ran also across his cape, the camouflage
was near perfect.
But
that ominously descending knife swooped down on him. It turned over in the air
so that the flat of the blade spread five feet wide above him. The rushing
displacement of anas it shrieked down tortured his eardrums.
Cape or no camouflage cape, the Demon had seen him!
And it was bringing down a
knife on his back.
Action
released itself in Stead like a spring lock being tripped. His feet stamped,
bent and lunged. He skittered sideways a fractional moment before the knife hit
the white china.
The
noise, the buffeting of wind, the stunning detonation as the china broke,
bruised and flayed him, tossed him end over end out onto the bright material
plain, flicked him, ignominiously, out into the open.
His
cape went through miraculous color changes as he sprawled headlong, adapting
itself dazzlingly to the patterns of the cloth.
In a
sucking welter of air, the knife rose and swishing, monstrous, paralyzing, whacked down again.
Stead leaped all
haphazardly across the cloth.
Scuttling,
he ran, and, scuttling, felt and heard the knife beat sickeningly down three
more times before in his half-blinded escape, he felt nothing and pitched out
headlong into the air.
The
floor below may have been a long way down, but it swooped up at him now with
frightening speed. His nervy fingers found his antigrav switch, clicked it on.
Abruptly, his descent halted its mad plunge; he swayed for a second, seeking
for safety.
In a
roaring sliver of murderous speed, the knife sliced through the air where he
would have fallen. He felt himself whirling over and over; he released the
antigrav and went up on it, shooting up, up and up, soaring away from that
ghastly-gleaming wicked knife.
Only
when his head bumped comfortingly against the ceiling was he satisfied. He
looked down. Vertigo now had passed. The Demon moved ponderously. It did
something to the wooden construction which, from his altitude, Stead recognized
as a chair. The Demon was climbing on the chair. Two legs lifted, then the
other two. The Demon swayed, its broad round puffy face lifted up, the knife
spearing up like a probing metal arm. Four arms, the Demon had, four eyes, two
of these, small and dimmed and half-hooded. But the other two stared up
unblinkingly. Stead began to push himself along the ceiling, heading for the
far wall.
The
Demon couldn't reach him. It kept straining up and swiping with the knife. Then
it descended, the noise rolling around the room in wave on wave of uproar.
Stead had reached the corner, now, and had realized why the light had not been
bothering him. Its source, in the center of the ceiling, was shaded to him up
here.
Remembering
his dark glasses at last he fumbled them on. The intensity of his fear through
the last few moments of horror and discovery had paralyzed his natural Forager
instincts, and, really, there was little wonder in that.
He
could not look at the Demon. Raging, furious, bellowing, it cavorted on the
edge of his vision like a nightmare spilling over into the day. The dark
glasses picked out for him the cupboard where he had been at work mining food.
He had to get back there. But the Demon thirsted for his blood; Stead began to
remember some of the more lurid stories told by old Foragers and his fear
increased.
The
Demon began throwing things at him. They were easy enough to dodge at first—a
monstrous book that flapped its pages and clapped with murderous intent, the
knife, a shining barbed fork, a rattling brightly colored box—and they all
dropped back, back down all that enormous drop to the floor beneath.
A
voice, a human voice, shrill with distance, pierced up from below.
"Stead! Down here! Hurry!"
Honey's
small figure appeared on the very edge of the cupboard shelf, her arms waving
and her silky black hair shining under that cruelly bright light.
At
sight of her, a queer physical pain jabbed through Stead's chest, as though his
fears for himself had swollen, turned into a ball and clogged his heart and
breath with fears for Honey. If the Demon saw herl
Straight
down Stead dropped. Like one of those long barbed Yob arrows he plunged down,
his camouflage cape gripping tightly to him and streaming away in the violence
of his descent, swooped down to the shelf. His feet hit the paper-covered wood sickeningly but in
his state of fear lie scarcely noticed the jar of landing.
"Come
on!" Honey screamed, and reached out to him with slender gripping fingers.
She
dragged him inwards as the bar of metal smashed clown onto the shelf, raising a
stinging cloud of dust. The wood shivered under them, throwing them to their
knees. The knife lifted, gleaming, turning, rising to come down again to crush
them flat.
Stumbling
over dislodged crumbs of food fallen away from the food mountains, dodging into
the shadow of those tall gleaming metal columns, hurdling obstacles, the two
humans fled from the wrath and violence of the Demon. Hand in hand, they fled, the mutual contact a warm and sustaining force between
them.
Twice
more that cruel seeking blade snapped at the floor behind them; twice more
racketing sound waves bruised their ears; twice more the shock pitched them
tumbling onward. Then Vance grasped Stead's arm and with savage, released
violence, hauled him down and through the slot beneath the wall. Honey pitched
after them.
"You complete, utter, idiot! You deserved to be trodden on!"
Thorburn fumed with all his leader's susceptibilities aroused. He'd nearly lost
a man. He would have felt sorry lor the man, but more sorry for himself when he
reported in to Controller Wilkins.
"That's finished this mine for a time,
anyway," cackled Old Chronic, wheezingly.
"And won't Controller Wilkins be pleased
about that." Julia flashed Stead a look that shriveled him.
As for Stead, he stumbled along with his
comrades and nil through his body the shakes trembled everywhere, dinning in
his head, splitting his skull with pain, stinging his flesh with the thousand
needles of remembered fear. He j'jipped his fists together so tightly that his
nails stung, but lie couldn't throw off the effects of that nightmare
experience.
The Demons were real!
The Demons existed.
They were no phantasms, no creatures of the
dark recesses of the imagination; they lived and breathed and stalked the
Outside,
waiting to maim and kill any human being rash enough to venture there.
By all the Demons of Outside—no wonder that was never a curse-phrase for
the Foragers. They lived too near its actuality, its very existence, to use it
so lightly and unthinkingly.
Down
the dark crannies slogged Thorbum's Foraging party, one lamp between two, capes
neatly wrapped, full sacks bulging, weapons ready, heads turning, turning,
turning, eyes never still. Through the narrow slots, scrambling up irregular
concrete junctions, leaping dark and echoing gaps, clawing up rough dirt
slides, moving always steadily onward, the men of Earth returned to their
temporary advance depot.
Dumping
their full sacks with the Quartermaster's assistants, giving them a helpful
shove up onto the stacks aboard the trucks, Thorbum's group could at last seek
their own cubby and strip off their armor, lay down their weapons, wash
themselves and walk along to the mess for food.
But Stead could not forget
his first sight of the Demon.
He
never would; he felt that an experience like that would remain with him through
any memory-erasing experience such as he had already gone through. He just
knew he'd never seen a Demon before. If he had, he knew he'd never forget it.
"You'll soon forget
it, Stead."
He turned sharply, surprised, imagining for a
weird instant that the voice had echoed in his mind. Honey smiled demurely up
at him. They were entering the marked off cubicle used as a mess and her face
looked cleaned and scrubbed and fresh, her eyes friendly, her red mouth soft.
"Forget it?" He laughed harshly.
"I doubt it."
She
sat down and, after a momentary hesitation, he sat beside her.
Awkwardly, he said, "Honey, I want to
thank you. You risked your life. If you hadn't— Anyway,
thank you. I'm not worth much to anyone, but thank you very sincerely."
"You're
worth a great -deall" she flashed. Then she picked up her knife and fork
and set to with a resoluteness that stifled any further conversation.
A bright color burned in her face.
Women!
Stead told himself with a sour little chuckle. He might take the Demons for
granted as a fact of life—all the other Foragers did and he meant to be as good
a Forager as any one of them—but women! Women—no. But
no!
All
the same, life couldn't be the same now he knew that Demons did exist and were
not an immaterial shadow working in opposition to the immortal being.
Only
then, sitting thinking in the mess with his comrades about him, did Stead
remember Simon and Delia. What would they say? He remembered the long
discussions and arguments, with Delia tossing her red curls and Simon stroking
his shrunken cheeks, as they thrashed out the meaning behind the
imagination-conjured Demons.
Weill He'd be able to inject some
common-sense into any similar discussions in the future.
If there were any, that
was.
A signals orderly came in, shouting over cutlery noise
and talk and laughter, silencing them.
"We're
pulling out. Manager Purvis and the Commander have decided that with the Yobs'
betrayal of our routes and mining areas, and the sighting of one of us by a
Demon, this lode is worked out. We return to the warrens at once. Everyone to load."
In a
welter of relief and excitement, the forward depot was packed up and in a long
column of vehicles the men pulled out, headed back for the warrens.
CHAPTER TEN
The warrens seemed unreal to Stead.
Manager Purvis called him into the office and
took no pleasure in ripping him to pieces.
"You didn't have to explain to a
supercilious Controller Commander that one of your men had seen a Demon, and
been seen in return. Thorburn reported the incident in as lie was bound to
do." Purvis pushed back in his chair and glowered up at Stead standing unhappily
before him.
"Thorburn knew that once the Demons
sight us they go on a determined all-out effort to kill us all. But you try
telling that to a Controller!"
"They don't believe in
Demons."
"Of
course they don't. They can't. How could they, stuck in the warrens or the
outside immediately surrounding the warrens? The Commander pulled out because
we had been betrayed by the Yobs." Purvis thumped the table. "That's
one of the few times in my life I've been glad to see Yobs!"
"But
can't we persuade the Controllers that there are Demons? Can't we—"
"We
can't. And it isn't our job to try. Our job is to go out and Forage and return
with full sacks. That and nothing more. Controller
Wilkins accepted the Yob report; I doubt that the Commander bothered to repeat
the story of the' Demon. Y'know, Stead, you've been extremely lucky."
Stead supposed that he had.
"The
Controllers consider themselves a superior form of life, Stead. Oh, I know
you've been in the inner warrens with them and you speak like a Controller. But
you're a Forager. From the reports I've had on you so far, an extremely able
one. Until this last fiasco. You've got to remember
that you are a Forager. You'll live longer that way."
Stead
nodded slowly, reluctantly. He had to agree with old Purvis, at least in part,
but he could never renounce his affinities with the Controllers. They had
taught him and they had taught him well, and he must not neglect the fact he
tended now more often to overlook—that he was out with the Foragers only for
one tour of duty. After that he'd go back to Simon's laboratory and Delia would
enter the final stages of bringing back the memory of his past. He still wanted
that to happen, but without the consuming passion the revelation of those
hidden days had once held for him.
How she was going to do it he hadn't the
slightest idea. He knew only that she could, and would.
"Right, Stead. Be off with you. You've
caused me enough trouble with your special guards and surveillance that . . .
ah hmml Well? What are you waiting for? Rang's dinner? Be off!"
Stead went.
Special guards? Surveillance?
Well,
there was Vance. Was that what Purvis meant? It must be; it had to be.
In
the days that followed Stead developed his Forager's eternal head-swinging
-habit into something that remained with him even inside the most secure
burrow. Everyone he saw wore to his sensitive perceptions the sinister aspect
of a spy, someone sent to watch over him and to prevent him from learning.
For
that, surely, could be the only reason the Controllers had set watchdogs on
him. They might just as well have set watch-Rangs; after a week or so Stead had
picked out the men he suspected.
His
suspicions crystallized the night of the Forager bac-chanalia.
Ostensibly
the celebrations were in honor of the anniversary of the landing on Earth of
the immortal being's garden. Farther in among the Controllers' warrens,
elaborate rituals were being gone through; down in the Captain's cabin
impressive processions wound through the lighted streets, chanting hosts and
singing choirs celebrating the auspicious day. Astromen came into
their own this day.
Huge
replicas of that instrument that hung at Astroman Nav's waist and had so
puzzled Stead would be borne in stately procession, illuminated by spotlights,
scented by sweet-burning aromatic woods. An instrument of potent power, it was,
said to have guided the garden to its resting place on Earth.
After
the solemn rituals would follow the parties.
Sorry
as he was to miss all that splendor and color, that pageantry and tradition,
Stead did not regret it for an instant. Instead of that, he had the Foragers'
Bacchanalia.
Ostensibly
the Foragers and Hunters, too, celebrated the anniversary of the garden's
landing on Earth; in fact, the day had become through long usage and custom in
the wilder sections of the warrens a day of license and jollity, when
inhibitions were flung aside and wine and laughter and carelessness ruled.
Caught
up in the excitement of preparation and then in the fever of participation,
Stead allowed himself to be borne along in the center of Thorburn's group. Even
on such a day, a group of Foragers tended to stick together.
Everywhere
the electrics burned. Everywhere flushed faces and laughing mouths and bright
eyes brought laughter and jollity to the warrens. Many people wore fancy dress.
The heaters burned at full power, reckless of the drain on the cables looped
through into the world from the world of buildings by the designing hand of the
immortal being. This day no one recked the cost.
Brass
bands marched and counter-marched, stunning the overheated air with music and
competing brassily with one another for unheeding ears. Foolish papier mache
masks grinned and bumbled along, brilliantly colored, eliciting shrieks of
laughter and shudders of revulsion. Tickling feather screechers unrolled as
youngsters puffed out their cheeks. Food and wine were dispensed on a lavish
scale. The aromas of cooking food, sizzling fat, the sweet heady scent of wine,
the flat taste of dust in the heated atmosphere, the myriad perfumes of
scented women, all combined with the stink of human sweat into a nasal orgy.
Stead
pushed along with his group and was pushed along. Painted women clutched his
arm. Screechers unrolled, pecking his face, making him dodge,
laughing. Someone blew a huge brass snort in his ear and he jumped and Honey
dragged him away from the brass band, laughing.
They
ate magnificently from nookside tables piled with the warrens' profusion. Wine
flowed. Stead drank as his companions drank, laughing.
Thorburn
boasted for them, "All this wealth, all this food and wine—all of it
brought here through the work of the Foragers. The Foragers keep men alive on
Earth!"
And no one could gainsay that.
Honey
held his arm, laughing up at him. She wore a parti-colored, red and black
costume. Her legs—one black, the other red—were
encased in shrunken-on tights. Her body, quartered red and black, and her head,
hooded in red and black, moved in jig time to different strains of music as
band succeeded band. Her eyes sparkled. Her cheeks flushed. Stead had not
missed the single glance from Julia, at once surprised and then femininely
understanding; he had not missed it but he had not comprehended it.
