Raymond F. Jones was an interesting and relatively neglected science fiction writer, mostly appearing in Astounding with his "Peace Engineer" series and many others. His two best works are the novel Renaissance (1951, serialized in Astounding in 1944) and the brilliant "Noise Level" (1947), but he published some fifteen books in the field, including This Island Earth (1952) which was made into one of the better sf films of the 1950s. His particular strength was in the area of ideas, not in execution, but he produced considerable work of interest.
"Correspondence Course" has strong
ideas and a powerful message.
(One of the inevitable tricks tried by any writer is the double-double-cross. In other words you work toward a surprise ending which you make just apparent enough for the reader to see dimly. And as that reader congratulates himself on having outsmarted the writer, that same writer pulls a rabbit out of his hat and reveals the real surprise ending.
Usually, this is the case with events, with matters such as the identity of the villain or the motive of the hero.
It is far less common to have this surprise come in the matter of the theme of the story; or the "moral," if you prefer. Here is a story in which you may prepare to be surprised at the nature and purpose of the "correspondence course" of the title, and then find out that's not at all what Jones had most in mind. Don't worry," I'm not giving away anything, for even with this hint I doubt you'll get it. LA.)
The old lane from the farmhouse to the letter box down by the road was the same dusty trail that he remembered from eons before. The deep summer dust stirred as his feet moved slowly and haltingly. The marks of his left foot were deep and firm as when he had last walked the lane, but where his right foot moved there was a ragged, continuous line with irregular depressions and there was the sharp imprint of a cane beside the dragging footprints.
He looked up to the sky a moment as an echelon of planes from the advanced trainer base fifty miles away wheeled overhead. A nostalgia seized him, an overwhelming longing for the men he had known—and for Ruth.
He was home; he had come back alive, but with so many gone who would never come back, what good was it?
With Ruth gone it was no good at
all. For an instant his mind burned with pain and his eyes ached as if
a bomb-burst had blinded him as he remembered that day in the little
field hospital where he had watched her die and heard the enemy planes
overhead.
Afterwards, he had gone up alone,
against orders, determined to die with her, but take along as many
Nazis as he could.
But he hadn't died. He had come
out of it with a bullet-shattered leg and sent home to rust and die
slowly over many years.
He shook his head and tried to
fling the thoughts out of his mind. It was wrong. The doctors had
warned him—
He resumed his slow march, half
dragging the all but useless leg behind him. This was the same lane
down which he had run so fast those summer days so long ago. There was
a swimming hole and a fishing pond a quarter of a mile away. He tried
to dim his vision with half-shut eyes and remember those pleasant days
and wipe out
all fear and bitterness from his mind.
It was ten o'clock in the morning
and Mr. McAfee, the rural postman, was late, but Jim Ward could see his
struggling, antique Ford raising a low cloud of dust a mile down the
road.
Jim leaned heavily upon the stout
cedar post that supported the mailbox and when Mr. McAfee rattled up he
managed to wave and smile cheerily.
Mr. McAfee adjusted his
spectacles on the bridge of his nose with a rapid trombone manipulation.
"Bless me, Jim, it's good to see
you up and around!"
"Pretty good to be up." Jim
managed to force enthusiasm into his voice. But he knew he couldn't
stand talking very long to old Charles McAfee as if everything had not
changed since the last time.
"Any mail for the Wards, today?"
The postman shuffled the fistful
of mail. "Only one."
Jim glanced at the return address
block and shrugged. "I'm on the sucker lists already. They don't lose
any time when they find out there's still bones left to pick on. You
keep it."
He turned painfully and faced
toward the house. "I've got to be getting back. Glad to have seen you,
Mr. McAfee."
"Yeah, sure, Jim. Glad to have
seen you. But I . . . er ... got to deliver the mail—" He held the
letter out hopefully.
"O.K." Jim laughed sharply and
grasped the circular.
He went only as far as the giant
oak whose branches extended far enough to overshadow the mailbox. He
sat down in the shade with his back against the great bole and tried to
watch the echelon still soaring above the valley through the rifts in
the leaf coverage above him. After a time he glanced down at the
circular letter from which his fingers were peeling little fragments of
paper. Idly, he ripped open the envelope and glanced at the contents.
In cheap, garish typograph with splatterings of red and purple ink the
words seemed to be trying to jump at him.
SERVICEMAN—WHAT OF THE FUTURE?
You have come back from the wars.
