The Caves of Mars
BEWARE
OF THE UNIVERSAL PANACEA
Ric
Coltor had lost an arm in an interplanetary exploration. For a spaceman at any
other time that would have meant the end of his career. But
not with the marvelous Martian Panacea in existence. Extracted from a
fungus found only on the Red Planet, it promised mankind perfect health and
longer life, for it grew back internal organs, conquered disease, and could
even grow back arms.
So Ric went to one of the M-P colonies to
become whole again and discovered a defect in that new Utopia— M-P not only
gave its users glowing good health but it also gave them a fanatical devotion
to the man who administered it, Dr. Morton Krill A devotion that was so
all-encompassing that any man who received it could easily become dictator of
two planets if he were twisted enough to desire that Dr. Krill was.
Turn this book over for second
complete novel
EMIL
PET A J A, who was born in Montana of Finnish ancestry, has been for most of
his life an enthusiastic follower of science-fiction and fantasy. Now a
resident of San Francisco, and for many years there a professional
photographer, he is devoting himself full time to his writing. Over the years
he has had many short stories and novelettes in national magazines.
His
previous novel in an Ace edition was Alpha Yes, Terra No! (M-121).
THE CAVES OF MARS
by
EMIL PETAJA
f
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
the
caves of mars
Copyright ©, 1965, by Ace
Books, Inc. All
Rights Reserved
to
Elsie and Don
I
Ric Coltor
looked down, way down, to
where Calcity winked in
the night. Calcity
stretched out over what had once been coast, then forest, then desert. Now it was a maze of towers, steel and glass business battlements,
spidery flow-ramps. Further down some self-conscious
older buildings huddled, ashamed. There were
a few private copters and late cabs idling across the night. But up here Ric
was the only
evidence of life. He had
the winter wind and the foretaste of death all to himself.
He'd stopped at a bar and downed two quick drinks before his climb up
this neon-splashed ad pylon on the highest building he could find. But he
wasn't fuzzy. By no means! Wind pressed his leanness against a narrow strut;
three inches of steel supported his booted feet. His normal one-seventy
muscular pounds had wasted to one-forty-eight those
months in the space hospital; that, taken together with enforced abstinence,
and the alcohol should have hit him like a ton of bricks. But it didn't. State
of mind, he decided, grimly. Never had his mind cut so sharp a swath at life;
never had his senses taken such a hungry bite at conscious existence. Why way
up here? That was easy. Space had been his life. This was as close to it as
he'd ever get again.
The
dope they'd kept him on, against unbearable physical and psychological pain,
was all worn off. Back in the hospital time had mushed together in a mindless
lump, a vehicle for continuous torment. So they'd kept him under drugs practically
all of the time.
Now,
suddenly, this rush of intense feeling.
He
didn't want it. He couldn't bear to think ahead, either. He couldn't bear to
look down at the plastic arm they had glued onto his right shoulder stump. It
worked after a fashion, sure. It had helped him climb up here. But, being the
kind of man he was, an awkward mechanical arm just wasn't enough. He couldn't
take it. He wouldn't.
So .
. .
The
thoughts churned up. Happy ones. Angry
ones. They took hold of his sharpened senses and somehow they only honed
down the knife.
From
the time Richard Franklin Coltor was old enough to grab a hold of whatever
chunk of matter his parents had first tossed him to play with,
he had grabbed it with both
hands. That was the key. Both eager fists. At fourteen he stowed away on a moonship
because they laughed at his eagerness and kicked his tail out of the Union
office when he swaggered in demanding a space job, any land so long as it was
spaceside.
Guts
and perspicacity won out and they kept him on. To Ric Coltor life was not to be
nibbled at but gulped dry, ravished with your whole being.
Pushing thirty now, the arbitrary age when
hard core spacemen were given a penetrating twice-over by the meds— especially
pilots—Ric would normally have been given the emphatic nod for a good twenty
more years of exploratory seat-of-the-pants spacing.
It
fed his soul, being part of the big push which now included a landing or
near-look at all the Sol planets, major and minor. Next stop,
Alpha. Ric had done his share; more. He'd crossed swords with death on a
daily basis. He loved it. To toe dance down that skittish ribbon that separates
life from death was to know what existence was all about.
But now .
..
"Come back early next week. Tuesday
okay? Well check up on that new arm." Doc Ace Rannigan was wiry and all
elbows, like a grasshopper, the way he moved and cocked his head, but thank God
he didn't talk with that enforced Pippa cheery tone some of the others used on
him. That did make Ric curl up at the toes. Flat. Dry. Efficient.
Ric
flexed his new fingers and shuddered. It wasn't that moving this skillful
mechanical member caused pain, which it did, it was
knowing what it represented. "I don't want to live half a man,"
shot-up soldiers used to say. But usually they would come around. Not Ric. He
simply wasn't the type.
He
said nothing. Doc Rannigan had done his best. What more could he do? Medical
science hadn't reached the miracle stage yet They
couldn't grow him a new arm, could they?
His
two cute nurses seemed to have been handpicked to keep him wanting to live. He
played along. He tried. It was an uphill battle. There was continuous massage,
enforced exercise, psychological byplay. Ric was a top pilot so he got the red
carpet treatment. Now he was free to walk out of his room, this sanctuary from
life, to take up the suddenly obnoxious business of breathing and functioning.
"So long, Doc,"
he just said. "Thanks."
Dr. Rannigan nodded
severely. No slop. No land words.
Walking
down the long antiseptic corridor toward the front door Ric shivered. A cold
hand pressed down on the back of his neck. Suddenly he knew he would never make
it. Spacing was out. And spacing was his life. So . . .
"Oh, Coltor." A Plorix Consolidated official caught hold of his plastic arm just as
the automatic door swooshed open. "I'm James Ledbetter. Remember me? Well,
perhaps not You were in pretty bad shape last time we
met Will you come into my office, please?"
"Sure."
For
many weeks walking out through the front door had represented a desirable goal Now, somehow, it didn't matter a
damn.
"Sit
down, Coltor." The man indicated a leathery
chair on the other side of his crescent-shaped desk. "Drink?"
Ric
shook his head. He wanted one, but not here. Not with this hawk-faced
character, whose eyes behind those focals reminded Ric of a bug-eyed
Venurian swamp lizard. He
took a cigarette, though.
"Keep
the pack," James F. Ledbetter urged, magnanimously.
"What do you want to see me about?" Ric asked. "Doc says I'm a free man."
Ledbetter
gave him a sharp calculating look of measuring a client for size. "Part of
my job as Personnel Head is coordination between the Pilot Union and the
insurance settlements." He rattled a dossier of papers on his desk.
"It so happens that our Board meeting took your case under advisement just this morning. I'm glad I caught you so I can give
you the good news."
"Good news?" For one fleering
moment Ric thought that maybe the enormous space metallics company was going, to relax its strict rule about physically handicapped on ships. The hope
died aborning.
"They voted you the full disability
compensation!" James F. Ledbetter's saurian eyes gleamed. "Wonderful, no? Of course it won't keep you in caviar,
but it will tide you over until you can snag onto something—er—suitable. Office
job, I imagine."
Ric just looked at him. The Personnel
Manager's frown was reproachful. "I know it's bad to lose a—limb. Especially for a man with a record as
dramatic as yours. But consider our standpoint, the Company's. The vote
was by no means unanimous and it could have gone flat against you. After all,
that jaunt of yours to the Polar Cave wasn't authorized. It was strictly on your own. Under the provisions of
the injury and Accident Liability contract between the Pilot Union and
Plorix-"
While
his glib legal verbiage droned crisply on, Ric's thoughts flicked back to the fateful weekend. He was on three day leave. Port Mars.
Alan had snagged him down in one of the bars with his wild proposition, excited
as hell that Ric should be
on Mais coincidentally
with his own project. Alan Tork wasn't just
an old school buddy anymore. He was Dr. Alan
Tork, with half a dozen degrees after his name, one of the foremost space-bio
savants of the day, young as he was. Alan had this bug in his ear about the
Polar Cave. Ric had to join him in an explorative
project up there. He had to. It would only take two days. Alan's
entourage was all waiting and ready. They could take off right away.
"What for?" was
Ric's natural objection.
It
turned out that years of examining microscopic specimens gleaned from various
sections of the Martian wastes, particularly in the hocus Maeris and Locus Solis areas,
and a significant double-canal complex that
threaded north to the region of winter ice caps and orange clouds, had led Alan
to believe that once fantastically great cities had existed in these areas and
that some enormous catastrophe had culminated in a vast exodus to the Cave.
"It's not a new
theory, exactly," Ric pointed out.
"No.
But my evidence is. In my opinion the migration was not caused by any
lack of water
or dwindling atmosphere. They had progressed to the point of producing their
own, or evolved beyond the point of
need. No. Some sudden overwhelming tragedy occurred. Possibly self-inflicted. Something that wiped away all trace of the existence of these great cities
and reduced them to electronic dust."
"What could do that?"
"We
almost succeeded in doing
the same thing,"
Alan pointed out. "Had it not
been for an almost perfect stalemate, the Third War would have brought Earth to exactly the same kind of an ending."
Ric
nursed his drink
and scowled. Those caves have been gone over dozens of times. Nothing but ice and rock."
"They
didn't probe deep enough," Alan said. "I'm prepared to go deeper. Follow microscopic animal and plant leads with an utterly new type of probe."
"Yeah?" Ric gulped down his drink hastily, already figuring it to be his last.
"What'd you
expect to find?"
Alan's
sallow face grinned an oddly solemn grin. "Suppose
you come along and find out?"
They
took full advantage of the
earlier digs.
Alan had secured the most detailed maps available from colleagues who had
explored the polar cavern and its network of honeycomb sub-caves—and who had
been so sharply disappointed. Mars had always been special. It was the only Sol
World where highly intelligent life could logically be expected to be found,
even residually. But none had been
found. Not a trace.
Newer, more efficient bores were put Into action by Alan's crew. Quarter of a mile down from the deepest
earlier dig they found breathable atmosphere. A last breakthrough opened out on
a huge chamber where the warm rock was laced through with loamy soil. Heat, apparently from a series of fissures and minor tunnels leading to the interior of the planet, made them drag off their
outer parka-like clothing, and microscopic
vegetable life slicking the damp walls glowed with a blue spectral light.
Then they found the fungi.
"Look
at the size of them I" Alan chortled. "They
remind me somewhat of our lepista procera, with
the long thin stems and the umbrella crests. But that greenish color is unlike any—"
Ric left Alan to his ecstatic snipping and on-the-spot testing, moved further in beyond a
stalagmite wall
to the cave's end. A wide arc
that reminded him of a
cathedral window, or one side of it, caught his curious eye. It was so clean-cut. One might imagine
that it had been tooled, like one side of a
sealed door which had been
snapped open by an age-old earthquake. Ric ran his hand along the smooth rim thoughtfully, then in, further and further in and down, where the crevice widened near the floor.
It happened then, and fast.
His
arm was bitten off, as if by sudden lightning. His torment-scream was sheered off by oblivion.
All that he knew next about being alive was a drug-saturated blur in the Port
Mars space-facility hospital; blurred changes indicative of a ship's dispensary; then—fire and brimstone of a hell
that centered itself in a right arm he didn't have anymore.
"—so you see, Coltor, the Company has
been more than generous." Ledbetter's babbling terminated and that brought
Ric back to reality with a wrench.
The
locals thought Plorix might derive favorable publicity out of the dig,"
Ric said.
"Sure, sure. It is quite true that Dr. Alan Tork is a great man in his field, that
he did bring back some interesting specimens, although perhaps it would have
been better if he —never mind all that. In any case official permission should
have been obtained from our head office."
There wasn't time."
Ledbetter
shrugged, then put on a forgiving smile. "There's
no point in discussing it further. I only wanted you to know that the full
disability payment will reach you in due course. Just let us know your address.
Then of course there's your new plast-arm. In my view, Pilot Coltor, you're a very
lucky man."
A very
lucky man.
Yeah. So lucky that even Alan hadn't once
bothered to contact him, in person or otherwise, at the hospital, even though
most of his lab work was centered in or near Calcity. Nor
Candi. Candi was Dr. Candida Lucas-Long. Candi was Alan's beautiful
green-eyed assistant when he worked at the Cal-U labs and, emotionally
speaking, she seemed to be divided into two roughly equal parts. On the one
hand there was the pale, scholarly Alan, whom she adored. On the other hand,
there was Pilot Richard Coltor, exciting and virile and shot through with the
glamour of deep space.
What's
to chose now? Ric mused.
It
was ex-Pilot Coltor, now, with his right arm cut off at the triceps. While Alan
had hit the jackpot with his Martian fungi, and not just with the scientific
world either. The fungi must had made him billions.
Along with Candi's wide-eyed adoration of Alan's stature as a biochemist there
was all that money. No wonder she hadn't sent him a get-well card. Get lost was
more like it.
Candida. Ric said her name softly into the
wind. And the thought of her statuesque beauty, of those green eyes, of that flame of pale
burgundy hair,
put a head on his cup of hemlock.
Ric
could endure all thoughts but this one with
icy-cold dispassion, standing here an inch from eternity, while the night wind mourned through the pilings and nagged at his silvery space-pilot's tunic
with the chevrons stripped off.
His
blue-gray eyes moved up from
the dizzy spectacle far
below—up, up, up into the
blackness and the secret
star-paths he used to plunge through. He looked up one last time and now he was glad. He'd had it. The good space life. A man
can have no more. There isn't any more.
When
his glance dragged away
from those winking
stars his eyes were caught by something that made them widen, then narrow in disbelief. Something forbidden. A copter and a hypno-ad-writer. Messing up the clean black
sky with a luminous message for him.
It
said: "Ric Coltorl Don't do it! We know how you feel, but don't! Try Martian Panacea—the
Miracle Fungi! It will solve all your problems." A needle of light searched, probed, found him, clung. "Don't jump, Ric! Use M-P! Live forever!"
n
He
kept to the
deepest shadows of seamy
waterfront street and had
to grin wryly at himself. Ric had been
so sure that all his feelings and emotions had been squeezed out;
but right now there was one small cocklebur of feeling
inside his brain, roweling him on.
What?
Curiosity, of course. What killed the cat. He had to find out why that sky-adman risked prison and perhaps death to single him out for his
pitch. After he found out he could then pick his spot and keep that rendezvous
with death.
Walking
randomly along the black asphalt he thought about hypno-advertising.
Unscrupulous companies still occasionally toyed with it wistfully and, of
course, lobbyed for it like crazy. Some fifty or sixty years ago the
ad groups had contented themselves with hiring psychologists and brain-boys to
determine peoples' weak points and play up to them via video, news sheets, or
whatever. There were subliminals, invidious low-pressures, snide
snob-pitches. Then one day some bright greedy egghead rang in overt hypnotism,
which included personal ESP probes of specific groups of customers. These all-too-personal findings were religiously taped onto central IBM banks and
this information peddled to admen. It got pretty rough. In fact, it went so far
out of line that pretty soon nobody was safe—not one busy housewife nor one
nine-to-fiver—and when the vicious competition began to percolate it wasn't long
before the available nut-hatches were filled
to overflowing.
The law stepped in with a very heavy foot.
So
now it was back to the old drawing board Advertising
as a whole took two giant steps backwards; housewives could stop cowering and
sniveling in comers because they forgot to use the right deodorant, and office
workers could switch to a different cigarette every week without
walking in terror of some vague nemesis overtaking them. The reaction was bad,
at first. Conditioned themselves to believe in the Tightness of their cause, admen didn't give up easily. There were dirty
messes, a kind of warfare, and even now some trigger-happy skycop might just take a shot at an adman who flaunted his pitch the way
Ric's skybuddy had.
Why?
Why Ric? Up to this point nobody had cared whether Ric lived or died. Candi and Alan, for instance. Then who?
Who
wanted him to try M-P, and why?
Prowling the Bay fog that clung wetly to the
old section of warehouses and cheap bars, Ric kept wondering, hearing the
mournful hooting of a foghorn at the Gate and passing a mangy cat that sprang
out, spitting wrathfully at him for invading its malodorous domain.
Ric's
ad-needled brain ran over what he had read about M-P in the periodicals they
had brought him in the hospital, and what he had seen on the hospital
video. Martian Panacea. That cure-all connotation was
the tip-off. Anything that cured everything just
had to be phoney. Whether the fungi derivatives the users had pumped into their
veins by hypodermic needles were in any way connected
with the mushroom Alan had found in that deep chamber of the Polar Caves was
something Ric had no way of knowing at this point. Maybe so.
Or maybe the promoters of M-P only used Dr. Alan Tories
discovery as a gimmick.
Anyway,
M-P—the pushers tagged ft fun for
fungi—enjoyed the biggest promotional scheme of any product ever made
available to a hope-hungry planet Every ad-medium was
saturated for the period of three months. The ads never mentioned Dr. Alan
Tork; they never even mentioned the Polar Caves, but they implied a lot. And,
short of the outlawed hypno-ads, they spread the gospel. D? there
breathed a single man, woman, or child in the
world who hadn't heard of M-P and its "miraculous benefits," that
person must have spent the last six months in a diving bell.
M-P
didn't need hypno-ads. Everyone who tried it praised it to the skies. Their health was so improved they were reborn. New teeth
sprouted in octogenarian mouths, diseased organs replaced themselves, sightless
people saw. Deaf-mutes chortled their heads off,
extolling M-P. The strange fungi spores swept the world like a beautiful
plague. Then the backlash.
What
started the reverse action was hard to figure. Was it because M-P was too good? Was it that after using it for a couple of months a person tended
to glow bluely in the dark? Or was it, perhaps, that Dr. Morton Krill—who began
by giving his important name openly and extravagantly to M-P promotion—suddenly
did an abrupt about face?
Whatever
it was, M-P promotions dwindled, then vanished altogether. The Law took the
present view that all its "benefits" must be potentially dangerous.
The Earth Medical Association, after exhaustive testing, found nothing in the
fungi that could (or should, anyway) bring about such wonderful
transformations, and declared that there must be a catch to it somewhere. Perhaps some hideous reaction. They were unanimous in
damning Dr. Morton Krill for having given it his unqualified blessing, pointing
out that now Dr. Krill had disappeared. Nobody knew where. That alone, the
medics said, was reason enough to ban the use of M-P entirely.
These
severe warnings swung the Law into action. M-P users went under cover; use of
the fungi was equated with opium addiction. Anyone caught with the raw fungi or
the injective distillation from them got a stiff prison sentence. Some local
authorities went even further; there were unexplained deaths of transportées to the special M-P prisons.
Yet
rumors persisted of secret cults dedicated to M-P. Dr. Morton Krill's name kept
cropping up, even though he had mysteriously vanished from public life.
Still.
..
Hope dies hard, and its filmy hand had a clutch on Ric's heart and guts, as he moved like a lanky one-armed
shadow down the street.
If M-P could grow new
internal organs and new eyes . . .
When he paused in a black doorway to warm his
cold-bitten limbs and to light up a cigarette, he saw that he was being
followed. He had been so absorbed he hadn't noticed until just now. When he
stopped the man following him did, too. Ric dragged on his smoke and waited.
The dark ill-dressed figure just stood there.
It was an educated guess that whoever
engineered the hypno-ad was having him tailed. Maybe because
they wanted to steer him to an M-P outlet. Underground as these outlets
were now, he might need help finding one. Ric had
employed elementary deduction when he had come down here south of the Market
Street move-walk; one was most likely to find an M-P cell down here in the
slums.
So
he had an escort. Of course there was the off-chance that his stalker was a legitimate mugger out on late-evening business.
Ric's
muscles tightened to potential danger. The adrenaline pounding into his heart,
the razor-edged wariness, the urgency for hair-trigger action when the need
came—all of this was quixotically familiar. To smell danger, where and when it
came, was a Spaceman's life. It made life desirable; even
to gulp in the cold marine-scented air was a good thing.
He
finished his smoke and waited for his tailer to make his move. He moved
finally, in a shuffling vag's gait, up even with Ric.
Then he stopped.
"Got
another smoke, Spacer?" Ric's silver-gray uniform (the only clothes he
had) was distinctive and respect-commanding, and the slouchy figure couldn't
see where his Grade One chevrons had been neatly scissored off. Spacers had a
reputation for hardness; they earned it.
"Sure."
Ric
jerked up a cigarette from his rumpled pack, then flicked on his lighter for the man so he could get a
brief but clear look at his face. The man's clothes were dirty; they looked crawly too. His square-jawed face was grimy.
The hand that propelled the smoke to his thin lips
shook like a wino's, but the whites of his eyes were too clean
for a wino, and his fingernails were too clean underneath.
He showed narrow in sunk
teeth when he grinned thanks. "Cold night," he said.
"Getting that way," Ric agreed.
"Know this part of town?"
"A little."
"Know where I can find some?" "Some what?"
Ric
shrugged. "Fun." He accented the word a
little, but left room for other meanings.
"I'm not quite sure just what you
mean."
Ric
came to the point. "M-P. I'm looking for an M-P
pusher."
The
play-bum jerked a rapid glance up the street, then down in the direction of the
Bay. The street was empty except for a couple of low-flying seagulls. The
foghorns gave out their mechanical keening.
"Maybe
I can help you out, Spacer. I'm not a user, nothing like that. But a guy hears
things."
He started walking. Ric followed him into deeper
dark without further conversation. His muscles and nerves were still ready for
the unexpected. He felt an angry ganglion twinge in his stump, and that brought
up a new and critical problem. Could he handle himself? He was moving into a
strange, off-color league. During those final months Doc Rannigan had forced
him to exercise what was left of him and he had done it, out of boredom more
than anything, so that his sinews and muscles weren't the pudding they could
have been, even though they weren't quite the old iron-tough Ric Coltor; but how
could he possibly match any man with two good arms?
When his escort dipped abruptly into a narrow
squalid alleyway, Ric sucked in a sharp breath and missed a stride. If he was
going to get taken, this was it. He ought to have gotten hold of a blaster or at least one of those hollow switchblades with stun-juice in them which
the young hoods affected these days. At least then he'd have a fighting
chance. Die, sure. He wanted it. But not like this. Not giving some sadistic
punk his lacks mangling him to a pulp
in a black alley.