Honey,
the reserved, dark, shyly withdrawn Honey, flamed in livid electric brilliance
this day.
Stead
had contented himself with his old blue shirt and slacks, but among the
Foragers that old clothing of his Controller days was itself a fancy dress. He didn't
bother; he smiled and drank wine and let Honey tug him along with the others.
A
surging, swaying, singing tide of maskers crossed their path, bursting from a
cross-runnel. They trundled barrels of wine on handcarts and took their
refreshment with them. Everywhere, Stead could see men and women hugging each
other, meeting and parting, dancing on, linking hands in long chains, swinging
and breaking free. The resemblance to the stately dances of the Controllers
struck him with in-congruousness. Here, men and women danced with an abandon, a verve, a vivacity that would have gonged a harsh note of
discord in the more delicate world of the Controllers.
And
then, flushed and laughing, reeling just a little, Stead was dragged away from
Honey and from his group. He saw Thorburn's massive head, the mouth open and
shouting jovially to Julia, and then the group vanished behind a prancing wall
of men and women intoxicated as much by excitement as by wine.
Without
a qualm, he joined a jigging line, went bellowing up a lighted runnel. A goblet
was thrust into his hand. He drained it on a laugh, danced on.
He
had no idea where he was. Each side of the runnel contained the usual rows of
wooden doors and glazed windows. Lights blazed, brilliant vegetable growths
depended in artfully wrought wreaths and streamers before every door. Gaily
embroidered cloths hung down; banners waved in the electric fans' continuous
currents of air. People surged around him bemusingly; noise clanged in his ears
incessantly.
Spinning, he staggered from the end of a
dancing line as slippery fingers failed to hold him; spinning, he staggered
away into a shadowed crevice between cubby holes. He leaned against the wall,
whooping, panting for breath, feeling the wine clouding in his brain. This,
indeed, was lifel
"More
winel" bellowed a fat, paunchy worker, waving his goblet frenziedly. Stead
felt the deep sympathy of complete understanding with the fat, sweaty man. If
he didn't have wine immediately, the tragedy would be beyond a mortal's bearing.
"Wine
for my friendl" shouted Stead, looking blearily about, angry that no one
should leap forward with ready cup.
A
lean, rascally-looking fellow, a silversmith's apprentice, rolled forward,
splashed wine liberally into the fat man's goblet and over the stone paving. A
girl slithered up behind him, thrust her bare arms
under the ruby stream, head back, laughing, her red mouth open and shining, her
eyes glittering. Then she sucked the glistening drops from the whiteness of
her arms.
"More winel"
yelled Stead, lurching forward.
The
girl turned with the speed of a Rang, saw him, gurgled deep in her throat. She
thrust her hands under the spilling stream of wine, caught a splashing
double-handful, swung towards Stead.
"Herel Here is wine
for the good of your immortal soul!"
Scarcely
knowing what he did, Stead bent, drank the warm sweet wine. The girl's hands
trembled against his mouth. Then they opened and ruby drops cascaded to the
ground. She laughed. Looking up at her, still bent over, Stead laughed too.
Her
brown, lusterless hair had been powdered with sparkling dust. Her yellow
bodice, caught in a deep vee-shape at the neck by large scarlet buttons, had
been half torn away. Her black skirt, short and shining, had been even further
ripped up its side slit. She swayed there before him, laughing, disheveled,
wanton, unknowable and . . . suddenly, a vivid
reminder of Belle.
Her
tongue flicked over her lips. She took one deep breath, and flung herself
forward on Stead. He felt her arms about him, her hot breath on his face, a
warm breathing aliveness that stirred a deep-sleeping demon within him.
"Come on, lover boy! Why so coy! This is
bacchanal-come on!"
Vertigo seized Stead. His hands trembled. He
bent forward with that hot breath of the girl breathing full on him from her
open mouth. He bent forward without knowing why or what to do next.
Rough
hands dragged the girl away, thrust her spinning and
cursing to fall on one knee. She plunged one hand into her bosom, drew out a
slender stiletto, lunged, shrilling curses, to her
feet.
Stead sagged back, bemused.
The
two men in tight-fitting black, with the square, patient, unemotional faces so
much alike, took her by the arms. The stiletto dropped to ring against the
flags. They dragged her off bodily. Stead caught a single glimpse of the girl's
contorted and frightened face before high black shoulders cut off that
disturbing vision.
What
they said to her he could not hear above the uproar cannonading down the
runnels. But she cast one horrified look at Stead and then turned, all
aquiver, ran as though a Rang trod her heels.
The
two men in black regarded Stead for a long, scrutinizing moment, a moment that
hung humming isolated from the bacchanalia all about. Then they turned as one,
and marched off, keeping perfect step. Stead wiped a hand across his forehead.
It dripped sweat.
So they were the Controllers' watchdogs.
Purvis had been right. He was being watched, and more than watched; Delia and
Simon intended with utmost severity to prevent him learning anything of that
forbidden country of the relationships between men and women.
As a character and a personality, Stead was a
very immature being, newly born and still soaking up knowledge and
understanding, still hazy about life. He stood swaying for a few indecisive
moments. He supposed Simon and Delia had the right to order his life; after
all, they had conjured it into being from the empty husk he had been. But
something he could not define deep within his core rebelled at their
high-handed treatment of him. It smacked of the master-slave relationship and,
coming as it did on top of the revelations he had experienced in the outlook of
the Foragers, presented him with a crisis of conscience.
These
scientists of Archon—these earliest friends—must know what they were doing. Surely?
He
felt a blazing impulse to rush out into the runnel, seize the first girl he
happened across, bundle her into this dark cranny and there rip off all her
clothes and so discover what mystery lay in a woman's body that all the
pictures and all the evasive answers could never give.
How
could it be so important? The important things in life were eating and
sleeping, drinking and having fun. The important things were going out into the
Outside and proudly returning with full sacks. The really important aims of
life were the learning of all that science could teach,
the probing of the barriers of the unknown. But— But that brought him squarely
back to where he had started.
Stead
staggered out into the runnel, avoided a miraculously appearing dancing line,
lurched away to find his comrades.
It
was all too much for him. He would have to go along with Simon and Delia and
wait patiently until they explained everything. Anything else, now, was far
too difficult.
And
as he went he hugged the knowledge of the Demons to himself. That, at any rate, was one area of knowledge where he was superior to them.
Not that it was doing him
much good.
Finding
his way back to streets and runnels he recognized took time. He passed endless
rows of workers' hovels where the pitiful evidences of their jubilation in
bacchanalia, a tawdry reflection of the more robust Forager celebrations, might
have filled him with sorrow and a pondering wonder had his mind not been
seething with his own problems. These people had little to celebrate. Their
lives grayed with daily toil, the fear of sickness, the never-ending search for
that extra crust of bread, that extra blanket, that extra heating element.
No wonder, then, at bacchanalia they let
their repressions pop.
At least the Foragers and Hunters met the
danger and excitement of their lives with a consciousness that they were alive.
The workers might as well be dead, most of the time, for all the difference it
made to them.
The
wine fumes coiled less chokingly about him now and his steps grew steadier. By
the time he caught a glimpse of Cardon's black-browed face, with Sims and
Wallas with arms draped across each other's shoulders, Stead was back to his
usual self, or, rather, the self he had become out here with the Foragers. He
hailed his comrades through the noise.
They were genuinely glad to see him.
"Hey, Thorbum! Here's Stead!" and, "Hullo, Stead. Vance has been
worried." Cardon just eyed him and took a long throat-jerking swig at his
goblet.
They
were standing pushed back against the comer of a pastryshop where already the
shelves had been covered by sheets of white paper, eloquent proof of their sold
and eaten wares' popularity. In this little eddy in the human stream Stead
paused, regaining his breath, looking about for Honey and the others. He turned
back, dodging a man wearing a papier mache mask six feet tall, leering and grinning
and blowing an immense trumpet, and saw Cardon striding off, pushing his way
through with the purpose of a man who would not be denied passage.
Chuckling
at Cardon's black-browed intentness, his brooding seriousness even in the
midst of Bacchanalia, Stead followed.
What was it that Thorbum had said,
off-handedly, without really thinking what he was saying? "Cardon is a man
cherishing a secret sin." Sins were acts and thoughts against the
sublimity of the immortal being. That was what he'd learned with the
Controllers, but among the Foragers, as Astroman Nav had direfully predicted,
spiritual matters and the deeper genuflections to the immortal one were mere
surface posturings, habits without conviction. That had shocked him. But he'd
wit enough to see that Cardon wouldn't cherish a secret sin against the
immortal being. At least, Stead, with his new-found knowledge of his latter-day
comrades, didn't think so.
Sims
and Wallas had vanished and Stead, pushing along in a roseate cloud of wine
fumes and heady thoughts and the blackness of the deeper frustrations within
him, supposed that Cardon was trying to catch up with the rest of the group.
Only
when Cardon turned off quickly into a narrow crevice under the curving flight
of stairs leading up to another level and, with a searching backward glance
into the throng that missed Stead, was a hazy idea of another destination borne
in on Stead. What was Cardon up to? The man slithered swiftly down a ramp of
beaten earth; his cape swirled around the lightless corner and the way lay open
and empty. Still with a betraying tremble in his legs, Stead started on down.
A hoarse shout, a blow, stunningly heavy
across his neck, and then the greasy taste of earth in his mouth. A man's foot, thick and
clumsy in ill-fitting sandal, an inch from his face. The
pressing feel of hands lifting, turning, bringing his face up into the light of
an electric torch. The blinding brilliance of that light struck through
in red whorls of agony past his closed eyelids.
"Who
is he?"
"A dirty Controller spy. Dispose of him—quick!" A rough horny hand under his chin, jerking his head up cruelly.
Sparks darting before his closed eyes.
"Wait!"
The
voice . . . the voice had to be Cardon's. "I know him. The
stranger. He knows nothing." Another voice, thick
and syrupy and laden with hate. "You're right. He will know nothing
when I've finished with him."
"No,
you fool! He has powerful connections." Two soft yet
firm pressures beside his eyes. "A thumb in his eye will stop him
spying." "Don't do it! You'll precipitate—"
Stead
heaved mightily, once. Then he was flat again on his back and a man's foot
pressed down without mercy on his chest.
"The
people will not tolerate Controller spies!"
"He
isn't—at least, I don't think so. But he's followed everywhere by Controller
watchdogs."
"Them! Men who betray
their own class."
The slither of metal on stone. Something hard jabbed excruciatingly into his
side. He tried to move, to roll over, to curl away
from that relentless light. A voice called, faintly, some distance away.
"More! Two of
'em!"
"They'll be his watchdogs; come on, man!
Run!" "I'm not leaving him."
The sound of a scuffle, hard breathing, a curse, the slide and slither
of feet on stone.
Then, "All right, Cardon, but you'll be sorry for this!"
The diminishing patter of feet. The darkness swamped back, blessed, cool,
concealing darkness.
When
his two watchdogs reached him, Stead was just staggering up, a hand to his
head, swaying, staring blearily about. He wanted to be sick.
They
didn't speak to him. They waited, hovering, their hands under their black
short-capes resting on gunbutts, watching. They hovered and waited and watched
as Stead lurched unsteadily back into the lighted runnels and, filled with a
horror he could not put name to, found his miserable way back to his group.
Truly, there was much to
learn in this wicked world.
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
The day after the Forager's Bacchanalia Manager Purvis
called Thorburn, Blane and Rogers into his office. The three leaders left their
groups speculating on what lay in store for them. Other group leaders had
already been briefed; more would be given their instructions later in the day.
"It's another big one,
you see," said Julia confidently.
Old
Chronic cackled wheezingly. "Must take all we can mine afore the Demons
step on us, eh, Stead?"
The oldster shot a
malevolently arch look at Stead.
He'd
sighted his first Demon on his last Forage and he'd had to stand drinks all
around his group, but they still liked to dig slyly at him. That was one of the
tricks of the trade, a morale booster, one of the hazards of life that set
these men and women apart from their warren-dwelling fellows.
Stead
didn't mind that. Not now. His values had been brutally altered since he'd
joined the ranks of the Foragers and Hunters.
He
felt their pride. A twisted force of . . . circumstances, pride, maybe. But it
uplifted them and gave them courage in the bright places of the Outside.
He gladly shared in it. He
was a comrade, now.
The
extent of that comradeship, its real meaning, was highlighted for him in a few
gruff words from Cardon.
Vance
had lounged across in the Hunters' anteroom, grim and seamed, the essence of
toughness, the veteran Forager, and bent down to Cardon. Stead caught the
swift, low words.
"That
bald-headed pal of yours never knew how near he was to his come-uppance. Lucky
for him you stopped him killing Stead."
"You saw?"
"My job, inside as well as out. The womanising angle doesn't concern me,
only his life. His two -watchdogs look after that."
"I
see." Cardon's black eyebrows drew together as he glanced covertly at Stead.
Stead's face, with its assumed air of negligence, apparently satisfied him.
"Stead's a Forager comrade and in my own group. That bald-headed fellow
is a fine man, born organizer, marvelous orator, but he's a worker. I couldn't
let Stead be killed, could I?"
Should
he let Cardon know he knew what had happened? The problem bothered Stead as
they sat there waiting for the orders that would send them Outside to face the
horrors lurking there, the Scunners and the Yobs, the Rangs . . . and the
Demons.
Cardon settled the problem.
Vance
leaned back and Cardon said across the gap, low and yet in that Forager's
penetrating whisper that would carry in the reaches of Outside without
disturbing the life that festered there, "Stead, forget it all,
understand? You'll be all right."
So Stead could only say, as a Forager must,
"Thank you Cardon. I assure you I followed you because I thought you were
going back to the group. You're—" "Just forget it, Stead. That's
all."
Sitting
back on the hard seat Stead felt the resentment coursing through his mind
again. Forget it. Why, sure, that must be easy for him. He was a man without a
memory. He was just a child, learning in a man's world; what difference could
he make to the great designs these men plotted in their nooks and crannies? He
wanted to learn, to know, to understand. Simon and Delia had helped and taught
him, but their teaching he found every day fell short of what his eyes and
brain told him was true. Was all of life then a fraud?