You have found life different than you knew it before, and much that
was familiar is gone. But new things have come, new things that are
here to stay and are a part of
the world you are going to live in.
Have you thought of the place you
will occupy? Are you prepared to resume life in the ways of peace?
WE CAN HELP YOU
Have you heard of the POWER
CO-ORDINATOR? No, of course you haven't because it has been a hush-hush
secret source of power that has been turning the wheels of war
industries for many months. But now the secret of this vast source of
new power can be told, and the need for hundreds, yes, thousands of
trained technicians—such as you, yourself, may become—will be
tremendous in the next decade.
LET US PROVE TO YOU
Let us prove to you that we know
what we are talking about. We are so certain that you, as a soldier
trained in intricate operations of the machines of war, will be
interested in this almost miraculous new source of power and the
technique of handling it that we are willing to send you absolutely
FREE the first three lessons of our twenty-five lesson course that will
train you to be a POWER CO-ORDINATOR technician.
Let us prove it to you. Fill out
the enclosed coupon and mail it today!
Don't just shrug and throw this
circular away as just another advertisement. MAIL THE COUPON NOW!
* * *
Jim Ward smiled reminiscently at
the style of the circular. It reminded him of Billy Hensley and the
time when they were thirteen. They sent in all the clipped and
filled-out coupons they could find in magazines. They had samples of
soap and magic tricks and catalogues and even a live bird came as the
result of one. They kept all the stuff in Hensley's attic until Billy's
dad finally threw it all out.
Impulsively, in whimsical tribute
to the gone-forever happiness of those days, Jim Ward scratched his
name and address in pencil and told the power co-ordinators to send him
their three free lessons.
Mr. McAfee had only another mile
to go up the road before he came to the end and
returned past the Ward farm to Kramer's Forks. Jim waited and hailed
him.
"Want to take another letter?"
The postman halted the clattering
Ford and jumped down. "What's that?"
Jim repeated his request and held
up the stamped reply card. "Take this with you?"
Mr. McAfee turned it over and
read every word on the back of the card. "Good thing," he grunted. "So
you're going to take a correspondence course in this new power
what-is-it? I think that's mighty fine, Jim. Give you new
interests—sort of take your mind off things."
"Yeah, sure." Jim struggled up
with the aid of his cane and the bole of the oak tree. "Better see if I
can make it back to the house now."
All the whimsy and humor had
suddenly gone out of the situation.
* * *
It was a fantastically short
time—three days later—that Mr. McAfee stopped again at the Ward farm.
He glanced at the thick envelope in his pack and the return address
block it bore. He could see Jim Ward on the farmhouse porch and turned
the Ford up the lane. Its rattle made Jim turn his head and open his
eyes from the thoughtless blankness into which he had been trying to
sink. He removed the pipe from his mouth and watched the car approach.
"Here's your course," shouted Mr.
McAfee. "Here's your first lesson!"
"What lesson?"
"The correspondence course you
sent for. The power what-is-it? Don't you remember?"
"No," said Jim. "I'd forgotten
all about it. Take the thing away. I don't want it. It was just a silly
joke."
"You hadn't ought to feel that
way, Jim. After all, your leg is going to be all right. I heard the Doc
say so down in the drugstore last night. And everything is going to be
all right. There's no use of letting it get you down. Besides—I got to
deliver the mail."
He tossed the brown envelope on
the porch beside Jim. "Brought it up special because I thought you'd be
in a hurry to get it."
Jim smiled in apology. "I'm
sorry, Mac. Didn't mean to take it out on you. Thanks for
bringing it up. I'll study it good and hard this morning right here on
the porch."
Mr. McAfee beamed and nodded and
rattled away. Jim closed his eyes again, but he couldn't find the
pleasing blankness he'd found before. Now the screen of his mind showed
only the sky with thundering, plummeting engines—and the face of a
girl lying still and white with closed eyes.
Jim opened his eyes and his hands
slipped to his sides and touched the envelope. He ripped it open and
scanned the pages. It was the sort of stuff he had collected as a boy,
all right He glanced at the paragraph headings and tossed the first
lesson aside. A lot of obvious stuff about comparisons between steam
power and waterfalls and electricity. It seemed all jumbled up like a
high school student's essay on the development of power from the time
of Archimedes.
The mimeographed pages were
poorly done. They looked as if the stencils had been cut on a
typrwriter that had been hit on the type faces with a hammer.
