KENNETH
BULMER has been rated by New Worlds
magazine as "Great
Britain's hardest working science-fiction writer." A native of London, he
has produced many novels and short stories, as well as non-fiction articles on
scientific subjects.
Buhner states that he has been reading and
writing science-fiction for longer than he cares to remember, starring both
while still at school in the early 1920's. During the war he served with the
Royal Corps of Signals and published and edited a Service magazine in Africa,
Sicily and Italy. It was while basking in the Italian sunshine that he first
heard of an atomic bomb having been detonated over Japan—and thought it was
just another hoax of his comrades.
He is an active member of London
"fan" circles, but also includes among his hobbies model ship
construction, motor racing and the study of the Napoleonic legend.
WHEN
THE HEAVENS FALL, MEN MUST FIGHTI
Keston Ochiltree's visit
home had been short and disastrous. His newborn nephew had proved to be one of
the Hopeless Ones and had only served to remind him of the present plight of
mankind. Keston knew that the decision he was being
called on to make might mean a new start for humanity or the end of their
underwater civilization.
Each
day found more Hopeless Ones being bom: pitiful
creatures with webbed hands and feet. More important, the inhuman Zammu were pressing their attack in a fierce struggle
between species. Most important, the silver sky was lowering. The shimmering
sky-level would soon shrink until they all burned in the gaseous beyond.
So Keston's decision might mean everything. Should he stay in
the Emperor's shark-cavalry to fight the Zammu? Or
should he join Professor Lansing in an illegal attempt to find what lay BEYOND
THE SILVER SKY?
Turn this book over for second complete novel
BEYOND THE SILVER SKY
by
KENNETH BULMER
ACE BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N.Y.
BEYOND
THE SILVER SKY
Copyright ©, 1961, by Ace Books, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Other Ace novels
by this
author:
CITY
UNDER THE SEA (D-255)
THE
SECRET OF ZI (D-331)
THE
CHANGELING WORLDS (D-369)
THE EARTH GODS ARE COMING (D-453)
MEETING
AT INFINITY
Copyright ©, 1961, by Ace
Books, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
The wild lands had encroached perilously around the
homestead in the ten seasons since he had gone away from Ochiltree. The
nearness of the sky shocked him. He started the turboflier
again from where he had paused along the ridge and
dived towards the house in a sweeping curve that crossed matted beds of weeds
and slides of glutinous mud where there had been trim rows of tended juicy
bivalves the day he waved goodbye.
His long hair swirled in the turbulence of
his passage and the homecoming ache in him filled his throat with a longing
both sweet and poignant. No man with wisdom in his skull stayed away too long. Too long:
the very syllables echoed
the deflated depression that had sprung so unexpectedly and disconsolately upon
him. Everything changed, himself included, and before
he could relax in the old familiar ways he would have to meet the family as a
stranger.
Although the nearness of the sky depressed
and alarmed him, so that he fingered his trident in the fighting man's instinctive
search for reassurance from his weapons, there was in him none of the rife and
mind-destroying fear of superstition that riddle the outer keeps. There was
even a strange joy to be taken from the colors and the iridescence about him.
A figure rose from the balcony as he
approached. It finned up toward him. So close to the shimmering sky her white
clothing was tinted into a luminous blue and the jewels in her hair shot back
sparkles of fire. Her lithe rounded body cleft the aquasphere
with impatient, joyous ease. Amazement took him.
"Mirameel"
She curved in toward him and caught the guard rail of
the
shell-shaped turboflier, clinging, gasping and
laughing, holding her head high with hair streaming in the wake. "Miramee! Little sister Mirameel"
She turned herself, eel-like, so that her
laughing and excited face hovered inches from his own.
Her eyes snatched vagrant gleams from the glistening sky.
"Little sister indeed! Why, you sere-skinned
oldster, Kes-ton!"
They laughed together, and the barrier of ten
seasons collapsed like weeds before the slicing blade.
Looking at her as the flier sank toward the
garage, Kes-ton, leaning against the main hall, saw
the gaiety as a mask, a superficial excitement fleetingly generated because her
big brother had returned home after so long. There was a shadow in her eyes and
a pain in her face that might have set him wondering had he not been
oppressively aware of the glittering sky, dancing so closely above their heads
and reflecting menacing ripples from the coral walls of the house.
Dismounting from the turboflier
he prudently left his weapons aboard, remembering Aunt Ranee.
Miramee saw the action and the smile left her face.