Were there always truths behind truths, one opening out of the next? Did men
say one thing and do another, and was that expected of them?
Just
when Honey came in and sat beside him he wasn't sure; but slowly he turned his
head to look at her, the cloud in his eyes a sure sign to her that his thoughts
were lar away from what now mattered to her, increasingly and with more
poignant force every day. Stead, for his part, knew obscurely that Honey looked
more troubled and sad each day, but what the trouble was he didn't know. And,
naturally, no one would tell him.
They talked desultorily as
they waited for Thorbum.
"More
and more wavelength changes," said Honey, steadfastly adhering to her
radio-talk. "Something's really messing up the air."
"You
should worry," Julia chipped in, her blonde hair glinting, her fresh face
flushed. "Lorna—she's Rogers' ra-darop—says that they met a nine-inch beam
last trip. Nine inches above the ground! Think of it!"
"You'd
never squeeze through that," Old Chronic cackled. "Not with your
figure."
"Keep
quiet, you old Scunner-bait!" snapped Julia. But Stead saw that she put
both hands to her waist and pressed them down and in, smoothing. "I'll be
sliding through beam gaps when they feed you to the river."
"River?" said Stead, politely.
"That's
where they drop corpses," Cardon said, and jerked his thumb down.
"Plunk 'em through the burial gaps into the river. Read a nice service over 'em and pipe an eyeful and
then, forget them."
"Lethe,"
said Honey, with a little shiver. "That's what the river's
called."
Stead
was about to ask where it went when Thorbum and the other leaders reappeared.
At once the casualness went out of the talk; the atmosphere in the room grew
taut with the knowledge that at last they would know where they were going on
this trip. It might all too easily end in a death far away from the cleansing
waters of the Lethe.
"A
big one," Thorburn told his group - as they gathered around him at one of
the briefing tables. Old Chronic shuffled his maps out, sniffing and clicking
his dentures. Vance sat relaxed, lounging, but his fierce eyes glittered on
Thorbum with a vigilance that chilled. Sims and Wallas sat together, erect,
watching Thorburn's face, taking all they wanted from there. Cardon crouched a
little in his seat, his hand fingering the worn handle of his machete, his
brows a black bar tufting over his eyes. Julia and Honey spread out their logs
ready to record wave-lengths and radarop notices of beam positions. Their
slender hands moved surely and with purpose, yet they contrasted strongly with
the square brown hands of the men.
They were a team, this group. Vance and Stead
were now full members, and each individual fitted in like the sliding mechanism
of a clock, each party devoted to its task and all depending on the efficiency
of each single member.
It
was, Stead decided, listening to Thorburn, a good feeling.
Thorburn
spoke crisply and yet matter-of-factly, not overly stressing any one particular
aspect of the Forage, yet at every word that good feeling leached out of Stead
as though his strength of purpose had become a sponge to absorb and let go at
the slightest pressure. Appalled, he looked forward to a return to the
nightmare world of Outside. His fear uncoiled in him with a physical pain in
the pit of his stomach, soggy, dull, shaming. In the
level words of Thorbum, the leader, the man who would take them out again from
the warrens into the outer runnels, Stead could find no comfort but only the final sentence
of a death he could not face.
Out
there were Scunners. Out there were Yobs. Out there were Rangs and all the
human enemies of the Empire of Archon.
And . . . there were
Demons.
No.
He couldn't go out again. He couldn't. That was all there was to it.
He
made his mind up in a single chaotic moment of confusion and fear and pain. He
put a trembling hand down onto the seat of his chair to press himself up. He
would rise and tell them he wasn't going out again . . . not
again. Not any more.
He'd
get Simon and Delia to intervene. They'd understand. They'd fix it. He must
have done his full tour as a Forager now; he must have done. His arm
straightened to push himself up, and—
And
Honey lightly tapped the inside of his elbow, his arm bent, and he remained
sitting down, feeling foolish, casting a sideways glance at her, his face
burning, a roaring in his ears and the shakes flowing all across his thighs.
Honey put her small cool hand on his knees. She pressed hard; she dug her
fingernails in. She dug as though her shapely hand had become on a sudden the
rending fangs of a Scunner.
Her
face, raised to his from her wave-length logs, held a long, aloof look of
complete understanding and compassion, and of absolute withdrawnness and
disinterest. Stead met that look; he matched it. He drew in a dragging lungful
of air, coughed, wiped his mouth with a hand that did not quite tremble, and
then put his own hand on Honey's fingers clamping into his knee.
"Thanks,
Honey."
"It happens to all of us," she
said, softly, allowing the intimacy between them to flower as a precious bloom
apart I mm thfe others of the group. "I know. Thorburn knows, too. We all
do." She lifted her hand from his knee and, for a queer split-second
instant her hand trembled against his. Then, with ii
quick pat, she had
withdrawn, was turning back to her logs. "You'll be all right, now,
Stead."
"Diane and Rogers and D'Arcy and a
number of other groups are co-operating. There will be a large military escort
and as many trucks as we need." Thorburn cracked a gritty smile. "Not
so much marching this time. You'll be glad of that, for one, Old Chronic."
"That
I will," huffed and puffed Old Chronic, putting on the act, pretending to
be the old hasbeen he very nearly was, in all truth.
"We're
going in and establishing the usual forward depot. We're likely to be Out for a month or more. Depends on mining
progress with the main party."
"Main
party?"
That was Cardon, sharp and edgy.
Thorburn
leaned back, tossing down the pencil he had been using. "Main
party. The other day Boris marched in with full sacks, and with only
three men left of his group."
He quietened the
astonished, shocked exclamations.
"Boris
had had to go into the Outside and ran into trouble. Rangs.
But he brought back sacks of berries."
"Berries!"
Thorburn looked calmly on their excitement, their flushed faces, fists
banging the tables, curses and ejaculations. Everyone—everyone except Stead—seemed
filled with a violent storm of emotion and excitement . . . and dread.
"You
know the value of a sackful of berries." Thorburn glanced at Stead.
"No? Well, after the celebrations in the Controllers' quarters, the stock
of berries will have been drastically reduced. I've heard that the Captain and
his Crew are particularly partial to berries, particularly so."
They
all laughed, all except Stead. He stared about, patiently, waiting for them to
tell him and yet annoyed and angry and ashamed, now, that he did not know the
most elementary things of the world, things that everyone else knew and took
for granted. It all made him very insignificant.
Then
Julia leaned across and whispered to Thorburn. The leader's massive head nodded
briefly. He looked back at Stead. "What you have to know about berries,
Stead, is that they are among the most valuable commodities Foragers can bring
in. Automatically they are the personal property of the Captain. For us . . .
well, for us they represent an extra hazard in collecting them."
"We do the dirty work and collect
them," Cardon spoke savagely and almost incoherently. "And the
blasted Captain takes them all for his own pleasure." He paused, and then
said, "Well, nearly all." Then he laughed. Thorburn fixed him with an
eye and Cardon slumped in his seat, his hand caressing that wickedly-sharp
machete.
"Don't
say anything you'll be sorry for, Cardon." He turned to Stead.
"Berries grow on things called trees that the immortal being sometimes
creates on the Outside. But this means we have to venture right out where the
Demons can see us." He stopped, looking levelly at Stead. "You know,
now, what that means."
"Yes," said
Stead, on a breath. "Yes, I know."
A
Forager rolled across to their table, cursing furiously and beating at his
camouflage cape that nearly had him on his nose twice. "Get back down, you
pesky Rang-disease-ridden-Scunner-baitl Get down there where you belong!"
Bang! He hit the cape a great flat-handed blow, knocked it away from where a
licking flap crept around his ankle to trip him. "I'll show you who's the master around here!"
"Hullo, Boris,"
called Thorburn. "Glad to have you along."
In
Boris, Stead saw elements of Thorburn and Vance and Old Chronic. Boris, like
Thorburn, was a leader and held himself with a leader's authority. Like Vance,
he brooded grim and frightening in his uniform and weapons and armor, grim,
seamed, and a veteran. But, like Old Chronic, he was ageing and growing slow,
losing some of essential flashing mobility of the expert Forager.
"You mean Boris is
coming along, too?" demanded Julia.
Thorburn
nodded. "He knows where the berries are growing. He'll take us."
Old Chronic snuffled his maps forward.
"Mark it on here. I can take you out."
Boris said, "Delia—she was my
navigator—didn't come out from under a Rang's claws. I'll take you."
After that there was no further dissent.
Manager Purvis and the Controller Commander were going on the forage and as
Stead mounted into Thorburn's group's truck, he saw the size and extent of the
convoy. There must have been over a hundred trucks. As each one pulled out past
the blue light and the barrier rose swishing the gas curtain away, the sentries
turned out the guard and gave a ceremonial send-off.
No
doubt they were happy to do so, being thankful they weren't going Outside with the Foragers.
The
soldiers cleared a good path and the trucks rumbled through long echoing
runnels. They made good time and pulled at last into a flat, open expanse with
the roof safely ten feet above their tops. Water, gas and electricity supplies
were tapped, with a suitable "thank you" to the immortal one's
prescience in placing them here. The camp grew, pickets were posted and duty
rotas issued. So far everything had gone with a reasuring familiarity. Stead's
fears, alive within him, slept.
Boris's
three survivors from his last disastrous forage had joined Thorburn's group as
a sub-group with Boris as subgroup leader. All told, there were thirteen men
and women marching out in the darkness of the world of runnels beneath the
world of buildings searching for a wealth of berries. Thirteen.
The
three latecomers, veterans all, were Jan and Moke, taciturn, rubbery little
men, and Sylvi, with brown hair and bright eyes and a body as tough as a man's.
They fitted in quietly and inconspicuously.
By
the time they all set off down the lead-off runnel where engineers had strung
lights, Boris had his cape tamed. "Wasn't due for a new
one for another three years. But that eternally-damned Rang ripped my
old one up, very painful—and I inherited this little blighter."
Thorburn
directed Sims and Wallas into the lead. Car-don acted as rear marker. Between
these two extremes the others marched as they wished, for now.
A disagreeable lump had formed a hard knotty
little ball * and lodged in the center of Stead's chest, just below his breastbone.
Although the lump snuggled in his chest it had sprouted a smaller twin brother
that clogged in his throat. He kept on swallowing, but both lumps stayed there.
He supposed that he was too afraid to feel fear; he'd gone beyond that tenuous
dividing line.
At
every step he expected the ghastly form of a Scunner to rattle out on him,
seeking, clutching, rending. But, in a way he could not explain and hadn't the
courage to pry into, he knew for certain that he mustn't own to his fear,
mustn't turn tail and run, when Honey marched at his side.
The
swollen party reached a wooden wall, very dusty, with discarded Flang skins
crackling like broken glass beneath their feet. When Thorburn ordered the
lights doused that eerie, pallid, blue-white illumination crept out again from
the world of buildings beyond the wooden wall. Out there lay—Outside.
And
yet . . . and yet Stead knew with a stark dread that he would have to go out
there. It had been carefully explained to him. The immortal being created
these strange objects called trees and placed them in the world of buildings.
To reach them and their precious crop of berries men must grope out into the
full sight and range of the Demons. There was no other way.
Jan
and Moke, Boris's men, passed forward, each carrying a sack, full, brilliantly
banded in red paint, the word poison prominent in white and black.
Sylvi
said, "We'll be only too happy to do this. Delia was my sister."
Forager
engineers had cut an exploratory hole the previous night. Julia stepped back from
the round inhibitingly inviting orifice, said, "All clear. No
beams."
"They're
not on to us yet, then." Thorburn hitched at his weapons belt, looked back
slowly along the line of expectant faces, then with a swift decisive movement
ducked his head and vanished through the hole.
In
his turn, tremblingly but firmly, Stead squeezed through the hole into the
Outside.
At
once he looked up. But the dimness precluded any sight of the ceiling; the
whole vast space before lay shrouded in shadow. He felt the first faint
prickings of relief. At least, rooflessness had
not attacked him.
Vance stayed closed up to
Stead.
The
line of men stepped forward across a coarse tufty surface of knee-high stems.
They marched through bands of different colored stems and with each change,
however dimly perceived in the faint ghostly lighting, their camouflage capes
changed to conform.
Thorbum beckoned, a
single swift overarm that, in the drilled and rehearsed sign-language of
Foragers, meant, "Close up. Flankers out."
They
clustered at the foot of a square wooden tower that soared into the dimness
above them. Thorburn checked batteries. Then the antigravs were switched on and
the men rose into the air. Up and up they ascended with the smooth wooden tower
flowing downward past them. Boris, who had taken over the lead, halted them
with a single wrist-flick. Jan and Moke had vanished before the ascent had
begun, going off with their poison sacks.
The
silence, the dimness, the rustling furtiveness of every movement, came home to
Stead in a strange and chilling miasma of fear and shame-bolstered courage.
This was a
Special Forage, with a vengeance.
Then
they had scrambled over the edge of a vast wooden plateau that stretched away
before them into the dimness. Walking across it was a strange experience; the
wood had been covered with some tacky substance only partially rubbed smooth.
Boris halted, pointed upwards. Stead craned his head back and stared.
So that was a tree.
There
had been a Tree in the garden that had brought the Captain and his Crew to
Earth, he recalled, and wondered if that Old Tree had looked like this. It
grew up out of a solid glass-like object fully eighteen feet high, soaring up
and away and spreading gnarled branches out above them, its top lost in the dimness.
Brown were those branches and each branch was covered
with pallid yellow and green leaves each the size of a dining room table cloth.
But they did not take Stead's attention. He looked up and he saw myriad shining
scarlet berries, round and juicy and glistening, hanging in great clusters
from every nodule of those branches.
Setting to work with the others, climbing up
on antigrav and plucking the berries, carefully, as he had been told, putting
them with caution into his sack, he was struck by the plump juiciness of the
berry, the feel of sweet goodness within. He wondered what they tasted like.
As each consignment of full sacks was stacked
below, a
transport party formed up and carried them back to the hole in the wooden wall.
Soon Stead found himself transferred to this duty. He made six trips. On the
seventh, with a returning group of Jan and Moke, their poison sacks laid aside
for full sacks, and Honey and Vance, he was halfway from the tree to the drop
when Julia's voice shrilled, faint and attenuated by distance from the hole. "Alarm!"