He
waited a couple of breaths, watching the red glow of his escort's cigarette
float off to a central point down the alley. Then, with a shrug, he moved in. A few yards off, he pressed his wide shoulders against the dank building, ears pricked for any telltale sound, such as the gulp of
intake before a sudden attack.
It
didn't come. Ric
flicked on his fighter.
They were standing in front of a narrow door, just a peeled-paint metal slab. No sign. No number.
"Here?" Ric asked.
"Like I said, I'm not sure. Want to
try?"
When
he stepped aside Ric rapped his knuckles sharply on the little door.
They waited, breathing out little vaporous ghosts.
The door opened just a crack. "Yeah?" a rough voice asked.
It appeared Ric was to take over. "We're looking for some fun," he said. "Fun?"
"Yeah. Fun as not in fun and games."
From
the dark interior came an indignant snort. "So go someplace else. You
won't find any here."
The door closed but not before Ric's space-boot
jammed the crack. "Listen, Bud, I want some M-P and I want it now. And my
friend told mer-"
"Which friend is that?" A ring of
torchlight splashed Ric's face, then swept the area
around him.
Ric's
eyes moved with it and he grunted his surprise. His escort was gone, evaporated
into the night. Oh, well. He'd done his job. He'd got Ric here.
The
light from the torch lingered thoughtfully on Ric's false arm.
"How about just a drink?" Ric said. "It's damn cold standing out
here."
"I guess I can sell
you a drink, Spacer."
The
door closed quickly behind them and Ric followed the man with the torch down a stretch of musty hall; it was dark out of the perimeter of the beam and
Ric noticed an odd phenomenon. The man who'd let him in was not tall but he was
very wide, like a wrestler. His grizzly-bear midsection and
sloping shoulders were limned by a blue-white glow, a nimbus, a fox fire that exuded from the man himself, through his
clothes.
At
the hall's end the big man stopped. He rapped at the closed door three times,
looked over the cavernous room, with its sickly pale wall-lights which didn't
quite reach the high metal rafters and the peeled gray walls. There were deal
tables, around which men were playing poker, as if killing time. Waiting. There was a beat-up bar at the far end with a row of dusty bottles behind it
Ric moved to the bar and slid onto a stool. The big man was the bartender. He moved behind it and swiped a
bar rag in front of Ric. "What's your pleasure?"
"Bourbon. Straight."
The
big man frowned, as if he disapproved not only of Ric's choice but of drinking
in general. But he nodded and poured out a liberal shot.
Sipping, Ric eyed the heavy jowls and the
thatch of black
eyebrows. "This is for the cold night air. Later I would like
something
more to the point." "Such as?" Carefully.
Ric held out his new arm. "As you see, I've got a problem."
The bartender nodded
gravely.
"You glory boys do get
yourselves in
trouble."
Ric sipped deep. "Any suggestions?"
The big man's worried look relaxed into a deep-throated chuckle. "My suggestion is stay the hell out of the sky. We got enough trouble right here."
"Looks like I don't have any choice." Ric gave the stripped chevrons a glum look.
Ric thought he glimpsed a flicker of sympathy behind those pinched careful eyes.
"I'm
Rolff," the bartender
said, adding, "stick around." He edged out from behind the bar and over to the hall door. A thin, hollow-eyed youngster with
a tousle of uncombed hair had a chair tilted against the door and was perched on it, un-hygienically cleaning
his fingernails with
a small fang. The bartender said something to the boy, and the youngster nodded and sauntered off through a back door and vanished.
When
Rolff came back he leaned across the bar and asked, "What put you onto M-P?
Most people nowadays think it's a ten-carat phoney and a dead one."
Leaving
out all but crucial facts Ric told him about
the pylon and the hypno-ad.
"Those
ESP probes work like lightning," Rolff whistled.
"Imagine putting you
on by name."
"That
was their initial gimmick," Ric said. "Everybody likes the sound and
sight of his own name."
"Guess
you're right." He jerked his thumb at Ric's arm. "You really think M-P can do it? Grow you a new
arm?"
Ric's forehead tightened.
"Don't know what to think. I've
been out of circulation over eight months. All I know is what I read in the
papers." He downed his double shot. "Suppose you tell me!"
Rolff
grinned uneasily. "Me? How should I know? Course," he went on like
stepping over eggs, "I hear lots of stories. How people with one foot in
the grave take it and are still going strong. How it grows new hearts. New livers. Even repairs damaged brains. All
kinds of talk. But I don't know from nothing—personally."
"No?
Then how come you lit up like a Christmas tree back there in the dark
hall?"
The
moment that followed stretched out like rubber. Rolff’s deep chuckle broke the
wall of silence.
"Touché, space-boy." He bulked closer and his voice was a tight whisper.
"A man's got to be super careful these days. The Law's especially tough,
even on suspects, here in the Bay area. This is where it all started, you
know."
A
wild gleam flashed up in his dark eyes, transfiguring that wide unbeautiful
face, as he let go of his mask. "Why can't people accept the miracle of
M-P? Can't they see? Everybody who ever took it was helped. Health of a land
they didn't even know existed. Not to mention
the cripples who are now dancing! The blind who can
see! God! Look at me. Doctors gave me up for dead. There was something wrong
with my ductless glands, something unfixable. Even starving myself I kept
gaining weight until I was a candidate for a freak show. It had
already damaged my heart. Since I've been using fun I've dropped over fifty pounds and I'm strong as a bull. I feel so damn good, man! You just don't know! Sometimes I have to hold myself back from yelling and singing, I feel so
good." That glow in his eyes was unbridled rapture. "Brother, I'm
going to help anybody and everybody who wants it to find out what I
found."
Ric had to look away from such ecstasy; he
couldn't stand the sight of it, unleashed. It occurred to him that if all M-P
users carried on like this no wonder the Law branded them drug-addicts. It
wasn't normal. Abnormal or supernormal, he couldn't say. But it was the land of
fanatic behavior that was bound to make non-users suspicious and angry, people
with their every-day aches and pains.
Rolff touched his artificial arm, grinning. "Sure it'll grow
you a new arm, manl Might take a while. Ill show you to a
place to hole up in while it's growing out." '
"Money?"
Rolff shrugged. "Sure. You must have got something for that gone arm. We can use it, in spreading the word, keeping our colonies fed, enlarging our
fungi-farms. Nobody wants to get rich out of it. Not even Dr. Krill."
There was reverence in the way he spoke the name. And the way he pulled in
afterwards made Ric think he hadn't meant to say it. Not just yet.
"I
had the impression that Dr. Krill was the one who put the hex on M-P before he took
off."
Rolff’s
smile was complacent and far-off. "Later.
When you've got your new arm you'll be told
lots of things, things that will surprise you."
He checked his watch and glanced at the back door. "Putter went out to
check on you and pick up the stuff. He ought to be back soon."
Ric
asked for another drink but Rolff shook
his head. "Might slow down the action. An hour
from now you won't need it."
After
a fifteen minute wait that seemed twice as long, Putter's long emaciated face
showed in the back doorway. He nodded at Rolff, grinned, and went back to his
post at the hall door. Rolff gestured Ric to precede him into the back room. It
was a meager little cell, furnished only with a straight metal chair and a
shakedown cot in the comer.
"Roll up your
sleeve," Rolff directed.
"Which one?" Ric's wry smile spawned out of the surge of hope boiling up inside of
him. He had always felt, and most of all out there in deep space staring into
the salt-sprinkled blackness, that somewhere there was an answer to all of
mankind's many troubles. Could M-P be the answer?
It
was plain that Rolff thought so. The fire in his eyes was stronger than ever as
he set about preparing a hypo of liquid, sucking it out of a sealed phial which
he took out of the hollowed-out center of a loaf of French bread. The liquid
was whitish, the consistency of coconut milk; his pudgy fingers primed the
needle with caressing familiarity.
All
ready; Ric felt a last qualm of doubt cut into him; then, with a faint shrug,
he held up his bare arm for the shot.
The shot came, but not from
the needle.
Fascinated
as they both were, for somewhat different reasons, by the
stuff in the hypo, neither Ric nor Rolff saw the door to the bar swing
open. The hypo needle dimpled Ric's forearm when it came. A
sharp, flat hiss-click from the open doorway. The hypo needle powdered
into dust, with nothing but an acrid scent lingering momentarily on the dead
air. The liquid in the needle boiled up and vaporized before the smallest drop
could spray Ric's
arm. Ric yelled
when the blast creased his arm with searing pain.
"Cops!" Rolff screamed.
His
hand whipped under his blouse for a weapon, a hollow fang filled with venom,
but it got only halfway out. The lead-man in the doorway spit blast-fire again.
Rolffs face took on a look of crumpling pain; his mouth twitched and bubbled
with unspoken words as he fell.
Ric
looked from him to the cops. There were two, both in plain clothes. One of them
was dressed like a vag and this one was vaguely familiar.
"You!"
"Yeah,
me. And
thanks for doing your part so nice."
"You used me to get in
here," Ric said.
The cop
in bum's clothing showed those thin recessive teeth gleefully. "I wasn't
just sure about this place. Wanted to nab them with the crud
on them. In action. Figured
that the pusher would feel sorry for you and let you in. Oh, yeah. Ill take this."
He
reached down and yanked an antique coin-sized hunk of shiny metal off
the back of Ric's wide spacebelt. It had been clamped there by two pin-sized
prongs.
"You had me
bugged," Ric
said, anger boiling
up.
The
cop sniggered. "Heard
every loving word you
and this—" he kicked at the body on the floor, "said
to each other. And that's enough to put you in our special M-P lockup for a lot of years."
Ric
stared at that gleeful
sadistic face.
The cop's self-approving smirk grew and spread out into a riot of angry colors. He looked down at the dead Rolff, at the smashed phial, and the hollowed-out bread
loaf. Now it was as if— as if this grinning cop had robbed
him of a new arm. And prison. Years of it, for wanting something most men took for granted. Two arms.
Words
began tumbling out of
him. All of the
hate and despair and hopeless fury he'd been storing up in his soul for many
months. It was all pointed at this cop and his blaster and it cut a wide swath
in a spacer's meaty vocabulary.
The words broke off when that blaster-butt started smashing his face,
rocking it from
side to side.
He
moved back fast, first—then he got in one good left before a crack on the head
buckled his knees.
"Lay
off, Jake." The other cop brushed
his partner aside and hauled Ric up on his feet. "Get back in the bar and
see that the rest of them are rounded up."
In the big room the late stragglers were
being lined up into a disconsolate row in front of the bar.
The uniformed cop in there started to hustle them out.
Putter,
the young doortender, was close to tears. "Where you
taking us?" Ric heard him demand, tightly.
A
cop pushed him ahead and laughed. "Where do you think, punk? We got
special pokey’s for M-P freaks."
in
The unhappy huddle of users and potentials—there were
eleven including Ric—were handled with contempt by the four officers, all with
blasters at the ready. They were crammed into a landcar waiting in the back
alley. In what had once been Candlestick Park, a baseball field, they were
transferred to a plane for removal to the "special pokey" the cop had
told Putter about.
Ric
groped along the metal wall to find a vacant section of steel bench next to
Putter.
As
the metal giant jetted upwards in a shivering roar of thunder, Ric found his
angry belly-knot of resentment subsiding as he looked at the youth beside him.
Putter was skinny and big-eared and homely and, in spite of a swaggering
bravado, Ric detected in him a bitter desperation. Capture by the Law had
changed the desperation to utter hopelessness; his thin hands roved across his
scrawny neck and shock of untidy blond hair; his eyes stared in bleak horror.
Ric's open empathy for other humans hadn't been used much lately, but now it
moved out toward Putter.
"Cigarette?" he
proffered the limp half of a pack.
Putter
started shaking his head, then changed his mind and nodded. He groped out one
and fit it, tight-eyed.
"Thanks."
"You' re a user?"
Ric asked, keeping his voice down so that the two guards at the rear wouldn't
hear them.
"Yes."
Putter's voice was dry, throaty. "But
not enough, yet."
Ric was aware now in the half-light that the boy's skin didn't glow with that swamp-fire
argence; nor did any of the others', for that matter.
"You've got special
problems?"
The boy's cheekbones stuck out as his hollow
jaw tautened. "I was bom with it. My father worked in a hydrogen reactor plant. The San Andreas fault
kicked up one night; there was a crack they didn't notice until some of the men got
over-hot. You know, radiation. Pop died from it. Just after that I was born. There was something wrong with my bones, something like pernicious
anemia. I take shots. I'll hang on for a while, but every year's a present. When I
met Rolff he told me M-P would cure it completely. It has before, lots of times, at the camps."
"But you haven't taken
enough?"
"Not
for something bad like I got. It's like
a miracle, Rolff said. But even miracles take time." His bony fingers made tight balls. "I was
going to be in
the next bunch,
Rolff promised. But, hell, there's so many
who need it. We got to be so damn careful, and there just ain't enough M-P camps!"
Ric
got the picture. The boy, in spite of orthodox
medical treatment, was
dying by inches. No hope at all. Then—Rolff, and the fungi. Who wouldn't grab
at straws? Ric looked around at the silent misery lined up on the twin benches in the ship's belly and saw the picture duplicated nine more times. In spite of prodigious strides in medical
knowledge there were thousands and tens of thousands who needed more than that—they needed miracles.
Like Putter.
"Where are these camps?" Ric asked.
Putter shrugged. "Nobody knows. Well, I
guess the pilots who make the pickups know and Dr. Krill knows, and maybe a few
others. They're spotted around in secret places. Also, there are lots of
smaller outlets, guys like Rolff, trying to help out. These guys here were all
waiting for their shots or hoping to get on the list for one of the camps—where they wouldn't have to sneak around like
criminals!" The boy's voice welled up in bitterness. "Just
because we want to live. That's all we ask—to live, like anybody else. The medics can't help us so
we're to die,
just to prove
they're right and Dr. Krill's wrong!"
Putter's
shaking hand
dropped his
smoke-butt; he hunched his spine, hiding his face from
an inimical world.
Ric
chewed on what he'd learned. There were M-P camps, clandestine villages where desperate men and women and children could go to take the drug openly. But not enough of them, so that many
thousands sneaked into alley-holes like Rolffs place for their shots and waited
and dreamed of getting on a camp list.
All
I’ve ask is to live, Putter
had said. Ric's jaws tightened. Hours ago all Ric had asked was to die. . . .
Ric guessed that they'd crossed the Imperial Valley and had reached a desert area near the Salton Sea, by the time the airwagon began to drop. He
envisioned a pattern of muzzy yellow lights stabbing the wet sky, felt the lurch as the gyros took over, a jolt of the spinal column when the craft thudded, landing.
They were hustled out. Ric was next to Putter. The boy staggered to his knees under a sudden
dizzy spell when it came to his turn to hop out onto what must be the prison's
roof; Ric grabbed him and pulled him to the
side until he recovered. The others shuffled on through the wet dark, lighted
by blurry searchlights and hand torches.
"You okay now?" Ric asked gently.
"I'll make it. Thanks."
The last of the prisoners was moving into a hooded concrete stairwell. One guard waited, beckoned impatiently.
"Keep
your pants on!" Ric growled. He kept his good arm around Putter and didn't
hurry.
The bullet-headed guard was shoving them into
the concrete roof hut when behind them somebody snapped out, "Hold
it!"
It was the
pilot. They turned, waited. The guard growled something under his breath.
The pilot, a thin sharp-faced man in a black
uniform, moved under the glow of the hut light and up to Ric. He
gave Ric a narrow, penetrating look. "You
are Ric Coltor?"
Ric nodded, frowning. How had he found that
out? Ship's radio, maybe.
Ric nodded. "So?"
The pilot flashed a quick look at the guard.
"You take the punk. I'll handle this one." "But-"
"Shut up!" the pilot snapped.
"Get going!" The guard scowled as he started grabbing Putter,
roughly, to make up for the implied humiliation.
"The boy stays with me," Ric said.
The
pilot gave him a slitted look. Ric moved in front of Putter and stayed there.
Putter leaned against the wall, too pale and beat to care what happened. Ric's
mind was busy. Whoever was behind that hypno-ad knew all about him,
didn't want him to kill himself. Wanted to help him, maybe.
They had passed the word to their pilot by some kind of covert radio, during
their flight. Ric was special. Well, they'd damn well make Putter special too.
He owed the kid something. It was in Putter's face that any length of time, however
brief, in this prison and without his M-P shots, would kill him. Ric couldn't
help them all. But he might be able to help Putter.
The
black uniformed pilot read that in the set of Ric's jaw, in his hard even look.
"Okay."
He gave a faint shrug and motioned the guard to go down the stairs. When the
guard vanished he beckoned for Ric and Putter to follow him across the wide
turreted roof toward the far end. Two flunkies in coveralls appeared. He
motioned them to unshroud a smaller
ship.
"Get in," he told
Ric.
"Where are we
going?"
"Never
mind.
You'll find out when we get there."
Ric
helped Putter climb aboard the four-seater and took the bucket seat next to
him, just behind their hawk-faced pilot. Putter huddled against the window,
white-lipped and weak. As they lifted into the muzzling dark again, Ric's mind
searched for answers. There weren't any answers outside the rain-smeared
window of the small fast-moving craft. Nor were there any to be had from the
pilot.
This
much Ric could figure out for himself. The M-P outlaw groups had spies and
agents in the minions of the Law itself. Their pilot was one. They made routine
airlifts of users and hauled them to the M-P camps. There was money behind all
of it. Money and fanatical determination. Also there was
a guiding genius. And one thing in his favor was that the Law was still in the
bumbling stages before full-scale war. But soon the Law would catch up. It had
all the ace’s. And when it did . . .
The
pilot maintained his cautious silence to all of Ric's careful proddings, as the
craft flung its way south, his best reaction an indifferent shrug. Ric thought
now he must be a paid menial, likely a pilot tossed out of the
Union and without proper license. He would have to be on the run from the Law
himself to take a job like this, and whoever had hired him knew this fact and used it to keep him in line. No use even trying to get anything out of him. He found it
healthier to keep his lips tightly buttoned.
Putter
was snoring now, but Ric's nervous system was all keyed up. His eyes were sharp
and bright, and they snapped back and forth from the wet dark outside to the
back of the pilot's sturdy neck. His training told him they were winging south, and a glimpse at the instruments corroborated
the guess—southeast.
When they bumped into a series of air pockets and a lashing rainstorm, Ric put his
geography to work and decided they must be in old Mexico
and the mountains under them must be the Sierra
Madres. What had once been the Republic of Mexico was now a central division of United America. There were sections of Sonora and Chihuahua and the rugged areas further south
which were virtually untouched by civilization. Some of
these indio areas still
were untouched by modem technology. The inhabitants
lived agrarian Biblical lives. The genius who had selected such an area for his M-P camp, isolated yet,
easily and quickly accessible, was to be
congratulated.
With
a heart-twinge, Ric thought about Candi. Candida Lucas-Long,
Doctor of Biochemistry. Alan was so preoccupied
with his research he
took the tall green-eyed
beauty to be part of the lab furniture. Not so Ric. He fell and fell hard, right from the first.
Ric
gave his head an angry shake. He mustn't think about
Candi. She and Alan were
doubtless married now and
busily occupied in living happily ever after. Yet . . . That last night, the eve of his fateful Port Mars run—something in those lambent emerald eyes had sent Ric off singing
lark-songs and mere inches from the certainty that she had made up her heart and that he
was the one, not Alan....
For
emotional distraction he jerked a look out beyond where Putter snored away. And
saw—stars. Great flinty sharp fields of stars, so that for a wrenching moment
he thought he was spaceside again. No. Couldn't be.
But they were out of the storm, clear out, and
moving eastward fast. Below, Ric glimpsed reaches of starlit desert, the
cactus-tops eerily white-tipped.
"Zacatecas," Ric decided aloud, as the ship made an abrupt downward plunge, then began skirting canyon walls, darting and
searching.
In a
while the pilot found what he was looking for in the jigsaw; he
nosed down through a washboard of air-holes, and Ric saw mist
blanketing the
basalt rock, and beneath it,
a long patch of green and brown and yellow. The plateau was roughly rectangular and it hung on the lip of a cliff that dropped away many hundreds of yards
straight down. At the terminus of the deep canyon, Ric glimpsed a faint zigzag ribbon of silver
water.
Nearer,
he caught a sharp breath
to see that the green-brown-yellow
landing strip
was painted, artistically
camouflaged to match the surrounding verdure, even to three-dimensional
Daliesque rises and potholes. What struck him
hardest was the size of the strip; it had been engineered to accommodate even spacecraft.
"The end of the line." The wooden-faced pilot twisted around and spoke for the first time, and there was an odd twist
to his mouth.
Ric
nudged Putter awake
and they descended.
The pilot left the ship to the attendants who came running out from the cliff-line. He swung off toward
the seemingly solid rock-wall.
"Where we going?" Putter wondered.
"We'll find out when
we get there." . As they sloughed across
the camouflage in the wind, Ric imagined he heard, above the moaning of the
wind in the canyon, a shrill unearthly piping. There was a melancholy tune to
it, in whole-tone scale; like some half-mythical folklore creature greeting
them from his secret lair here at the top of the world. Ric stopped, listening.
It was Putter who located its source, pointing. "Look!"
Straight ahead of them, on a narrow grassy
ledge thirty feet up the wall, surrounded by goats, was a boy in hooded
sheepskin, playing on a primitive herdsman's pipe. When the pilot gave the boy
a hand signal the cowled figure stood up and played again; this time the melody
was a happy spirited air.
While
the pilot waited a few yards ahead, the dark cliff-wall moved. It opened to the
signal. The pilot moved rapidly into a well-tooled arch, nice a mine shaft,
and Ric and Putter followed after. The shaft angled down at a twenty-degree
angle, and there were yellow fights glowing at intervals, attached to the
smooth walls.
It
was a long but easy pull; then they burst out into clean mountain air again.
Putter squeeked like a mouse at what they saw; Ric sucked in a gasp.
Ahead, in the wash of new dawn, stretched a wide green valley, dotted at
its center with adobe dwellings and other buildings landscaped in a circular
pattern.
There were carefully cultivated gardens and budding trees; all covered by soft
morning mist that gave the scene a dreamlike quality. Near the center of the
neat pastel-colored buildings was a random triple-street of older adobe huts.