She shook her head. "Aunt Ranee is dead. Over
five seasons ago, big brother. We no longer have need
to argue peace or war."
He shook his head in turn so that his long
hair coiled and floated in the aquasphere. The sky
was so close that his hair showed a streaked yellow. But he left the weapons
there, all the same.
Miramee caught his hand. Laughing again, she kicked
off, pulling him towards the vaulted doorway where the bronze gates hung askew
from hinges that had not been used for over a hundred seasons. He was not
wearing his fins—they formed merely an unnecessary impediment aboard a turboflier—and so he calmly allowed her to tow him along.
Inside the courtyard everything was the same,
and yet disturbingly different. He pivoted, idily finning with his naked feet, making small balancing
movements with his hands, looking as his eyes would and drinking in the old
scene and the old memories.
"Come onl"
Miramee was impatient. "Father knew you were
coming."
"He knows!"
"Of course. Since you have gone and the sky has crept
closer we maintain a most efficient intelligence service. The Marhalls audioed that a turboflier—a fighting turboflier—had
ghosted past their keep without stopping for the welcome that awaited within.*'
"I—I was thinking about the reason for
my visit. I had no wish to argue with neighbors until I knew what was in the aquasphere."
She pouted her lips at him, wending across
the courtyard to enter the main doorway. "You were always the cautious
one, Keston."
He smiled, a fleeting, grim smile compounded of memories that would
bring no joy to many men's mothers.
"I have had to be cautious, little
sister. And cunning. And sometimes
ruthless. But I am alive."
She shivered. "Has it been so bad?"
He rallied her, obscurely annoyed that this
homecoming should be so colored with echoes of decay and disaster.
"Away with youl Where
are father and mother?"
On the instant he felt his heart leap. Miramee
had said nothing. Aunt Ranee was dead. Perhaps, too .
. .?
Thankfully, Miramee
pirouetted on one slender fin and pointed behind his back. A voice, a
well-remembered, well-loved voice, said: "So you have come back, Keston."
She was caught up in his arms, pressed close
to his brown and sinewy chest, long before his eyes had time to tell his brain
of the wrinkles on her face, of the tiredness in her eyes and the thin,
listless droop of her figure.
"Mother mine," he
said, after a long time. "Yes, I have come back." Then, because it
would be best to deliver the wounding thrust quickly, so that there would be
all the time at his disposal left for it to heal, he said, "But not for
long. There is a thing I must do—"
"Don't say any more, Keston.
Don't say anything. I know that men's lives are spent out in the deeps and that
a woman must wait in the keep—and wait and wait." She put her arm around
his waist and smiled up at him. Like Keston, she was
not wearing fins, and he remembered the times he had been scolded for wandering
about without strapping on his own.
"Now you can take me to your father. And
kick straight with your legs and hold your head high so that your hair waves.
Remember, - you are a fighting man now. A fighting man . . ." Abruptly she
turned her head down and Keston felt the spasmodic
thrust of her chin against his chest.
Together, they flew past the empty shark pens, with the harness neatly
hanging above, through the doorway and so came into the great hall of
Ochiltree.
It was as he remembered it. Smaller, perhaps; but he was filled out from
the turmoil of batde and bulked large. The groined
roof was more thickly covered with growth, mute testimony to the creeping
dissolution that choked this place and showed its strength'in
its power to undermine his mother's house-proud efficiency. The tattered
banners still floated from their crosstrees, high against the walls. Each
Ochiltree male placed his own banner there on the day he saw his twenty-first
season. Keston's eyes swept instinctively to find his
own. It was there. A flicker of reassurance wanned his heart.
"And do you gawp still, lost in
self-love, lad?" The great voice boomed at him, washing currents of sound
in the vaulted hall. Despite his tally of kills, despite his scars and the
searing memories of desperate encounters against overwhelming odds, despite
his own esteem of himself, despite all the outward symbols of the fighting man
shown in dress and impeccable weapons, despite all the flummery that made of Keston a sudden and dangerous fighting man—despite all
this, he started. He snapped his back straighter automatically as his father
spoke.
Only then, when he was floating with evenly finning
feet and the occasional unconscious gesture of one hand to bring him balancing,
when he was once again in command of himself, did he raise his head and stare
directly at the great chair of the Ochiltrees, where
his father sat, waiting.
