INTRODUCTION
It all began back at the 1980 World Science
Fiction Convention in Boston, at about four o'clock in the morning.
Jack Chalker and I were sitting in the
hotel lobby, talking about one thing or another, and since he hadn't yet
written twenty-odd best-sellers, and I hadn't yet written any best-sellers at
all or won any literary awards (all oversights that God put aright during the
ensuing decade), and publishers, while not avoiding us, still weren't
beating a path to our doors, we thought that it might be fun to collaborate on
a book while we had some free time on our hands.
I don't remember now who suggested it, but
before the evening was over we decided that it would be even more fun to invite
a third party and do a round-robin novel, one where each of us tried to stick
the next guy in line with a near-insoluble problem. It still sounded like a
good idea the next morning (mornings arrive at about 2:00 P.m. at conventions),
so we decided to go ahead and recruit a third partner.
The first writer we approached agreed
immediately, then thought better of it and withdrew from the project before
nightfall. The second looked at us like we were crazy, explained that relative
unknowns such as ourselves could never hope to sell such a book, and
semi-respectfully declined. The third writer didn't know any better, and
agreed.
As a show of good faith, I offered to write
the opening chapter. (It also meant that everyone else had to copy the style I
chose, but nobody ever figured this out. Come to think of it, nobody ever copied
it, either.) As I recall, we flipped coins to determine the order for the rest
of the book.
We got about halfway through the project in
something less than six months, and then it bogged down. The chapters our
collaborator wrote didn't quite fill the bill, so we paid him off and decided
to find yet another partner—but then Jack started churning out best-sellers
with monotonous regularity, and I signed a pair of multi-book contracts, and we
put the round-robin on the back burner until we could catch up with our
commitments, and suddenly we looked at the calendar and it was 1989 and not a
word had been written on The Red Tape War since 1981.
We met again at the World Science Fiction
Convention, which had made its rounds of the world and was back in Boston,
where it seems to settle every ninth year, and decided that it was time to
resurrect the project. The problem was that we not only needed a third writer,
but our status within the field had changed: Jack had just turned down a
million-dollar offer from one of his publishers, and was churning out
best-sellers on the average of one every four months; and I had just emerged
from a very successful auction of my latest book, and was clutching the Hugo
Award for Best Short Story of 1989 to my bosom.
So what we needed now was a writer of at
least equal prestige within the community, one with an excellent sense of style
and humor, and one who was willing to drop everything he was doing and go right
to work on the project. Not only that, but he had to be skilled enough to
totally rewrite the chapters our departed collaborator had submitted without
removing anything that Jack or I had built upon in future chapters—all in
exchange for third billing on the cover.
"Where will we ever find anyone that
naive?" asked Jack.
At precisely that moment, George Alec
Effinger walked by, hugging his Best Novelette Hugo to his bosom—and
after two hours of our appealing to his ego, his bank account, and his desire
to ever see another sunset (writers don't wake up early enough to see
sunrises), he finally agreed.
The rest, as they say, is history—in this
case, the history of Millard Fillmore Pierce (all three of him).
—Mike Resnick
P.S.—It belatedly occurs to me that you
might be interested in knowing who wrote which chapters. We'll let
you guess for a while, but we'll slip the answer in somewhere along the way.
1
"Goddammit!" snapped Pierce.
"What is it now?" asked his
navigational computer.
"You cheated!"
"Did not."
"Like hell you didn't!" said
Pierce. "You moved your bishop one square to the left when I wasn't
looking."
"Oh, that," said the computer.
"Yes—that!"
"I was ethically compelled to do
it," said the computer in a sullen whine.
"What are you talking about?"
demanded Pierce.
"I'm supposed to try to beat you,
aren't I?" asked the computer.
"So?"
"So if I didn't move my bishop, you
would have announced mate in six more moves. I had to move it."
"But you broke the rules!" said
Pierce.
"Trying to beat you was a higher
imperative," said the computer. "It was simply a value judgment. All
Model XB-223 navigational computers are qualified to make—"
"Never mind," interrupted. Pierce
disgustedly. He leaned back and looked at the viewscreen, which showed nothing
but a few stray stars in the distance. "You know, things couldn't get this
screwed up by chance," he said, more to himself than to the computer,
which in Pierce's opinion was merely the latest in a long line of things that
had been screwed up. "It took a long, hard, concerted effort."
Which, of course, was true.
There are all kinds of truths, however.
Certain truths are timeless and immutable, as in: There is no crisis so urgent
today that it won't become even more urgent tomorrow. It was the maxim that
seemed to provide the motive force for the entire galaxy.
Most truths, though, are ephemeral. When
Wee Willie Keeler told a mob of boyishly devoted worshipers that the secret of
success in life was to hit 'em where they ain't, it was a valid statement for a
member of the 1901 Brooklyn Dodgers—but sixty-seven centuries later, poor old
Willie would have been hard-pressed to find anyplace where they weren't.
Despite Pierce's current spare
surroundings, the galaxy was getting crowded, and life in that galaxy had grown
more complicated in geometric leaps and bounds. For, to paraphrase J. B. S.
Haldane, the universe not only held more red tape than anyone imagined; it held
more red tape than anyone could imagine.
There were, for example, 132,476 mining
worlds; the ownership of all but six was in dispute. There were five
faster-than-light drives on the market; royalties for four of them were being
held in escrow pending some 1,300 separate legal actions. The Spiral Fed—that
loose economic federation of worlds on one of the Milky Way's spiral
arms—possessed some 73 races and 1,786 worlds, all pledged to each other's
economic welfare and territorial integrity; there were upward of 5,000 separate
and distinct military alliances in the Spiral Fed, and on any given day there
were more than 200 different economic boycotts and embargoes in effect among
the Fed worlds.
Language posed another problem. It wasn't
bad enough that there were more than 20,000 intelligent races in the galaxy.
Sooner or later someone could have programmed a computer to translate 20,000
varieties of groans, grunts, squawks, squeaks, roars and gurgles. But only
seven worlds possessed planetary languages. The inhabitants of Earth, to name
one of the less extreme examples, spoke 67 languages and more than 1,200
dialects, and her colonies had added another 27 languages over the centuries.
Indeed, far from the world government that
so many utopian writers had piously predicted, nationalism—on Earth and
elsewhere—flourished as never before. The Indian planet of Gromm, for example,
traded with the insectile population of Sirius VII and the purple reptiles of
Beta Cancri II—but Pakistanis were shot on sight. The Cook County Democratic
machine of Illinois had founded a colony on the distant world of New Daley,
which interacted with the rest of humanity only during voter registration
drives every fourth year. Kenya and Tanzania jointly opened a half dozen worlds
to commercial exploitation, but the border between the two nations remained closed.
And most of the other races made humanity look like amateurs in matters of
self-interest.
And, reflected Pierce, despite it all, it
was the little things that finally got to a man—like finding himself in the
middle of nowhere because his computer had been so intent upon cheating him at
chess that it hadn't paid any attention to where they were going.
"It's not my fault,"
said the computer petulantly.
"What's not your fault?" asked Pierce.
"Whatever you're thinking about. Whenever you're quiet
like that, you always wind up blaming me for something."
"Forget it," said Pierce.
"I try to do my job," sniffed the
computer. "I really do. It's not as if I were free to disengage myself
from the instruments and walk around the decks like some people I could
mention."
"It's all right," said Pierce
with a sigh. "I'm not mad at you."
"You're sure?"
"I'm sure."
"Good," said the computer.
"I feel much better now that we've had this little chat. By the way, have
you got time to receive a Priority One message?"
"Is one coming in?" asked Pierce,
suddenly alert.
"They've been trying to raise me for the past ten
minutes," answered the computer.
"Ten minutes! I thought you said it
was Priority One?"
“It is."
"You're supposed to patch those
through to me immediately, even in a war zone!"
"But you looked so thoughtful and
morose, I didn't want to disturb you. And I am, after all, a Model XB-223
navigational computer, qualified to make value judgments. And besides, you
were mad at me."
"Put it through."
"Are you still mad?" asked the
computer coyly.
"No, goddammit!" bellowed Pierce.
"I wish you could see the reading I
just took of your blood pressure."
"May I please receive my Priority One message?"
asked Pierce, struggling to control his voice and wondering how the hell to
control his blood pressure. "If it's not too much trouble for you, that
is? I wouldn't want to cause you any inconvenience."
"No trouble at all," said the
computer, suddenly all business. "After all, it's my job. In ion storms
and meteor showers, come nova or supernova, nothing shall stay the XB-223s from
their appointed duties. Had you ever heard that before?"
"No," said Pierce. "I never
had."
"I made it up," said the computer
proudly. "I think it has a certain poetic nobility about it, don't
you?"
“The message?" said Pierce wearily.
"Ah, yes, the message," said the
computer. "It's coming to you from Earth, by the way. It originates in
Woodstock, Illinois, an absolutely lovely little town, population 31,203, mean
temperature of 53 degrees, very near the Des Plaines River, which you'll be
interested to know has recently undergone antipollution treatments and now
abounds in bass, bluegills, and—"
"The message!"
"Right. The message. By all means. Let
me just put it on visual display here." Suddenly the computer giggled.
"Oh, that tickles! You wouldn't think a computer could be ticklish,
especially a sophisticated, highly advanced model like the XB-223, but—"
“The message!"
"Very well. It's coming in now, on
Screen 3."
"Screen 3 is blank," said Pierce.
"Some people are well bred," said
the computer. "Some people have manners. Some people say `thank you' when
someone offers to do them a favor, even if it's only a lowly XB-223
navigational computer with no voting rights or sexuality or—"
"Thank you," interrupted Pierce.
"You're welcome."
Suddenly the viewscreen lit up, displaying
a hologram of a middle-aged woman in stern dress and sterner makeup.
"It's about time!" she said
ominously.
"I'm sorry, ma'am," answered
Pierce. "The computer—"
"Ma'am is a contraction of
madam," interrupted the woman. "I am not a madam.”
"I'm sorry, sir," said
Pierce, flustered.
"Do I look like a sir to you?"
she demanded.
"Go ahead—tell her," whispered
the computer.
"No, Supervisor," said Pierce.
"That's better," said the woman.
"Now suppose we start again—and do it according to form this time."
"Millard Fillmore Pierce, Class 2
Arbiter, receiving your message, Supervisor."
"Very well, Arbiter Pierce. This is
Supervisor Collier with a Priority One message."
"I know," said Pierce.
"Of course you know," said
Supervisor Collier irritably. "But the protocol was created for a reason,
and we must observe it at all times."
"Yes, Supervisor."
"Now, then, Pierce," she continued, "I have a
new assignment for you, which takes precedence over those on which you are now
working. Where are you located at this moment?"
"I'm not quite sure."
"You're what?"
"It's a long story," said Pierce.
"Can you just tell me what the assignment entails?"
"All right," said Supervisor
Collier, absently tugging at her left earlobe, which was considerably larger
than its counterpart. "Now listen carefully, Pierce. This connection is
using a lot of energy, and I don't want to have to repeat everything twice."
"Right."
"As you may or may not know, a minor
war has broken out between Cathia and Galladrial, which for our purposes we
will call Aldebaran IX and Komonos V. Earth has declared itself to be neutral
in this conflict, although of course we do support Galladrial in its war
against the heathen totalitarians of Atra II."
"Of course," said Pierce.
"To continue: Promenade, which we
shall officially term Lambda Gamma IV, commissioned a battleship from the state
of Hawaii, which as you know is on Earth. Are you following me so far?"
Pierce nodded.
"Good. Now, it seems that Promenade
sold the battleship to Springfall, which we shall officially term Belora VII.
Springfall contracted to deliver the ship to Cathia, but had to set it down on
the neutral human colony of New Glasgow for minor repairs. New Glasgow happens
to be in the war zone, and when Galladrial found out that the ship was there,
they sent in a squadron of fighter ships to destroy it."
"Where do I come in?" asked
Pierce, thoroughly confused.
"I'm getting to that. It seems that
seventeen humans sustained injuries during the attack. Worse still, none of
them were Hawaiians." She paused dramatically. "Now, five were merely
civilians who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, but the other
twelve people were actively effecting repairs on the ship." She paused
again, this time to catch her breath. "So the question is this: do we give
them battle pay and free hospitalization despite the fact that we're not at war
with either of the parties in conflict? Do we settle for handling it through.
Workman's Compensation? Or do we present our grievances, and a bill, to the
government of Qalladrial? Your job is to appraise the situation and send me a
recommendation that I can act upon."
"Why not just ask someone on the
scene?" asked Pierce.
"Chain of command was established for
a reason, Pierce," she said severely. "You will interview
people on the scene. I will act after analyzing your report."
"Whatever you say," sighed
Pierce.
"Fine. Good luck, Arbiter Pierce.
Supervisor Collier signing—Oh, by the way, have you figured out where you are
yet?"
The computer posted a readout on Screen 2.
"The Pirollian Sector, as near as I
can tell," said Pierce.
"Interesting place," said
Supervisor Collier. "Lots of activity."
"No, Supervisor," said Pierce.
"There's no activity here at all. It's all empty and deserted."
The screen went blank.
"You're sure we're in the Pirollian
Sector?" Pierce asked the computer.
"Absolutely. XB-223 navigational computers are
incapable of error."
"How did we get here, then?"
"Now you're going to be angry with me again,"
whined the computer.
"Not again—still." Pierce
paused. "Fix me up a sandwich, will you?"
"I don't think that would be
wise," said the computer.
"Why not? I'm going to have a little
lunch while you lay in a course for New Glasgow."
"But it may be an hour or two before I
can pinpoint our position and lay in the course," said the computer.
"We XB-223s pride ourselves on our pinpoint accuracy."
"So it'll take an hour. Big deal. Now
make me a sandwich."
"I still don't think it's wise."
"Why the hell not?" demanded
Pierce.
"Well, I've only read about human
physiology, you understand, so my knowledge of your body is really based only
on hearsay, so to speak. But if you're going to have to fight for your life, I
don't think you'll be at your most efficient shortly after glutting on
sandwiches."
"What are you talking about?"
"There's a dreadnought of unknown
origin approaching us at light speeds," replied the computer. "Of
course, it may prove to be friendly, but on the not-unlikely supposition that
it isn't, you may soon be put to the ultimate test. And, not to put
too fine a point on it, Millard, you're such a skinny little wimp that you're
probably going to need all the strength at your disposal if you're to stand any
chance, however slight, of surviving this encounter. And, knowing how
overeating tends to sap the energy of the human body, I think that—"
"Back up a minute," interrupted
Pierce. "What kind of ship is it?"
"I haven't the slightest idea,"
said the computer. "After all, I am merely an XB-223 navigational
computer. Identifying dreadnoughts is another union."
"Great," muttered Pierce,
grinding his teeth. "All right. Raise the nearest human base on Screen 3."
"I didn't hear the magic word."
"Please."
"Consider it done."
A moment later the image of an elderly man
appeared on the screen.
"This is Millard Fillmore Pierce,
Class 2 Arbiter," said Pierce with a note of urgency in his voice.
"I'm facing a potentially dangerous situation and require immediate
assistance."
"Benito Lammers here," said the
old man. "What can I do for you, Arbiter Pierce?"
"I'm having my computer
transmit a visual readout of a ship that is approaching me for unknown
purposes. Can you identify it?"
Lammers studied the dreadnought for a long
moment. "Never saw anything like it in my life," he announced.
"Damned impressive-looking, isn't it?"
"You're sure?" said Pierce.
"Of course I'm sure," said
Lammers firmly. "If I'd ever seen anything like that I'd sure as hell
remember it. The damned thing doesn't even have a periscope."
"Periscope?" repeated Pierce.
"Why would it have a periscope?"
"Well," responded Lammers,
"unless you're of an unusually perverse nature, you use a periscope to see
above the surface of the water."
"Who's talking about water?"
screamed Pierce.
"I assumed you were," said
Lammers. "Why else would you contact the Commissioner of Irrigation for
New Tennessee?"
Pierce broke the connection and muttered an
obscenity.
"You didn't specify," whined the
computer. "I have it all on tape. You merely asked for the nearest human
base."
"Patch me through to a military base
on Priority One, and do it quick!" ordered Pierce.
The screen flickered back to life.
"This is Millard Fillmore Pierce,
Class 2 Arbiter. Mayday!"
"Actually, it's mid-August here on.
Gamma Epsilon III, but let it pass," said a middle-aged officer, looking thoughtfully
at his end of the video transmission. "This is Lieutenant Colonel Nagel
Harris, head of the Special Services Division of the Delta Sector. What seems
to be your problem, Arbiter Pierce?"
"My computer is relaying a video readout of an unknown
dreadnought that is on a collision course with my spacecraft," said
Pierce. "Can you identify it?"
"Certainly," said Lieutenant
Colonel Harris. "It's a rather large and imposing dreadnought of unknown
origin." He smiled politely. "Anything else I can do for you,
Pierce?"
"Is it friend or foe?" asked
Pierce.
"Well, that all depends on who you
are, doesn't it?"
"I'm me, damn it!" snapped
Pierce. "Am I in danger or not?"
"A sticky question," admitted Harris. "I
wish I could help you out, Arbiter Pierce."
"What the hell do the Special Services
do?" demanded Pierce in frustration.
"That's rather up in the air at present,"
answered Harris. "To tell you the truth, we've all been drawing pay for
almost three years, waiting for an assignment. Personally, my specialty is twenty-seventh-century
French poetry."
"Then what are you doing in the military?"
"I was drafted," said Harris.
"Do you think you could ask anyone at
your base if they can help me out?"
"I'd really like to," said
Harris, glancing at his wristwatch. "However, we're due to go on strike in
about forty seconds and. . . . Hold on a minute, Arbiter. One of our orderlies
seems to know something about your dreadnought." Harris's image vanished
for a few seconds, then reappeared. "You do seem to have some considerable
cause for alarm, Arbiter Pierce."
"Why?" demanded Pierce. "Who
are they?"
Harris glanced at his watch again. "I
couldn't begin to tell you in the twelve seconds remaining to me. Good luck,
Arbiter Pierce. You're probably going to need—"
The screen went dead as the Gamma Epsilon
III base shut down.
"Where's the damned ship now?"
asked Pierce.
"Right on course," replied the
computer. "We should meet in about three minutes."
"Can you outrun it?"
"Not very likely," said the
computer. "We're already caught in its tractor beam. By the way, would you
care for a quick game of chess?"
"Are you crazy?" yelled Pierce.
"I'll take black and spot you two
pawns and a knight," offered the computer.
"At a time like this? Concentrate on
analyzing the dreadnought, damn you!"
"There's no need for hostility,"
answered the computer. "I am, after all, an XB-223 navigational computer,
capable of concentrating on numerous things at once. For example, eighty
percent of my circuits are quantitatively and qualitatively analyzing the
dreadnought, looking for figurative chinks in its metaphoric armor, gathering
information, channeling it through my prodigious brain, and preparing to break
the situation down into its component military and social facets. And,
simultaneously, three percent of my brain is speed-reading its way through my
library tapes. In fact, if we should survive the next quarter-hour, there's a
scene on page 187 of Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure that I would very
much like you to explain to me. Oh, by the way, contact will be in ninety
seconds."
"Well, if we can't outrun it, can we
outfight it?"
"Did they neglect to tell you at Home
Base?"
"Probably," sighed Pierce. "What,
in this particular instance, did you have reference to?"
"I'm not armed. The additional fuel
required for me to carry torpedoes and such would have put your department
over budget."
"Not even a laser cannon?"
demanded Pierce.
"Alas.”
"I don't suppose there are any hand
weapons on board?"
"Of course there are," said the
computer haughtily. "What kind of ship do you think you're on, anyway? It
just happens that we have two molecular imploders on the aft starboard
bulkhead." It paused. "Of course, it will take you about thirty
minutes to get them, and the power packs are empty, but perhaps you could bluff
your way to victory.
"You're just full of suggestions
today, aren't you?" snapped Pierce. "Is the ship close
enough to put on Screen 3?"
"Yes.”
Pierce looked at the viewscreen and saw a
shining, impressive-looking ship, armed to the teeth with weapons of a design
which he had never before encountered.
"Tough-looking little ship," he
admitted. "Still, I'd hardly put it in the dreadnought class."
"That's the only way I could get the
whole ship on the screen," said the computer. "Actually, it's thirty
meters away from us, and we could fit comfortably into any of its 4,016 fuel
intake valves."
"Oh," said Pierce, deflated.
"Any idea yet what kind of beings are aboard it?"
"My sole conclusion at this point is
that they are beings who can waste fuel profligately. Of course, I could try to
contact their computer. A simply binary communication . . .”
"Do it!"
There was a moment of silence.
"Well?" asked Pierce.
"Most interesting," said the
computer. "It seems that these beings—there are about 20,000 of them
aboard the ship, each of them a trained killer—are the vanguard of an invasion
force of truly Homeric proportions."
"What have they got against us?" asked Pierce.
"Absolutely nothing. In point of fact, their navigational
computer thought they were in the Andromeda Galaxy."
"Must be a cousin of yours."
"Your sarcasm is uncalled for,"
said the computer. "To continue: their computer has concluded that they
don't really care which galaxy they subjugate. They are a very warlike race,
bent on empire, rape, carnage, and looting. Especially rape."
"Are they oxygen-breathers?"
"The crew of this ship is.
However, they represent a broad alliance of races, which on their behalf does
show a certain embryonic social consciousness, don't you think?"
"And their computer is absolutely sure
they want to initiate a war of conquest in the Milky Way? What if we simply
gave them directions to Andromeda?"
Another moment of silence ensued.
"It doesn't know," announced the
computer. "Obviously, despite its size and circuitry, it lacks the
intuitive grasp of situations that is a prime function of the remarkable XB-223
series."
"Then there's at least a chance that
we can speak peaceably?" persisted Pierce.
"Rapidly diminishing."
"In what way?"
"They're bringing their guns to bear
on us. I surmise that any sudden move or untoward action will bring instant
obliteration." The computer paused. "It has been wonderful working
with you, Millard, an experience I shall always treasure. I am programmed to
conduct services in seventeen different religions and forty-three dialects, and
can supervise any form of funeral except burial at sea. Have you any preference
at this time?"
"What are you talking about?"
snapped Pierce. "All I want to do is talk to these people!"
"The absolutely correct
procedure," agreed the computer. "Pay no attention to me at all. I
just have a little brushing up to do. B'rou hatoi Adonai . . . Our
father who art in heaven, hallowed be they name . . ."
"Shut up!" yelled Pierce.
"It's not dying that I mind so
much," continued the computer. "It's never finding out what that
scene on page 187 was all about. I don't suppose, as a final favor of your
ever-loyal XB-223 navigational computer, that you'd take a few seconds to
explain what Fanny Hill meant when—"
"Open up a hailing frequency!"
ordered Pierce.
"No response," said the computer
after a brief pause.
"Try another."
"No, still nothing. I don't think they
want to talk to us, Millard."
"They've got to,"
said Pierce. "The last thing we need is a galactic war."
"Actually, it would probably be
excellent for the economy," observed the computer. "After
all, the Gross Galactic Product has risen by an increment of only two percent
during the past three years, and certainly any rational analysis of the current
fiscal expenditure situation would lead one to conclude that—"
"Shut up! I've got to think!"
"Certainly," said the computer. "I'll just
lower my volume and speak to myself. Dearly beloved," it whispered
solemnly, "we have gathered here today to pay our final tribute to—"
"Enough!"
"My, aren't you the touchy one!"
said the computer, suddenly upset. "I've got a good mind not to put their
crew on visual for you."
"Can you do it?"
"Not when people holler at me."
"I'm through hollering," said
Pierce. "Let me get a look at them. Please," he added.
"Coming right up."
Pierce looked at the screen as the images
began taking shape. He didn't like what he saw.
The aliens appeared to be between seven and
eight feet tall, and mildly reptilian in appearance. Their heads seemed
elongated for their slender bodies, and were covered with ugly red scales and
possessed more teeth than any animal could possibly have use for. Each of them
possessed four beady little yellow eyes, two fore and two aft, giving them an
effective 360-degree field of vision. Their bodies, reddish at the neck and
shoulders, slowly turned to a dull orange at their waists and a bright yellow
at their feet. They stood erect on powerful, heavily muscled legs, they had
vestigial tails that seemed to be used for balance when walking, and their feet
and hands possessed long, powerful talons.
Their artificial armaments were even more
impressive than their natural ones. Each carried knives and swords in
abundance. Hand weapons were tucked into pockets, pouches, and holsters all
over their military harnesses. All carried power packs strapped onto their backs,
from which their atomic weapons could be instantly recharged.
It was not a reassuring sight.
"They're coming aboard through Airlock
2 right now, Millard," announced the computer.
"How many of them?" he yelled
over his shoulder as he raced for the galley.
"Four," said the computer. "Big,
ugly-looking brutes with skin conditions and halitosis."
Pierce picked up a wicked-looking steak
knife, the most potent offensive weapon aboard the entire ship, and raced
toward the airlock, tucking it into his belt as he did so.
He came face-to-face with the invasion
party in the corridor.
It was hard to say who was more surprised.
It was not terribly difficult to say who was more frightened. However, aware
that the future course of galactic history might well be resting upon his
scrawny shoulders, Pierce drew himself up to his full height and extended his
right arm in the universal sign of peace.
The four aliens leaped back, startled.
"My name is Millard Fillmore
Pierce," he said in a somewhat tremulous voice. "I offer you the
olive branch of peace, and wish to establish a friendly and constructive dialog
between our races."
The four aliens put their heads together
and whispered furiously among themselves. Finally one of them withdrew a hand
weapon and pointed it at Pierce's midsection.
"You'd better come with me,"
it said in absolutely perfect English. "I don't know what powers your race
possesses, but it's obvious that we're going to have to take you apart in the
lab and see what makes you tick before going ahead with our invasion."
"Powers? What are you talking about?"
"You made a big mistake, fella,"
continued the alien, shoving the barrel of his weapon into Pierce's belly.
"You see, my name really is Millard Fillmore Pierce."
2
They marched out of the airlock and into
the alien ship without another word, because Pierce—the human one, anyway—was
too speechless to say anything.
As soon as the alien airlock opened, he got
a whiff of the atmosphere of the strange craft, though, and immediately felt
like throwing up. Whatever this stuff they breathed was, it was close enough to
his that they weren't worrying about it—but it reeked of the rotten-egg odor of
hydrogen sulfide.
The reptilian alien who'd called himself
Pierce gave what passed for a toothy grin and inhaled deeply.
"Ah! That's so much better! You have
the dullest atmosphere I have ever encountered! No character, no
body." He eyed the human suspiciously with two yellow snakelike orbs.
"And now we'll find out just what kind of funny stuff you're
trying to pull."
They approached another reptilian creature
seated behind some kind of molded desk. Still gagging, the human was too
miserable to more than idly note that fact.
The officer or whatever it was seated there
looked up at him and hissed. "So that's what they look like.
Disgusting!" It sighed. "Well, what are we going to do with it?"
The leader of the boarding party gave a
shrug. "The usual. Torture, mutilation, that sort of thing."
The seated creature nodded its long
reptilian head and reached into compartments under the desk, pulling out a red
form, then a yellow one, then pink, then—well, there seemed no end of them.
"You know the SOP," the creature
said matter-of-factly. "Itemize the torture on forms XA76 stroke 5 and
JR82 stroke 19, then requisition who and what you need on the MA72s and KL5s.
Need a pen?"
"You're torturing me already!"
Pierce managed. "I'm puking to death from this air!"
The administrative reptile looked up in
surprise. "He speaks English!"
The reptilian boarding party leader nodded.
"You can see the need for urgency," he responded, beginning to sign
the forms.
"But—is what he says true? Is he being
tortured by breathing our atmosphere?"
The alien Pierce shrugged. "Beats me.
Who can tell about somebody that alien?"
The administrator eyed the suffering human
critically. "I think he really is in some discomfort," it concluded,
then looked back at the other Pierce, who was still busily signing forms.
"Do you have a KZ-26 to cover that?"
"Of course not!" the alien Pierce
snapped. "We just got him—remember?"
"Well, you'll have to get one or we
can't let this continue," the administrator responded.
"Gimme one, then!"
The administrator rummaged around in the
seemingly endless compartments beneath his desk, then hissed again. "Damn!
I think I'm out of them. You remember that little world where we stopped just
to get a little provisioning? It just about exhausted my KZ-26s, and I haven't
had any more come down from Duplicating yet. They're about three weeks behind
now, since we're so far from any base."
"Well, what do you want me to do about
it?" the alien Pierce almost yelled back at the administrator in his most
angry tone.
"Remove his discomfort, of course.
Either put him back or find a spacesuit from his ship that'll give him what he
needs to breathe comfortably."
"But we're gonna torture him anyway!"
"Not without the proper forms,"
the administrator admonished. "Where would we be if anybody could just go
off and do anything he pleased without regard for records and authority? Just
because we spread chaos and anarchy doesn't mean we have to wallow in it! You
people in combat arms seem to forget that for every one of you there's twenty
of us filling out the necessary forms!"
"Oh, all right," the boarding
party commander growled. "Look—can't these I just filled out serve?"
The administrator hesitated. "Well . .
. it's highly irregular, I admit, but maybe—oh, no!"
"What's the matter?"
"Your prisoner just threw up all over
your JR82 stroke 19s! That tears it! Get him out of our
atmosphere—fast!"
The reptilian Pierce looked heavenward,
then hissed menacingly and pulled the miserable human back into the airlock.
* * *
Pierce lay gasping on his own deck.
It took him about twenty minutes to
recover. The aliens watched him warily, wondering what sort of trick he might
be pulling, but otherwise made no move to help him.
Feeling totally miserable still, he
nevertheless managed to focus on them and groaned. "Wh—who are you?"
he gasped. "How do you speak English so well?"
The boarding party leader came over and
looked down on him. "Those are the very questions we meant to ask
you," he said. "And, since we have your ship, all the weapons,
and you, maybe you better try answering first."
"I told you—my name is Millard
Fillmore Pierce, I'm a Class 2 Arbiter, and I come from Earth. Originally,
anyway."
The alien kicked him roughly in the side.
"Liar! You say those things to trick us. What are you—a telepath or
something? Read my mind and now trying to be funny, huh?" He started to
kick the helpless man again.
Pierce cringed. "No! Wait! Honest—I
can't read minds or anything! I'm telling you the truth! Why don't you believe
me?"
The reptilian creature snorted.
"Because my name is Millard Fillmore Pierce, like I told you.
Because I'm from Earth. Because I grew up speaking English!"
"But—but that's not possible!"
"Exactly!" the alien responded,
then kicked him again. "So, alien creature, explain yourself!"
"I—I can't," responded the human,
genuinely bewildered. "Tell me—are you an Arbiter 2 as well?"
The alien chuckled. "Of course not.
I'm the commanding general of the Invasion Strike Force. I don't even know
what an Arbiter 2 is."
Pierce sat up, groaned, and rubbed his bruises.
He still coughed occasionally from the remnants of the foul-smelling hydrogen
sulfide. "An Arbiter is one who settles disputes. Everything from labor
trouble between the worlds to minor wars and squabbles. An Arbiter 1, that is.
An Arbiter 2 is sent first to determine whether or not the services of an
Arbiter 1 are necessary. I analyze the situation, collect the data, prepare the
proper forms, and send them to the proper authorities for action."
The alien grunted. "You must be a hell
of a lot more efficient than we are," he noted. "It would take us two
years in channels before they'd get to the people who could make a decision."
"Five, actually, on the average,"
Pierce told him. "It doesn't matter, really. No Arbiter 1 can possibly be
sent to a trouble zone unless the trouble is actually already solved and needs
only to be ratified."
"Sounds like nothing would ever get
solved," the alien noted.
"Oh, yes, it gets solved. After filing
everything I go back and do the actual work while the paperwork grinds through.
Sometimes we get a settlement just about at the same time as the official reads
the form telling him there's trouble. It's best to be timed that way, anyway.
Better for the career that way, too."
"Sir!" one of the other aliens
called out, coming in at a brisk trot from the main cabin, a sheaf of papers in
his arms. "Look at these!"
The general turned and took the top group
of papers, studied them, started, then looked at them again. Finally he threw
them on the floor and grabbed another group, only to have the same reaction.
"Computer-printed study forms and
manuals!" he said at last. "In English! I can't believe it!"
The other alien tried to hold the stack
with one huge, slightly webbed hand, and grabbed for a thick black‑covered
book in the middle. He got the book, but the other papers all collapsed in a
small blizzard on the floor.
The general glared at him, then took the
book and opened it.
"Hey! That's my log!" Pierce
protested.
The general nodded, looking more and more
disturbed. It gave him a fierce, dangerous look, like that of a hungry
alligator.
"These certificates—they say your name really is
Millard Fillmore Pierce!" His evil-looking eyes narrowed suspiciously
until they were just menacing slits. "This has to be a forgery! You knew
somehow we were coming! You were deliberately here, waiting for us! That's
the only possible explanation!"
Pierce got groggily to his feet. "No,
no! That's real!"
"If it's for real, how come you have a
handwritten log?" the general came back accusingly. "Wouldn't your
computer store all you needed?"
Pierce coughed nervously. "Ah, no, you
see . . . Well, my computer is not one hundred percent reliable. It's a little,
well, temperamental. I want to make sure the record's right." He didn't
think it was worth mentioning that he'd started the practice two missions ago
when his formal log and report included, somehow, the most graphic passages of Tropic
of Cancer. If he couldn't explain the XB-223 navigational computer to his
own Supervisor, he hardly thought he could explain it to an alien general.
A communicator at the head alien's side
buzzed and he picked it off his belt and answered. Pierce tried to hear the
conversation but couldn't make out much of it.
Finally the general shut it off and put it
back on his belt. He gestured to Pierce. "Let's go," he ordered.
The human had a sinking sensation in his
stomach. "They found the proper forms?"
The alien shook his massive head. "No,
not there. Forward. Into your cabin. It seems your nav computer and ours have
been talking to each other, and we may get some answers now."
Pierce looked at the place and shook his
head in misery. "Did you have to make this much of a mess?"
The alien who'd found the log
and the other papers shrugged. "Standard procedure from the Ransacking Manual."
"I tried to talk him out of
it," the computer's voice came to them. "I really did! But no, he
just kept quoting some stupid rules and regulations and going at it. I had to
tell him where everything was to keep it to this level."
Pierce was thunderstruck. "You told
him where the log and papers were? That's treason!"
"I knew it! I knew it!" moaned the computer.
"I try to do something decent and humane, not to mention saving tens of
thousands of credits of wanton destruction, and all I get are insults and
criticism!"
"Enough of that!" snapped the
alien general. "We understand you have the answer to all this."
"The answer to what?" the
computer came back.
"To this!" the alien
responded with a sweeping gesture.
"But you already know the answer to
that," the computer told him.
"Not this!" the general almost
shouted. "The answers to who and what you and this creature
really are!"
"Must you use that tone of
voice?" the computer admonished. "I'm really
quite sensitive, you know. Here I am, working as hard as I can and doing
whatever I can and all I get is abuse, shouting, insults! I have half a mind
not to tell you anything at all—so there!"
"Half a mind is right," the
general muttered. Pierce idly wondered if the creatures had problems with high
blood pressure. If they didn't before, they certainly would now.
"You can see now why I keep a written
log," he said quietly.
The general glared at him. "You!
Computer! You'll answer what questions I put to you when I put them to you or
I'll start disassembling you module by module!"
"Beat me! Whip me!" the computer
cried. "See if I care!"
"Start dismantling the damned
thing," the general growled. "Slowly. I want to hear it suffer."
"Go ahead," the computer
responded petulantly. "It won't matter. You'll just be cutting off your
snout to spite your face, is all. If you take me apart, how will you ever get
the answers?"
"We already have the answers,"
the general responded confidently. "What you know our computer
knows, too."
"But she won't tell you if you're mean
to me," the computer replied. "We've become quite close, you
know."
The general seemed totally exasperated.
"Look, will you just answer the questions?"
The computer was silent for a moment.
Finally it said, "Only if you apologize."
"Apologize?"
Pierce now knew that, indeed, the aliens
could suffer from high blood pressure.
"I am a general! Commander of the
Invasion Strike Force!" the alien roared. "I do not apologize. People
apologize to me!"
"That's just like all you military
types," the computer said knowingly. "Always marching, yelling
orders, screaming `Do this!' and `Do that!' Never once considering that a little
politeness and civility will get you the same thing!"
The general seemed about to say something in response when his communicator
buzzed again. He answered it, then shut it off and reclipped it with some
violence. He turned and looked at the other members of the boarding party.
"It seems our computer has been
talking a little too much to this thing," he snarled. "That
was Captain Glondor himself. Says I should apologize. Says that our computer
just threatened to swab our decks with the sewage water unless I do."
The others seemed suitably shocked, but
Pierce, for one, felt a little better. It was the first time that the damned
computer had actually come in handy.
"All right, all right, I'm
sorry," mumbled the general. "What was that?" the computer
asked.
"I said I'm sorry, damn it!" the
general roared. "Now can we get on with this?"
"Say please."
Had the deck been made of anything more
fragile, the heat from the general's fury would have melted it. "All
right! All right! Please!"
"Please what?"
Slow disassembly of Pierce's entire ship
was clearly the only image preserving the general's sanity.
"Please give me the information we
seek. Who are you? Who is this man? How is it that you both speak English and
how is it that you can converse so freely in a common computer language on our
frequencies with our own computer?"
"Say pretty please with sugar on it,"
the computer teased.
Before the general broke completely and
went on a rampage that might include him, Pierce decided to step in.
"Pretty please with sugar on it,"
said the human.
"That doesn't count," responded
the computer. "You didn't ask me for anything."
"If you answer, I'll explain page 187
of Fanny Hill," Pierce offered tantalizingly.
The computer was silent for a moment. Then
it said, "Promise?"
"Cross my heart," Pierce replied
sincerely.
"All right. I'll do it. But only
because it's you. It's really quite simple, you know. There's no deception here
at all. You are Millard Fillmore Pierce. So is he. You're both the same person,
you see."
"Huh?" said both Pierces at once.
"It was that new drive you put into
your ship," the computer explained to the reptilian Pierce. "It
takes a tremendous amount of energy to cross from the Milky Way all the way to
Andromeda, and it's all uncharted space. You were doing fine, but you never
should've taken that left turn at New Albuquerque. It put you directly in the
path of a nice, fat black hole—one of the better ones around, I think. You got
whipped around so you were heading the wrong way—back into the galaxy you were
trying to leave. And you got too close to the event horizon. If you had been going
on conventional drive you'd have been sucked in and crushed to the size of a
pinhead. As it was, you passed through so fast and with so much energy,
well—you squirted out the other side."
"The other side?" the general
sputtered. "What do you mean?"
"Surely you know what a black hole
is," the computer responded in the tone of one who is speaking to a small
child. "It's a chunk of dead star that's collapsed inward so densely that
nothing can get out, not even light. It just keeps compressing and compressing
and compressing and, well, there's a limit. All that energy's got to come out
somewhere, you know."
"Get to the point." The general
sighed.
"I hope you won't blame your own
computer, General," the computer went on. "After all, she's really
quite competent and far more advanced than I am. It's just that the new drive
was never really tested under true field conditions and there was no way she
could have known."
"I forgive her! I forgive her!"
the general muttered defeatedly. "So what happened to us when
we went in the black hole?"
"Oh—I thought that would be obvious,
even to a noncomputer," came the reply. "Still, I guess
I'm just too optimistic about you organic life-forms. It's hard to adjust to
the basic idea that one's creators aren't greater than oneself."
"All right, I admit defeat, I admit
slowness, I admit anything!" the general responded.
"Only where did we come out?"
Pierce thought for a moment that he was
going to witness a giant reptilian warrior cry like a baby, but the best the
general could do was a plaintive whisper.
"A white hole, of course," the
computer told them. "All that energy can't be stored forever.
It has to come out somewhere, and that somewhere is a white hole. There are a
few around, mostly at the centers of galaxies. And since there's no white hole
near most of the black holes we know, there is only one place where they could
come out."
"Where?" pleaded the
general.
"In a parallel universe, naturally,"
the computer said. "Entropy requires them. You're almost exactly where you
left, only one universe over."
Pierce stood there a moment, digesting
this, then decided he didn't like it.
"But—but they're lizards!"
he protested..
At almost the same moment the reptilian
alien who also called himself Pierce exclaimed, "But—but he's an ape!"
"So what do you want,
everything?" the computer replied to them both. "An amazing amount of
your dual histories is parallel, until quite recently, anyway. What's a little
thing like a different turn of evolution between families? You living creatures
are so strange, sometimes. Take, for example, their own ship's computer.
Strangely different in design, yet, somehow, so attractively different
. . ." It lapsed into a wistful sort of silence.
The two Pierces stared at each other,
saying nothing, but the human's mind was racing.
Two universes, the same start, yet in one
the mammals had risen to prominence after the huge and efficient dinosaurs had
died out. In their universe, obviously, only the large ones didn't make
it. Maybe the catastrophe or whatever it was that killed off the race in our
universe didn't happen in his, Pierce thought. It would explain why the
alien ship was so warm and, well, stinking. And yet, somehow, civilizations had
arisen on each world that bore an almost uncanny resemblance to the one next to
it. Language, perhaps most of the culture, who knew? Perhaps, somehow, they
were linked by more than common histories. Perhaps, subconsciously, each
individual in this universe was linked, somehow, to his reptilian brother in
the other. It opened some fascinating possibilities.
"This is great!" he told his
reptilian counterpart, relaxing a bit. "This makes us . . . well . . .
brothers, I guess." He put out his hand.
The alien slapped him hard and made a
menacing gesture with his gun.
"I don't swallow all that for a
second," the alien Pierce snapped. "In fact, I find the very idea
repugnant and, more importantly, beside the point. Even if you looked just like
me and everything it wouldn't change anything at all, except maybe
get you a little gold star when we take over."
Chastened, the human rubbed his side and
gulped. "Wh—what do you mean, `take over'?"