This nucleous, Ric guessed without much trouble, must be the original little
village. Tucked away up here in this isolated valley, self-sustaining by virtue
of the rich loamy soil and mountain springs and rivers, it had existed for many
hundreds of years —until the M-P people found it and enlarged it and modified
it by super-technology and fanatical man-labor into an important M-P colony. Perhaps the main one.
Putter shouted his joy. He grabbed Ric's arm.
"Look up there—way up to the top of the cliffs!"
Ric
obeyed and puckered his mouth to an involuntary whistle. Up there was a shroud
of mist that could only be man-created, to shield the colony from the prying
eyes of passing aircraft And below the mist itself was layer after layer of
translucent netting, skillfully colored in elusive combinations of reds and
grays and browns and greens.
"Clever," Ric
opined. "Damn clever!"
The
pilot" led them to one of the larger buildings and a stocky oriental in a pastel green uniform bowed and grinned at them. The
pilot vanished and the oriental led them to a small cheerful room with two beds. There was an adjoining bathroom,
all functional and sparkling clean. There were green uniforms for them to put
on after washing up.
Putter
showered briefly, then
went straight to bed. Ric
looked down at the emaciated figure curled up foetally under the pastel green covering and sighed his hope that Putter had at
last found his dream.
Ric
bathed and put on his uniform.
He was a little
surprised to find the hall door unlocked, somehow. Like the whole concept of M-P, Ric
found all this too good to be true. In his space-tough lexicon,
life didn't work like that. There was a catch to everything, and if things came too easy-watch out
He prowled out and down the
hall
Everything
was immaculate. The green doors had blank imperturbable faces. Everything was
green. Somebody loved that color, or considered it psychologically right.
Rounding
a corner Ric caught sight of a slim figure in a lab smock moving through a doorway at the far end of the hall Ric gave a
yell. The man turned slowly, then, without a sign of recognition, moved through
the doorway and closed it behind him.
Ric went to the door. It was locked.
Ric fell asleep wondering why Alan hadn't
even bothered to say hello.
rv
Ric was
wolfing a
breakfast of chorizo
and eggs with Putter in
the cafeteria-like dining
room, empty at this hour.
He wondered why the food tasted so food. Then he remembered
his nearness to death and the desultory way he had taken meals in the hospital.
To live was to eat.
"There comes our Chinese buddy," he told Putter.
"Hope he's got good news," Putter said anxiously.
"You'll
be okay," Ric assured him. Now that the boy
was here, list or no list, they'd take him in the fold.
The
oriental moved
up to them and curved a fat
finger in Putter's direction. Putter scrambled to his feet. Ric called "Good luck," after him and meant' ft. The boy deserved a break. For the sake of the human
race one could but hope that the miracles of M-P were true.
Ric frowned this over while he poured out more coffee from the self-heater.
An invisible voice pulled him to his feet.
"Dr. Alan Tork can see
you now," it said.
"About
time," Ric told the blank walls. "I was
beginning to wonder."
"Just follow the Keen."
"What's the Keen?"
His
answer was an aggravating banshee wail that didn't come from anywhere in
particular. It pulled him. It dragged him out of the cafeteria and down the
hall.
Ric moved under its impulse through a
labyrinth of halls and across a garden court to another low building. When he reached the right door the Keen cut off sharp. Ric
opened the door and stepped in.
The
nose-twitching chemical smells reminded him forcefully of Alan. Yes. There he
was, hunched over a long cluttered white table. Just like in the old days.
He looked up.
"Alan! You son of a robot!"
Alan
smiled thinly. His narrow face was gaunt and his sandy hair less messy than Ric
remembered because there was less of it. His pale wide forehead gleamed under
the spiral light above his stool. Those clear blue eyes still seemed to look
right through you into some other plane of existence, vaguely annoyed by reality.
They showed a flicker of gladness, then misted and became almost furtive.
One thing sure, Ric
thought. Alan wasn't a user.
"Nice to see you at
last," Alan said.
"Why
haven't I heard from you?" Ric exploded. "You could have written or
visphoned."
"Not
from here," Alan smiled bleakly. "Secrecy is our watchword."
Ric
moved up to massage his friend's smocked shoulders. "Okay. Get it. But last night?"
Alan
gave a darting glance around them. "I—I wasn't supposed to be—" He
broke off with a forced smile. "We have our rules. Security rules, you
understand." A twinge crossed his lips and italics appeared between his
eyes when he took Alan's right hand.
"Ric, I-"
"Never mind." Ric lumped a lot of
forgiving into those two words. He found himself a stool and pulled it close to
Alan. "Now. How about some
information?"
Some of the remembered blue fire lit up
Alan's eyes. "I
guess you've earned that.
Where do I start?"
"You were the one who put the hypno-ad
flier onto me, weren't you?"
"Yes. I wanted you here. But first you
had to be in shape and the whole thing had to be worked secretly. Their way."
"Get it."
"I kept a constant check on you, Ric.
All the time you were at the hospital, through one of our spies." He grinned wryly. "This cloak and dagger stuff is necessary. You know
about the anti-laws. We didn't dare risk exposure. Gilead is the main
colony."
"Gilead,"
Ric murmured. "There
is a Balm in Gilead. . . ." He moved uneasily. "Now tell me about the fungi. How did all this
get started? I don't see you as—"
Alan
frowned. "Not me. No." He sighed and plunged into words.
"Routine research with the fungi occasioned consultations with
researchers in many fields outside of mine. M-P was utterly
new, alien-new. It demanded explorative experimentation in every area. As you know, I'm not a medical man. This area led me to Dr. Morton Krill
"Krill's
private hospital in Mendocino was handy and his work in metabolics and cellular
regeneration outstanding. He worked a lot in gerontology. Some of his methods in retarding the aging process in humans came in for a lot of criticism, but we scientists are used to that. Most of his patients at his Mendocino hospital were old, many
given up as terminal by other medics. Many were wealthy and able to contribute
generously to the cause."
"Get
it," Ric said. "Anything to keep the pump pumping
and the cells growing."
"That's
it. I joined Dr. Krill at his hospital for a time, at his request. I'm still
with him." Alan's lips were tight, his eyes somber.
"Go on," Ric said
gently.
"In our routine experiments with rodents
and simians we soon discovered that in every case the subject's health improved.
Some improved so fast that the heart burst. We had many failures, of course,
until we learned to control the dosage. A hamster who'd been maimed by a
companion, one of the new super-breed, had a foot torn
off. Under the drug the foot grew back!"
"Wow!" Ric
touched his plast-arm.
"We
knew now that what we were dealing with was earth-shaking. Still there was a
long way to go. I advised extreme caution when it came to human subjects. Not
Krill. Patients were dying who could be saved. It was criminal to wait. Without
my consent he went ahead on his own. Some died. Krill rationalized it by saying
they were terminal in any case and they died for a great cause. He pointed out
that the neo-cancer strains are still
killing many thousands monthly, that microbal and viral forms are still
battling us, mutating as fast as we discover cures for them. Then of course
there are accidents, lost limbs, and degenerative
organs that need replacing and can't be built artificially. Plus
our archenemy—old age."
"He had a point."
Alan
nodded. "We found ourselves facing a great crossroad. A
millenium. A new dawn.
Conquerors of death and disease on a sweeping scale. Especially when our old folks practically leaped out of their beds
to kiss Dr. Krill's hands."
"I get the
picture," Ric said.
"One
thing Krill agreed to do was keep it a careful secret. Should the news leak out
you can imagine what the reaction would be!" Alan rubbed the cherubic
cleft in his chin. "I lost here, as well. Turned out
that Dr. Krill had injected himself with the fungi, early in the game.
He is such an—an ebullient person that the
characteristic joi
de vivre an
M-P user experiences wasn't noticeable. Not at first."
"You
couldn’t keep a thing like this secret very long," Ric interjected
thoughtfully. "Then there's the fact of all those people dying who might
be saved. Moral responsibility, and all that."
"Don't you suppose I spent many
sleepless nights mulling over all this?" Alan reproached. "But we
weren't ready yet. We had to be sure there wouldn't be some terrible secondary
reaction. You know me. I'm not an organization man. I'm happiest in my little
lab, poking and probing. If the results of my probing help mankind I'm very
happy about it. But I have no interest in glory-grabbing. And I was determined
not to let the fungi which I brought back to this planet be misused. Besides
the economic chaos it could cause if it were flung out en masse, it
might be turned into a political football. Above all it must not become
controlled by swindlers!
"Dr. Morton Krill is different. He is a
man of resolution, dynamic action. Once he was aware of the fierce loyalty his
old people displayed for him he—well, maybe it started
something working in his brain. His already brilliant capacities became
supernormal, under the impetus of the fungi. . . ."
"In other words, he
took over."
"Yes.
What could I do? I had to trail along. Through relatives of the cured people
it became obvious that there was something remarkable going on. They came to visit. Maybe some were marking time, waiting for their
grandparents to kick off. They were astonished to find them dancing fandangos
instead. It became impossible soon to hush the facts, and Dr. Krill decided to
go whole hog. He hired the best image-makers in the ad business and pushed M-P
up to the status of a household word. Until—"
"Came
the reaction."
Alan nodded. "There were a lot of
reasons and Dr. Krill
preconceived them well in advance and laid his plans accordingly."
"The
medics were certain there was a joker in the pack someplace."
"Not
only that, but consider the sociological upheaval. Half of our world business
is based on the premise of people living to such-and-such an age, of so many
dying of such-and-such. Insurance charts go insane. You can't upset the status
quo overnight and prevent chaos. Dr. Krill realized this. I think he realized
it right from the first. But he wanted the world to know that M-P did exist and
even, more subtly, that it continued to flourish undercover.
"M-P
took on the aspect of a new religion. It had its martyrs, its godheads, its
secret conclaves, just as the Christians had theirs, in the catacombs outside
ancient Rome. Only this new religion didn't give people promises of pie in the
sky—it gave them its miraculous benefits now!"
Ric whistled.
"How many of these
colonies are there?"
Twenty-eight,
at last count Then there is the Port Mars plant that
distributes the live spores and the synthesized fluid, and the Cave. That's
heavily guarded since Dr. Krill bought it from Plorix Incorporated. Since it's personal property the local law doesn't interfere,
presuming it to be inactive. I imagine, also, that—"
"I know," Ric grunted. The old payola. Port Mars is famous for the bribe bit."
As a busy clearinghouse for import and export from a dozen thinly colonized but
heavily exploited worlds, Mars had its own perverted style of policing, and
the UN grumbled but politely turned its eyes to problems less complex and
closer to home.
"Of
course the twenty-eight colonies are only the above-water islands. Megalopoli
such as Calcity are rampant with secret users who get their injections at
hidden alley-holes."
"I know, I know," Ric assured him.
"How many users would you judge Dr. Krill has under his thumb by
now?"
Alan
winced and raised a cautionary hand. "Let's be careful what we say, shall
we?" His eyes narrowed and made blue sparks; his eyebrows tilted.
Ric
pulled in a sharp breath. "Oh." He looked around at the light green
walls, which were bare and innocent. "Oh," he said again.
"Yes,"
Alan nodded. "To answer your question, I would guess in the neighborhood of two or three million. It might run as
high as ten million. I have no way
of knowing. Of course, the number is moving up very rapidly.
So many desperate, miserable wretches in the world."
"Must have cost a lot of money. Just building
and supplying units like this one. Not to mention
the pickers-up, Mars transports, and
payoffs."
"Dr.
Krill took his cue
from the adoration his
old people displayed at the hospital. Most of them were rich. He concentrated on elderly millionaires with
discreet invitations. As to labor, no problem here.
M-P users who might be dead or clipped
will, and do, work
twelve hours a day
at whatever jobs he chooses for them. And being supremely healthy, they can take it. They are constantly
reminded how lucky they are by signs in their dormitories, and by Dr. Krill's voice in his inspirational morning talks over the invisible wall-radio.
"Yes,
to users Cilead is heaven. Right here. Attempts to stifle such a thing only strengthen it, as you know. They see the
results with their
own eyes, feel it in their
own boundless good health."
"So what's wrong then?" Ric demanded.
"Nothing."
"No? Have you ever tried MP? And if not, why not?"
V
Alan's
frowning shrug was
his only answer for the moment. Ric grimaced at the blank sterile wall.
"Is Dr. Krill here in Gilead? Now?"
"Yes."
"Will I see him?" "Perhaps."
"Do you ever see him?" -
"Not much, these days. He's very
busy."
"I'm sure he is."
Ric
scowled in silent thought for a few moments, while Alan went back to his work, or pretended to. Ric noticed that his hands didn't seem too steady, nor were the things they did
decisive.
Alan
was not a user, that fact was pointedly significant. He could put it down to
not needing it, but that didn't ring true, either. From the looks of his haggard face Alan could use a little of that boundless energy and joi de vivre the
users exhibited.
Here
he was, a sort of captive in a bugged lab. Why? Why
hadn't he left Dr. Krill back at the Mendocino
hospital? Why trundle down here to the wilds
of Mexico along with Dr. Morton Krill's re-animated octogenerians and other
assorted disciples? He hadn't been forced here at the point of a gun, had he? No. There was some other reason, something
that had to do with Alan's high sense of morality and responsibility. He was
involved in Dr. Krill's Great Plan, whatever that might be; and he had started
it by bringing the fungi back to Earth and giving it to him. He was
responsible, in a way, for what was now happening all over the world. He must
be watchful; he must be sure that the tremendous power Dr. Krill had unleashed
was not misused. In order to do this he must
stay close to Dr. Krill, here at the nucleous of the fast-spreading cult. . . .
That must be it, Ric decided.
Another thing. Candida. She was always on his mind, like a happy hurt.
"Where is she?"
he blurted.
Alan blinked up from his
work. "Candida?"
"Who
else? I
thought you two would be married by now."
Alan's
narrow jaw tightened. "You're something
of a. dope, Ric, for a trained tech."
"Don't
try and tell me it's been me all along! Candi's been hanging on your every word
these many years. If you told her to stick her hand in a vat of boiling acid
she would do it."
Alan
laughed hollowly. "If I told her anything like that there would be an
excellent scientific reason. Candida knows that. Use your brain, Ric. Candida
is a fine, dedicated bio-research scientist. She admires my work. We think alike, in the lab. We understand each other. We mesh. As for the woman, Candida's
fight-years away from me. If I love her, that's my misfortune. Not yours. Not Candida's."
Ric's
heart galloped. His sympathy for Alan,
guessing at once how much Alan did love the green-eyed goddess, could not help
being overwhelmed by leaping joy that caught in his throat and made it hard to
think straight, much less talk.
"So
why wasn't she there when I needed her so much, holding the hand I didn't
have?"
"She
wanted to be, believe me. But there was really nothing we could do. You were
having the best care possible, and our time was taken up here. We both gave
every minute to something related to the fungi discovery. Something we pushed
to a conclusion by working night and day. Something for you, Ric!"
"What-"
"Come and see for
yourself."
Ric followed him wonderingly into another
lab, a large room that seemed to have been planned and dedicated to one
particular purpose. To one side was a great tank which was fed by color-coded
pipes from great vats hung above it. Alan pointed. Ric looked down. When a light leaped on Ric saw, through a rectangle of plastic or
glass, floating free in gently seething fluids, a rigid length of pale flesh
anchored to a steel and plastic shoulder. A translucent shoulder, so
that Ric saw an intricate network of veins and arteries and fine nerve threads
running into
it, fed from
the vats overhead.
"What is it?" Ric asked, staring.
"Your new arm. See the hand? We got the measurements from photographs you didn't know existed, and through evidence assimilated from all your body measurements. To all intents and purposes ft will be your old arm. The preliminary tissue specimens we grew it from came from you. From the hospital. We've got spies there, as I said."
"You grew it!"
Alan
nodded. "From your own body cells. I'd been working under UN grants in fields
allied with cybernetics and cellular growth for some
time. When you lost your arm because I dragged
you up to the Polar Cave,
I dropped everything to work
on this. So did
Candida."
"But—how in the—I"
"The
fungi put us on the track. The basis for its remarkable
power is that it acts
as a growth catalyst on the
glands that promote cellular
regeneration."
"Then—if you manage to
transplant that
arm on me 111
be a user?"
Alan
shook his head.
"No. I didn't
say we actually used the fungi on it. But the fungi experiments pointed the
way. So, ironically, while M-P lost you your arm it also helped you get one back. I hope."
"You mean you're not sure my body will
accept it?"
Alan nodded. "That's been the bête noir of medical transplanting for a hundred years
or more. But I'm not using tissue from a close relative. I'm growing cells
from your own body. Muscle. Blood
cells. Nerve cells. In a way that arm is you, already."
"When?" Ric gulped. "Now?"
"Sorry. We need some more sample tissue
from you, to feed in. There are a few finishing touches before we can start on
the painful job of fusion. Meanwhile—now about a look around
the grounds? Dr. Krill's proud of what his workers have done here in
Cilead in such a short time."
On
their brisk walk about the circle-patterned city of green and brown buildings
and neat gardens, Ric listened to Alan's rambling spiel of the communal life
Cilead provided for the M-P users, who toiled cheerfully and endlessly in the
fields, barns, and kitchens. It was a healthy, outdoor life. Virtually all the necessities were
produced on the colony.
Once they passed a bower of roses and ivy.
Ric looked in curiously at an arched cairn of round stones. It looked suspiciously like a shrine. On a stone at the back was an image carved out of wood. It was a
man, of rather less than medium height, stocky,
wearing a modem tunic but with an off-shoulder cape that suggested classical Grecian
times. The face was a trifle wide, but stylized into lines of great nobility.
"Dr.
Krill”
Alan
sighed and nodded. "The sculptor has never seen him, of course. But they
spend a good
deal of time gossiping
about what they have heard via the grapevine." He shrugged and gestured
Ric on. "They call Dr. Krill, Father. Father doesn't approve of this sort
of thing. He will have this removed. But then in a few days another one will
spring up somewhere else."
"Still, it might give a
man ideas." "It might," Alan agreed grimly.
Ric
shot a look around the curving paths and across the saffron-misted fields where
the city ended and the vegetable gardens began. He wondered just how far the
bugging of their conversation extended. Far enough, he decided. No point in taking
chances. Alan was being innocuous and careful.
"Hi!"
a blithe voice shouted, as they moved past an elephant's-eye-high cornfield
down a path between fields of fresh-turned earth.
Ric
turned and saw Putter perched on a plow-hitched tractor, waving and grinning.
"Hey, Putter! How you
doing?" Ric yelled.
The
skinny boy called back: "Perfect! Thanks to you, I made it!"
"Good show."
They
moved onto the concrete path that wound up to the plateau tunnel.
"Everybody's
happy as jaybirds," Ric stated. "It's like Eden."
"Eden had its—problems."
Halfway to the tunnel-mouth Alan took Ric's
arm and pointed back at the valley in a grandiose Sweep. "I want you to
see the panoramic view. Isn't it something?"
Obediently,
Ric shaded his eyes from the afternoon sun and looked, again at the neat
pattern of buildings and the gardens. "I saw it from up there, when we
came in. I was impressed and I still am. But—"
Alan's
clutch on his arm tightened. "Never mind!" he whispered fiercely,
changed. "I didn't bring you up here for the view! Far as I know Dr. Krill
hasn't got around to wiring this far up. His people never come up here. They
don't even want to think about leaving Gilead."
"So-r
"We haven't got much time. Keep admiring the view
while I talk. If we stay too long they'll have somebody up here. I'm watched
every second. That's why I didn't talk to you iit the hall this morning. I was
making one of my tries at finding out Krill's secret!"
"What secret?"
"Listen! There's something about the
fungi that Krill discovered and I haven't. Maybe he found out by using
it." Alan kept pointing out sites of interest like a moon-guide making his
spiel for the tourists. "Krill took M-P before we had honed down the
tests. Something happened to him. A change. In a
confiding moment, full of bloated ego, he hinted to me that there was some odd
power involved in the fungi—something strange. Something
nobody but he knows because he keeps strict control over it. He doesn't mind my
not using it because he doesn't want me to find out what it is!"
"If you took it you
might be like him."
"Maybe. Maybe not. I'm
responsible for bringing it here, and the responsibility is an albatross around
my neck. That's why I stick to Krill like glue. I've got to find out his secret and you've got to help me!"
Ric scowled in thought.
"Suppose I took a shot and—"
"For
God's sake, Ric, no! Whatever you do, don't touch it until we find
out!"
"What about
Candi?"
"She's
not a user, either. Since she might guess, Krill doesn't want her to become
one, either. In spite of constant bugging and surveillance, Candida and I have
a tacit understanding between us. We wanted you here, Ric. To
give you that new arm, of course. And to help!"
"Where
is Candi now?" Ric demanded. "Why can't I see her?"
"She's not here. Krill
had some important new work for her at Port Mars. She hated to go and not see
you, bur Krill insisted. This new project is something big. Part of a Master
Plan-"
"To
get everybody on M-P?"
"God knows. The secret is still locked
in that Polar Cave.
Listen, Ric! My job's to stick here with Krill. Yours is to get
back to the Cave,
somehow. Find out what is
behind all of
this____ "
"For
this I get a new arm," Ric mused. He rubbed his beard stubble briskly.
"What about bringing in the Law?"
"The
UN police might kill off a few users,
stamp out some of the colonies. But I doubt
they'd catch Krill. He's mostly just an invisible voice. And they wouldn't get
to the core of the secret."
A
wasp's buzz from the direction of the Gilead core made them both tum. A small
copter was lifting abruptly
from a slid-back roof
down there. It moved
purposefully in their direction.
"He's dispatched somebody up here to check on us," Alan said crisply. "We won't get a chance to talk again, unmonitored. So don't say anything you wouldn't want Dr. Krill to hear. And don't trust anybody. Not anybody!"
The one-man craft eased down on them; the bubble opened and a smiling user in a light green uniform stepped out.
"As
I was telling you," Ric murmured, "Dr. Krill
impresses me as a great benefactor to all mankind."
VI
Ric spent
most of the next few weeks
flat on his back, on the crest of a wave of ceaseless, poignant agony. He might
as well be back in the space hospital, he groaned, except— Alan kept reminding
him over and over—this time the torture was constructive. The pain had to be
there; it could be muted by drugs but not wholly absent, because each spasm of
muscle or twitch of a nerve registered on the Dr. Frankenstein machine to which
he was hooked up, and told Alan and his hawk-eyed assistant, Dr. Lambert Furr,
that bone and tissue and arterial were knitting and that his body was accepting
the lab-created member for its own.