He knew the slow, sure fire of purpose in himself should have prepared him for the abnormal sameness
in his father. Where all about him had changed—Miramee
a grown woman, his mother aging and worn down with care, his elder brother Kaley so indifferent to his return as not to be present,
the whole homestead, Ochiltree itself, decaying and wasting away—in all this
change his father, Kevin Ochiltree, was as he remembered him, to the same
clothes the same lines in his stem and uncompromising face, the same jut of
chin and twist of head that he saw in his own mirror.
"I was but remembering my youth, father."
"So you have returned. Well, the time is opportune."
Keston, obscurely and for no easily touchable
reason, did not interrupt his father. He waited patiently until the big man,
sitting in the carved chair of solid stone with the pelts flung in careless profusion upon it, had finished.
Then he said, "I cannot stay long. I came back to say
goodbye."
His mother's hand was on his shoulder.
Asserting himself as he had known he would have to do, with the strength of an
Ochiltree set against an Ochiltree, he felt guilt. Kevin Ochiltree glared at
him and Keston recognized and was torn by that glare.
Here sat a man consumed with anger because he was growing old, with the sky
pressing in on him nearer and nearer with each passing season. And when he turned for comfort and help from his sons, they—sons.
Kaley?
Keston said, "Where is Kaley?"
Miramee said impulsively, "Lissa
is—"
His mother shushed her. "Kaley was married two seasons ago to Lissa,
a girl from the Marhall keep. Kaley
is with her now. Her time is due."
"And that is where you women belong," his father said in that
chest-thrusting voice. "Keston and I have much
to discuss."
"I think—" Keston
paused. He had been about to say: "I think not, father." But he
chopped it off. Not before the women.
When they were alone his
father gestured inperiously. "Sit down, lad."
Keston sat. He sat on the footstool his father
pushed out with one white leg. He repressed his involuntary shock at sight of
that thin, gnarled and shrunken leg. His father's fins, resting on their hooks conveniently
at his back, would swamp both feet with one fin. The crossed tridents on the
wall at his father's back, the sharkskin shield with its memory evoking tang
of shark oil, the ancient bronze sword and the modem, beryl-alloy blade—all
would tax his father's strength merely to wield. No, his father remained true
to Ochiltree and in the general decay could not, after all, remain aloof and
unchanged.
"You look well, soon." There was a
pause. Then: "Times are hard. You recall the Lawson Homestead? Harrap Law-son
and his family?" He shook his head. "They are living with us,
temporarily. They have discreedy kept out of sight
whilst you return home. They are here and they are not the first"
Keston did not have to ask why the Lawson homestead
was no longer tenable. Or, to be precise, of the two reasons
why a keep or a homestead would be abandoned. But the only one that
fitted here was self-evident in that the Lawsons were
still alive.
"How long?" he asked.
Kevin Ochiltree moved one hand at random on
the carved arm of the great chair.
"I am no scientist like you, lad. I am a
plain farmer, livestock man." His mind caught the errant thought.
"You saw the pens?"
Keston nodded somberly. "I did. Nearly empty. And not a mount in the
courtyard. And the weeds and the mud. Ochiltree
must—" Again he paused; it was delicate work telling your own father that
the family home was on the starvation danger level.
Kevin Ochiltree closed his eyes wearily. "How
long? Mar-hall says three seasons at the minimum. Lawson, who saw the
sky descend and engulf his home, says two. I do not know. AH I know is that the
sky is falling upon us and that when Ochiltree is swallowed up I shall not have the heart to leave. I shall sit here with my fins and
my weapons strapped to me and wait for what may be, beyond the silver
sky."
Softly, so that he barely stirred the aquasphere,
Keston said, "And the Zammu?"
Softly as he had spoken, the name rang in the great hall.
Kevin Ochiltree's
granite face set hard, stubbornly, like a grouper refusing to emerge from a
hole with the trident piercing his body. He bunched up, hard and ugly.
"As well talk to me about them as about
the Hopeless Ones." His shrunken legs stirred so that the aquasphere eddied. "The Zammu
have not been seen in this quadrant. I hear only secondhand rumors of them. You
have news?"
"A little. They raid. They kill. They steal. That is
common knowledge."
His father rolled a contemptuous eye upon
him. "And you have been away ten seasons! Studying, so
you said, at the University of Golden Nablus. You are a watchshark with the Emperor. An echelon-leader! The last
audio told great stories of your prowess. And this is all you can tell your own
father of the Zammu?"