He tossed the second lesson aside
and glanced at the top sheet of the third. His hand arrested itself
midway in the act of tossing this lesson beside the other two. He
caught a glimpse of the calculations on an inside page and opened up
the booklet.
There was no high school stuff
there. His brain struggled to remember the long unused methods of the
integral calculus and the manipulation of partial differential
equations.
There were pages of the stuff. It
was like a sort of beacon light, dim and far off, but pointing a sure
pathway to his mind and getting brighter as he progressed. One by one,
he followed the intricate steps of the math and the short paragraphs of
description between. When at last he reached the final page and turned
the book over and scowled heavily the sun was halfway down the
afternoon sky.
He looked away over the fields
and pondered. This was no elementary stuff. Such math as this didn't
belong in a home study correspondence course. He picked up the envelope
and concentrated on the return address block.
All it said was: M. H. Quilcon
Schools, Henderson, Iowa. The lessons were signed at the bottom with
the mimeographed reproductions of M. H. Quilcon's ponderous signature.
Jim picked up lesson one again
and began reading slowly and carefully, as if hidden between the lines
he might find some mystic message.
By the end of July his leg was
strong enough for him to walk without the cane. He walked slowly and
with a limp and once in a while the leg gave way as if he had a trick
knee. But he learned quickly to catch himself before he fell and he
reveled in the thrill of walking again.
By the end of July the tenth
lesson of the correspondence course had arrived and Jim knew that he
had gone as far as he could alone. He was lost in amazement as he moved
in the new scientific wonderland that opened up before him. He had
known that great strides had been made in techniques and production,
but it seemed incredible that such a basic discovery as power
co-ordination had been producing war machines these many months. He
wondered why the principle had not been applied more directly as a
weapon itself—but he didn't understand enough about it to know whether
it could or not. He didn't even understand yet from where the basic
energy of the system was derived.
The tenth lesson was as poorly
produced as the rest of them had been, but it was practically a book in
its thickness. When he had finished it Jim knew that he had to know
more of the background of the new science. He had to talk to someone
who knew something about it. But he knew of no one who had ever heard
of it. He had seen no advertisements of the M. H. Quilcon Schools. Only
the first circular and these lessons.
As soon as he had finished the
homework on lesson ten and had given it into Mr. McAfee's care, Jim
Ward made up his mind to go down to Henderson, Iowa, and visit the
Quilcon School.
He wished he had retained the
lesson material because he could have taken it there faster than it
would arrive via the local mail channels.
* * *
The streamliner barely stopped at
Henderson, Iowa, long enough to allow him to disembark. Then it was
gone and Jim Ward stared about him.
The sleepy looking ticket seller,
dispatcher, and janitor eyed him wonderingly and spat a huge amber
stream across his desk and out the window.
"Looking for somebody, mister?"
"I'm looking for Henderson, Iowa.
Is this it?" Jim asked dubiously.
"You're here, mister. But don't
walk too fast or you'll be out of it. The city limits only
go a block past Smith's Drugstore."
Jim noticed the sign over the
door and glanced at the inscription that he had not seen before:
Henderson, Iowa. Pop. 806.
"I'm looking for a Mr. M. H.
Quilcon. He runs a correspondence school here somewhere. Do you know of
him?"
The depot staff shifted its cud
again and spat thoughtfully. "Been here twenty-nine years next October.
Never heard a name like that around here, and I know 'em all."
"Are there any correspondence
schools here?"
"Miss Marybell Anne Simmons gives
beauty operator lessons once in a while, but that's all the school of
that kind that I know of."
Disconcerted, Jim Ward murmured
his thanks and moved slowly out of the station. The sight before him
was dismaying. He wondered if the population hadn't declined since the
estimate on the sign in the station was made.
A small mercantile store that
sagged in the middle faced him from across the street. Farther along
was a tiny frame building labeled Sheriffs Office. On his side Jim saw
Smith's drugstore a couple of hundred feet down from the station with a
riding saddle and a patented fertilizer displayed in the window. In the
other direction was the combined post office, bank and what was
advertised as a newspaper and printing office.
Jim strode toward this last
building while curious watchers on the porch of the mercantile store
stared at him trudging through the dust.
The postmistress glanced up from
the armful of mail that she was sorting into boxes as Jim entered. She
offered a cheery hello that seemed to tinkle from the buxom figure.
"I'm looking for a man named
Quilcon. I thought you might be able to give me some information
concerning him."
"Kweelcon?" She furrowed
her brow. "There's no one here by that name. How do you spell it?"