Ric's
torso bitterly resented the intruder. Try as he did to convince it cerebrally
and psychologically that
it would be glad later
on, it fought back.
After a solid week of effort and vigil, Alan
collapsed. Dr. Furr took over. He was eminently qualified to take over the
finalizing stages, Alan knew that, but that ever-present
user's smile put Ric's teeth on edge.
"Take
it easy!" Ric bellowed, when the moon-faced young medic poked at
recalcitrant nerve
tendrils with the enthusiasm
of a county coroner with a fresh
corpse.
Furr
clucked his tongue and laughed. "Everything is knitting beautifully! Beautifully!"
"It hurts, damn
it."
"Never mind; tonight 111 give you something to help you sleep. Your body needs rest more than
anything, now. Rest." "Thanks," Ric
said, fervently.
The
world was mint-new and beautiful when he wakened after a round-the-clock sleep. Morning sun outside of his window glistened on verdure
and sent little nebulas of steam up from the brown paths and the green
adobe walls. His new arm was still numb, but that, Alan assured him, would pass. By effort he managed to twitch the muscles in his thumb and forefinger.
That was all he needed right now.
It
would come. The stars were his again. Gilead was a place of miracles, fungi or
no fungi.
Alan watched him eat his first solid
breakfast in weeks, with eyes that
gleamed triumph. "Father!"
The chanting voices drifted from around the comer
of the open window.
"Greetings, my
children," said a deep, benevolent voice.
Ric's fork stopped halfway.
"What is it?"
"See
for yourself." Alan beckoned Ric out of his convalescent chamber to the
front side of the lab. Ric looked down from the quasi-balcony. Below them the wide central plaza was lined with neat
columns of men, women, and children, all wearing the same pastel green tunic. The morning light, sifting between the camouflage-nets at the
cliff-tops, glowed softly, on thousands of eager uplifted faces. They
were silent now, breathlessly intent.
The voice out of nowhere
came again.
"My
dear friends! My children!"
"Fatherr they chanted in ecstasy.
"I
greet you again before our day of happy toil begins," the deep voice
intoned, with a sense of inner power and paternal warmth. "We are all
happy here in Gilead, are we not?"
"Yes!" The affirmation was a great roar to the topmost
crag.
The rich voice was deliberately slow in
coming. Each word was a pearl "We are happy because we are healthy. Our bodies and our minds are
free from all ills. That is as it should be. That is as it will be for all mankind!"
"Father!"
"I
thank you for your love and your trust. Now, each one of us must dedicate this
bright day to his tasks. With sustained courage and hope, and with the
realization that he is participating in the beginning of a new and glorious
Earth!
There
are greater miracles to come, my children. All of you shall become the vanguard
of a new super race!"
There
was more, a hint that the time was drawing near when the whole world would not
only accept them with open arms but would revere them as courageous pioneers. All the while this benevolent voice rang out across
the wide valley Ric squirmed. The verbiage was
familiar and distasteful, somehow. It smacked of bad old times, of dictators who cozened their followers with "superior race"
nonsense.
Yet
Dr. Krill was different from them. He not only promised, he gave. He
pulled thousands out of the jaws of death. He healed the sick, the
blind, the lame. He gave them a well-being few humans enjoy beyond middle age. M-P had its effect on the mind, as well. It relieved them of the ever-present horror of death. New
technologies created their own lands of terror. The primitive fears of the dark and the unknown were still there.
"It
wasn't him!" Ric muttered fiercely, watching the mob file off to their tasks, blessed and
refreshed.
"No.
But he put the fungi to
work. He pushed
the thing forward. And the
human soul needs a father image to look up to. Something greater than itself. Something to blame for its own shortcomings, something
to run to for forgiveness. Call it God. Or-"
"Or call it Dr. Krill."
Alan
gave him a sharp significant look. Every word
they spoke was being taped
for careful analysis
by Father. "When do I get to meet him?" Ric wondered aloud "I don't know." "Can't you arrange it?"
Alan's smile was tight, sardonic. "I’m not one of the apostles. I have my uses, but I'm on
the outside looking in. You, too."
"Then
it looks like well just have to wait until Father gets ready to turn us on."
As
his new arm flexed into active use and became part of him his impatience
mounted. He resented having Dr. Krill to thank for it, even in part. But the
rankling obligation was there, all the same. Why? Ric wondered. Why had
Krill made it possible?
The
turn-on came around two at night. Alan shook Ric awake.
"Get up, Ric! This is
it!"
Ric
climbed out of bed, yawning. He groped toward the shower. "What is
what?"
"We've got company. Martian
company!" "An M-P shipment?"
"No.
The synthesized M-P comes
here on regular transports to Calcity, with legitimate cargo, then it's rerouted here. This ship is very special.
Soon as they get it readied—
off we go!" "We?"
"Yes. Both of us!**
While
he let the cold needles of water drench him awake and added a brisk toweling to
complete the job, Ric felt his heart pound the way it hadn't in many months. To
feel the shudder of rockets under him again! To view the splash of star-suns against the black deeps! It had been so long. So damn long!
"Ill get to see Candi!" he cried out.
"I imagine so. Apparently Dr. Krill wants us
both up at the Port Mars unit at this stage of the game. Things are moving to a head." Alan laughed shortly. "And I thought I had served my term and was about to be discarded."
Gilead's machine-made mists hung over the
plateau land-strip heavier than ever to shroud the long whale-shaped spaceship
that pointed spaceward. Ric kept Alan at the ran as
they moved after the officers and crew toward the open hatch. Wind nagged
across the painted field and up on his perch Ric heard the goatherd piping his
song to the glimmering new dawn. The ship lifted.
Ric
grinned inwardly at the brazen openness of their landing at Port Mars. After
the radio operator demanded and got permission and landing instructions from
the Tower Authority, the vessel vectored its way to a neat down in the busy
Port. The captain's false papers were accepted with alacrity by the Port's
officials.
Ric was in his element. It was a joy, too, to
be away from the bland smug environment of Gilead and back in this roaring
ganglion. Elbowing with Alan through the fantastic wash of humans and
non-humans from many worlds, Ric hummed a space chantey. Even Dr. Krill and his
sinister secrets seemed unreal for the moment.
"What
now?" he asked their captain, who accompanied them to the gated periphery
of the noisy Port.
Captain
Kunnick was a
dapper little man with
lead-gray, simian eyes. "An airear's
meeting us. Tm to
drop you two off at Lief Swen Square. You'll be met."
His
manner was patronizing and Ric boiled inwardly. The tunics both he and Alan had been given to wear suggested prosperous Earth
merchants or maybe políticos
on tour, but he wasn't
either, and play-games made him impatient.
Captain Kunnick nodded them into the waiting airear. Their flight across the wide pocket of mixed
air that blanketed the city was rapid and silent. The car cushioned down in an
empty drop-and-lift space in the Square.
"Wait
here," Captain Kunnick directed, as they stepped down.
They found themselves in a gaggle of
merchants and bugeyed tourists with tri-di cameras, plus wary-eyed predators,
aliens, and of course neat rows of wheeled robos.
"Right
in front of the Space Emigration office," Ric told Alan, grinning.
"There are more cops, public and private, on this patch of plaza than
anywhere else in the solar system.
"What do we do?"
Alan wondered.
"Act natural."
"What's natural?"
"Almost
anything, here."
Ric
nudged Alan forward in the direction of a great fountain, which spayed fine
rust-red sand, not precious water. He snuggled the blaster Captain Kunnick had
handed him just before they left the ship. It was concealed in his tunic under
his left arm, readily accessible.
Ric
appreciated what the weapon implied, that since he and Alan were after all
outlaws and here illegally, they just might run into trouble. Ric was expected
to get them out of it.
While
they ambled forward Ric savored the fine taste of freedom and the pungent
sights and smells of Port Mars. He shot Alan a paternal glance. Alan was
nervous. Well, nobody would hurt him while Ric was around.
A space opened in the crowd
and he saw her.
"Candi!"
She
was standing a few yards from the fountain and when he yelled she turned and
saw them. She waved. Ric's in-sides did flips. Candi had been sent to meet
them. He hadn't dared hope for this!
She
moved toward them, slowly, brushing her way. Smiling that catapult smile, in
her white-flecked-with-green-gold tunic, she was all the goddesses personified.
Tall, delightfully feminine, her movements were sinuous and graceful. And those sea-green eyes. Unique in space
and time.
Ric was frankly pole-axed. Struck dumb. Immobilized.
No wonder she kept herself hidden in a
research lab. She was dangerous. Lethal.
Alan was bounding ahead
toward her.
Ric
watched. Something happened in those seconds, something over which he had no
control whatsoever. His new arm moved.
It moved without his brain telling it to.
Moved
under his tunic and pulled out the blaster Captain Kunnick had given him.
His arm pointed it at Alan.
His finger pressed the
stud.
Alan dropped.
VII
Ric didn't
budge for an eon that
lasted just ten seconds.
He couldn't. Around him in a gaggle of other dimensions people were rushing and roaring. First his head bent and he gaped down
at his outstretched arm—the arm Alan had grown for him. That arm still held
onto the blaster that
had just killed Alan. Now, rock-steady, the arm lowered and dropped the blaster. Then it, too, shuddered like the rest of him.
If your right arm offend thee—cut it off.
Ric
stifled a
whimper. What could
he do? He had just killed his best friend with the physical part
of him that best friend had
created for him by his genius. Why didn't all those people
gathering leap
on him and tear
him to pieces? It was simple justice.
Candi
was on her knees, cradling Alan's seared body in her arms. Moaning. Then all at once she was up on
her feet, facing Ric with her beautiful face contorted, eyes
green fire.
"You killed him! Why! Why! Why!"
Someplace there was an answer but Ric's rocking
mind was unable to grope it up out of his misery. "Candi!" he
shouted. "My arm! It—"
That
was as far as they let him get. A growling breath and the creak of boots behind
him alerted that Dart of his mind which was ever-tuned to danger. He whirled
and dipped to recover the dropped blaster, but he didn't make it. A universe
slammed down on his head and he had a split-second's preview of death.
The cell-box he woke in had a sour unwashed
flavor clinging to the paintless surfaces. Ric groaned himself up on one elbow
for a look.
His
head was splitting, and no wonder. One side of it and the back of his neck were
patched over with dry blood. His blood. His right
hand, gingerly exploring, took away a red smear.
Blinking down at that hand brought it all
back. your right hand offend thee—cut it off. The knowing hurt worse than the bash on the
head—much worse.
"I
killed Alan," he moaned, dropping back on the smelly bunk-bed and snapping
his eyes shut
He
refuted it denied it, pushed back all the clocks in creation—but there it was
again. It was just not possible that he could have done such a thing. But he had. Alan was the last person anybody but a sadistic lunatic could harm, yet he had killed him. Alan and he had been closer than brothers.
Alan had provided him with the kill-weapon. His new arm.
Irony piled on irony until his brain tottered.
"No!"
he yelled, and leaped up.
He was about to smash the offending hand against the cell wall when a voice
spoke out of the dark shadows.
"You are in
despair," the somber voice murmured. "Your soul is in torment for what you have done.
You repent your evil deed but you shall receive no mercy. Not from your soul.
Not from the Law."
Ric
wondered for a moment if his mind had tumbled over that fine-line edge between
sanity and madness.
"You know how the Law operates here in
Mars, Richard Coltor," the voice went on. "Mars is a jumping-off
place to many worlds and there is no time for long debative trials. Justice has
to be swift and certain here. An eye for an eye. With
so many alien types and so many criminals seeking refuge here the Law can take
no chances. For example, your trial lasted seven minutes."
"My—trial—?" Ric muttered. "But I was unconscious!"
"So
what if you were? Thirty-one witnesses saw you kill Dr. Alan Tork. Nine of
these were Lawmen."
"But-"
"In
one hour you will die, Richard Coltor. You will be taken from your cell and
marched down the long corridor to the Doom Door. Behind the Doom Door you will
become nothing. Nothing but a contemptible memory and a soul
that can never know peace because it bears the Mark of Cain."
Ric
whipped around, probing the half-dark. The voice came from the dark corridor
beyond the cell bars. He strode to the barred door and curled his fingers
around the corroded metal.
"Come on out where I can see you!" he cried.
Across,
the shadow stirred, and a figure floated toward him. Floated,
because his accusing nemesis was swathed in gray robes, and cowled, like a
neo-monk. It was tall, more than eight feet tall, so that Ric gasped. It
was like a Hamlet's ghost, faceless and terrible.
Ric sucked in air.
"Who are you?" he managed.
"I am the Voice of
Eternity."
Fanged horror clawed his
throat, "Who—who sent you?"
Was
this some new land of punishment invented by some sadistic outworld Lawman?
Ghosts sent to torment you, rub it in?
The
figure moved still closer and Ric saw that it did have a face—a translucent
face. He could see blood vessels under the gray-white flesh, and high
cheekbones. When the apparition raised a cloaked arm Ric saw that the long
five-fingered hand was see-through too.
"Who sent you?" Ric demanded in a
hard whisper.
"She"
"She?" Ric's knuckles whitened on the bars. "Candida?" "Yes."
"Why? To make me
suffer more than I am already?"
"No. To bring you solace—"
"You're doing great so far," Ric
said bitterly.
"—and
to tell you that she will keep trying to understand and perhaps forgive."
Ric's
confused mind chewed on that for a moment. "I don't blame her. She saw me do it. Still—she did send you. . .."
His
thoughts floundered and roiled. Candi had sent this living scarecrow to sound
him out, to find out if he had killed Alan deliberately, or if that, too, was
all part of Dr. Krill's Great Plan. Alan had said
it himself.' His usefulness was over. He must be got rid of. Ric was merely the
weapon.
Don't trust anybody. That's what Alan had said during their brief
unbugged conversation halfway up the hill. More irony.
Dr. Lambert Furr must have inserted something in his arm while he was
unconscious those twenty-four hours. Something that caused the arm to obey, a
machine monitored and directed from a distance.
That machine was still with him. .. .
Therefore, he too must die.
Candi was nobody's fool, and, like Alan, she suspected Dr. Krill's motives. The lightning quickness of Alan's murder had shaken her badly for a while, but when she had had a chance
to think rationally about it she must have realized Ric was incapable of such
an act. Ric might have gone crazy, blaming Alan for his lost arm, or killed him
out of jealousy over her. But to do it there—in view of hundreds of witnesses. Lawmen everywhere. It didn't make any sense.
They
had been fiendish about it. They had caught him while his whole mind and being
were wrapped up in that first sight of Candi after all those hungry months. . .
.
"We haven't got much
time," his visitor reminded Ric.
When the figure moved
closer Ric got a better look.
"Hey! You're an
android!"
"Believe what you
wish."
"Why
the monkish getup?"
"A device to get inside the prison. Even a condemned
man is permitted spiritual comfort during his last hour."
Ric
squirmed, thinking about androids. The science of cybernetics was not yet in full flower; mostly
the subject of androids was considered in questionable taste. Near-men and near-women had been laboratory
creations, yes,
but it was horribly
expensive and not too successful. Most of the early experiments had been financed by wealthy weirdos and were erotic in nature.
These were quite at variance with industrial robos of all lands;
robos were never human in appearance, or only as much their function required
them to be. They performed laborious tasks and solved mathematical problems.
"You're an android!" Ric repeated
in awe. "Candi made you! But—"
"You are thinking about Dr. Krill, and
whether I am from him. Another trick. No?"
"Yes. Can you blame me?"
"I am not. I am loyal to Candida. But I am not an android."
"Then what are you
"
“A Martian."
Before
Ric could do much besides gulp he found his hand grabbed and held firmly. His right hand. "What you doing?" he demanded. "And
don't give me this Martian jazz. You're a Martian because you were made on Mars. Otherwise, there aren't any such—"
"Please.
I'm trying to see what—ah!—there it is. Underneath, just above your elbow."
"What in the
living—"
"Not living, Richard. It's a transistorized machine. The device at
the other end triggered it remotely." "Am I bugged?" Ric wondered.
"No.
It was designed for one purpose only. Ingenious, but limited.
Meanwhile, we have other things to worry about. Such as those two guards coming
to drag you off to the Doom Room."
Ric said: "By the way,
what's your name, Martian?"
"Alph. Short for Alpha. At least Candida calls me
that. I am the first of my race to be brought back and this body, while it
resembles our true structure closely, was made transparent so that the organal
and neural functions could be observed and, when necessary, corrected. I am,
you might say, an experimental model. You might also say that Dr. Candida
Lucas-Long is my mother."
"But-"
"No time," Alph said, as two big,
hairy-legged guards moved up to the cell.
They wore brown leatheroid tunics like Roman
skirts, with laced leggings, and both of them carried blasters. Their wide
bristle-bearded faces were not calculated to win beauty contests.
"Hey!" One spun
Alph around. "What you doing here?"
"Humans,
even such a one as this miserable wretch, are entitled to hopeful prayer before
liquidation."
"Yeah? You don't look like one of the regular kooks to me. Look at that blue
mouth and those veins, Muk. Ever see anything
like it?"
"I am of the Gannymedan hill cult,"
Alph lied smoothly.
"Robo
Jesus, they got," the big guard gaffawed. "Let's see your pass."
Alph
pulled a slip of plast out of his
voluminous sleeve and the guards squinted it over.
"Okay. Stand aside.
You've had your time with him."
"I am permitted to see
him to the Doom Door."
He
grunted while Muk opened the cell door with a flasher that snapped open the
electronic lock. "Let's get
this over. Breakfast's getting cold."
They
began the long walk to
the Doom Door.
Beyond it Ric would cease to exist. The Saturate gases employed were
fantastically effective, as early explorers of the Rings found out.
Alph went into a dismal droning about dire, eternal horrors.
The blue door to extinction
moved closer.
Ric,
between the giant-size guards and their fisted guns, marched and tried not to
listen. Alph's bell-like chanting mocked him, poked icy
needles into his conscience.
Only a few yards now. Straight ahead. Inside the sealed chamber, the
gases would be released. When they had been sucked back and the apertures
sealed again, the Doom Door would be opened again, and there would be nothing
there.
Nothing.
At the door Muk took out the cylindrical
flasher to flick it on the lock and break the contact. "One last
prayer," Alph intoned.
"Our breakfast will be ice cold, damn
it!" "Permission?" Alph cracked out.
"Okay. Half a minute. No more."
Alph
lifted his robed arms, his blue lips mouthing a silent prayer. Swiftly, then,
he moved to take hold of Ric's hands. Ric felt a shock pass between them.
"Repent!"
Alph quavered. Then, his voice altered: "If you are to be freed from this
eternal damnation—act
now!"
VIII
Ric did
an unnatural thing. He
began to moan and totter backwards in an ecstasy of death-terror. Muk, at the
Door, had holstered his blast under his wide leather belt in order to take out
his flasher. The other guard jumped back a step, and stood there scowling at
Ric's frenzy, blaster drooping. Ric had gone nuts. Well, it figured.
The
guards exchanged sour glances, relaxing until Ric got over his fit.
In
the middle of his crazy fit, Ric butted forward. Right at the
guard with the blaster. His tackle sent the burly giant grunting against
the wall and sliding down it. Ric's fast judo chop slammed the back of his
neck, and it Was over.
When
he straightened up, sucking air, he was not surprised to notice that Alph's
bony hands were squeezing Muk's fat neck; Muk tumbled.
"This
might prove useful." Alph nipped up the flasher that opened doors from the
guard's hand.
"I
prefer this." The blaster fit neatly into Ric's fist—his left fist. He
didn't quite trust the other one.
They prowled down the hall warily.
"These
jailhouse halls must be monitored," Ric thought aloud. "Especially
condemned row."
Alph
nodded. "Of course. However, I did contrive to post-jam the vid at the entrance to this wing when I
came in. It's early. Most of the officers are still sleeping or having
pseudo-coffee."
Out
of the folds of his robe Alph produced another robe like his. He handed it to
Ric. "Slip it on," he advised.
'Tour pass reads two priests?"
"No.
But the robe has a scrambler in it. That machine in your arm is beamed. Dr.
Krill's people can track your location by it. You're supposed to be
liquidated, arm and all, remember. Also it will be a disguise."
Ric nodded and donned the
robe hastily.
There
was only one wing guard at the steel-barred entrance to condemned row; his
back was to them. He was cursing the blacked-out vid scanner which gave him a
view of the wing. The last thing he'd seen on it was the guards hauling Ric
toward the Doom Room, with that weird priest. Busy fiddling with knobs and
swearing, he didn't turn when the wing door slid open.
"That
you Muk? Roffey?"
"Yeah." Ric imitated the tough growl. They moved out and past the desk.
When
the vid guard snapped a fast look at them he realized his error. His hand
jumped for the blaster on his desk. Ric's balled fist swung out. He tumbled
with only a weak sigh.
The
scanner came buzzing erratically to life as two cowled figures hurried toward
the front door, as if late for morning Mass. . . .
Central
Prison was bustling outside. Creatures from many worlds hopped, shambled, or
merely walked across the high-walled quad. Two neo-monks in gray floating
across the yard to the main gate were not unusual enough to cause more than an eye-flick of interest. Everybody had his problems gnawing his guts.
Halfway to the gate Alph slipped Ric the gate pass.
"What
about you?" Ric
wondered, keeping his face muffled in the hood.
Alph muttered something about it not
mattering and he was doing this for Mother. Ric wanted to know what he meant by
that but there wasn't time for questions and answers.
The
giant guard at the main gate took Ric's pass, squinted it over carefully, then shot Alph a puckered, suspicious look. He gave his counterpart
at the other end of the gate a significant nod. Ric saw the Number Two guard train a rifle-sized weapon on them.
"What you trying to
pull, skinny?" the guard demanded.
"I am Man's servant," Alph said, with great dignity.
"Bull!"
"Open
up," Ric told him. "This is my servant.
That's what he means. He's not very bright."
The wide face peered
closer. "What is he?"
"He's
an experimental android. We neo-monks can't have human helpers, so we are
starting to make them, to help us in our soul-saving crusade. This one didn't
turn out very well. Sometimes he says the wrong things. He's got a quirk."
"Quirk
or no quirk, he stays," the guard growled stubbornly. "One pass
means one kook, whether he walks, flies, or slides on his belly. Take him, Lars!"