"All the details I could tell you
resolve into this one thing. Man is everywhere drawing in, retreating in face
of the descending sky. And the Zammu, who came out of
that sky within the stored archival recordings' time-span, press us, harry us,
kill and steal and soon there will be but one keep and one man and when the Zammu have made an end to him—"
"Man will never have an endingl"
Kevin Ochiltree's
voice was harsh and resonant. A flicker of gold from the pet's cage showed
where his favorite rainbow-fins swirled in unaccustomed alarm,
Long weeds trailing from the groined vaulting undulated beckoningly.
"And when the sky meets the ground?"
Keston had not meant to sound so fierce, so
fatalistic, so crushed. His father sat back, scowling, rubbing one thin hand
across his face. "When that day comes—"
"When it does," Keston
said, amazed at this bludgeoning of his father, "you will long since have
gone beyond the silver sky."
"Don't taunt me, boy. At least, we are
men still. We at least have not fallen into the fatal flaw of the Hopeless
Ones."
"The Zammu kill the Hopeless Ones, too,
father."
"Good. They have ceased to be men. The Zammu never were men, though they ape our ways and our
inventions and steal our secrets. Enough. I
famish." He pressed the worn bell-push set in the arm of the chair.
"Let us eat."
"A noble thought, father. I, too, famish after my journey."
"Remiss of me, lad. Should have offered hospitality before . .
. Let us have more light, so that I may see what University and the Emperor
have done to my son!"
Kevin Ochiltree had bellowed himself into a
good humor; Keston knew that a man's mind cannot face
the final disso
lution and so shies away and seeks outlets in
exuberance. He rallied at his father's mood. The outer keeps were no place for
a fine academic discussion on Man's destiny upon Earth.
The clustered light globes lit up among the festooned weeds
of the ceiling. They shed their calm light outwards, bringing up colors,
putting the natural red back in Keston's hair,
throwing up the brilliance of jewel and precious metal in his father's cloak of
ceremony, bringing out a glittering pseudo-brilliance from the tattered
banners.
"At least the lights are—" Keston
said, and stopped.
His father brushed the implication aside. "Whilst the aquasphere contains sixteen hydrogen atoms to every eight
of oxygen and our thermonuclear reactors operate, Keston,
lad, then we have light and power. Ho, there! Food!"
But it was not food that Miramee and his
mother brought.
They finned in through the doorway leading from the upper bedchambers.
Behind them followed Kaley. Keston
finned upright, to greet his brother as was seemly.
Kaley barely glanced at him. His dark, heavy face,
so much like Keston's and yet, as though retaining
all the brute force and vehemence that in Keston had
been refined into liquid energy, was sullen and indrawn. Now he merely said,
"So you return to eat our food and then depart. Well, I—" And then he
went on, Keston forgotten completely. He floated up
and flew protectively over his mother and the bundle she carried.
Kevin Ochiltree's
old face lit up. His hands began to tremble. He inched forward on the seat,
rising slightly, finning futilely with withered
legs.
"Let me seel"
his great voice boomed. "Let me see my grandson!"
Why, then, was Miramee
hanging back? Why was Kaley scowling so, fingering
the sword at his belt? Why was his mother sobbing so that her gown billowed
about her?
The monstrous suspicion blossomed like an
anemone into certainty in Keston's apalled mind.
Old Kevin Ochiltree was hanging weakly over his seat, peering dodderingly down towards his grandson. Miramee
put one slender hand on her mother's arm and her mother gently, reluctantly,
fearfully, withdrew the undulating shawl about the baby.
Keston rose and finned across,
turned on his stomach and looked down.
The baby's pink and white face was screwed
into a knot of digestion. The frayed mouth parted, seeking, the cheeks dimpled
softly. The eyes of brilliant blue showed wide and unblinking, staring in
wonder upon this strange and dramatic world.
And the hands.
Two tiny curled hands like the most delicate of coral weakly gripped and
moved at the ends of rolled-fat chubby arms. Delicate,
feathery hands. Hands with a tissue-thin membranous
web linking finger to finger and finger to thumb.
Kevin Ochiltree's cry was lost in the silence
of the hall.
His shaking hands wrenched the shawl away,
bared the infant's feet.
A
thin, membranous web, linking toe to toe . . ..
"No!" Kevin Ochiltree choked.
"No! My grandson—a Hopeless Onel
It cannot be! It cannot be!"
"But it is, father." Keston looked
down without compasj-sion on that chubby, baby face.
"My nephew is a Hopeless One. He has webbed hands and feet. You know the
law."
Kaley turned to face Keston
with an abrupt, tortured movement.
"He is my son! I know the law. And I
also know he is my sonl Lissa
went through hell back there for thisl For this, and you quote the law at me."