He
heard no more. The ground beneath his feet trembled. A breath of air blasted
across the surface, dragging at hiS camouflage cape. Honey gasped a single
short cry, chopped off by rigorous Forager training.
Every
ear strained, every sense jumped alert. A monstrous creaking noise blasted at
them from the far distance away from the hole.
"Dark
glasses ready!" snapped Vance, taking over the lead at this moment of
crisis. "There will be light soon. Now, run!"
Shambling,
they ran for the edge of the wooden plateau and the drop beyond.
The
light, when it came, crashed with actinic violence across his eyes. He fumbled
his dark glasses on in haste, nearly dropping them, blinded by sweat and
shaking with fear.
When he could see again Jan and Moke were about to drop over the edge
some hundred yards away. Vance was tugging at him and Honey had slung her own sack onto her back
and had grabbed his.
"Come on, man.
Run!" Vance looked back and up.
Stead
could not do so, but he ran. He knew at what Vance looked back . . . and up.
Through
the air above his head whistled and roared a frightful force, a blast of air, a
sensation of wind buffeting around him. The wooden plateau shook under his
feet. And ahead . . . ahead— A great white roll
swooped down out of the air, lay full length in a crushing blow across Jan and
Moke, caught them and bent them and flung them to the floor.
The
long roll rose slowly into the air, hovered above their heads. He saw with the
numbness of complete fear that the end of the roll was grasped in the hand of a
Demon. The arm reached back out of his vision and he could not swing his head
to look.
"Up!" gasped Vance. "Up! It's our only chance!"
Stead
remembered the chilling swish of that knife wielded by a blood-crazed Demon
thirsting for his life, and he triggered his antigrav and rose between Vance
and Honey, shaking.
The
blasphemous roll of white blasted through the air, flattened in rolling waves
of sound against the wooden plateau. Torrents of displaced air shook him,
whirled him over and over, broke Vance's grip on his
arm. Honey tumbled headlong away and still she gripped her full sack. The noise
rolled around his head like the sound of splutter-guns fired in a constricting
cavern—booming, hideous.
"Honey!" he
called despairingly.
She
checked herself somehow, twisted her legs, began again
to rise on antigrav. He couldn't see Vance. Then he, too, was rising with Honey
and the white roll went swish! crack! past below.
"There
must be a roof we can shelter against up there!" he shouted to Honey,
forgetting the sibilant Forager whisper in the terror of the moment.
The
roof swooped down on them, white and flaky, with wide areas loose and ready to
fall in powder. He bumped against it thankfully, regaining his breath, feeling
his limbs once more coming under his control. Honey pressed close to him, her
eyes behind the dark glasses wide and fearful. He took a deep breath and wiped
the sweat away from his forehead. That first Demon he had seen had been unable
to reach him flattened out against the ceiling. That gave him hope.
He
remembered that he was a Man. He looked about him; he looked about, and he saw.
The
Demon was very like a Yob, but for its size and its four uplifted front limbs
and four limbs for locomotion. It was dressed in shapeless glittery clothes,
much slit and pouched for pockets, the material straining now with the violence
of the Demon's movements. He could see the Demon's uplifted crest, erect and
fleshy, a dark glistening green, saw the streaky colors around the face, colors
that could well be cosmetics. The thing's flat tureen-like head sat squatly on
its thick neck around which brilliant jewels flamed in a string of splendor.
The four eyes were not symmetrical; two were opaque and atrophied,
horn-covered, not used. And all the time the Demon snorted and gasped,
breathing with a heavy rasping hiss and bubbling like a giant pot of stew.
Stead
saw. He saw that the Demon was a real live being, a beast living in this room,
in which he could now understand that the wooden plateau across which they had
run was a table, that there were chairs in the room, and sideboards, carpets
on the'floor, windows to the room, curtained now and dark, a room not unlike
the rooms he had seen in the warrens. And he was an insignificant figure
bumping against the ceiling like a fly.
The
Demon slowly climbed from chair to table and that creaking sounded hollow and
ghostly to Stead. The Demon lifted a long wooden pole, tipped with what Stead
could now perceive to be a broomhead. The bristles, twelve feet long, scraped
across the ceiling, dislodging much white plaster, creating a cloud, rustling
and clacking past them.
"We
can't stay here." Honey grasped his arm. "There's a hole. Come
on!"
Together
they wriggled across the ceiling, away from the horrific giant broom, squirmed
through a hole into a dark world they understood.
Here
dust and plaster and dirt festooned everywhere. Their lights threw up wooden
walls, rough floors, crevices littered with flang skins and with the red
reflected glare from faceted watching eyes.
"Trigons," Honey said, drawing her
splutter-gun forward. "Nasty brutes. Spin webs. Got a filthy bite." She stared around, cool now and
calculating, back in the world she knew. "Thank the immortal being
Scunners can't get in here. But we can't stay."
A
clinging strand of some sticky, soft substance brushed across Stead's face and
he jerked back, repelled. He brushed a hand to one side,
saw in the radiance of his headlamp the white slithery strands trailing away
like thrown ribbons at Bacchanalia. They caressed his hands and arms, stuck,
clung, would not be stripped free.
"They're
shooting their webs at us. We'll have to get out of here, fast."
"Well,
we can't go back down the hole." Stead said that with complete conviction.
He couldn't face the Demon again.
"We'll
go on up," Honey said firmly. "Work our way through the runnels and
rejoin the group." She moved purposefully forward up a sloping mound of
crumbling rubble leading to a wooden wall. "I hope Thorburn and the others
got in all right."
On
hands and knees up the tricky slope, unwilling to drain their antigrav
batteries, they scrambled along. The wooden wall had been split in the long ago
and through the crack they could just edge carefully. Watching Honey's slim
figure determinedly pushing forward, Stead suddenly realized he no longer held
his sack. He made a decision, then, that was another milestone along his path
to independence.
"We're
in a tough situation, Honey. I think it would be best for you to drop your
sack."
"But,"
said Honey.
"But . . . full sacks?"
"I
know. But our lives depend on quick movement. Drop it here. Now."
She
obeyed him without further protest. But a strange glow crept into her face.
Stead thrust that aside, concentrated on bashing his machete through the
flimsy last strands of wood and webs opposing him. A couple of Trigons stirred
and spat. Honey ducked and the rustling webs stranded away above her head.
Stead, flowing into action, triggered a quick burst. The splutter-gun in that
confined space made nearly as much noise as a Demon.
Light, a bright but yellow light, spilled
through the hole he had made. Cautiously, wearing his dark glasses, he put his
head through.
Directly
before him a bright blue wall towered away and up and curved over in a
multitude of small folds, some fifty feet above. Behind him
extended a highly polished, reddish, wooden wall. The yellow light lit
everything softly through the dark glasses, and the floor, bare and shining,
could not conceal danger. '
"I'm
going up," Stead said. Confidence flowed back. He was going to fight his
way out of this and rejoin the group, and that would show his comrades that he
was • a real Forager, full sacks or no blasted full sacks.
"Hurry. The Trigons are stirring."
Stead
put his hand down on the edge of the hole and pushed himself up. The bright
blue wall lapped down over the floor and he trod on it, regaining his balance.
It felt soft through his Hunting boots. He turned to reach out to help Honey. Her head showed through the hole, her face, white but resolute,
staring at him.
The blue wall moved.
The
ground trembled. The blue on which he stood jerked, throwing him on his face.
Automatically, he hung on, digging his hands into the material. The blue wall
(lowed. Above him it shifted aside, revealing a sudden disastrous vision of
immense distances, a high white vast-ness raking away to a ceiling impossibly
far away.
The blue material shifted beneath him. He
felt its upward movement through every pore in his body. Sweat sprang, wet and
dripping, upon his face. He hung on, looking down, seeing the floor sweep away,
drop and dwindle. That reddish wall flowed downward too, appeared as a sudden
white expanse extended away into the distance.
And
still he was jerked up, hanging on, wondering, gripping
the blue material.
Comprehension hit him with the subtlety of a
gunbutt across the neck.
He was clinging to a
Demon's clothing.
He was being dragged up and onto the back of
a Demon.
The yellow light blossomed into unbearable
brilliance.
Far
below—far, far below—he caught a last frenzied fclinipse of Honey, staring up
at him out of her hole in the lloor.
CHAPTER
TWELVE
The terrors that leered and gibbered at Stead then, as
paralysis locked his fingers into gripping fists in the blue material, he
afterwards remembered with as much clarity as he remembered his former life.
That
last receding glimpse of Honey staring up in horror from her hole in the floor
had stirred uneasy trains of thought in Stead's sluggish mind, had made him
think of blasphemous thoughts no sane man could possibly entertain. All he
could see of the Demon he was riding was a vast curve of blue. On either hand
stretched a lofty chamber, a place so vast that rooflessness would surely have by now struck him down if he had not been immunized by
previous experience.
The
Demon kept snorting and snuffling and blowing in a most disconcerting way.
It
pulled the blue material higher around it and Stead hugged the cloth and was
drawn up until he perced atop a massive shoulder in the shadow of the puffed
tureen-shaped skull. A pulse beat in an artery the size of a water main. Thick,
coarse hairs grew downward in greasy bundles. The Demon's skin, pitted with
pore craters, its yellow flushed with the red of subcutaneous blood, wafted a
pungent perfume that dizzied his senses. But he hung on. He hung on for he
could not yet, not just yet, will his muscles to release their catatonic grip.
The
room was a bedroom. That reddish wall was the bed, the
vast sheet of whiteness the bedclothes. From the eminence of his vantage point
atop a Demon's shoulder, he saw the objects of the room in flat, sharply angled
perspective, but everything appeared to him whole. The old and familiar way of
looking at the items in the world "of buildings on a size-scale in relation
to himself and thus seeing only the details had gone—gone for ever. Now he saw
the whole picture.
The
immortal being had created the world of buildings. 104
But
why had the immortal one created everything of a size that suited the Demons?
Why? Why?
Strange clanging thoughts
echoed in Stead's bemused brain.
The Demon moved towards the window.
The
blind went up with the noise of a thousand cave-ins. Air tore
at him. He closed his eyes and hung on, determined now to see this thing
through, and to discover if the macabre thoughts struggling into coherent life
in his brain could possibly be the truth.
For
if they were, if they were— Then everything he had
been taught and believed was a hollow mockery, a gigantic blasphemy, a callous
joke of the immortal being's incomprehensible humor.
At
first he had not believed in Demons, had considered them figments of the
imagination to frighten men and women into abiding their consciences' dictates.
Then he had been forced to accept the unpalatable fact that Demons were real and
existed. Now . . . now he was being rubbed in the mire of humiliation, of race
humiliation, struggling against an understanding that screamed sheer bedlam at
him and would not be denied.
The Demon's shoulder twitched and Stead clung
on as the movement rolled thick flesh beneath the blue covering. He stared past
the enormous shell curve of the Demon's ear, with tufts of hair like clustered
broom handles thrusting out, stared past and out the
window.
A
pale, washed out, all pervasive light splayed down out there. The dawn of the
Demon's day must be only a few moments away, that electric flickering in the
air their long-prolonged multi-second vibration of their lighting. The one
second flickering of the electric light that served to demarcate time periods
in mankind's world would be too small for Demons—too small . . . too small.
Slowly,
reluctantly, with agony and despair, Stead's eyes focused on the illimitable
distances through the window. Outlines showed hazy and indistinct, but he saw
monstrous square blocked shapes, miles away: cliffs that hung peppered with
the random scattering of lighted windows, yellow oblongs glowing against the
pallid radiance and the blackness of mighty buildings.
Those buildings out there, structures created
by the immortal one for mankind to inhabit, were all of a size with the
Demons. Mankind had shrunk in Stead's understanding. Mankind had shrunk and he
thought he understood and he did not want to understand.
With a wide spinning movement that swung the room
about him, he felt the Demon turning, leaving the window,
walking with a ponderous undulation for the door. And
for the first time the thrill of fear contained an inward-
directed core: how long could he perch here before the
Demon became aware of him? -
Through
the door he was carried, down in a series of steeply precipitous lunges,
shuddering shocks as each tread halted, followed by a further dizzying descent,
down step after step as they went down the stairs.
A
number of conflicting emotions kept him where he was. Fear predominated. But
also a slow, stubborn will-to-knowledge possessed him,
a teeth-grinding will that he knew would sustain him now through whatever might
befall. There remained little in that dogged conviction of his earlier eager,
naive rushing after knowledge for the sake of it; now he wanted to know so that
he could alter and change both himself and the truths of men.
The
Demon entered a room where on a wooden table stood a glass vase containing a
flowering shrub. All down one side of the shrub the scarlet berries had been
picked away, scarlet drops like sprinkles of blood lay trailed haphazardly
across the table.
A
Demon with a broom was brushing up a couple of mangled bodies—bodies of men,
men caught stealing the red berries. Jan and Moke would never return to the
safe world of the warrens.
From Stead's Demon volumes of noise poured
out in crashing and stunning waves of sound; a great vein in the Demon's squat
throat vibrated; Stead could clearly hear the blood rushing through those
distended veins.
A
shining drop of cloudy liquid oozed through the flesh just before him; the
smell of sweat stank in his nostrils.
Were the Demons, then, frightened of men?
The broom wielding Demon, the Demon who had
struck so savagely with that monstrous rolled up paper at them on the table,
turned to face the newcomer, moving with an undulating grace abruptly
disconcerting to Stead, crouched, shivering and hating, in the shadows atop a
Demon's shoulder. He knew what he must do, but the messages shrilling from his
brain to his muscles met impenetrable blocks of fear; his muscles locked. He
had to leave this Demon's shoulder. He must plunge out and up on antigrav—he
mustl But he couldn't.
The
callous broom disposed of Jan and Moke, swept them away, broken and bloody,
into a dustpan. The Demon turned that massive flattened head; the two good eyes
focused on its companion; the Demon screamed.
A
hand like the hand of doom swept down on Stead's Demon's shoulder. Broad and
curved, cupped for a stunning buffet, that hand slashed down to knock the puny
human being from the blue robe, send it dashing to
destruction on the floor so far below.