Before he could answer, the woman
dropped a handful of letters on the floor. Jim was certain that he saw
the one he had mailed to the school before he left.
As the woman stooped to recover
the letters a dark brown shadow streaked across the floor. Jim got the
momentary impression of an enormous brown slug moving with lightning
speed.
The postmistress gave a scream of
anger and scuffled her feet to the door. She returned in a moment.
"Armadillo," she explained. "Darn
thing's been hanging around here for months and nobody seems to be able
to kill it." She resumed putting the mail in the boxes.
"I think you missed one," said
Jim. She did not have the one that he recognized as the one he'd mailed.
The woman looked about her on the
floor. "I got them all, thank you. Now what did you say this man's name
was?"
Jim leaned over the counter and
looked at the floor. He was sure—But there was obviously no other
letter in sight and there was no place it could have gone.
"Quilcon," said Jim slowly. 'Tm
not sure of the pronunciation myself, but that's the way it seemed it
should be."
"There's no one in Henderson by
that name. Wait a minute now. That's a funny thing—you know it was
about a month ago that I saw an envelope going out of here with a name
something like that in the upper left corner. I thought at the time it
was a funny name and wondered who put it in, but I never did find out
and I thought I'd been dreaming. How's you know to come here looking
for him?"
"I guess I must have received the
mail you saw."
"Well, you might ask Mr. Herald.
He's in the newspaper office next door. But I'm sure there's no one in
this town by that name."
"You publish a newspaper here?"
The woman laughed. "We call it
that. Mr. Herald owns the bank and a big farm and puts this out free as
a hobby, It's not much, but everybody in town reads it. On Saturday he
puts out a regular printed edition. This is the daily."
She held up a small mimeographed
sheet that was moderately legible. Jim glanced at it and moved towards
the door. "Thanks, anyway."
As he went out into the summer
sun there was something gnawing at his brain, an intense
you-forgot-something-in-there sort of feeling. He couldn't place it and
tried to ignore it.
Then as he stepped across the
threshold of the printing office he got it. That mimeographed newssheet
he had seen—it bore a startling resemblance to the lessons he had
received from M. H. Quilcon. The same purple ink. Slightly crooked
sheets. But that was foolish to try to make a connection there. All
mimeographed jobs looked about alike.
Mr. Herald was a portly little
man with a fringe around his baldness. Jim repeated his inquiry.
"Quilcon?" Mr. Herald pinched his
lips thoughtfully. "No, can't say as I ever heard the name. Odd
name—I'm sure I'd know it if I'd ever heard it."
Jim Ward knew that further
investigation here would he a waste of time. There was something wrong
somewhere. The information in his correspondence course could not be
coming out of this half dead little town.
He glanced at a copy of the
newssheet lying on the man's littered desk beside an ancient Woodstock.
"Nice little sheet you put out there," said Jim.
Mr. Herald laughed. "Well, it's
not much, but I get a kick out of it, and the people enjoy reading
about Mrs. Kelly's lost hogs and the Dorius kid's whooping cough. It
livens things up."
"Ever do any work for anybody
else—printing or mimeographing?"
"If anybody wants it, but I
haven't had an outside customer in three years."
Jim glanced about searchingly.
The old Woodstock seemed to be the only typewriter in the room.
"I might as well go on," he said.
"But I wonder if you'd mind letting me use your typewriter to write a
note and leave in the postoffice for Quilcon if he ever shows up."
"Sure, go ahead. Help yourself."
Jim sat down before the clanking
machine and hammered out a brief paragraph while Mr. Herald wandered to
the back of the shop. Then Jim rose and shoved the paper in his pocket.
He wished he had brought a sheet from one of the lessons with him.
"Thanks," he called to Mr.
Herald. He picked up a copy of the latest edition of the newspaper and
shoved it in his pocket with the typed sheet
* * *
On the trip homeward he studied
the mimeographed sheet until he had memorized every line, but he
withheld conclusions until he reached home.
From the station he called the
farm and Hank, the hired man, came to pick him up. The ten miles out to
the farm seemed like a hundred. But at last in his own room Jim spread
out the two sheets of paper he'd brought with him and opened up lesson
one of the correspondence course.
There was no mistake. The
stencils of the course manuals had been cut on Mr. Herald's ancient
machine. There was the same nick out of the side of the o, and the b
was flattened on the bulge. The r was minus half its base.
Mr. Herald had prepared the
course.
Mr. Herald must then be M. H.