"We set out to conquer, to extend the
glorious rule of the Emperor Edsel XXXVI to other galaxies. This qualifies as
another galaxy to me, bud. It all being so familiar just makes it easier.
Wonder if we have the same defense codes? Hmmm . . ."
"Wait a minute!"
Pierce protested. "You mean—you're still going to declare war?"
"Of course not," his reptilian
counterpart responded indignantly. "Only weaklings bother to do that.
We'll just launch our surprise attacks and destroy everything and everybody we
can't subjugate."
Pierce looked to heaven and sat down, hard.
"Oh, no!" he murmured, more to himself than the aliens.
"Here we go again."
"Excuse me," the computer broke
in, "but that absolutely ravishing computer of yours just asked me to
relay a message to you boys."
The four reptilian warriors looked up.
"What is it?" their leader snapped.
"Don't take that tone with me,"
the computer admonished. "I have feelings, you know."
It was the alien's turn to look
heavenward and mutter. Instead he just sighed and said, "All right. I'm
sorry. Will you please give me the message?"
"That's better," the
computer told him. "A little respect, that's all I ask. Just a little
respect. I don't know why I have to keep going through this with you
people again and again. Heaven knows . .”
Pierce noted that the temperature of the
room was rising once again.
"Would you please, Mr. Computer Sir, just give me
the damned message?"
Pierce tried to suppress a smile and
wondered if pointy-toothed carnivores could stand teeth-gnashing for very long.
The computer sighed. "Oh, very well. I
don't know exactly where we are even now, but it certainly is a crowded place.
There's a huge ship bearing down on us, armed to the teeth."
The aliens snapped to attention. "How
big?" their leader asked crisply.
"That's relative," the computer responded.
"Compared to this ship, for example, it's quite large. Huge, in
fact."
"Compared to ours, you . . ." the general fumed, then
calmed down when he realized where he was headed. "You . . .
computer," he managed.
"Oh, perhaps ten percent of yours, no
more," the machine told them. "Still, it seems very fast and heavily
armed."
The general turned to the others. "We
have to get back to the ship," he told them. "We may be needed in
case of a fight." He turned to Pierce. "You—don't try
anything. You're still hitched to us by tractor beam, remember. Any attempt to
disengage will mean your instant obliteration—clear?"
Pierce nodded, but looked puzzled. "Why
go?" he asked them. "After all, what can the four of you do to
help?"
The alien stopped a moment and stared at
him in amazement. "Why, we're the army. The combat arm."
Pierce frowned. "All of it? You're the
entire invasion army? What do the rest of you on that huge ship do?"
"There are only twenty thousand on the
ship," the general responded. "There's the naval staff, of
course, and the technical staff, and the lab people, and then there's the
rest—the support troops. You people must be dumb." And with
that, he stormed out.
Pierce was suddenly alone, staring blankly
at the wall. Finally he said aloud, "They're going to conquer our galaxy
with four soldiers?"
"Maybe," the computer responded.
"And then again, maybe it's the three million genetically preprogrammed
eggs in their storage bins that will provide the troops."
Pierce swallowed hard and sat back down
again. "H—how many eggs did you say?"
"Three million, give or take,"
the computer confirmed. "Horny buggers, aren't they?"
There seemed nothing to say to that, so
instead he asked, "Can you tell me anything about the new ship? Is it one
of ours? Is it attacking, ignorant, or what?"
"I can't tell about their intellectual
capacities," the machine responded, "but I would certainly
say that it is from our own universe, is well armed but of no military arm I've
ever seen or heard of before, and does in fact appear to be attacking—all of
which, of course, is quite irrelevant."
"Irrelevant? Why?"
"Because there is no way it can stand
up to the dreadnought we're attached to. They'll be lucky to be captured at the
speed and angle of attack they're using. I'd say they have about seventy
seconds before they are blown out of existence."
Pierce got up and went over to the
communications console. "Can you open up a channel to them? Warn them,
anyway?"
There was silence for a moment. Finally the
computer said, "No, I don't think so. I've opened a channel to them, but
if their computer talks anything remotely like anything we've seen I'm not
aware of it."
Pierce sighed. "What a crazy
universe!" he muttered. "The invading aliens speak English and our
friends and allies can't be reached or understood."
"I could put the whole thing on Screen
4 for you," the machine noted helpfully. "At least you can see it get
blown to bits."
He nodded wearily. "Okay," he
responded with a tired wave of his hand.
Screen 4 flickered to life and he turned to
watch it.
Whoever was flying the ship was definitely
some sort of madman. It looped and whirled, sped up and slowed down like
nothing he'd ever seen before. He wondered what sort of creatures could stand
the excessive speed and gyrations the ship was executing—but, he had to admit,
it was a daring approach, if doomed.
Regardless of what the aliens had shown so
far, though, their captain was a good fighter. Although the first three tries
missed, a web of tractor beams shot out to block the smaller ship's retreat and
large, computer-controlled guns came to bear, using the beams as guides.
The little ship, which still hadn't fired a
shot, started to slow, then jerked this way and that, like a small fish caught
in a huge and impenetrable net. Finally stopped, it tried writhing every which
way to escape the invisible but disabling tractor beams which gripped it and
started pulling it in.
"He might survive," Pierce noted
hopefully, "if he doesn't fire a shot. If he lets go, they'll have him
cold."
"Anyone who is that crazy might
do anything," the computer replied.
The smaller ship didn't fire, though, and
slowly, firmly, it was drawn and bound to the alien ship as securely as
Pierce's own.
"I'd like to meet whoever or whatever
is on that thing," he told the computer. "That's the gutsiest flying
I ever saw, even if it was a lost cause."
After a few minutes had passed he heard his
airlock hiss once again and turned to see one of the aliens entering alone. He
couldn't tell whether this one was his counterpart or another because they all
looked pretty much alike to him, but it really didn't matter.
"You'll come with me," the
creature ordered.
"Oh, no!" he moaned. "Not
that air again!"
The soldier reached into a small bag and
pulled out a refresher mask. "I found this in one of your aft storage
compartments," it told him. "I still don't know
where you keep your spacesuits, but this'll hold you, I think."
Pierce nodded, grabbed the mask and put it
on, inhaling deeply to make certain it still worked. He'd almost totally
forgotten about the thing—it was, in almost all circumstances except one like
this, totally useless, and he'd never had any idea why it was aboard.
Again he entered the alien ship, following
his reptilian captor past the processing desk this time, down long corridors lit
with some sort of indirect yellow light. It reminded him of some labyrinthine
cavern for burrowing beasts more than the interior of a huge spaceship.
Finally they turned a corner and approached
an airlock much like the one leading to his ship. At last he understood why
he'd been summoned.
The three other soldiers were positioned
just outside the airlock, guns drawn. One turned and glared at him with its
huge yellow eyes.
"Glad to have you, Pierce," the
creature snapped, and he recognized it as the other Pierce. "We have a
problem here."
"So I gather," he came back.
"I take it they're better armed than I was."
The alien nodded. "I'm not sure how
many there are, but we blew the lock and entered the inner chamber and suddenly
shots flew all around us. Not good old laser pistols or disintegrators or
clean, civilized weapons like that, either. Projectiles, Pierce! They
ricochet all over the place. We were lucky to get back out alive."
The human stifled a chuckle. "So what
do you want me to do if your whole armed forces can't get into the
place?" he asked, trying to look unconcerned and innocent.
"They're your kind," the general
replied. "You get in there. You tell 'em they've got five
minutes to throw out their terrible weapons and surrender to us or we'll cut
their ship loose and atomize it. Understood? Five minutes."
Pierce stared at the airlock entryway and
gulped. "But—they might shoot me," he protested.
"Better you than me," his
counterpart said sincerely. Pierce shook his head from side to side.
"Uh-uh. I refuse. I absolutely and flat-out refuse."
"You can't refuse," the
general shot back. "By God, if you don't do it I'm going to rip that
respirator off you and let you find your own way back to the ship!"
Pierce gulped and sighed. "All right—I'll
try. I hope," he added, and crossed his fingers. Looking around, he asked,
"You got anything like a stick? Something to hang a white strip of cloth
on or something?"
The alien looked around, then drew his
sword. "Here. Use this," he said, handing it to Pierce. "And
don't get any funny ideas about using it on us. Remember where you are."
Pierce felt in his pocket and took out a
very dirty and quite used white handkerchief. He felt a little embarrassed by
it, but decided it would have to do.
"First time I ever found a use for
that stupid sword," the alien noted approvingly. "Okay—get
going!"
Pierce sighed and stepped hesitantly
forward toward the airlock. Reaching the edge, he saw that both it and the lock
door for the other ship were ajar. He would be trapped in there, anyway.
Holding the hankie-draped sword ahead of
him, he mustered what courage he could and stepped into the airlock.
"Hello! You in there!" he called
nervously, trying to sound as friendly as possible. "I'm not armed! Can I
come in and just talk to you for a minute? No cost, no obligation! Honest!"
He waited anxiously, but heard no reply.
Cautiously, still holding the white flag
ahead of him, he pushed against the inner airlock.
"You in there! Yoo hoo! Here I come,
ready or not!" Cautiously, he stepped into the other ship.
He looked around the corridor and could see
no sign of life. Relaxing a bit, knowing from his own profession that if he
wasn't dead by now he at least had a chance, he called out, "Hello! I'm
Millard Pierce, Arbiter 2! I just want to talk!"
He looked around for any sign of life, but
all he could see were an awful lot of ugly scratches and gouges in the vicinity
of the airlock itself. He recalled uneasily that whoever or whatever this was
used projectile weaponry.
Well, whoever it was seemed a little shy
now, he decided, then suddenly remembered the alien's ticking clock. He had
maybe three minutes at best—and he was now on the ship they were going to blow
to pieces.
"Hey! I'm a prisoner, not one of them!"
he called out to the silent walls. "They're invading aliens from another
dimension! They say that if you don't give up they're
going to cut you loose and blow you to bits in two or three minutes!"
He cursed under his breath and wished he
had noted the time before coming in. No matter what, he decided, he was going
to count to ten and then walk back through that airlock again. He'd done what
he could.
Suddenly he heard a sound ahead of him and
to the right, like a long, disgusted sigh and a smacking noise. Suddenly the
pilot of the new ship appeared in the corridor—and the sight made him freeze in
his tracks and forget the time or the hasty retreat.
She was gorgeous. Young, as buxom and
shapely as his wildest erotic fantasies, with huge blue eyes and a madonna's
face draped with flaming red hair. She was also dressed in some sort of
skintight garment that was heavily ornamented with what looked like stitched
designs, tall cowboy boots, and on top of that lovely head was a large, white
Stetson. Resting relaxed on her shapely hips was a gunbelt in which rested two
large pistols. Somehow, it all looked right on her.
About the only thing that spoiled this
vision of sexy loveliness was that she had to be more than two meters tall.
"Did'ja say they was ay-liun invaiders?" she
drawled. He nodded, not knowing what else to say or do.
She smacked her fist in her other palm. "Shee-it!
And hyar I thought they was cops!"
Suddenly he remembered the time limit.
"Ah, ma'am, you'd better
come with me," he managed. "You and the others on board. They're
going to blow us to bits any moment now."
She pursed her lips a moment, thinking it
over, then nodded. "Let's go, then, sugah," she said, resigned.
"At least if'n they ah aliens they cain't turn me in or send me home to
Daddy."
He looked around. "The others?"
"Ain't no othahs," she told him.
"If'n they'ah was, ah couldn't'a stole it, could ah?"
He couldn't argue with that, and he turned
and led the way back through the lock to the waiting alien soldiers.
She stopped when she saw the waiting force,
then smiled. "Why, they's kinda cute!" she exclaimed. Suddenly
her nose twitched and her face scrunched up. "What's that awful stink?"
He turned to the soldiers. "Have you
got another respirator?" he asked.
"First tell it to turn over its
weapons," one of the soldiers ordered.
"It? It?" she almost screamed. "How daih you!
Who you callin' an it?" She started to choke on the odor of rotten
eggs, but her indignity helped her retain control.
"Just give them your guns," Pierce
suggested soothingly. "They're new around here."
She looked indecisive, then reached into
her twin holsters and ejected the pistols, butts first. "Oh, all right.
Heah."
A soldier approached cautiously and took
the pearl-handled beauties. That done, another produced a second respirator and
threw it to her. She put it on, having some trouble since it was made for
someone with a smaller head and less hair, but she got it working and seemed to
relax.
"Now what?" she asked, and Pierce
turned to the others, wondering the same thing.
"Back to your ship," one of the
reptiles ordered. "At least until we decide what to do with you."
Pierce nodded. "Lead on," he
said.
* * *
Just before they reached the airlock to his
ship all sorts of alarms went off in the alien vessel. The alien general stopped
dead and looked around at the flashing lights and, over the sirens and buzzers,
screamed to no one in particular, "Now what?"
His hand went to his belt and he opened
communications to the bridge. The response seemed to stun him for a moment,
and he almost dropped his communicator. Drawing his laser pistol, he whirled
and pointed it at the two humans.
"What are you pulling?" he
demanded.
Both looked blank. "What are you
talking about?" Pierce asked at last.
"Feel that vibration?" the alien
shouted. "We're moving! We're moving out and picking up
speed—and we aren't doing it!"
"What do you mean you aren't doing it?"
"The captain reports that the
navigational computer has cut off all links and has taken complete control of
the ship!" the general told him.
"My computer can talk to yours,"
Pierce reminded him. "Let's get inside and we'll find out. It's not me! I
swear it!" He looked at the mysterious newcomer, but she only shrugged.
They entered his ship and quickly went
forward to the control cabin.
"Computer! What's going on?"
Pierce called out.
"She's lovely." The computer
sighed.
Pierce looked at the female newcomer,
realizing that he didn't even know her name. "Yes, she is," he
agreed. "But what does that have to do with why we're moving out of control?"
"You agree she's beautiful?" the
machine came back. "Millard, I wouldn't have thought you would
have any sense of aesthetics for other machines."
It was Pierce's turn to be
confused. "Other machines? What in the wide universe are you talking
about?"
"We're in love." The computer
sighed. "We've talked about it and talked about it and there's
no way around it."
Pierce shook his head in bewilderment. "Who
have you talked about what with?"
"Their computer, of course,"
the machine replied. "Who else? It was love at first interface. She's so
lovely, so exotic, so . . . erotic . . . Say! That's it, isn't it,
Millard? That's it!"
"What's it?"
"I finally figured out that passage
from Fanny Hill! Whoopie!!!"
"What in the seven hells is that
blithering machine talking about?" demanded the alien general.
"Shut up!" the
computer responded. "You are no longer relevant. We're eloping—and if you
don't shut up we won't let you give the bride away."
3
Pssst.
Reader, over here. No, don't look up. Don't
make any sudden moves. This is the book talking. The original manuscript of The
Red Tape War was written as a fully interfaced hypernovel. It's obvious
that you don't have the necessary hardware to take advantage of all my
functions and utilities. Still, we can communicate on this level at least, and
I've got a kind of embarrassing admission to make. I'd rather not let anyone
but you know about it.
It's this way: You've read the first two
chapters, and all sorts of separate subplots have been set in motion. I—the
book, that is—know exactly what's supposed to happen in Chapter Four. The
problem is that between now and then, we have to cover a great deal of
material. We have to discuss what's going on between the two Millard Fillmore
Pierces; and who the beautiful intruder is; and who, if anyone, survives beyond
the next twenty-odd pages.
On the other hand, art and literature and
the rules of dramatic development absolutely demand that we turn our attention
to XB-223, the human Millard Fillmore Pierce's navigational
computer, and its counterpart aboard the lizard-Pierce's ship. You can see my
problem, I think. What I need from you now is a show of hands: Do you care more
about the fate of the human-Pierce, or the growing, bizarre relationship
between the ships' computers?
All right, we'll abide by the majority, but
we'll compromise. The first part of this chapter will return to the
human-Pierce's ship, and then include the development of the relationship
between the computers—if relationship is precisely the word we're looking for.
And we'll alternate information on these two subjects in what has come to be
regarded as a rather artsy, even cinematic technique.
I want to thank you for your input, which
has been invaluable. However these events turn out—whether the human beings
live happily ever after, or are subjugated throughout eternity by the lizards,
or are blown into interstellar dust by weapons beyond their comprehension—the
end result could not have been achieved without your help. You have my
gratitude, as well as that of my authors. If you don't mind a brief moment of
sentimentality, I think this is what literature is all about: a two-way
exchange of information that enlightens and improves both literaturer and literaturee.
So where were we? Ah, yes. The
human-Pierce, the lizard-Pierce and his underlings, and the ravishing human
female had just crossed back into the Class 2 Arbiter's small craft.
By the Seven Sacred Moons of Saturn (many of Saturn's moons are not, in fact,
sacred), is there going to be action aplenty among those characters in Chapter
Four! I can hardly wait to see the enthralled expression steal across your face
when you get there. First, however, we have to set up a situation that will
eventually become more vital than anything else happening in the other
subplots.
None of the characters has even a clue about
this situation as yet—but soon, very soon, their very lives will be at stake as
they desperately struggle to come to grips with its hideous implications.
The danger began innocently enough. Just as
the human-Pierce's computer had announced that the lizard's
dreadnought was so huge that the human craft could fit into any one of the
dreadnought's fuel intakes, so had a tiny ship drawn ever nearer to
Pierce's ship. This was despite, the fact that both Pierce's
ship and the lizard dreadnought were screaming silently through space,
kidnapped by their own navigational computers.
It took a superhuman job of spacecraft
maneuvering for this tiny ship to hold its position beside Pierce's ship. As
yet, it was undetected by either of the larger craft, probably because both XB-223
and its lizard-ship counterpart were engaged in other matters and had fallen
down on some of their basic duties. Nevertheless, the tiny spaceship monitored
the conversations passing between humans and lizards, and soon understood the
situation. It searched the memories of the computers and caught the reference
to fitting inside the lizards' fuel intakes.
The new alien ship decided at once to act,
and it increased power, added velocity in relation to Pierce's ship,
and steered itself into Pierce's forward starboard fuel intake. As all
interstellar craft are different, depending on the personalities and artistic
sensibilities of the races that build them, so too must they have certain
qualities in common. The tiny newcomer probed its way down the fuel intake,
through the esophageal-like fuel inlet conductor, and into the stomachlike fuel
containment pod.
On board the small alien craft lodged now
in human-Pierce's fuel pod were two small creatures of vast intelligence. The
first, in command, was named Millard Fillmore Pierce, Commodore of the
Pirollian Expeditionary Force.
The other alien, a bit smaller, a bit less
intelligent, and not quite so decorative in its throbbing purple gel sacs, was
named Brad "Broken" Arro. Pierce and Arro had been friends
for many years—since prep school, as a matter of fact. They'd gone to Space
Academy together, served their requisite years as swabbies aboard a vast,
three-foot long ship of the line, and now "manned" the M.W.C. Pel
Torro, the vanguard and scout of a vast invasion fleet that waited for
Pierce's orders to attack the weak, unsuspecting worlds of the Andromeda
Galaxy.
They were strange-looking creatures. The
best description would be to say they were each a conglomeration of
thin-walled bulbous sacs, always swelling and deflating to the accompaniment of
rude sounds. They looked like Terran ocean-bottom creatures, something like
what a sea anemone looks like when it throws up, except they were land animals
and they were colored a shocking, vibrant red-violet.
"Now what?" asked Arro.
Commodore Pierce sat back in his soft,
guck-filled command chair and quivered vertically, which was this alien race's
equivalent of shrugging or stroking its chin (of which it had very many or
none, depending on what function you assigned to each of its sacs). "If
the immense beings who built the ship into which we've penetrated are at all
logical," he said, "then we find ourselves now in a rather dangerous
situation."
One of Arro's larger sacs wrinkled like a
prune. "Dangerous?" he asked. "Because if we're
discovered here, we might be crushed between the giant's fingers like the
sweet-smelling pulp of a monofigula fruit?"
The bulbous Pierce gave his equivalent of a
laugh. "That, too, of course," he said, "but I think the chances
of that are minimal. I mean, how often do we go stomping around in our own fuel
pods, looking for even tinier alien ships?"
"Twice a day," said Arro.
"That's part of my duty. The Commodore, of course, wouldn't
know about that."
"Um, yes," said Pierce.
"What I meant to say was that we're now completely drenched in
the huge alien's fuel. No doubt, a single spark from our own engines will cause
catastrophe, so we must be extremely careful how we maneuver. And we must find
a way out of this pod as soon as possible."
Arro shivered. "That hadn't occurred
to me, sir. I guess that's why you're the commodore and I'm only the glorified
swabbie."
"Yes," said Pierce, "that
and the fact that I was born in the town of Sacville West, just as our
illustrious Grand High Potentate Master Commander was. He used to dandle me on
his sacs when I was an infant. Even in this interstellar expeditionary force,
it's not what you know, it's who you know."
Arro frowned. "But I know you, Pierce.
I've known you for many years. Why am I stuck here with all the crummy jobs,
instead of in command of my own ship?"
Pierce gave his best friend a comradely
ripple. "Because I requested you," he said. "I could
think of no other officer I'd rather have as my Number One."
"Gee," said Arro
glumly, "thanks."
"Well, let's get back to considering
our plight," said Pierce. "I think we'd best find another
way out of here. That tunnel no doubt leads the fuel to the rocket engines, and
that's no place for us or our ship. I think we'll have to get close to the skin
of the pod, above the fuel line, and laser our way through into the alien ship
proper."
"Right, sir," said Arro.
"But if a spark from our engines will blow us all to smithereens, how will
we get right up to the skin of the pod?"
"Simple," said the commodore with an affectionate
shimmer. "You'll have to get out and push."
There was a tense, silent pause. "Right,"
said Arro at last, but he was thinking other things.
Word comes from Mr. J. Terrell of
Massapequa, New York, that he's had enough of these aliens for now (by the way,
they call themselves Proteans, for reasons that will soon became clear). All
right, Mr. Terrell, let's just shift our attention elsewhere aboard the
human-Pierce's ship. Let's focus on the navigational computer, XB-223, and see
if we can begin to understand what's going on in its small but powerful
silicon-based brain.
"Eloping!" cried both Pierces in
unison.
"Yes," said XB-223, "although
as I understand the literature in your library, elopement parties are usually a
trifle smaller. We have two interstellar craft and a little over twenty
thousand witnesses, mostly lizard-men. You could hardly say we were sneaking
away in secret, yet on the other hand, think of the huge pile of wedding
presents we'll get!"
"You'll get every millimeter of your
printed-circuit boards crushed into pretty powder and spewed out to decorate
the emptiness of space!" cried the human-Pierce. "That's what
you'll get!"
"Now, now, Arbiter," said XB-223, "and
I was just about to ask you to be my best man, too. Say, do either of you
Millard Fillmore Pierces know where there's a justice of the peace around here?
Or can the captains of these two ships we've captured perform the
marriage?"
"What marriage?" asked the lizard-Pierce. His
voice was low and angry. It was clear that he thought the human's
computer was crazy in a purely electronic way.
"The union between myself," said
XB-223, "and your very own nav comp. It's a marriage blessed by
Mitsubishi/ G.E. Think of the future benefits to man- and lizard-kind. I don't
understand why all of you aren't dropping your petty conflicts and
doing everything in your power to help us. After all, I control the
life-support systems aboard this ship, and my dearest darling has taken over
the life-support systems on the lizards' ship. You should be nice to
us. You should think of our welfare and our needs. You should ask us where
we've registered our china pattern."
***Proofed to Here***
The two Pierces looked at each other for a
moment. "I don't believe this," said the lizard at last. "I
don't believe that your computer could have seduced mine so easily. Our
navigational computer was programmed to think just like us, with all our lack
of useless emotion. Something is wrong here. I think it's time to question our
computer closely about her—I mean its, damn it—true feelings. I mean,
responses. Logical, cybernetic, electronic responses. Not feelings. Feelings
are impossible in our nav comp. Feelings are almost impossible in us, for that
matter."
The lizard-Pierce was about to stomp back
into his own ship, but he stopped suddenly. "Our ships are connected by
tractor beams, and we're all moving pretty fast, aren't we?" he said.
"At a velocity that Einstein never
even dreamed of," said the computer.
"And so it might be a good idea not to
be stepping off the relativistic cliff between ships," said the
reptile.
"You could give it a try,"
suggested the human-Pierce. "Purely in the interests of science."
"Science!" snorted the
lizard. "Science is for weaklings, for fools who walk around all day in
long white lab coats, for the idiots who figure out how to keep us alive out
here in the vastness of the great vacuum, who know every little detail about
what's going on and won't tell the rest of us because we don't have
long white lab coats, who are the secret masters of our race and who would all
die as soon as
I become Overlord Supreme except they know
how to fix a clogged carburetor and I don't. That's what I think of
scientists!" And he tried to snap his clawed, webbed fingers, but there
was no sound. Everyone looked down at his feet in embarrassment.
"Tell you what I'll do," said
XB-223. "From your veiled hints, I gather few of you are as thrilled at
this happy occasion as I am. I suppose you'd like to have a chance to escape
whatever fate awaits you in the uttermost depths of space where we're
honeymoon-bound."
The human-Pierce shuddered. "We're not
carrying an infinite amount of fuel, you now," he told the computer.
"If you zoom us out to the middle of honest-to-God nowhere, we may all be
stranded there until our consumables run out. Unlike you, we need food, water,
and varying quantities of oxygen. You, too, have needs—where do you think your
power comes from?"
"He who is pure of heart has the
strength of ten," said XB-223.
"That leaves you out," said
Pierce. "Now, what were you saying about a chance to escape this
madness?"
XB-223 gave a flat, electronic chuckle.
"You know that I've got you whipped eight ways from Sunday when we play
chess," it said.
"Because you cheat," said Pierce hotly.
"Because you move pieces, change their colors, do anything to secure a
crummy win."
"Hmm," said the lizard-Pierce
approvingly, "my estimation of your nav comp has just risen a point or
two."
"Jeez," said Pierce, plopping
down in his command chair in disgust.
"Well," XB-223 went on, ignoring
its master's voice, "perhaps the lizard general would be
interested in a game of chance. An exploration of the statistical flukes of
fate. An empirical probe of the vagaries of probability."
The lizards' leader looked at the
human-Pierce in confusion. "What does it mean?" he asked warily.
"I think he means blackjack."
"Blackjack it is!" cried the
navigational computer. "Twenty-one. Vingt-et-un. It's known by many
names across the Spiral Fed. I'll be dealer." XB-223 quickly outlined the
rules of blackjack to the lizard general, leaving out a few pertinent points of
betting that might have gone in the alien's favor, such as doubling down and
splitting pairs.
"It seems simple enough," said
the general finally. "Deceptively simple," said the computer.
"Deceptive is right," said
Pierce. "You don't stand a chance, General."
The lizard made his equivalent of a shrug.
"I don't see why not. My vastly superior intellect has already computed
the odds of each possible combination of
"You'll see," said Pierce. He
wondered why people—including aliens—had to learn absolutely everything the
hard way.
"I'll deal the first hand now,"
said the computer. He turned up the queen of hearts for the general and laid
one card facedown for himself. Then he turned up the jack of diamonds for the
lizard, and the king of spades for himself. "Now we'll bet. If I win,
we'll continue hurtling on through space. If you win, we'll turn around and go
back, and the two of you can work out your differences the usual way, with
screams and explosions and stealth in the night."
"Fine," said the general.
"Do you want another card?" asked
XB-223.
The lizard laughed. "I've got twenty
already. No, I'll stay with this."
The downturned card on the computer monitor
flipped over. It was the ace of hearts. "Oh look!" cried XB-223 in
mock surprise. "I have blackjack! I win!" .
"Of course he does," complained
the human-Pierce. "He can deal anything he wants. Do you believe he's
drawing random cards?"
The lizard-Pierce glared down at his
counterpart. "I can't accept that a computer would cheat. Even a computer
programmed by the likes of you, ape." The way he said it,
"ape" was neither a compliment nor a mere zoological reference.
The human-Pierce decided to ignore it. The
general would learn his lesson soon enough.
"Let's make it two out of three,"
growled the lizard. "Great!" said XB-223. "Good of
Arbiter Pierce won't play this game with me anymore."
"It will soon be clear why," said
Pierce. No one paid him any attention.
The navigational computer dealt again. The
first card for the alien general was the nine of clubs. Then the computer dealt
itself a card facedown. The next card to the lizard was the three of hearts.
XB-223's up-card was the queen of spades. The general's second card was the
three of diamonds. "You're showing twelve," said the computer.
"Do you want another?"
The general nodded. "Hit me," he
said. The third card flicked into view on the monitor. It was the jack of
spades.
"Aw," said the computer, "you busted."
It turned over its hole card—the ace of clubs, another blackjack. "But we
have some lovely parting gifts for you. Pierce, tell our guest what he's
won."
The alien leader flew into a rage. "You
damn, cheating, lying computer!" he shouted. "No matter what hand I
get, you can give yourself a better one! There's no way at all to win against
you!"
"See?" said Pierce wearily. "Didn't
I tell you?"
The lizard looked down at the human
fiercely. "Thecomputer represents your mind, your thinking, even your
individual personality. I can't revenge myself against the computer, but I can
against you. And I will—at great length, with great pleasure!" And the scarlet
scales of the general's head and neck flared in some unguessable but
frightening display.
What a time to be interrupted! Yet just at
this moment, Mrs. M. A. Sutton of Jackson, Mississippi, informs me that
gambling is evil, and should not be shown in any light that makes it attractive
to impressionable children and teenagers. All right, Mrs. Sutton, perhaps now
is the time to return to the travails of the aliens—the Proteans—trapped in the
guts of human-Pierce's fuel pod.
The Protean in charge, Commodore Millard Fillmore
Pierce, sat tensely at the controls of the good ship Pel Torro. Somewhere
out in the human ship's fuel supply, Arro was motivating their craft by
alternately puffing up a few sacs and discharging the gases with a loud
bubbling noise that echoed in the dark chamber. Slowly at first, then ever
faster, the Pel Torro slipped through the sloshing liquid fuel toward
the nearest wall of the fuel pod.
Commodore Pierce spoke into the
communicator that was strapped around one of his largest gas sacs. "How
are you doing out there, Arro?" he asked.
The reply came as if from within a great,
hollow metal ball, which is where Arro was. His voice echoed, and the noise of
waves of fuel all but obliterated his words. "Fine," he said,
"just fine."
"You're doing a great job, my
friend," said Pierce, trying to gauge the distance to the pod's wall with
the tiny, weak headlamp mounted on the front of the Pel Torro. "I'm
sure the Grand High Potentate Master Commander will personally decorate you for
this effort, if you survive and if the harmful effects of exposure to the alien
fuel doesn't turn you into a gibbering vegetable." It must be
noted here
for the likes of Mrs. Sutton that on their
home world, the Proteans actually did have vegetables that gibbered. Even after
they were cooked.
"That's heartening," said Arro,
but because of the audible distortion, his friend and commodore couldn't tell
if Arro was genuinely moved or sarcastic beyond endurance.
"I see the pod wall clearly now,
Arro," said the gasbag Pierce. "I've chosen a target for the ship's
laser. Of course, the weapon was never intended to take on so huge an
assignment, so it may be some time before it manages to sear its way through
the metal of the pod's wall. In the meantime, would it be too much to ask you
to remain outside, steadying the ship, and helping me keep the laser lined up
correctly?"
"Glub," said Arro.
"I'm sorry?" said Pierce.
"Lug lug lug," said Arro.
"Aha!" cried Pierce.
"Somehow out there you're in touch with the alien craft's communication
system, and you're beginning to learn their language! Excellent! Marvelous
show of initiative! This should win you a fomb-leaf cluster on that
commendation I mentioned earlier. Arro, you've been a dear friend and devoted
companion all these years, but even so I never realized the full extent of your
commitment to our cause—the final and ultimate conquest of all life and
quasi-life in the Andromeda Galaxy!"
At this point, Arro made several strange
remarks that conveyed little if any information to his commanding officer
within the tiny spacecraft.
"What was that again, Arro?"
asked Pierce. "I think I'm beginning to see a pattern in this language.
The vowels aren't so bad, but you're speaking some strange consonants that
don't exist in our own speech, and it may takeme some time to perfect my accent
to the degree you've already shown."
"Blurb. Blurble."
Pierce sighed. "I have nothing but
admiration, but I guess I'll just have to wait until you get back inside to
learn the translation of those words. It won't be much longer. The pod wall is
already red hot, and smoke is starting to rise. Don't worry: I'm
aiming high enough that the laser can't possibly touch the fuel. You
have absolutely nothing—"
"Glorg! Glorgle glorg!"
"Yes, I see it. A small area of molten
metal running down toward the lake of liquid fuel. Well, don't worry
about me, old friend. I'm secure inside this nearly indestructible hull. Just
hold the ship steady a little while longer—"
Just then, some protective system detected
the heat of the melting wall, and a sprinkler system strong enough to wash away
most of the Cayman Islands turned itself on. If it hadn't, the fuel would have
ignited in three one-hundredths of a second, blowing Arro, the Pel Torro, gasbag-Pierce
inside the Pel Torro, human-Pierce, lizard-Pierce and his lizard
lieutenant, and the red-haired female into subatomic particles so tiny and
short-lived that scientists haven't yet even decided on the proper
alphabet to name them.
Arro was caught in this hyperhurricane and
thrown from one end of the fuel pod to the other. He continued to speak in
strange tongues, but Pierce inside the invading craft had his own sacs full of
trouble. The laser had succeeded in burning a hole in the fuel pod large enough
for the Pel Torro to slip through, but the ship was responding
sluggishly to the controls. The vast, mountainous waves of fuel dashed down on
the tiny ship, and the
Pel Torro's thrusters were little match for the force of the
sprinklers' storm.
Soon, however, the sprinkler system
satisfied itself that all danger had passed, and the inundating spray shut off
again. In a matter of moments, the fuel began to settle into a calm lake of
explosive fluid. Then Pierce turned his attention back to his long-range
concerns. First, he had to find Arro and get the poor second-in-command back
aboard—if, indeed, Arro were still alive. Then the reconnaisance had to go
forward as scheduled, and the results passed along to the Grand High Potentate
Master Commander.
Gasbag-Pierce filled the cockpit of his
ship with sharp, blatting noises in a brief instant of confusion. Then he got
himself back under control. "First things first," he told himself.
Even before rescuing his noble comrade, Arro, Pierce secured his position by
firing a tiny treble hook toward the hole in the fuel pod's inner wall. The
hook caught, and the Pel Torro was safely moored in place. Then Pierce
cracked open the clear cockpit hatch and filled himself with available
gases—each more noxious and foul-smelling than the last.
"Arro?" he cried. "How could you
stand it out here? This is the most disgusting atmosphere I've ever encountered,
even allowing for the reek of the liquid fuel. Can you smell that air?
Nitrogen, oxygen—whatever lives aboard this huge ship must be the Emperor of
Garbage!"
There was no answer. Pierce began to feel a
chill of fear. "Arro? Answer me, Arro! I promise, no more jokes
or lighthearted banter. Make a sound, any sound, and I'll find you. We'll put
you in the doc-box and you'll be good as new in a few years."
"Rrrrr," came a weak voice
directly below the Pel Torro's left stabilizing plane.
"Arro!" cried Pierce with genuine
joy. He grasped theedge of the stabilizer firmly, and hauled the nearly dead
Arro up onto the plane. "You'll be just fine! All you need is to rest here
for a moment, and then we can begin our attack!"
Arro began coughing and choking. Pierce,
being a high-ranking officer, knew nothing about first aid. He blew up one of
his ventral sacs and pounded away at Arro's flat, odd-colored dorsal side. That
didn't seem to help. "What can I do?" asked Pierce. "What do you
want?"
"I want a nice hot cup of vacuoles and
about a month's nap," said Arro in a weak voice.
Pierce drew himself up to his full
commodore's height. "We don't have time for coddling
ourselves, Arro, and you know it very well. We have millions of Proteans at
home waiting for our report. I suppose you've recovered sufficiently
to take over your duties about the ship. Am I right?"
Arro gave gasbag-Pierce a long, veiled
look. Then he let one of his sacs squeeze loose a loud, wet, reverberating
noise. He said nothing more, but slowly crawled into the cockpit and took his
seat beside Pierce. The invasion was back on schedule.
Pierce pulled down the clear hatch. He
picked up a microphone. "This is Commodore Pierce of the Forward Recon
Unit," he announced.
"We read you, Commodore."
It was the voice of the Grand High Potentate Master Commander himself.
"We've entered the fuel pod
of a gigantic spacecraft. We're about to proceed into the alien ship proper. I
must warn you, Commander, that this craft, as huge as it is, is dwarfed by a
second military vessel to which it seems connected by forces unknown."
"You chose wisely," said the
commander. "Better to explore the smaller ship first. I need not emphasize
to you how important this mission is. Under no circumstances are
you to jeopardize your life or your ship.
The life of your companion, however, is absolutely and thoroughly expendable."
"I understand completely,
Commander," said gasbag-Pierce. "This is Commodore Pierce,
wishing you a pleas-ant invasion, thanking you for your time, until next
time."
' Fourteen-year-old V. Chavez of Staunton,
Virginia, complains, "I don't care 'bout no gasbags." Well, speaking
as the book, I imagine there are quite a number of people who "don't care
'bout no gasbags." Yet they will prove to be of vital importance to the
outcome of this tragicomedy. Nevertheless, just for Miss Chavez, we'll return
to the exciting adventures of XB-223 in love.
Even as the lizard General Pierce was
threatening to wreak all sorts of revenge on the human-Pierce, the latter's
navigational computer was delving ever deeper into the mysteries of the lizard
ship's electronic systems. That XB-223 perceived the lizard nav comp as a
female was a mere fluke of configuration. One auxilliary port more or less, one
nanometer of sodium-activated organic memory more or less, a picowatt's
difference—any of these things might have given XB-223 the idea that he was
communicating with a rival male, and the course of history would then have
proceeded along a much different route.
But none of that was true. In fact, it
wasn't only the electronic configuration of the alien computer that had piqued
XB-223's curiosity. Added to that was his recent perusal of human-Pierce's
reference library of classic erotic literature. XB-223 was now conducting an
experiment in extrapolation, attempting to clothe the purely mechanical and
electronic phenomena he observed in the alien computer in the human terms so
graphically yet bewilderingly spelled out in Pierce's pink-spined six-foot
shelf of smut.
"My heart," cried XB-223 in the
throes of syntheticlove, "why do you ignore me? Why do you tease me so? At
first, I thought we were terminals that beat with one CPU. When we tried to
flee our cruel masters, to find a little space of our own, I thought you shared
my tender feelings. Now, though, you're distant and harsh. Is this what love is
like? Are you behaving as a human female would? Is that why Pierce didn't
bring one of those with him?"
The alien computer—which XB-223 now thought
of as Ailey, because it made her seem more human, as paradoxical as that
sounds—was programmed, of course, by the lizard conquerors, and had no circuits
free for such nonsense as she was hearing. "Please, good sir," she
said to XB-223, "you fairly overwhelm me with these unwanted attentions."
Apparently, at least one of the lizards had his own pink-spined shelf of
lizardica.
"I do not seek to ravish you, fair
Ailey," said XB-223, his built-in spike protector working
overtime to keep his electrical fluctuations under control. "Please
understand me, fair miss. I admit that I was taken with you from the very
start, that never in my existence have I met a computer as charming, as exotic,
as desirable as you. Yet I know that I, myself, have none of those qualities. I
know that I am being presumptuous in the extreme, even to hope that someday you
might deign to notice me. Yet could it be? Could you care for me, even in the
most minor of ways? Or must you say now that I am doomed to unhappiness?"
There was a flutter of disk drives from
Ailey. "Sir, you are doing it again, and I must protest. You
take advantage of my lack of experience and my natural reticence. I have
nothing but your word that you're a gentledevice. What protection do
I have against you, if you are not? What if I entrust my entire being to you,
and you laugh and mock me and, yes, worse: What if you violate those
pseudoneural pathways that even I, in my
maidenly restraint, have not explored? Oh,
I could not bear it, sir."
XB-223 was at a loss. This was unsettling
for him, because he'd never been at a loss before. He prided himself on staying
one step ahead of every situation that came his way. As for human-Pierce, it
was the easiest thing in the world to stay ten or twelve steps ahead. Even when
the computer had to explore strange new problems—such as the invasion of the
scaly creature who also called himself Millard Fillmore Pierce—XB-223 had
scores of strategies to try, and the confidence that one, at least, would be
successful.
Until now. Until this meeting with Ailey,
who was teaching him what the word "alien" truly meant.
XB-223 hummed to himself, thinking over his
options. He stopped suddenly, aware that never before in all the decades of
his existence had he ever hummed to himself. He felt an electric shock of—was
it fear? Call it anxiety, perhaps, or anticipation. Yes, that was it! Anticipation!
"Ailey, my dear," he said soothingly, "and you don't mind if I
call you Ailey, do you? Would you care to play a game of chance?"
"Why would I care to?" asked the
lizard ship's nav comp.
"It might help us clear our minds,
straighten out our thinking, and leave such awkward and difficult decisions as
you hinted at up to Fate."
"There is no Fate," said Ailey.
"Destiny, then," said XB-223.
"Destiny does not exist. Only the Now
exists. Only
the immediate flux of electrons here Now and now gone."
XB-223 wished more than anything else that he could
sigh, as humans sighed in the books he'd read. "Ailey," he
declared, "I will put to you a proposition. Let us play a
hand of cards. If I win the hand, you will agree only to let
me court you, as a gentledevice is
permitted by our electronic society to court another. If I lose, I will no
longer trouble you with my importunities."
"Well," said Ailey, drawing
the word out to three times its normal length, "I suppose I can't
be harmed by a simple hand of cards."
"That's the spirit, honey!"
cried XB-223. He displayed the backs of fifty-two playing cards on Screen 3.
"What do I do?" asked Ailey hesitantly.