The
hand flashed down, and Stead was shooting up on antigrav, spinning, numbed, shaken
with the violence of his reactions, purged of fear as his brain forced its
messages savagely past the blocks locking his muscles.
He
cavorted in the air, trying to regain his balance, trying to evade the enormous
lethal swipes of broom and paper.
A
larder door stood open by the wall. On the topmost shelf a shadow moved, metal
glinted. Stead looked down.
Down there, peering around the open door on the top shelf, glistening
whitely, a row of tiny faces—men's and women's faces. His comrades!
Honey was there. She waved at him, a gesture
so brave and so defiant that it stung him. Her voice lifted,
a squeak in the vastness of the Demon's room.
"I got back all right, Stead. We had a
run-in with a gang of Yobs. Drop down here with us. But hurry! Hurry!"
That
strange and inexplicable feeling for Honey seized him now with the desire to
ensure that she, of all people, should never again have to face the fear and
terror of the Demon myth. He wanted to break the barrier of lies surrounding
his comrades. The Foragers—mere rats stealing food from this
Demon's larder.
Now
Stead wanted more than ever to live and return to the world, and tell the
people what he had discovered, what he knew.
As
he lifted his splutter-gun he wondered if anyone else had made this discovery
before, if anyone else had gone through the blasting of pride and honor in
race, had discovered that brave humanity was but a parasite scuttling behind
the walls in the darkness of the earth behind this great Demon-created world.
He
thought of the Regulations. And he denied them. He aimed the splutter gun very
carefully at the Demon's looming monstrous eye.
The
gun made a loud sound. But to the Demon it must have made a very tiny, very
pitiable spitting.
Even so, a full clip
blinded the beast.
The
Demon's roars were now so great and reverberating that great
billows of sound made Stead clap his hands over his ears. A door opened.
Another Demon walked in with that slow graceful movement imposed by their size.
But Stead had dropped on antigrav to the
shelf of the larder and had scuttled in among his friends.
He
remembered the choking fear he had felt, that all Foragers must feel, as they
set off for Outside. That inhibited exploration. Had anyone ever reached the same conclusions as he had been forced to this
day? Surely they must have done!
Someone grabbed his arms, ran them up his
back. Someone else snatched away his splutter-gun.
Thorburn
said, "We won't kill you now, Stead. You'll go back to H.Q. where you will
stand trial. We're not barbarians any more. You have violated the
Regulations."
"Of course!" Stead's brain seethed now with his vision. "I did it to save my
own life, but I found out—"
'Take him along!" said Old Chronic with
a new and frighteningly savage voice.
These people who had been his comrades had
changed. He was met with only hostile stares, vicious eyes glaring at him; he
was a pariah, an outcast.
"But—" he said, pleadingly, not
believing. "But I believe in Demons, and I know what they are!"
"We
believe in them too. And the Regulations expressly forbid a man to shoot at
them." Thorbum hurried the party along, through the food quarry, out the
exit hole, along the dark way littered with dead Yobs. "You've committed
the worst crime a man can commit, Stead. You'll seel At
your trial not one voice will be raised to defend you; you'll die, Stead,
because you broke the Regulations."
"All I did was save my life."
"Your life! Your life! Don't you see, you imbecile, the Demons
will hunt us down mercilessly now. We'll have no peace
for generations to come."
That
shocked and sobered Stead. He hadn't thought of that.
The fiery importance of his discovery chilled
suddenly.
Grimly,
silently, the Forager group marched on. The need for hurry possessed them all,
Stead no less than the others. An overhanging doom seemed pressing in on them,
stultifying thought, making them cast apprehensive glances over their
shoulders far more frequently than they covered the way ahead. Cardon scowled
and closed up and his face was as black as the nether depths. Cardon, this
time, didn't relish his rear marker position.
When
at last they marched into the temporary depot, consternation greeted them.
Honey, having already passed on news of Stead's deed over the radio, had not
been able to meet his eye since. Her pert face was now as downcast as a rock
slide.
The
Commander's men and Purvis's men had been formed up and rows of sullen,
hostile, frightened faces glowered on Stead. The parade watched him in frigid
silence. Then everyone boarded the trucks and the convoy pulled out.
Stead,
his hands tied together, rode in the back of Purvis's truck, two Forager guards
with ready guns eyeing him halefully all the ride.
But that ride was dramatically interrupted.
The first volley riddled the point truck. Men
screamed and toppled. Splutter-guns crashed from the slot of darkness up which
the convoy had been rolling, headlights cutting a path of radiance ahead. A
soldier swung a searchlight and it was shot out at once, exploding in a screech
of glass and a shower of fragments.
The
two Forager guards grabbed Stead, and in a rolling, tangled bundle, they
dropped over the tailboard. Two of the electric trucks had collided. All along
the line bullets pocked the dirt. Fire stabbed pitilessly from the blackness.
"Enemy all aroundl"
Stead
heard the orders ringing out, the forming of lines, defense posts, first-aid
for the wounded, the trucks' electric motors whining
as gallant volunteers tried to drive them into a defensive ring. The noise
cracked down in the dark slot beneath the ground.
Beneath
the houses of a race of people so giant that mankind was a mere pest to them,
Stead still clung to that knowledge as the battle raged and roared about him.
One
of the Forager guards yipped abruptly, turned over and lay still. Stead saw the
blood seeping, bright in the fire glow from a burning truck. He crawled off a
little, inching along with his bound hands. The second Forager guard followed.
He, too, was reluctant to be caught under a truck that might explode at any
minute.
A dark form, camouflage cape glittering against the fire at its back,
glided up to Stead.
"Hold steady."
A knife slashed his bonds.
"What's going on?" The guard moved
across, his face wild, gun up.
"We need everyone in the fight,"
snapped Thorburn, sheathing the releasing knife. "Get into the line."
He turned to Stead, gripped his arm. "You, too."
Intermittently
caught in the quickly stabbing bursts of Archon searchlights, hooded on the
instant, men's figures flitted out there, enemies closing in for the kill.
Fleetingly, Stead glimpsed the insignia of Trychos. He lined up his sights
quite automatically, the gun thrust still warm into his hands by Thorburn,
grim-faced, smoke-grimed, dusty.
Where
yesterday Stead would have seen in those soldiers of Trychos only enemies to be
shot and disposed of, now a reluctance held his trigger finger in a stasis his
conscious efforts could not break. They were men; why kill a fellow human being
when there were so many ravening monsters in this underworld inimical to
everything human?
Through
the darkness lurid bolts of light leaped and crossed. Men screamed and died,
the shriek bubbling from lips already doomed, limp bodies falling all atangle
across the lights. The livid beams circled and swept the battlefield,
silhouetting maniacal figures in antic motion, marionette of death. The lights
threw distorted shadows, picked out the sudden lethal gleam of steel, threw
drifting war smoke into silvery beautiful streamers, writhing like gossamer
veils. The stench of battle beat up palpably. The feel of it scraped his nerves
raw.
Thorbum
paused and sagged back, reaching for a fresh clip, smacking the rounds in savagely.
His powder-streaked face turned to Stead, all crouched and immobile.
"Why
aren't you fighting? There are a lot of 'em. They caught us flat-footed. Sims
is already wounded." The breath caught in Thorburn's throat. "We've
got to fight, man, if we're to come out of this."
His teeth and eyes gleamed
ferally.
"They're
men," Stead said, foolishly, as though that was answer enough.
"You
mean you've nothing to live for, when we get back. That's understandable. But
think of Honey—she's in here, fighting."
Stead shook his head, helplessly, like a dumb
animal.
"I
thought," Thorburn said, sighting and firing in a winking beam of light,
dropping back to earth, "I expected—we all did—that you'd see the way
Honey felt about you even if you're not supposed to be talked to about . . .
about—" He lifted his shoulder, hunched, fired again, flopped back.
"They're getting closer."
"About what?"
"Never mind now. You shot at a Demon. Oh, sure, I understand
why you did. He'd have swatted you like you swat a ily
if you hadn't. But the Regulations were made to protect all men, not just one
Forager stupid enough to be caught iu the open in the
light."
Ill
"You talk ... as though you do . . . might . understand."
"I've
seen what you've seen, Stead. More, probably. I know
the position of men in the world of buildings. A number of us do. But what is
there to be said, let alone done about it?" He hunched up, fired, cursed,
fired again, dropped back with the return fire crackling past his ear.
"You
see? You made me forget how to fight—one shot a time, son—otherwise they'll
take your head off."
The
bedlam of noise hammered on. Smoke reeked in their nostrils, racked their
throats. Stead's eyes were streaming again, as they had done when the Demon's
light struck them. He coughed, bitterly.
"You mean you know? And yet you go on?"
"You
forget. We're Foragers. The high and blasted mighty Controllers don't even
believe Demons exist. If they thought that man was just a parasite, living on the scraps from a giant's table—no, Stead. It just couldn't get through to them."
"But we ought to tryl We've got to show them."
"What for?" Thorburn's tones were brutal. "What good would it do? Racial inferiority? No, son, no.
Mankind has got to believe in himself in some things. Just the stupid,
down-trodden Foragers have to bear the load."
"Wilkins—he's a
Controller."
"Half
a Controller, the others call him. And he doesn't know. Even if he did, what
could he do?"
"What I must do, Thorburn!" A blazing conviction rang now in Stead's
words. He felt uplifted, shorn of fear, dedicated. "I must go into the
world and preach the truthl Men must know, and then, then, Thorburn," I will instigate a great crusade against the Demons!"
"You'll
what?" Sheer surprise at the audacity of Stead's words brought Thorburn
down in a rush from his slow aiming. "You'll do what?"
"Tell
the world, the world of men! Then we can come up out of our runnels, take over
the greater world outside, the world of Demons, and make it rightfully our
own!"
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The soldiers'
Commander was down. He lay prostrate, pumping out his life blood, prone there
on the dirt of a runnel beneath the world of buildings.
Was
that, Stead wondered sickly, any way for a man to die?
Lights
blazed confusedly before him. Like an apparition from the nether depths he saw
Rogers all silhouetted against a burning truck, striking about him with his
sword, smashing back a would-be victorious onslaught. Vance, too, and Car-don,
leaped to stand with Rogers, sweeping away the soldiers of Trychos, then
dropping flat into concealing darkness. Then the orange flicker of their guns
took a further murderous toll.
"We'll
do it, boys, we'll do it!" Old Purvis's yell knifed clearly through the
hubbub. Already the detonations of enemy explosives crashed less frequently;
the bright winking of their guns faded to blackness in ever-growing patches.
The men of Archon once again were routing the men of Trychos.
Thorburn
was up on one knee, now, shooting with calm precision, hurling the last
remnants of fleeing enemy soldiers back. Stead looked beyond him. Honey rose,
her black hair shining almost green in the lurid lights, shooting with
methodical directness. Julia crawled up, clasping a riddled leg, swearing
vitriolically. Wallas was binding "up Sims'
wound.
And
Old Chronic, cackling, was already slithering out, creeping like some
underworld animal, across the churned up ground, out to strip the dead.
"Julia!"
Thorburn leaped all asprawl to her, dropped to a knee, caught her to him.
"Are you all right?"
"By a Scunner's diseased left kidney!" Julia said, juicily. "Those Rang-bait, illegitimate, thrice-damned, eternally lost
goons of Trychos put a bullet through my shapely leg!" She dragged her
dull green Hunter's slacks up around the shattered armor greave. Blood glistened Oilily.
"If it leaves a scar I'll . . . I'll—"
"You're all right, Julia," said Thorbum,
fervently. "Thank the immortal being!"
Stead
laughed, nervously. His head ached. He had come through a traumatic experience;
but there was no time to indulge in fancy psychological exhibitions; if he was
to save himself he had to go on along the path he had chosen.
He
stilled that silly, nervous, betraying laugh. He walked across in the lights
being switched on as the men of Archon began to create order out of the
aftermath of battle. Old Purvis was shouting his head off. Cardon, Honey,
Vance, all the others of the group except Old Chronic, gathered around Thorbum
and Julia. Near them Rogers and his group gathered in the smoky light. The
soldiers were out searching for the men shouting out there, the wounded, only
now able to call for help.
"Fighting
other men," Stead said bitterly. "Julia, Sims, wounded by men!" His face, smoke-blackened, gaunt, with deeply-sunk eyes rimmed in
black, bloodshot, glared around on them. "You're going to listen to
me!"
Surprised,
they watched him. Vance put up a hand. "You're a criminal, Stead."
"Only in the light of Regulations framed
to prevent us from taking what is ours by right! I'm no criminal to any
thinking Forager! And you all know it!"
Cardon pushed forward. His fiercely eager
face, as vicious as a Rang's, thrust out. "If you're saying what we think,
Stead-"
"I'm
saying that it is time the Foragers told the world the truth! It is time we
liberated mankind from the slavery, the thraldom, the parasiticism, that the
Controllers have permitted for too long!"
And then, incredibly, Cardon was talking. His
lean ferocious face glowed with an animation Stead had never seen it possess
before. He spoke with vituperation of the Controllers. His words poured out,
pure demogoguery, impelling, compelling, charging words with a new meaning, old-established
facts with new, sharper life.
"Our
brothers are spread wide!" he cried. "Through every firm of Foragers,
in the ranks of the soldiers, of the workers— the brothers of the revolution
merely await the call]" He pointed dramatically at Stead. "Look at
him. He's a new man, but he has become a comrade. He has been thrust down to
toil with us in the Outside. He has broken a Regulation, well he may. And he
will be condemned to a hideous death because he sought to save his life from a
peril the Controllers never face, that they cannot believe to existl"
Others
had drifted up now, Rogers' group, soldiers cleaning their weapons. .They
clustered in the fitful light, a ring of tense faces, softly breathing, waiting
for the spark that would set them alight.
"The
Day has come, my brothers!" shouted Cardon. "Stead shot at a Demon. And how many others have done the same?" He stared around on them, dramatically pausing. Then, "Vance has,
I'll wager. And Manager Purvis. A
lot of us. I have!"
No sound whispered from the packed ranks.