Quilcon. But why had he denied any knowledge of the name? Why had he
refused to see Jim and admit his authorship of the course?
At ten o'clock that night Mr.
McAfee arrived with a special delivery letter for Jim.
"I don't ordinarily deliver these
way out here this time of night," he said. "But I thought you might
like to have. it. Might be something important. A job or something,
maybe. It's from Mr. Quilcon."
"Thanks. Thanks for bringing it,
Mac."
Jim hurried into his room and
ripped open the letter. It read:
Dear Mr. Ward:
Your progress in understanding
the principles of power co-ordination are exceptional and I am very
pleased to note your progress in connection with the tenth lesson which
I have just received from you.
An unusual opportunity has arisen
which I am moved to offer you. There is a large installation of a power
co-ordination engine in need of vital repairs some distance from here.
I believe that you are fully qualified to work on this machine, under
supervision which will be provided and you would gain some valuable
experience. The installation is located some distance from the city of
Henderson. It is about two miles out on the Balmer Road. You will find
there the Hortan Machine Works at which the installation is located.
Repairs are urgently needed and you are the closest qualified student
able to take advantage of this opportunity which might lead to a
valuable permanent connection. Therefore, I request that you come at
once. I will meet you there.
Sincerely,
M. H. Quilcon
For a long time Jim Ward sat on
the bed with the letter and the sheets of paper spread out before him.
What had begun as a simple quest for information was rapidly becoming
an intricate puzzle.
Who was M. H. Quilcon?
It seemed obvious that Mr.
Herald, the banker and part-time newspaper publisher, must be Quilcon.
The correspondence course manuals had certainly been produced on his
typewriter. The chances of any two typewriters having exactly the same
four or five disfigurements in type approached the infinitesimal.
And Herald—if he were
Quilcon—must have written this letter just before or shortly after
Jim's visit. The letter was certainly a product of the ancient
Woodstock.
There was a fascination in the
puzzle and a sense of something sinister, Jim thought. Then he laughed
aloud at his own melodrama and began repacking the suitcase. There was
a midnight train he could get back to Henderson.
It was hot afternoon when he
arrived in the town for the second time. The station staff looked up in
surprise as he got off the train.
"Back again? I thought you'd
given up."
"I've found out where Mr. Quilcon
is. He's at the Hortan Machine Works. Can you tell me exactly where
that is?"
"Never heard of it."
"It's supposed to be about two
miles out of town on Balmer Road."
"That's just the main street of
town going on down through the Willow Creek district. There's no
machine works out there. You must be in the wrong state, mister. Or
somebody's kidding you."
"Do you think Mr. Herald could
tell me anything about such a machine shop. I mean, does he know
anything about machinery or things related to it?"
"Man, no! Old man Herald don't
care about nothing but money and that little fool paper of his.
Machinery! He can't hook up anything more complicated than his
suspenders."
Jim started down the main street
toward the Willow Creek district. Balmer Road rapidly narrowed and
turned, leaving the town out of sight behind a low rise. Willow Creek
was a glistening thread in the midst of meadow land.
There was no more unlikely spot
in the world for a machine works of any kind, Jim thought. Someone must
be playing an utterly fantastic joke on him. But how or why they had
picked on him was mystifying.
At the same time he knew within
him that it was no joke. There was a deadly seriousness about it all.
The principles of power co-ordination were right.
He had slaved and dug through them enough to be sure of that. He felt
that he could almost build a power co-ordinating engine now with the
proper means—except that he didn't understand from where the power was
derived!
In the timelessness of the bright
air about him, with the only sound coming from the brook and the leaves
on the willow trees beside it, Jim found it impossible to judge time or
distance.
He paced his steps and counted
until he was certain that at least two miles had been covered. He
halted and looked about almost determined to go back and re-examine the
way he had come.
He glanced ahead, his eyes
scanning every minute detail of the meadowland. And then he saw it.
The sunlight glistened as if on a
metal surface. And above the bright spot in the distance was the
faintly readable legend:
HORTAN MACHINE WORKS
Thrusting aside all judgment
concerning the incredibility of a machine shop in such a locale, he
crossed the stream and made his way over the meadow toward the small
rise.
As he approached, the, machine
works appeared to be merely a dome-shaped structure about thirty feet
in diameter and with an open door in one side. He came up to it with a
mind ready for anything. The crudely painted sign above the door looked
as if it had been drawn by an inexpert barn painter in a state of
intoxication.