He
flipped the gate open just enough for Ric to get out and jerked a fat thumb for
him to do so.
Ric
vacillated. One more try. The guard with the rifle was moving on Alph.
"But he's my servant! He cost us a lot of credits! You can't—"
"Out!"
Ric shot Alph a wild look; the cowled head
nodded gravely. Ric stayed. Then, behind them, sirens
began screaming and he knew he must make it now or never. No good for both of
them to die. The Doom guards had been discovered.
He was out, whipping along the crowded
thoroughfare as fast as his skirts would permit. What Alph had done he had done
with cold deliberation. Because Candi had created him (or recreated him) Alph
possessed some irrevocable built-in loyalty to her. She had sent him to find out whether or not Ric was innocent, and if he was, to save
him from Doom. Alph had done this, so now it was up to
Ric to make the most of it. Which included making Dr. Krill
pay for his invidious machination.
Stepping
onto a move-ramp that would carry him as far around the perimeter of the city's
core as
possible, Ric thought
grimly: he didn't need Condi's grief to spur him on. His own was quite sufficient.
Port
Mars was a cramped beehive of never-ending activity, under its controlled pocket
of atmosphere. The machine inside his arm was monitored
to an activator somewhere in Dr. Krill's network
of colonies,
probably in the one right
here at Port Mars. This one was important
because here the fungi was
reduced to an essence for
handier shipment. Here,
Alan had said, was where the Great Plan was hatching.
Candi was here, doing her bit, under Dr. Krill's Argus-eyes.
The
robe, Alph had said, would
scramble the connection, so that at least Dr. Krill wouldn't know where
he was. He would, however,
find out that Ric was not dead according to plan. Father had spies everywhere, which would naturally include Central
Prison. Some palm-greasing, no doubt, had gone into that seven-minute doom decree. Dr. Krill wanted Ric dead right now.
And
Candi?
Ric shivered.
Among other things he must get to Candida right away, before Father got ideas about her. It took a
mathematical robo
to add up his enemies at
the moment. The UN Earth-law was after him. Port Mars videos
must be flashing his face to every comer of the city
by now. Dr. Krill had found him useful for the moment; now he was a nuisance.
His own right arm was his
enemy. And maybe Candi's. . . .
Maybe
the scrambler would keep them out. If not,
what was to prevent Dr. Krill from making it reach up and strangle himself? Or put a blast-hole in him?
When
the curving move-way indicated he was as far from the prison as he could get before circling back, he stepped off and was faced with the necessity for a
decision. He was on his way—but where?
To Candi? To Dr. Krill's Port Mars'
outlet?
Sure.
But just exactly where was that? He
couldn't stop a passing cop and say, "I'm
Ric Coltor and I'm looking for the big M-P outlet. I know I'm
wanted and I know M-P is illegal but—"
I'm getting punchy, he told himself. Get
a grip on yourself.
"Pardon me," he said to two lawmen
who brushed impatiently past him, ignoring his holy vestments.
One
glared. Alan bowed and hurried off into a narrow service street. Halfway down
the alley he stopped for a long intake of the blended air. He told his
gurgling stomach, "Down, boy!" Lord, he could use a double-scotch
right now, besides food!
But
he didn't dare seek out even a small bar or cafeteria; they all had newsvids
tuned to the Prison Authority. His face was public property by now.
Anyway,
he was broke. Even his phoney papers had been taken. Wherever he went, it had to be furtively and on foot.
Moving deep into the shadows he was aware, in the silence here
at the outskirts of the city, of a rumbling sound under his feet. The sound of
the big air-mixers and filters, down under the street.
A
place to hide, to rest.
Ric
nagged his mind into a recollection of what he knew about the air
machines. Not much. A prodigious feat of engineering when they were installed,
these machines thrummed automatically, suckling up oxygen from the low canal
areas, and by an ingenious air stream of hurricane velocity, kept it from dissipating;
enormous filters made it possible to use the same air over and over, like in
spacers. The labyrinthine arcades and towers composing the governing and
commercial heart of Port Mars City had a round tube at the center. Called the
Shaft, it reached far up, pushing out mixed air from a million tiny vents in
its head, a never-ending air fountain.
For
security reasons all entrances to the Shaft and the machinery
below were heavily guarded at all times. How to get down there? Ric moved on.
Then he heard a faint sucking hiss from an oblong mound of
metal at the end of the street. There was not much beyond this street and Ric's
straining lungs told him why. He had
reached no-man's-land. Many more steps and he would fall flat
on his face, gasping for
oxygen.
He
moved weakly up the slanted pylon. The sucking sound came from here. A moment's thought and he knew what it was. This was one of the many vents
forming a circle at the city's edges, where old air was sucked in to be
re-treaded.
Ric
blinked at it thoughtfully. v
The
metal bands at the top would be electrified of course. Touching them would set
off alarms in the Shaft. The vents would all be keyed to some giant map for
locating plug-ups.
The trick was not to touch any metal.
The robe! It just might work. Scramble the vid-wave. He shot a back-glance down the long alley.
All was clear. His hope was that the monks-cloth garment would scramble the
trouble-shooter's map to some extent; the vague blur he caused would be taken
for some random phenomenon like a blown hunk of paper.
Ric's
nature was fast-action. He cat-footed up the rough, pegged wall, leaped the
triple bands and landed in the center of the vent. The metal grill here was
some ten feet long, and five wide. The sucking noise was a roar, now. Ric's hem
slapped against the grill and stuck there.
"Here
goes," Ric murmured, pressing the stud on his blast. "Lucky it's not
a straight drop."
It
took but a minute to blast a rough hole around himself,
and before the circle was complete the grill gave way. Down he went.
A
patina of scum made it a fast slick ride. He shot down the forty-five degree
tangent like a bullet. There was nothing to grab onto. He fell and fell.
Now
the roar became a thousand bellowing bulls. Vertigo pushed up dry vomit. For
rubber moments he knew only dismay and regret. What a dumb thing to do!
When
he hit something it loosed every tooth in his head Here
the runnel angled off. The offshoot wore a second dust screen. His fingers
touched fine wire mesh under him, but not for long.
"Got to get out or 111
end up in a mixer!"
Too late. His plummeting weight yanked the mesh loose
in a moment and down he shot. But this tunnel was smaller and the slope less
precipitous.
Panic
clutched his windpipe. The Stygian dark made it hard to think straight. He
strained to sit, half-did.
When
a second jolt came he was ready for it. He jabbed the blast stud around him.
Flame ate the metal. For seconds his butt was hunkered on a thirty-degree
comer. He grabbed the ragged edge and clung. The robe sleeve cushioned his
fingers or they'd have been torn off when the mesh gave way. His right hand,
holding the blast, weaved crazily, but contrived to complete the ragged hole
around himself.
Barbs
of metal tore his back when his improvised door to oblivion gave way.
He dropped.
DC
It
was preposterous to
imagine that he was alive, but he had to be. He hint
so damn bad. His right arm, for instance, with the blaster still gripped in his
fist, seemed to be permanently shattered. His back howled agonies where the
metal had scraped the hell out of it. Where his left hand had clung, the
insides of the fingers were torn open. All this in complete
darkness.
Slowly,
very slowly, the ability to think coherently mounted. There wasn't much his
senses could do about it. He saw nothing, heard nothing. Wait. Half-deafened by the roaring in the wind tunnel, it took a while to
recognize tidbits of sound. There was a far-off thrumming up there, yes. And somewhere else a drip-drip-drip. Now he was unpleasantly
aware that the rocky surface under him was wet and his nostrils weren't happy
about it. He coughed himself to a sit, if only to move a little ways off the
horrible stench.
If
only he'd had the brains to bring a torch of some land, even a cigarette
lighter! Finishing chewing himself out about it, he made a tentative test of
his limbs and torso. The fall must not have been too far or that alone would
have cracked his spine. He was, miraculously, all of a piece. His muscles
shrieked protest at every movement, but they did work. And the numbness of his
right arm was mostly because he'd been lying half on it all this time.
He
crawled dizzily up on his feet and found the rocky wall hoping to follow it and
get the hell out of this malodorous tomb. He retched sometimes, when a waft of
putrescence struck him full in the face. His journey was a mindless one, but
he kept going.
"Sewer,"
he muttered. "I'm somewhere in the damn sewer." His original idea of
a cozy hideout where he could rest up and angle things out had not worked too
well.
Sloughing
through the darkness, his optical nerves strained for cat's eyes, so that he
could tell whether or not he was moving the right way. Maybe he should have
followed the other wall. Suddenly Ric realized he was seeing! Vaguely. The rocky walls took shape and
substance, dimly, bluely. Had he become a cat?
His
hand came away from the rough luminescent wall; it put Ric in mind of
something. Yes. The Polar Cave. Alan had spouted sententiously
that the microscopic lichen which lit up the cavern where Ric had left his arm
were related to the blue-green lichen that patched Mars' surface every summer.
Here
in this man-made tunnel the lichen had begun to brighten the rock as they did
up there. Why here?
Ric
was able to move faster now that he could see that there were no hideous brinks
to fall over. The patches of ethereal blue foxfire became heavier and more
frequent; that too spurred him on, although he wasn't sure why. He wasn't anxious
to lose another arm.
Something
else drew him. Warmth. The robe was woolly, but the
back of it was wet with gagging slime; here among the lichen it was warm, like
the Polar Cave had been. He was moving in the direction of the heat-source.
At first the darting shadows appeared to be
phantoms from out of his plagued mind and starved body. What else, down here in
the sewer? There was no animal life on Mars of any land,
only what the humans had brought with them—which come to think of it did range
from chiggers to spirachaeta.
Unless
you believed in Alph.
"Rats!" Ric
yelled, when the shadows moved closer.
They
were rodents, just what you might expect to find in a sewer. Stowaways
on cargo ships from Earth. But huge.
They'd
been edging in silently for some time, but now one gave a loud squeal for the
benefit of his companions and then scampered boldly into clear view.
Ric
gasped. The rat-leader was fully three feet tall, poised there on his haunches,
giving Ric the once-over with sharp beads for eyes. His foot-long feelers
twitched; two fangs showed whitely, inimically, over his inset lower hp. While
Ric gaped in disbelief, others joined the first rat, until there was a ring of
them shutting off his tunnel, their polished black eyes catching the spectral
blue light.
The
size of them! They appeared to be ordinary house or dock rats. But what could
have spurred such a glandular leap in . . .
What indeed?
Ric
was beginning to figure ft out when the lead-rat squealed out another command
to the others and they started closing in for the loll.
Ric
gulped and upped the blaster; there were far too many of the creatures. He
could never hope to down them all. But he could give them something to think
about.
When they got too close for comfort he thumbed the stud.
Their leader toppled.
The
ring of staring eyes moved back. A low gibbering set up among them, after a
horrified moment. Ric got the weird idea that they were talking among
themselves. And not in the normal low-level animal fashion.
There was cerebral
thought going
on. In a crazy way Ric guessed what they were saying, in their squeaky
whispers.
Shall we try it? The monster is only one and we are many.
But he has a fire-thing. He killed our leader.
I'm for trying!
Many will die.
So what? If we don't kill
him the monster will find our city and destroy us all. That is the way of
monsters. Let us retreat and take council.
Ric
watched them file back into the tunnel in orderly fashion; he leaned against
the lichened wall, puffing wonderment and dismay. There were so many of them,
and if they were as intelligent as they seemed, they'd find a way of blocking
off his retreat, too. A concerted rush and he would end up a heap of gnawed bones.
Curiosity drew him over to
the dead leader.
Ric
had encountered all manner of creatures, in his space piloting. Earth rats, included. This was a gray wharf rat, from his whiskers and ears to his long dwindling
furless tail. But the size of himl In the ordinary
way, the open environment of Mars
killed Terran life, even plant life, and that which managed to survive was
invariably stunted in growth, not larger. Fresh edibles were raised in hydro
tanks or carefully Earth-simulated nurseries.
Blinking
down, Ric glimpsed something hanging from the big rat's furry neck—something
metallic. Holding his breath against the charred-flesh odor, he bent for a
look. The shiny thing was a coin, an Earth coin with the picture of a UN
President on it. It was fastened around his neck by a plastic thong.
His
badge of leadership.
"Well, 111 be-"
Whistling,
he nipped it off, string and all. That the coin had a human picture on it gave
him a sudden flash of hope.
If
the minds of these creatures had evolved as well as their bodies, then they
must think of humans, with their enormous city and great noisy burrowing
machines, as some kind of gods.
Assumed omnipotence seemed his only chance.
He
moved on into the tunnel where they'd disappeared, swinging the bright coin and
whistling.
After
a while the walls became smooth; thousands of little claws and teeth and
perhaps crude tools, too, had turned the ferrous rock opening into a sleek,
rust-red half-moon. The floor of the tunnel was free of debris.
He
didn't see them, but furtive squeakings in the occasional black offshoot
tunnels told him they were there, happier in the total dark.
Ric
moved on. The tunnel widened and then abruptly became a huge chamber. He
gasped to see a well-organized network of paths like streets in the cave city;
along this patterned lacework of engineering were holes at spaced intervals,
homes. Even the lichen had been cultivated to grow where they wanted it.
It
grew very bright at the far end of the
chamber, in an arch around something like an icon, bathing it in a great splash
of cold blue light.
There
was unseen movement around him; scamperings and gibbering talk. When he pulled
his eyes away from the image in the grotto shrine he saw that they were all
around him. Thousands. Their eyes made a half-circle
of little blue lamps. There was respect in their breathless silence, watching
him as he stood there lazily twirling the bright coin on its string.
A
sharp fear cut through him when he realized that escape was now impossible.
This was their city and that grotto was their church. Behind it was solid wall.
He
moved slowly toward it because there was nowhere else to go. The rodents had
him cut off from the tunnel. There were three rises from the floor to the
grotto; Ric moved to the top, then whirled and made a sweep with his blaster.
"Now what am I
supposed to do?" he asked, aloud.
The
rat-city buzzed with their chitterings. The blaster was a heavy weight in his
fist. He almost wished they would rush him and get it over with; he was beat,
bone-tired, sick with lack of food and water.
He
waited there in front of the illuminated grotto, hands holding up the blaster
and the coin.
The
cluttering stopped; then the multitude flopped down in united genuflection. Ric
whistled, guessing the coin to be a talisman to them. A
sacred, magic thing. Well, he grinned, it was kind of magic on Earth,
too.
He
turned for a look at the image in the grotto; it was carved out of red mud and
sticks and fashioned to resemble a man. No, not exactly. It was tall and skinny
and the fingers were double the length of a human hand's. Ric was reminded of
something but there wasn't time to dwell on what.
He
shot a glance at his worshippers; they were still on their faces, so he turned
his attention back to the grotto. Behind the figure were fissures in the
untooled rock; from these cracks dripped a nasty-smelling liquid. Behind the
elongated icon was a sluggish pool of it that made him gag.
This,
like sacred Lourdes on Earth, had great importance to the rat populace. Why?
The sour pungent odor was tantalizingly familiar. His mind flashed back to
Cilead, then to Rolff and his hypo of synthesized fungi.
Yes.
That was it. This seepage was the drain-off
of fungi residue, wastes from the laboratories that produced the M-P essence. Which meant that he was right below Dr. Krill's Port Mars M-P
outlet!
There would naturally be waste-products of the
fungi to be disposed of, and such was the power of it even in waste form that
it had randomly evolved a race of super-rats down here in the sewers. And of
course they worshipped the source of their new power. . . .
Behind that grotto wall, and up, was the
essence-producing lab. And Candi.
The super-rats lifted to watch when he went
to work on the fissured wall with his blaster. They watched gravely for a time,
then they began to help. As the blast-flame sheered
off rock and rubbled it at Ric's feet they dragged it out of the way on torn
sheets of fabric. Ric angled the hole upwards until finally he struck basement
floor.
He prayed the fuel would hold out until the
hole in the dense artificial rock was big enough for him to crawl through, and
that whatever waste disposal area he found himself in would be unoccupied
presently.
Luck held.
He
lifted himself and scrambled through. It was pitch dark, so that only the
nauseating pungency of the fungi lab wastes revealed the presence of some
manner of disposal units. Leaky ones, it seemed.
Ric
tossed back the talisman-coin to his little gray helpers, who by the sound were
already engaged in refilling the hole he had made. The coin was for their new
leader. A survival syndrome told them they must make their city a secret,
again. Other gods than their visitor of today might not be so benevolent. . .
.
By
groping, Ric found a door; he moved out into a well-stocked storage room which
was diffusely lighted between the orderly stacks. He held his breath, listening
for activity. Silence. Whipping his ragged robe skirts
around him, he darted from tier to tier until he found an open freight
elevator.
He glanced at the controls. There were twelve
burtons, twelve floors. The lower ones, Ric decided, would be busiest, and Level
Twelve was probably the land-roof for local air traffic.
He thumbed Eleven.
The
hall he moved out on was empty. The walls, he noted wryly, were that same
pea-green color he knew so well by now. Off to one side was a neat clutch of
inert robos, movers, but nothing human. Moving down the antiseptic halls Ric
determined this must be living quarters, and not for the hoi polloi. Top-level quarters for top-level lab workers.
He
hesitated at several doors he passed by, wondering which one, if any, might be
Candi's. The last time he stopped, hand poised to open the door and find out, a
tall figure whipped on him from behind. Ric restrained a yell that would only
bring more, as the grabbing arms pinned him and relieved him of his blaster.
He was hiked up on a bony shoulder and hauled away down the hall.
X
It
happened fast
and in silence. A door was opened and Ric was hauled through an
anteroom and into a small inner room that was green tiled and tidy and appeared
to be part dressing room and part bathroom. He was dumped on a padded bench and
left there. He didn't get so much as a glance at his captor's face; there was a
flash of fish-scale tunic, then the door clicked shut behind him.
Ric
was trying the door and getting nowhere with it when something in the milieu
struck him with a thrilling force. Perfume! Perfume he knew.
"Candi!" he cried
softly.
The door opened and there she was; her pale
flame of hair was tumbling over her shoulders and she was still fussing with
the catches on her silver-green tunic. Her green eyes were heavy with sleep,
but leaped when they saw his face. "You're hurt!"
He only stared at her beauty for a moment.
Then: "What in the hell is going on?" he demanded.
"Take it slow, darling, while I get you out of that rag and put something on those cuts."
She found him a nubby wraparound that wasn't
too feminine and he slipped it on while she fetched medicines from the bath
part of the room.
"Who
was that ape with the bony shoulders who dragged me in
here?" Ric asked, while she went to work on his lacerations.
"Alph, of
course."
"Alph! He's dead!"
"You
mean at the prison? Uh-uh. He told me all about ft after I got his body back
from them. They tried to kill him, Lord knows. He looked dead enough when I fetched him, so they made no fuss. Being part android has its
advantages. What happened to you, after?"
Ric
told her, succinctly. "Now, you give me a few answers. What about
Alph?"
She finished dusting antibois on him; he
stopped wincing and dragged the white bathrobe back over his wide shoulders. "As
you know, Alph is loyal to me. I recreated him and somehow that makes him
mine, in spite of Dr. Krill. We've been hoping somehow you would find your way
here. Tonight Alph probed you in the building and in the hall. He's got
superhuman mental powers, limited but helpful. He didn't speak in the hall
because—"
"I know. The walls are bugged. Father
hears all."
Candi
nodded. "I have certain privileges, because in spite of the power M-P
gives him he still needs my help. Using techniques I learned from Alan I
brought Alph back. That's the first step in the final stage of his Great
Plan." "Which is-?"
"Let
me tell it," Candi begged. "As I said, he still needs me. For how
long I'm not sure. I insisted that my apartment be debugged and Alph helped me
remove the scanners. I guess Dr. Krill feels that there's no reason to keep me
monitored here. The only ones who ever come in my room are Alph and the
cleaner-upper, a user. I put it to feminine whim."
"So we're safe from
detection here."
She nodded. "And only
here!"
"What about Alph? Is
he really a Martian?"
"Yes.
The mobile part of him is a cybernetic husk; that's why I was able to give him a new one after I rescued him this morning."
"Fast
work!"
"We've
got rooms full of bodies, just waiting. I had to work fast. I need Alph. He's all I've got."
Ric
saw the shadow of utter weariness behind her eyes; she had suffered and worked
and waited hopefully. He put his arms around her tightly. She clung. There was a faint tap at the door.
Ric stiffened.
"Don't
worry. It's Alph. I sent him for food. Breakfast for me.
I often eat alone here in my rooms. This morning I'm ferociously hungry."
Alph stalked in with a plast-tray, loaded down with food and coffee. Ric licked
his lips.
"Go ahead. Eat." Alph added
helpfully, "On the way to the cafeteria I checked for signs that your
presence here was noted. It was not. We are fortunate. I don't understand how
you got in."
While he went to work on
the food Ric relieved Alph's curiosity. "I got in the only way Krill
didn't expect—from below."
His ravenous hunger sated, Ric suddenly remembered
the bug in his arm. I’ve taken off the robe! The scrambler isn't working!"
Worried, Alph took hold of the contrary arm.
His long fingers poked. "Ah. Again we are lucky. Your fall into the sewer
has jarred loose some of the delicate wiring."
"Get rid of it, once
and for all," Candi said.
From
a concealed drawer she lifted out a box which contained surgical tools and
chemicals filched from her lab. "I knew these would come in handy. Hold
still while I freeze your arm and take out the wicked thing."
Ten
minutes later her forceps nipped out the miniscule demon and Candi tossed it in
the toilet angrily. Ric sighed to see it gurgle away, the gun that had killed
Alan.
"Now
you have a good long sleep," Candi told him. "I have to get down to
the lab before Father sends somebody up here."
"Krill is here
"Yes.
So I was told, anyway. You never quite know. His special apostles are called
Flames. They are officers and wear bright orange flames on the backs of their
uniforms. They do the directing and organizing. They're conditioned to take
drastic action when necessary and are suicidally fanatical."
"Brass."
"Don't
ever underestimate the Flames," Candi warned. "They are handpicked
for intelligence and dedication. They wear light uniforms."
"Meaning?"
"Pale green, like mine. Father loves green. The top echelon and lab
scientists wear pale green, the workers, darker green. The color of the uniform
deepens as you go down the social scale. The robo haulers and cleaners wear uniforms
that are nearly black."