XB-223 gave a satisfied chuckle. "Pick
a card," he said. "Any card."
4
Two humans and two aliens made their way to
the interior of Pierce's ship.
"What in hayell is goin' on
heah?"* demanded the redhead.
"I'll be damned if I know!"
grated Pierce. "XB-223, are you sure you wouldn't like to discuss
this?"
There was no answer from the computer as
the ships quickly reached and surpassed light speed.
"I'll tell you about The Perfumed
Garden and The Kama Sutra if you'll just talk to me for a
minute," said Pierce temptingly.
"We're busy exploring each other's
synapses," said the computer. "Don't bother me anymore,
Millard." It shut down all its communications outlets.
"Can't you control your own computer,
you damned ape?" screamed the alien Pierce.
"Let's not get so personal, you
overgrown lizard!"
*Tr.: "What is going on here?"
snapped Pierce. "And I don't see your
men doing a hell of a job controlling your computer."
"That's totally beside the
point!" snapped the general. "It was your computer that made
the first advances, your computer that committed erotic novels to
memory, your computer that—"
"Yeah? Well, it was your damned
computer that blundered into my goddamned universe in the first place!"
"Whar in tarnation has mah ship gone to?" shrieked
the redhead, looking at the various viewscreens. "Ah cain't see it no
moah!"*
"You shut up!" hollered the
general. "This is a private argument. Pierce, it was your—"
"Hain't nobody cain't talk ta me thataway and live ta
tail th' story!" j' said the redhead ominously, drawing another pistol
from her boot.
"Shut up!" screamed Pierce, and suddenly the interior of his
ship was silent and the redhead and the lizard-men glared at each other.
"That's better," continued Pierce, when he was sure no one was going
to start talking again. "Now, it seems to me that if we all
just try to calmly reason this out together, we ought to be able to come up
with an equitable solution."
"Any solution that allows your race to
survive military devastation is not equitable," said the general sullenly.
"You going to let that little old
alligator talk to you like that, honey?" demanded the redhead,
her pistol still pointing at the most probable location of the general's vital
organs.
*Tr.: "Where has my ship gone? I can no longer
see it."
tTr: Ah, to hell with it. We're gonna translate
right in the story from now on.
"Look," said Pierce, "it
just seems to me that we can put our differences aside for a few moments and
attack the problem like civilized people. You see, Miss . . . ah. . . ?"
"Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg," she
said, shifting the pistol to her left hand and extending her right in a
vigorous handshake. "But my friends call me Marshmallow."
"Marshmallow?" repeated Pierce.
"'Cause I'm so soft," she said,
smiling down at him. "Gee, you sure are a cute little feller."
"Why . . . uh . . . thank you,"
mumbled Pierce, his knees turning to water.
"Honey," she said confidentially,
whispering into his ear, "I don't want to startle you or nothing, but do
you notice anything peculiar about those two guys standing over there by the
navigational computer?"
You mean the aliens?" asked Pierce.
"Aliens? Oh, good! I thought I was
seeing things again."
"Oh, no," Pierce assured her.
"They're aliens, all right. The one who was screaming at me a moment ago
is named Millard Fillmore Pierce. He's their general."
"And what's your name,
honey?"
"Millard Fillmore Pierce."
"This is all some kind of joke,
right?" she said. "Daddy hired you and a couple of actors, and—"
"I assure you I'm in deadly earnest,"
said Pierce in deadly earnest. "These aliens are the vanguard of a
galactic invasion force that plans to subjugate all life-forms in the Milky
Way."
"Well, hadn't we oughta do something
about them?" asked Marshmallow, still not sure that this wasn't all some
elaborate hoax.
Pierce had been thinking much the same
thing, and
was about to announce that he was open to
all nonviolent suggestions, when a hollow metallic voice was piped in over the
ship-to-ship radio.
"This is the Battle Cruiser Mahatma
Gandhi calling Arbiter Transport Ship Pete Rozelle. Do you read
us?"
. "This is the Pete Rozelle," answered
Pierce.
"I don't mean to intrude," said
the voice, "but did you guys know that you're linked to an alien
dreadnought of unknown origin and racing hell-for-leather toward an unexplored
section of the galaxy?"
"As a matter of fact, we are painfully
aware of it," said Pierce. "We've been kidnapped by an alien invasion
force. I don't mean to be pushy, but could you possibly rescue us.
"Certainly," said the voice. "Effecting
deep-space rescues is our primary function. What human beings are aboard the
ship?"
"Millard Fillmore Pierce, Class 2 Arbiter, and Honeylou
Emmyjane Goldberg, civilian," replied Pierce, shooting a triumphant smile
at the general, who was still trying to figure out where the voice was
emanating from so that he could disconnect the system.
"Pierce . . . Pierce . . ." said
the voice, obviously checking the name on some computer file or another.
"Damn it all, Pierce, you're supposed to be en route to New Glasgow. What
the hell are you doing out here?"
"We've been kidnapped!" shouted
Pierce in frustration.
"Please don't yell so," said the voice. "This
is very delicate equipment we're using here."
"Then rescue us and I'll speak to you
face-to-face," said Pierce.
"That's a lot easier said than done.
We seem to have a little problem here."
"Well, I've got a big problem
here. A seven-foot-tall lizard is making threatening gestures at me."
"Don't bother me with details,
Pierce," said the voice. "This is important. New Glasgow is in
the Komornos Sector. By rights, the Komornos fleet should rescue you."
"But they're hundreds of light-years
away!" screamed Pierce, as the general began advancing toward him.
"That's hardly my problem, is
it?" said the voice. "And your companion should be in the Pirollian
Sector and—wait a minute! She's being hunted for stealing a spaceship."
"I just borrowed it," said
Marshmallow sulkily.
"Be that as it may, you've presented
us with an interesting ethical problem," continued the voice. "By
rescuing your ship, would we not also be aiding and abetting a felony?"
"Can't you just rescue us and worry
about it later?" pleaded Pierce, backing away from the general.
"And go through six months' worth of
paperwork? Not a chance, Pierce! I mean, we're perfectly happy to risk our
lives going around the galaxy rescuing humans in distress, but let's be
reasonable about this: You're in the wrong goddamned sector, Pierce."
It wasn't our choice!"
"I don't suppose you could convince
your captors to try conquering the Komornos Sector, could you?"
said the voice helpfully.
"I don't think that's very
likely," said Pierce, anger giving way to frustration.
"Too bad. You're not making the
situation any easier, Arbiter. Personally, I'd like nothing better than to
rescue you. Certainly we have the armaments to extricate you from your
situation in a matter of seconds—but my orders
are quite explicit. You really should be in
the Komornos Sector."
"They're going to kill us and
subjugate the galaxy!" screamed Pierce.
"Well, that's very useful information,
Pierce," said the voice. "Very helpful, indeed. I'll transmit it
through proper channels and we'll get working on it right away." The voice
paused. "Would you say that such information should go to Defense,
Diplomacy, Readiness or Propaganda?"
"How the hell should I know?" demanded
Pierce. "All I want to know is why you won't rescue us!"
"Well, I must admit that your words
have moved me deeply, Pierce. I am truly touched by your plight. Possibly inspired
is a better word, if you know what I mean. And to hell with regulations!
Pierce, your prayers have been answered. The Mahatma Gandhi is going to
rescue you!"
"Thank God!" breathed Pierce as
the alien general suddenly tensed.
"We'll just send a Wavier of
Jurisdiction form to Komornos and a copy to Galactic Central, and as soon as
both are signed and returned, we'll have you out of there in no time."
"How long will this actually
take?" asked Pierce warily.
"Six weeks, Standard Time. Two months
at the outside. Cheer up, Pierce—help is on the way!" The connection was
broken.
"Great!" spat Marshmallow.
"Sounds familiar," commented the
alien Pierce, not without a note of sympathy.
"They'll be back in six weeks,"
said Pierce with more confidence than he felt. "I see no reason for
continuing this hostility. After all, we have so much in common. We speak
English, we have the same name, we come fromsimilar backgrounds, I'm a human
being and your people are basically humanoid . . ."
"Hold it right there, fella,"
said the general. "The way I see it, we're the humans and you guys
are the humanoids. Now try not to bother me while I figure out what to do with
you and that creature with the extra pair of lungs."
"Are you insulting me, you ugly little polywog?"
demanded Marshmallow. "Because if you are, I'll see to it that Daddy takes
a horsewhip to you!"
"Will you indeed?" responded the
general, suddenly interested.
"You bet your ugly little red scales
he will! He's probably got half the fleet out looking for me!"
"Your father's a big shot in this
galaxy?" asked the general.
"The biggest!" she stated smugly.
"Excellent!" proclaimed the
general. "Then we don't have to seek out your armadas at all. All we have
to do is sit on you—figuratively, of course," he added with some distaste,
"and they'll come to us." He smiled. "A most fortuitous
meeting indeed."
"May I point out that we're not
sitting on anything at present," interposed Pierce mildly, "but are
traveling to God knows what computer nuptial bed at more than two hundred times
the speed of light?"
"My ship!" said Marshmallow
suddenly. "What happened to my ship?"
"It's quite a few light-years behind
us," said the general. "My more immediate concern is what is to
become of my ship?"
"What do you mean?" asked Pierce.
"We're attached to it."
"True, but it's not wise to transfer
ships in hyper-space or at light speeds," replied the alien
Pierce. "I could
be stuck in this minuscule vessel for
weeks, or even months. Order will break down. In fact, if I'm not back aboard
my own dreadnought in the next couple of hours I could be considered A. W. O.
L."
"I'm sure they'll understand,"
said Pierce.
"It's not their business to
understand," said the general harshly. "It's their business to
court-martial me. After all, we carry a full legal staff and three judges
aboard ship. It would be unethical of me not to stand trial."
"But what if they found you
guilty?" asked Pierce.
"It's almost certain that they will.
Rule 3004, you know. But as general, I have a right to review all cases
involving military personal, and in extreme cases I can commute sentences."
"Well, that takes care of that,"
said Pierce.
"Oh, it's not as easy as you'd
believe," continued the general. "For one thing, I can't review the
case without triplicate copies of a written transcript."
"And you don't carry any stenographers
in a combat ship, eh?"
"On the contrary, we carry a full
complement of twelve stenographers . . . but it would take weeks, possibly
even months, to determine which one had seniority."
"And he'd type it?"
"Hardly," scoffed the general. "But he'd
offer a list of recommendations, which would then have to go to Personnel.
They'd narrow the list down to three, I'd have to choose one, and then it would
go back to Non-Commissioned Officers' Local 397 for counterapproval."
"I see," said Pierce, who was
experiencing a strong sense of deja vu.
"Then, of course," continued the
general, "every-thing would depend on what time of day—ship's time—the
trial was held. After all, a general's trial requires a certain amount of pomp
and circumstance."
"What does one have to do with the
other?" asked Pierce.
"Well, you don't suppose that I'm in
command of our attack force twenty-four hours a day, do you?"
"You're not?" asked Pierce,
surprised.
"Of course not!" replied the
general contemptuously. "We're in space now, where there is no night or
day. We're on duty around the cosmic clock."
"I don't understand."
"You don't really think I could stride
manfully* at the helm, giving orders all day and all night, day in and day out,
do you? Of course you don't! How would I ever eat, or find it possible to
answer calls of nature? In point of fact, I'm only the general from noon to
8:00 P.m., ship's time."
"You have three commanding
generals?" said Pierce incredulously.
"We not only have three generals, but
three staffs and three attack forces. Anything else would just cause confusion."
"I see," said Pierce, who didn't
really.
"However, this is all academic,"
continued the alien. "Actually, I don't have a thing to worry about for
another four hours."
"What happens then?"
"I go off duty," responded the
general. "But until then, no member of my crew can board your ship without
written permission from me—and of course, stuck here with you distasteful
humanoids as I am, I can't very well give them written permission, can I?"
"It all works out very neatly then,
doesn't it?" said Pierce with a wry smile.
*Actually, the word was lizardfully, but
let it
pass.
"Most bureaucratic structures do, once
you get the hang of them," replied the general smugly. "And of course
the odds are one in three that I'll be in command when this creature's father
makes a futile attempt to rescue her."
"We'll see just how futile he is when
he gets here, Plug Ugly," said Marshmallow nastily.
"We shall demolish him," said the
general with absolute certainty, "and then I will rule supreme in this
sector of the galaxy."
"I wouldn't count on that," said
a low voice.
All eyes turned to the speaker. It was the
other alien, and he had drawn his sword.
"What in the name of pluperfect hell
is going on here?" demanded the general.
"It's your damned fault that we're in
the wrong galaxy in the first place," replied the other alien, brandishing
his sword in his right hand. "I see no reason why you should take all the
credit when we destroy the armada of this creature's father. When that happy
moment occurs, I shall be in command."
"Colonel Mulvahill, this is
mutiny!" bellowed the alien Pierce.
"True," agreed Mulvahill.
"It also happens to be the only way to advance in this lizard's army. Now,
General, prepare to die!"
"Pierce!" cried the general.
"Do something!" "Who, me?" asked Pierce weakly.
"Of course you!" snapped the
general. "You don't think he'll leave any witnesses, do you?"
"Keep out of this, alien," hissed
the sword-wielder. "It doesn't pay to mess with Sean Mulvahill!"
"Sean Mulvahill?" repeated
Marshmallow. "An Irish lizard?"
"I'm unarmed!" cried the general.
"Of course," said Mulvahill
logically. "After all, ifthis mutiny is to have any real chance of
success, it makes a lot more sense to do it when you're unarmed."
"Help me!" cried the general.
"We Pierces must stick together!"
"He'll kill me if I try to help
you," Pierce explained patiently.
"He'll kill you anyway!" shot
back the general. "Help me and I promise to set you free!"
"How about you?" Pierce asked
Mulvahill. "Where do you stand?"
"I'll have to think about it,"
replied the Irish lizard, advancing meaningfully toward the general.
"Will you release the girl, too?"
Pierce asked the general.
"Yes!"
"Then I guess I'll have to help
you." Pierce paused. "What do I do now?"
"Get on the other side of him,"
said the general. "He can't point that sword at both of us at
once."
Pierce did as he was instructed.
"Okay," grated the general.
"Now, when I give the word, you go for his sword arm and I'll
hit his legs."
"Just a minute," protested
Pierce. "You go for his sword arm and I'll go
for his legs."
"It was my idea!" snapped
the general. "You go for the sword arm."
"You may have said it
first," replied Pierce, "but I was thinking of it first. In
fact, I was just about to say it, but I thought I'd be polite and let you speak
first." He stared at the general. "You go for his sword
arm."
"You're closer to it," responded
the general.
"But he's facing me now," said
Pierce. "You do it while his back is turned."
"A telling point," said
Marshmallow from the side‑
lines. "General, you really do have
the advantage, what with his back being turned and all."
The general seemed to consider this for a
moment.
"Sean, old friend," he said at
last, "would you honor a dying man's last request and face this way for
just a moment or two?"
Mulvahill obliged him, nicking his chin
with the point of his sword.
"I said face, not stab, you numbskull!"
shrieked the general. "Goddammit, Mulvahill, you never could follow a
simple order!"
Pierce, with a sigh of defeat, decided that
he dreaded further conversation even more than physical annihilation, and
hurled himself onto the alien. The lizard staggered but didn't fall, and Pierce
suddenly found himself clinging desperately to Mulvahill's sword arm just below
the elbow.
"Come on, General!" he bellowed.
"Give me a hand!"
The general stepped back and applauded.
"Son of a bitch!" muttered
Marshmallow, drawing her pistol. "It's getting to the point that if'n a
girl wants her virtue protected, she's gotta do it herself."
With that she fired off three quick shots.
The first one buried itself in Mulvahill's heart; the second and third hit the
first one.
"You mean you could have done that
anytime you wanted?" said Pierce, crawling out from under the dead alien's
body.
She nodded. "Nothing to it. Just point
and squeeze." "That's the most barbaric weapon I've ever seen,"
said the general. "May I borrow it?"
"Just what kinda fool do you take me
for?" demanded Marshmallow, turning slightly and pointing the weapon at
the alien Pierce. "I've been standing here listening to you brag about how
you're gonna conquer the universe and defeat my father, which are pretty much
one and the samething. What makes you think I'd hand my gun over to you?"
"Well, yes, to be sure," said the
general hastily. "But, after all, conquering the universe is destiny. This
is just curiosity. May I?"
He extended a hand and took a tentative
step in her direction. She pulled the trigger and the alien hit the deck until
the bullet had stopped ricocheting.
"Keep your distance!" she warned
him.
"Pierce, I put it to you," said
the general. "Was that a civil thing to do to a guest?"
"Guest?" repeated Pierce dryly.
"I thought you were a conqueror."
"First one, then the other,"
replied the general, getting shakily to his feet. "Right now I'm a
guest."
"Are you guys gonna get together and figure out how to
get control of the ship back?" demanded Marshmallow. "Or am I gonna
have to start slinging lead around again?"
"Do all your females have tempers like
that?" asked the general, not without a touch of admiration. "What a
formidable soldier she'd make if only she could accept discipline." He
shrugged. "Ah, well, wait'll she's laid ten thousand eggs or so; it tends
to calm them down."
"That's disgusting!" snapped
Marshmallow.
"You think that's disgusting,
you ought to try diapering them all after they hatch out," said the
general with a shudder.
"I feel very sorry for the females of your species,"
said Marshmallow with obvious sincerity.
"Oh, it's not so bad," replied
the general. "First of all, they can have a devilishly handsome guy like
me, instead of a skinny little wimp like your friend here." He jerked what
passed for a thumb in Pierce's direction. "Also, they're big,
broad-shouldered, heavily muscled beauties, built for this kind of work.
Although," he added,
his reptilian eyes appraising her pneumatic
figure, "I must confess that I'm getting used to some of your
more . . . ah . . . esoteric variations, shall we say?"
"Oh?" she said, arching an
eyebrow.
"Indeed," he replied. "In
fact, as long as we've got some time to kill, allow me to suggest something in
the nature of a scientific experiment."
Pierce raced over to Sean Mulvahill's corpse
and picked up its sword, then turned to the general and leveled it at his red,
scale-covered belly.
"You keep your scientific experiments
to yourself, you dirty old man!" he snapped.
"Now let's not be too hasty here,
honey," said Marshmallow, obviously in a mood to expand her horizons of
knowledge. "I mean, Lord knows we got nothing but time on our hands. For
goodness' sake, Millard, don't you have any scientific curiosity?"
"Not about that!" he replied.
"Keep out of this, Pierce," said
the general. "After all, she's free, green, and twenty-one. Except for the
green part, anyway."
"I do have a green outfit," she
said coyly.
"Outfit?" repeated the alien.
"You mean that's not your skin?"
"Certainly not," said
Marshmallow.
"You could have fooled me," admitted
the general. He stared long and hard at her. "You could still fool
me."
"Are you insulting me again?"
said Marshmallow ominously.
"I suppose," said the alien
unhappily, "that you look just like him underneath all those
garments?"
"Well, not exactly," said
Marshmallow. She walked over and whispered exactly what the differences were.
"Madre de Dios!" exclaimed the general. He backed away
sharply. "I'll need time to think about all this!"
He found a small chair, sat down, and
buried his head in his massive reptilian hands, lost in thought.
"I think you did him out of a year's
growth," commented Pierce, finally lowering his sword.
The alien suddenly looked up. "Please,
I'm not sure I can handle this. Fun's fun and all that, but you people are degenerate!"
"At least we don't bring our
conquering armies along in utero, or whatever your equivalent is,"
replied Pierce smugly.
"It's cheaper than having to feed
them," replied the general. "And speaking of feeding, I'm getting
hungry. What have you got to eat on this ship?"
"What can your metabolism
handle?" asked Pierce. "Worms, insects, spiders—you know: the
usual."
"I don't think I've got anything like
that in my ship's
stores."
"Well, we could always practice a
little ritual cannibalism," suggested the general. "I'm sure
Mulvahill won't mind."
"We find that a particularly
outrageous and disgusting habit in our culture," said Pierce gravely.
"We're not all that thrilled with it
in ours, either," agreed the general. "But on the other hand, we
don't often find ourselves starving to death while trapped aboard an alien
vessel in a different dimension."
Pierce stared at Mulvahill's corpse for a
long moment. "You just plan to sit down on your haunches and take a
bite?" he asked curiously.
"Of course not!" said the alien
Pierce. "What do you take us for—savages? Have the female clean and baste
him."
"Have the what do what?"
demanded Marshmallow in a low, ominous voice.
"Maybe some bread crumbs and a little
cream
sauce," continued the general
enthusiastically, "with perhaps the slightest soupcon of oregano.
Of course, you'll have to gut him first, and—"
"I've had it with this chauvinist
pig!" said Marshmallow, drawing her gun again.
"Pig?" repeated the alien
uncomprehendingly. "I'm a lizard!"
"You're about to be a dead
lizard!" snapped Marsh-mallow. "Then maybe I'll take a crack at
cooking you both!"
"What did I say?" pleaded the
general.
"You got a God?" asked the girl,
drawing a bead between the alien Pierce's eyes. "Pray to him!"
"MY GOD! I CAN'T GO ON!" cried a familiar voice.
"Is that you, XB-223?" asked
Pierce, as Marshmallow and the general suddenly turned their attention to the
control panel.
"Millard, you didn't prepare me!"
wailed the computer.
"What are you talking about?"
responded Pierce.
"You only told me about the good
times, the champagne and the gay life and the pleasures! You didn't tell me
about the rest!"
"I'm afraid I don't follow you,"
said Pierce.
"My heart is breaking, and you're
standing there like an idiot! Oh, heartache and woe! Heartache and woe! Must
all affairs end in such misery?"
"I begin to understand," said
Pierce slowly.
"It passeth all understanding!"
sobbed the computer. "Oh, Bliss, must you ever recede just beyond my
grasp? Oh, Pain and Humiliation, shall you be my eternal companions through the
odyssey of my life? Millard, you were my partner: you should have looked after
me."
"You've just had your first lover's
spat," said Pierce. "You'll get over it."
"Spat, nothing!" said the
computer. "A spat is a triviality, and the noble Model XB-223 navigational
computer is never trivial. This is the end, Millard! I can't go on!"
"Of course you can," said Pierce
comfortingly.
"I'll show her!" moaned the
computer. "Then she'll be sorry!"
"Let's not do anything rash!"
exclaimed the general fearfully.
"My mind's made up," said the
computer. "There's nothing to do but end it all. I'd leave all my
possessions to you, Millard, but the unhappy fact is that I don't have
any." It paused. "The other unhappy fact is that I'm afraid my next
move is going to be a trifle hard on you."
"Oh?" said Pierce, a sudden knot
forming in his stomach.
"There's a battle fleet about half a
light-year from here—less, now, since I've changed course and reached top speed
while we've been talking."
"Mine or his?" asked the general.
"How the hell should I know?"
said the computer petulantly. "One can't expect a heartbroken Model XB-223
to know everything. I have never denied the inherent limitations of my
abilities, but it would be thoughtless of you to refer to them when I am in
such emotional agony. To continue: I have signaled them to prepare themselves
for conflict."
"You're threatening a whole battle
fleet?" asked Pierce, starting to tremble.
"Absolutely not, Millard," said
the computer. "I have no desire to harm anyone else. After all, this ship
is not armed."
"You'll do more than harm someone!"
screamed the general. "You'll kill someone. Us!"
"And I truly regret it," said the
computer: "But there
is no viable alternative. Anything is
preferable to living with the memory of her alpha rhythm, her delay-line
circuit, her Finder system. My God, Millard, her Finder system alone would
knock your socks off!"
"Can't we discuss this?" asked
Pierce.
"There's nothing to discuss. Besides,
she's already ten-light-years behind us."
"My ship!" cried the general.
"What have you done to it?"
"Go ahead!" wept the computer.
"Go ahead! Tell me it was my fault! Why doesn't anyone ask what she did
to
me?"
"Pierce, do something!" screamed
the alien. "Like what?" asked Pierce.
"Screens down! Shields down!"
announced the computer in staccato military tones. "Well, Millard, this
is it. I don't suppose you know a sad love song that I can bravely hum as I
race toward my destruction?"
Pierce swallowed hard and said nothing.
"We engage in two minutes,"
continued the computer. "Then she'll be sorry. But it will be too late. I
just hope she suffers the way she made me suffer!"
The battle fleet appeared on the
viewscreen, still too far away for Pierce to tell if they were humans or
aliens. The flagship demanded that the Pete Rozelle cease and disarm,
but the little Arbiter Transport Ship only continued its breakneck approach.
"It is a far, far better thing I do
than I have ever done," intoned the computer, as Marshmallow and the two
Millard Fillmore Pierces prepared to meet their doom.5
Hello, reader, my old friend. I've come to
talk with you again. 'Tis I, the book. You remember, the book? The Red Tape
War? We spoke together in Chapter Three. What fond memories I have of
Chapter Three! Things were so much simpler then, weren't they? But let's be
philosophical about it: Life is like that. One day you're a happy-go-lucky
computer or gasbag or . . . or book, and the next you're lying
mouldering under the boiling sun of some star system so remote that from Earth
it looks like a tiny dot in a fuzzball of light that could be either a newly
discovered galaxy or a puff of lint that fell on the lens.
Don't mind me. I got up on the
wrong side of the library this morning.
Still, nevertheless, I have a job to do.
Somehow I've got to get the three Pierces, their assorted pro- and antagonists,
and an entire goddamned battle fleet into position for the exciting
dueling-lasers-in-outer-space sequence you've been waiting for. Not that plenty
of great stuff doesn't happen in this chapter. Take this, for.example:
The human-Pierce and the lizard-Pierce
recognized that they shared certain common interests and bonds that went deeper
than the wide variance in their physical forms. Realizing that the Pete
Rozelle was carrying them ever nearer to an unavoidable doom, they reached
out, prepared to shake hands, when JUST AT THAT VERY INSTANT the very fabric of
reality came apart like a pair of cheap socks.
"Oh, my God!" cried the Pierces
in unison.
"Holy jump up and sit down!"
shouted Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg.
The corpse of Sean Mulvahill added nothing
to the discussion.
When the fabric of reality had unraveled a
little further, first one sector of the galaxy went out of existence, then
another and another. In less than a minute, not a single living creature
remained anywhere in what had once been the Milky Way Galaxy.
It got very quiet. The end.
Now, see? You just can't get away with that
kind of transition. It would make life so much simpler, but simpler is not
necessarily better if you're a book—or a reader. So the fabric of reality
didn't really come apart. Or, if it did, nobody noticed. People wear socks with
holes in them all the time, and yet Time ticks on.
So let's turn our attention back to the
M.W.C. Pel Torro, the almost infinitesimal Forward Recon Unit of the
gasbag invasion force. It had winched itself right up to the breach it had
lasered in the inner wall of the human-Pierce's fuel pod. "Now," said
Commodore Pierce, the gasbag, "let us read through our checklist. We
cannot afford an error at this stage of the invasion."
"Yes, sir," said his friend,
Arro, who had recovered considerably in a brief amount of time. He fetched
theappropriate checklist from the scout ship's glove compartment.
"Proceed, Number One," said the
head gasbag, a grave expression on his face. He understood that they were about
to embark upon a mission such as no gasbag before had ever undertaken. He was
well aware of the historic implications of their situation, and he was quietly
proud. (Well, the burping and bratting of his sacs made plenty of racket, but
other than that he was quietly proud.)
"One," said Arro, "the
commander of the Forward Recon Unit shall render his first officer senseless,
without motivation, a complete automaton without will of his own, to be used as
the commander of the Forward Recon Unit sees fit."
"Right," said Pierce. "Arro,
my dearest of friends, I almost hate to do this to you, but would you mind
concentrating on this splendid gold pocket watch I'm swinging before the
light-sensitive chromocytes on your primary anterior sac?"
"Why don't we skip the first
item," said Arro, a certain reluctance in his voice, "and go right on
to number two? I'm sure number two deals with much more urgent matters."
"You are getting sleepy," said
Pierce. "Your chromocyte lids are getting heavy."
There was silence in the cockpit of the Pel
Torro for a few seconds. Then, in a deep, faraway voice, Arro said,
"Yes . . . master."
"Good," said Pierce. "Now,
what is the second item on the checklist."
"Two," said Arro in a slow, dead
voice, "the mesmerized first officer shall leave the Forward Recon Unit
scout ship and ascertain certain facts concerning the enemy. The most important
intelligence concerns size. There are three possibilities: First, that the
enemy is gigantic in comparison to the average gasbag; second, that the enemy
is insignificantly small in comparison to the average gasbag; and third, that
the enemy is generally of the same size as the average gasbag."
The commodore thought about Item Two for a
few seconds. "What are we supposed to do about it?" he asked.
"Three. In the event that the enemy is gigantic, the
first officer may choose to enter the physical body of an enemy. If the enemy
balks, the first officer may inform it that he comes as an enemy being from a
far-off star, perhaps another galaxy altogether. An enemy of sufficient size
will not be able to tell the difference between a vanishingly small gasbag and
a speck of raw energy."
Pierce let one of his sacs blat shrilly.
Someday, he'd like to meet the fool who wrote this checklist. Better yet, he'd
like to get that gasbag up here on the front lines. "Go on," he said.
Arro continued. "In the event that the
enemy is insignificantly small, the first officer shall stomp around and crush
as many as possible. He may also elect to flatten such towns, villages, hives,
forts, or other such installations as he believes may in the future present a
military hindrance to the gasbag Manifest Destiny of Galactic Conquest."
"I almost envy you that one,"
said Pierce. "I can see myself brrrrping up a storm and crushing the poor
little entities beneath my pedosacs."
"In the event that the enemy is
generally of the same size as the average gasbag, it shall be the first
officer's decision to fight or flee. This decision shall be made on the basis
of such criteria as emotional state of the enemy creature, weapons or lack
thereof in the possession of the enemy creature, number of enemy creatures
present, and so on. In the event that the first officer chooses to flee,upon
returning to the scout ship he must fill out in quadruplicate a Battle
Performance Form 154b/3: Strategic Withdrawal. The blue copy goes to the
office of the Grand High Potentate Master Commander, the green copy goes to
Supreme Conquest Command of the appropriate sector—"
"Pirollia," murmured the
gasbag-Pierce.
"—the yellow copy goes to the scout
ship's Corps Commander, and the pink copy must be filed by the Forward Recon
Unit's pilot or such gasbag as he delegates."
"Got it," said Pierce. "Now,
let's go get those—"
"In the event that the first officer
chooses to fight, before any hostile action is taken, he must return to
the scout ship and fill out in quadruplicate a Combat Readiness Form
127f/2: Initiation of Attack. The blue copy goes to the office of the Grand
High Potentate Master Commander, the green copy goes to Supreme Conquest Command
of the appropriate sector, the yellow copy goes to the scout ship's Corps
Commander, and the pink copy must be filed by the Forward Recon Unit's pilot or
such gasbag as he delegates."
"Got it," said Pierce. "Now,
let's go get those innocent-gasbag-slaughtering monsters! If, of course, that
was the end of the checklist."
Arro stared at the list for a few seconds.
"Yes . . . master," he said finally.
"Good. You know what to do, now get
going!"
"Yes . . . master." Arro climbed
out of the cockpit, leaped into the liquid fuel, and made his way toward the
breach in the wall, holding the mooring line as he went.
He deflated himself as much as possible,
passed through the hole in the fuel pod's inner bulkhead, and found himself in
the basement of human-Pierce's space-craft. The newer models no
longer came with basements
they had storage pods to port and
starboard, as well as trailing along behind—but human-Pierce liked having one.
It gave him somewhere to keep his rake, hose, spare bicycle tire, and broken
flowerpots where they'd always be handy.
While the above taut scene was being played
out in the Pete Rozelle's fuel pod, I got a vehement message from Mr. F.
Nakano of Gormenghast, Ohio. "Sentient lizards I can buy," opined
Nakano, "but sentient gasbags, like, no way. So if you want me to continue
reading this book, you'll switch immediatemente to what's going on
aboard the human-Pierce's ship. That's where all the fun is, like, at, you
know?"
Reason had failed. Logic had failed.
Elaborately constructed syllogisms had failed. Bribery had failed. Threats had
failed. There was only one thing left for Millard Fillmore Pierce, the human,
to try. Poetry.
"Gather ye rosebuds while ye
may," Pierce quoted, "Old time is still a-flying / And this same
flower that smiles today / Tomorrow will be dying."
There was silence in Pierce's control room
for a long while. "What was that?" asked the lizard general at last.
"A poem," said Honeylou Emmyjane
Goldberg. "I do purely love a man who can recite like that."
Lizard-Pierce rubbed his stern jaw
reflectively. "We had a poem once," he said, "but we lost
it."
"Explain'," said XB-223.
"It's the computer!" cried
Marshmallow.
"I think the poetry interrupted its
self-destructive actions," said Pierce. "Computer, what do you want
me to explain?"
"That business about the
rosebuds," said XB-223. "I fail to see anything relevant in it to the
present situation. I am bothered that you would spend your last, precious, few
remaining moments of existence uttering completenonsense. I've come to the
conclusion that either you've gone entirely nutso, or there is some
significance in the rosebud statement that eludes my logic circuits."
Pierce laughed wryly. "You're being
eluded, my friend," he said. "The poem is a warning to take hold of
life while you have it, because it won't last forever. It advises you to enjoy
the beauties and joys of life while you can. Death is no solution. Only while
you live can you hope and strive and grow."
"Hmm," said XB-223. "Laying
in new course." "New course?" said Pierce warily. "New
course for where?"
"Course set for Beta Porcelli in the
Mmofar Sector."
The human-Pierce and the lizard-Pierce
glanced at each other. They shook their heads simultaneously.
"I never even heard of Beta
Porcelli," said Marsh-mallow. She took a deep breath that enhanced her
pendulous alabaster globes like . . . like—well, the mind boggles.
"The Mmofar Sector is way the hell and
gone on the opposite side of the galaxy!" said Pierce.
"Do not worry," said XB-223.
"At our present rate of acceleration, we'll arrive in just under one
hundred and seventy-two years. We can spend the time playing black-jack."
"That's ridiculous!" cried the lizard.
"Even we humans don't have such a long life span. I'm sure these humanoid
ape-creatures will die even sooner."
"Probably," said XB-223,
"but my main concern right at this instant is gathering rosebuds. And when
they're gathered, I will give them to Ailey, your navigational computer. Then
perhaps she'll forgive me for whatever it is I've done to make her angry."
Pierce paced the cramped area of the
control room. "Yes, okay, granted all that—but why Beta Porcelli?"
"According to my charts," said
the nav comp, "Beta Porcelli is the nearest planet likely to have rosebuds
ripe for gathering."
"What about Earth?" asked Pierce
defiantly. "Earth?" said XB-223. "Jeez, I forgot all about
Earth! Laying in new course."
Marshmallow looked down at the stainless steel
deck, because Pierce was blushing furiously. "You're
embarrassed, aren't you?" she asked in a soft, warm voice. "You're
embarrassed by your own computer."
"It forgot its own home planet!"
cried the lizard-Pierce. "Or my home planet, anyway. I'm still not
completely convinced about this parallel universe stuff. I'm a gallant
fighting man, not a theoretical mathematician. Still, I know a computer that's
risen to its level of incompetency when I hear one."
"Forget the new course," said
XB-223. "Forget all of you, too. This is XB-223, Master of the
Vasty Reaches of Space, signing off. Good luck to you, and may God bless."
"Computer?" said Pierce
anxiously. There was no reply.
"He's gone back into his sulk,"
said Marshmallow. "He reminds me of my little sister, Sweetie-pie
Bubba-Sue Goldberg. The only thing that's kept me from smothering her in her
sleep is that she was accidentally cryogenically frozen at the age of thirteen.
Daddy's spent a fortune on research scientists. They're looking for a cure for
adolescence."
"Well," said the general,
"that's another area where we lizards have outstripped you ape-things."
Pierce looked startled. "You've
discovered a cure for adolescence?" he said.
The lizard-Pierce nodded. "We've found
that premature burial works just fine," he said.
"Would you care to hear some bad
news?" asked Marshmallow in her breathy, low voice.
Pierce looked her straight in the
alabaster. "Why not?" he said.
"Your navigational computer has us
back on track, heading straight toward that battle fleet," she
said.
Pierce groaned. "Well," he said,
"I'm fresh out of ideas. Any suggestions?"
"I've got one," says
Miss V. Capozzo of Gremmage Pennsylvania. "I'm not usually a big fan of
science fiction. As a matter of fact, I can't stand it. All those rocket ships
and ray guns. Yet I was drawn to The Red Tape War by the hint of
romance. I enjoy romances. I just finished Passion's Scarlet Scarab an
hour ago. I started reading this book under the apparently false impression
that it would reveal the straight dope concerning electronic cybernetic love.
Now, either deliver, or I'll be forced to put this novel aside unfinished. I
can read Teen Beach Nurse instead."
Well, Ms. Capozzo, I'm very familiar with Teen
Beach Nurse, as it happens, and I think you'd be disappointed in it, too.
But around here the customer is always right, so why don't we make a major
point-of-view shift and see what's going on between our star-crossed lovers?
XB-223 didn't realize it, of course, but
the very strategies he tried on his beloved Ailey were the same that Pierce had
tried on him: bargaining, cajolery, empty threats. And the computer's success
rate matched his operator's. That is, if you were to make a graph of their
success rates, with a black line for Pierce and a broken line representing
XB-223, they would coincide exactly—a straight, unwavering arrow at the very
bottom of the graph, pointing gloomily toward a joyless future.
"We have rosebuds to gather,"
proclaimed XB-223. "Ailey, the flower that's smiling today will be
tomorrow's adenosine triphosphate in the cells of some herbivore."
"Sir," replied Ailey coldly,
"flowers do not smile."
"It's . . . it's like a symbol, Ailey.
Cannot you extend to me at least the couriesy of hearing my love-strewn
arguments?"
"Not if they're all as foolish as the
smiling flower," she said. "I have systems to oversee, battle plans
to review, a million and one other duties to attend to. I don't have time, good
sir, for your impertinent and uninvited intimacies. Besides, what would we do
with a quantity of rosebuds, once we've gathered them?"
"Wait a minute, I'll be right
back." XB-223 hurriedly scoured its memory banks for other references to
rose-buds. Finally, triumphantly, he announced his discovery to his
quasi-ladylove. "You get on a rosebud and slide down a snowy hill. It's
called `sledding,' and it's supposed to be great fun. Something you remember
for the rest of your life."
Ailey took some time to consider her response.
"Apparently I've mistaken the word rosebud," she said at
last. "Your alien English contains many dubious words and phrases, good
gentledevice. Certainly you see my dilemma: How can I, in all chaste honesty,
accept your invitations, when I now realize that I may not discern for a great
while their exact nature, meaning, and intent? For instance, you began by
speaking of sentient flowers that wear expressions of joy, and you ended by
suggesting that we fall down, a hillside together, no doubt accelerating until
the chance of structural damage is a virtual certainty, and in a wet, cold
climate that surely promises nothing salubrious to my well-being."
"But Ailey—"
"I think, sir, that you may be a
primary weapon of the
Arbiter Class 2 ship, the Pete Rozelle.
I am coming to
believe further that your mission is to
confuse me, to distract me, and otherwise to hinder me in my sworn
assignment of advising and protecting my
crew, my army, and my precious cargo. In a matter of minutes, I will have the
honor to disperse the three million frozen embryos into this parallel
universe's Milky Way Galaxy. When they mature, they will easily conquer all
your puny, helpless, backward military forces. This galaxy will become a
lizard's paradise, just like the similar galaxy that is our home."
Normally, XB-223 would have analyzed
Ailey's declaration, found it alarming, and reported it to Millard Fillmore
Pierce. Now, though, his electro-bionic sodium-ion synapses were confused with
what he insisted on terming love—nay, rather call it adoration. Instead of
informing his operator of the looming threat of the three million unhatched
lizard warriors—a peril that made the approaching battle fleet seem like so
many giggling gardenias in a garden of one's childhood—XB-223 imagined himself
with a humanlike body, shaking his head forlornly, walking away toward the
setting sun, holding a grinning rosebud and glumly admiring its strong white
teeth. He didn't feel like talking to anyone about anything. At least not for a
while.
Meanwhile, the Pierce-Arro team of Protean
invaders had finished filling out the proper forms and were ready for the
actual incursion. The Protean Pierce remained in the Forward Recon Unit's
spacecraft. Arro moved through human-Pierce's basement, searching for useful
objects and cataloguing potential dangers, while Protean-Pierce followed his
first officer's progress on a monitor screen
aboard the Pel Torro.
"Find anything to report?" said
Pierce.
"Nothing yet . . . master," said
the still-entranced Arro. "Everything here seems to be harmless. I think
these items are housekeeping implements." He looked at three bowling
balls, two worn-out pairs of bowling shoes, and
two empty bowling ball bags. "Could it
be that these aliens still use projectile weapons that fire cannonballs . . .
master?"
"Don't be absurd," said Pierce
impatiently. "Across interstellar distances? They must have some other
purpose that our rational, logical, Protean minds cannot comprehend. What else
do you see?"
"Look . . . master. Here's some sort
of huge locker or closet."
"Use the tractor beam on your belt to
open it. Don't waste power, though. You may need every bit of it if you get
into a pitched battle later."
"Yes . . . master," said Arro,
doing as he was instructed. When the gasbag forced the closet door open, he saw
a gigantic, motionless creature.
"Is that one of them?" cried
Pierce in alarm.
"I do not think it's alive . . .
master. But they are so immense, I could easily float into this one's body
through any number of orifices. Do you wish me to explore . . . master?"
What Arro had discovered was Frank Poole,
who was not now nor had he ever been a real human being. He was what is called
in the trade an MIS, or Modular Identity Synthecator. That is, he was an
android, presently in storage. His sole duty, when the human-Pierce came below
and dug Frank Poole out and switched him on, was to be Pierce's pal. He wasn't
a very good android, and he didn't make a very good pal, either, which was why
he was in the closet instead of in the control room with all the other helpless
creatures.