Jim entered the dimly lit
interior of the shop and set his case upon the floor beside a narrow
bench that extended about the room.
Tools and instruments of
unfamiliar design were upon the bench and upon the walls. But no one
appeared.
Then he noticed an open door and
a steep, spiral ramp that led down to a basement room. He stepped
through and half slid, half walked down to the next level.
There was artificial lighting by
fluorescent tubes of unusual construction, Jim noticed. But still no
sign of anyone. And there was not an object in the room that appeared
familiar to him. Articles that vaguely resembled furniture were against
the walls.
He felt uneasy amid the
strangeness of the room and he was about to go back up the steep ramp
when a voice came to him.
"This is Mr. Quilcon. Is that
you, Mr. Ward?"
"Yes. Where are you?"
"I am in the next room, unable to
come out until I finish a bit of work I have started. Will you please
go on down to the room below? You will find the damaged machinery
there. Please go right to work on it. I'm sure that you have a complete
understanding of what is necessary. I will join you in a moment"
* * *
Hesitantly, Jim turned to the
other side of the room where he saw a second ramp leading down to a
brilliantly lighted room. He glanced about once more, then moved down
the ramp.
The room was high-ceilinged and
somewhat larger in diameter than the others he had seen and it was
almost completely occupied by the machine.
A series of close fitting towers
with regular bulbous swellings on their columns formed the main
structure of the engine. These were grouped in a solid circle with
narrow walkways at right angles to each other passing through them.
Jim Ward stood for a long time
examining their surfaces that rose twenty feet from the floor. All that
he had learned from the curious correspondence course seemed to fall
into place. Diagrams and drawings of such machines had seemed
incomprehensible. Now he knew exactly what each part was for and how
the machine operated.
He squeezed his body into the
narrow walkway between the towers and wormed his way to the center of
the engine. His bad leg made it difficult, but he at last came to the
damaged structure.
One of the tubes had cracked open
under some tremendous strain and through the slit he could see the
marvelously intricate wiring with which it was filled. Wiring that was
burned now and fused to a mass. It was in a control circuit that
rendered the whole machine functionless, but its repair would not be
difficult, Jim knew.
He went back to the periphery of
the engine and found the controls of a cranelike device which he
lowered and seized the cracked sleeve and drew off the damaged part.
From the drawers and bins in the
walls he selected parts and tools and returned to the damaged spot.
In the cramped space he began
tearing away the fused parts and wiring. He was lost and utterly
unconscious of anything but the fascination of the mighty engine. Here
within this room was machine capacity to power a great city.
Its basic function rested upon
the principle of magnetic currents in contrast to electric currents.
The discovery of magnetic currents had been announced only a few months
before he came home from the war. The application of the discovery had
been swift.
And he began to glimpse the
fundamental source of the energy supplying the machine. It was in the
great currents of gravitational and magnetic force flowing between the
planets and the suns of the universe. As great as atomic energy and as
boundless in its resources, this required no fantastically dangerous
machinery to harness. The principle of the power co-ordinator was
simple.
The pain of his cramped position
forced Jim to move out to rest his leg. As he stood beside the engine
he resumed his pondering on the purpose it had in this strange
location. Why was it built there and what use was made of its power?
He moved about to restore the
circulation in his legs and sought to trace the flow of energy through
the engine, determine where and what kind of a load was placed upon it.
His search led him below into a
third sub-basement of the building and there he found the thing he was
searching for, the load into which the tremendous drive of the engine
was coupled.
But here he was unable to
comprehend fully, for the load was itself a machine of strange design,
and none of its features had been covered in the correspondence course.
The machine upstairs seized upon
the magnetic currents of space and selected and concentrated those
flowing in a given direction.
The force of these currents was
then fed into the machines in this room, but there was no point of
reaction against which the energy could be applied.
Unless—
The logical, inevitable
conclusion forced itself upon his mind. There was only one conceivable
point of reaction.
He stood very still and a tremor
went through him. He looked up at the smooth walls about him. Metal,
all of them.
And this room—it was narrower
than the one above—as if the entire building were tapered from the dome
protruding out of the earth to the basement floor.
The only possible point of
reaction was the building itself.
But it wasn't a building. It was
a vessel.
* * *
Jim clawed and stumbled his way
up the incline into the engine room, then beyond into the chamber
above. He was halfway up the top ramp when he heard the voice again.
"Is that you, Mr. Ward? I have
almost finished and will be with you in a moment. Have you completed
the repairs. Was it very difficult?"