"Jolly,"
Ric said. "Efficient. Everybody carefully color-coded. Regimented, like
ants."
Candi
nodded. Her face clouded. "I've tried to puzzle it out but I'm afraid I
haven't gotten far. The M-P 'slavery' looks simple, but there's more to it than
meets the eye. I've been kept frightfully busy since I got here. The walls have
ears. There is always a user assistant close at my elbow. Now that I've done my
job of reviving Alph ..
."
Ric
felt a cold hand squeeze his insides. Taking Alan as an example, Dr. Krill had
a way of disposing of people who had served their purpose and were a potential
danger to him.
He
looked at Alph. Alph was standing in the shadow, immobile, respectful, his
deep-sunk eyes yearning toward Candida.
"Alph's your
baby," Ric said.
Candi
blushed, then laughed. "I'm his mother, in a way,
yes. By the methods I learned from Alan I brought Alph back. His organic vitals
were provided and I took it from there." She glanced at her wrist
chronometer. "But, I've got to go! See you this evening. Get some
sleep!"
Ric
stopped her for one more question. "Where did Alph's vitals come
from?"
"Can't you guess? A sealed casket. From the ice caves!"
"Then he is a Martiani"
"Of
course."
It
was a luxury to bathe and shave, using one of the surgical scalpels for a
razor. Ric piled up cushions on the long bench and stretched out luxuriously;
his contented sigh turned into a yawn. He was not to use Candi's bed because
any small noise would alert the bugs in the walls of his presence. Here in this
cubicle he was safe.
Blissful oblivion came. He snored away until
his sleep was interrupted by a
low tap on the door. He leaped awake. The door opened softly. It was Alph.
"I
brought you a vessel of coffee, and sandwiches," the Martian said. He
dropped down a dark green bundle from under his arm-crook.
"What's that?"
Ric asked.
"Uniform. You can't stay here indefinitely. Mother is
working something out for you." Ric yawned. "What time is it?"
"Just past midday meal. Mother thought it best not to come. She
usually doesn't return here until evening. You can sleep some more."
Ric began wolfing
sandwiches. "Sit down, Alph."
Alph obeyed promptly.
"But I must not be gone long."
As
his long legs folded up mantis-like when he sat Ric thought he looked more
alien than before. The cowled robe had concealed his odd build. Ric was
reminded of old wood carvings of Don Quixote. That long saturnine face was an
enigma, those eyes caves with bright jade fire behind them.
"Tell me about
you," Ric suggested.
Alph
made a sound like a sigh. "What can I say? My present life began on that laboratory
table when I looked up and saw Mother."
"But you lived
before?"
"Yes.
A long time ago. The memories are blurred and dim. Shadows. Something in my mind pushes them away when I try to
remember that other life. Perhaps it will all clear
when the time comes."
"What time is
that?"
Alph
seemed puzzled. "I don't know. When we have all been awakened, I
suppose." The planes of his face twisted. "I keep trying to work
things out. I assume certain things to be true—by deduction."
Ric waited.
"I
think that a long time ago
here on this planet we lived an intelligent industrious life. Then something
happened to us. Something terrible. My mind doesn't
want to remember what. But among us were wise savants who did not want us to
perish. They "conceived a plan. They sealed up each individual's vitals
in caskets of alloy that would resist even time. There in the northern ice
caves we were to wait until someday—somehow—we would be awakened."
Ric
tossed the residue of his lunch in the disposer. "Alan started things off
when he found the fungi. How about that? Maybe the fungi was put there so that—"
He
broke off. A chill snaked up his spine. What about Alph's race? What part did
Dr. Morton Krill actually play in the drama of this race of sleeping beauties?
What was the secret? Could it be that Krill was only a tool?
XI
Ric was
green-uniformed and filled
with impatience when Candi finally made her appearance, followed by Alph carrying
her dinner tray, double-loaded for Ric's benefit.
"About
time," Ric grumbled, kissing her, rubbing his cleanshaven cheek on hers.
"I
told you we work long hours." She looked him up and down. "My, you do
have that muscle-bound look. You'll do."
"Do for what?" He
leered hopefully.
"For one of the new batch. They're flying in fifty users tonight,
midnight, to help push the work ahead. I wanted to work you out as a new
assistant for my own lab, but you'd be sure to make a boo-boo sooner or later
and there are so many more of the greenbacks you will be nicely lost in the
shuffle."
"Greenbacks?" "Menials."
"I get it," Ric grinned wryly. "Muscles and no brains."
Candi
kissed his ear. "Exactly. And no need to make
idle conversation, perhaps give yourself away."
"Maybe
as a dumb user I can find out what Father is really up to." Ric plunked
down across from Candi, while she served up their dinner.
"This
will be our last chance to talk," she said glumly, while they ate.
"Make the most of it."
"I've
done some thinking about M-P," he stated. "Whatever evil's there, it
has a good side. Think how wonderful Hfe could be if we were
all in perfect health and lives were not snuffed out at the height of their
creative power."
"Amen.
On the other hand, it could be sugar-coated slavery. A welfare
state to the nth degree. You get more work out of healthy slaves."
"Ever thought of trying it?"
Candi
shuddered. "I don't much like the syndrome that makes Dr. Krill a new
messiah."
Ric
frowned at his forkful. "Maybe it's not M-P at all. Maybe that part of it's some additive Krill put in."
"What could that be?"
Ric
shrugged. He looked down at his green-clad legs. "I'm sick of green
already."
"How do you think I feel?"
Ric kissed her. "Like a bunny in lettuce
patch."
He
glowered at his skintight uniform in the mirror. "Hey! We forgot that my
face is wanted. I'm an escapee from the Doom Room!"
"I
didn't." Candi nodded at Alph, who produced a box of stuffs from the lab.
"This plast-putty will do nicely to change your appearance."
"What is it?" Ric grimaced.
"Something
like what they use in the theater for long-run
productions. Synthetic flesh, actually. It's so live' it gets to be part of
you. I could have grown flesh as Alan did for your arm but that would have been
permanent and I like you better just as you are."
"Thanks."
Ric
tried not to squirm while she applied the guck. His spacer's life had not
included much by way of the theater, nor did it occur to him to wonder why
women were always pretty. He eyed his widened jawline, sunk-in eyes, accentuated
ears, with displeasure.
"I look like an
ape," he grumbled.
"Good.
The main thing is to act like a user. Work your head off and genuflect a little
when anybody says Father. And for heaven's sake—"
"I
know. Smile."
Candi
wasn't satisfied with his brave efforts to produce that inner ferver of a user.
She gave him a pillbox. "Take three each day. They act on the thalamus,
like the old pep-drugs."
Life in the colony was easier to fall into
than Ric could have hoped. Nobody paid him much attention. Everybody had his or
her hard-driven job. There wasn't much time for idle speculation about
anything.
Everyone
smiled. Everyone was cheerful and happy at his work. The Flames in charge of
Ric's work-gang were condescending but courteous. There was no need for whips.
But there were signs:
"Keep
active! Be alert! Work!"
Some
of them went into detail. "Each of us is important to the Great Plan.
Father is watching each of us. He sorrows when we do not do our best every
hour of every day."
The
idea that Dr. Krill's very eyes were on each spurred them on. They reveled in
his good will. In the work places scanners were hardly necessary. As he climbed
into his bunk-bed in the dormitory at night Ric wondered about the spectral
glow users acquired. Wondered until he found that most
menials were new to M-P; only long-time users wore that giveaway glow.
Lying
there after twelve grueling hours of loading
robos and hauling delicate things the machines couldn't, Ric worried constantly
about Candi. Worried and waited.
A
week passed. Two. When fellow greenbacks tried to drag
him into conversation in the
cafeteria he smiled and made likely remarks about Father.
That his job was physically exhausting was good. Time fled.
His
name was Carson Wills, his card
said. He was miner from one of the colonized asteroids. Life there had
been bleak and grim; years
of inhaling the pumice-like mineral had eaten
out his lungs. Here on Mars the fungi was administered in capsule
form, luckily, so he was
able to fake
taking the daily doses. He became expert at palming the gel capsules.
The
big push was on; he felt it in the aura that surrounded the colony, in the increased pep-talks each morning before breakfast. It was as if
they were ants,
running around the rim of a volcano getting ready to blow its top.
Ric
yearned for action, but the only thing he could do, besides smiling and keeping
his ears open, was to learn the layout of the colony. Where all
the elevators were. Where the scanners
kept check. Where the Flames hung out and how to avoid
them.
In spite
of his annoyance with the users and their wild devotion to Dr. Krill, daily
association with them, hearing their miraculous stories, engendered a growing
empathy. He thought about that rock shrine back at Gilead anc! the carved figure that was supposed to be Dr. Krill. How
logical for simple humans to worship something that gave them something—that didn't prate on endlessly about a glorious
never-never land after death.
Ric spent sleepless nights
thinking and wondering. . . .
It began routinely. After the night meal Ric
and two other greenbacks were picked by a prowling Flame for a special job
unloading a cargo from a ship that had just landed on the roof.
They
hurried out of the elevator toward the freight-lift, where sky cargo was
decanted. Greenbacks were not permitted on the landing roof itself. Ric ached
for a look. Camouflage like that at Gilead was unnecessary here at Port Mars.
Local payoffs helped Dr. Krill get by with plenty. And as Port Mars was a way
station for colonial exports and imports, the space-port cargo vessels were
humming in and out at all hours, Dr. Krill could even get by with this great block of activity under the very noses
of the Interplanetary Law.
The
ship's crew was grumbling. Down below Ric and the other two waited for the ship
to descend with its first load
Ric's
trained ears caught the last gasps of the
ship's motors as it taxied next to the raised unloading dock above his head He
restrained a whistle of surprise. This was not a transport vessel from the Port proper. It was not a space craft that sneaked in, ignoring the Port Authority. It was a big job, though.
Also, there was something odd about the crew.
There were only three, from the sounds of their badinage. A few clipped orders
from the captain. Monosyllabic responses. Then a
strange silence. . . .
Ric
pegged the ship as a large planetary craft, like the one Alan had chartered for
their polar trip. There weren't many of these middle-sized ships on Mars;
decades ago Mars had been put down as not worth exploring; resource-wise it was
a desert. Even the eager archaeologists had given up the hope of finding traces
of a dead civilization.
There was only one place
this ship could come from.
The
Polar Caves.
To get his hooks on the
controls of that ship! God!
"Where are the ice-chests?" a voice cracked the wall of silence. "Where is your cargo?"
A depth, an inherent sense of dramatic
intensity in the voice put Ric's neck-hairs up on end. He knew this voice. Its
deep timbre, its benevolence turned to steel.
'Where are they?" Father's voice thundered. "Speak up!"
There
was a submissive rejoinder which Ric couldn't hear, it was so low.
"Speak up, man!
Now a tough clipped voice, probably the
captain's, went into a half-apologetic half-defensive burst of rhetoric. Ric
strained, but he caught only scraps. There was something about getting
everything all lined up and then at the last moment He wouldn't permit them to load the ice-chests. The He was spoken with awe. Another voice chimed in corroboration, and, when
queried, a third. Dr. Krill didn't say much but what he did held in it titanic
rage. This first shipment of ice-chests was vital. Everything else was all
ready. He would hear from Dr. Krill, and soon. How
dared Rllyeth—?
R'llyeth. Spoken in one spiraled syllable. Someone non-human.
Somehow monumentally important.. .
In
that alien name was the answer to everything. To the fungi.
To Dr. Krill's power over people. Everything.
Up there less than fifty yards away was a ship that could take Ric to the
Cave—to the source of Father's world-shaking secret. . . .
"What do we do
now?" the pilot was asking.
"Go back! Wait! I will
be there to deal with Rllyeth!"
"But-"
The low complaint made Ric
grin from its familiarity. The long pull from the Cave, this time of night, had
left the short-crew tired, hungry. A brief rest, please? A
bite?
"All right, but make
it fast."
"Can we get something
here?"
"No.
The comer elevator will take you to the street. One of the all-night warehouse cafés will do it. Be back in twenty minutes!"
He rapped out something to a silent attendant,
A
Flame's head showed when he flashed a light down on them.
"Dismissed!" he snapped, his voice echoing down the hold. "Go to
bed!"
Ric lay, every nerve-ending sizzling, while
the other two greenbacks crawled into their respective bunks, whispering in awe
about having actually heard and almost seen Father. But not
for long. It would annoy Father. Dormitory time was sleep time, the
signs said.
Ric's
five-minute wait was sheer agony; he begrudged every second of it. Twenty minutes. That's all the time he had had Now it was fifteen....
He
slipped down to the bare floor. Should he be challenged by a Flame on his
rounds he hadn't had time to undress and this was a lavatory call. He didn't
stop at the lav; he hotfooted past and into the main corridor.
It was now he congratulated himself for
having fixed the layout of hallways in his mind including just where the spiral
stairway was—the one the Techs used when checking the robo controls.
His
mind screamed to push back time. If only there wasn't Candi to worry about, but he didn't dare leave her.
The least hint of sabotage and she would be the first to get it in her pretty
little neck. She had served her purpose: mothered Alph.
His first rap on her door opened it so fast
he gulped. Candi was not only there, but she was fully
dressed. Ric pulled her out and down the hall in one flying scoop.
"You!" Candi cried.
"Who were you
expecting?"
"Ric,
they took Alph! Yesterday! I've been frantic. He was the only possible link
between you and—"
"Never
mind all that just now," Ric gritted. "I'm sorry about Alph but we've
got places to go and less than no time to get going."
"Where?"
They
were in the up-lift and Ric's thumb was pressing Level Twelve. Ric told her
briefly, very briefly.
He
pulled Candi with him into the cavernous sky-drop hold and looked up. The
opening was locked up tight over their heads.
"Must be a way
up," he grated.
"From
Dr. Krill's private floor," Candi wailed. "He has all of Level Ten to
himself."
Ric
shut his eyes to think. Where would the spiral stairs be? He prowled the
corner, sniffing
like a hound. The crack was
almost invisible but he found it From his earlier
casings and observation of between-floors troubleshooting he pegged the
slide-back opening.
The
minute stairs corkscrewed up darkly. At their top Ric gripped Candi's arm for
silence. There'll be a guard left at the ship."
Under
a bright canopy of flinty stars they slunk toward the pointed spear. Ric shoved
Candi behind him, darting into the crisp-cut shadow of a giant tailfin. Around
the far side, a cigarette glowed. In the ache of night silence they heard the
kind of tuneless whistling that goes with a lonely watch.
Luck. One
guard only. The
lowest rank, naturally. He'd get a cold sandwich and a cup of joe when the others returned. Any minute
now. Ric thanked what he used to curse—that the allotted twenty minutes
was stretching past thirty. It was only human that the gone two would have a
drink with their food.
Candi
handed him his blaster, which she had pocketed for her try at finding Alph. It's metallic coldness felt good in Ric's fist. It was still
empty, but the guard had no way of knowing that. Ric leaped from the shadow.
Its muzzle rammed into the youngster's midback.
"Quiet, punk!"
Surprise
produced a boyish curse; the uniformed youngster dipped for his holstered
weapon. Ric brought the empty blaster down on his head, medium-hard. He
dropped.
Candi
helped him hike the young guard up into the gloomy bowels of the ship's hold
which, except for piles of foamy padding materials, was empty. Ric plugged the
lad's mouth with a wad of the styrofoam and dragged
him back out of sight.
"I hear them coming!" Candi gasped.
Ric
pushed Candi behind the padding pile and had just enough time to appropriate
the unconscious guard's coat when the voices outside approached and moved to
the oval hold-mouth. A torch glanced their way casually. It caught the brass
buttons on Ric's purloined coat. His arm's hid his face.
"Hey,
stupid!" the voice said, thickened by a couple of drinks. From their jets
of conversation Ric was aware that the pilot and co-pilot had little regard for
Number Three.
"Lemme sleep," he whined.
"Get out of there! We're blasting
off!"
Ric's
finger tensed on the stud of the guard's blast Tm tired," he complained,
raising his voice an octave.
"Damn it, Belasco, get your tail
out—"
"Let
him crap out" the pilot said. "Who needs the jerk?" The hold
door thudded shut.
Ric
breathed deep. In the darkness Candi's hand held his arm tight. He squeezed her
hand, then went about cushioning them both into a
nest for the blast-off.
Minutes
later it came. His arms held Candi when the rockets sang.
xn
It
was so pleasant, snuggled
together in their nest of plastic foam that Candi had to finally push him back.
"Let
me get that guck off your face," she said. "It's like rubbing noses
with a clothes dummy."
Ric
reached down to the wall-torch and snapped it on. Candi went to work on his
facial camouflage and Ric ouched. "Take it easy I Some
of that's me!"
She
finished up the job with water from the canteen Ric found in a wall compartment
along with the usual hand tools. As an added fillip her starflower-scented
handkerchief caressed his stinging skin.
"Umm," Ric said.
"Now can I have that kiss?"
In
the middle of it the junior crewman stirred and made muffled sounds. Ric found
some rope among the packing material and made a good job of trussing him up. "Now. So long as one of the pilots doesn't take a notion to come back here, we're all set."
"I
like your confidence," Candi murmured. "But just exactly what are we
set for? Where are we headed, for instance?"
Ric
told her about the missing casket shipment and Dr. Krill's temper-tantrum.
"R'llyeth."
Her voice shivered a little when she spoke the alien name. "One
of the Martians?"
"Seems
logical."
"But Alph's the only
one brought back!"
"So
we thought. With you the Number One waker-upper. But
R'llyeth sounds vastly important, somehow. He's not just one of the boys."
Candi
sighed helplessly. "I guess well find out—soon enough."
"Besides
worrying about you," Ric said, I’ve been mulling over the idea of Krill
adding something to the fungi to give him psychological control over users.
What he's got is more than gratitude. Gratitude has a habit of wearing off all
too fast. The users are groveling fanatics and the more they use M-P the worse
they get Reminds me of—" Somewhere in the recesses of his unconscious a
tantalizing spark of an idea glowed. It tottered on the edge of recognition, then tumbled back.
His
baffled musing was shattered when Candi cried, "The boy's getting
loose!"
Ric
swore and made a grab for the young guard, who was flopping his way
energetically toward the cabin door. "Take it easy, boy. You're not going
anyplace." He hauled him back and removed the gag. “Now,
how about some information?"
Belasco only tightened his
mouth.
"You've
had your little nap," Ric prompted. "I want to know all you can tell
us about the Cave—now." His blaster emphasized the request.
A
whimpered sigh, men: "W-what'd you want from me? I'm only a cargo-hustler."
In the lighter flare his youthful wide-apart eyes radiated bitterness.
"That hashmark on my skivvies don't mean nothing!"
This,
then, was Ric's cue. The boy had been recruited up here with wild promises of
wealth, excitement, adventure. What he'd got was sloughing work and
second-bests of everything. A healthy if uneducated animal, he didn't need or
get M-P; Ric guessed Dr. Krill was choosey, that his congregation of devotees
formed a pattern. Go-betweens such as pilots and crewmen were best free of M-P,
lest they unconsciously reveal themselves, outside.
"He's
just a boy, Ric. Don't!" Candi's reaction
to Ric's
hard tone was just right.
When he lifted up his arm to slap the beardless cheek she pushed him away in
protest "Why, you can't be more than eighteen!"
"Nearly nineteen." He blinked up at Candi and her smile of
genuine sympathy got him. Ric knew it would. "I—111 tell you anything I
can, but I don't know much. Honest."
Ric
took over. "A rundown on the operation. Keep it
short How many men? What goes on? And what's the procedure when we land?"
"Mostly
it's guards, sir. The whole area's
patrolled all the time. The gun towers are all camouflaged,
real good. There's about
fifty of us, sir. Picked because we're crack shots.
Then there're the pilots. We live in barracks, but they got better quarters. I didn't know it was going
to be so cold and there's nothing to do. I get so—"
"Sure. I know. What goes
on down
below?"
"Down the big elevator? Gee, I don't know. I help haul stuff
down, and I helped build the shaft But they don't tell me nothing!"
"Any guesses?"
"All
I know is the big elevator and the robo tunnel. I was told like the others not to wander into any
off-caves or try to open
that door at the bottom of the shaft.
Couple guys
got nosey. They disappeared."
"Ever hear of
Rllyeth?"
"I heard what Captain Andrews said. All
I know is once when
he was land of loaded I heard him tell Pete, the copilot, that someday he was going to have it
out with the so-and-so mechanical monster down at the bottom of the shaft Do
you suppose they did build one down there? We hauled enough equipment and junk
down there to build ten hundred!"
"What about the ice
chests?"
"Dunno. Only the officers are permitted
beyond the door off the big drop. I figure they're mining some precious mineral
and don't want the word to get around." He sat up, drawing his eyebrows
into a pucker of bewilderment. "Hey, if Rllyeth is a machine, how come he
won't let them take the chests?"
Ric
mulled this over; Candi chatted idly with her new conquest. His name was
Belasco Vorpis; he was originally from one of the Slavic countries of
mid-Europe. He spoke English but he couldn't read or write well. He just didn't
take to book-learning; so when the chance came for outworld adventure he
grabbed it. He was good at doing what he was told and he kept his mouth shut.
He was proud of the gold-braid on his uniform. Dr. Krill's Polar contingent
seemed to be made up of restless youths like Belasco, or by scoundrels. The
gunpost guards were criminal types, dead shots, and happy to oblige.
"Are
you with some other mining outfit?" Belasco wondered, reasonably.
"No.
We think something bad is brewing up here. We want to find out what and if
possible, do something about it. Will you help us?"
Belasco
frowned, considering this. "Why? I mean,
why should I? We get fancy uniforms to wear and I was told later 111 be a big wheel."
"That's
all part of the bait," Ric informed him. "You're useful now, but
you'll get tossed in the disposal when they get the flags hoisted. Look at how
the pilots treat you. Like a dog."
Belasco considered this for a long moment.
"Could you untie my hands now? They're awful tight."
Ric grinned and obliged and then Candi
massaged Belasco's wrists to bring back the circulation. Ric gave him back his
uniform jacket with the braid-bait. "It's too tight, anyway. But I must
say that Dr. Krill is quite a psychologist. Using such
well-tailored fancy uniforms. It's sucked them in since Hitler and
before, when—"
The
changed whine of the fission generators and a sudden gut-grabbing plummet
before the anti-gravs caught sliced off his musings.