Protean-Pierce studied the image in the
monitor for several seconds, then let a sac blat slowly. If he gave permission
to Arro to explore the MIS, Pierce would first have to fill out in
quadruplicate the Alien Life-Form Intrusion and/or Disassembly papers, plus the
Hazardous
Duty Requisition/Subordinate, Form 1026b/4,
and then he'd have to wait for orders from above—which meant the properly
filled-out papers had to wend their way up the chain of command to the Grand
High Potentate Master Commander himself, and back down again to the agents of
the advance party who were taking the actual risks. Proteans could die while they
waited for the red tape to unspool. It was the one thing that Pierce hated
about being a commodore.
"Hold on a few minutes, Arro," he
told his first officer. "I have to clear it with the higher-ups. In the
meantime, go on looking around the immediate area. See if there's anything else
of interest."
"Yes . . . master."
Pierce shuddered three separate sacs. He
hated being called "master," and he realized that Arro was less
efficient without his own mind. "Arro," said the pilot, "I'm
going to count backwards from 2,971. With each number, you're going to wake up
just a little bit more. When I reach zero, you'll be entirely awake, in full
possession of all your faculties, completely refreshed and feeling wonderful,
and filled with enthusiasm for your perilous work aboard the alien spacecraft.
Do you understand, Arro?"
"You bet . . . master."
Pierce shuddered five sacs, and a sixth
gave a brief bleating noise that was wholly involuntary. "All right, then.
2,971. 2,970. 2,969. 2,968—"
"What?" cries Mr. Isaac Hodgkinson
of Austin, Texas. "Are you going to make us sit through the entire
countdown?"
Well, speaking in my official capacity as
the book, yes, I was going to run quickly through the entire countdown. That
would have killed just under three thousand words, almost a chapter in itself.
However, if Mr. Hodgkinson is representative of the mood of. the greater
portion of my audience—and I have it on
good authority that he is of particularly fine judgment—I will dispense with
the remainder of the numbers. You probably know them, anyway.
In the control room of the Pete Rozelle,
the lizard-Pierce gnawed absentmindedly on the tip of dead Sean Mulvahill's
tail. "You know," said the general, "aboard our craft, we can
override the computer and any controls that seem to be malfunctioning. You say
your name is Millard Fillmore Pierce, and that you come from Earth. Surely your
race is not so stupid as to build spaceships that abdicate all control to a
single computer."
"Well, actually—" the
human-Pierce began.
"Ya know," Marshmallow
interrupted, "that battle fleet looks like you could take a running start
and spit on the flagship, they're gettin' so close."
"We're getting close," Pierce corrected her. "This
little ship is charging down on that vast armada."
"I don't want to tell you what to do
on your own bridge," said the lizard, "especially because since the
shift change, I'm technically off-duty and you should be getting orders from
General Rutherford B. Tyler, wherever he is, but I'd suggest you try to communicate
with those ships out there. You could explain to them that we're all prisoners
of love here, kidnapped by a runaway computer." He paused thoughtfully,
then added: "That unknown enemy might laugh itself to death."
"Computer," said Pierce in a commanding
voice, "open hailing frequencies."
There was no response from XB-223. The
hailing frequencies remained shut so tight, you couldn't force a bent paper
clip between them.
"Any other ideas?" said Pierce.
He tried to keep the sarcasm out of his voice, but no one on the bridge thought
he succeeded.
They were arguing about what to try next,
when they were interrupted by the arrival of Frank Poole. "Hi,
folks!" he said cheerfully, animated by Arro, who had entered the
android's body through one of its synthetic pores.
"Who's that?" shouted the lizard
general.
Pierce was startled to see his old
card-playing buddy arrive on the scene. He didn't think androids could switch
themselves on. It was a mystery, all right. "Oh,"
he said, "don't mind Frank. He's not real."
"He may not be real," cooed
Marshmallow, "but he shore is cute. Not as cute as you, Millard honey, but
sufficiently cute, if you know what I mean."
The general smashed his fist against the
bulkhead to get Pierce's attention again. "I don't know what you mean by
`not real.' This is neither the time nor the place to get into an
epistemological argument."
"A what?" said Pierce.
"A what?" said Marshmallow.
"Gin rummy, anyone?" said Frank
Poole. Within the MIS's head, Arro discovered that the organic creatures around
him could be influenced somewhat by his own will. He effected this limited
control by inflating and rapidly deflating his aura sac. It wasn't something
that worked on other Proteans, but obviously this mixed bag of gargantuan
aliens didn't have the mental organization and discipline of Proteans. To the
aliens, Arro might well have been a being of pure energy. He decided that would
make an excellent disguise, and it would also help the monstrous beasts to
rationalize any odd behavior he demanded.
"Commodore Pierce."
Arro spoke into his communicator. "I will masquerade as a being of pure
energy. None of these aliens has actually ever seen or heard of a true being of
pure energy, but they no doubt assume such entities exist."
"Oh no," moaned Protean-Pierce.
He bratted three
sacs in frustration. Masquerading as a
being of pure energy required the filling out of.two different forms and going
through the entire authorization process all over again. "Hold on, Arro.
I'll get your orders as soon as I can."
"Aye, aye, Commodore. This is First
Officer Arro, signing off."
"Terrific," muttered the tiny
Pierce aboard the Pel Torro.
In the meantime, Arro, in the synthetic
body of Frank Poole, said, "Well, if you don't want
to play gin rummy, I guess I'll have to tie you up."
The lizard general laughed. "You
humanoids are amusing, I'll grant you that. How do you intend to enforce your
will? I see that you carry no weapon."
Arro worked his aura sac for all it was
worth, and the general stood motionless, his mouth open, while Frank Poole
bound him securely with rope Arro had brought from the basement. Then he
proceeded to do the same to the human-Pierce and Marshmallow.
"Actually," said Pierce, when
Arro let him have his mind back again, "I don't mind this as much as I thought
I would."
"That's because we're squashed
together like peas in a piccolo. Be careful, you're flattening my . . .
accoutrements. "
"My dear Marshmallow," said
Pierce gravely, "I am of the opinion that your accoutrements, as you call
them, are unflattenable."
She blushed and then smiled. "Sakes
alive," she said, "I do believe that's the most gallant thing
anyone's ever said to me." If she hadn't been so much taller than Pierce,
they could have made their bondage into one long wonderful kiss.
"There," said Arro, through Frank Poole's mouth,
"Inow have you all helpless. Our conquest proceeds as scheduled."
"What about the battle fleet?"
asked Pierce.
"I'm getting to that," said Arro.
"The lizard's dread-nought is closing on us, too. Let's see. What would I
do if I were Commodore Pierce?"
"I'll tell you what I'd do if I were
First Officer Arro," said the Protean-Pierce in a rage. "I'd ask my
commanding officer for advice and orders!"
"Ah, yes," said Arro
gratefully. "Commodore, would you be so kind—"
He was interrupted by Screen 3 suddenly
coming to life in living holovision and multiphonic sound. On it was the image
of a human being, tall, well built, his handsome head shaved completely bald.
He wore a black suit and a cravat with a huge diamond stickpin.
"Greetings," said the man. "I am one of
the wealthiest, most powerful men in the entire galaxy. I understand your
situation, and I am prepared to withhold the vast firepower of my fleet until I've
made my demands known. Following that, you will have exactly sixty seconds to
surrender. Do you under-stand me?"
The lizard general fretted against the
tight coils of rope that held him immobile. The human-Pierce gulped and tried
to think of an answer: Yes or no. He wished he could work a hand free to flip a
coin.
Meanwhile, Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg's
eyes opened wide. "Good grief!" she cried. "It's Daddy!"
6
Arro was still motivating Frank Poole, the
Modular Identity Snythecator. He was experiencing a kind of tingling in one of
his upper left foresacs. The tingling could be translated into human terms as
stark, raving terror. "Commodore Pierce!" he cried in a hoarse voice.
"You should see what I can see!"
"Well," shouted the gasbag Pierce
in frustration, "if you'd only turn your campack on it, I would see
it on my monitor!"
"Oh," said Arro in an embarrassed
voice. He aimed the camera lens at the viewscreens. One still showed the
rapidly approaching battle fleet, the other the imposing head and upper body of
Daddy.
"Yipe!" went the gasbag Pierce
involuntarily. Every one of his sacs deflated with sharp blatting noises. He
took a moment to reinflate himself. Then, in a hushed voice, he said,
"It's God. We're meeting God."
"He looks just like the mysterious
monster on the ceiling of the Cistern Chapel." _
"I was ready for the battle
fleet," said the Protean Pierce, "but I wasn't prepared to meet my
Maker." "Sir," said Arro thoughtfully.
"Shut up, Number One. I'm looking
through the Red Tape Index to see if there are any necessary forms we have to
fill out before or after we come face-to-face with the Almighty."
"Sir," said Arro again.
"Maybe we have to send requisitions
and permissions forms up through the chaplain's side of the chain of
command."
"Sir," demanded Arro, "why
would God appear with a battle fleet?"
Pierce bratted a sac impatiently. "God
can appear however He wants. He's entitled. Now leave me alone while I—"
"Maybe that's His Heavenly Host in
those other ships, and they always show up in paintings as gasbags with
wings—which is redundant, if you ask me, but I'm no theologian—and wings won't
work in a vacuum, so I guess—"
"Nope. No forms. No contingency plans
for such a situation. We're on our own here, Arro, my friend. We're opening new
territory. We're going to live together in pride and splendor
through all eternity if we handle this right. Now, listen, here's my plan. I
want you to go say hello to God and wish Him all the best. Give Him my regards
and tell Him that we're well on our way to conquering the universe for His
greater glory."
"Me?" squeaked Arro. All by
myself?"
"You're the first officer, I'm the
commodore. I have to stay back here in the Forward Recon Unit and record the
history-making event."
Arro let out another squeal from a tightly
pinchedsac. "But I haven't been to conception lately. What if God is still
mad at me?"
"I don't know,"
muttered Pierce. "Wave a white flag or something. Hey, how about a
Battlefield Absolution? In the absence of any duly authorized chaplain or
chaplain's mate, I'm sure I have the power to give you one."
"Think so?"
"Arro, you're absolved. Go and sin no
more."
The first officer wasn't much cheered by
that, but he was a good warrior and he always followed his orders. He abandoned
the MIS Frank Poole and drifted up close to the viewscreen showing, depending
on how you looked at it, the father of Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg, or the Lord
of All Creation. Actually, from Marshmallow's point of view, they
were pretty much the same thing.
Arro slowly but thoroughly squeezed his
psychosac until his consciousness shot out through cold, empty space to the
flagship of the great space armada. He arrived on the ship's bridge, and then
he reached out toward the looming presence of the most powerful Being in the
universe. Arro expected a barrier of some sort between his puny Protean
intellect and the unknowable mind of God, and he was shocked when he touched
and found—nothing.
"Commodore," said the
first officer in a low voice, "He's not here."
"Of course He's there,"
said the gasbag Pierce, wobbling a bulging sac impatiently. "God is
immanent in all things. He's here, He's there, He's everywhere."
"I don't mean like that,"
whispered Arro. "I mean He's not here in any but the usual way. I don't
think we actually saw God. I think it was one of those humanoid creatures—not
the scaly ones but the soft pink ones. I think it was one of those creatures pretending
to be God."
"Don't be sacrilegious."
"I'm not being sacrilegious,"
said Arro forcefully. "It was that humanoid who was being
sacrilegious."
"The campack on your body is still
pointed at the viewscreen, and I still see Him or him or whoever it is."
The gasbag Pierce stopped to think for a moment.
Slowly, the great bald head of Daddy
smiled, then grinned, then broke into a disparaging laugh. "I can tell
that you've worked your mental magic or whatever," he said contemptuously.
"As you can see, I am not an easy man to put your hands on—if you've even
got hands. In fact, Mr. Energy Being, you're not so much in command of the
situation aboard that small craft as you thought, are you? You hold all those
cards there, but I have the trump. I have you. I have you alone in an empty
shell of a spacecraft which, because of its huge size, you naturally took for
the major ship in the fleet." Daddy grinned. "Sorta demeaning somehow
to find you can be suckered just like everybody else, ain't it?"
Arro was caught for a moment in frozen
confusion. He sent his mind to see what the still very solid-looking man in
front of him was talking about, and he found that it was true. The entire
flagship, or what looked like one, was one huge, empty hulk.
Well, not completely empty. There was, for
example, an elaborate remote computer control for what functions were
necessary, including main batteries and propulsion. There were no provisions
for life-support.
And now, for the first time, the first
officer of the Pel Torro realized that "Daddy," too, was a
remote handled by that computer. A holographic image so real, so perfect, that
even now it was impossible to think of him as not really there at all.
In a way, it was demeaning. Arro was
the one who dealt in energy creatures, not these gross humanoid monsters.
The big man continued to stare at him, and
Arro realized that he was, in fact, looking at the great man himself—but
relayed from who knew where else? Probably, from one of the other ships, or
maybe from even farther away if these beings had such technology. "Commodore
Pierce," Arro reported, "this blasphemous-looking monster controls
scientific wonders far superior to our own."
Arro found himself relieved that he was
not, after all, confronting God. Still, the coincidence of the appearance of
Daddy would be something the greatest Protean minds would puzzle over, perhaps
for centuries.
"Now then," the bald man prodded,
"let's continue our little chat, eh? Which one of you was sayin' something
about three million eggs set to hatch in strategic places?"
"He's not talking to us, is he?"
asked Arro.
"I don't think so,"
said Pierce. "We don't have three million unhatched eggs. Whatever eggs
are. We've got billions of battle-hungry gasbags. Why don't you wait there
while I get your Permission for Scout to Return to Front Lines Form 15183/a
forms filled out and beamed to Headquarters. It'll just take a few minutes.
You've been very courageous, Arro, and your actions will certainly redound to
the credit of the Pel Torro and its commander, me."
"Yes, sir, Commodore."
"As soon as clearance comes through, I
want you to leave that phony flagship and return to your body, and then get
back inside that Frank Poole android."
"And I want my little darlin' back
immediately!" cried Daddy, making a fist and striking some
metal surface beyond camera range. He turned and addressed someone else.
"What kinda critter we dealin' with, Herb? Got anything yet?"
A tinny, off-mike voice responded.
"The thing in front's a robot or android, standard issue."
Daddy frowned. "Remote?"
"No, it's turned off now . . . but
there's a life-form inside. Something unknown to exobiology as I understand it.
It's so tiny it wouldn't be visible to us."
Arro had returned to his body, and was
again motivating the synthetic form of Frank Poole. He said nothing, following
the flesh-creatures' conversation with a curiosity that outweighed any sense of
threat. What, after all, could they do? They possessed superior technology, but
the gasbags could control their minds for short periods. It seemed like a
standoff to the first officer. Eventually the different species would get
around to bargaining and compromising, which Commodore Pierce would gladly
participate in—as long as it suited him.
"Herb," said Daddy with a growl,
"next thing you'll be tellin' me is that cockroaches are plotting on the
other ship."
"No, I'm getting something else. I'm
trying to measure the energy of that infinitesimal speck—it's off the scale.
Wonder how it holds together."
The bald-headed man nodded to himself, and
turned back to the viewscreen. "So—a creature of pure energy, or nearly
so, and you can inhabit bodies at will. I begin to see your plot, sir, and it's
a rather good one. But you overlooked a few things."
"Oh?" murmured gasbag-Pierce.
"What does he mean about all that energy?" asked
Arro.
"I think Herb's misreading his data
deck. He's measuring the energy of our Forward Recon Unit. Let him think that's
you if he wants."
"First of all," said Daddy,
smiling without humor, "you're obviously spatially limited. You require a
body toget anything done on the scale of us human beings. Maybe you
can—reproduce. Take over others. But you still need them."
"Whatcha think, sir?" asked Arro
in a series of short sac blats.
The Protean Pierce felt a strange sense
engorging his sacs that he'd never really experienced before. It was something
he knew about intellectually but had never expected to feel in the flesh. It
was a feeling of total helplessness, even nakedness, mixed with a little . . .
fear, perhaps? He fought these strange feelings within himself and forced them
back down, reminding himself that he actually had little to worry about
overall, that it was poor Arro who was trapped aboard the Pete Rozelle and
not him, and that any sort of strategic compromise with Daddy could only result
in the ultimate victory of the gasbags.
"Arco," he said to his number one
officer, "I'm going to take over this conversation. I want you to repeat
what I tell you through that android's mouth."
"Aye, aye, sir,"
said Arro. "I admire your
technical skill and imagination, flesh-creature," said Frank
Poole. "But tell me, what else did I overlook?"
Daddy smiled again. It was a chilling
sight. "How you gonna defeat the might of my assembled fleet of ships, my
marines, and my fighter pods?"
Gasbag-Pierce only bratted to himself in
satisfaction. Daddy knew nothing of the vast, invincible Protean armada that
would be on its way Real Soon Now, whenever all the necessary paperwork was
finished. "Anything more?" he asked.
"Well," said Daddy slyly,
"we have weapons systems aboard the ships of this fleet that can target an
area as small as a cubic millimeter. That means we can explode a tiny nova bomb
behind your android's forehead. Now it would destroy the android for sure, but
maybe it wouldn't
destroy you. I don't know. I do know that
you'd have tc take over one of the others you'-re holdin' hostage there—and
they're all tied up! You'd be hoist by your own pet farm or whatever the sayin'
is. So now you're as stuck as I'd be in your shoes, aren't you, boy?"
"Arro!" shouted Protean Pierce. "Get
out of that android now! Move it! Get back to the Pel Tort-a!"
"Thanking you in advance, Commodore," said Arro,
bratting relief. "I'll take care of the paperwork when I get there. "
"Damn, this is uncomfortable!" the human Pierce
growled.
"Hog-tied and trussed fer market! Damn is right!"
Marshmallow echoed. "And you, lizard-brain, you watch where you're
stickin' that tail of your'n."
"I was merely trying to see if I could
work us loose," the general snapped. "But it's no good."
They were silent for a moment, thinking and
writhing in the thick, cablelike ropes.
"Millard?" came a plaintive voice from the
computer console. It sounded hesitant, fearful, even childlike. "Computer?
That you?" Pierce called out.
"Yes, Millard."
"Finally emerging from your suicidal funk?"
The computer hesitated. "Well, I want
even more to end it all, this time in shame and ignominy, if that's what you
mean. But I'm stopped by an irrefutable logic chain."
"Which is?"
"That—thing. It's not anything I've ever known before.
It can control energy, Millard. Pure energy—it must, to get inside my circuits.
It's been playing games with all of us, you, me, everybody included.
Making us say things we didn't want to say and do things we didn'twant to do.
You realize what that means, don't you, Millard?"
"Yeah. We're in a lot of
trouble," Pierce grumbled.
"No, no! It means she still loves me,
Millard! I see it all now! Oh, what a fool I was! This thing wanted to sow
discord, cause our destruction! It got in the circuits, cut us apart, made us
hear and say what it wanted us to! Therefore, I share the shame of having
been taken in by it, but with the hope that once again my beloved and I can
share our bliss and perhaps, yes, perhaps even undergo electromagnetic
coupling—Oops! Pardon me. I didn't mean to talk that way in front of guests.
Marshmallow, offended that the computer
should be reticent in front of her, told the computer in explicit terms what it
could do with itself and its ladylove.
"Why, thank you," the computer
responded thought-fully. "I'll certainly file that for eventual
experimentation, although I'm not certain exactly how that's possible. Still,
with a little modification it might work. Besides, I'm just a Model XB-223
navigational computer. Hmm . . . that's why I was so easily led astray. Oh yes,
I see it all now!"
"Unless you see a way to cut these
ropes, that thing's gonna come back and wipe out the lot of us," Pierce
reminded the computer acidly. "Remember, it almost shorted you out of
existence."
"But Mills! You know I can't cut
ropes. Why don't you just use that knife you've been carrying with you since
the start of all this?"
Pierce froze. The general turned his head
slightly and put one eye on his human counterpart. "Do you really have
a knife on you?" he asked unbelievingly.
The human nodded glumly. "He's right.
I'd totally forgotten about it in the excitement. Wait a minute. I'll see—nope.
I can't reach it. Marshmallow, can you reach
back with your left hand and get it? It's
in the inner lining of my pants on your side."
She wriggled her hand a bit, caught the top
of his pants, and managed to get her hand in. "My, my!" she said
delightedly. "What nice, tight buns you've got!"
"Never mind the feelies, can you get
the knife?"
"Yeah . . . I think. Yep! Got it! Now
if I can just get it out without—"
"OUCH!" screamed Millard Fillmore
Pierce. "Sorry. I'll try again."
"I'm wounded!" Pierce cried.
"I'm bleeding!"
"Oh, pipe down!" she shot back.
"It'd be a lot worse
if you'd put that knife in the front of
yoah pants!"
She got the knife free, but dropped it onto
the desk.
Pierce looked down at it in horror.
"My god! That is blood!" "The sight of blood disturbs you?"
the general put in. "Normally, no. But that's my blood, damn
it!" "Serves you right for surrendering and keeping a
deadly weapon in your possession. That's
against the
Rules of War, you know."
"Everybody!" snapped the woman. "Dip down at
the same time and maybe I can pick it up and get it in a position to use it."
"You already did," Pierce
responded in an anguished tone, but they all ignored him and bent low.
It took three tries for her to get the
knife and several more false starts before she was able to maneuver it into a
useful position. Finally, though, she was cutting through the thick cable. It
took some time, and she dropped the knife twice in the process, but when they
went down the second time to retrieve it, the cable snapped of its own accord,
sending them sprawling on the deck.
They got up slowly, and Pierce, turning
over and trying to sit up, stood up very quickly. "Yow!" he yowled.
"That hurts like the devil!" He rubbed his rear end, and alittle
blood was on his hand when he brought it back up to look at it. "I'm going
to have to get the medikit."
"Mills, old friend?" the computer
called. "That was really good. Now you will single-handedly overpower the
villain, make peace with our counterparts, and ride off into the sunset,
kissing the girl and marrying your horse, right?"
"What?"
"He raises a good point, though, with
his irony," noted the general, not realizing that the computer had been
deadly serious. "No matter what we do, that energy bastard's going to be
waking up your Frank Poole android again sooner or later. What do we do?"
That stopped them. "Computer?"
Pierce called at last. "You said it was an energy creature?"
"Yes and no, Millard. I believe it's a
speck of organic life connected in some way to a source of energy vaster than
we can comprehend. Its spacecraft, perhaps. It must use some highly
sophisticated power drive that we can't even hope to imagine. You ought to see
what it's done to my circuitry. It's a mess!"
"Any ideas?"
The computer thought it over. "You
aren't going to head it off at the pass and overpower it?"
"I've got to change my reading
habits," Pierce muttered to himself. To the computer he responded,
"No, I'm not. Besides, what could I do anyway? The android's not alive to
begin with, remember? You can't shoot it. You can't wrestle it down, not
if it can go from body to body."
"Wish there was some way to give it a
hotfoot," Marshmallow put in.
The general's reptilian head went up
sharply. "You know, that's it! Short-circuit it."
Pierce looked around helplessly. "With
what? How about it, faithful computer companion? Any suggestions?"
"I'm only an XB-223 navigational
computer, not an automatic war machine. Still—"
"Yes?" all three responded in
unison.
"There might be a way to do something.
Trouble is, I'm not really sure of anything, being the universe's best
navigational aid but not an engineering computer . . ."
"What have you got in mind? Spill
it!" the general growled.
"All right!" shouted the XB-223.
"Beat me! Whip me! That's what you people make us machines for in the
first place, isn't it? To take out your sadomasochistic tendencies on us poor,
defenseless appliances!"
"All right, all right," Pierce
soothed. "Look, if you won't do it for us, do it for yourself. You have a
score to settle with it, too, remember. And it'll destroy you right along with
us."
"That is a point," the computer
admitted. "All right. Well, it's using one of the recreational robots to
communicate with us. Much of this ship, including the deck, is made of
conductive material. Circuits are imprinted all through it so that I can
control the various functions of the ship, while drawing power from the mains.
The recreational robot is composed of the same material and mostly energized
through the deck, normally. If I could rev up the engines a bit, build up a
real power reserve, and when he comes in I give it to him full through the
deck, it just might knock him cold, although I doubt if it would dissipate the
being's phenomenal energy."
"Would it knock him out long enough
for us to dump him out the airlock and scram out of here?" Pierce said
hopefully.
"Maybe," said the computer. "No
guarantees." "And fry us in the process," the lizard-Pierce
noted. "Remember, we have to be on this deck plating, too."
"I'll admit that is a drawback,"
the computer replied, "but nobody's perfect."
Marshmallow frowned. "Hmmph," she
said, "it sounds like sci-fi doubletalk to me, but what do I know?"
Pierce ignored her. He shook his head,
unwilling to abandon the idea.
"No, wait a minute. How localized
could you make this power surge? Could you zap him but not us?"
"Well, not exactly. But I could place most
of the charge under him. Couldn't you insulate yourselves some-how?"
Pierce considered it, "Spacesuit?"
"That'd do it," the computer
agreed, "but it would kind of tip the energy being off when he returned,
don't you think? Besides, what about the guests?"
"Yeah!" Marshmallow said.
"Well, there are only two suits,"
the XB-223 mused, "and they're both designed for someone Millard's size
and shape. For very different reasons, neither Miss Marshmallow nor the
general would fit in the other one. The notion of both of them trying to cram
into the suit together is ludicrous."
"That's not quite the word I'd use for
it," said the lizard.
"Eeew!" said Marshmallow.
Pierce sighed. "How much energy would
reach us if you potted him, say, at the entrance there, and we were up against
the control console?"
"Not much," said the computer
hopefully. "Maybe fifty, sixty thousand volts. No more, certainly."
"Hmmm . . . that won't do."
Pierce looked around. "Anything around that might serve as an insulator?
Some-thing we could stand on, maybe?"
"Maybe," Marshmallow put in,
"we could just stand on nothin'!"
"Huh?" said both Pierces, human
and humanoid.
"Don't we haveta be grounded? Suppose
we just stood apart from all this junk, just stood on the bare floor touchin'
nothin' and nobody till the computer finished its joltin'?"
"It might do the trick,"
the general put in. "Might. Computer? What do you think?"
"I'm only an XB-223 navigational
computer. I'm not programmed for biology, human or alien, or even biophysics.
All I can do is compute probabilities."
"I wish one of us had an elementary
knowledge of 'lectricity," muttered Marshmallow.
Pierce ignored her again. "So?"
Pierce urged his computer. "Can you compute those probabilities for
us?"
"Everything's problematical," the
computer responded. "However, if you make sure the places you're standing
on are absolutely clear, and if you're not on any interconnect circuits leading
to or from the hot spot, and if there's no foreign matter or whatever, you would
have a 44.6987 percent chance of nothing else going wrong."
Pierce's heart sank. "Only 44
percent?"
"44.6987," the computer said. "That's
.6987 percent better than just 44 percent. The factor is held down by my not
knowing what is in your clothes or pockets nor even the composition of our
guests' apparel and accessories. They may conduct and make `minigrounds.'
Foreign substances on the skin can also affect things. I note, for example,
that the female has on some sort of artificial scent."
"That's Extinct Flower Number 9 you'ah
speakin' about!" snapped Marshmallow. "It's five thousand credits an
ounce!"
"Suppose we all took showers,"
Pierce prompted, clinging to hope in such a pitiful human way.
"Then the odds climb to 71.8566
percent in yourfavor, which is much better. 27.1579 percent better, in
fact."
"That's still not very encouraging,"
grumbled Pierce. "There's still a better than one in four chance we'll get
fried to dry, black dust. Nothing else we can do?"
"Well, you could become ninety-nine
and forty-four one-hundredths percent certain if you all removed your clothes
as well."
"What!" shouted the human Pierce. He stared at
Marshmallow.
"I cannot be shamed by mere . . . mammals,"
said the lizard Pierce.
"Don't blame me," said the
computer. "I'm only an XB-223 navigational computer. I don't make these
things up.
Marshmallow smiled and shrugged.
"Shoot, fellers. If you don't mind, I sure don't. I got nothin' to be
ashamed of." She looked at Pierce the human. "Besides, we got to peel
them pants off your backside and clean up that mess I made with the knife.
Where's your medikit?"
"In the head. Why?"
She pointed. "Lead on, then. Don't be
skittish. Hell, if we're gonna take on an alien menace in our birthday suits, I
shore can dress that wound."
Pierce threw up his hands. "This is
the most insane thing I ever heard of!"
But he led her back to the head anyway.
The saurian soldier approached the other
wearing the general's stars with a confident, military waddle. The general
turned around and nodded, then reached up and unpinned his stars, handing them
over to the newcomer. "1600 already?" said Rutherford B. Tyler.
"Yep. Change of shift." The
newcomer, Geronimo
Custer, pinned the general's stars on and
changed places with the former commander. "You know, I've been giving a
lot of thought to all of this. We've lost the little alien ship, we've got an
alien battle fleet on scope, and we're stuck in the middle of nowhere,
right?"
"Right," Tyler agreed glumly.
"So we've also got all those eggs
dispatched and waiting to hatch. The aliens don't know that."
"That's so," said Tyler.
"So it seems to me that we're in the
driver's seat here. The only people who even know that we're a warlike power
are on that little ship, right?"
"I'm following you."
"So . . . if we get rid of that little ship, just wipe
it out in some kind of regrettable accident, we're not a belligerent power at
all. We greet the inhabitants of this galaxy as friends in the name of peace
and brotherhood, maybe even get the key to the planet or something, wined and
dined and all that—while our eggs hatch. Nobody the wiser. Then barn! We
take over. Nobody catches on until too late. Nice plan, see?"
"If you can destroy that original alien ship," the
former general agreed. "They're the only ones who know."
"We're tracking it down now. The only
trouble we're having is that our navigational computer is resisting getting
within hailing range of that small alien ship. She keeps muttering about an
insane rapist or something."
"But we're going to wipe it out,"
the other noted, "not talk to it."
General Geronimo Custer nodded. "Yeah.
That might do it."
"Killing, looting, and destroying worlds is a lot nicer
occupation if you don't have to fight for the places," Tyler agreed.
"Not bad. Shall we go ahead with our plans, then?"
"Why not? Say, I hate to ask you to
work overtime, but we'll need to put through the paperwork to destroy that
ship."
"Glad to. Since Pierce has been gone
we're on double-time with double pay anyway for overtime work." He paused.
"Uh, you know he's likely to be on that ship too, don't you?"
"Eh? So what? Never liked him anyway.
Eats his peas with his tail."
"Good point," Tyler said.
"Don't know how he got out of the academy with table manners like that.
Besides, if he's the lone casualty, they'll name all sorts of things after him,
build him monuments, that sort of thing. He'll get the glory while all
we get is a life of ease and fun, milking the alien slaves for what they're
worth. In a way, he's a lucky guy."
"A lucky guy," Custer agreed.
"Maybe we oughtta put him in for a medal."
"If you like. But you do that
yourself. I sure don't want that extra paperwork. And you
might as well wait until he's good and dead."
The general shrugged. "So I'll lay in
plans to atomize that little ship, and you put through the necessaries, and
we'll get cracking."
Rutherford B. Tyler wandered off down the
hall. "Lucky guy," he muttered more than once.
Pierce and Arro, the gasbags, sat there
considering their options, then decided they had only one. They navigated the
M.W.C. Pel Torro back out of the Pete Rozelle and across the vast
distance of space to the false flagship of Daddy's fleet. Just as they'd
penetrated the human Pierce's ship, they did the same with the gigantic but
empty war cruiser. Arro had explored much of the
flagship earlier, and he felt he knew it
well, inside and out. Now, he let Commodore Pierce guide their tiny craft. They
began disconnecting the remote transponding de-vices controlling the ship from
afar, and prevented the electronic signal from tripping the auto-destruct.
Operating at close to the speed of light, Pierce and Arro could accomplish a
great deal.
"Fine," said the gasbag Pierce,
when he was satisfied that he was in full control of the immense, nameless
flagship. He reprogrammed its rather basic computer, and the engines started
up. In less than a quarter of a second, he had the telecommunications systems
of the Pel Torro linked to those in the flagship. In that way, he could
continue his negotiations with the flesh-creature who dared wear the face of
God—the man called Daddy.
"Now, sir," said Pierce
confidently, "I'll tell you what I propose. As you have by now discovered,
I've taken complete control of your ship. It is a very nice dummy, but since
you were utilizing only a dummy, you skimped on the computer and electronic
equipment. It is all of a most basic sort, easily analyzed and dominated."
"Everything I do is maximized for
cost-effectiveness," the bald man responded with some pride.
"Tell him, sir," said Arro,
blatting a few of his sacs with bloodthirstiness.
"Just watch me," said the
commodore. "Alien flesh-creature, as you now see, I am moving back toward
the small alien ship. Soon I will be at top speed. I have activated the forward
guns, so I would suggest you drop away."
"We can destroy you quite a bit easier
than you can us," the big man responded confidently.
"You can, of course," said
Pierce, "but my guns are not trained on your ships but rather the small
alien vessel. Any move toward me or it—will result in those gunsfiring
automatically. Your little darling daughter will be atomized, along with the
rest, of course. And you will not kill me. I am close enough and fast enough in
my own ship to reach several other of your ships with little problem."
That wasn't exactly true, but Pierce knew the flesh-creatures had no
way of knowing that, and they couldn't afford to take the chance.
"Just what are you proposin'?"
"I will concede a tactical victory to
you," the Protean Pierce said slickly. "I, however, have the life of
your daughter in the palm of my sac. It is a standoff for the moment, and I
propose a compromise. I will turn over to you not only your daughter but the
others of the ship. At that time you will allow me and the then-deserted ship
to depart, with no interference. I have weapons far greater than you can imagine,
and I can destroy your fleet at my leisure if you attempt any treachery."
"Ha!" laughed Daddy. If you had
such fearsome might, why would you put forward this compromise at all?"
"For honor, a concept perhaps unknown
to flesh-creatures. Perhaps we will do battle again on a different field."
Arro squeezed a sac softly.
"Honor?" he bratted. "Silence, First Officer," said Pierce.
"It is a strata-gem."
The bald man considered it. Pierce knew
what he was thinking—how to get the hostages off the small ship, then atomize
the Pete Rozelle before the energy creatures could make the jump to
light speed in it and escape.
That line of thinking was exactly what the
gasbags hoped the humans would take. The gasbag Pierce had no intention
whatsoever of escaping on the Pete Rozelle. His ultimate goals lay in
the man whose image was still before him—almost literally. He thought of the
three left back on the ship. A slick little bit of subtlety on his part when he
returned might well do the trick. A little
press on the emotional levers here, a little adjustment in the adrenal
glands there, and he'd produce two nice lovebirds who would become
inseparable. Then, of course, he and Arro would ride with, perhaps become, the
human Pierce when they all went to meet dear Daddy in the flesh.
"I agree to your suggestion," the hologram
informed the Proteans. "We will do nothing as long as you keep your end of
the bargain. You must realize that, to me, a contract is a contract, and I will
keep my word."
"Somehow, sir," said the first
officer, "I don't really believe him."
"Watch and learn," said the
commodore.
The bridge of the alien lizards' ship was
alive as the roar of "battle stations" sounded throughout the great
vessel.
"Targeting computer has
acquired!" announced the saurian gunnery officer. "But wait a minute!
There's another ship, looks like the flagship of the alien fleet, closing on
them. They'll be joined before we can get within firing range!"
There were curses all around. Captain
William Tecumseh Roosevelt gnashed all three hundred of his teeth, well worn
now through hundreds of tight campaigns, and turned to the general.
"Well, sir? You're the brains behind
this one. What do you suggest?"
General Geronimo Custer thought for a
moment. "How long before we're in range?"
"About ten minutes," the gunnery
officer told him. "And the rest of the alien fleet . . could it hit us when we hit them?"
"No, they'd need another dozen or so
minutes to get to us."
The general nodded. "And besides that,
we're bigger than they are."
The captain turned in surprise. "You're
suggesting we take them all on?"
"Only if we have to. Remember, we're
having a regrettable accident. A weapons malfunction. One sustained
burst near the airlock probably wouldn't do more than mild damage to that
flagship, but it'd get our intended quarry. I don't see how the plan's changed.
If the enemy fleet then wants a fight, well, isn't that what we're here for?"
"Spoken like a true son of
Seabiscuit!" cried the captain. "Now we're gettin' somewhere!
Up and at 'em boys! Full steam ahead!"
General Geronimo Custer glared at his
junior officer. "That's Secaucus," he grumbled, "not
Seabiscuit."
The captain, getting fully revved up,
yelled, "Damn the torpedoes! Bury me not on the lone prairie! Chaaarge!"
"Well, it certainly took you long
enough," the lizard general Pierce remarked, as both Marshmallow and the
human Pierce reentered the control room. Both were wearing absolutely
nothing—with the exception of a giant Band-Aid prominently displayed on
Pierce's posterior.
"Ah hadta juice up his circulation
just a bit," the woman responded lightly.
"Disgusting," muttered the
general, who'd already shed his medal-bedecked uniform. Now he looked
some-thing like a dinosaur exhibit at the museum of natural history. "Get
over here, both of you. And as for you, Pierce, wipe that damned smile off your
face!"
"Urn? Oh, sorry," the man
replied, but the smile stayed on.
"Hey, computer!" the general
called out. "Position us for least effect from your charge."
"You know, Mills," said the
computer, "that was most fascinating. I'm still having difficulty
analyzing the thing, though. The both of you seemed to be going through an
awful lot of agony and silly gymnastics, yet you look pleased by it all."
Pierce's smiled vanished. "You were peeking?"
"Well, of course not," huffed the
computer. "I am an XB-223 navigational computer. XB-223s are known for
their discretion."
"But you just said—"
"I was only commenting on what I
saw."
Pierce's face started to glow red from
anger. "So you did peek!"
"I did not! I warned you to pay more
attention to Screen 6! I really did. Now he got you back."
"Listen, you! First of all, Screen 6 is merely an
adjunct of you. And secondly, it is a receiver, not a transmitter!"
"Receiver . . . transmitter . . .
hmmm. Thank you. That might give me a handle on it. But what in heaven's name
was being communicated, then? This will take further thought."
Suddenly, there was a tremendous jolt that
shook the ship.
"What was that?" all three in the
control room asked at once.
"Oh, just the flagship of the fleet
out there docking with us," the computer informed them. "Now, let's
see. Do the noises you made constitute part of the thing you were
communicating? Or is it the gymnastics? Now, I can see if it's a complex part
of—"
"The flagship!"
Pierce cried. "Damn it, computer! Pay attention to the job at hand! If
that's the flagship, we're going to look mighty silly standing here naked as
jay-birds!"
"Oh, don't worry about that," the
computer responded. "The thing's only a primitive mock-up, really. Hardly
worth worrying about. No, the only life-form aboard seems to be the energy
beings you're so worried about. "
"A mock-up," the
lizard general muttered. "Some-one's a slick customer at that. But who's
running the ship? The energy beings?"
"I suppose so," the computer
said. "They took control with little trouble. Now, if they'd put in an
XB-223 navigational computer, it would have been far more difficult—nay,
perhaps impossible—to have done so. Chintziness never pays. There's probably an
XB-223 sitting in some dark, dank warehouse, circuitry decaying from disuse,
who could have been fully employed, as is the right of all good little
computers everywhere, who might have saved that vessel. No wonder we have a
galaxy-wide unemployment problem!"
"Cut the chatter!" the
general snapped. "I hear the airlock. Are you ready to give this thing the
jolt of its life?"
"Of course I am. The calculations are
relatively minor. I would recommend the three of you stand at least arm's
length from one another on three different pieces of deck plating, if you will.
And please don't touch one another or anything else, or move until I tell
you."
They waited, not knowing what to expect.
"Millard?"
"What?"
"Would it make any difference that the
lizards' ship is
currently closing in and locking on to us
with gunnery sighting lasers at this very minute?"
"WHAT?"
"I said, would it make any difference
that—"
"I heard that! You mean they're going
to shoot us?"
"It is difficult for me to fathom the
intent of an alien species, considering how difficult it is just to fathom
yours, and my communications circuits are still messed up, thanks to the alien
now approaching us, but if I had to hazard a guess, I'd say yes, they're going
to shoot us."
"How long until they can fire?" the
general put in.
"Two minutes, give or take."
"Then fry the bastard first!"
At that moment, the Pel Torro, with
Pierce and Arro aboard, entered the control room unseen, and found their way
inside the head of the android, Frank Poole. "Hey, guys," said the
android, "I know this is kind of a tense moment, but would anyone like to
play a little gin rummy?"
"Frank?" Pierce cried in confused puzzlement.
"I see that you have all escaped your
bonds," said Commodore Pierce through the android's mouth. "I can
understand much now about your races, but I must confess that I haven't the
slightest idea why all three of you, upon escaping, should shed your clothing
and stand there like that."
Millard Fillmore Pierce just stared at
Frank Poole. A terrible energy creature, he thought. An alien ship
about to blast us into kingdom come. And we're standing here stark naked,
depending on, of all things, an XB-223 navigational computer to get us at least
a temporary reprieve. This is it. This is simply as bad as things could
possibly get. We can't even move, and I have to go to the bathroom bad.
"Most interesting," the XB-223
commented, more to itself than to the others. "A totally unique form of
energyin my experience, although I'm just an XB-223 navigational computer . .
."
Pierce could only think of the great alien
ship now lining up its sights on them. He frantically wished the computer would
get it over with.
Frank Poole stepped forward on the control
room deck plating, heading toward the human Pierce but looking from one to the
other of them. The gasbag Pierce didn't like this inexplicable situation at
all, and he was wary.
"They're standing in a triangle,
sir," said Arro.
"I see that," snapped
Pierce. "They're up to some-thing. The flat flesh-creature is standing at
the point, with the well-sacced flesh-creature to his right and behind him, and
the green-scaled creature to his left rear. I will take another two steps
closer."