He hesitated, but didn't answer.
Something about the quality of that voice gave him a chill. He hadn't
noticed it before because of his curiosity and his interest in the
place. Now he detected its unearthly, inhuman quality.
He detected the fact that it
wasn't a voice at all, but that the words had been formed in his brain
as if he himself had spoken them.
He was nearly at the top of the
ramp and drew himself on hands and knees to the floor level when he saw
the shadow of the closing door sweep across the room and heard the
metallic dang of the door. It was sealed tight. Only the small
windows—or ports—admitted light.
He rose and straightened and
calmed himself with the thought that the vessel could not fly. It could
not rise with the remainder of the repair task unfinished—and he was
not going to finish it; that much was certain.
"Quilcon!" he called. "Show
yourself! Who are you and what do you want of me?"
"I want you to finish the repair
job and do it quickly," the voice replied instantly. "And quickly—it
must be finished quickly."
There was a note of desperation
and despair that seemed to cut into Jim. Then he caught sight of the
slight motion against the wall beside him.
In a small, transparent
hemisphere that was fastened to the side of the wall lay the slug that
Jim had seen at the post office, the thing the woman had called an
"armadillo." He had not even noticed it when he first entered the room.
The thing was moving now with slow pulsations that swelled its surface
and great welts like dark veins stood out upon it.
From the golden-hued hemisphere a
maze of cable ran to instruments and junction boxes
around the room and a hundred tiny pseudopods grasped terminals inside
the hemisphere.
It was a vessel—and this slug
within the hemisphere was its alien, incredible pilot. Jim knew it with
startling cold reality that came to him in waves of thought that
emanated from the slug called Quilcon and broke over Jim's mind. It was
a ship and a pilot from beyond Earth—from out of the reaches of space.
* * *
"What do you want of me? Who are
you?" said Jim Ward.
"I am Quilcon. You are a good
student. You learn well."
"What do you want?"
"I want you to repair the damaged
engine."
There was something wrong with
the creature. Intangibly, Jim sensed it. An aura of sickness, a
desperate urgency came to his mind.
But something else was in the
foreground of Jim's mind. The horror of the alien creature diminshed
and Jim contemplated the miracle that had come to mankind.
"I'll bargain with you," he said
quietly. "Tell me how to build a ship like this for my people and I
will
fix the engines for you."
"No! No—there is no time for
that. I must hurry—"
"Then I shall leave without any
repairs."
He moved toward the door and
instantly a paralyzing wave took hold of him as if he had seized a pair
of charged electrodes. It relaxed only as he stumbled back from the
door.
"My power is weak," said Quilcon,
"but it is strong enough for many days yet—many of your days. Too many
for you to live without food and water. Repair the engine and then I
shall let you go."
"Is what I ask too much to pay
for my help?"
"You have had pay enough. You can
teach your people to build power co-ordinator machines. Is that not
enough?"
"My people want to build ships
like this one and move through space."
"I cannot teach you that I do not
know. I did not build this ship."
There were surging waves of
troubled thought that washed over his mind, but Jim Ward's tenseness
eased. The first fear of totally alien life drifted from his mind and
he felt a strange affinity for the creature. It was injured and sick,
he knew, but he could not believe
that it did not know how the ship was built.
"Those who built this ship come
often to trade upon my world," said Quilcon. "But we have no such ships
of our own. Most of us have no desire to see anything but the damp
caves and sunny shores of our own world. But I longed to see the worlds
from which these ships came.
"When this one landed near my
cave I crept in and hid myself. The ship took off then and we traveled
an endless time. Then an accident to the engine killed all three of
those who manned the ship and I was left alone.
"I was injured, too, but I was
not killed. Only the other of me died."
Jim did not understand the queer
phrase, but he did not break into Quilcon's story.
"I was able to arrange means to
control the flight of the ship, to prevent its destruction as it landed
upon this planet, but I could not repair it because of the nature of my
body."
Jim saw then that the creature's
story must be true. It was obvious that the ship had been built to be
manned by beings utterly unlike Quilcon.
"I investigated the city of yours
near by and learned of your ways and customs. I needed the help of one
of you to repair the ship. By force I could persuade one of you to do
simple tasks, but none so complex as this requires.
"Then I discovered the peculiar
customs of learning among you. I forced the man Herald to prepare the
materials and send them to you. I received them before the person at
the post office could see them. I got your name from the newspapers
along with several others who were unsatisfactory.