"We're
landing!" Candi's whisper was tight with sudden fear.
"It'll be a while. Relax. Now,
Belasco—comrade—tell us the best way to get to that elevator." "You
want to go down there?"
"You bet. We've got a
date with Rllyeth."
When
the cargo hold door opened Belasco scrambled down without waiting for the
ladder. From their hide-nest among the plastic foam Ric and Candi felt a
penetrating blast of icy air before the auto-lock slapped the door back in
place. He squeezed Candi's cold hand while, rumbling, rolling, the craft was
taxied into the hangar Belasco had told them about, half-constructed,
half-cave. There would have to be heat, lest the delicate instruments and
machinery freeze solid. Ric marked time by following the ground-crew through
the mechanics of their familiar servicing ritual. There was the off-chance they
might make a prowl through the ship's hold in the direction of the engines but
it was still sleep-time and most likely the routine would be kept as sketchy as
the Law allowed. Captain Andrews represented the Law, since this was his ship,
and from the little he knew about the pilot, Ric figured Andrews for a hot
bath, a long snort, and the sack. And to hell with the condition
of his ship.
Still, it was best not to rush things.
After the long silent wait Ric lit up two
cigarettes and handed Candi
one. They smoked; Candi closed her eyes. "Tired?" "I'm
praying." "Say one for me."
When he at last prowled to the hatch and found it unlocked from
outside, Ric murmured "Good boy." Belasco had managed to keep the hatch door
from getting sealed up with the others. Also he had headed straight for the
barracks and chow, before flaking out. Everything normal.
The
hangar was far from warm. Silent. Dusky,
with only minimum light softening the night loneliness of the cavern, etching
the contours of three ships lying like great slumbering whales. Ric
moved to the great twin-doors and put his eyes to the round peephole he found Nothing out there but howling whiteness under blackness,
with a faint uncertain twinkle of yellow light that must be a careless barracks
window.
He pulled the shivering Candi toward the rear, which was black blasted
rock, toward a small comer door. This door, Belasco had told them, led to the
robo-mover and the track led to the down-dropi
' "Strange
they don't have any guards," Candi whispered.
"But
you know Father," Ric nodded, feeling a cold chill splash his nerve
centers. "His eyes are everywhere."
It was too easy.
The
door was locked, probably time-locked. "I don't hice to do this but—" Ric pointed his blaster at the magnetic catch and
let fly white fire.
The
door snapped open but not without raising a fuss about it; the whole hangar was
suddenly a pandemonium of screaming sound. The clutch of guards that moved on
them seemed to have sprung up out of the ground. Bursting through the door and
down the neat long stretch of man-made cave beyond, Ric pulled Candi along, and
somehow had time to think that these big uniformed hulks had probably been
shooting craps or something in one of the nearby outscoops.
Shock
and surprise were on their side. Such a diversion in the guards' bleak Polar
routine—especially a beautiful girl—was practically impossible. Not inside this
ring of dedicated killers.
"How—much—further?" Candi pleaded, choking down wind-tears.
"Not
far," Ric panted. "The robo hauler and the track are at the end of— There! See!"
Ric
scooped Candi up and plunked her down into the cab of the vehicle, leaping in after,
while irate voices boiled up out of the corridor they had left. Blasters egged
them on.
"Same
land as the robos at the Port, thank God. I only hope the track is
activated!"
He
snapped switches and a high-pitched whine said yes. A gentle cough and the robo went to work, becoming what it was built to
be, a fast-traveling hauler, informally—Snake.
Candi's
cry was lost in the hurricane wind produced by their abrupt lunge downtrack.
"Do you know where
we're going?" Candi wailed.
"What
Belasco called The Big Drop, undoubtedly. That's
obviously the important deal around here. Just where we want
to go." He mused in a mutter, "My worry is they'll snap off
the power."
Their
frictionless ride a hairbreadth over the electronic track carried them through
a series of dim-lit caves; a bust-out leveled the Snake onto a straight
terminal length of track in a brighter, wider chamber. At the switchback end of
this terminus was a blank steel wall. And in front of this wall, forming a
determined phalanx, were guards—uniformed in near-black, mean-looking, and with
blasters eagerly pointed at the Snake.
In a blur Ric counted
eight.
He jerked the Snake to a
whiplash stop.
"They
didn't get here from the other end, that's a cinch. There isn't any faster way
than the robo. Which means they were already here, alerted by phone. Why here? Why so many?"
Ric whistled. "I know! They're not here to keep tourists out of the Drop!
They're here to keep
something in!"
Blasts began to splat
against the breezeshield.
"Down!" Ric pulled the girl out of sight. While they crouched there, he fisted
his own blaster, reloaded from Belasco's ammo. "This robo's tough but it
won't hold up forever, The heat is what’ll get
us."
"What’ll we do?”
For
answer, Ric traded fire with the eight, to keep them at their distance. In
moments Candi began coughing from the acrid odor of radiated heat. The cab
would soon become a white-hot death trap.
Ric
dared a fast look at the wall; now he noted the square crack of doorway, and
something else.
Besides
the switch-out track over which the guards crouched behind improvised shields
of construction material, the twin Snake track dipped and was sheared off by
the closed door.
"Goes
right into the elevator," Ric mused. "If only—damn me for a Venurian
loco!"
"Oh,
you're not so bad" Candi choked bravely. "What is it?"
"Keep your head down,
damn it!"
He
was searching the controls panel furiously. "Here it is!" "Is
what, darling?"
"The control that opens the elevator
door!" Ric
shouted in triumph. "Look!"
The imperturbable steel face was lifting,
yawning out into an open mouth.
"Here goes!"
The Snake leaped ahead. The guards yelled and
scrambled out of its path. They shot past them into the elevator in a fury of
spitting blast-fire.
XIII
The
big drop was
measurable only by time-speed. There was no sound at all, no sensation of
falling. But it was deep, very deep, seemingly
endless. The Snake's cab cooled; it was possible to touch it by the time a
flashing green light overhead implied that they had now plumbed full depth.
Candi
groped for the comfort of Ric's hand as they stepped out of the cab.
One
wall opened into a rocky cave, wide, high. They stared into the gloom. Ric felt
Candi's fingers tighten. Something alien here. Forbidding.
Strange.
"Looks
like the cave where Alan and I found the fungi," Ric said. "Changed a little, though. Barn's been painted. Uncle
Jed put up a new picket fence."
"Don't,"
Candi begged. "Can't you feel the—the sense of portent?"
"An
inner sanctum for Satan," Ric murmured. "A place
for lopping off arms. Yeah. Maybe hell's on Mars." His arm curved
around her shoulder. "Well now that we're here—"
They
moved in gingerly. The cave had been enlarged, the fungi that was left trained
into luminescent patches. There was no other light, just the uncanny blue
lichen mingled with the fungi. After their bake in the Snake's cab the hothouse
warmth seemed almost cool. The silence was spectral, ominous. Over all clung
that vaguely sweet, sickish aroma— the odor of the M-P fungi growing.
"Look! That doorway at the far end! That's
where they got my arm!"
Candi shivered closer as they moved toward
the church-window curve of doorway. Suddenly Ric's lees froze. They wouldn't
move another step. In a curious twist of memory he thought about Captain Hook
and his alligator. The alligator had bitten off his leg and forever after
wanted more. . . .
They
stood there, silent, then Candi whispered, "Now
that we're here, I wonder . . ."
"I
know. Maybe Father Krill really is St.
Morton Krill. Saving mankind from some shattering doom on the
other side of that door."
"Something like that."
"All
I can say is now is a hell of a time to get religion, Krill-style." Ric
added, wincing, "I can't get my legs to moving. They're frozen up
tight."
"Trauma,"
Candi said. "Getting your arm sheared off was a tremendous neural shock.
Your unconscious is reliving it."
"Thanks for the
lecture. What do I do about it?"
His answer came when the cathedral door ahead
of them dissolved. Candi gave an involuntary gasp. Ric only stared at the
sharp-edged opening and the blackness beyond.
"R'llyeth?" he
ventured.
The answer was smooth,
courteous, mental.
"Come
in, please. I have been anxiously waiting for your arrival, Richard
Coltor."
Ric's freeze-up melted. Holding Candi, he
moved through the arch and they found themselves facing a square block of
smooth material that seemed to be a combination of ceramic and metal. The
chamber housing it was not large, and the block looked to be both immovable and
impenetrable. The voice came out of it, and when it spoke inside their minds, a
light glowed lambently around it, like a nimbus.
"You are R'llyeth?"
Ric gulped.
"Yes."
The voice was gentle as rippling mountain water, and as cooling, somehow.
"I know quite a good deal about you, Richard Coltor. Your
ancestry. Your personality. Even
your capacities and your philosophy."
"From my arm?" Ric guessed. "You bit off my arm so that you could read me?"
R’llyeth, by a thrumming in their heads, registered protest and a hint
of impatience. "Nothing of the sort. While we wished information about
you and your race we would never do anything so primitive."
"What then?"
"It
was an accident, caused by your own impetuousity. We regret it. However, it did
serve to waken us, to tell us that after thousands of years we had been
discovered at last. That our self-bondage was at an end."
"How,
an accident?"
"The
door was electronically sealed against time and chemical action. This chamber
must remain inviolate above all. Sometime during our long sleep a planetary
tremor occurred. It was probably the result of some of your race's excavations
in this area. When you slid your arm through that crack you touched a nerve
ending of the sealed power artery, part of ourselves.
This machinery was geared to waken us when the door was opened. We sensed your
presence and in that sudden blinding flash when your arm was dissolved we
recorded your mind and its contents. But it was not until Dr. Krill opened the
door fully that our consciousness wakened fully."
"You keep saying
toe/"
"Yes.
We, R’llyeth, are a multiple personality. A compound of
several of the greatest intellects of our dying rrce."
Ric’s
thoughts flicked over Alan's theories about a lost Martian race and an exodus
to the Caves in the face of some overwhelming disaster. "Then you did live
on the surface once. What—what happened?"
"The
Yeth, our race, lived complex lives in great cities along the straight
stretches which you call canali. These
were our highways, actually, between our cities. In physical appearance, in our
ecology, and in other ways our race is not too unlike your race on Earth. Even
our hands possess the thumb, like yours.
"When
Dr. Krill began the task of revivifying the Yeth we provided him with a design
for the bodies, so that we will look as we did before. You may put it down as
racial pride, but there is actually more than that to it. There are climactic
and environmental reasons why we should be as we were.
"The
Yeth developed more rapidly than the Earth race, as many of your scientists
have guessed. We had great telescopes. We watched the progress of your more
primitive civilizations with eager interest. We contacted you again and again
by super-radio. We used, as well, a land of mind-to-mind telepathy. We actually
did communicate occasionally, randomly, when sometimes one human who possessed
a thrust of intuitive knowledge ahead of the rest of you would partially
understand what was happening and sometimes even attempt to let us know that he
did by some prodigious undertaking which the rest put down as religious
foible. Once a megalithic leader created an ingenious ring of stone on an
island, which by its astronomical accuracy in reading the movements of the sun
and the moon told out astronomers that momentarily our minds could
fuse.''
"Stonehenge!"
"Then
again on your North America our telescopes detected figures of animals as well
as geometric designs which again told us our telepathy attempts were randomly
hitting
a mark."
"The Great Serpent in
Ohio!
High Banks! The Adena and
Hopewell
cultures! They built enormous animal figures and geometries one thousand years
before Christ!" Candi contained herself with an effort, when Ric squeezed
her shoulders and nodded at Rllyeth to go on.
"Yes.
Even then your race was groping toward other worlds. We are, as I said, in many
ways like yourselves— many unhappy ways. While our
scientific minds were hopefully struggling with Earth-contacts and other vast
mysteries, lesser minds were struggling for domination of our people. Just as
your lofty minds have been superseded by power-mad militarists, so the Yeth.
There were wars, suicidal wars. Atomic fission was discovered. Our resources
were depleted. Our atmosphere was polluted.
"When
scientific and rational elements realized that soon the fantastic atom-eating
weapons we had produced would turn our planet into a desert of electronic dust
we conceived the plan of moving what was left down here. We created an
underground sea, and a great city on its banks. We created Us.
R'llyeth. We created Us to govern over the remnants
of our people and to preserve the finest minds of our race to this end. R'llyeth's
is a single dispassionate purpose-to preserve the Yeth from their own perverse
nature and from—outside."
"What happened to
those who remained on the surface?"
"The
destruction was complete. So complete that we knew it would seep down into our
crystal city eventually. We— R'llyeth— devised a means of sealing each
individual's life essences in caskets, which in turn were sealed into
ice-chests. These chests are neatly catalogued and stacked up in the chambers
of intense cold beyond our lifeless city."
"How do we get to your
city and the chests?"
"At my mental command a door will
dissolve behind us."
"You've
given us quite a dizzy-making chunk to chew on," Ric said wryly.
"Give us a chance to latch onto it. Let me see. RTIyeth—you—are a composite mind of the greatest minds of the Yeth."
"From varied areas of knowledge. To rule our race,
and to control its reawakening."
"You guessed we would
eventually come to Mars!"
"Yes.
One day the Earth race would reach maturity and it was logical that you would
visit our planet. By that time the pollution would have been dissipated. We
knew that every trace of our magnificent cities on the surface would have
vanished.
"Our
ecology has always included absorption of the fungi which you found here in the
Caves. Lacks in our thin-atmosphere planet were supplemented by the fungi. We
have always nurtured this vegetable growth and now we planted them down here.
We planted them where you would be sure to find them. By their very nature we
knew, or hoped, that they would survive the overwhelming holocaust. They alone. Your scientists know that mosses and lichen and other spore plants have
tremendous tenacity for life. They will grow where nothing else will grow. Our fungi is peculiarly tenacious. Absorbed into our bodies, it
becomes involved with us in a land of symbiotic relationship. It becomes a part
of a
living animal form,
permitting that form to partake of its remarkable hardiness."
"Then it is a boon! A blessing!" Candi cried out.
"Let
me get this straight," Ric put in. "You planted the fungi here, in
front of the sealed door, to attract us to you. To make us
aware of your existence. It was a bait. We
would be your alarm clock. We would let you know that all was clear above and you
could awaken again."
"Yes,"
R'llyeth said. "We hoped that from our telepathic communications with your
primitives that you would evolve to an empathetic, high-natured race. Yet there
was always the fear that you would not. There was always the chance that we
would be awakened by someone evil. A predator who
would wake us only to enslave us and use our gifts to some wicked and selfish
purpose."
Ric heard
Candi catch her breath, felt her fingers involuntarily dig his shoulder.
"Someone like Dr.
Krill"
XIV
Doctor
Krill. The name rang
down the corridors of their minds like the overtones of a Satanic chord of music. So. The die; was
cast. The Yeth had gambled on the human race—
and had lost. . . .
It
might have been Alan Tork. It should have been Alan who opened that door.
Ironically, Ric's messing about had spoiled that chance, and later on Krill had
taken over. Dr. Morton Krill had possessed the drive that Dr. Alan Tork lacked
"You
must have weapons to protect yourself," Ric frowned. "How can Dr.
Krill just take over?"
"Our
greatest weapon is Rllyeth, ourself, and the fact that we are telepathic. But
our race is not telepathic. We believed in Dr. Krill until we found out that he
has discovered a way of building up an irresistible loyalty to himself into the
bodies he creates for our people."
"We
know all about that." Ric was getting that glimmer of an idea again, but
it didn't quite crystallize, not in the welter of information Rllyeth was
thrusting into his cranium.
"You let him start. You let him have Alph."
"Yes.
From our first meeting with Dr. Krill we were fearful, but we had to take that
one chance. Now our fears have been proven, and we have refused to allow his
sycophants permission to go behind this chamber or to remove any others of our
race." "You've got him stymied."
"For the time being. True, he cannot destroy Us. The rare synthetic
elements of which this block is made are impregnable, to all intents and
purposes. Not so everywhere. There is nothing to prevent Krill from burrowing in elsewhere. He is doing just that already." Pause. "Rllyeth cannot move. Rllyeth has
Hands. But they are mechanical Hands only. No, Richard
Coltor. You say that we must have weapons that can
defeat Dr. Krill. We hope that we have. Now."
"And-?"
"These weapons are you—both of you."
The
super-mind retreated, to give them
time to ponder this over. Ric prowled the small chamber thoughtfully, wishing for a
cigarette. That faint glimmer of hope kept flaring up, then dying again.
"Time! We need time!"
"If only we could
find out Dr.
Krill's secret!"
"Yeah,"
Ric growled. "For generations the Yeth have been absorbing the fungi and
it must have impregnated the part of them that is in those sealed
caskets. So how can Dr. Krill do what never happened to
them before—make slaves out of them? Must have something to do with the human element
and—"
It struck suddenly.
"I think I've got it! Candi, I think I know! "What-?"
"First
we've got to
test it. Make sure."
He whirled toward the great faceless block that was Rllyeth. "You have
laboratories in your city. You'd have to have. Someplace
where we could work. Where Candi could bring back one more Yeth! Check
my wild idea!"
Rllyeth rumbled back into their minds.
"Our laboratories are fully equipped. Our Hands will take you there. Assist you." "What are these
Hands?"
His
answer came out of the wall. Two small, neat, cer-metal robots slid out and lined themselves in front of
the cube.
"We
call our Hands Th'ryl and Z*yrl. They
are robots, nothing more. They are indelibly one with
us. speak
out of our minds, and, as they have no life of their
own, are limited. They are programmed to obey only ns but we will now direct them to obey Richard Colter, too. Any instructions you wish to give them will be imprinted on their tapes
directly. We give them to you, Richard
Colter. We
trust you. Good-bye."
The
door that led to the
underground sea and the crystal city opened. Behind them it became wall again.
The
way wound, carved from basalt rock, through tunnels and along tortuous cliffs
where weird bone-white bracken grew, in landscapes like negatived video. The sea itself was an amazing thing, stretching off into pale
blue mists, lit spectrally
from within its placid depths by algae and blue lichen. This sea provided the
crystal city with water and atmosphere.
They gasped when they saw the city
called Yetha.
Its
shimmering rock crystal edifices reared up in spires of beauty on the shore of
the blue sea. The whole panorama was an eldritch dream in tones of pale fire
and silver.
They walked through the' silent streets under
a cloud-misted sky, over that same lichen-blue so high that it gave the effect
of actually being an evening on the surface of Mars. The buildings
were elongated, attenuated, like the inhabitants who built them, constructed
to fit their shapes as well as their aesthetic wants.
The twin robots led them straight to the
laboratories.
"I'm so tired," Candi said,
collapsing in the nearest chair.
He
eyed the long rows of lab tables and the machinery that once upon a time had
condensed the Yeth to vital essences. He turned to the nearest robot.
"I'm
beat, too. We haven't time to be tired. We require sleep but there is no time.
Is there something you can give us for fatigue? For
energy?"
The
twins nodded as one and hustled off. They returned with deep cystalline beakers
of golden liquid.
"What is it?" Ric asked.
"For rapid sustenance, when they first
awaken. It has excellent rejuvenative qualities," one of the robots said.
Ric tasted his.
"Um. Not bad. A little vodka would help."
They drank.
Ric
sent the robots to fetch one of the ice-chests. While they waited he asked
Candi, "Can you find what you need here to revive another Yeth?"
"I've
been looking," Candi nodded. "I think so. It's different, of course,
but with the help of the robots I can do it. R’llyeth's taught them English so
they can' translate the chemical names for me. And here's a body. Must be the
one Dr. Krill used as a model. Why didn't he use this one for Alph, I
wonder?"
"Father's a slick one. He probably
wanted to make sure his built-in slave syndrome would work. Let's get
going."
"Sure,
Boss," Candi admonished. "Soon as you tell me what your clever idea "
Their preoccupation over the task of bringing
back a second Martian collapsed time; two hours could have been twenty. Ric
pushed back the nagging thought that somewhere above them Dr. Krill's crew of mech-moles were burrowing through the black rock to
reach Yetha without benefit of R'llyeth.
They only stopped for more of the elixir.
When the figure on the table in front of them stirred, Ric said, "How long
before he will regain full consciousness?"
"An
hour, at least. Maybe five."
Ric
scowled. "I'd better go back to Rllyeth, see what's up. I don't want Krill
to find us together. Meanwhile, you check on Beta when he wakes. See if my
idea's any good. Ill take the robots with me. Better
he finds you alone."
He
felt a twinge when he turned for a last look. Candi looked so small and
feminine and fragile against all those enormous machines. He sighed and hurried
out.
When
he told R'llyeth his plan the mind-voice replied: "I hope you are right,
but we have no basis for such knowledge."
"It seems like the
only possible way that—"
A
roaring sound from behind broke him off. Machines were biting holes in the
chamber wall. When the mechanical chomping stopped a deep voice boomed out of
the round hole. A short, almost squat figure leaped through. He wore a green
satin cloak trimmed with gold braid
"Dr. Krill," Ric
said.
"Call me Father. Soon
everybody will."
XV
Dr.
Morton Krill. Doctor of Gerontics.
Self-made god. Here, after all this time, Ric was
seeing him face to face. He stared, feeding his curiosity, drinking him in.
Flanked by a covey of Flames holding Masters,
the little man in the vivid green cloak fairly beamed honest good cheer and
benevolence. He was Santa Claus pudgy, with apple-red cheeks, but no beard. His
hair was peppery gray and he wore it combed straight to the side to hide
incipient baldness. Apparently M-P didn't grow hair. Come to think of it, the
Yeth were entirely hairless. Teeth, yes. Dr. Krill's
beneficent smile revealed perfect gleaming teeth.
What
killed the Santa Claus image were his eyes. They were gray and cold, cold as
ice. They caught Ric and told him to stand up straight. Something behind them
brought out all kinds of litde guilt worms crawling to the surface of his mind.
He was ten years old and caught writing a bad word on the chalkboard. But he
wouldn't fry in hell forever. No. Father would forgive him. If he submitted his
soul to Father's will. . .
All
this in one look.
"How are you,
Doctor?" Ric found himself asking.
"Perfect,
as always." Father chuckled happily. "It is axiomatic that users of
my panacea are always in perfect health. Would you like to try some,
Richard?"
"Not just now, thanks
a whole lot."
"Later,
then."