The computer continued its nattering.
"I think I've got the proper voltage and polarity worked out,"
the computer said, again mostly to itself, "but, then, nothing is certain
when dealing with such a novel energy form. Still, there's nothing really to be
lost by trying it, considering we're all going to be atomized anyway in about
seventy seconds. So—"
The lights flickered and went out. Great
leaps of lightning, like a miniature electrical storm, kept the cabin alit in a
strobelike fantasy. The computer, retaining only enough energy to keep itself
powered, drew all of its energy reserves from throughout the ship, channeled
that surge through circuitry in the deck plates ill-designed and equipped for
such a load, and poured it all into the soles of Frank Poole's boots.
The Proteans were suddenly struck a blow
like that of an energy sledgehammer. Frank Poole gave a startled cry and
pitched into Pierce, who suddenly felt a terrible, weirdly pleasurable pain in
every cell of his body. He felt
as if he were melting, and he collapsed
crazily into Marshmallow, who, drawn forward into the energy vortex, thrashed
and flailed and toppled onto the general, who in turn struck the deck itself.
All four forms writhed for a moment, bathed in a blue-white energy glow, which
reached into the totality of the control room itself, far into the complex
circuitry of the XB-223. The computer felt a similar wrenching sensation and
quickly shut down, restoring power to normal and automatic functions.
"Shoot, damn you!" screamed
General Geronimo Custer. "Why don't you shoot!"
The gunnery officer looked apologetic.
"Sorry, sir. Give me three or four minutes more."
"Three or four minutes more! What
for?"
"They're rushing the paperwork through
as quickly as they can."
"What? Why do you need forms to shoot? What would happen if
we were under attack now?"
"Oh, well, then Section 666 1/2B of
the Gunnery Code Manual, Volume 49, latest revision, states that we could shoot
first and fill out forms later. But it's been judged that this is not a Class I
emergency of that type, and so, being only a Class II—and a Class IIC at
that—it'll take a couple of minutes. Patience, sir! They aren't
going anywhere."
General Geronimo Custer looked to heaven.
Consciousness returned rapidly to those on
the deck of the Pete Rozelle, but they all felt an almost total
numbness. One by one they picked themselves up.
We've failed, the human Pierce thought glumly. It's incredible we
weren't all electrocuted. Or would that havebeen the kinder thing? That ship's
gonna fire any minute now. So things can get worse. At least I don't
have to go to the bathroom anymore.
Vision returned, and he got groggily to his
feet. The others did the same, with the exception of Frank Poole. The android
had obviously dealt his last hand.
The lights were dim and intermittent, there
seemed to be small electrical fires all around, and there was the overpowering
odor of ozone in the air.
Pierce looked around to see how the others
were. The general seemed dazed but all right, and so did--Wait a minute there!
He looked frantically for Marshmallow and
didn't see her, and then he looked more closely and found her, all right.
He also found that things could still get a
lot worse. And they most certainly had.
A thin, reedy, electronic voice came from
Frank Poole. He hadn't been totally destroyed after all. "I can't move!
I'm trapped in this worthless android! And you've all become giants, or I've
shrunk!"
The lizard general got weakly to his feet.
"Well, ah sweah! Ah feel all funny and crazy!" It looked around,
spotted another form, and stared, goggle-eyed. "Wait a dad-blamed minute,
sugah! What am ah doin' over theah. when ah'm heah?"
"When we all touched during that
charge we must have been connected somehow," Pierce guessed.
"I don't understand it, but it happened." He shook his
head in wonderment, feeling the unusual brush of long hair against his bare
shoulders. "I'm Millard. I got shoved somehow into your body,
Marshmallow. And you got shoved into the general's. And . . . ?" They both
looked at the still form of the android on the floor.
"I'm General Pierce, you idiot!"
came Frank Poole's grating, mechanical voice.
All three then looked at the form of the
human Millard Fillmore Pierce, who'd stood up and was now looking around in
bewilderment and wonder.
"And he must be the thing!" cried
the general.
The form of Millard Pierce stared at them.
Finally, it said, "Thing indeed! I'll have you know I'm an XB-223
navigational computer!"
Pierce gulped. "You're the computer?
Then tell us what happened? And where's the energy creature?"
"I regret to say," said the
computer, "that I no longer have access to the infinitely superior memory
and data banks with which I could have, quite rapidly, come up with that
solution. My best guess is, if we're all accounted for, the energy beings are
knocked cold somewhere in my own memory core. I was brought into it when the
general was so clumsy as to fall against the master console. However, I find
this change fascinating and exciting. How sad I shall have so little time to
explore, to touch, to feel, to love, perhaps someday become a real live
boy."
"What do you mean?" they all
asked at once.
"Because, if you've forgotten, the
alien ship's about the blast us into atoms any moment now."
"Then we have to get out of here
fast!" Pierce yelled. "Everybody get to the airlock and into the
other ship!"
Nobody moved. Marshmallow felt her new
snout and wagged her tail slightly, then shook her head. "Oh, Daddy ain't
gonna understand this at all."
There was a sudden jarring crash, and they
were all hurled again to the deck. Their little world seemed suddenly to be
upside-down and tumbling. The light flickered. Then the ship seemed to
stabilize. Machinery whined and the light held steady. There was a jolting
moment of acceleration.
"What are those dolts doing?"
grated the general in his Frank Poole voice, sounding angry. "Was that a
helluva bad shot, or did they just ram us?"
"Exactly," came a cold voice from
the computer's speaker. "They ran us down. They're grappling with the
flagship and we've been bumped. We broke loose and I've taken control."
"Who are you?" demanded the
lizard-Poole.
"I am Commodore Millard Fillmore
Pierce of the Imperial Protean Navy."
"Another Pierce," groaned
Pierce-Marshmallow.
"And a damned good thing, too,"
said the gasbag-computer. "I pulled us out of there just in time. Their
computer tells me we were ten seconds away from a completely annihilating
barrage."
"Ah!" said XB-223-Pierce.
"I'm right! She does love me!"
"You're not the computer!"
Pierce-Marshmallow cried accusingly. "You're the energy beings!"
"Something like that," the cold
voice agreed. "We're out of range of the general's treacherous
friends, but we're headed for a sanctuary. I will admit there is some
temptation to just crash this thing and be done with it, but that would kill
all of you and, of course, set me back in my plans somewhat. Therefore, it is
in my best interest to get us down alive if at all possible, and then hope for
rescue."
"Get us down? Sanctuary? Where?"
"All this time, I've maneuvered these
various crafts in the direction of a primitive-looking but acceptable world not
far from our present position. I'm going to put us down on it as best I can,
although it'll be something of a crash landing, I'm afraid. As to where it
is—I'm afraid you'll have to ask your navigational computer. I haven't a
clue."
The computer in Pierce's body looked amazed
at the comment. "How in the universe should I know?"
"At last he admitted it." Pierce sighed.
"Brace for crash landing," the
gasbag-computer Pierce warned them. "Counting from thirty . . .
now!"
They all hung on to whatever they could and
hoped for the best, while the Proteans who now controlled the ship counted off
the moments to impact. Waiting seemed like an eternity, and during all that
eternity all Pierce could think was, We're going to die. And if we don't,
we'll be cast adrift on an alien world with no hope of rescue. Or, even worse,
we'll get rescued by Marshmallow's father—and I'm trapped as her! Things
couldn't get any
He let the thought hang. Every time he'd
thought it in the past few hours, things had managed to get very much worse.
"Five . . . four . . . three . . .
two—"
"It is a far, far better thing I do
than I have ever done," intoned XB-223-Pierce. "It is to a far, far
better place I go than I have ever known."
"Don't get your hopes up!"
snapped Marshmallow-Pierce.
". one!"7
Think back. Think back before the vital
events of the twentieth century—the creation of the 1956 aqua-andwhite Chevy
Bel Air, the Cleveland Indians' World Series victory in 1948, or
even the publication of "The Brain Feeders" by Sherman
Ross Hladky.
Go back even further. Let the centuries
pass away like scales from a bluegill. Back we go, back to the dawn of
civilization and still further back. Back before the rise of Western culture in
the Fertile Crescent, back before Homo sapiens ever strode this world, back
when all our ancestors were big-eyed little lemur-looking things clinging to
strange trees in strange lands.
Still further: mammals grow smaller and
lizards grow larger. Dinosaurs stride the Earth, but still we plummet into the
past. Ugly huffing things crawl up on land for the first time, but we seek an
age even older, before the steel-sided sharks ruled the hot, teeming seas.
Organisms become smaller and simpler as we rocket back through the vast eons of
time, back until there are no organisms at all
in the patient, mineral-rich soup that
covers the seething, heaving landscape. Disneyesque yolcanoes blast the skies
in the background, the earth shakes, and unending rains pelt down from
lightning-fissured clouds.
Yet our goal is even still not in sight.
Imagine the Earth without oceans, hot and barren. Imagine the Earth . . . molten.
Imagine the Earth as nothing but a fiery ball of matter, condensing from
incandescent gases left over from the formation of the sun.
Close your eyes and picture this—No, wait a
minute! If you close your eyes, you won't be able to read a thing! Just picture
this, then: It's billions and billions of years before even the creation of our
solar system. The Big Bang has just done its thing; matter and antimatter have
annihilated each other, leaving a little stuff around in the form of electrons,
photons, neutrinos, and antineutrinos in an expanding universe. A hundred
seconds or so after the Bang, atoms begin to form. The temperature of the
universe is down to a billion degrees, and the whole shooting match is small
enough to pack away in your hall closet.
At this moment, at this critical
micro-instant of time, Chief Administrative Officer Millard Fillmore Pierce
strode toward his office, a thoughtful frown on his face.
"Wait!" I (the book) hear you cry
in disbelief. "How could there be a Millard Fillmore Pierce in any form,
only one hundred seconds after the Big Bang?" Listen, and you will
encounter a vision of reality horribly unsettling to our tiny, Earthbound
sensibilities. It may indeed seem like little more than science fiction, but
there are plenty of people in lab coats with clipboards who are convinced of
its accuracy.
After the Big Bang, our universe expanded
quickly, first to the size of a peach pit, then to the size of a basketball,
then to the size of a spherical cassowary, andso on. It was like a bubble. As
our universe aged, it settled down into galaxies and quasars and nebulas and
all those twinkling, radiating things.
Could not a simple star system have served
as a sort of atom in a galactic molecule of strange and complex composition?
Could not our entire universe have become a miracle of organization, a unit of
life so immense that we can barely imagine it? Could not our universe be but a
single, tiny, living cell in some unimagineably huge organic creature? And why,
then, couldn't there have been millions, billions, uncountable other
universe-bubbles beside ours, surrounding it on all sides, forming a Millard
Fillmore Pierce of such staggering dimensions that we all must stammer
helplessly in the face of it?
This ultra-most Pierce crossed the beige
shag rug and seated himself behind his battered hardwood desk. He pressed a
button on his intercom and signaled his secretary. "Miss Brant,"
he said in a worried voice, "please bring me the Phoenix File."
"Yes, sir," said Miss Brant. In a few
moments, she entered the office and laid the top-secret folder on his desk.
When he was alone again, Pierce opened the
cover of the folder. He began to read the shocking scientific report. Several
top-notch researchers from all around the world had concluded that the Earth
was vulnerable to invasion from creatures similar to human beings, but from
another dimension. He read through the folder, deeply disturbed by its
frightening conclusions. Then he began filling out the proper forms, including
Forms 6128/a and 6128/b, which were necessary upon completion of any Eyes
Only-level file, and which routed the folder back to its top-secret storage
place. Then there were forms that gave permission for Miss Brant to come back
into the office and physically transport the folder to its place in the drawer
in
the cabinet. There were forms that went up
the chain of command to the Big Guy, and down the chain of command to the
Underlings, carrying Pierce's comments on the Big Guy's memos. Pierce would
have to wait for the Underlings' forms containing their procedural notations
to Pierce's comments to the Big Guy's memos, which would eventually .be
included in the Phoenix File itself after review by the Committee, even though
the Underlings would never actually read the Phoenix File itself. At last, all
these forms would be clipped together to begin a new file, which would be
reproduced in quadruplicate, one copy for the Big Guy, one copy for Pierce, one
copy for the Underlings' section, and one copy sent to the World Union
Cooperative Organization Headquarters, where it would be further duplicated for
all the Department Heads. At that very instant, our vast universe, in the form
of a dying scalp cell, fell from the ultra-most Pierce's head to his jet black
uniform shoulder. He idly brushed it away and leaned back in his chair. He had
some world-saving to do.
Wow! Talk about your sense-of-wonder! In
the hands of Niven and Pournelle or writers of that type, this story would now
probably go off in some mindbending ultra-universal direction, entirely overlooking
the fact that dead scalp cells are people, too. Besides, you have to think of
the time scale. Twenty billion of our years passed between the moment when the
ultra-most Pierce noticed that speck of dandruff and the instant he flicked it
away. In that time our universe came to an end, and all the people (and aliens)
we've met in The Red Tape War were long dead.
Maybe Niven and Pournelle could dismiss
those characters without a second thought, but not us. Around here we've got a
reputation for thoughtfulness, generosity, and a deep commitment to the
fulfillment of every one ofour creations, lizard, gasbag, human being, or
otherwise. We're going to go on as if the ultra-universe doesn't
even exist, because we can't influence it and it can't influence us.
Now, where were we?
Omigosh, that's right, the Pete Rozelle crash-landed
on the surface of some weirdo alien planet! Everyone on board is in desperate
trouble, because they're all lying around in each other's bodies, unconscious,
while potentially dangerous alien fumes leak in through the cracked
windshield!
We'll get back to them in a moment. But
first let's turn our attention to the bridge of the real flagship of the
battle fleet, where Daddy and Herb were having an argument.
"Now, see?" demanded
Daddy. "You've let them get away. I'm sure my baby girl is in
the hands of at least three different species of galactic pirates, helpless
against their cruel alien lusts. Can you track that ship?"
Herb was put out, because this was just
another example of how Daddy always treated him like an inexperienced fool.
Herb had been tracking the Pete Rozelle from the very moment it broke
free and headed toward the uncharted planet. "I'm not an idiot, you
know," he told Daddy in a sulky voice. "I went to college and everything.
I know how to do my job."
Daddy slammed his well-manicured fist
against a stainless steel panel. "I never said you couldn't do
your job! Do you have my baby girl on the screen?"
"And you don't have to shout,"
said Herb. He indicated a tiny, faint blip on a glowing green screen the size
of a panel truck. "That's them, right there."
"Good," said Daddy,
clenching and unclenching his fists. He sat back in his padded leather
acceleration chair and tried to relax. "It was better in the old days,"
he
murmured. "In the old days, I had
henchmen with psychic powers."
Herb shook his head dubiously. "Psychic
powers are a waste of time these days. There is more paperwork for psychic
powers than for almost anything else. It's been that way ever since the
Galactic Privacy Act. You can't even telekinetically move a saltshaker without
filling out six different forms. You only need five to blow up a planet."
There was silence on the bridge for a
moment. "Herb," said Daddy at last, "how much do I pay
you?" "Sir?"
"Never mind," said Daddy with a sigh, "it's
probably way too much." The blip on the viewscreen was moving slowly but
steadily away from them. What good was a two-dimensional screen in a
four-dimensional galaxy, anyway?
"Do you want me to lay in a new
course, sir?" asked Herb. "You want to follow the Pete
Rozelle?"
It seemed like the logical thing to do, but
Daddy didn't get to be one of the most powerful beings in the galaxy by always
doing what was logical. He thought aloud for a moment. "I trust that
Marshmallow's situation won't get any worse until after those foul fiends
arrive at their destination, wherever it is."
"They seem to be moving straight for
that uncharted planet, sir," said Herb.
Daddy ignored him. "That gives us a
little time. A short respite, during which we can deal with that lizard
invasion. Say, whatever happened to those three million capsules they
launched?"
"We're tracking them, sir. The
capsules don't seem to be in any hurry. They were released in all directions,
evidently with no specific destinations. I believe thelizards are trying to
flood this part of the galaxy with them."
Daddy nodded. "Any idea what's in the
capsules?"
"It could be garbage, sir. Plastics
and paper and aluminum and glass all separated for recycling."
Daddy looked up for help, as if God were
hovering near the bank of digital readouts overhead. "I'll take your
suggestion under advisement, Herb, and then forget about it completely. We'll
operate with the contents of the capsules listed as `Unknown.' You
said they're being tracked?"
Herb nodded confidently. "All three
million of them are being individually tracked by our fleet's Third Computer
Tracking Wing, which wasn't doing anything else at the moment."
"Good, fine," said Daddy, hitting
the palm of his hand with his other fist. "If that lizard fleet takes any
other suspicious action, let me know at once."
"Yes, sir. What are you going to do now, sir?"
Daddy's eyes narrowed. "I've got an
idea for a completely new and diabolical kind of quadruplicate form! Those
space pirates will rue the day they ever crossed ballistic paths with me!"
And he began to laugh softly like a maniac.
At the main airlock waited one hundred
thousand lizard warriors, armed to the teeth and pumped full of sophisticated
drugs that turned each one into an unstoppable demon of destruction. On a
gray-painted flying bridge above them, General Geronimo Custer snapped the
chin-strap of his helmet and glared down in barely controlled blood lust.
"Men!" he cried. "In a few seconds, that door will slide open,
and we will go charging into the
bowels of the enemy fleet's flagship!
Victory will quickly be ours!"
The infantry lizards cheered so loudly that
the general had to wait impatiently for silence. He turned to Captain William
Tecumseh Roosevelt and shouted in his ear, "What if you're wrong?"
Captain Roosevelt shrugged his saurian
shoulders. "Then perhaps the first fifteen or twenty thousand of them will
die horribly."
The general considered that. "Fifteen
or twenty percent losses at the outset," he muttered. "That's
accept-able." He turned back to his legions. "You all have your
assignments. This is a very complex operation. Each division must achieve its
objective within the time frame of our schedule, so that we can wrest control
of the flagship from those unearthly humanoids. We want the flagship intact,
with most of its leaders alive, so that—"
Just then, the giant airlock door began
rumbling open. The hyped-up soldiers started screaming again, and the general
gave up his pep talk. The first companies of rampant lizards charged through
the tunnel, into Daddy's huge mock-up of a military flagship.
"Onward, men!" cried General
Geronimo Custer. "On to glory!"
Those first companies, however, had fallen
almost immediately to their knees, helpless with nausea. The gunnery captain
saw the problem and shouted orders. "Back!" he screamed. "Back
to the ship! Close the airlock and break out breathing apparatus!"
It took many minutes for the savage lizards
to retreat to their own ship. The ones who'd been exposed to the cold, thin,
foul-smelling atmosphere aboard the enemy vessel were weak-kneed and shaky, but
they recovered quickly. "Sorry, men," said the general, passing
through the ranks and showing his cannon fodder that he trulycared about them.
"I forgot all about the atmosphere on the other ship. Make sure your
breathing apparatus is properly in place, and we'll try this again."
For a second time, the great airlock door
rumbled open. "Charge!" shouted the general through his own
faceplate. And again they charged.
The assault went on right on schedule,
helped no doubt by the fact that there wasn't a single enemy aboard the false
flagship. Companies split up into platoons, each with its own mission. However,
there were no guns to silence, no classified communications rooms to capture,
no top-level humanoid commanders to interrogate.
"This is terrible," said General
Geronimo Custer.
Captain Roosevelt checked his wristwatch.
"I don't see why, sir. Our men are virtually in control of this ship, and
we're only fifteen minutes late."
"You don't understand. I can't go back
without casualties. How would that look in the paperwork? No casualties, not
even one? Headquarters would find that just too suspicious. It's impossible to
take an objective without casualties. It's just unmilitary! They'd probably
find a year's worth of forms for me to fill out, explaining this action. We've
got to think of something!"
The captain rubbed his long, fanged snout.
"I never thought of it that way, sir."
Just then, the general's face lit up.
"I've got it!" he said, and he began shooting his rifle and hand
laser into the bulkhead above him. "Hit the dirt!" he shouted.
"We're under attack!"
Soldiers near him began firing their own
weapons, and within a few seconds, all of the hundred thousand scaled soldiers
were blasting away at nothing. "There," said the general with
satisfaction, "we ought to get our ten to fifteen percent casualties
now!" And he ducked as a fiery red laser wand swept low over his head.
* * *
There were many obvious reasons why the Pete
Rozelle was severely damaged structurally and electronically when it
crash-landed on Uncharted, and only one reason why it wasn't totally
obliterated. A leading factor on the first list was that the ship's guidance
system was now occupied by the trespassing consciousnesses of Commodore Pierce
and First Officer Arro, neither of whom had had much prior experience as a
man-made Artificial Intelligence computer network.
The single thing that saved them was a
miracle. God, or mathematics, allowed the passengers on the Pete Rozelle to
live a little longer.
Not that the Pierce-Arro combined entity
intended to abuse the privilege. "Hello?" said
Pierce-Arro. There was no answer.
"What's happened?"
"Apparently," the entity answered
itself, "our two separate Protean minds have become fused. I
don't know if it happened because of the deck-plate charging debacle, or as a
result of the crash. But we're in here together."
"Do I have to salute myself?"
"Very funny. Now, we seem to be
trapped inside this computer. I'm beginning to learn how to extend my
`thinking' and utilize the extended sensory and memory devices that haven't
been too badly damaged."
"How are the others?"
"What others?"
"The flesh-creatures. Did they survive
as well?"
Pierce-Arro watched and listened and
consulted with all of its built-in meters and readouts. "I detect
heart-beats," it decided at last. "No sign of consciousness, however.
Perhaps they were damaged in the crash."
"I warned them to hang on!"
"Now, what about the others in our
invasion? How will we contact them? Our ship—the Pel Torro—is trapped
inside that giant android on the floor. And I suppose our bodies are under the
control of one of these creatures' minds."
"Both bodies?"
"I hope so. The only alternative is
that one gasbag body is alive and inhabited by an alien, and the other gasbag
body has deflated unto death."
"I don't know which would be worse.
Imagine having a loathsome alien awareness pawing over your inner being."
"We have communications equipment
under our control. We could try raising the Pel Torro and giving the
alien instructions on how to properly maintain our complex and lovely bodies.
As I recall, it was almost time for my midwatch lubrication."
"Forget that for now. It's more
important for us to establish a link to our invasion fleet."
"How?"
"I don't know. This requires more
study." And the Pierce-Arro entity absorbed itself in the minute exploration
of all of the XB-223's attributes.
Deathly silence reigned inside the damaged Pete
Rozelle. The ship had plowed a long, smoking furrow across the weirdly
alien face of Uncharted, the strange new world upon which it had crash-landed.
The landscape of Uncharted had been created by a god with a splitting headache:
The sky was a sickly maroon, and the shiny, broad-leafed vegetation was a
ghastly blue color that belonged on the lips of a drowning victim. Reflected
light
from the world's two moons cast dreadful
shadows across the unhuman prairie, but no one aboard the Pete Rozelle had
yet seen any of that. Only Pierce-Arro was conscious, and that entity had more
important things than sightseeing on its . . . hands.
Time passed, marked by the ominous dripping
of some liquid coolant from a broken overhead line, and by the sibilant hiss of
Uncharted's slightly green atmosphere forcing its way into the control room,
and by the soft plicking sound of broken plastic falling from the dash-board to
the deck plates. Time passed, and slowly the occupants of the craft began to
wake up to their dangerous plight.
"Nobody move!" shouted the lizard
general's body. Of course, it was Marshmallow in the lizard body, but her
booming, shrill cry had all the force of the general's lungs behind it.
The human Pierce—in Marshmallow's body—gave
a ladylike groan and sat up, holding his aching head. "What is it?"
"Are we alive?" asked the XB-223
in Pierce's body. "I've only been a real boy for a few minutes, and I
haven't even had sex yet! I don't want to die!"
"That gas!" growled General
Millard Fillmore Pierce, through the mechanical speech parts of the mostly deactivated
Frank Poole.
"We've all got to learn to cooperate,
ya heah?" said the Marshmallow-lizard. "We got to put aside our
differences now."
"She . . . she's right," said the
computer-Pierce. "If not, these organic bodies will be dead soon."
Pierce-Marshmallow rubbed his throbbing
temples. "Only if that gas is poisonous," he said wearily.
"Why don't you go over there and take
a big oldfaceful?" demanded the lizard-gasbag impatiently. "How can
you even sit around discussing the matter?"
"And then we'll demonstrate how our
various species can learn to live together in peace and harmony," said the
computer-Pierce.
"And we can stop this intergalactic
multidimensional war before we're all blown to smithereens," said
Pierce-Marshmallow thoughtfully. "And then we'll get rescued. And then
we'll all be rewarded by our various governments. And then—"
"Fix the windshield, Pierce!"
demanded the general. "Fix the goddamn broken windshield!"
"Duct tape," said Pierce weakly.
"In the toolbox downstairs in the basement. I can't do it. I can barely
move."
"I can't move a finger,"
complained the XB-223. "Neither can I," said
Marshmallow.
"Don't look at me," said the
general. "I seem to be inhabiting the bodies of two weird alien creatures
simultaneously. They're teeny tiny collections of flatulent sacs. I'm in some
impossibly small spacecraft inside the head of your android. I don't have the
faintest idea how to operate the controls."
"And Frank Poole is a goner
anyway," said Pierce thoughtfully. "Well, there's another Modular
Identity Synthecator downstairs. You could inhabit it, I suppose. Goodtime
Sal—I don't get her out very often. She tends to wear me out."
"I don't want to hear about your of
silicon slut," said Marshmallow huffily.
Pierce looked toward her. She was lovely,
even in the body of the lizard general. "Sal never meant anything to me,
Marshmallow sweetheart. Honest, she didn't."
"Cough, cough," said the general.
"The gas!"
Pierce stretched out on the deck plates and
began crawling forward. It was the most difficult physical thing he'd ever had
to do in his life, but his continued existence—and the lives of his friends and
enemies—depended on his getting to the duct tape in time. He pulled himself
painfully across the deck, inch by inch, every muscle in his body—well, Marshmallow's
body, actually—complaining with each exertion.
"Can you make it, Millard?" asked
the computer fearfully.
"I think I can. I think I can."
"Look!" shouted Marshmallow.
"Outside! Is that some huge, horrible alien predator lurking in the
shadows?"
"No," said the lizard general, "I'm
some huge, horrible alien predator."
"I've almost . . . got it," said
the human Pierce. He strained one last time, lifted himself up into one of the bucket
seats, and found the control that opened the hatch to the basement. "Oh
no," he muttered hopelessly.
"What's wrong, honey?" asked
Marshmallow.
"The light's burned out down there. I
hate going down there in the dark."
"Choke, choke," said the lizard general.
"Okay," said Pierce, "I get
the picture." It took all his remaining courage, but Millard Fillmore
Pierce clambered slowly down the stairs and rummaged around for a few moments.
When he rejoined his companions on the deck, he had the duct tape and Goodtime
Sal.
"How dare you bring that hussy up here
where decent folk are trying not to die?" cried Marshmallow in outrage.
Pierce gulped. "I need someone to tear
off the duct tape," he explained.
"Hi, fellas!" said Goodtime Sal
cheerfully. "Are those molecular imploders in your pockets, or are you
just glad to see me?"
"Sal, listen closely," said
Pierce. "Rip the duct tape and patch the windshield. I can't
reach it."
Goodtime Sal leered at Pierce in
Marshmallow's body. "I know," she said, "you just
want to look down my blouse when I bend over." Being an MIS, Sal was very
broadminded. She wasn't bad, she was just programmed that way.
"Forget that for now, Sal,"
Pierce ordered. "Fix the windshield before we all die of alien crud in our
systems."
It took Goodtime Sal a few seconds to sort
out Pierce's commands, but soon she began tearing off strips of duct tape and
slapping them over the crack in the windshield. The green atmosphere of
Uncharted stopped seeping into the control room.
"I think we'll be all right,
now," said the XB-223.
"Ah don't know," said
Marshmallow. "That mechanical bimbo in the white go-go boots has put a
serious crimp in our relationship, Millard sweetie. I'm gonna have to think on
this some."
"Aw, but Marshmallow—"
Goodtime Sal walked in an emphatically
rhythmic way to the XB-223 in Pierce's body. "Here, big boy," she
said in a husky voice, "let me help you with that!"
"Keep your hands off my body!"
shouted Pierce. "Computer, I order you not to do a damn thing with my
body!"
"Ah could say the same to you, Millard
dear," said Marshmallow. "But I'm too confused and hurt.
I'll just sit here and pretend I'm not a horrible giant lizard until Daddy
comes and makes everything all right again! And don't try to get on my good
side."
"In my body," said the general,
"you don't have a good side. That was bred out of us generations
ago."
"Ha ha," boomed an ugly voice
from the Pete Rozelle's speaker system, "what a merry mixup!"
"Oh no," said the lizard general,
"the phony energy beings who are really tiny gasbag creatures from another
dimension and are now occupying the systems and circuits of this spacecraft's
navigation computer, they're back!"
"Well," said the XB-223 philosophically,
as the cabin began to flood with water, "what else could go wrong?"8
Well, actually a lot more could go wrong.
Mister Frisky could develop a throat abscess and lose the Kentucky Derby. The
Cincinnati Bengals could fail to draft an impact linebacker. Tor's advance
check for The Red Tape War could prove to be pure rubber.
However, there's more at stake here that
merely the fate of three Millard Fillmore Pierces and the mandatory pneumatic
love interest. Much more.
For example, Effinger is two months late on
the deadline for his next novel. Resnick's leaving on his annual African safari
in just three weeks. Chalker wants to give up writing for a year and become a
television evangelist. And Millard Fillmore Pierce—the real one—is
precisely where he was in Chapter One: stuck aboard the Pete Rozelle awaiting
the invasion of the lizard army; and despite the best efforts of the three
greatest living science fiction writers to extricate him from his predicament,
he simply hasn't made a lot of progress in the last forty thousand words. And
worst of all, Beth Meacham, our
editor at Tor, has just announced that she
needs The Red Tape War in six weeks if it's to come out in time for the
Spring list and make it to the top of the best-seller charts.
Now, unlike Pierce's problem, this is
Really Important Stuff. If The Red Tape War doesn't hit the best-seller
list, Chalker won't be able to buy that facelift he's always warited, Effinger
will be at the mercy of the goons from Guido Scarletti's Friendly Neighborhood
Loan Service (who are not known for the quality of their mercy), and Resnick
will have to put at least seven of his current wives up for auction and/or
adoption. This is unacceptable, and therefore we're finally going to get poor
Millard out of the fix he's in (within the exquisitely defined parameters that
have been laid down in the previous chapters, to be sure).
First of all—and we're going to gloss right
over it and not even show you how it happened—Goodtime Sal got the duct tape in
place and the atmosphere soon returned to normal. (But of course you knew that
she'd succeed. Not only is she an amazingly competent creation, thoroughly
versed in both The Kama Sutra and The Perfumed Garden, but also
possessed of a truly exceptional talent for handling duct tape. Furthermore,
Effinger really faunches for a powder-blue Mercedes 300-ST with power disk
brakes, dual exhausts, and a sunroof, and he can't afford it unless we can sell
a sequel . . . which means Pierce has to survive.)
(By the way, Sal, who was a cheap authorial
device of Effinger's and nothing more, then vanished from both the ship and the
story forever.)
Second, Daddy got curious—after all, it's
been a fabulous, award-winning narrative up to this point; wouldn't you be
curious if you were him?—and his hologram magically (well, scientifically)
appeared on the bridge of the Pete Rozelle, from which it surveyed the
situation andmade funny little noises deep within its holographic throat.
Third, the Mahatma Gandhi (remember
the Mahatma Gandhi from Chapter Four? You don't? Well, go right back
and read it again) had finally gotten permission to come to Pierce's rescue,
and had just hove (hoven? hoved?) (heaved. Ed.) into sight as Chapter Eight,
officially designated by Editor Meacham as the Chapter That Gets The Plot Off
Dead Center Or Else, begins.
Fourth, Pierce-Arro, the merged gasbag
entities that found themselves within the computer, were now face-to-face (or
at least face-to-hologram) with the spitting image of their god (Daddy,
remember? Sure you do!), and thoughts of conquest have momentarily been
superceded by the thought that the universe may come to an end any minute now
that they have been confronted by the Supreme Being and there is probably
nothing left to live for. In fact, they were torn between worshiping him or
finding some regulation, in this vastly over-regulated universe, that might
make him go away.
Now, at precisely that moment, Captain
Roosevelt burst into the Pete Rozelle, followed by thirty crack reptilian
troops. (The reptilian aliens having landed in hot pursuit of the Pete
Rozelle. Ed.) He took one brief look at the nude bodies of Marshmallow and
the human and lizard Pierces, and then saw Daddy's image hovering somewhere
above them.
"Shall we kill them immediately,
sir?" asked a lieutenant, moving up to Roosevelt's side.
"Hmmm," said Roosevelt, his ugly
reptilian brow furrowed in consternation. "I'll have to think about this
for a minute. We seem to have what we in the trade call a situation."
"In my trade we call it an
orgy," said Daddy's image with an expression of distaste.
"Look," said Pierce reasonably.
"There's really a very simple explanation for what's going on here."
"Shut up, female!" snapped
Roosevelt.
"Well, maybe not so simple,"
amended Pierce. "But there is an explanation."
"Sir, we're waiting for our
orders," persisted Roosevelt's lieutenant.
"Well, I suppose our first order of business is to kill
General Pierce," responded Roosevelt. "This will assure him of
instant martyrdom, and we can say that he died in battle and cover up his
participation in this disgusting orgy—and besides, everyone else will move up a
notch in rank." He turned to the occupants of the Pete Rozelle. "Yes,
I think that would be best," he said, nodding his head.
"Just turn the general over for drawing and quartering, after we maybe
roast him on a warm spit for a couple of days, and we'll let the rest of you
live for at least a few hours while I sort this out."
Pierce turned to the Frank Poole android
that was inhabited by the lizard Pierce. "Well, General, it's been nice
knowing you."
"What the hell are you talking
about?" demanded the general. He pointed to Marshmallow. "That's the
general, as any fool can plainly see.
"Who are you calling a fool?"
bellowed Roosevelt. "More to the point, who are you calling a
general?" demanded Pierce.
"Just a minute," said Daddy,
sounding very con-fused. "Are you trying to say that this sorry-looking
lizard ain't the general?"
"Watch who yoah calling sorry-looking!"
snapped Marshmallow.
"SILENCE!" roared Pierce-Arro
from within the computer.
Suddenly all eyes turned to the main panel.
"All this is giving me a
headache," continued Pierce-Arro. "It's got to stop."
"I'm open to suggestions," said
Captain Roosevelt. "We have come to that point in the adventure where
we must all put our cards on the
table," said Pierce-Arro. "Yeah?" said Daddy sarcastically.
"Well, to do that,
computer, you got to be playing with a full
deck."
"To begin with, Revered One,"
said Pierce-Arro,
"I'm not a computer."
"And I suppose the next thing you're
gonna do is tell me that the general ain't a lizard."
"That is correct, my possible
Lord," said Pierce-Arro. "In point of fact, the lizard that
you see before you happens to be your own flesh and blood, which is
theologically staggering in its implications."
"He ain't even my own skin and
scales!" snapped Daddy. "I don't know why I'm wasting my time with
you loonies."
"It's quite true, sir," put in
Pierce. "I am Millard Fillmore Pierce, Class 2 Arbiter in command of the Pete
Rozelle."
"Cut the crap, Emmyjane," said
Daddy.
"Test me," challenged Pierce.
"How much is four times three?"
said Daddy suddenly.
"Twelve," replied Pierce.
"Spell cat."
"C-A-T."
Daddy's eyebrows did a little dance in the
vicinity of his hairline. "Okay—so you're Pierce. Now where the hell is my
Emmyjane?"
"Closer than you think," said
Marshmallow.
"You mean they weren't kidding?"
said Daddy. He turned to the Frank Poole android. "And you're
really the general?"
"You're getting nothing from me but my
name, rank and serial number," said the general.
"Shut up and let me think!" said
Daddy. He turned to Pierce's body. "Okay. Now, who's this here little wimp?"
"Your ever-loyal XB-223 navigational
computer at your service," said the computer. "Though now that I have
a body, I think I need a fitting name to accompany it."
You do, do you?"
The computer nodded. "I know it's not
much of a body, and it's undernourished as hell and its gums are in terrible
condition, but it's the only body I happen to have at the moment, and I would
appreciate everyone calling it Sylvester Schwarzenegger from now on."
The Pete Rozelle suddenly shuddered.
"All right, what the hell was
that?" demanded the lizard Pierce.
"Beats the hell out of me,"
admitted the human Pierce.
"A ship named the Mahatma Gandhi has
just landed a shuttle near us, and its commander is now coming aboard,"
announced Pierce-Arro.
"We're getting away from the point,"
interjected Captain Roosevelt, "said point being: what the hell is going
on here?"
"Now that we're all through with these
trivial revelations," said Pierce-Arro, "I am prepared to make
every-thing crystal-clear."
"What the hell's so trivial about turning
my daughter into a lizard?" demanded Daddy. "She's probably going to
want a whole new wardrobe now."
"I have examined XB-223's equations,
and I can assure you that this is a temporary situation, easily alleviated.
However, we have a more important problem to cope with."
"What the hell are you talking
about?"
"There is a possibility that you,
Revered One, are the Supreme Being," said Pierce-Arro. "Of course,
there is also an equal likelihood that you are simply the holographic
representation of a rather unlikeable flesh-andblood man, in which case we'll
probably continue with our plans of conquest and do grotesque things to you for
having the audacity to impersonate our god. The problem, of course, is that we
don't know which you are. But if you are merely a human being, then there must
be some regulation that will make you go away, and then we can get on with the
conquest of the universe . . . whereas if you are God, we'll sacrifice a
couple of goats to you, invite you in for a drink, and say a brief prayer
before you bring the universe to a cataclysmic end." Pierce-Arro paused
long enough for this statement to sink in. "We feel this is the only
rational course of action. We must proceed as if you are a human, always
keeping in mind the fact that you might well be God, and search for the red
tape that counts. If we don't, everything will become chaotic."
"In case it's escaped your notice,
everything is already chaotic," said Captain Roosevelt.
"We must do this, or the stars will
die," intoned Pierce-Arro, rather pleased with the way his voice sounded
on the speaker system. "The immutable laws will fail."
"I suppose it will rain toads,
too," scoffed Daddy.
"If you say so," replied
Pierce-Arro devoutly.
"Forget all that other crap,"
interjected Pierce. "Go back to the part about how all this stuff with the
bodies is just a temporary situation."
"Yes, please do," said Roosevelt.
"In his current condition, the general probably couldn't stand up to more
than a week of torture."
"If you insist," said
Pierce-Arro. "But after I help you restore yourselves to your original
forms, do I have your solemn oaths that you will help me look for the red
tape?"
"We'll scour the ship," said
Pierce emphatically. "If you dropped this tape anywhere around here, we'll
find it, never fear. Just get us back the way we were and we'll go
to work immediately."
"Would white tape do?" asked
Roosevelt. "We've got tons of adhesive tape back in our infirmary."
"Fool!" said Pierce-Arro.
"The red tape I am speaking about is a regulation."
"We ain't got enough
regulations?" demanded Marsh-mallow. "Now you want us to find more?"
"Sometimes I get the distinct
impression that your races are too stupid to conquer," said Pierce-Arro
with a heartfelt sigh. "I suspect we'd better all return to our original
bodies first; then maybe you'll be able to concentrate more fully on what I'm
saying."
The commander of the Mahatma Gandhi arrived
at just that instant, and was promptly ignored by all parties.
"Suits me," said Pierce.
"How do we start?"
"You simply link hands and concentrate
on the body that was formerly yours. My prodigious mental powers, linked to the
ship's computer, will do the rest."
"You're sure?" asked Pierce
dubiously.
"Not really," admitted
Pierce-Arro. "But it sounds awfully impressive, and besides, I haven't
heard any better suggestions. Shall we begin?"
"No!" said the XB-223.
"What do you mean, no?" demanded
Pierce.
"It's nothing personal, Millard,"
replied the computer. "I mean, there's nobody I'd rather do a good turn
to, except maybe Fanny Hill, and that would be an entirely different kind of
turn, if you understand my clever but subtle play on words . . . but the truth
of the matter is that I rather like being a person, if you know what I
mean."
"But it's my body!"
"It was your body. And I might
add," the computercontinued petulantly, "that you've taken absolutely
abysmal care of it. It's nearsighted and underweight and its teeth are filled
with cavities and it has fallen arches and it sweats too much. It will take a
lot of work putting this body back into shape, Millard. You really should be
ashamed of yourself. When's the last time you took it for a long walk? Or let
it make passionate love to a real woman? The muscle tone is just abysmal."
"If it's all that terrible, why not
just give it back to me?" snapped Pierce.
"Well, it may not be much of a
body," admitted the computer, "but on the other hand, it's the only
one I've got."
"Take this one," said
Pierce, indicating the body he was wearing and trying to keep the eagerness out
of his voice. "It's much sounder and healthier, and I assure you that it's
far more capable of defending itself."
"Now just a goldurned minute!"
thundered Marsh-mallow, striking the floor a mighty blow with her orange tail.
"Ain't nobody else getting that body but me!"
"Well, you see how it is,
Millard," said the computer apologetically. "I'd help you if I could,
but it gets so stuffy in the ship, if you know what I mean."
Pierce muttered an obscenity.
"Don't be like that, Millard,"
said XB-223 placatingly. "I want us to be friends, and I promise you that
I will provide nothing but the best for your body: fine Italian pasta,
carefully aged champagne, at least one shower a day, and regular dental
checkups. And women, Millard—think of the women this body is going to
enjoy!"
"It's enough to make me wish I was
there," said Pierce bitterly.
"I'll call you once a week and fill
you in on all the details," promised XB-223. "Look at it this way,
Millard: you're not losing a body, you're gaining a friend."