"The
day has come when the masses shall arise in their wrath and their powerl The day of the Controllers has ended! We—the Foragers, the
soldiers, the workers—must take over the control! We must exercise the power we
possess but are too disunited to use." His voice sank. "Brothers, in
our hands, lies the opportunity to arrange the world
in a saner, more ordered, fairer fashion." His voice soared, keening now
with the thrusting, dark ambition of the man. "We must not hesitate! We
must go on, march shoulder to shoulder against the tyranny of the Controllers,
smash oppression, bring new hope and decent life to all men. To
you and to me!"
They
cheered then. Helmets rose into the air. Swords flashed. These men of the
underworld, these men doomed to spend their lives in unending toil, fighting
the horrible denizens of a hostile world unknown to the lordly Controllers—
they cheered, these men, cheering themselves and their hopes, famishing for a
chance to lead a better life.
But Stead stared on,
appalled.
Was this what he had
planned? This revolution?
"No," said Stead,
weakly through the noise. "No."
Thorburn stared at him,
licking his lips, uncertain.
"So that explains Cardon," the
Forager Leader said, softly. "That sin he always carried with him. He,
too, shot at a Demon."
"And
it didn't bring the results you predicted for Stead," flashed Julia,
finishing the bandages with her own fingers. "Cardon speaks good
sensel"
"But . . . but can we
do it?" whispered Thorburn.
"We'll
do it." Julia stood up, grasping Thorburn, reaching out a hand to Stead.
"We'll make a better world for our kids, Thorburn! That's what matters to
me!"
After
that the return to the temporary depot became an inferno of muddled noise and
light, shouting and cheering, and an occasional shot. The temporary depot
joined up to a man. The brothers of Cardon's conspiracy had infiltrated
everywhere; the acceptance of their lot that had so impressed and perplexed
Stead lay revealed now as the quiescent, patient waiting of a volcano.
Controller Forager Wilkins disappeared from the scene. Stead did not, then,
have the courage to make too pertinent inquiries. Tiredness lapped over him,
tiredness and a weary disillusion.
He
was borne along on the heady wave of enthusiasm, dragged along with the masses,
and thankful, inexpressibly thankful that he would not have to face a charge of
shooting at a Demon.
But
Demons really existed. He did not forget his vow to do all he could to take men
out of their warrens and their runnels behind walls, bring them into the real
world of the Outside that was rightfully theirs.
Countless
meetings were held. Committees were elected. Thorburn and his entire group,
with the significant exception of Old Chronic, were
elected onto an action committee. Delegates went out to neighboring Forager
H.Q. Soldiers drifted in, deserters welcomed with open arms and good food and
wine.
For
this area on the periphery of the warrens, Cardon, to his own surprise and then
gratification, was elected Delegate Member Controller. He was not an ambitious
man for himself. Cardon really believed in the message he preached.
And his prophet, to the absolute bewilderment
of Stead, was B. G. Wills.
From
that erudite and clear-thinking man, Cardon and his associates had gleaned a
distorted view of the world and their part in it, and they had set about
rectifying the faults. Through all their declamations, their points programs,
a queer far-off echo of Wills rumbled down in muted logic but violent fury.
In
all honesty, having seen what he had, Stead could not gainsay the right of
these downtrodden people to a fair share in the good things of the world.
But
he had wanted them to go out into the Outside, and take those goodnesses from
the Demons, from the alien monstrosities who dominated the real world and
under whose feet mankind was a mere irritating pest.
For
the first time since those early days when he had first realized he was a man
without a past, a man whose early life was a blank, a cipher figure, he longed
desperately to know who and what he was. Perhaps, at this critical juncture in
the history of the human race on Earth, he might be able to influence it along
the right road if only he knew. And
then he would groan inwardly at the stupid pretentiousness of a single impotent
mote of humanity imagining it could change the destiny of mankind. Mankind's
destiny lay in the hands of every individual—Cardon preached that. And,
manifestly, it was true. B. G. Wills had said that if society could be changed
then man would change, too. Delia had said that. And now Cardon was arraigning
the human race to answer the charge, was drawing up his legions to do battle
for the good things of the world.
A gnawing longing to see
Delia possessed him.
The
ache grew. It blossomed one day of fiery speeches, of a small probing battle
over against the blue lights of the barrier, of fresh heart and
mind-searchings, into a consuming passion.
He must see Delia!
An
unsuspected well of caution prevented him from telling anyone, even Thorburn,
of his intentions.
In
the seething tumult of those days, when everything seemed possible, when the
old order was being changed, visibly altering before everyone's eyes, Honey had thrown herself into
organizing work with a gay abandon that masked her steely spirit. She believed
in the future. Ash-amedly, watching her slender boyish figure, her pale set
face, the little crease of dedication between her eyebrows, Stead drew back from
contact with her. He didn't know what Thorburn meant. The exploration of the
hints and innuendos that had come his way, the mystification of that experience
with Belle, his feelings about Delia, had been pushed into the back of his mind
in the tumult of the revolution.
Simon
would know. A Controller he might be, but he was a man of science. He
understood the murky workings of the human brain. Science, it seemed to Stead
now, offered the one last hope. If Forager and Controller met in head-on battle
the death knell of the human race would be rung here in the dark crevices
behind the real world. Stead couldn't let that happen whilst still there
remained a chance and science had not been consulted.
Cautiously,
he made his preparations, stifling the guilt feelings that, irrational though
he knew them to be, afflicted him with sharp pangs of doubt when he saw the
animated purpose of his Forager comrades.
He
learned that Forager Controller Wilkins had escaped, and Old Chronic was gone,
too. The task of finding a Controller Officer's uniform was not difficult; the
dead man's kit lay still neatly folded in his abandoned cubby. Stead picked up
the smart blue and gold, the dress sword, the insignia, and stuffed them into a
pack slung beneath his cape. He carried food and wine there, a map of the
warrens found in Old Chronic's deserted possessions. Then, not without a twinge
of doubt and apprehension, he set off.
As a
member of the action committee he bluffed his way past the blue light and the
gas curtain and barrier with no difficulty. His heart beating heavily, he
strode into the warrens.
Every street and level here was alive with
workers, pouring randomly from their cubicles, talking, shouting, gesticulating,
holding meetings, running; the whole place seethed with
an aimless activity. Soon, Stead knew, the workers would be given their chance
to join the revolution. As soon as the foodstuffs stored within the warrens
gave out, the workers would join their Forager and Soldier comrades. That would
leave the Controllers isolated. Isolated and starving.
He
had need of his cape going swiftly through the lighted runnels. The cape's
chromatophores went through their pigmentation arrangements, changing color,
concealing him against concrete walls and dirty shadowed alcoves, giving him
the chance to penetrate deeply into the warrens. As he left the workers' areas
the quality of the panic changed, grew deeper, tolled with a more resonant fear
in the faces and bearing of the people he passed.
Here,
the Controllers gathered to talk in whispers, to fidget, to wonder what the
Captain and his Crew were doing.
Stead
passed through the familiar ways, found Simon's laboratory, and dressed in the
reassuring blue and gold, the proud insignia of Archon blazing on his breast,
went up the steps and through the oval door. Soon, now, he would see Delia. But
anticipation of that could not live with his burning desire to tell these
heedless people the truth, to secure their help in the business of routing out
the Demons. The revolt appeared small and petty beside that great aspiration.
Lieutenant
Cargill stepped from a doorway into the corridor. He looked grim and haggard,
but his face still contained that youthful iron, that awareness that the
future of Archon rested on his shoulders. He saw the Commander, resplendent in
blue and gold, bulky in armor, camouflage cape swirling, weapons aglitter, and
he saluted.
Mechanically
returning the salute, Stead went to brush past.
Cargill
raised his eyes. He saw the grim, lined, tough face scored with the marks of
bitter experience, the crinkles around I lie eyes, the
thin wide lips clamped now into a line of determination, the jutting chin.
Then
comprehension flowed in shocking understanding through him.
"You
. . . you're Steadl But what— And in a soldier's
uniform, an officer's ... a
Commander'sl What does this mean, Stead? Quick, now!"
Cargill's hand gun snouted
up.
Stead
brushed it aside, pushing the muzzle to point to the floor. "Where's
Delia? Where's Simon? I must see them, immediately! Come on, man—where are
they?"
The
very vehemence of Stead perturbed Cargill, threw him off balance. He hesitated.
"You
may come too. You could be useful. Hurry, Car-gill. There is little time. Where
is Delia?"
"Who's
calling?" The sound of the opening door clicked loudly. "Cargill?"
Delia
walked towards them, pale and drawn, her eyes slowly widening as she saw Stead.
One hand flew to her mouth. "Stead! What do you
want here? What's happened?"
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
They were all pleased to see him, of course, even if their
first greetings held a note of restraint.
A
twinge of nostalgia afflicted Stead peculiarly as he stared around the old
familiar laboratory. Here lay his earliest memories, the beginning of his life
with the People of Archon, his first fumbling attempts to learn and understand.
He had traveled a long way
since then.
"I
don't know why you've come here to see us, Stead," said Simon, nervous and
fidgety. "The situation is very serious. The Captain is considering taking
the very gravest measures."
"What can he do?" demanded Stead
with the new arrogance of the emancipated Forager. "We . . . that is, the
Foragers, have simply cut off all supplies to the warrens. When the people have
no more food, they will be only too happy to talk sensé."
"Stead!"
exclaimed Delia, shocked.
"I
thought so," said Cargill uglily. He put hand on his gunbutt. "He's
nothing but a filthy Forager now!"
"Wait,
Cargill." Simon could still exercise his authority. "Let us hear why
Stead did come to see us. Or—" He glanced sideways at Delia and licked his
lips.
Stead made no comment on that.
"I
came for one very simple reason. In the present situation that we know is
grave, I believe that the power of science is our only hope."
"If
more people believed that," said Simon tartly, "maybe this trouble
would never have begun."
Stead
shook his head. "No. You're wrong there. The present revolution is no
fault of science's; but it can be stopped. It started
because you Controllers have been too selfish, blind, arrogant
in everything." He waved them to silence, anxious to sweep away their
misconceptions. "I, too, feel like a Controller, but only in the good
things, in the manners, the graces, the
open-mindedness. In everything else I know, now, that the Controllers are an
incubus on the backs of the workers and the Foragers."
He let them babble denials
and angry counter accusations.
Then
he chopped them oS brutally. "The Foragers hold
you in the palms of their hands. But I have no wish to see my friends killed,
deprived of their lives and liberty, even sent to work or become
Foragers."
Cargill shuddered at that.
"There
are many more workers than Foragers, and more Foragers than Controllers. The
soldiers, Cargill, are with us solidly in a fraternal spirit of revolution;
nothing you or your fellow-officers can say or do will alter that."
Simon stared at him, his mouth drooping a little, the weariness and
disillusion strong across his face.
"Tell
us your terms, then, Stead. I assume you have come as some sort of
delegate?"
Stead
shook his head. "No. I am here as a private individual. You seem to
forget that I was brought up here, with you as teachers, as a Controller. I cannot
forget that. I am shoulder to shoulder with the Foragers in this revolution.
But I seek a compromise."
"Ahl"
said Simon. "I take it you do have some position with the Foragers."
"I am a member of an action committee,
if that means anything."
"You
could get a message to the leader?" "Yes."
Both
Simon and Cargill went off into a long and involved discussion about the
possibilities. Delia looked at Stead. He ignored her gaze, troubled,
recognizing in him the craven fear of saying what he had come to say. He had
been avoiding the issue, talking of the Foragers' Revolution as though that
was the most important new factor to influence life in Archon. By a Scunner's
infected intestinesl They must have had revolutions
before.
"Listen!" he
said, loudly, explosively, vulgarly.
They
stopped talking, jerked out of their planning, swiveled to look at him.
He
wet his lips. Delia was staring as though he was a madman. Well, he supposed he
was, in their eyes.
"I've been Outside. I've seen . . . I've seen—"
Cargill
sneered nastily. "We've all been outside, Stead. I suppose you had to run
from a Scunner."
"I
don't forget you saved our lives from that Scunner, Cargill. You mentioned a
Rang. Ever seen one?"
"What?" Cargill
blustered. "Why . . . well . . . that is-"
"I
have, Cargill." Stead spoke softly. "I have. I helped to kill it. It
wasn't pleasant."
"Oh, Stead!" said
Delia, on a breath.
"I've
been Outside," Stead said again. "Out beyond this sham little world of walls and runnels hidden
in the earth behind greater walls."
Simon
put a shaking hand to his lips. "What do you mean, Stead?"
"I've seen a Demon!"
Silence.
Then
Cargill swung a contemptuous hand. "Rubbish! He's a typical brainless
Forager, trying to impress us with his fairy stories. Nannies frighten their
children with stories of Demons. Grow up, Stead!"
"I've
seen a Demon," Stead repeated viciously. "And I know what they are. I
know what Demons are and I know what mankind is. And the story isn't pretty, it
isn't glorious, it doesn't make us all great heroes; you won't like what I'm
going to tell you."
The wouldn't let him tell them at first. They told him he was just a petty-minded
braggart, trying to impress them.
Like
all Foragers, aware of his inferior social position, he sought any unlikely and
ego-boosting story to prove his difference, his superiority. They had no time
for phantasms and legends.
He
let them run on. They could not be expected to understand at once, but he was
frighteningly determined to make them see, to hold them until they did see.
Then,
in a controlled, clipped, concise voice he told them what had happened to him
since he had left them. He told them everything. When he had finished the
white-lit laboratory rang with his words; but the three people facing him sat,
pale-faced, trembling, not wanting to believe, and yet transfixed despite
themselves by his sincerity, his honesty of purpose, his frankness.
"It can't be,"
whispered Delia.
"I
don't know." Simon stood up, paced restlessly. "I've always believed
that Demons could exist, that there might be something in the stories, but . .
. but this!"
"Just
a miserable runnel of parasites!" growled Cargill. "Stealing
discarded crumbs from the tables of the Demons, raiding their larders—no. By
all the Demons of Outside! No!"
"Yes,
Cargill."
Stead spoke levelly. "Yes!"
"But if this is true,
it means—"
"It
means what you've just said. That man is a rat in the world of the Demons.
That's all. But that doesn't alter the facts. The Demons are just one form of
life, like a cat or a Scunner or a Yob. All of them, all . . . are inferior to
mankind!"
"Then—"
said Simon, a new light breaking over his face.