The bushy eyebrows, over those snake-cold
eyes, moved up and down in thought. "Perhaps we can become great friends,
you and I. You have displayed much ingenuity in your little war against me,
Richard. I like clever people. I am quite a student of psychology, you
know."
"I'm
sure of it." Ric thought about the canned talks. The
Father image. The Hitler uniforms. The way Dr. Krill relieved his
converts of the necessity of thinking for themselves.
Then again, maybe all this genuflection got boring after awhile. Hence the bid for friendship with Ric.
Now he became a brisk
dynamo.
"There's a great deal
of work to be done." He gave
R’llyeth only a brief frown and motioned Ric to accompany him to the
Yeth city.
"They'll have the tunnel completed by now. I've had all the bodies moved
here. The laboratory here is really splendid and our police in Port Mars are
getting restive. Come along, Richard!"
"Just
what is your plan, Doctor?" Ric managed to keep emotion out of his voice. Level and light. "M-P for everybody?
One for all and all for Father?"
Dr.
Krill clucked sharply. "Why is it that when a saviour arises and offers
incredible benefits for his race he is immediately accused of being some land
of a monster? Jesus Christ, Buddha, and others, offered them a formula for universal
brotherhood and happiness which they were unable to accept because it was based
on an illusionary premise. I offer them health, well-being, extended life. What
more can anyone want? And for that matter, what does it matter who gives it to
them as long as they get it?"
Ric
was within an ace of being convinced, but a sudden glance into those cold gray
eyes as they entered the crystal city put things back in proper perspective. He
had and did offer the human race a fantastic boon. As with any monomaniac with
godhead ideas, all that Dr. Krill said was painfully true. Yet if his motives
were as benevolent and altruistic as his Santa Claus facade—why did he need the additive? Why not the fungi straight, the way the Martians had used its gifts? Why
put people under his pudgy thumb?
And—gruesome
thought—as an M-P user and controller, Dr. Krill would continue to five and
dominate indefinitely!
They went in the
laboratory.
"Ah!
Here is my charming leading research genius. Ex, I might add." His
cherubic smile for Candi was tinged with reproach. "What are you doing, my
dear?" His eyes narrowed. "Probing into forbidden things, I take
it?"
Candi's lips tightened. "I was
captivated by all this. You can understand. What a fantastic race!"
"Indeed."
Krill
was no dummy. He saw through the surface lie, which they knew he would. The
eyes darted from Candi to Ric and back. "When love reared its head you
decided to forego your career in the benefit of mankind?"
Candi
blushed. "I thought so. But I—I've changed my mind. I don't want to be
left out of all this. My life is here, in the lab. One doesn't change habits of
a lifetime overnight, even for—love."
Dr.
Krill's eyes dug hers. He chuckled, then tittered.
"Yes, one understands these libidinal lapses. You have been cooped up in
research laboratories for a long time. Too long. Sex
was bound to lift its head sooner or later." He shrugged and started out.
He whirled sharply. "All right, Dr. Lucas-Long. I can use you. My full
staff will be arriving soon, along with the rest of the new bodies. You've had
the necessary experience and can be of much help. But, mind you, eyes will be
on you—constantly."
He
turned to Ric. "As for Casanova, here. Something
tedious and muscular will serve to keep him out of mischief."
Weeks of furious activity followed. Work
crews on every level were shuttled in from the Port unit. Work schedules were
around the clock and more stringent than ever. Ric was put back in the
greenback contingent of cargo hustlers and robo operators. It filtered down
through the grapevine that outworld Law was beginning to take notice of the
surge toward the Polar region; the manned gun posts circling the Cave were
primed for liquidating casual snoopers, not for full-scale war. The need for
haste was obvious.
Candi played her part to
perfection. A dedicated scientist, she labored long hours supervising
user-lab-crews in the monumental project of bringing the Yeth back to life.
Ric
glimpsed Belasco from time to time, but didn't speak or acknowledge friendship.
In any case idle conversation was verboten.
On a
whim Dr. Krill called Ric in for the second Yeth's awakening.
"Do we call him
Beta?" Candi
asked the Doctor.
Ric
glanced at the figure in the crystal case, the one Candi had brought back to test Ric's theory, and
immediately deactivated again. He was
the real Beta. . . .
They
stared down at the attenuated figure in its new android body. Ric sucked in a
sharp breath. There was a lump of ice in his middle. This moment was crucial,
too.
Tine.
Only wake him I Wake him!" Krill's voice was snappish with impatience.
Beta
opened his eyes. They were deep-sunk, larger than human eyes, and steel-blue.
Like Alph's. The long gaunt face was without expression. It was as if he wasn't
sure whether he liked being alive again or not. He would have to work on it.
He
looked up at Candi.
His unwinking eyes
expressed nothing. Then, a puckering, a twinge. His head lifted a few inches;
his eyes searched.
They
found Dr. Krill. They stopped. His hps formed one word. "Father!"
Ric
suffered his random moments as Dr. Krill's court jester with equanimity; they
gave him a chance to at least see Candi. Now
that Dr. Krill's triumph was complete, with Beta his devoted slave, it was
full-speed ahead. Under Candi's supervision the huge lab bustled with assembly
line re-awakenings; Candi
had redeemed herself in
Father's good graces.
Ric,
too, might be useful later on. Top space pilots were always in demand.
One
day Ric found himself hauled into the Presence, as was happening more often during the passing days. Dt.
Krill and two tech-Flames were examining R'llyeth's Hands,
Th'ryl and Z'yrl. They were propped against the wall of Dr. Krill's throne-room, blank-faced chunks of cer-metal, like R’llyeth.
"What
do you know about these?" the Doctor demanded. "We can't get them
activated."
"What would I
know?"
Dr.
Krill snorted. "You had a oozy talk with the Big
Brain! R’llyeth told me about you and your arm when I first talked with Them
I"
Ric shrugged. "Then
you know as much about it as I do."
Dr.
Krill's look was a blaze of ice-fire. "First I was a savior of the Yeth.
Now I'm poison."
"Maybe they don't like
the idea of being dominated."
"R’llyeth
is sulking. They want to be the big cheese." That
rumbling chuckle. "Never mind. When I've
got them all where I want them R’llyeth will knuckle under. There is a lot of knowledge locked up in the chunk of matter. I want it."
He
shot a glance at the techs, still busy on the Hands with cutting tools and
blasters. "How are you coming?"
"They're like R’llyeth himself,"
one said. He gulped agony at having to upset Father. "Nothing seems to
even dent it"
Dr.
Krill swore. "Take them away. Seal them up in the ice caves. Post a guard.
Make sure they can't get out." He grinned triumphantly at Ric. "Lucky
we found them. They're the only means R’llyeth has of fighting me."
"They
were sick to death of war and weapons," Ric said somberly. "They
relied on our sense of justice."
Dr. Krill grunted.
"What happens to R’llyeth?"
Ric wondered.
Dr. Krill gave his cloak a toss and paced the
floor. "What?
What?
If I can't get inside of Them 111 blast the cave over that cube before I leave
here and bury Them under a thousand tons of solid rock. Let Them
sit there for the next million years thinking Their long thoughts!"
XVI
To
Ric, that was the lass of death. Suffering through days of toil, his anger at a
human being who could do such a monstrous thing boiled up in his craw so that
sometimes he thought that his brain was going to explode. The Yeth came off the
assembly line like emaciated ten-foot tin soldiers. Was his wild idea, and
Candi's work, all for nothing? Was it a flop? Obviously, yes, for nothing
happened. Nothing except that Dr. Krill's Great Plan moved forward with the
precision of an accelerated time-clock.
Like
every dictator, Dr. Krill justified his one-man control as being more
effective, more productive, than any form of democratic-socialistic rule such
as the UN. It eliminated long harangues, endless pros and cons; it cut through
the gordian knot of human complexities and problems the way Hercules had
slashed the knot. But it degraded, subtly. Led to far worse
evils than vacillation and lack of decisive action. And to deliberately
destroy the greatest power for multiple thought ever created!
Somehow he must get to R’llyeth,
He must.
First
tries at evading the Flame-guards during sleep periods got him nowhere. Then, one midday, moving ice-chests out of the Caves, he spotted
Belasco eating his cold ersatz lunch behind a shard of frozen rock. He hunkered
down beside the youth.
"Hey!" Belasco started, pleased. I’ve
been wanting to—"
"Shush," Ric admonished tautly.
"Listen! I've got to get out tonight. I've got a plan. You can help.
Listen closely." Belasco gulped his grub and nodded.
The
hooded parkas against the freezing temperature of the Caves were the break Ric
needed. Mostly the men didn't bother to remove them for their sleep breaks; the
greenbacks' bunkrooms were cold, too. The only way a Flame guard could tell
one parka-ed lump of humanity from another was by the luminous number on his
back, luminous for the dark caves where they labored.
In
the confusion of change in sleep-shifts, Ric switched parkas with Belasco, who
slept in a low-security unit. Ric, naturally, was kept under heavy guard* An hour after sleep-time, Ric made his move. . . .
The
guard at this minimum security unit had ambled off for coffee. Ric cat-footed between the lumpy bunks and out. He made his
way to R'llyeth's sanctum, thanking his unerring space-taught esp for orientation. He darted between shadows until he
heard the voices of guards in R’llyeth's chamber. He hugged the wall and froze.
"I
don't know why they put us here, night after night," one of the Flames
grumbled. "That hunk of rock ain't going no
place."
"There's something inside of it." "Yeah? Like what?"
"How in hell would I
know? But Father knows what he's
doing."
That stopped his buddy. Ric's tight muscles
yearned to act, but it would be folly to tangle with two blasters. He was
weaponless, of course.
Suddenly his mind thrummed
with familiar thunder. R'llyeth was making himself known. "We must not lose hope."
"Did
you hear that, Tom?" one of the guard's yelled
out. "Yeah. Like it was that rock talking."
Rllyeth
spoke again. "All within this chamber can hear me. I am able to detect
presences only within this room."
Ric
understood now. R'llyeth's thrumming voice could not select minds. Nor could he telepath with Ric at a distance. Only
with a Yeth mind.
"Hey!" a guard cried. "What's
going on!"
"We
are Truth," Rllyeth told them. "Put down your weapons. They are
useless against Us. All those within
my hearing listen carefully. I have communicated with my people.
Through them I know what has happened."
Tell me! Ric begged silently. Did we succeed?
"It
is ordained that all of Our people shall revere the
True Father. That—"
Long
steely fingers grabbed Ric from behind. The thrumming voice broke off sharply.
Ric whirled to see who had hold of him. He looked up into Beta's alien face,
his deep-set eyes angry emerald flames.
XVII
"I
found him skulking in the hall near the sanctum," Beta told Dr. Krill.
"I believe that he was trying to communicate with Rllyeth."
Dr.
Krill’s silk cloak swished about his legs as he strode the emerald-lit
antechamber to his bedroom. Ric watched him toy absently with the
tassels on his robe belt, shooting icy glances at Ric from time to time.
"Tie his hands," Dr. Krill told
Beta. "Behind him."
"Yes, Father."
Beta
did a thorough job of it. Ric found his fingers gradually numbing from the
pressure of the plastic cords.
"What are you trying to pull?" Dr.
Krill demanded. Ric said nothing.
"There
is some scheme afoot, Father," Beta said. "I don't know what it is
but it is in the air, all around me. I can sense it."
Dr. Krill made an impatient sound.
"Sense what?"
"I
don't know. But Rllyeth is holding back from all of us. He is not permitting
telepathic communication. Just before I captured this wretch I heard Rllyeth
talking."
"Did you hear what he said?"
"No. He stopped as soon as he felt my
presence in the corridor. But I questioned
the guards. They heard him." "And-?"
"Mostly
a careful camouflaged beginning—but it was intended for Colter's ears, Fm
sure. There was something about the True Father."
Dr.
Krill's mouth curved a triumphant smile. "Maybe the Big Brain is coming
around, admitting defeat, knuckling under."
"If you will forgive me, Father, I
don't—" "Never mind!"
Beta
gurgled meekly. "May I kill
this one, Father? That would stop—"
"Stop
me from finding out what he knows!" Dr. Krill cracked. "Send for the
girl. If there is anything to this sensing of yours, she must be in on
it." He scratched his haunch and paced, while they waited for Candi to be
awakened and brought in. "But don't get any ideas that I'm a soft weak-kneed
messiah, Mr. Colter! Savor every moment while you can; you haven't many
left."
Ric's
wash of rage dissolved into despair. Dr. Krill was not above using primitive
methods for getting information out of his enemies, and he would use them on
Candi. Ric knew he couldn't hold out long watching sadistic stunts being pulled
on the girl.
Candi
swept in, giving a fair representation of a female dragon breathing fire at
having been dragged out of bed in the middle of the night. "I'm dead
tired. Twelve hours of work and—"
"I
know, I know." Dr. Krill went to her and stroked her hand. "I like
you this way, my dear. In your negligee, and with those green
eyes. Like hot emeralds. I do like green."
Candi
played it all the way. She shot a look at Ric and her lip curled. "I
thought you got rid of him!"
Dr.
Krill laughed. "Soon. Very
soon. Our project is moving ahead admirably and soon I shall dispose of
him and other excess baggage as well."
"You're not including
me, I hope," Candi pouted.
"It all depends, my
dear."
"I've
worked my fingers to the bone for you!" Candi flared. "I brought Alph
back—and Beta!" She gestured at the Number Two Martian, who stood by the
closed door with two Flames, casting adoring glances at Father, waiting
patiently for him to turn them to his uses.
"Alph wasn't exactly
what the doctor ordered," Krill said.
"It wasn't my
fault," Candi frowned. "But Beta is."
"True."
The Doctor scowled at Ric. "Beta believes that some plot is going on,
involving Rllyeth. I don't see what it could be, with the precautions We've taken. But that's what I called you here for. Do you
know anything about a plot, my dear?" The silk in his tone hid a bared
knife.
Candi frowned. "No. Of course not."
"Then we must make
Richard talk."
Candi
seemed to consider this. "There's one obvious way. Do you have some M-P
handy? A hypo would be best. Make sure it gets to work, and fast."
Dr. Krill tittered
his admiration. He moved to a desk and produced a jade box. The elaborately
carved green box contained a hypodermic and a vial of M-P. The Doctor's own.
Ric watched him puncture the plastic stopper and fill the hollow needle. Watched with eyes that went wide. "May I, Doctor?"
Candi asked.
Dr.
Krill lidded his ophidian eyes a moment, then handed her the hypo. "Just
in case," he said fatuously, pulling a green-handled blaster out of his
dressing gown pocket and pointing it at her.
Candi shrugged and went to
Ric.
"Damn your eyes!"
Ric pulled back.
But
the needle went out swiftly. There was a wide gleam in Candi's eyes. Dr. Krill
moved to the other side; Ric was caught between them.
Candi pounced
the hypo into his greenback's tunic.
Dr.
Krill chuckled as Candi tossed the empty hypo away. While the Doctor's eyes
involuntarily followed its trajectory Candi whipped a scalpel out of her
negligee. Almost casually she flicked it across the wire-tight ropes that bound
Ric's wrists.
"He won't need these
anymore," she smiled.
Ric
drooped his head in despair; working his fingers so that the blood would find
its way back. Then, swiftly, he lunged.
His
jump pinned Dr. Krill to the wall. He nipped the blaster neatly when it popped
out from the Doctor's flaccid hand. Then he was between Candi and the
doorway—pointing the weapon firmly in Dr. Krill's spine.
"If
any of you tries anything, Father gets it," he told the Flames and Beta.
He grinned for Candi's benefit. "That guck is cold, running down my arm
like that."
"I was petrified you might have a cut or
skin-nick," Candi said.
"Nope." His eyes were glued on the three at the
door.
"Now,
friends, just toss the lady your blasters. Very carefully, please."
The burly Flames were gaping. For a moment
Beta seemed about to fall on his face. "Father!" he wailed. "What shall we do”The apples in Dr. Krill's cheeks
withered. "Do what he says. For the time being."
The three stopped waving their blasters
helplessly and tossed them on the carpet. Candi scooped them up.
"Stay behind us," Ric told her.
"First answer me this riddle. What happens to Fathers flock if he dies?
Will it be good or bad for them
"Hard to say. A terrible trauma, I think. Better if they were
prepared emotionally first."
Ric
herded Dr. Krill and the three myrmidons out and down the cave-corridor. Candi
trailed after.
"Where are we going?”
"R’llyeth.
Well keep Father alive-if we can. If not, they'll just have to take their
chances. They don't have to know he's dead right away. Well fake it with
tapes."
"You
can't kill me!" Dr. Krill raged. They'll
die, all of them!"
Ric
paid no attention to his babblings. The little group moved down the darkest,
loneliest ways Ric knew of, skirting the edges of the crystal city and the
bright-edged sea.
"Don't worry about
saying too much, Pop. We know all."
"You
know?"
"You
must have done it accidentally that first time you injected those patients at
the hospital, without telling Alan. You were working alone; you were in an
almighty sweat to try it. The instrument or the beaker you used to synthesize
the fungi wasn't sterile. It was contaminated. Contaminated with your own blood cells."
Dr. Krill stumbled.
Candi
went on: "Leucocytes, biconcave red corpuscles. Both are involved. I ought
to have guessed it when Alph displayed yearning toward me and called me his
mother. Finally I remembered nicking my finger during the final stages of
revivification. Microscopic amounts of my own blood cells were mixed with the
fungi essence which had to be used in bringing back the Martians, since it is a
concomitant of their ecology."
"Alan
told me that when he grew my new arm," Ric said, while they moved toward R’llyeth's.
chamber. "He got a 'starter' from my own body—the fungi pointed the way toward
this growth cycle. There's a theory that living cells have knowledge and
emotional responses. As the blood cells from your body multiplied in each
user's body they responded to the parent body. You!
Dr.
Krill's shoulders quivered in a spasm of hysteria. "Slobbering
dogs! All of them I Each one of them became
part of me. I cured them, yes, but as they were cured and
strengthened, every day my blood cells in their bodies pulled them toward me.
They are me—every .one of them!"
They wound in a tight procession up and
around the clean-cut rock and soon the shimmering city of Yetha vanished from
view. They plunged down the long straight tunnel to Rllyeth.
Two Flames blocked their
way.
"Where
do you think you're going?" one demanded of Beta, at the lead. Then he saw
Dr. Krill. "Forgive me, Father!"
"Suppose you join our
happy group," Ric suggested.
Dr.
Krill twisted to scream, but he thought better of it, and nodded instead.
It was evident that Dr. Krill was worried,
but he was more angry than desperate. It was impossible for him to believe
that Ric and Candi could prevail over him—his
godhead, and his army of fanatics whose very cells cried out to him in
adoration.
They
neared the new door to the sanctum (the one Dr. Krill had had cut) and two
sleepy guards popped out.
"Getting
crowded," Candi whispered. "Can we handle all of them?"
"Keep your chin and
your blaster up," Ric grinned.
But
this was the time for the Flames to make their move to save Father. There were
six, now, besides Beta. Six against two.
Candi's
slim, strong fingers gripped a blaster tightly, valiantly. Ric frowned,
wondering if it was in the girl to loll. Her whole life had been dedicated to
benefit and save humanity, not destroy. What shall we do, Father? they said with their adoring eyes.
"R’llyeth!" Ric
yelled. "Can yon hear mer*
No answer.
"R’llyeth!"
he called again. "Help! You know what to do! Get
them here—fast!”
Beta
reacted first. He moved rashly in front of Ric and his weapon and swung. His
fist caught Ric's face a glancing blow. Candi screamed and upped her blaster at
the Martian.
"Shoot!" Ric
cried.
"I—I
can't," she wailed. "Not Beta! It's my fault-what he is! I put those
blood cells in him. I—"
Ric
grunted and yanked his blaster out of its nest of green satin and spine-bones.
He got one shot out before the Flames rushed in, pinning them both against the
rocky wall. Beta slapped the gun out of Ric's hand.
"I'm sorry,"
Candi sobbed.
"Don't be. I
understand. We were outnumbered, anyway."
Dr.
Krill took a moment to breathe freely, then started
slapping Ric's face over and over with his emerald-ringed hand. His relish was
hysterical. He strutted in front of them, back and forth, his tassels hobbling.
Ric thought of a banty rooster parading before a barnyard of worshiping hens.
Beta
and the Flames watched and waited for his frenzy of triumph to abate.
Finally Beta said, "Father, we
must—"
"Shut
upl" All of this had touched off a mainspring within him somewhere, a
dictatorial god-complex carried to the nth degree. "I am the Father of the whole Universe! Others have tried to rule the
Universe by force, or by their favors. I don't need either. I am inside of you!
I am part of you! I will give you boundless health and long life, but in return
you must worship me—all of you!"
He
raved on and on, silks brushing the floor as he paced in ecstasy. Somewhere
during that ecstasy Ric began to hear a distant rolling sound, like the
beginnings of a summer storm over the mountains. But it wasn't a storm. It was
the sound of marching feet. Hundreds. Thousands. An army of feet, moving nearer
and nearer with each tick of time.
"Father!" Beta shrieked. "Listen to me!"
"Silence!" Dr. Krill commanded him. "I listen to no one. I am Supreme! I am God!
The
thundering footsteps roared up and into the tunnel. It was like a great host
drawn to the object of their fanatical love by an irresistible force within
their very veins.
"Father!" the marchers cried. "Father!”
Dr. Krill beamed his face toward the tall
army of resurrected Yeth’s. They moved toward him, their eyes aflame.
"My new super-army!" Dr. Krill screamed. "Nothing can defeat
them!"
Beta
fell to his knees, hugging the Doctor's skirts and moaning.
"Shall we tell him?" Ric asked
Candi. "It seems a shame to burst his bubble."
Thank God R’llyeth did hear me. He did call
his people to come here."
"And
Dr. Krill never stopped to think that two can play the same game," Candi
said. "How are you going to enjoy being Father to fifty thousand
Yeth?"
"Not
a damn bit," Roc groaned. "But there has to be a way of nullifying
the action of the blood cells! There just has to be!"
"Well
find a way," Candi promised. "And some day—some day soon—we will make
the Father bit real. The legal, natural way. Want to
join me on such a project?"
With
this promise, and Candi's dazzling smile to fortify him, Ric gestured for his
army of alien children to take charge.