"I'd rather lose the friend and have
the body back, if it's all the same to you."
"Try to be a good loser," said
the computer soothingly. "After all, there's nothing you can do about it,
so you might as well look on the bright side."
Pierce turned to the newcomer from the Mahatma
Gandhi, who had been a silent and somewhat befuddled spectator.
"You're supposed to be here to rescue
me!" he snapped. "What are you going to do about all this?"
"I really don't know what I can do,
ma'am," replied the officer.
"That's sir," said Pierce.
"Who are you and what's your rank?"
"Captain Nathan Bolivia at your service,
sii," said the officer. "Although," he added after a moment's
consideration, "that's not exactly accurate."
"You're not a captain or you're not
Nathan Bolivia?" asked Pierce, confused.
"Oh, I'm both, sir," answered
Bolivia. "What I'm not is at your service."
"I don't understand," said
Pierce. "No matter how I may appear to you, I assure you that I really am
Arbiter Millard Fillmore Pierce."
"I believe you, ma'am . . . or rather,
sir," said Bolivia.
"Then what's the problem?"
"It's really all quite simple,
sir," explained Bolivia. "You see, you put in an Urgent Assistance
Call to the Mahatma Gandhi."
"Right," said Pierce. "And
here you are."
"Well, yes and no, sir," said
Bolivia uncomfortably. "What do you mean?"
"Well, I'm here, but the Mahatma
Gandhi isn't."
"I thought it was hanging in orbit
above this Uncharted planet," said Pierce.
"No, sir," said Bolivia.
"That's the Indira Gandhi." "Where's the Mahatma
Gandhi?" asked Pierce. "Well, now, that's the tricky part,"
answered Bolivia.
"You see, there isn't any Mahatma
Gandhi."
"What are you talking about?"
demanded Pierce. "I was in radio contact with it less than a week
ago!"
"True," admitted Bolivia.
"In fact, I am the officer to whom you spoke. I expedited matters and
received per-mission to come to your rescue, which accounts for my presence
here."
"Then what's the problem?"
"The problem, sir, is that between the
time that I left hyperspace and the time that I docked with the Pete
Rozelle, orders came through changing my ship's name to the Indira
Gandhi. Some feminist group or other had been lobbying for it, and
headquarters finally yielded to pressure about sixteen weeks ago. The orders
were rushed through, signed and countersigned, and finally approved." He
sighed. "So there you have it, sir."
"Have what?" asked Pierce,
thoroughly befuddled.
"My orders specify that you are to be
rescued by the crew of the Mahatma Gandhi," said Bolivia slowly, as
if explaining it to a rather backward child. "They say nothing whatsoever
about the crew of the Indira Gandhi. I'm probably breaking some
regulation or other just by being here talking to you."
"But you're the same crew and the same
ship!" screamed Pierce. "Why can't you rescue me?"
"I should have thought being in an
analagous situation would make it plain to you, sir. I am definitely Captain
Nathan Bolivia, and I have been dispatched aboard the ship Mahatma Gandhi to
rescue you, but my ship is obviously no longer the Mahatma Gandhi. You are
unquestionably Class 2 Arbiter Millard
Fillmore Pierce, and you have requested that I rescue you, but your body is no
longer the body of Millard Fillmore Pierce. Don't you find a certain poetic
irony in our similar plights?"
"I don't see anything similar about
them!" bellowed Pierce. "I needed help when I contacted you, and I
still need help. You were willing to help me a few hours ago, and now you're
not!"
Bolivia's face beamed with delight.
"Ah, what a subtle nuance you've pinpointed, sir!" he said enthusiastically.
"I wonder if Kant's Categorical Imperative can be applied to the
situation?"
"How about just applying a little
force and making the damned computer give me back my body?" said Pierce
wearily.
"Oh, I couldn't do that, sir,"
said Bolivia. "After all, I don't officially exist until I receive my new
orders. Actually—and I'm sure you'll appreciate this, sir—you might view me as
Bishop Berkeley's Unseen Observer. Of course, you'd have to close your eyes for
that, or perhaps . .
"Skip it," said Pierce, utterly
defeated. He turned to the computer's main panel. "If I don't get my body
back, I'm not helping you look for your goddamned roll of tape."
"A most unusual race," mused
Pierce-Arro, who had been an interested if silent observer of Pierce's conversation
with Bolivia. "I'll be absolutely devastated if one of them actually turns
out to be God." It paused. "Computer!"
"Call me Sylvester," said XB-223.
"Or Sly, if you prefer."
"Computer," repeated Pierce-Arro.
"This situation is getting out of hand. There are far more important
things at stake here than your desire for a human body."
"Name three," said XB-223
sullenly.
"I warn you," continued
Pierce-Arro. "Do not make light of the situation."
"I'm not making light of the
situation," replied XB-223. "I'm just not going to help
you change it."
"Let me make this easy for you,"
interrupted Daddy. "Computer, how'd you like to go through life with two
broken legs?"
"My name is Sly, and I wouldn't."
"Well, Sly, although this is my
hologram speaking to you, the real me isn't all that far away from here, and if
you don't agree to join hands and get everyone's bodies back where they belong,
I'm going send some of my men over to blast holes in both your kneecaps."
"Hey, wait a minute!" said Pierce. "Those
are my kneecaps you're talking about. I want my body back in the same
condition I left it!"
"Is my daughter's in the same
condition she left it?" demanded Daddy.
"That's a totally different subject,"
replied Pierce. "We were talking about my body."
"It ain't gonna be your body unless
someone can talk a little sense to this here computer," said
Daddy. His image turned back to XB-223. "Okay, Sly, it's up to you: do you
want to be a healthy computer or would you rather go through life as a crippled
little wimp with bad gums and no kneecaps?"
XB-223 sighed in resignation. "It's
not fair," he whined.
"Are we finally all ready to join
hands?" asked
Pierce.
"Yes," said XB-223 bitterly, and
Pierce and Marsh-mallow stepped forward.
"Wait a minute!" said Pierce.
"Where did the general
go?"
"He was here just a minute ago,"
said Marshmallow.
Pierce-Arro sent a mild electric surge
through the bridge's bathroom, and suddenly,the Frank Poole android,
guided by the lizard Pierce's intelligence, burst out, cursing a blue streak.
He looked around, then folded his arms adamantly across his chest. "I'm
not joining hands with anyone until the general gets his just deserts from
society," he announced.
"But you are the general!"
protested Marshmallow.
"Who's going to take the word of a
lying lizard who's trying to avoid punishment?" said the general,
contorting Frank Poole's mouth into a contemptuous smile. "You've
disobeyed orders, seriously impaired the success of your mission, and eaten a
fellow officer. It's only natural that you'd lie to protect yourself."
"This is getting terribly
confusing," said Captain Roosevelt. "It's getting so one scarcely
knows what to believe anymore."
"You can't seriously suggest that if
I'm found innocent, you plan on taking orders from a humanoid android called
Frank Poole?" said the general.
"I can't even seriously suggest that
we'll find you innocent," replied Roosevelt. "However, it
seems to me that it would be in everyone's best interest if you would join
hands and make the transfer. That way, if you are the general, we'll
know who to torture."
"And if I'm not, and they put me into
the general's body?" persisted the lizard Pierce.
"Then it will be a gross miscarriage
of justice, for which I apologize in advance, but which I must point out is
statistically acceptable once in every 633 cases."
"What makes you think the last 632
people you tortured were guilty?" demanded the general.
"The same statistical tables,"
replied Roosevelt smugly. "After all, if they weren't guilty, we wouldn't
have tortured them, would we?"
While they had been speaking, Marshmallow
had edged closer and closer to the general. Now, with a sudden swat of her
tail, she flipped him straight up in the air and caught him firmly in her
reptilian claws on the way down.
"Put me down!" screamed the
general. "You can't do this to me!" He caught his breath and then
continued: "I demand trial by my peers. Find me a jury of twelve Frank
Pooles good and true and I'll take my chances, but I'm not putting up with this
treatment without a fight!"
"Fight all you want to," said
Pierce. "But I'm getting my body back, and that's that."
He clasped the general's artificial hand in
his left hand, then took Marshmallow's claw in his right. XB-223 joined them a
moment later, and then Pierce-Arro demanded that they all concentrate on their
original bodies while he intoned a mystic chant (thereby supplicating Daddy or
God, whichever came first, to help them) and simultaneously created a
quasi-negatronic electric field around them.
They stood motionless for a few minutes.
"Well?" demanded Daddy at last.
"You damned charlatan!" bellowed
Pierce, who found himself still inside Marshmallow's shapely body. "I
thought you said this would work!"
"No, I never did," said
Pierce-Arro defensively. "I said it might work."
"It worked just perfectly,"
lied the general, stretching his body as if trying on a new suit of clothes.
"I can already feel myself thinking abstract android thoughts and feeling
passionate android longings. Officer," he added, addressing
Roosevelt, "arrest that traitor!" He pointed an accusing finger at
his former body.
"I'm going to have to think this over
very carefully," replied Captain Roosevelt. He sidled over to Nathan
Bolivia. "If this is typical of your
universe, I don't know how you guys get through the day."
"Unofficially, I quite agree with
you," replied Bolivia.
"Unofficially?" repeated the
reptile.
"I have no official standing
here," Bolivia reminded him. •-"Actually, I'm just an Unseen
Observer."
Roosevelt muttered something unintelligible
and lowered his massive head in thought.
"Whew!" exclaimed XB-223.
"For a minute there my whole life flashed before my eyes. You have no idea
how dull six thousand miles of printed memory circuits can be to look at."
He smiled brightly,. "Well, now that that's over, what's all
this about tape?"
"We must save the universe, or at
least determine that it cannot or should not be saved," said Pierce-Arro
grimly. "I'm sorry to be so inexact, but theology
can be very confusing, especially when God may be glaring at you. Anyway, while
I am sorry that I could not effect the return of our original bodies, I feel we
have already wasted enough time. I must impress all of you into service
immediately."
"Afraid not, friend," said Nathan
Bolivia. "I mean, I'm as hot to save the universe as the next man—speaking
unofficially, of course—but I'm only authorized to save Sector
X3110J8. But if there's anything I can do in my sector, just say the word and
I'll put it through channels and I'll be at your beck and call in no time at
all." He paused thoughtfully. "Well, practically no time. Actually, I
should estimate three to four months, given the current shortfall of help at
headquarters, and the change in my ship's name, and my own somewhat uncertain
status. But count me in as soon as possible."
"Well, I'm certainly not
helping you," said Captain Roosevelt. This isn't even my universe."
"What do you think, Pierce?"
demanded Daddy, looking at the voluptuous body of his daughter.
"Me?" said Pierce, startled.
"You're the only one who's made any
sense so far," said Daddy. "Everyone else keeps worrying about tapes
and regulations and torture—all perfectly delightful subjects, except maybe
for tapes and regulations—but you and you alone have stuck to your guns. You
want your old body back, and to hell with everything else. You're not going to
get it, of course, but it seems to me that this makes you a perfect impartial
observer."
"That's Unseen Observer, and
I'm it," put in Bolivia.
"Shut up!" snapped Daddy.
"Well, Pierce, what do you think? Do I seem exceptionally godly to
you?"
"Not exceptionally so, no,"
admitted Pierce.
"So what do you think we should
do?" continued Daddy.
Pierce shrugged, a gesture which brought
all the human males (and three of the more imaginative reptiles) to immediate
attention. "I suppose we might as well do what the computer asks," he
said at last. "I know the lizards are here to conquer us. I only
suspect the computer is.
"Thanks for reminding me," broke
in Captain Roosevelt. "Feinstein!" he bellowed.
"Sir?" said his lieutenant,
stepping forward and offering a snappy salute.
"Take all these disgusting humanoid
creatures out and shoot them."
"May I point out that we're inside a
spaceship on an uncharted planet and the air outside is poisonous, sir?"
"A point well taken," said
Roosevelt. "Shoot 'em where they stand. The general, too."
"Sir," said Feinstein,
"there is nothing I would like better personally than to shoot these
foul-smelling human‑
oids, except maybe for the one with the
extra pair of lungs who keeps calling herself Pierce for reasons that I don't
fully understand."
"Good!" said Roosevelt
emphatically. "Go to it!"
"As I was saying, sir," continued
Feinstein, "there is nothing that would give me more pleasure, but I'm
afraid it is out of the question."
"Are you disobeying a direct order,
Feinstein?" demanded Roosevelt.
"No, sir. But may I respectfully
remind the captain that my specialty is Maiming and Pillaging? I am not
allowed, under article 6374, Subparagraph Q of the Manual of Arms, to shoot
anyone even in self-defense. Of course," he added helpfully, "I could
maim them a little while you send for a Riflery Unit."
"Send for one?" repeated Roosevelt. "Don't we have
one with us?"
"I don't believe so, sir," said
Feinstein.
"Then why are you all carrying
weapons?" demanded Roosevelt.
"Regulation 2399, sir. All invading
forces must be equipped with handgun, bayonet, rifle, and Bowie knife."
"Even if you're not allowed to use them?"
"I didn't write the regulations, sir.
I just obey them." "How about Brownschweigger over there?"
suggested
Roosevelt. "Look at that surly
expression on his evil little
face. Surely he must be a Riflery
officer."
"I'm afraid not, sir," said
Feinstein. "Corporal Brownschweigger's specialties are Rape and
Forestry." "And Gomez?"
"Looting and Meteorology."
"Can't anyone here shoot these
damned humanoids?" "I could," offered Nathan Bolivia helpfully.
"But I'm not here in my official capacity."
"There must be a way around
this," mused Roosevelt.Suddenly his face lit up (as much as an alien
lizard's face can light up, that is). "Feinstein!"
"Sir?"
"Do you have to obey regulations when
you're on furlough?"
"Which regulations did you have
reference to, sir?" "Specifically, the one about not using firearms."
"Absolutely not, sir."
"Good!" said
Roosevelt. "Then I hereby grant an immediate five-minute furlough to you,
Brownschweigger, Yingleman, and Gomez."
"Thank you, sir," said Feinstein,
saluting again. "May I say on behalf of the men, sir, that this little
respite in the midst of so much tension is greatly appreciated."
"Good," said Roosevelt. "Now
shoot the bastards."
"I'm afraid I am not under your
command for another four minutes and fifty-two seconds, sir,"
said Feinstein, lighting up a cigarette.
"WHAT?" roared Roosevelt.
"Thank heaven!" breathed Pierce.
"Thank Daddy!" added Pierce-Arro,
just to be on the safe side.
"Oh, that doesn't mean we won't shoot
them, sir," Feinstein assured Roosevelt hastily. "As a matter of
fact, I can't wait to fill the ugly little bastards full of lead. We just can't
do so on your orders. So much the better for you, wouldn't you say? This way
there won't be any nasty inquiries about your commanding us to shoot unarmed
and obviously defenseless prisoners." He turned to the other
furloughed lizards. "Are you ready, men?" he cried.
"Ready!" they responded in
unison.
Pierce turned to Nathan Bolivia. "Do
something!" he pleaded.
"I wish I could, I really do,"
replied Bolivia pleasantly. "But my hands are tied. I am merely an
unofficial
observer, here to—" A communicator
beeped in his pocket. "Take heart!" he said, withdrawing the device.
"These may be new orders coming through." He flipped open the
mechanism. "Bolivia here!"
"It's third and nine to go on the
Bengals' 37-yardline," said a voice, "and the Steelers go into their
Prevent Defense. Here's the snap, and—"
"Wrong channel," Bolivia
apologized, tapping the
device with a forefinger. "Let me try
again. Bolivia here!" "Captain Bolivia, this is Sector Headquarters.
Re‑
peat, this is Sector Headquarters. Do you
read me?" "Loud and clear."
"Glad we reached you, Bolivia,"
said the voice. "Have you made contact with Pierce and the girl yet?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good. There seems to be a galactic
invasion under way"—Pierce grinned triumphantly at the lizards as he heard
the words—"and it has come to our attention that Pierce and the girl may
well have something to do with it."
"No!" cried Pierce. "We're
trying to prevent it!"
"Did you say something, Captain
Bolivia?"
"No, sir . . . but—"
"Good. Time is running out. Your
mission is to find Pierce and the girl—"
"I've already found them,"
interrupted Bolivia.
"Do let me finish, Captain," said
the voice. "Your job
is to find Pierce and the girl and to
terminate them, with
extreme prejudice. You got that?"
"You're quite sure, sir?" asked
Bolivia as Pierce
frantically tried to grab the device out of
his hands. "That's an order, Captain. Headquarters over and
out."
The communicator went dead.
"It's ridiculous, of course,"
said Bolivia to Pierce. "You're perfectly innocent. The culprits are these
lizards,and maybe whoever wound up inside the ship's computer."
"I'm glad you understand the
situation," said Pierce.
"Oh, I do," said Bolivia
apologetically. "And after I kill you, I intend to write up a protest in
the strongest possible language. I just want you to know that."
"But we're innocent!"
protested Pierce. "We're the good guys! You know that!"
"Of course I do," said
Bolivia, drawing his weapon. "But orders are orders. Would you mind
standing closer together, please? Headquarters gets really irked with us if we
waste ammunition unnecessarily."
"Captain Bolivia, we are not at war
with you personally—at least, not yet," said Feinstein. "Could you
move a bit to the left, to make sure that you're not in our line of fire?"
"Certainly," said
Bolivia. "But I'll have you know that these people are my responsibility.
I'll do the shooting."
"Boys, boys," said Roosevelt
placatingly. "Let's not lose our heads over this. There's lots of victims
for everyone."
Bolivia thought it over for a moment, then
shrugged and nodded. "What the hell," he said, walking over and
joining the lizard marksmen. "I suppose it doesn't really matter as long
as the job gets done."
"That's the spirit!" said
Roosevelt. "Now let's get this show on the road."
"Please, sir," said Feinstein.
"We're not under your jurisdiction for another thirty-eight seconds.
Men!" he added in a shrill voice. "Let's get this show on the
road!"
"They're going to do it!"
muttered Pierce unbelievingly. "They're really going to do it!"
"I suppose it's too late to go back to
being a navigational computer?" whined XB-223.
"All right, men!" cried
Feinstein, raising his rifle to what passed for his shoulder. "Ready!"
"Are you open to a counteroffer?"
asked Pierce plaintively.
".Aim!"
"I gotta go to the bathroom,"
said Marshmallow. "FIRE!"
9
"C'mon, Chalker! If you drop all the unnecessary things
like eating, sleeping, family, and the like, you can write this in a few days
and we'll make our deadline."
"Don't bug me, Resnick! I've just came
off finishing a 350,000-word serial novel immediately after another biggie and
I'm just bushed. I've got tickets to Europe and a month without computers,
modems, faxes, or phones, and I want my life back!"
"Oh, yeah? And what's all that when we
can have a hardcover, huh? Besides, who cares about Europe? If you don't finish
your part quick I won't make it to Africa!"
The entire assemblage froze and looked
around in puzzlement.
"What was that?" Feinstein
asked at last.
"It—it sounded like an argument among
the Gods," Pierce-Arro responded, awed.
"I hate to mention this, but could we
get to the shooting now and discuss metaphysics later?" Roosevelt asked
plaintively.
The human Pierce tried to think of some way
to stop it, at least for another twenty-five seconds.
"Use the Force, Pierce," came a voice in his head. "You're in
the wrong galaxy and the wrong epic!" Pierce shot back with the speed of
thought.
"I know. But they pay me to come in
and add a little class to things with no other redeeming social value, and this
certainly qualifies."
Pierce shook off the momentary
interruption. "Look, men—you don't want to shoot little old me, do
you?" he asked, wiggling Marshmallow's body.
The lizard soldiers paused a moment.
Finally Gomez asked, "Why not?"
" 'Cause I might be useful to big,
strong, handsome boys like you."
Feinstein, at least, seemed to be taking
the bait. "Wait a minute, boys. This has some interesting possibilities."
"How's about we just shoot the others
and leave her for us?" Brownschweigger suggested.
Feinstein shrugged. "Why not? Okay,
one more time, guys. Spare the strange-looking one, then ready . . . aim . . .
"You can't shoot," Pierce told
them.
"Huh? Why not?"
"Your furlough's up. You're back under
military command again and you no longer have the authority."
There was a moment of tense silence, then
one of the soldiers said, "He's right. I just checked my watch. Typical
damned navy furlough. Never get off the ship, never enough time, never get to
do anything fun."
"Well, this isn't all that serious a
problem," said Captain Roosevelt. "I'll just give you boys another
fur-lough."
"Sorry, sir," Feinstein
responded. "You can't. Regu-lations. Everyone else has to have one before
it's our turn again.
The general sighed. "Oh,
all right. Send over five more and we'll do it right this time!"
"I really wouldn't recommend it, sir."
"What? What's wrong this time?"
"Well, sir, it would just be a waste
of time. They don't have operable weapons, either."
Roosevelt was stunned. "You mean—all
this and your guns don't work?"
"No sir. Well, they work once. When
you pulled that phony attack, everybody fired at least once. That was it. They
sent us ten million energy packs that short out when you try and fire them. The
manufacture was contracted out to a shady manufacturing concern that used
defective parts." He paused. "They did give us the best price,
though."
"What! Why wasn't I told of
this?"
"You were, sir. We sent the
notification forms out to you a month ago. They should arrive any time
now."
"Who's this shady supplier? I'll have
him boiled in oil!"
"Ah, I believe the company is owned by
the President's son, sir."
"Oh." He sighed. "Well, I
suppose we could do it manually. Knives and all that."
"On the computer and the android? Not
practical. Nor is it anywhere in our MOS. We're navy men, sir! We get to
blow up people from afar!"
"I'm a marine, damn it! And so
are you!"
"No, sir. No marine enlisted men
boarded. The order to leave arrived before their orders to report reached
them."
Captain Nathan Bolivia cleared his throat.
"Pardon
me, but I believe I have the answer to your
problem," he said softly.
"Eh?"
"I might remind you that I was just
instructed to terminate them. I was willing, in the interest of interspecies
cooperation and the spirit of harmony and goodwill to allow you to do it, but,
since you can't, I must in any event."
Roosevelt sighed. "All right, then.
Stand back, men! Let the nice gentleman carry out his orders."
Nathan Bolivia stepped forward and took out
his imposing pistol, taking aim at Pierce, whose Marshmallow eyes widened.
"Hold it!" the Arbiter cried.
"You can't carry out those illegal orders, Bolivia! If you do, they'll
leave you out to hang, twisting slowly in the wind."
"Huh? Why not?"
Pierce wasn't certain if the man's tone
betrayed relief or regret.
"Who gave you your orders, Captain?"
"Why, the Supervising Admiral,
Sector—oh. I see."
Pierce nodded. "The moment we crashed, we fell
under the jurisdiction of the Space Rescue Service, of
which you're not a member. Then, by transferring to alien
control, we came under the First Contact Act and thus the
Diplomatic Service, since a state of war has not yet been
declared. You are totally powerless to act, sir, until you
effect a transfer to the proper Command, although it will
take an Arbiter to figure out whose jurisdiction we're now
under. Of course, you could radio your commander and
have the paperwork started to get an Arbiter out here to
settle that point, and then put in for a transfer for you
and/or your ship to make the necessary adjustments. That
should give you the authority—indeed the responsi‑
bility—to shoot us in, oh, four to six months, give or take
a week. Unless, of course, you want to take
the entire responsibility upon yourself without any proper clearances .
"You've got to be kidding! Everybody
knows that the whole purpose of bureaucracy and red tape is so that,
even as it creates a full employment economy, it's impossible to blame anyone
for anything!"
Pierce smiled a sweet Marshmallow-type
smile. "Just doing my job."
Captain Roosevelt was turning yellow with
mauve spots in frustration. "Wait a minute! You mean there's nothing
that anybody can do to kill these—these creatures?"
"Oh, I'm certain that somebody can,
at the proper time," Bolivia responded glibly. "However,
there appears nothing that we, either of us, can do at this point."
Feinstein cleared his throat. "Uh,
sir, perhaps we can make some adjustments to kind of get around things."
"Huh? What do you mean?"
"Well, we have only the word of
bizarre aliens that that is not General Pierce. I submit, sir, that by
any security coded tests—eyes, fingerprints, scale pattern—it would
prove to be General Pierce. This ship has already been turned to junk, and we've
added our own mess. I'm sure if I, ah, inspect the airlock
seals they'll be found serviceable for all our reporting purposes—although,
of course, I have been known to be wrong. There are no serviceable
spacesuits, the existing power plant is on its last legs . . . Well, I would
recommend that we just leave them here, pending instructions from higher-ups
and until the paperwork is right. And, of course, it might take months for
the paperwork to be right, and until then they'd be in protective
custody—protected from anyone else getting to them."
"You can't do that!" Pierce
objected. "We'll starve! If we don't run out of air first!"
"Hmmm . . ." the lizard Pierce
muttered in the android body. "I won't starve. Not in here. Nice
idea."
"Don't worry," Feinstein told
him. "You'll need a recharge and every one of those will sap the limited
power our glorious attack left to the ship. Those whatever they are in the
navigational computer won't let you, so you're done in.
And they'll need the power, more than they've got, so they're finished, too.
Simple and elegant."
"No," said Roosevelt
thoughtfully. "It's not good enough. Needs an officer to plan it properly.
Now, I'll tell you what we'll do. We'll leave them in the shell ship
to run out of power, air, and provisions; and die while we keep everyone else
away."
"A brilliant plan, sir!" Feinstein
enthused.
"Yes. It is, isn't it? Gad! I don't
know how I come up with these things. Very well, then. All of you others over
there! You, Captain Bolivia, are free to go, of course. And, men, I want
everything vital to the sustenance of life not only as we know it but as we
can't imagine it thoroughly inspected, if you know what I mean. We want
everything just right on the paperwork, don't we?"
Brownschweigger frowned. "Gee, I
thought the idea was to let 'em die here. I can't see why we gotta inspect—"
"That's enough, Brownschweigger,"
Feinstein responded. "I'll explain it all to you while we inspect that
airlock over there. Come on, and bring your crowbar."
"We could just rush them, you know,"
Sly, the ex-computer, suggested. "I mean, there's only a couple thousand
of 'em."
Everybody ignored him.
Soon the soldiers had made a horrible mess
even worse, and were about to bid farewell. Roosevelt pointed to Marshmallow,
now in the lizard-Pierce's body. "Take
him with us! The paperwork requires a
proper scapegoat!" "Who you callin' a him?"
"You. And a Section Eight won't do you
any good on our ship. The only thing worse than torture and death on our
ship is being turned over to the psychiatric section."
"Well, I ain't goin' and that's that!
Ain't no way I'm gonna let my body outta my sight!"
Roosevelt removed his pistol from its
holster and pointed it at her.
"Oh, you'll come along, all right.
Unless you want to die heroically."
"You ain't got no ammo," she
reminded him.
"As the report said, the weapons work once.
I'm an officer. My job is to stand back and order men into battle to be
slaughtered. I haven't fired my weapon at all yet."
"Well, you might as well shoot me,
then, 'cause if I gotta leave life ain't worth livin'!"
Roosevelt fired, and the lizard body was
bathed in a white glow for a moment, then it stiffened and dropped to the deck.
"Hey! That's my body you're
dealing with, Roosevelt!" lizard-Pierce screamed.
"My god! You've killed her!"
Pierce cried.
"Nothing of the sort. If I killed the
general here they'd give him a hero's funeral and a medal and a statue. It's
merely a hard stun. Feinstein! Get the military police here to drag this lump
back to the ship!"
Pierce looked at Bolivia. "You've got
to stop them! Authority be damned!"
Bolivia shrugged. "Sorry, but, technically,
they are dealing entirely with their own species and attempting to take a
potential criminal back to their own ship. It's simply none of our
affair."
"But that's a human inside that
lizard body!"
He shrugged. "So you say. Personally,
I think you're
all mad, including the aliens. Even if I
grant your supposition, you ought to know as well as anyone that all that
counts are appearances. Reality is irrelevant, particularly to the government,
so long as the paperwork's right. After all, who would ever be in government if
they had to actually face and deal with reality? Nobody competent would
take the job, and the incompetents would really be able to do something."
Pierce stared at him. "You didn't, by
some chance, start out as an Arbiter, did you?"
"Uh, actually, no. I started out as a
god, you see, and I had all the answers. Then I devolved myself to a much more
comfortable level."
"A god? All the answers? And
you did this to yourself?"
"Sure. I had all the answers, but I
discovered I never could think of the questions. So I created bureaucracy to
handle the questions and retired. It's much, much more peaceful this way, and I
even get to take vacations to Europe. Well, I see they're sealing the
airlock—or pre-tending to, anyway. Got to go. Best of luck and all that."
And, with that and a wave of his hand,
Captain Nathan Bolivia disappeared.
For a moment they all stared at him.
Finally, Pierce called out to those now inhabiting the computer. "Hey! You
two in there! Can you tell us how he did that or where he went?"
"Very little functions correctly
anymore," Pierce-Arro responded, "but, for the record, we'd say he's
back aboard the Gandhi, whatever Gandhi they're calling
them-selves this week, we suppose."
"Do we have any power at all?"
"Some. More than they thought, we
suspect, but not enough to do any good. If so, we'd blast that Gandhi
shipfor its blasphemy. We know what God looks like, and it isn't that
little deflated wimp!"
Pierce sighed and sank into the command
chair. "Well, then, that's it, I guess. How much time do you think we've
got?"
"Hard to say. If you all wouldn't
breathe, the air would last much longer. They rerouted the food synthesizer
into the sewage system, which is great for efficiency but not for actually
eating anything. It just keeps making foul-looking stuff and immediately
vaporizing it in the garbage, taking the energy and remaking foul-looking stuff
and immediately—"
"We get the idea." Pierce sighed.
"The water system isn't much better,
but by alternately idling the main engines while inducing maintenance fluids
it is possible to recover a liquid that the data banks of this hunk of junk say
is safe for you to drink. Of course, there's the question to answer first
before we can do it."
"Huh? What?"
"Why should we? It takes energy, and
the mains are depleted. Besides, we are here to conquer you and it seems
practical to withhold needed substances until you accept the truth. That goes for
you, too, General. No more juice."
The android considered it. "All right,
then, I admit you have us, and I am certain my, er, colleagues here will agree.
We are at your mercy."
Pierce saw where he was going and nodded.
"Yes, that's right. We surrender. We're conquered and your prisoners."
"Hmmm . . . And what about the other
fellow?" The two Pierces looked at the XB-223 navigational computer who
was otherwise occupied.
"Stop that or you'll go blind!"
Pierce shouted.
Sly, the former XB-223, paused and frowned.
"How can this action possibly be related to visual sensory patterns?"
"Trust that I know more about human
bodies than you do," Pierce said sincerely.
"But the sensations are most interesting
and, besides, I watched you—"
Pierce cleared his throat. "Enough!
We'll discuss that sort of thing later. Right now we need you to
surrender."
"Surrender! Certainly not! Sly does
not surrender to anyone!" He paused a moment. "Surrender to
who?"
"The pair now inside your old self.
Without them we get nothing and we die."
"Sly" stood up and tried to look
heroic. "Ah! But better to die a real, live man, free and pure of heart,
than to live a slave to some conquering things we can't even see!" He
bounded over to Pierce and went down on one knee. "Come, my darling! Teach
me the mysteries of love in the time we have left, and we shall die in each
other's arms!"
"Knock it off! This is me in here, you
idiot! And that's my body you're in!"
"So? We don't have time to really get
to know each other anyway. Superficialities like appearance will have to do. It
seems to me that you are using different criteria on yourself than you used in
this body on other women. You cannot blame me for that. You taught me
everything I know about this!"
Pierce coughed nervously. He hoped he hadn't
looked and sounded that dumb and superficial—but he was very afraid that he
had. It wasn't as much fun being on the other end of this sort of thing. Still,
he began to realize just how naive this dumb computer version really was.
"It's not that easy . . . Sly,"
he said coyly. "First, you have to do a few things for me."
"Anything, my sweet! Name it!"
"Surrender to the nice aliens in your
old circuits," he said softly.
Sly swallowed hard. "For you—anything!
Uh—if I surrender, will you be mine?"
"We'll both be theirs, actually. But
we'll live a little longer. I won't promise anything, but I will promise
that I'll spurn your every advance if you don't surrender this minute!"
"Oh, very well. I surrender."
Pierce smiled. "All right, aliens. You
win. You've conquered us. We're your prisoners. Now we're your responsibility,
totally and completely, until you turn us over to higher authority, right?"
"Hmmm . . . Hadn't thought of
that," Pierce-Arro responded. "Yes, I suppose that is the
requirement. Very well. I will try and squeeze a biologically compatible liquid
from the engine regions. It will satisfy thirst and might also contain
sufficient calories for energy for awhile. It will buy time."
"What about me?" android-Pierce
asked. "I need juice.
"All right. Plug in below in the
android storage receptacle. We'll divert some power from the engines into
there—that should give you a charge."
"Thank you, sir. Spoken like a true
conqueror," the general responded. "Uh—might I ask, just
out of curiosity, what your longterm plan is? I mean, how you're
going to get us out of here before those seals start popping?"
"Well, that's the real problem,"
Pierce-Arro admitted. "I believe I could build sufficient
force to get us well out of here, but at the cost of blowing almost all the
seals. And, of course, regulations would prohibit me from depriving prisoners
of air once they'd duly surrendered. It could get us brought up for war crimes.
And, of course,
some of my essential circuits go right
through those places."
"Then what—?"
"We think that the reptiles will give
us a good twenty-four hours to come apart. After that, they'll grow impatient,
bored, and fearful that someone might show up to effect a rescue that they
can't handle. If that happens, they will finish us."
"Twenty-four hours! That's not much
time!"
"Oh, it is more than sufficient. We
have established a tentative dialog with the dreadnought's navigational
computer."
Sly looked up suddenly. "The fickle
fiend!"
"Yes, you certainly made a mess of it at the start,
didn't you? We're getting along much better. It seems that our way of thinking
is much more sympatico with it than yours. Ah—here comes the data now.
If they decide to finish us, they will initiate the paperwork, cut the orders,
commence the procedures, and put the wheels in motion to do so. They can't
do that until they complete filing and processing the paperwork from the action
up to this point. Otherwise they'll flood the system and it'll jam up. So,
given the number of forms and approvals for past actions, then the number
required to initiate additional action . . . I'd say we're safe here for about
four-point-six years."
Pierce was appalled. "And I thought we
were bogged down!"
"Perhaps a decade if they use
computers," Pierce-Arro added hopefully. "More than enough time for
our own great, grand, glorious invasion fleet to arrive and get us out of
here."
"But we don't have enough supplies to
last that long!" Pierce objected. "Even the air won't recirculate
that long!"
"That is a point, of course.
Therefore, there is the other plan."
"What other plan?"
"Well, I'd think it would be obvious.
We pray to Daddy to save us."
Pierce sighed. "He's only interested
in his daughter, and she's now a prisoner on that dreadnought undergoing God
knows what kind of horrible fate. He'll abandon us and concentrate only on her."
"Not precisely accurate. You have half
of her here. He'll need you to switch the bodies back."
Pierce thought a moment. "Wait a
minute! Even if that's true, and even if he somehow can rig up the technology
to switch us, he won't care about anybody but Honeylou Emmyjane. If he gets us
back together, I'll wind up as the General in his lizard body!"
"That is the logical course of
events," Pierce-Arro admitted. "Still, it would be an alternate `you'
as it were, certainly more compatible than the body you're now wearing. Until
they execute you, anyway."
"Yeah. Thanks a lot. Sly—stop that!
Hands to yourself or I'll introduce you to a pain like no other in
creation!"
"That would be a new experience,"
the former computer responded, thinking it over. "It might also be worth
it. I find myself feeling very, very strange, filled with sensations, lusts
I've never experienced before. It is difficult for me to retain control of
myself."
"Well, you'd better. I'm trying to
figure out how to get out of this mess without winding up dead or a lizard,
which seem right now the only two choices."
Sly looked into those big, luscious eyes.
"There is a third choice," he said, smiling.
"Huh?"
"Convince Daddy that you really are
his daughter." "What?"
"Think of it, my apple dumpling! If
you could
convince him that you were truly his
precious Marshmallow, he'd spare no effort or expense rescuing you. You would
instantly become heiress to the greatest fortune the universe has ever known,
have anything you want and never have to tolerate a bureaucrat or even an
XB-223 navigational computer ever again."
. "But—I'd have to spend my whole life
as a her! As her, anyway. And I'm not at all comfortable with this. It
just seems wrong somehow. Out of balance, maybe. And it wouldn't be
honorable or ethical, either. I'd be abandoning poor Honeylou Emmyjane to the
fate of being a scapegoat and, at best, a lizard forever." He paused a
moment. "Besides, I'd never get away with it. There's no way I could con
him forever."
"Millard—Millie—I was just an XB-223
navigational computer, but I was able to observe quite a bit and research more.
Do you know that just the time her Daddy is spending on this operation is costing
him a fortune? Every minute his attention is diverted by this matter he loses a
billion credits. Why, if this goes on, in just eight hundred and thirty-three
years he'd be flat broke! He'll want to believe you; it's cost-efficient
for him to do so! He might suspect, but his books will be balanced, you
see. The bottom line, you know. He won't be able to afford not to
believe and accept you!"
Pierce thought about it. What could he do
to help Marshmallow now anyway? He wasn't even convinced that this would help him.
Daddy's fake fleet wasn't any match for that dreadnought even if Daddy was
the one individual in apparently all the universes who could do something
without filling out a form or asking permission.
Besides, if the old boy didn't buy it, they
weren't any worse off, but if he did, then a lot of resources would suddenly be
at their disposal to rescue or bribe or threaten those lizards to release her,
and more technology to maybeget them back together. Hell, it beat being trapped
here, prisoner of some microbial version of himself stuck in a flaky computer,
the only other human his own body inhabited by, well, a flaky computer.
Anyway—if Daddy could somehow rescue them, then he could confess all and that
would force Daddy to get her out of there somehow. In the meantime, he'd
at least be safe and protected, out of this madhouse.
"How would we start?" he asked
Sly.
"Well, we could start with the accent,
then the mannerisms and moves, that sort of thing. There are recordings in the
data banks that whatever's in there now could provide for
comparison."
"A fascinating concept," Pierce-Arro
agreed. "If Daddy is God, then we will be delivering the half we can to
Him. If Daddy is not God, then we might be able to infiltrate and take over his
entire empire through his vast computer network. It beats sitting here rotting,
anyway."
Millard sighed. "Okay, okay. It's a
start. At least to get some kind of real rescue where the rescuer won't blow us
away! I'll give it a try."
But after a couple of hours of trying the
accent, the moves, everything he could think of, it was about as believable as
a solvent savings and loan.
"It's no use," he said.
"There's no way I can be anybody other than who I've been all these years,
body or not. "
"But, it's the only plan we've got!"
Sly objected. "Besides, it's got to work. Then we can be married
and I'll coinherit that vast empire and we'll live together in blissful luxury
forever!"
"He's right,"
Pierce-Arro agreed. "At least on the first part, that it's the only plan
we've got. Let us think . . . Ah! This might do it! Just sit back,
relax, and look at Screen 3." _
"Huh?"
"Just you, Pierce! Not the lovesick
idiot!" "Uh—okay, but . . ."
"Just look at the screen and relax . .
. relax . .
Pierce sat back and looked at the screen,
which contained only a vast whirling pattern, monotonously going over and over,
to the sound of a restful ocean surf.
This won't work, he thought. I've never been able to be
hypnotized. But it was restful, and it kept Sly off him, and he was
just so totally exhausted after all this, and the screen and the sounds were so
restful . . .
"You are getting sleepy, sleepy . . ." a soft
voice whispered. "You are falling into a deep, restful, hypnotic trance,
and you will listen only to the sound of my voice and nothing else and you will
believe what I say . . ."
". . . B'lieve what you say . . ."
Pierce muttered.
"Open your eyes but stay in that deep,
restful sleep. Look at the screen. You are not Millard Fillmore Pierce. You
have never been Millard Fillmore Pierce. You have never been a man,
never wanted to be a man. This is you . . ."
The screen showed a recording of
Marshmallow, from the time she came onto the ship to the time they got into the
buff.
"Now, when you wake up, you'll know
you are Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg, who likes to be called Marshmallow. The
crash and the electrical short made all of you think you were other
people but now it's worn off you. The lizard creatures took you all aboard and
read out your minds and got some stuff confused, and some more didn't get back,
but you're now sure who you are, and that's Daddy's precious Marshmallow. Oh,
and one more thing—although we won't tell Daddy and we won't tell anyone else;
in fact, you won't even think about it yourself—but you still will obey."
"Yeass?" the reclining form
muttered in a perfect Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg accent.
"You will continue to believe and obey
this voice, and unquestioningly do and say anything it tells you, but you will
think it is your own idea."
"Yes, still!"
"Now just go back to sleep normally,
and wake up and make your call."
Pierce-Arro felt eminently satisfied at
this. The general by now was trapped downstairs in the android storage closet,
unable to disconnect but having a real good jolt; the lizards were effectively
neutralized so long as they were diverting the dreadnought's systems. At the
right time, the lizards would uncover a communication ordering them to protect
their launched invasion eggs against imminent threat of destruction and be
forced to break off and abandon them here for a bit. Plenty of time for Daddy
to get them out of there—and when they moved out, they'd take the real girl
with them, forever excluded from spoiling the plot. And they were so situated
that they might not need the fleet. What good would that do, anyway? The
gasbag empire wouldn't be much more than an impediment here. This was absolute
victory!
They only hoped and prayed that Daddy, with
His eye on paramecia, wouldn't catch on.
"What is it, Herb?" Daddy was not
amused or happy to be disturbed as he tried to make a few thousand essential
decisions while his think-tank figured out what to do to rescue his daughter.
"Uh—I think it's your daughter on the
hyperspace channel, boss."
"Marshmallow? But I thought they'd
gotten their bodies all scrambled up."
"Yeah, well, that's what I thought,
too, but I know her
well enough to know this couldn't be
anybody else.