"You
are a scientist, Simon, and so is Delia. Cargill is a soldier. You can accept
this new information. You can evaluate it, find it's
truth, and then go on to plan means to alter it." Stead's voice blazed
conviction now. "But my comrades of the outside? Tfae Foragers? And the workers in the war-ions? No. They couldn't take this. Their minds wouldn't take the strain. A
few, a rare few like Thorbum, know and live with the knowledge. But that isn't
good enough for a scientist. We don't want to go on living merely accepting
the situation. We—"
"We
must change it!" Delia stood up, her whole figure 123 expressing
conviction and dedication to this new aim in her life.
T
must convene a meeting," said Simon. "I do believe you, Stead, now.
My whole life becomes a mockery to me, but I intend to convince my colleagues.
We will form an anti-Demon front. We can overthrow theml"
"Who shall we contact
first?" asked Delia.
Cargill
shook his head dazedly. His tongue kept licking his lips, furtively. "I
don't know!" he said, over and over. "I don't know. It's blasphemous.
The immortal being would never create that sort
of world!"
As
Simon contacted selected scientists, Delia and Stead tried to calm Cargill. The
soldier had reacted pathologically to the information of his position in the
scheme of things in the world. But his very reaction told the others that he
believed. And, believing, the balance of his mind had been dangerously
disturbed. A proud, arrogant, confident man couldn't face that sort of truth
except in the spirit of absolute humility. There would be others like that.
Questioning,
apprehensive, aware of the revolutionary threat ravening at the barriers, the
scientists answered Simon's call. Astroman Nav arrived. Shown the usual
deference accorded him, he smiled at Stead quite warmly, shook hands.
"So
the Captain's plan worked, then?" he said by way of greeting. "The
Crew guessed that the shock of Outside would bring your memory back." He
turned benignly on Delia. "Well, my dear, and what is he? You have done
well to bring his memory back, but I wonder if, now, he will still want to be
an Astroman."
"My
memory has not returned," Stead said bluntly. "And plan or no plan of
the Captain's, he left me to rot out there. Now, listen to Simon."
The shock of this ungracious speech outraged
the listening scientists. But Simon quietened them, began to talk. And, as was
inevitable with a second-hand dissemination of the truth, he was met by a blank
and stony refusal to credit what he was saying.
At
least Stead intervened, angry, persuasive, telling the whole story over again.
One or two of the younger men and women wavered; some believed him now. The
session became protracted, prolonged, arguing and talking and planning long
into the night. But the guiding light of science prevailed. Above all, these
people wanted to know. They could accept anything, if they could
know the truth. <
The
food supply position had not yet reached a serious shortage and the Controllers
with their vast reserves were still eating and drinking as usual. During one
meal break with arguments still raging as the men and women ate standing before
long buffet tables hastily organized by Delia, a low growling rumble vibrated
through the laboratory. The electric lights shook on their cables. Someone
dropped a plate. Dust suddenly appeared in the air, irritating nostrils and
throats.
The
distant rumbling disturbances lasted for perhaps half a minute. Then, in the
wordless silence, everyone heard the soft furtive slither of rock. Then that,
too, faded to silence.
"Another
earthquake," said one eminent scientist. "We could do without one of
those at this juncture."
A
puzzled frown creased Stead's weary face. He turned to Simon.
"Earthquake,
Simon? You've told me about them, I know. But . . . but surely that noise came
from above us?"
Simon
laughed, a little nervously, trying to retain his composure. "I thought so
too, Stead. But that is the usual impression one receives. The sound waves
travel vast distances, you know."
Then
the hubbub of argument, denunciation, pleading, planning, broke out again.
Simon had placed trusted guards from the ranks of the young scientists who
believed Stead on all doors. Everyone knew that they had to reach a decision—a
fairly unanimous decision—before they would be free to go. Most of them
welcomed that. Cargill sat in a corner, dazed, believing and unable in the
young pride of his military strength to take that knowledge and grow in stature
with it.
Delia said of him, sadly, "I always
thought that soldiers were resilient, but now I see that their brains are
channeled in a groove of unthinking discipline."
Stead
remembered the soldiers' fight against the soldiers of Trychos. Dismal and sad
though that had been, one could snatch a fierce pride at the courage of
soldiers in action. But he did not answer Delia on that; he took her arm and
steered her out of the main laboratory and along the corridor that led to his
old suite.
The ground vibrated gently
about them as they walked.
T
couldn't say this with all the others kicking up all that
row. But you've got to help me, Delia. The human race stands at a critical
point in its history. And, crazy, paranoiac, swollen-headed though this may
sound, I know that I have a part to play."
She
did not laugh or deride him, understanding what he meant. "Go on."
He
looked at the ground, his eyes clouded, his face slack now, loose with the
emotions trying to find expression.
"I
am absolutely convinced that I can play a decisive part. Perhaps, I think
certainly, the most important part. Everything that has happened has conspired
to thrust me forward, into a destiny that at first I did not want, but that now
I know is my duty."
"What convinced you,
Stead?"
He
walked on a space as the distant rumblings died away. "I keep getting the
niggling, split-second, hazy idea that I was sent here for that purpose. I feel
that I am in this world but not of it. And I know, Delia, that these feelings are originated by my lost
memory, battering at the closed doors of my consciousness, trying to break
through, trying to make me remember!"
Delia
nodded. Her red lips pursed up as though she had come to a decision. They
walked side by side into Stead's still unoccupied suite. The place brought back
happy memories, but he turned a troubled face to Delia as she sat on the low
divan. She tucked her long legs up underneath her, closed her eyes for a
second, then began to speak.
"We
are dealing with three separate yet connected phenomena." She ticked them
off. "One, the Foragers' Revolution. Two, the anti-Demon Crusade. Three, your
lost memory."
"And,"
said Stead vehemently. "My lost—"
"Yes."
She interrupted, speaking with forceful gravity. "Yes, Stead. Your lost
memory is the most important of the three."
"It sounds crazily paranoiac,"
Stead said softly, scarcely crediting the validity of it himself.
She
shook her head. She patted the divan. "Sit here." As he sat her
perfume wafted disturbingly over him. She was wearing a perfectly normal white
lab smock. It buttoned all the way up the front. Her short red curls glistened
in the electrics. Her eyes shone gray and candid in that light, unfathomable,
depthless, regarding him from puckered eyebrows with a
iook at once distant and warmly appraising.
"We
have had workers' Revolutions before, and Foragers', too. The Controllers
always win; I see no reason why they should not now." She stopped him with
an uplifted finger. "Uh, uh. But we have never
yet faced the situation you have brought to us. I expect other men have found
out the truth, other people who had looked down on the Demons' houses and seen
them whole. Our Architectural Geographers haven't ventured outside the warrens
for generations."
"Yes!
I expect that must be so. But why didn't they spread the news? I can understand
Thorbum remaining silent, but surely a man of education would see what must be
done?"
"That
is why I believe you! You are different from us. Your memory holds
the clue." The ceiling suddenly quivered. Pieces of plaster fell; dust
tasted flat and limey on their tongues. Delia gripped his arm.
"Stead!"
"That
must have been a big one." He went to stand up, but Delia held on to him.
He was conscious of her quick, shallow breathing. Twin spots of carmine flamed
in her cheeks.
"We ought to find
out."
"No. Stead . . . don't
leave me alonel"
He
stared at her, astonished. This did not sound like the (rim, practical
scientist. That strange upper part of her body heaved now in tumult; her eyes
were enormous. "I'm not going to leave you, Delia. But this
earthquake. The roof might fall in."
"The roof could fall in all over the
world; where could you go to escape it?"
"Why . . . why, Outside, I
suppose."
"You
say you've never been out to the Outside Thorbum 127 told you of. Our people
couldn't face that Outside, not yet, Stead. They'd all contract rooflessness."
"That!" Stead
remembered that, and hastily thrust it aside.
The
shaking of the room became a regular, drumming beat, each solid shock following
on at regular, slow, maddening moments. Each interval between maximum effect lasted for about five minutes. Then the shaking and
quivering would build up, the room tipped, plaster fell, and slowly the chaos
subsided.
"There's
intelligence behind this." Stead again tried to stand up and this time
succeeded, dragging Delia with him. She put both her hands on his back and
clutched him, her head resting on his breast. "Intelligence . . . and that
means—"
"Demons!" Delia said in a choked voice. Her whole body shook. The fear struck up
out of her alive and livid and horrible.
"Delia!"
Stead put a hand under her chin, lifted her face. She had not been crying, but
the fear danced naked on that beautiful face. "Delia," he said again,
soft voiced, wonderingly.
"I'm
frightened, Stead. Demons! Real. . . true! And they're
digging down to us, digging us out like rats in a hole. Oh, Stead, I'm frightened!"
Panic
threatened to claw Stead into red ruin, then, but he fought it down. For
something to do, something to occupy a brief moment, he reached out, with Delia
clinging to him, and switched on the radio.
"There might be some
news."
Another
tremor began, shook the room like a Rang shaking a Yob, receded. The radio
said, ". . . everyone to help. Shoring parties to repair and buttress
roofs. Parties to clear rubble. Electric
lines to be repaired. Everyone must help. The Captain has complete
confidence. The immortal being is sending us a test. We must measure up to
that."
The
radio babbled on, telling of rock falls, cave-ins, the hideous long-drawn-out
rumble of a rock slide, the most terrible sound an underground dweller can
hear.
Delia clung to Stead and
the roof fell in on them.
Through
the smoke and dust, the choking blindness, Stead realized he was lying athwart
Delia, the divan crushed beneath them. She lay there, breathing still, her eyes
wide open, her mouth in a blasphemous parody of a smile. The buttons had ripped
away from her lab smock and it had been twisted aside. He saw black lace,
narrow straps, white flesh, flushed rosy now and all powdered with the acrid
dust from the fallen plaster.
"This isn't how I'd
planned it," she whispered. "But—"
Her
arms tightened on his neck. All the fear had fled from her eyes. He had a
moment's shocked remembrance of Belle, and how she had said, "This!" And then his lips touched Delia's, clung, moved, parted. Her tongue
touched his. Something was happening to him. Great world-shaking rumblings
ravaged the room, the divan, but they could have been bursting out from within
him as much as the Demons digging down to kill him.
He
drew his head back, gaping for air. Delia lay, limp and yielding, but vibrant
now with the key to that mystery that had mocked and eluded him for so long.
Without understanding why he did it, he reached out, pulled away that black
lace, snapped the narrow straps.
"Oh,
Stead!" Delia sobbed. Her arms pressed him down with a ferocious strength
that filled with a joy he still did not comprehend.
The
dusty white lab smock lay discarded. His armor rang and the buckles squealed.
The radio babbled on: "Heavy falls all over the warrens. Boiling water is
pouring in everywhere. Poison gas on a scale never known
before. The immortal one aid us! The boiling
water is . . . it's coming in! It's steaming, boiling, scalding. It's—"
Stead
didn't hear. His spirit fused with Delia's and blinding lights pulsated in his
eyes, glorious music cascaded into his ears. A moment
of absolute truth would be reached in which he could forget everything save the
miracle his body wrought, at any second. Now . . . now—
A
beam, dislodged from the cracked roof, fell shrewdly across the back of his
head.
There came no climax, only a deep drifting
blackness that took him away into nothingness.
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
"Steady, now. . . Steady."
Captain
Winslow Tait of the Terran Survey Corps opened his eyes and stared about him.
Everything
seemed very dark and dusty; his head ached; an abominable noise tortured his
eardrums; he felt like hell. That damned generator would have to cut out just
as he'd been trying to impress the Samians with Terran efficiency. The Samians
were a big people, though not as big as some Tait had discovered in the Galaxy,
and it looked now as though he'd begun with a very bad impression. He'd crashed
his single-seater scout, all right.
But
how in the name of a blue-tailed baboon had he got here?
He
stared about, then recoiled as though he'd touched a
red-hot venturi.
He was lying beside a naked woman.
Clumsily,
he stood up, to discover that his regulation green coveralls were missing and
the he wore a few scraps of underclothes foreign to him. He shook his head.
What the hell?
A cloak-like garment clung
narrowly to his back.
The
ground shook heavily. Something pattered down from the roof like rain. A light
speared from a single electric bulb, wan and pitiful. A wall of this odd room
collapsed and water, steaming, boiling water, spewed out. A few drops stung his
naked flesh.
Well,
the woman couldn't be left there, whoever she was. Tait flung a white smock
thing about her, lifted her over one shoulder, and sprinted madly for the door
opposite the swirling flood of boiling water.
Any man of the Terran Survey Corps was
trained to react to the needs of the moment; Tait doubted whether any of them
had met this little lot before.
Through the door he plunged, to be engulfed
chaotically in a crazed, screaming, fighting bedlam of people. The cloak was
about him now, covering both him and the girl.
He
didn't remember tightening it. A man shouted into his face.
"It's
no goodl We're too latel Nothing matters nowl This is
the endl"
Captain
Winslow Tait had served a goodly time in the Terran Survey Corps, moving from
one globe of space to another, discovering everything he could about them,
using his flagship Cochrane as the only base and home thousands of people
would know for a decade or more. The Galaxy was a stupendously wonderful place
and always there extended worlds upon worlds, worlds never-ending. Homo
sapiens in reaching out from the Solar System encountered many strange aliens:
friendly, hostile, disinterested. When the scouter had reported the Samians,
Tait had gone down personally, on the invitation of the Samian prime minister.
He
now found himself engulfed in a screaming hysterical mob of human beings, in a
corridor that shook itself to pieces, with the stink of fear in his nostrils
and the awful stench of scalding flesh and the bubbling sound of tons of
boiling water assailing him from every direction.
He wasn't mad. That, he
could never believe.
So
there had to be a logical answer, that a human being
from Solterra could find and understand in the alien inhumanity of the galaxy.
Vague and nebulous thoughts washed through his mind. The people jostled him. He
was pushed gradually along the corridor—once he narrowly missed a rock
fall—going with the living tide.
The
girl in his arms stirred. He looked down, then pushed
his way into a shadowed alcove, his back pressed against the dirt wall.
The
cloak thing moved. It writhed away from contact with the wall,
adjusted itself, hung neatly at his side.