Quite unmoved, Keston said, "You know the law, Kaley."
His hand groped down along
his side, sliding toward the familiar ridged grip of his sword. "Every
Hopeless One must be killed, instantly, as soon after birth as possible. That
is the law. Our father is incapable of the deed. You, as the father, should be
spared the agony. I will force myself to do it, Kaley,
in sorrow and—"
His hand, groping along the wide sharkskin
belt, could not find his sword. Kaley, eyes wild,
drew his own blade with a snicker that echoed eerily
in this peaceful homestead hall. The women hung as though turned to lumps of
coral,
"You shall not kill my child, Keston, for all the laws in the Empire. Fin back, Keston! You have no weapon, you
left them aboard your flier. Fin back, I say."
Keston retreated, the monstrous, blasphemous form
of the Hopeless One there before him, destined to die at once. And he,
weaponless, could do nothing. His brother would kill him. He knew that, coldly
and logically.
He turned awkwardly with naked feet. In a
long shallow dive he flew towards the door.
Behind him in the great hall of the Ochiltrees he left consternation, heart-bursting grief,
red, illogical rage—and the blasphemous form of a web-footed Hopeless One.
For some reason, all the way back to his turboflier, Keston kept thinking
of that day in primary school when he'd been late because a mudslide had washed
out the north field and his father kept him back to help clear up. He could
only have been six or seven seasons old, then.
The class had been droning some scrap of
rote, a routine task. The smell of cuttlefish ink and the confined ill—circulating
aquasphere was as strong in his nostrils now as it
had been every day at school. Flippering into the
classroom he'd heard the young voices chanting:
"After the worms the
jellyfish, then the Crustacea and the invertebrates,
then the fish, then the breathless ones and after the breathless ones,
Man."
And into his young mind the chant had gone
on: "And after Man, the Zammu."
He'd said this aloud into the silence after the hush of children's voices.
The teacher—a dim and fading memory now—had
rounded on him, stirring plastics from the desk. "After Man, the rat
people, the Hermaphrodilia, the octopoi,
the whole great genus of the Corporate Entities, and then the Zammu. But, Keston
Ochiltree, they are merely transients upon this globe. The rat people existed
for a million seasons, and the octopoi for a hundred
million. Where are they now? Yet Man is still here, still lord and master of
the aquasphere."
"And the Zammu are still here,
after—"
"After a mere fifty thousand
seasons."
He'd rebelled at being proved a shallow thinker. He'd talked back, been
cheeky. He'd then received sharp corporal punishment.
It was at that moment that he'd decided that
he was going to enter the Emperor's watchsharks.
Well, much good it had done him. To be caught
without a weapon—he'd be the laughing stock of the regiment if they heard. The
only reason the octopoi people had at last died out
had been the simple one that Man was not caught without a weapon at his side.
The Zammu would go the same way; all intelligent life
erupting freshly into the aqua-sphere was eventually conquered and banished by
mankind.
Evolution taught that organisms evolved from
simple multicellular forms into higher and higher
forms until at last, a very long rime later and only
a very few forms, evolved into intelligent beings. But Man went on from time
past the knowledge of his scientists through all the foreseeable time to come.
That was the indisputable lesson of all history and archaeology. The aquasphere was Man's.
For however long the aquasphere remained.
Leaning into the flier to retrieve his weapons, Keston
experienced a positive mental ache at the counterpoint to that grandiose
thought. The silver sky was descending. The aqua-sphere was shrinking. There
was one answer to that problem, an answer that only fear-crazed men would
seek, and yet he had volunteered to be one of the band.
And so he had come here to Ochiltree to say goodbye before the great adventure.
And he had come to find a newborn Hopeless
One, one of those poor unfortunates who transgressed through no fault of their
own the cardinal law:
Man is Man. Man must stay Man.
To keep the strain pure no mutations could be allowed even though common
sense indicated that a man with webbed hands and feet, a scaly skin, a strong
paddle-tail, would be more at home finning through
the aquasphere. But the Law that had no recorded
origin said no. Swim fins were so much a part of the dress of man that natural
finned feet would become a hindrance, a scaly skin had its drawbacks, and Keston, like all his fellows, had a horror of tails. It was
all a mystery, shrouded in the distant and still undiscovered origins of
mankind upon his world.
And still Keston
had not buckled on his scabbard and drawn his blade ready to return and slay
the Hopeless One.
Kaley's son. His own nephew. He
slid the sword up and down in the scabbard. Well, he'd seen the family again.