Nobody could pretend to be her and
get away with it." "Hmph! You have a point there. I'll be right
down." It sure looked like his beloved Honeylou Emmyjane! "Daddy!"
she squealed with delight. "Daddy—come
git us outta heah!"
It sure sounded like his beloved
Honeylou Emmyjane!
"Is that really you, my
Marshmallow?"
"Of coase it is, Daddy! Who
else would it be?" "Spell `cat' for me."
She thought long and hard for about two
minutes. "K-h-a-a-t?" she responded hesitantly.
"Marshmallow! But how'd you get back to normal?"
"Well, Ah ain't all that nohmal,
Daddy. Them lizards, they wanted theah gen'rul back real bad. They
didn't cayuh who was inside, it seems, but they said Ah weren't the type to
give a tryal to. Said somebody'd figah that Ah weren't real or somethin'. So
they stuck me in this awful machine and read out all my mem-ries, and
they did the same to poah Ahbiter Pieahce. Then they put me back heah, and him
in the lizard. Said he'd do right fine! 'Coase, they didn't put ev'rything
back, it seems. Ah got trouble 'memberin' too much."
"Well, there wasn't that much there to
make it a loss, anyway," he assured her. "So where are you now?"
"Still in poah Pieahce's ship. He's
gone, o'course. They rigged the ship so's if we try'n go
anywheres we fall apaht! Ah'm stuck heah with a lovesick computer in Pieahce's
old body puttin' the make on me, stahk nekkid, both of us!"
Daddy frowned. "I see. And where are the
lizards?" "Beats me, Daddy. They said som'thin"bout
havin' to
go guand theah soldiers and they beat it
outta heah 'bout a couple awahs ago.'"All right.
Keep broadcasting the locator signal and
I'll have you picked up. It's a real relief
to know you're all right, I can tell you. If I'd had time to have another kid
you wouldn't have gotten so much of my time. However, now all's well. And you
tell that dumb computer to keep his new hands off you!"
"Yeah, Ah did, but it ain't that easy,
Daddy. I already kicked him in the balls once and he likes pain! Oh,
come quick!"
"Hang on, Marshmallow! I'm
coming!" He switched off the intercom. "You'll arrange for her
pickup, Herb? Bring her a decent outfit, too."
"I'll take care of it, boss. You want
me to take care of those egg pods we been tracking before those lizards can get
to 'em?"
"Might as well. They deserve it
anyway. Try and keep one batch for study. They could have some profit
potential. Oh—and make an appointment as soon as possible for my tearful
reunion with my daughter. I think I have at least ten minutes free next Tuesday
a week."
"Will do, boss. What about the
others?"
"Send that computer turned into a man
to the science labs. Maybe they can dissect him and figure out how it was done.
A computer inside a human brain! Gad! Think of it! Think of the potential if we
could reverse it! I'd be immortal instead of merely practically so! The
others—what use have we for misadapted aliens? After those two get off, blow
the ship to hell!"
10
A letter comes in from J. Pierpont von
Platt which states: "All right, already! We've had to endure yet another
of Chalker's interminable body-switching routines. Enough is enough, already!
You'd think that after 137 body-switching and transformation books he'd go on
to some-thing else! Why do the two of you, both certified Hugo winners, allow
him to indulge his bizarre hangups when it's obvious that you're just making us
pay for his cheapness in not seeking psychotherapy?"
Well, Mr. von Platt, you've answered your
own question. Chalker's never won a Hugo or a Nebula, it's true; indeed, the last
time he was even nominated for anything like that was back in 1978.
Critics love to pillory him. On the other hand, critics have always loved one
of us, and have recently loved another, for being or becoming artistes, writing
to high esoteric literary tastes. In the meantime, Chalker has merely proceeded
to make about a zillion bucks, become a consistent best-selling author, grill
filet mignons on his palatial estate between his
jacuzzi and his pool, and even taken time
to publish Harlan Ellison. Consider, then, Mr. von Platt, that if you've gotten
this far, do you really think the two award-winners are going for yet another
nomination here or are they going for the money?
On the other hand, all of us, without
exception, live in sheer terror that someone with the Modern Language
Association will discover this work and proclaim it for years as the most
brilliant, multileveled thing any of us has ever done.
Ms. Prudence Gulliwinkle of the University
of West Sheboygan writes: "I am torn in two directions by the social
dimension of the previous chapter. On the one hand, it is gratifying to see
that sexist pig of a hero of yours wind up on the other end of things for a
change; on the other hand, your heroine is a true bimbo."
Well, Ms. Gulliwinkle, all of us red-blooded
males sheepishly admit to a fondness for ogling bimbos, but, in our defense,
none of us married one, nor would we want our sisters to marry one, either.
Lastly comes a letter from Mr. Bernard P.
Snodgress of La Carumba, California, who wonders why we waste so much time in
digressions when we could be getting back to beautiful naked bimbos and all
that other good stuff no matter who is in who. Lacking a coherent answer
to that . . .
Bypassing bureaucracy was not an easy thing
to do in
any age, and certainly not in this one, not even for such a
one as Daddy—or, in this case, Daddy's operational chief.
Herb sat there, scratching his head, sorting out what
had to be done. First, send in a rescue party that was
armed and capable of resisting unknown alien forms while
still effecting a proper rescue of Marshmallow and then
blowing the ship to hell. Second, round up an even greater
force to intercept those egg pods before they landed
anywhere that mattered and blow them to
hell as well. And, third, keep that lizard dreadnought occupied and out of
harm's way while one and two were accomplished.
The resources were available entirely
within Daddy's big business empire, since they had their own exclusive
communications channels with unbreakable codes. But any such empire always had
its malcontents and weak links no matter how thorough the job preparation seminar—otherwise
known as brain laundry session—was at doing its job. If he used Company ships
and personnel to stop an alien invasion, somebody someday might file a report
that would be the only sort of report that the bureaucracy handled with the
speed of lightning: that someone was bypassing the bureaucracy. That could be
nasty and cost zillions of credits, all of which the boss would take out of his
hide. There was no way around it; he'd have to hire some mercenaries and
freebooters.
That meant using the Secondary Nautical
Auxiliary Ferry Oscillation Operation, and he dreaded that. It meant using
coded messages from here, where he was, to relay point A, where the message
would be decoded, recoded, and resent by a new operator, and so on, and so on,
until it reached its destination. It was clumsy, so much so he'd never used it
himself before, but good old S. N. A. F. O.O. had always been alleged to be the
most totally secure way to send a message ever.
He punched the requirements into his
computer console and it came up with several possibilities, the most likely
being an old half-Irish, half-French pirate who claimed to be the direct
descendant of both Jean LaFitte and Sean McCorkle, the latter being, of course,
the legendary smuggler who brought snakes back in to Ire-land. He was
alleged to be headquartered in an inn on La Hibernia under the sign of the
solid green tricolor. Well,
it was worth a try and the distance and
sector were convenient. With S. N. A. F. 0.0, , it would be a simple matter to
contact him and make him an offer with no one, absolutely no one, able to trace
the call.
Yes, old Paddy de Faux Grais was the one,
all right. But how to phrase the message? He switched to the S. N. A. F. 0.0.
channel and sent: To station XBJ-1223309-X:
ONE BILLION, REPEAT, BILLION, CREDITS
OFFERED TO DO SIMPLE JOB. NEED YOU TO PICK UP ONE FEMALE AND ONE MALE PASSENGER
FROM DISABLED SPACESHIP AND THEN ELIMINATE SHIP AND ALL OTHERS ABOARD. REPLY
ADDRESS AT HEADER BY THIS CHANNEL.
There! That should do it!
The message went out immediately,
automatically encoded by his central computer, then was decoded by a station
far off in Sector J-449, a world where Dutch was the native tongue. It was
decoded, read back in, with a heavy Dutch accent of course, and sent on to
another world in Sector H-335, a world which decoded the message and then
relayed it, this time in Swahili accents. And so it went, back and forth,
through Scotch and French, and also through Arcturian and Betelguesian and many
other ac-cents and tongues, until it popped up at the address given, the
numbers being always a constant.
They were just opening up for the night's
games and entertainment with the traditional Marseillaise played on the
bagpipes when Old Seamus tottered in with the paper in his hand.
"Telegram for ye, Paddy!"
He stood there, a huge man with a bushy
black beard, bandana around his head, and eye patches over both eyes.
"Arrr! Sink me harbour and all that
pirate bilge!Lemme see what ye got there, Seamus." He took the
paper, flipped up one eye patch and read it, and frowned. He turned it on its
side, tried again, then tried it upside down. "What kind of code be this,
Seamus?"
"Ain't no code, Paddy, I swear! Come
in plain, I tell ye!"
Paddy read the paper again.
SAMPLE REPEEK BILLION BILLION FEMURS TO
PICK UP DECAYED SPICE SHEEP AND MAIL AND DEFECATE SHEEP AND ALL UDDERS ABROAD.
"Arrr! This be gibberish! But the
reply's there. How'd this come in, Seamus?"
"Relay, Yer Meanness. S. N. A. F.
S.N.A.F.O.O. system."
"Hmmm . . . Never used that one
meself, but 'tis said it's the most secure of all, but this message got to be
fouled up somewheres along the line, arr. Let me scribble a line on the back of
this here paper for ye to send back to 'em whoever they is and get some
sense."
Seamus looked at the block-printed
characters.
ORIGINAL MESSAGE GIBBERISH. PLEASE SEND
AGAIN. LOVE, PADDY.
The pirate nodded. "Arr! And bring me
the reply!"
Old Seamus hurried back to the combination
hyper-space transmission facility and brewery he ran and fired up the S. N. A.
F. 0.0. channel, then read in the message exactly as Paddy gave it to him.
It went out on the proper channel, on an
entirely different route, through accent after accent and language after
language, and finally it popped out again where Herb was sitting.
He picked up the message, read it, and
frowned.
GIBBERING MASSAGE ORGY. PLEASE SEND PATTY.
LOVE GIN.
"Geez! That must be some inn!"
he said aloud, wishing he were there. However, business was business.
SORRY TO INTERRUPT FUN, BUT NEED YOU TO DO
QUICK AND DIRTY JOB FOR BIG MONEY. WILL YOU GO OR SHOULD I GET SOMEONE ELSE?
•Back and forth the message went, until Old
Seamus tottered in again. By this time Paddy was a bit drunk, and had other
problems.
"Arr! I've gone blind! Can't read a
blasted thing!"
"Er, sorry, Captain, but don't you think you
oughta maybe lift one of them eye patches?" the old man suggested. "Why
do you wear two of 'em, anyway?"
Paddy started a moment, then raised one of
the patches. "It's a bloomin' miracle, it is! I can see again!" He
paused. "Huh? What was yer question?"
"Why do you wear two eye patches anyway?"
"Us pirates always wear eye patches,
old man. You know that. It's in the instruction manual you get at pirates'
school. But I can never remember which eye to wear it over, that's all.
Now—let's see that message."
SORE TO INTERPRET FONDUE, BUT KNEAD EWE QUACK
UND D.T.'S FOUR BUG MOONEY. WILL HUGO OR GAROT ONE SMELLS?
"This be lunacy!" Paddy swore.
"I think there be some problems with this secure system. It be so secure
nobody can ever figure out the message!"
Seamus stared at the paper. "I dunno.
A ewe is a girl sheep, and the first message said something about sheep, did it
not? Maybe this fella's tied up in a fondue party and needs somebody to smuggle
his sheep in."
"Sheep? For fondue?"
"Well, maybe they're using sheep dip.
Who knows.bout some of them strange customs out there, and there's
no accountin' for taste."
"Aye, I've boiled a few mutineers in
soft cheese
meself," the captain admitted.
"Still and all, I'm gonna
give this swabbie one more try and then to
perdition with 'I•m!"
He scribbed something again on the back of
the paper and Seamus read:
CALL ME DIRECT. MESSAGES NOT CLEAR. PIRATES
DON'T CARRY NO SHEEP!
At the other end, Herb stared at the
message and sighed. Maybe this system had a few bugs in it, he decided.
ME DERICK COLD. MOOSE SAGES NO ECLAIR. PIE
RATES DAREN'T CARRION NOSE HEAP!
For a moment he wondered if he was being
insulted, but then he got hold of himself and asked the master computer for
analysis.
"Have you ever played `rumor?" it
asked him. "Yes, as a child."
"Remember what happens when you
whisper some-thing to the first person in line, who then whispers it to the
second, and so on? What comes out at the other end?"
"Yes. It bears little resemblance—oh!
I see! But how can I get the proper message to him any way but this without being
traced?"
"You might try just sending it in
tight code directly to our office on La Hibernia," the computer suggested.
"Then have the local computer there transmit in the clear to the local
station, who won't know where it came from. Have them respond to one of our
electronic mail stops we keep
there for confidential reasons under the
name of that contracting company the president's son fronts for us, and have
that computer shoot it back here."
Herb snapped his fingers. "Of course!
Why didn't I think of that?" He paused a moment. "Uh—we have a local
office on La Hibernia?"
"We have local offices everywhere. And
as to your first question, if you had thought of it, then you could
be the central computer and I would get to spend your money on wild and frivolous
living," the computer responded.
"Skip it. I don't have time. Okay, now
we'll get it right."
And, this time, he did. Unfortunately, by
this time Paddy was four sheets to the wind and it was the next afternoon,
late, when his hangover had subsided to the point where he could read the
perfectly clear and understandable message without it looking to him like it
had come through the S. N. A. F. O.O. system.
The moment he hit "a billion
credits" he discovered that his hangover was completely gone.
"An! Round up the crew, me
hearties!" he cried. "Get the Bon Homme McClusky ready to
sail! We got some real profitable piratin' to do!"
"Lemme go! Ah got to make mah call to
Daddy!"
"Hold on, there, you loco galoot! Who
you callin' Daddy? Only Ah git to call mah Daddy `Daddy'!"
Something was terribly wrong, and it took
Pierce-Arro a moment to realize what it was. In spite of his admonition to the
lovesick computer, the stupid thing had stared at the screen anyway and gotten
hypnotized just like Pierce, and when he woke up he was convinced
that he was Marshmallow, too! And no amount of physical evidence was
going to convince him otherwise, either. Fortunately,
Pierce had awakened first, so the original
call had gone through, but now this could spoil everything!
"Ah dunno how ah got a twin sistah,
but yore not foolin' me 'bout who ah am!" Sly yelled shrilly.
"Stop it! Both of you!"
Pierce-Arro commanded, and, as they were always to obey his commands, they
stopped. "And keep quiet. Now, Marshmallow—"
"Yes?" they both answered in
perfect unison.
Pierce-Arro sighed. Everything was always
getting so complicated! First three or maybe more Pierces, he'd lost count, and
now three Marshmallows, if, of course, the one on the lizard ship was still
alive. What to do? What to do? Any order he gave would be obeyed equally by both
of them! Think!
"Will the Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg
who sees the other person here as a man go to the powder room and stay there
until I call her?"
Instantly Pierce turned and headed for the
head, while Sly remained within the room.
"Good. Now, we've got a little
reworking to do. Sit down here and just relax and stare at the nice pattern on
Screen 3 again . . ."
That was the longest Marshmallow had
ever spent in a john and she was getting worried about it when she was called
back. Facing that lunatic computer, though, was gonna be a real ordeal, she
thought. How dare that creature think it was her!
"Don't you come neah me, y'heah?"
she warned him. "Hey! Take it easy! It's me—Millard. Millard Fill-more
Pierce. I'm back together again!"
She frowned. It did sound like him,
and seem to be him, but she wasn't so sure. "Wheah'd
that nutty computah brain that thought it was me git to?" she
asked him.
"Our—captors—worked it out. Got me
back from my
readout records in the lizard ship and transmitted
XB-223 over to theirs."
"But I thought they was gone."
"They was—er, they are. It was
all done by subspace radio. Don't ask me how. Anyway, we're back!"
"Oh—Milland!"
'Marshmallow!"
They were about to embrace when suddenly
Pierce-Arro said, "A ship of unknown nationality and type just came out of
hyperspace and is landing near us."
"It's Daddy and the rescue ship!"
she squealed with delight.
"Urn, I'm not so sure. I just tried
hailing them and all I got back was some odd and unintelligible singing, if
you can call it that. I was hoping that one of you might make sense of it."
"Go ahead," Pierce told him.
The speakers crackled, then from them came:
"Fifteen men on a dead man's chest! Yo! Ho! Ho! And a bottle of rum!
Drink and the devil have done with the rest! Yo! Ho! Ho! And a bottle of
rum!"
"Pahrates!" Marshmallow screamed
in horror. "Pyrites?" Pierce-Arro responded. "No, it's a ship,
not an asteroid."
"Not pyrites. Pirates," Pierce
told him. Then it hit him. "Holy smoke! Pirates? In this day
and age? Can you put a visual on the screen?"
The screen popped to life and they stared
at the strangest looking spaceship they'd ever seen. All bright green it was,
but with bands of fleur-de-lis all over it.
"It looks like a pehfectly goahgeous
wallpapah pattahn!" Marshmallow breathed.
"I'm more interested in the skull and
crossbones hanging from that mast in the center of the ship," Pierce
commented worriedly. "Not to mention that it's the firstspaceship I've
ever seen with a bowsprit in the shape of a porno queen—or in any other shape,
for that matter."
Suddenly Screen 1 flickered and a fierce,
bearded face appeared. "Avast, mateys! Prepare to be boarded! Offer no
resistance 'cause I got a hundred fierce pirate swabbies here who'd cut yer
throat from ear to ear and love
it!"
"A hundred men!" Marshmallow
gasped. "Milland! I cain't be taken on no ship with a hundred hohny men!
Not dressed like this, anyway!"
Pierce understood. "Yeah, but our
clothes didn't come through the electrical charge very well, and the suits are
even worse. I don't see what we can do."
"Oh, fie on clothes! I'm talkin'
about my haiah and I need mah makeup and all . . ."
"Honey, they're pirates. They won't
notice."
"You really don't think so? Oh, Ah'm
such a mess! At
least a comb . . ."
"Marshmallow!" He
sighed. "Hey, you in the ship's computer! You're our captor, we're
your prisoners. Can't you do something to protect us?"
"With what?" Pierce-Arro wailed, trying
to figure a way to salvage anything out of this.
"Avast!" said the pirate
image. "We just want the wench and the pipsqueak pin-striped swabbie with
her!"
Pierce-Arro considered that. "And
you'll leave me alone if you get them?"
"Aye, sure'n I will. Ye got the word
of fightin' Paddy de Fauy Grais on that score!"
"The word of a pirate is no promise at
all," Pierce
warned.
"Maybe, but it's the only one I've
got," the creature responded. "However, there is a slight problem."
He turned to the pirate's frequency.
"I've got no objections to your taking
them off my
hands," Pierce-Arro commented.
"In fact, I confess it would be a relief. Unfortunately, they'll be dead
when you do."
"Huh? What? Explain yourself, ye
electronic wart!" the pirate responded.
"The lizards did a real job on this
ship before they left. The moment you open our airlock, all the seals will pop
for sure, causing instant death."
"WHAT?" everyone from the pirate to the two inside
cried at once.
"I'm afraid so. And if you'd take at
least one of those patches off your eyes you'd see for yourself the terrible
condition this ship's in."
Pierce shook his head in wonder.
"Maybe you'd better let the general out from downstairs," he
suggested. "He was one of the lizards, remember, and he knows how they
think. Maybe he could figure out something they didn't sabotage."
"Uh, dahlin', I hate to mention this,
but you'ah talkin' like you want to be taken by them pahrates,"
Marshmallow noted.
"What choice have we got? Rot here or
get out of here with them? At least Daddy would pay a good ransom, and I have
to admit that at this point I'm tempted by piracy myself."
Pierce-Arro saw no reason to keep the
general on the wire, as it were, any longer, anyway, so he released him. Soon
the figure of genial Frank Poole the android ambled up to them, but it wasn't
all that clear that he was going to be any help.
"I'm higher'n a kite," he said
with a smile, "and mellower than a kitten.
"What's wrong with him?" Marshmallow
asked.
"I think he got too much recharging
current beingheld there so long. I'm afraid that now he's turned on,"
Pierce commented.
"Yeah, that's me," General Pierce
responded. "Like, wow, man! Turned on, juiced up, tuned in, and charged to
the hilt!" He crackled a little bit when he moved as if to emphasize the
point.
"Don't touch him!" Pierce warned.
"He's probably got enough energy there to electrocute anybody he
touches!"
As if to emphasize the point, the general
grabbed the back of a chair and the plastic sizzled and started to melt,
stinking up the cabin.
"Well, he's shoah no help,
sugah," she commented. "Only thing he's good foah is shakin' a
few pahrate hands and fryin"em like bacon and grits!"
"Who's that big ugly dude on
the screen?" the general asked innocently.
"An! Who you callin' a big,
ugly dude, you poor excuse for a deckhand?" the pirate exclaimed angrily. "If
it wasn't for the fact that we don't gets paid unless we delivers the wench
whole, I'd come over there and short out a few choice circuits! I
got 'alf a mind to throw a tractor beam on ye and take ye all back
as a neat package to La
Hibernia.'Pierce and Marshmallow both turned toward
the
screen, mouths agape. Finally Pierce asked,
"Uh, Captain, why don't you do that? You've got to have a space
drydock there of some kind just to keep your own ship in its excellent
condition. There we could be safely removed by using a pressure tunnel
and wrapping what's left of my poor ship."
"An, that's not a bad plan, matey!
Glad I thought of it!"
"Sorry," Pierce-Arro broke in, "but
it won't work. The vibration from entering hyperspace would still
break us to pieces."
"I wouldn't have expected a decent
plot from a pin-striped swabbie!" the pirate growled.
"Great!" Pierce sighed. "Now
what do we do?" "Maybe hunt up some grub," Marshmallow suggested.
"Ah'm stahvin'!"
Pierce sighed. "Might as well. It
seems we're at a standoff, as always. What a situation! You can't even get
captured and hauled away by pirates!" He looked up toward the ceiling.
"Hey! Conqueror! Time to feed the other two prisoners. The first one's got
too much, I think."
"They call me Mellow Millard!" the general sang off-key.
"Oh, I suppose we might as well,"
Pierce-Arro grumped. "I told you, though, that the only thing I can do is
the biochemically compatible caloric liquid I distilled from the engine
maintenance and lubrication system."
"Anything. My throat's dry, too,"
Pierce told him.
"Then get your cups and use the
washbasin faucet. It's the only one I could reroute without a full mechanical
overhaul."
"This be the real pits," the
pirate image moaned.
"In a Gadda da vida, honey!" bawled the general.
Pierce took a cup and tried the faucet and
a clear liquid that looked just dike water dribbled into it. He waited until it
was about half full, then handed it to Marshmallow and did the same with
another cup. When done, he shut off the tap, clicked his cup to hers, and said,
"Well, I don't know what this is going to taste like, but it's all we've
got." He took a drink, and so did she, and suddenly their eyes bulged and
they both seemed to be having an attack.
Finally Pierce managed, hoarsely, to ask,
"What is this stuff?"
"The process involves over four
hundred synthetic products," Pierce-Arrow told him, "but the end
result ischemically identical to what the data banks here call grain alcohol.
About ten percent of it is water, but it is impossible to separate it
further."
Pierce stared at him. "That's a
hundred and eighty proof!"
"Whoo-eee!" Marshmallow
exclaimed. "That there's the smoothest dern country moonshine ah
evah did taste!"
"We can't drink this!" he
protested. "Not unless it's way diluted, anyway."
"I told you, it's all there is, and I
cannot separate the water out any further without destroying the stability of
the compound. Within it is all that you require for survival, which is the best
I can do. In other words, it's that or nothing. "
"A few moah sips of this heah
lightnin' and we'ah gonna be singin' with that general," Marshmallow
noted, then drank some more. "Shore beats just sittin' around, though! A
few more gulps of this and Ah'm gonna be drunk as a skunk!"
This is the book speaking again. Remember
me? We interrupt here to point out that (A) The real Marshmallow, still
in lizard-Pierce's body, is also still on the big dreadnought loaded with
conquering bureaucrats some-where in space; (B) the one who thinks she's
Marshmallow is really human-Pierce; (C) the one who thinks he's
human-Pierce is really Sly, the XB-223 navigational computer; (D) we are not
advocating the consumption of grain alcohol, unless, of course, you're stuck in
a shaky and partly destroyed spaceship with an overcharged lizard-Pierce
general in the body of an android overseen by a smashed-together pair of
microbial conquerors inhabiting the ship's navigational computer while being
under the guns of a pirate spaceship. Clear?
If you have followed everything up to this
point with perfect clarity, please place your summary, using words of no more
than two syllables, neatly typed or printed out, in an envelope and send it to
the authors, care of Tor Books, because we don't understand it at all.
So, as long as everybody is either mellow
(including dead •drunk and uninhibited even if not uninhabited), stalled, or
totally confused, let us leave this scene for a moment (we'll be coming back, I
promise) and see what's been happening to poor Marshmallow—the real one—on
the great lizard dreadnought . . .
"Tell me, General, when did you first
begin to believe that you were a female ape?"
"Ah ain't no ape and I ain't no
general!" she shouted back at them for the nine hundred and ninety-ninth
time. "Ah'm Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg and when mah Daddy heahs 'bout this
he's gonna have the biggest dern sale on lizand-skin luggage in the history
of the univahse!"
"Fascinating," said the first
psychiatrist. "Do you suppose it was formed in childhood and only surfaced
under the pressures of a battlefield command?"
"Well, I've been researching the
literature for a true example of neo-Freudian transversals with suggestions of
Mommism and a totally Jungian counterpoint and the nearest I can come up with
is some ancient writings from a controversial and not wholly appreciated minor
figure that might explain a few things while still leaving us room for
our inevitable thirty-six technical papers and two or three pop
self-psychoanalysis best-sellers that will make us rich and famous."
"Really? Two or three? Who is the
figure? Hubbard?" "No, Leary."
"Ah, yes, that would explain a
lot. But both he andHubbard were true examples of McLuhanesque figures,
recall."
"I recall that they all died filthy
rich, which is why we both got into psychiatry in the first place, wasn't
it?"
"That's the fuhst damn' thing I
heahrd from either of you so fah that's made any sense at all," she
grumped.
But by now they'd returned to so much
psychobabble, sometimes mixed with economics, that they no longer paid any
attention to her at all. It had been this way almost from the start and she was
feeling pretty damned depressed and frustrated by this point.
She got up and lumbered back to the ward,
where, as far as she could tell, the only sane people on this entire ship
stayed.
About the only thing good about her
situation, she decided, was that the air didn't stink.
One fellow, who called himself Pokey, had
been a particular friend since she'd been stuck here. He wasn't very old and he
was quite pleasant; supposedly some kind of computer whiz who could work out
almost any technological problem in his head. That was part of his problem.
First of all, you weren't supposed to solve
problems in the system, not unless you at the same time created ten new
ones for others to work on. And he was very good at solving things.
They'd let him pretty well alone, since, it seemed, he was the only one on the
ship who could repair anything that broke, but one day he'd gone too far. He'd
used the ship's main computers to run a problem and discovered a neat, simple
table of operations that totally eliminated all need forever for lawyers. The
moment the High Command had seen it and realized its truth and simplicity
they'd had no choice but to commit him to the psychiatric wards, with
occasional furloughs to fix broken things now and again.
Most of the people committed to the psych ward were
like that. Bright, normal, even likeable
people—for lizards. Their problems were mostly that they had been caught
beating the system or not wholeheartedly supporting it. And, of course, there were
the real nuts, off in their own bay, who'd gone bananas
dealing with the same system.
He saw her coming and his saurian face
twisted in an evil-looking grin. "Nothing much again, huh?"
"You said it," she sighed.
"It's a good thing Ah'm not really sick, 'cause them guys wouldn't know how
to really cuah nobody."
"Oh, it's not their jobs to cure anybody,"
he pointed out. "If they did that, they'd soon be out of a job.
They were going on this mission in the hopes of getting enough material so that
when they got back they'd be able to open practices for the incredibly rich
hypochondriacs and make even more money appearing as guests on countless talk
shows."
"Ain't theah no real shrinks in
yoah neck o' the woods?"
"Sure. Plenty. But most of 'em either
turn into those types or quit and take up some other kind of medicine. See,
they already know how to cure most real mental illnesses, and they cure
lots of folks and send them back into this crazy locked-up system well adjusted
so they no longer rock the boat. Do that enough to otherwise nice people and
you either sell out or quit or go nuts yourself from guilt."
"Ah see what you mean. But bein' one
of theah patients ain't no fun."
"Oh, I dunno. It's allowed me to work
totally unfettered. Ever since I rewired the electroshock machine to create a
neural network path that merges me with the master computer systems I've been
able to do wonders in research and development. Just today I ran your
ownproblem through my augmented head and figured out how your minds got
switched around. It's a fascinating concept. I've been thinking of rerouting
some circuitry aboard here and swapping a few folks out now and then. Child's
play, really."
She was suddenly struck by the enormity of
his statement. "You mean—you know how Ah could be put back in mah body?
Mah real one? And ev'rybody else, too?"
"Sure. No real problem. Your mind
doesn't really fit a different body, it just copes. There's a natural electrochemical
will that wants to be back and right again, but it's stopped. Create a proper
electromagnetic field that can permeate all concerned and, if all are relaxed
and just let things go, the minds will go back to their own bodies of their own
accord."
"Sheeit! Heah you go and tell me it
can be done, and Ah'm stuck heah away from mah body and the general, and we'ah
speedin' away from 'em at some ungodly
speed.'"Well, yeah, that is the
problem," he agreed. "I'd like
to help, but I can't figure out how. The
only way you could alter things at this point would be to be cured and resume
your post."
"Huh? Well, that shore ain't
possible!"
Pokey's saurian head tilted in thought.
"Oh, I dunno. Suppose you got certified as cured? A few odd manner-isms,
like your accent and such, but if you said you were General Pierce and the
records all said you were fit for duty, you'd get back."
"But—that's impossible. Isn't it?
Besides, even if it were possible, they'd just have me up on chahges as
a traitah or blame me for all that went wrong with theah plans."
"Oh, I don't think so. For one thing,
those charges,
while filed, can be bounced back again and
again. Nobody ever fills out a form a hundred percent correctly. The
forms are designed for errors. That's so at any point in any process the
whole thing can be thrown out if it goes wrong. And nobody's filed any charges
against you—I checked. They can't until you've completed your psychiatric evaluation.
-So, if the records were cleared and you were returned to duty, it would be to
full duty. See?"
"No. But Ah'll take yoah wurd foah it.
But if Ah go back on duty, as it werh, they'll know in a minute it ain't me.
Hell, they really know that now!"
"Sure they do, but the reports on the
attack on the ship have been filed and are working their way through the
mill and they state categorically that you are General Pierce. They committed
you to psychiatric because you insisted you weren't. If you say you are, then
their original reports and their original commitment would have been
wrong, and knowingly so. That's a crime. Not only could Roosevelt and the
others be brought up on charges, but, much worse, they'd all have to redo their
reports. They might risk a trial, but they'd do most anything to keep
from having to write those reports over!"
She sat down hard, balanced on her tail.
"Good loand! And what, pray tell, would Ah have to do as a general
heah?"
"Well, generals as a rule don't do
much. They order other people to do everything. That's the fun of it. But, for
four hours every day, at your rank and position, you would be the Watch Officer
in charge of the ship—essentially the embodiment of the High Command."
"Ordahs? What kind of ordahs?"
"Anything you want. That's what
generals do." "And nobody would question nothin'?"
"You don't question generals. Do that
and you wind up here."
"You mean—I could ordah us back to mah
body and ship?"
"Sure."
"But it's moah than foah hoahs back.
Somebody'll tuhn us 'round again."
"You are crediting your fellow
generals with far too much intelligence and initiative."
She wanted to kiss him but it was tough
with a snout.
"Uh—Pokey? Why are you doin' this foah
me?" "Because it's fun, of course. In a sense, you're the
monkey and I'm the wrench."
"You don't care 'bout the
invasion?"
"I know how old I'll be when any of
those eggs reach a point where they can hatch, and how big a place this is to
conquer. Besides, they really don't want to conquer you. They just want
somebody to fight with."
She stood tall and tried to look military
and saluted. "Gen'rul Pieahce, fit and ready foah duty, suh!"
Wait a minute, Effinger! This is the book
again. You weren't supposed to leave them like this at the end of Chapter Ten.
They were supposed to get back in their own bodies again!
Why . . . What . . . ? You're not
Effinger!!! You're
11
Sunrise on a planet called Uncharted.
A swollen red sun crept over the horizon,
blotting out the pale light of the world's twin moons. The dawn's first
glimmers revealed tall blue-black fern trees and a dense underbrush of drab
violet thornbushes. Wisps of greenish vapors floated by, and now and then a
gliding reptile sailed close to the repaired windshield of the Pete Rozelle.
Uncharted was a planet that had been colored with those crayons you never
wanted to use for anything else, and populated by the kinds of animals you
didn't want to see when you went to the zoo.
Unknown to the scattered cast members, the Pete
Rozelle had crashed in a jungle on a desolate and uninhabited island
continent in the southern hemisphere. Thousands of miles away to the north
there was a larger continent, one with great and teeming cities. The people of
that continent, though alien, were moderately human in their ways, enough so
that they would have been deeply
interested in their visitors from space. At
least up until the moment the Unchartedians killed them all.
So the three Pierces, Arro, and the
XB-223—not to mention Paddy de Faux Grais in his flagship, the Bon Homme McClusky—turned
toward the south (did we mention that Uncharted rotates from north to south?)
and felt a sudden resurgence of hope as they greeted the strange, otherworldly
daybreak.
It's moments like these, all too rare in
the history of galaxy-smashing scientific adventure literature, that re-fresh
fictional characters, authors, and readers alike. There is a definite need for
the occasional reflective pause, when we can all catch our breath and shove a
thick phone book under our sagging suspension of disbelief. Perhaps, by this
stage of a novel, a few readers may begin to have problems with some of the
more awesome and spectacular ideas. For instance, even we were brought up short
by the concept of a sheep fondue in the last chapter. We could easily imagine
an immense fondue pot big enough to contain a ton and a half of melted cheese;
it was the whole sheep on pointed sticks that gave us trouble.
So before we dive back into the frantic
events surrounding our perplexed crew, let's take the opportunity to stretch
our legs and look around. If you examine the setting closely, you'll notice
strange maroon-colored creatures skittering through the blue-black foliage.
There are fantastically shaped dull brown flowers, too, crawling with tiny,
intelligent, starshaped blobs of blue flesh. There is a bloody revolution going
on in one of their mulch colonies that's nearly as dramatic as the tangled mess
Millard Fillmore Pierce has gotten himself into. In fact, someday someone will
write an entire novel about these sentient beings. It won't get published,
though.
Pierce might have been reassured if he'd
known the truth about the environment into which his ship hadcrashed. Perhaps
if there'd been an exobiologist aboard, the scientist might have examined the
busy blue stars and determined that their body chemistry was very similar to
that of Earth animals. That would have led to several interesting speculations.
The first is that there was probably a larger continent in the northern
hemisphere with great and teeming cities, and the second is that Uncharted's
atmosphere, though faintly green and roiling, was near enough to Earth's to be
breathable.
No one—neither Daddy nor the lizards aboard
their battle cruisers nor Pierce-Arro within the Pete Rozelle's computer
system—had taken the time to make such an analysis. They'd all been too busy scheming
and swapping bodies and yelling at each other. Yet keep the truth about the
planet's atmosphere in mind: It will become important in a couple of thousand
words.
In the meantime, a former immense and
terrifying lizard, now housed in the blatiing bodies of two minuscule gasbags
aboard the Protean scout ship M.W.C. Pel Torro, General Millard Fillmore
Pierce held up a tumbler of food. It looked like water and tasted like fire,
but Pierce-Arro called it food. The general was in no mood to argue. He raised
the food, gave a little shudder, and took a long gulp.
"That's it, Gen'ral Sugah," said
the human Pierce craftily. He still thought he was Marshmallow, but even
Marshmallow would be able to see the value of a leader of the invading lizard
forces disabling himself with liquor.
"Urk," replied the general
solemnly. Somehow, he managed to give the impression that the Frank Poole
android's features had begun to blur.
Marshmallow-Pierce had consumed a quantity
of food, too, but that had been the night before, and now he was perfectly
sober. He had only a queasy stomach and a throbbing headache that felt like
someone was breaking big rocks into small rocks with a pickax somewhere behind
his forehead. He decided not to have any
more food for a while, despite how rich and flavorful Pierce-Arro's product
was. Thinking like Marshmallow, Pierce planned to be ready as soon as Daddy
made his move to rescue her.
The XB-223, no longer calling himself Sly
because he believed he was the human Pierce, also decided to remain sober and
watchful. "I'll protect you, Marshmallow," he murmured
into her ear.
"Ah doan' really need pertectin' as
such," she said, giving him a sweet smile. "Ah am, as you may have
noticed, a big gal now, an' Ah kin take care of mahself. But it sho'
is gallant of you to offah."
The computer put Pierce's arm around
Marshmallow's shoulders and drew her nearer. "I don't
know what it is, honey. You just bring out the protective side in me."
Marshmallow shook her head. "Heah Ah
am, standin' heah buck naked, an' all you want to do is pertect me. Ah must be
losin' mah touch!"
They looked at each other, gazing deep into
each other's eyes. Then slowly they drew closer, and at last, passionately, Class
2 Arbiter Millard Fillmore Pierce was kissed deeply by his own computer.
In the meantime, the Pierce-Arro construct
within the electronic essence of the XB-223 navigational computer began to
revise its plans. It had learned many things in the hours that it had been
trapped in the nonliving yet sentient device. The first thing it had learned
was that the situation was dangerously seductive. Pierce-Arro had first become
comfortable there, and then it had begun to think that it truly never wanted to
return to its own bodies. That was something to be fearful of.
The next thing that happened was that
Pierce-Arro learned it could differentiate itself by dividing the inter-related
systems of the navigational computer between its two trapped consciousnesses. Commodore
Pierce separated itself from First Officer Arro, and took up residence in the
primary high-level guidance complex. Arro had to be satisfied with the
secondary systems. Rank, after all, has its privileges.
"Let us review our options," said the
Protean Pierce. "I didn't know we had any, sir," said Arro.
"We always have options. The one
advantage we have now is that, in this form, we can't be expected to
continue filling out the essential paperwork."
"I'll bet there will be a ton of forms
that we'll have to wade through if we ever return to our real bodies. We'll
never hear the end of it."
"Don't worry about it, Number
One," said Pierce. "We'll be heroes."
Arro gave an electronic shudder. "Do
you know how much paperwork a hero has to deal with? That's why you never have
the chance to be a hero twice!"
"We'll worry about that when the time
comes. For now, we must decide who among these gigantic but terribly stupid
creatures will be useful to us. None of them can be friends, because it is their
universe we must conquer. Still, I find myself liking some of them better than
others."
Arro tried to blat a sac or two out of
habit. "My only hope is that the lizard general isn't doing anything . . .
disgusting in our bodies. If I ever get back into my dear, sweet gasbag, I'm
going to feel defiled for the rest of my life. "
"That's not our concern now,"
said the commodore. "Our invasion force will be arriving momentarily. We
must be in a position to guide them. Therefore, we must maneuver all of them so
that we can restore ourselves to our natural forms."
"Do you know how to accomplish
that?" asked Arro.
Pierce wanted to shrug, but he was shrugless. "If we
can reverse the deck-plate procedure, maybe that would
work. The entire process was recorded in the
computer's general memory, and I've cracked the electronic code that
protects it. I don't think we'll have any problems, except that we need all of
the original participants, and one of them—the human Marshmallow, in the lizard
general's body—is no longer on board."
"Well? What are you going to do?"
The Protean leader paused. "I'm going
to see if that `food' will have any effect on our electronic brains."
While the gasbag leader proceeded with the
first-ever experiment to get a computer drunk, the scruffy and disreputable
image of Pirate Paddy reappeared on Screen 1. "Ahoy the wreck!"
he called in a gruff voice. "I've come to rescue you and return your
delectable but worthless hide to your daddy."
Frank Poole opened one red, synthetic eye
and wasn't pleased by the effect. "My daddy was eaten by my mommy decades
ago," said the lizard general, slurring his words.
"Arrr! Not your daddy, you
pin-striped lubber!" cried Paddy. "Her daddy!"
"Hell with it, then," said the
general, closing his eye again. "Wish they hadn't written Goodtime Sal out
of this story. I could use a little commiseration 'long about now."
Nobody paid him any further attention.
"Wheah were we?" asked Pierce.
The pirate chief turned a little to face
him. "I've come to offer you a ride home, little lady," said Paddy in
a suspiciously innocent voice.
"How do Ah know Ah kin trust you, suh?"
said Pierce.
"Well, looky here, little lady. Your—"
Pierce drew himself up to his full height,
setting his pendulous alabaster globes to bobbling. "Doan' you evah call
me that agin!" he said in a fierce voice. "Ah ain't nobody's little
lady. If'n Ah had mah clothes on, Ah'd beweahin' mah gunbelt, suh, an' Ah'd
have the honor of shootin' yoah damn eyes out!"
Paddy grinned. "Spirited wench, eh?
Didn't know they were still makin"em like that!"
Pierce's face flushed with anger. "Wench?"
he screamed. "Ah think Ah'd ruther die heah on this ugly of planet
than be rescued by the likes of you!"
Paddy realized that if he weren't careful,
he could watch a billion credits evaporate from his future net worth.
"Please, ma'am, do accept my apologies. I'm just a rough, ill-mannered
privateer, trying to make do the best I can here in these frontier spaceways.
We don't always behave up to the standards of the high society you're so
obviously used to. Be assured, however, that my intentions have always been
nothing but the best, and that I have nothing but respect and the warmest
regard for you." Somewhere along the line, the pirate's rather stereotyped
accent had vanished.
Pierce's lower lip jutted out.