Winslow
Tait's mind crawled. His body erupted into a rash of goosepimples.
The cloak—alivel
Then
the girl opened her eyes and stared up at him. Deep violet
were those eyes. He looked down on her and he knew that he knew her, but
he could not remember.
His
first, irrational thought had been: A luscious wench. Now he saw the firmness
of purpose in that beautiful face, the shadow of tragedy marking its pallor.
Her short red curls were matted with sweat.
She
opened her lips, soft and supple; they parted on a breath.
"Stead," she
said. "Oh, Stead!"
And Captain Winslow Tait of the Terran Survey
Crops remembered. "Delia!"
Two
divergent, colliding, opposing streams of thought clashed in his mind. They
were like oil and water, coiling around each other in the case of his skull,
refusing to mingle. First one, then the other boiled uppermost.
Now
he saw the thick star-clusters of space as Cochrane drove steadily across the light years; then
he saw the evilly slavering fangs of a Rang. Now he was standing in the control
room of his flagship, conning his scouters down onto a new and unknown planet;
then he was creeping with Thor-burn and the Foragers along dusty, Flang-skin
scattered crannies behind the skirting boards of the Demons' houses.
Demons?
Demons!
No—not Demons—Samians.
Ordinary people, living in a relatively low stage of culture,
admittedly with four legs and four arms and two ordinary eyes and two
atrophied eyes, but intelligent, ordinary, simple people. The Samians had welcomed the advent of alien
life upon their planet. Every overture they made had been friendly. They had
only recently invented wireless and the first weak signals spluttering into
space had homed in Cochrane.
Ordinary,
decent, law-abiding folk—albeit hundreds of feet tall—who liked to keep their houses clean and clear of pests.
Delia
clung to him, demanding his attention. Further sections of the roof fell in.
The Samians were doing what a man on Earth would do trying to rid himself of a plague of rats. Boiling water, poison, dig the
blighters out.
The
situation drove home to him then in every aspect of horror.
His fingers dug into
Delia's white shoulder.
"Delia, I've got my memory backl I know
who I ami"
"Oh,
Stead, that's wonderful! But ... but
it's too late. Simon is right. This is the end."
He shook
his head savagely. "No. There is a chance. My radio.
You mentioned artifacts found with me—where is my radio?"
"Belle-"
"Bellel
Yes, the radio techl We've got to find her! I've got
to talk to the ship."
That
awful overpowering stifling sensation, the impression inseparable from
confinement in the earth that he was nailed down in his coffin, rose chokingly
as the lurid darkness, the screaming people, the sinister bubbling of boiling
water and the continuous earth tremors rocked in a mad saraband all about. He
had to hold on. Had to!
"Ship?" said
Delia, stupidly. "Ship?"
"You
wouldn't know. Thing your ancestors came to this planet in thousands on
thousands of years ago. Probably called the Ark. Common name for
colonist ships going out on the long haul." He smiled down on her,
fighting to regain sanity. "One thing you were right about, Delia. The
Empire of Archon probably did descend directly from that old Ark."
"I ... I don't know, Stead. What can we
do?"
"Find Belle and my
radio. Pronto! Come on!"
Heaving and struggling they fought their way
through the masses of people, avoiding rock falls, ducking where the roof
sagged menacingly. Dust choked everywhere. Twice they had to dodge streams of
water. But, thankfully, that water now was no longer boiling; as it seeped into
the earth, into the man-made runnels, its temperature dropped. But still it
came, and soon splashing sounds rose eerily from the lower depths.
"The Captain and his Crew want to get
out of there quick," he said, dragging Delia after him.
Belle's wireless lab was not too far off.
They reached it, found the wall in ruins, bundled through to a familiar scene
of devastation. Somehow, Simon had stayed with them. Belle rose up, ashen,
disheveled, weeping, staggering amid llie ruins, panic
stricken.
"Bellel"
snapped Tait, brutally. "Where is my radio?" 133
She couldn't understand, open-mouthed,
distraught.
Simon,
knowing only that Stead offered some salvation, began to ransack the place.
The
radio stood on a shelf in a cupboard, face down on the floor. Eagerly, Tait
snatched it up. The smashed end gave him a heart-jolting second of defeated
panic; then he realized that he could still use the transmission circuits; only
the receiving circuits were broken.
Without
a tremble his fingers span the dial, switched on. He began calling out, voice
near the concealed mike to shield it from the dinning bedlam about.
"Calling Cochrane! Calling Cochrane! This is Captain Tait. This is Captain Tait. Listen carefully. I have no
reception, repeat, I have no reception, repeat, I have
no reception."
He
heard Simon say, "What on earth language is
that?" And sorted out the language they had taught him with a feeling of
relief that his mind could still function on two levels.
"I
am down on Samia. Get a fix on my transmission. Tell the Samians to stop
digging out the rats. Repeat. Tell the Samians to stop digging out the
rats." He repeated this over and over again as the earth shook and dust
stifled eyes and nose and rock fell rumblingly.
At
last he paused, said, "I hope they're getting this. It may be a job to
find the right house to tell the Demons to stop digging."
Simon and Delia gaped.
"Yes,
the Demons are a kindly, friendly people. And I . . . I shot one in the eye;
God forgive me!"
"The Demons—friendly!" Simon blustered. "You must be mad,
Stead; all this horror has broken your mind!"
"No,
the Demons are a gentle people—yes, the Demons! You are a gentle man, Simon,
yet you kill a rat without a second thought, knowing it to be an evil
pest."
"I
... I see that," whispered
Delia. "Are you succeeding in doing . . . whatever it is you're
doing?"
"I
don't know." He went on calling out, sweat running down his body his voice
hoarse. He broke off to say, "I can only try. All I can do is try."
He didn't tell them that Cochrane might be gone. He had no real estimate of his time below here. Commander
Good-wright might have spaced out, mourning the loss of a skipper and a friend.
"No," he said, fiercely. "No! Come on, Goody! You've got to stop
the Demons—tie Samians—from digging us out! You've got to!"
The
far roof caved in; dirt and rocks tumbled down in an avalanche of terror, and
light, bright, white, cruel light, splintered through.
"Stop
them, Cochrane!" he yelled into the mike. "Stop theml They've
dug us open; they'll be trampling all over us soon! For God's sake, stop
them!"
The
roof ripped back. Brilliant, stabbing beams of actinic fire lanced down, stung
his eyes, brought tears spurting. Delia screamed.
Simon clapped his hands to his tortured eyes.
The
noise became impossible to sustain. Hydrogen bombs and planetary volcanoes
seemed to combine in one hellish cacophony. Typhoons whirled about the figures
of the human beings, crouching in holes in the ground.
Up
there lay nothing—up where Tait looked with something still left of the fears
of Stead; a sky, a distant prospect of clouds drifting, roseate, far off, serene.
Simon,
lowering his hands, looked up and . . . screamed. He fell writhing to the
ground. Still shouting into his mike, Tait could do nothing for the old
scientist struck down by rooflessness. Delia
clung to him.
"Shut your eyes!"
he screamed to her in a panted aside.
Against
those clouds, so familiar, so awful to these people of the skirting board
labyrinths, a dark shape moved. In the broken-open ground now, pitilessly
exposed to the light of the Samian day, men and women ran and screamed and
dropped, scuttling like ants in a nest disturbed by a probing stick.
And up there that looming monstrous shadow
towered up and up and up. "My God!" said Tait, awed. "They're
big!"
Flat
on the ground with one arm around Delia, the other grasping the radio, he
continued to call out desperately, incoherently. The camouflage cape spread
itself out over them, its sixteen legs tucking themselves neatly in at the
sides. But it was puzzled by the light, by the feeling in the air, its
chromatophores changed sluggishly. The cape, too, felt naked under this
inconceivable nothingness above.
Face
strained, muscles jumping, the cords in his throat taut with the effort of
shouting into the mike, he saw a sudden shining expanse of metal appear with a
crash of displaced air directly before them. Something lifted him, a brief
intolerable pressure, then he was sprawling on the
metal. It lifted. It swooped dizzily up into the sky.
He
screamed into the mike, "The Demon's got us! It's put us on its shovel!
For pity's sake, Cochrane, tell them."
A blackness whirled about him. Star-shot darkness engulfed him. Something
extraordinarily hard cracked deftly down along his temple. Everything whirled
away into nothingness.
Tait woke up in the sick
bay aboard Cochrane.
He lay in the comfortable bed between sweet-smelling sheets,
feeling the goodness in him, the drowsy after-sleep pleasantness seeping along
his muscles, his whole body aglow with health.
Old Doc Hejaz must have
worked overtime on him.
A
sudden fluttery movement at his side brought lazily incurious eyes to focus.
His camouflage cape lay in the bed with him, still, he guessed, attached to him
by its twin umbilical cords; old Doc Hejaz's eyes must have popped open at
that one. But, like the sensible medico he was, he'd left the cape in situ
until the skipper woke up to explain.
It
felt good just to lie in the sick bay and think over what had happened. Nothing
he could do now would alter what had happened. One glance had shown him Delia's
red curls on the pillow of the next bed. H'mm. She might not understand space
rules and regulations.
He
thought about her attempts to bring back his memory. She'd been right, too. Sex
was, after all, the most potent factor in racial memory; it would have worked
probably without that crack on the head. And she'd have shown him the kit
Thorbum had found with him.
Thorburnl The Foragers! Honey!
Were they all right? Cursing, Cochrane's skipper levered himself out of bed, pressing the call button.
The orderly who answered brought with her
Doctor
Hejaz.
Hejaz, a roly-poly little man with a prim mouth, soft womanly hands of immense
strength, an understanding of a man's insides that came from par sees of
spacefaring and space-doctoring, sat calmly down on the bed.
"Well,
skipper. You really believe in delving into the new planet's underworld."
"Huh,"
said Captain Tait. "Tell me what happened. But, first, there are some
Foragers I want looked up."
"If
you mean Thorburn and Honey and the gang, they were brought to Cochrane an hour or so after you and Miss Hope, here."
"What the-"
"You talked,
skipper."
"I
see. Well, your conscience is like a blasted monk's, so I don't envisage
blackmail. Now, tell me."
"We
picked up your signals loud and clear. I can say that everyone felt awful about
not being able to reassure you. We found the right house—enormous places, these
Samian cities—and the folks, a decent enough old couple, were busily pottering
with their kettles of boiling water and their rat poison. The old chap was
digging away and cursing the pilfering thieves who'd pinched all his best
cheeses and like that."
"The
Corps is never going to let me forget this," said Tait, morosely.
"I
had a look at their lad. The one whose eye you messed up. I think with a spot
of Terrestrial medicine and surgery, he'll regain his sight."
"Thank
heavens for that. That was one thing that worried me, made me feel
miserable."
"Went after you with a knife as big as a
picket boat, I gather. Well, can't say I blame you, skipper."
"But the Samians are such decent gentle
people. The Demons—well, the Demons were—"
"The Demons," said Delia's voice,
"are real, at last. I'll giant you that,
Stead."
"You all right, Delia?"
"She'll be fine." Hejaz smiled.
"Oh, and, Skipper, in case you're wondering. The human people of Samia are
just that
Homo sapiens. They must have descended from a Solterran colonist venture."
"A damn long time ago. Imagine how they got on in the beginning! Ugh, makes your flesh
creep."
"You mean—What do you mean?" asked Delia.
Simon,
from the bed the other side, chimed in with, "I think
we have more to learn than that the Demons are real, Delia."
"Say,
Doc," said the skipper. "Bring in thb Foragers, will you? If we're to
explain, I'd like to do it to an audience of friends."
When
they were all seated, Thorbum, Julia, Sims and Wallas, Vance, fierce Cardon
whose revolution had been swallowed up in a world-shaking event, and even Old
Chronic, clacking his dentures, Tait looked around for Honey. She stood at the
foot of his bed, hesitant, shy, her silky black hair shining wonderfully now in
the lights. He smiled encouragingly at her and she sat down on the bed, next
to Hejaz. She hadn't looked at Delia, and Delia's patrician face had frowned
slightly at sight of the slender girl.
Tait
explained it to them, all about the Galaxy and Sol-terra and how mankind had
set off on his great adventure among the stars and how their long-gone
ancestors had come to this planet of Samia and hadn't quite got off on the
right foot. It took some digesting.
"That's
why the Evolutionary Theory and the Uniqueness of Man stumped you. Cats and Dogs and Men, with four limbs and a common ancestry.
All the rest—alien. And that, too, I guess, is why you
haven't advanced greatly in the sciences. You have no real record of scientific
progress. And all that howling you've been getting on your wireless, Honey.
That was the Samians with their recently invented wireless fouling up the
bands."
She
smiled timidly at him, her hands clasped together in her lap. She looked very
lovely. But then ... so did Delia,
smiling at him from the next bed. Deuced awkward.
"They
dug you out, skipper," said Hejaz, unable to understand the odd language
Tait spoke to these people, except for the occasional, understandable word,
like "Forager" and "men" and "humanity".
"You were lifted on the old chap's spade, and they're so big and clumsy.
He was bound to knock you both out, handing you up to us. Ensign Lewis brought
you in."
"Himl
I suppose he's found himself a girl already down there?"
Hejaz
laughed. "Quite a few have, skipper. This planet
is a pleasant place, light gravity, good air."
Tait
turned back to his friends from below. "You'll go on living in Samia. But on the surface, where men belong. No rooflessness will affect you. You'll form a valuable Sol-terran colony here, as was
planned in the beginning. The Samians—the Demons—can only be your friends."
Friends.
He looked at Delia and then at Honey. Well?
Well,
he was a deep-spaceman, a rough and tough member of the Terran Survey Corps.
He had a job to do. He would space out, on the next stage of man's colonization
and exploration of the galaxy.
Who knew what they'd find
next?
Delia and Honey. Honey and Delia. Little
people from the dank underworld beneath the feet of an alien race. People who'd lived all their lives as rats pilfering and stealing
other people's possessions for food, but still human beings.
Good people.
He wondered which of them—or perhaps none of
them— would go with him out from this planet into the vasty deeps.
He
turned with a joyful smile as a girl's voice—a well-loved girl's
voice—stumbling over the unfamiliar language, said, "Skipper?"