"I had to teach you to understand
the power co-ordinator because only by voluntary operation of your
highest faculties will you be able to understand and repair the
machine. I can assist but not force you to do that."
The creature began pleading
again. "And now will you repair the engine quickly. I am dying—but
shall live longer than you—it is a long journey to my home planet, but
I must get there and I need every instant of time that is left to me."
* * *
Jim caught a glimpse of the dream
vision that was the creature's home world. It was a place of security
and peace—in Quilcoa's terms. But even its alienness did not block out
the sense of quiet beauty that
Quilcon's mind transmitted to Jim's. They were a species of high
intelligence. Exceptionally developed in the laws of mathematics and
theory of logic, they were handicapped in bodily development from
inquiring into other fields of science whose existence was demonstrated
by their logic and their mathematics. The more intellectual among them
were frustrated creatures whose lives were made tolerable only by an
infinite capacity for stoicism and adaptation.
But of them all, Quilcon was
among the most restless and rebellious and ambitious. No one of them
had ever dared such a journey as he had taken. A swelling pity and
understanding came over Jim Ward.
"I'll bargain with you," he said
desperately. "I'll repair the engine if you'll let me have its
principles. If you don't have them, you can get them to me with little
trouble. My people must have such a ship as this."
He tried to visualize what it
would mean to Earth to have space flight a century or perhaps five
centuries before the slow plodding of science and research might reveal
it.
But the creature was silent.
"Quilcon—" Jim repeated. He hoped
it hadn't died.
"I'll bargain with you," said
Quilcon at last. "Let me be the other of you, and I'll give you what
you want."
"The other of me? What are you
talking about?"
"It is hard for you to
understand. It is union—such as we make upon our world. When two or
more of us want to be together we go together in the same brain, the
same body. I am alone now, and it is an unendurable existence because I
have known what it is to have another of me.
"Let me come into your brain,
into your mind and live there with you. We will teach your people and
mine. We will take this ship to all the universes of which living
creatures can dream. It is either this or we both die together, for too
much time has gone for me to return. This body dies."
Stunned by Quilcon's ultimatum,
Jim Ward stared at the ugly slug on the wall. Its brown body was
heaving with violent pulsations of pain and a sense of delirium and
terror came from it to Jim.
"Hurry! Let me come!" it pleaded.
He could feel sensations as if
fingers were probing his cranium looking, pleading for entrance. It
turned him cold.
He looked into the years and
thought of an existence with this alien mind in his. Would they battle
for eventual possession of his body and he perhaps be subjected to
slavery in his own living corpse?
He tried to probe Quilcon's
thoughts, but he could find no sense or intent of conquest. There were
almost human amenities intermingled with a world of new science and
thought.
He knew Quilcon would keep his
promise to give the secrets of the ship to the men of Earth. That alone
would be worth the price of his sacrifice—if it should be sacrifice.
"Come!" he said quietly.
It was as if a torrent of liquid
light were flowing into his brain. It was blinding and excruciating in
its flaming intensity. He thought he sensed rather than saw the brown
husk of Quilcon quiver in the hemisphere and shrivel like a brown nut.
But in his mind there was union
and he paused and trembled with the sudden great reality of what he
knew. He knew what Quilcon was and gladness flowed into him like light.
A thought soared through his brain: Is sex only in the difference of
bodily function and the texture of skin and the tone of voice?
He thought of another day when
there was death in the sky and on the Earth below, and in a little
field hospital. A figure on a white cot had murmured, "You'll be all
right, Jim. I'm going on, I guess, but you'll be all right. I know it.
Don't miss me too much."
He had known there would be no
peace for him ever, but now there was peace and the voice of Quilcon
was like that voice from long ago, for as the creature probed into his
thoughts its inherent adaptability matched its feelings and thought to
his and said, "Everything is all right, isn't it, Jim Ward?"
"Yes ... yes it is." The
intensity of his feelings almost blinded him. "And I want to call you
Ruth, after another Ruth—"
"I like that name." There was
shyness and appreciation in the tones, and it was not strange to Jim
that he could not see the speaker, for there was a vision in his mind
far lovelier than any Earthly vision could have been.
"We'll have everything," he said,
"Everything that your world and mine can offer. We'll see them all."
But like the other Ruth who had
been so practical, this one was, too. "First we have to
repair the engine. Shall we do it, now?"
The solitary figure of Jim Ward
moved toward the ramp and disappeared into the depths of the ship.