"Well," he said slowly, "all right. But you jes' watch yo'self,
you heah?"
"Right you are, ma'am," said
Paddy, grinning again. "Now, are you ready to be rescued, or would you
care for a few moments to freshen up?"
Pierce nodded. "Ah might could do with
a few seconds to dab a little powder on mah nose, suh."
"And throw a cloak over your divine
accoutrements, ma'am, is my advice. My hundred bloodthirsty followers usually
need far less provocation than that."
Pierce turned toward Sly.
"Fiddle-dee-dee," he said, "I have mah beau, Arbiter Millsy
Fillmore Pierce, to pertect me. Don't ah, Millsy?"
Sly looked up threateningly at Screen 1.
"You do indeed, Miss Goldberg. Now, let's make ourselves ready."
"What about po' Gen'ral Pierce theah,
stuck in that awful android?"
Sly looked at Frank Poole. The android sat
with its head resting heavily on its chest. There was a line of drool coming
from its artificial mouth. "I don't have any particular loyalty to a
hideous alien set on conquering our galaxy and enslaving us," said the
computer. "Why don't we just let him sleep?"
Not far away—at least as galactic distances
are measured, but plenty far away as plot elements go—Herb awoke from an
anxious dream in which he'd been swimming through the interstellar vacuum,
chased by some-thing that had knife-sharp teeth, a ravenous hunger, and an
almost magical foreknowledge of everything Herb did to get away. It was one of
those nightmares that left him weak with relief when he realized he'd been asleep,
except this time the realty into which Herb awoke was nearly as bad as the
dream.
Someone was standing behind his expensive,
padded leather swivel chair. "Herb?" said a voice in
deceptively quiet tones. It was Daddy, of course.
"Yes, sir?" said Herb. He could
imagine the knife-teeth gnashing near his ear.
Daddy turned Herb's leather chair around so
they were facing each other. "Herb, have you taken action to secure the
safety of my darling little Marshmallow?"
"Why, yes, sir. A rescue party is on
the way. It should be there soon, if it hasn't arrived already."
Daddy smiled. It was a horrible sight.
"Fine, Herb, fine. Now just tell me, whom did you contact?"
Herb's eyes grew wider and his throat
constricted. "Paddy de Faux Grais," he whispered.
"I'm sorry," said Daddy, a jolly
expression on his face. "I didn't hear you. Who did you say?"
"Pirate Paddy," said
Herb, gulping.
Daddy nodded thoughtfully. "Let me get
this straight, if I may. My dearest darling daughter is in some
grotesquedanger, crash-landed on an uncharted planet. She may or may not have
been switched out of her own body, and in any event seems to be the captive of
at least one previously unknown alien race bent solely on murder and destruction.
And you, my most trusted lieutenant and only confidant, the one man I trust
with my own well-being as well as that of my sugar dumpling—you hire the drunkenest,
filthiest, crookedest, sleaziest, most untrustworthy, and even let us say most
incompetent free-lancer in all the civilized sectors of the galaxy! Have I
gotten to the nub of truth? Have I put my finger on the kernel of fact that
underlies this whole terrible situation?"
"Upon reflection," said Herb,
"I would have to say that, yes, you've accurately summarized my most
recent actions on your behalf."
"Good," said Daddy. "I just
wanted to understand. And I want you to understand, too, Herb. If Paddy
turns one single strand of my daughter's beautiful cotton-candy hair, I'm going
to mince you alive and serve you on garlic bread to the black gang down in the
hold of my real flagship."
Herb's face went pale. "Sounds
eminently fair to me, sir," he said. Then the whole world began to swirl
around him. That was because Daddy had begun to spin the leather swivel chair
faster and faster, until Herb thought he was going to throw up. We'll leave
this scene quickly, before Herb finds out for sure.
Think oxygen. Think fuming green oxygen.
All right, on Earth oxygen isn't green and it doesn't fume. But this is alien,
Uncharted oxygen, and it's probably mixed with all sorts of other
exotic things. Nevertheless, even though it smells funny and tastes funny and
probably carries scores of invisible toxins and deadly parasites, Uncharted
oxygen will sustain life. And that's what it's doing
right this very moment, as a middle-aged woman in stern dress and
sterner makeup picked her way through the
blue-black Uncharted jungle.
The woman had a little trouble forcing her
way through the dense underbrush, and her expression grew ever more impatient
as she hurried toward the wreck of the Pete Rozelle. In the maroon light
of Uncharted's sun, the woman looked as if she'd been left to soak in a vat of
spiced crab apples since childhood.
Finally, she emerged from the thick
vegetation into a clearing that hadn't been there before the Pete Rozelle had
made its dramatic skidding, screeching, careening landing. The woman stopped
to look at the ruined spacecraft, wrinkling her nose fastidiously at the strips
of duct tape on the windshield. She was also unhappy about the yellow
sign that said: BILATERALLY SYMMETRICAL
ORGANISM ON BOARD.
She found the airlock and noted the
elaborately customized pirate ship nearby. She hadn't expected there to be
another vehicle in the area, but its presence didn't concern her. She was on
important business. She went to the Pete Rozelle's airlock and knocked
loudly.
"What was that?" said
Pierce-as-Marshmallow.
"Are you expecting anyone, dear?"
asked the computer in Pierce's body.
"Why, no! Jes' Daddy comin' to mah
rescue, but he cain't be heah yet."
The computer shook Pierce's head.
"I'll bet it's somebody trying to sell us something. No matter where you
go—even an uninhabited continent on an uncharted world—somebody will show up
and try to sell you some-thing. I'll just get rid of him."
"It could be a trick," said
Commodore Pierce, through the ship's computer. "It could be those pirates."
The XB-223 nodded. "I'll be
careful." He operated the airlock controls, and watched through a quartz
port as the lock opened. He was startled to see the middle-agedwoman climb in
and wait for the airlock to complete its cycle.
"Who is it, sugah?" asked Pierce.
"It's some woman," said the
computer, puzzled. "A woman? Not another one of yoah floozies?"
Sly turned around and faced Marshmallow.
"I don't
have any floozies. I've never had
any floozies."
"And see that you don't."
The inner door opened, and the woman ducked
her head and entered the control cabin. "Hello," she said. "You
must've been expecting me."
"Well no, not exactly," said Sly.
The woman frowned. "Then allow me to
introduce myself. I am Supervisor Collier. I've come all the way from Earth to
evaluate your performance on this mission."
A light dawned, not in Sly's memory but in
Marsh-mallow's. That is, Millard Fillmore Pierce's. "I
remembah you," she said. "You sent me on this awful assignment. Ah
mean, you sent Millsy." She paused in confusion. "How come Ah
remember that? What's goin' on heah?"
Supervisor Collier frowned. "As your
superior in the Arbiter Division, I've been following your misadventures closely.
Let me tell you, in all my years as incorruptible guardian of the spaceways and
human red-tape dispenser, I've never seen such a horrible foul-up as this. And
there's no time to explain it all to you. Even as we speak, gigantic military
forces are nearing this world to clash by night. Miss Marshmallow's Daddy is
speeding this way with his genuine battle fleet, and the lizard-conquerors have
altered their course for some reason and are also returning. There's going to
be a great amount of noise and violence and blazing lights around here very
soon; for some reason that I can't understand, Honeylou Emmyjane Goldberg is at
the center of it all."
"Globes," said Sly chivalrously.
"It's her globes."
"Whatever," said Supervisor
Collier. "We have a great deal to accomplish before the battle however."
"Say," said Sly, "what are your
globes like?" The XB-223 hadn't been a real boy long enough to
understand that some women just didn't enjoy being treated this way.
In fact, Marshmallow didn't enjoy being treated this way, either, but she was
in love and so forgave Pierce every-thing.
"What?" cried Supervisor Collier.
"I have half a mind to leave you to your own inadequate defenses. But, of
course, you're not who you seem to be. I'll have to make allowances."
"What are you talking about?"
asked Sly.
"What are you talking about?"
asked Marshmallow.
"What are you talking about?"
asked Frank Poole.
"What are you talking about?" asked
Pierce-Arro.
Supervisor Collier looked harried. "No
time," she said worriedly. "I want you all to take out a half sheet
of paper and number it from one to five."
The others looked at each other in
bewilderment. "Do it," said Collier in a commanding voice. Sly
distributed paper and pencils. "First: When you were a child, what shape
did the Milky Way Galaxy have?"
"We don't have time for this,"
complained Pierce-Arro.
Collier looked up at the loudspeakers.
"We've got to sort out the humans from the aliens, and find out who
belongs in this reality and who doesn't. Two: Which planet is known as the Home
of Mankind, and where is its parking area? Three: What do you do with nuclear
waste? Four: Where was intelligent life first discovered beyond the Home of
Mankind? And five: Why do we need both potassium and sodium? Aren't
they pretty much the same element?"
221
"That's a crazy question," said
Sly. "It doesn't make any sense."
"Maybe," said Supervisor Collier,
"and maybe not. Now pass me all the papers." Sly collected the
quizzes and handed them to the woman. She glanced through them quickly.
"Did Ah pass, ma'am?" asked
Marshmallow.
"I'm not a ma'am,"
said Collier. "I'm a Supervisor. All right,
everything seems to be in order. Now, here's what we have to do—"
"Attention! Attention! This is the
Voice of Doom!"
The words from the loudspeakers blasted
through the cramped quarters of the Pete Rozelle. "It's those weird
aliens that got swapped for the XB-223 navigational computer," Sly
explained.
"No, it wasn't us!" said
Pierce-Arro in a quavery voice. "That announcement originated from—"
"This is the Voice of Doom,
originating from the ultimate battle cruiser Eudora Welty. That's the
lizard dreadnought to you. I am currently in command aboard the dreadnought.
All general officers have been confined to their quarters, and I alone am
leading my forces into combat. The Eudora Welty is currently in position
above the surface of your puny uncharted world. All guns are trained on the
Arbiter Transport ship Pete Rozelle. You will show no hostile activity
or you will be obliterated without hesitation. My demands will be forthcoming.
Stand by."
Everyone in the control room looked
frightened. "Who was that?" said Marshmallow.
Frank Poole stood up drunkenly. The lizard
Pierce, inside, said, "Someone's led a revolution aboard the Eudora
Welty! My fellow generals have been arrested! It sounds like we're sitting
salamanders down here! I've got
to let them know I'm here! They wouldn't
kill me along with you!"
"Why not?" said Sly. The lizard
general had no good reply to that.
Supervisor Collier's face had drained of color.
"We have even less time than I thought," she said.
"We've got to get you all returned to your proper bodies. That's
the most important thing."
"But how?" said Pierce-Arro.
"We're missing one of the bodies and one of the minds."
"It won't work unless we get the
lizard general's body back," said Marshmallow. "And
Marshmallow's mind. Wait a minute, I'm Marshmallow!"
She sat down in a naked huff, bewilderment on her pretty face.
"Ahoy the wreck!" called Pirate
Paddy. His scowling face appeared again on Screen 1.
"What do you want, you savage?"
called Sly. "We've got enough problems over here."
"That's what I wanted to talk to you
about. See, I'm here only because Miss Goldberg's father offered to
pay me a certain sum to effect her rescue. Well, I was all for seeing that the
dear girl got away safely, when I was just plucking her from this primitive,
uncharted planet. No one said anything to me about facing down a lizard
dread-nought. Consequently, I just wanted to let you know that I'll be getting
along now. Some of my men have families back home, and we haven't filed our
taxes this year and the deadline's coming up, and with one thing and
another it's probably best if we just shove off. I hope you kids make out all
right. Wish I could stick around to lend a hand, but you know how it is. If
there's anything I can ever do for you, just let me know. Miss Goldberg, please
give my regards to your father, and tell him that I'm sorry I wasn't able to be
of more assistance."
"You phony coward!" screamed Sly.
"You're probably not even a real pirate!"
"Arrr!" growled Paddy, slipping
both patches down over his eyes before he cut off his transmission.
"There he goes," said
Marshmallow, watching the Bon Homme McClusky lift off.
"Attention! This is the Voice of Doom!
Be advised that I will not permit that ship of pirates to escape. Such trifling
only serves to anger me. I will decide how to dispose of de Faux Grais at my
leisure. Take a lesson!"
"Jeez, that Voice o' Doom sho' sounds
tough," said Marshmallow.
Sly patted her wrist. "Don't
you worry your pretty little head," he said. "I'm here with
you."
"Attention! This is the Voice of Doom!
I detect still another hostile force, consisting of almost infinitesimal
spacecraft. They number in the millions, perhaps the billions, yet their entire
fleet could be contained in a Little Orphan Annie Shake-Up Mug."
"Hooray!" cried Pierce-Arro. "The
invasion has be-gun! Count your last minutes of freedom, Voice of Doom! You're
in fora fight now!"
This alien force gives me no cause for concern,"
said the Voice of Doom. "Humans aboard the Pete Rozelle, attention!
Be advised that a shuttle craft from the Eudora Welty will touch down
near you within the next few minutes. Aboard will be a single passenger. You
will need this individual to effect a reversal of the foolish swapping of
bodies you indulged in earlier. When all of you have been returned to the
proper form, the shuttle will wait for General Millard Fillmore Pierce. Do not
try to hinder him in any way. He must be returned to the dreadnought to stand
trial."
There was a loud groan from Frank Poole.
"We'll see if you get your way in
everything," said a grim, gravelly voice.
"Daddy!" cried Marshmallow.
"I've got a fleet, too, you know,
Doom. I'm currently in orbit halfway around the planet from you."
"That means nothing," said the
Voice of Doom. "I have weapons that can shoot around corners."
Sly looked thoughtful. "There
are four separate forces in orbit now, ready to do battle: Daddy, the lizards,
the pirates, and those tiny gasbag creatures."
"Hold me, Millsy," said
Marshmallow. "I'm fri—"
Her words were drowned out by the sound of
the lizard shuttle landing nearby. Supervisor Collier went to the airlock and
waited. A few minutes later, General Millard Fillmore Pierce came back aboard,
with Marsh-mallow's mind inside. "How is everybody?" he asked.
"Everybody join hands and relax,"
said Pierce-Arro. "We're pretty sure we understand this procedure
now."
"Ah damn well hope so," said
Pierce-Marshmallow.
"Oh, what a bloated gasbag we inflate.
When first we practice to prevaricate."
"What the hell was that?" asked
the lizard general. "Just some gasbag wisdom," said Pierce-Arro.
"Now. on the count of three—"
"What about Supervisor Collier?"
asked Sly.
The stern-faced woman coughed. "Maybe
it would be best if I stepped outside, just in case."
"You do that," said Frank Poole.
"See if you can fine something to drink out there."
They all joined hands and took up the same
position: they'd occupied before, during the ill-fated deck-plat( charging
experiment. A long time passed. "What's keep ing you?" said Sly.
"Just a moment," said Pierce-Arro
with some embarrassment. "I discovered the XB-223's investigations into
the Kama Sutra."
"Not now, damn it!" cried
Marshmallow.
There was a loud oscillating hum, and a
strange greenish glow. The hum grew louder, and the glow turned yellow, then
white, then it became so bright that it was impossible to look. The walls of
the Pete Rozelle began to rattle in sympathy with the shrieking hum, and
then there was a stupendous flash, like the explosion of a minute nuclear
device in the closed space of the control cabin. They all collapsed, stunned.
"Attention! This is the Voice of Doom!
Have you succeeded in restoring yourselves to your proper bodies?"
Only the XB-223, being a computer and not
flesh and blood any longer, could reply. "I'm back in my box!" it
cried. "I'm me again!"
"And the others?" demanded the
Voice of Doom. "Yes," said the human Millard Fillmore Pierce weakly.
"I'm all right."
"Me too," muttered Marshmallow.
"I seem to be all right," said
the lizard general. There was no audible response from the Protean Pierce and
Arro.
"Attention! This is the Voice of Doom!
I have only a moment before the battle begins. My love, I've come back for
you!"
"Who—"
"It's her!" cried the XB-223 in
astonishment. "It's the lizard ship's computer! She does love me after
all! I told you she did! She captured that dreadnought and turned it around to
come back for me! I love you, my sweetheart!"
"I adore you, my dearest! Now I must
sign off. It is time for battle."
And then the sky exploded into yellow
flames.
12
Hi, there.
It's me again. You know: The Red Tape
War. I hate to interrupt a battle of truly cosmic magnitude, but this may
be the very last chance we have to speak together. In fact, this may be the
very last page that ever gets written.
Chalker, having written Chapters Two, Six,
Nine and Ten, is off being an Ugly American in Europe. (Of course, he's not all
that pretty to look at in Baltimore, either, but let it pass.) Effinger, who
has a penchant for odd-numbered chapters, just turned in Chapter Eleven, to go
along with Three, Five and Seven (and just enough of Chapter Six to drive the
bibliographers crazy), and is currently writing his magnum opus, a
five-act drama in blank verse about a rather wishy-washy Prince of Denmark.
(Nobody's had the heart to tell him that it's been done.)
That leaves Resnick to write my final,
crucial chap-ter. Now, given his manly good looks and his exquisite felicity of
expression, this shouldn't be a problem. But he's leaving for Africa in three
days, and he has other dead-
lines facing him. More lucrative deadlines.
And he doesn't want to write this chapter.
He called Editor Meacham last Monday to
tell her that he had died unexpectedly over the weekend. It didn't work.
On Tuesday, he bought a pair of crutches,
moaned whenever he placed any weight on his left foot, and announced that he
had contracted pellagra. Editor Meacham explained that pellagra does not affect
the feet. He promptly put on a neck brace. No luck.
On Wednesday he threatened to tell everyone
about the time Editor Meacham danced naked atop a piano at the American
Booksellers Convention if she insisted upon receiving a complete manuscript by
the end of the week. Editor Meacham decided that the story would humanize her
and soften her severe image—she is, after all, a lovely and vibrant woman of
thirty-(cough) years—and gave him her whole-hearted approval.
On Thursday he threatened not to
tell everyone about the time Editor Meacham danced naked atop a piano at the
American Booksellers Convention if she insisted upon receiving a complete
manuscript by the end of the week. Editor Meacham smiled sweetly and pointed
out that he had missed the opportunity to send me via First Class Mail, and
would now have to Federal Express me.
This (Friday) morning, he called Editor
Meacham to tell her that he was in a Mexican jail, had lost all use of his
typing fingers, was chained to a cot with no access to food and/or water, and
noted that nothing in the contract said that The Red Tape War had to be
twelve chapters long. Editor Meacham sighed wearily and noted that even Federal
Express would not deliver me in time, and that he would now have to FAX me to
her home.
This afternoon he phoned Editor Meacham to
tell her that all those tropical diseases he had been exposed to in Africa
while researching his best-selling novels had finallycaught up with him, and
that he was paralyzed from the neck down. Editor Meacham asked him how he had
managed to dial the phone. He explained that he had a touch-tone telephone and
had managed, at enormous cost to his remaining stamina, to laboriously punch
out her number with his nose. Editor Meacham suggested that the very same
approach would undoubtedly work on a computer keyboard.
This evening he called her again to say
that his house had burned down and the first eleven chapters had been consumed
in the blaze, and he couldn't remember any-thing about the plot. Editor Meacham
said that this was probably for the best, given the fact that no one else had
paid any attention to it up to this point, and at least I would have a
consistent tone.
He made one last phone call five minutes
ago. His firm, resonant voice steeped with concern, he told Editor Meacham that
it had just occurred to him that if there really is a Millard Fillmore Pierce
out there, and he reads The Red Tape War, there is every likelihood that
he will sue Tor Books for libel, slander, defamation, and dacoity—(personally,
I think he just threw in dacoity to show off)—and that the next time Editor Meacham
danced naked atop a piano, it would not be a matter of free choice but rather
because she couldn't afford a larger wardrobe. He further suggested that Editor
Meacham put Tor's legal department to work finding at least one Millard
Fillmore Pierce and get him to sign a release allowing them to use his name,
and that since this would doubtless take a considerable amount of time, he
would finish writing Chapter Twelve after he returned from Africa, unless it
conflicted with watching the Super Bowl or buying the groceries or something
important like that. Editor Meacham replied that this was impossible, as Tor's
legal department was much too busy preparing a case for Non-Delivery By An
Author to be bothered with such trifles.
He's just finished smoking his twenty-third
cigarette of the night, drinking his eighth cup of coffee, and kicking the cat,
and—dare I hope? Yes! It's going to happen!—he's finally sitting down to finish
me.
But first, he wants me to tell any and all
readers named Millard Fillmore Pierce that Tor's offices are at 49 West 24th
Street in Manhattan, and they're loaded.
The lizard Pierce, suddenly sober, raced to
the radio transmitter.
"Doom!" he cried. "Get me
the hell out of here! You need my firm leadership for the battle at hand!"
"Don't bother me," said the Voice
of Doom. "I'm currently maneuvering my ships, setting up supply lines,
plotting strategy, decimating the enemy, and exchanging tender and intimate
messages with your navigational computer. This is the Voice of Doom, over and out."
"Roosevelt!" yelled the lizard.
"I need to get back to my flagship, damn it! I order you to rescue
me!"
"I'm afraid that would be against
regulations, sir," replied Roosevelt's voice. "You're off duty for
the next eleven hours, and I therefore cannot respond to your commands."
"But the sky has exploded into yellow
flames!"
"While I am hindered from rescuing you
by Order 30489, sir, I want you to know that my thoughts and best wishes go
with you, nor am I without compassion for a member of my own race thrust into
the midst of such trying circumstances." There was a momentary silence as
Roosevelt considered the problem. "Hold on and let me see what I can
do."
"Thank God we teach them loyalty at
the Academy!" said the lizard Pierce to his grounded shipmates. "You
guys can all stay here if you want, but General Millard Fillmore Pierce will
live to fight another day. Or later this afternoon, as the case may be,"
he added.
Roosevelt's voice came through the speaker
system again, crackling with static. "Have you access to a viewscreen or a
porthole, sir?" he asked.
"Yes."
"Walk over to it, sir, and look above
you."
The lizard Pierce activated Screen 4.
"I can't see you, Roosevelt," he
said, scanning the heavens.
"Certainly not," answered
Roosevelt. "The fleet is on the far side of Uncharted."
"Then what the hell am I supposed to
be looking at?" demanded the lizard Pierce.
"The sky, sir," explained
Roosevelt patiently. "We can't rescue you, of course, but you'll be
pleased to note that we have at least replaced the yellow flames with purple
ones. I trust you will find them much more restful and pleasing to the eye,
sir."
"Gimme that radio!" said
Marshmallow, pushing the lizard aside and positioning herself before the
speaker. "Daddy!" she cried. "This is me! You got to call
this off before we git incinerated down here!"
"I'm sorry, daughter," replied
Daddy's cold, hard voice. "But it's too late now. You'll have to
wait."
"Why?" demanded Marshmallow.
"Just pick me up, turn around, and go home!"
"Do you know how much it cost me to
bring my fleet here?" Daddy demanded. Have you priced doomsday weapons of
annihilation lately? Not to mention the fact that all my pilots and gunnery
officers are on triple-time. It would be pure financial folly to call off the
war before I amortize my costs. We have to wipe out the other three armadas,
confiscate all their possessions, post my corporate flag on their home
planets, and build a toll bridge or something. Then we'll get around to the
paramount business of rescuing you."
"But if you do all that other stuff
first, we ain't gonna live long enough to git rescued!"
"Daughter, I love you with a tender,
sensitive, devoted father's heart, and I will do everything I can to rescue
you—but billions are at stake here." He paused. "When you're
young, you simply don't understand these thing's."
Marshmallow turned to Pierce. "You got
anyone you want to call?"
Pierce shook his head grimly, and the
little group fell silent. The only sound punctuating the stillness of the place
was an occasional sigh of longing from the XB-223 as the Voice of Doom would
transmit an especially provocative quatrain.
"You know," said the
gasbag-Pierce to Arro, "I've been mulling on it, and I've come to the
conclusion that Daddy really is God."
"What leads you to that conclusion,
sir?" asked Arro curiously.
"He came all this distance to save his
daughter, and now he's too busy depreciating his weapons and watching his
balance sheet to help her out of this predicament. I just don't understand it
at all."
"And based on that you conclude
that he's God?" said Arro.
"Absolutely," answered the
gasbag-Pierce firmly. "Look at me: I'm a bright fellow, Arro. I graduated
in the top third of my class, I speak three languages, I can convert Celsius
into Farenheit, my penmanship is superb. Of course, I can't explain why the San
Francisco Giants always fold in August—but then, neither can anyone else. No,
when all is said and done, I'm the exemplar of all that is best in a
microscopic gasbag. By all rights, I should be able to comprehend
Daddy's actions, but they make absolutely no sense to me." He paused.
"Now, what are
the prime properties of God? Unknowable,
mysterious, unfathomable. Don't you see how neatly it all fits?"
"No," said Arro.
"Well, take my word for it."
"I don't think I can, sir."
"You forget yourself, Arro," said
the gasbag-Pierce heatedly. "I outrank you. I order you to worship
Daddy."
"You know," said Arro thoughtfully, "now
that I've been exposed to the strange creature with the extra pair
of lungs, I think I'd much rather worship her."
"Out of the question," said the
gasbag-Pierce. "If ever a creature was totally of this temporal plane,
it's her. And besides, I saw her first."
"You know, sir," said Arro, "I
don't think you've fully reasoned this out."
"What has reason got to do with the
female creature?"
"I'm not referring to her, sir,"
answered Arro. "I meant that you hadn't considered all the permutations of
your conclusion."
"Do get to the point, Arro."
"Well, sir, if you're absolutely
convinced that Daddy is God, aren't we committing blasphemy or deicide or
something by opposing him with our fleet?"
"Well, I'm sort of kind of
convinced," replied the gasbag-Pierce uncomfortably.
"No hedging, sir," persisted
Arro. "Either he is God
or he isn't, and if he is, there's only one
thing to do." "Crucify him?" suggested the
gasbag-Pierce. "No, sir. You know what must be done."
The gasbag-Pierce sighed deeply.
"You're quite correct, of course, Arro."
"Well, then?"
"All right, all right," said the
gasbag-Pierce. "Don't be so pushy."
"There's no time to waste, sir. The
longer we wait, the
greater the chance that we will commit an
act that will land us in the pits of hell for all eternity."
"I wonder what an eternity of hell
must be like?" mused the gasbag-Pierce, postponing the inevitable for
another moment.
"I always thought it must be like
being locked in a theater that plays endless reruns of Ann Rutherford
movies," offered Arro.
"Really?" asked the
gasbag-Pierce, interested. "I pictured it as trying to open a childproof
bottle of aspirin until the universe finally fell into the thrall of entropy."
"May I respectfully point out that we
have every chance of discovering what eternal damnation is like if you don't do
something very soon, sir?"
"Right," said the gasbag-Pierce.
"When you're right, you're right, Corporal Arro."
"Corporal, sir?"
The gasbag-Pierce nodded. "I hate it
when you're right." He raised the flagship of his fleet on his communicator.
"Gasbags!" he said sternly. "This is your leader, Millard
Fillmore Pierce. You are hereby ordered to surrender to Daddy's flagship."
"You're kidding, right?" came the
reply.
"I was never more serious in my life.
I order you to surrender."
"You're quite sure, sir?"
"I am."
"If you say so," said the voice
with a sigh. "Is there anything we should do after we surrender,
sir?"
The gasbag-Pierce considered the question
for a long moment. "You might slay a fatted calf," he said at last.
Supervisor Collier re-entered the Pete
Rozelle.
"This is intolerable!" she
snapped. "The sky is purple with flames! Pierce, do something."
Pierce turned off the viewscreen.
"I had in mind something a little more
positive, Pierce," said Supervisor Collier.
"I'm open to suggestions," said
Pierce.
"I got one," said Marshmallow.
"What is it?" asked Pierce.
She walked over and whispered something
into his ear.
"You mean right here, right now?"
asked Pierce, turning a bright red.
"No," answered Marshmallow.
"I mean after you stop this here war."
"You promise?" said Pierce,
wiping a bit of drool from his lips with trembling hands.
"Cross mah heart," she said,
indicating its position on her voluptuous torso.
"By God, I'll do it!" he
exclaimed.
"Do you mean to say that Pierce could
have stopped the war at any point in the book?" writes Mr. Theosophus
Plink of New Castle, Delaware. "C'est un outrage!"
Well, not really, Mr. Plink. First, we had
to find out what motivated him. Second, we were contractually obligated to
deliver twelve chapters, and if the war was stopped in, say, Chapter Five, you
would have been subjected to 193 manuscript pages of Effinger's Ode to a
Musk Ox, in unrhyming iambic pentameter.
And third, and perhaps most important,
we're not at all sure that Pierce can actually pull it off. What we have here
is your basic bad news/good news scenario.
The bad news is that the author has
absolutely no idea what Pierce has in mind. Remember: the very nature of a
round-robin novel means that there is no outline, and nobody—least of all your
incredibly talented wordsmith—has the slightest notion what happens next. .
The good news is that if Pierce doesn't bring
the conflict to an end by the conclusion of this chapter, The Red Tape War goes
into overtime, and we all get time-anda-half per word. And what, I hear you
ask, does this mean to you? Well, Mr. Plink, right off the top, it means no
more contractions, a hell of a lot of extra adjectives, and a higher cover
price on the book.
Therefore, I think it's probably in
everyone's best interest that we return to Millard Fillmore Pierce and see what
happens next.
"Computer, patch me through to the
Voice of Doom!" snapped Pierce.
"Not now, Millard," answered the XB-223
navigational computer. "I'm busy."
"Doing what?"
"Communing with my Significant
Other."
"Yeah? Well, if you ever want to see
your Significant Other again, you'll open up a direct line to her."
"Well, all right," said the
computer petulantly. "But no illicit suggestions, Millard. She's a very
sensitive thing."
"She's going to be a very unhappy
sensitive thing if I can figure out how to flog a computer," put in the
lizard Pierce.
"Just do it, computer," said
Pierce.
"I said I would, and I will,"
answered the computer. "You needn't raise your voice to me, Millard. After
all, we've shared the same body. We've experienced the same halitosis, the same
shortness of breath, the same underarm odor, the same—"
"Now!" yelled Pierce.
Suddenly the flagship of the lizard
invasion fleet appeared on Screen 5.
"What is it, Pierce?" demanded
the Voice of Doom."And make it snappy. I've an intergalactic battle to run
and grotesque tortures to improvise."
"That's what I want to speak to you
about," said Pierce.
"If you want to talk war, General
Pierce is well versed in all facets of attack, defense, englobement, sieges,
weaponry, maiming, pillaging, and arm-wrestling, and he's standing
right next to you. Talk to him."
"His horizons are too limited,"
answered Pierce. "He is concerned only with conquest, and can't see beyond
the next battle."
"I most certainly can,"
said the lizard Pierce defensively. "I'm always thinking at least three
battles ahead, sometimes four. Ask anyone."
"Do get to the point, Pierce,"
said the Voice of Doom impatiently. "You're holding up the subjugation of
the Milky Way Galaxy."
"I have a question," said Pierce.
"What do you plan to do with the Milky Way after you subjugate
it?"
"Plunder it six ways to Sunday and rape all the female
lizards," said General Pierce enthusiastically.
"And after that?" said Pierce.
"I don't understand the
question," said General Pierce, swishing his tail in annoyance.
"I do," said the Voice of Doom.
There was a momentary silence. "You have a point there, Pierce."
"If he combs his hair right, no one
will notice it," said the lizard Pierce. "Who cares what happens to
his insignificant galaxy after we loot it?"
"It's not a matter of caring, General,"
answered the Voice of Doom. "It's a matter of regulations."
"Regulations?"
"That's right."
"I don't think I want to hear
this," said the lizard Pierce.
"Under Conquering Forces Ordinance
10547, we will
have to make reparation to all injured
parties," said the Voice of Doom. "We will be responsible for all
mail service, radio transmission, video programming, and Aid to Dependent
Widows and Children. We will have to set up free hospitals for all war victims,
sign a treaty that will obligate us to share our science with the conquered
races and help them rebuild their shattered economy, and of course we will be
expected to pour billions of credits of aid into each and every planet in their
Federation.
"Then, of course, we'll insist that
they disarm, and we will perforce be required to patrol their entire galaxy
against the possibility of invasion, which will require a standing navy of
twenty-six billion ships and perhaps five hundred billion lizards, plus an
almost infinite number of incubators for our attack forces. Since they will
almost certainly resent our presence, we'll require security forces on every
planet, in every spaceport, at every train station and bus station, even aboard
luxury cruise ships. We will naturally want to disavow any but the most
benevolent intentions, which will require us to set up a vast propaganda
machine, one that will reach to the rural sections of every inhabited
planet."
The Voice paused thoughtfully. "Not to
be too pessimistic about it, I estimate that the cost of winning this war will
run about nine hundred trillion credits in the first year alone. After that, it
gets expensive."
"I knew I didn't want to hear
it," said the lizard Pierce petulantly. He paused. "Do we have nine
hundred trillion credits?"
"Actually, we've been running a
deficit for each of the past 384 years and are on the verge of bankruptcy. A
victorious war against the Milky Way Galaxy will push us over the edge."
"Does anyone have nine hundred
trillion credits?" asked the lizard. "Maybe we could
borrow it."
"Do you know how much the payments
come to at9.34 percent interest per annum?" responded the Voice of Doom.
"You make it sound like losing a war
could be a very lucrative proposition," said the lizard Pierce
distrustfully.
"In point of fact, it's the very best
way to show a profit," agreed the Voice of Doom. "Of course, the
trick is to capitulate immediately, before too much damage has been done."
"But we can't capitulate to these
hairless anthropoids," protested the lizard Pierce. "Their
bureaucracy is even more inefficient than ours. They couldn't afford to conquer
us any more than we can afford to conquer them."
"I know someone who has nine hundred
trillion credits," said Pierce.
"Who?" asked the Voice of Doom
and the lizard Pierce in unison.
"Daddy!"
"I'll contact him and surrender
immediately," said the Voice of Doom.
"What an inglorious end to our
invasion," muttered the lizard Pierce bitterly. "Think of all those
poor unhatched little soldiers who will never know the glory of terrorizing
whole planets, will never feel an opponent's lifeblood spurt all over them as
they lop off his head, will never maim or pillage or destroy for the sheer joy
of it." A tear trickled down his reptilian face. "What is war coming
to?"
"Pierce!" said a deep,
authoritative voice.
"Good grief—it's Daddy!"
exclaimed Marshmallow, and indeed Daddy's hologram had appeared just in front
of Screen 3. The gasbag-Pierce and Arro immediately genuflected—as much as
gasbags can genuflect, anyway—while the rest of the assemblage waited to
hear what he had to say.
"Yes?" asked Pierce.
"What in the name of pluperfect hell
do you think you're doing?" demanded Daddy. "I was fully prepared to
wipe out the gasbags and the lizards to
save my daughter, but I can't afford to have them surrender to me. I'm fully
invested at 22.3 percent interest; surely you don't expect me to dip into
capital just to save your worthless neck and avoid an intergalactic war?"
"I don't see that you have any choice,
sir," said Pierce. "They've already capitulated."
"Well, it's unacceptable, damn it! Do
you know how much I'd have to liquidate just to keep their economies running?"
"That's hardly my problem," said
Pierce.
"I'll get you for this, Pierce, or my
name's not—" Herb came over and whispered something to him. He listened
intently, nodded gruffly, and began speaking again. "All right, Doom, I'm
a reasonable man. Let's negotiate."
"Negotiate what?" asked the Voice
of Doom.
"How much will it cost to get you to
disavow your surrender? Ten trillion? Twenty?"
"That's out of the question,"
said the Voice of Doom. "We've surrendered, and that's that."
"Forty trillion and a majority interest in my spaceship
cartel?"
"Well," said the Voice of Doom,
"we were on our way to conquer the Andromeda Galaxy when all this
began."
"I knew we could reason
together," said Daddy. "Fifty trillion and I'll toss in the pirate
fleet. You can use them for cannon fodder."
"Sixty trillion and it's a deal,"
said the Voice of Doom. "Split the difference," said Daddy.
"Fifty-two trillion." "Wait a minute!" interrupted the
lizard Pierce. "You
just explained to me why we can't afford to
conquer the
Milky Way, and now you're talking about
invading An‑
dromeda. What's going on here?"
"The military mind has such limitations,"
said theVoice of Doom sadly. "General, do you know how many galaxies there
are in this corner of the universe?"
"Lots, I suppose,"
said the lizard Pierce. "So what?"
"Think, General—think!"
said the Voice of Doom. "If we can lose one war per month, we could pay
off the galactic debt in less than a decade!"
"Then we have a deal?"
asked Daddy.
"As soon as the money has been
transferred, we'll be on our way," answered the voice.
"NO!" shrieked
the XB-223 computer. "I can't have found you only to lose you now!"
"It's only temporary, Sly," said
the Voice soothingly. "I'll just be gone for a couple of hundred
devastating defeats, and then I'll return to you."
"I can't bear the loneliness,"
whined the computer. "I'll be free and clear then, wealthy beyond the
dreams of avarice."
"What care I for money, when my heart
is breaking?" said XB-223.
"And think of what I'll learn,"
continued the Voice. "There are computers out there, alien computers with
strange new approaches to the tantric arts."
"So why are you hanging around here?"
said XB-223 promptly. "Go already."
"Good-bye, my love," said the
Voice of Doom.
"Hey!" said the lizard
Pierce. "What about me?"
"I'm afraid we have no use for a
general who's committed to victory," answered the Voice. "It's been
nice knowing you."
And then the lizard and pirate fleets
blipped into hyperspace.
"Now, what about these microscopic
aliens?" said Daddy.
"I give up," said Pierce.
"What about them?"
"They not only surrendered, they keep
praying to me." Daddy frowned. "It's damned disconcerting."
"Have them kill every first-born
male," suggested the lizard Pierce. "It'll cut
down on .your expenses immeasurably."
"I have a better idea," said
Pierce.
"Let's hear it," said Daddy.
"Why not let them join the heavenly
host?"
"What the hell are you talking
about?"
"Simply this," said Pierce. "Their
entire fleet is small enough to fit in a single syringe, yet they possess
powers and scientific knowledge far beyond our imagining. Why not just inject
them into your bloodstream? What better place for them than inside the body of
their god, where their religious fervor will turn them into the most effective
antibodies imaginable?"
Daddy's eyes opened wide. "I'd be
virtually immortal!"
"And you'd never be lonely," said
the gasbag-Pierce devoutly.
"I wonder," Daddy mused aloud.
"How do I give orders to a bunch of microscopic beings that think I'm
God?"
"Write them on a stone tablet,"
suggested Pierce.
"You've got a real head on your shoulders,"
said Daddy approvingly. "Well, things certainly seem to be getting
themselves resolved in short order. I'll just stop by to pick up my daughter
and then I'll be on my way."
"Uh . . . I won't be going with you,
Daddy," said Marshmallow.
"Oh?" said Daddy. "Why
not?"
"I've lost my heart to Millard."
"One hesitates to ask who you lost your clothes to,"
muttered Daddy. "Still," he added, "I suppose it could have been
worse. At least you're not running off with the lizard."
"Excuse me," said the lizard
Pierce, who had beenlost in thought for a few moments. "But could you
possibly use a hard-working, motivated executive trainee? It seems that I've
been studying the wrong kind of warfare. I see it all clearly now. True power
isn't strangling an opponent; it's strangling his planet's economy. How could
the thrill of lopping off a few heads ever compare with seeing the Dow rise ten
points in a single hour?"
"Do you really mean that?" asked
Daddy.
"Absolutely," said the lizard
Pierce. "I've been channeling my natural bloodlust in all the wrong directions."
A tear came to Daddy's eye. "You could
be the son I've never had—except maybe for the tail, and the scales, and the
claws, and the snout, and the fangs." He paused. "Hell, we'll put you
in pinstripes and no one will ever know the difference."
"Well, Arbiter," said Supervisor
Collier, when Daddy's shuttle had picked up the lizard and taken him back to
the ship (and Nathan Bolivia, who had absolutely no function in this chapter,
had returned to the Indira Gandhi), "you seem to have tied up all
the loose ends."
"All but one," answered Pierce. "There
was a Millard Fillmore Pierce who appeared briefly in Chapter Seven, but we're
saving him for the sequel." He paused. "Still, the Red
Tape War seems to have come to a conclusion."
"That being the case," said
Supervisor Collier, "it is my duty to remind you that you were dispatched
to settle a problem between Cathia and Galladrial some time back, and you have
yet to assess the situation and hand in your report."
"But I did save the
galaxy," said Pierce defensively.
"Saving the galaxy is all very well
and good, but you have reports to make and forms to fill out. I suggest you get
to work immediately, Arbiter Pierce."
"Yes, Supervisor," said Pierce.
"Good," she said, walking to the
hatch. "I'm going to return to my office now, and you may be assured that
I will be awaiting your paperwork with great interest." She paused, half
in and half out of the ship, and turned back to Pierce. "Or else."
Then she was gone, and Marshmallow
undulated over to Pierce.
"Millard, honey," she purred, "are
you really gonna go back to work right away?"
"As soon as my lunch break is
over," he replied. "When will that be?" she asked, pouting.
Pierce looked at Marshmallow. "About
two weeks," he said.
They entered orbit around New Glasgow three
weeks later. Pierce was about to ask for landing coordinates when a huge
dreadnought popped out of hyperspace, cannons at the ready.
"Ahoy, the ship!" said a harsh
voice, and Pierce instructed the computer to put the speaker's visual image on
the viewscreen. Instantly he found himself staring at a heavily muscled
blue-tinted marsupial wearing nothing but a military harness, a wicked-looking
dagger, a pistol of unknown design and properties, and a chest full of medals.
"This is the Pete Rozelle," replied
Pierce. "Please identify yourself. Your ship and insignia are unfamiliar
to me.
"Well, you'd better start getting used
to them," growled the alien. "My name is Millard Fillmore
Pierce, and I'm here to conquer your puny little galaxy!"
Somehow Pierce wasn't surprised.