He'd seen his mother and father and little Miramee—and
Kaley. Why prolong the agony? Why go back now, to
face a fight with his brother and his murder and the slaying of the baby? Why
not let Kaley and the Ochiltrees
work out their own salvation?
Near above his head the sky winked and sparkled, sending scuttering radiance in ghosdy
splashes of ever-moving light across the ground. He slid the sword hard back
into its scabbard.
So the law was the law and
a hard taskmaster into the bargain. But of what real deep value was the law, in
these wild days when the sky remorselessly descended, soon to engulf the entire
world and blot out forever all sentient life? Of what value then the slaying of
a tiny, helpless Hopeless One? Of what value then, in the
final reconing, the adherence to the law and the
murder of a tiny newborn baby; his own nephew?
Trapped in a whirlpool of indecision, he
mounted the turboflier and eased the machine into the
aquasphere, sending it spinning along toward Long
Mile Reef. This was an infantile return to the days of his youth, an
instinctive retraction of a matured personality confronted by problems
hitherto outside its scope; Long Mile Reef had been his hiding place and
think-cache for as long as he could remember. Now, returning to it with his
emotions torn and trampled by all that he had experienced in the past moments,
he could find little joy in the eagerly anticipated pilgrimage.
Everything was subdy altered by the awful
nearness of the bedappled sky. Brain corals sprouted
where before had been, to his uncertain memory, merely flat expanses of weed.
But that, of course, could not be so. His memory was at fault. He was careful
with the turboflier. He was still paying off on the
installments, only about halfway through, and his pay as echelon-leader in the
Emperor's watchsharks filled but meagerly the demands
he made upon his purse. A repair bill from clumsily smashing his status-symbol
into an outcrop of coral, on top of the regular payments, would see him finning moodily about barracks with an empty purse instead
of joying in his comrades' company in the taverns
lining Global Way outside the palace.
The dim and looming blue shadow of Long Mile
Reef had vanished. In its place lay a massive weed-encrusted slope rising
steeply to the sky. Again the sense of shock took him. Making all allowance for
the difference in viewpoint from that of ten seasons ago he could yet still not
fully grasp the scale of the catastrophe encompassing the world.
The sky pressed full on Long Mile Reef. Up
there, where as a child he had perched in his own cave snugly buried in the
depths of the aquasphere, washed now the dimpled silver
coins of the sky. He shivered. Then, because he was an Ochiltree, and because
he was one of the Emperor's watch-sharks, he lifted the turboflier
and rose steeply, leaving a bubbling wake trailing beneath. Fronds trailed
past. The colors brightened. Reflections glanced from the burnished handrail.
His hair waving in the wake of his passage resumed its natural auburn tint.
Resolved upon his purpose, he drove on upwards.
He could see for miles, it seemed. Down in the deeps, where normal men
lived and where even the best of the modern artificial lights could penetrate a
mere matter of yards, men's eyesight could pick up objects far beyond mere
ordinary light range. The chemicals in his eyes reacted now, filtering down,
shuttering off the glare. He started about, enchanted.
The first thing that struck him here, having driven through silent and
deserted stretches, was the relative abundance of fish. Wild and untamed, they
lurked in crevices, switched this way and that in thin shoals, their flanks
catching the light and gleaming like a forest of blades. He wondered briefly
what Kaley was doing, allowing all this potential
stock to run wild. But one man could do only so much ....
A hammerhead bumbled along, turning its
clumsy cross-shaped head this way and that. For an instant, as it passed, Keston saw the brand along its flank. The
Flying O. An Ochiltree mount, then. He remembered his own first sharkling— Fury—and the brave bronze-studded harness, and
his arrival so proudly at school. He was tempted to capture this maverick and
take it back but remembered that his problems would not be solved by the
bringing in of one stray.
Amid a brightening fight
and shards of bubbles rising from some source below, he rose higher and higher
toward the sky. He was perversely determined, having come this far, to reach
his old cave. Already he felt sure that up the next weed-smoothed slope he
would run across the little dell where the cave lay.
He had almost reached it, and already the choked exclamation of
disappointment was rising in his throat, when the sky split asunder.
He knew at once what it was.
A wild and ferocious rim-runner would have
reacted with split-second violence, seeing only another threat to his herds.
His father, now, would have drawn his gun and blasted without another thought.
That was the way the men of the outer keeps stayed alive and in business.
A scientist, a studious man from the
University, would have paused and begun to take mental notes, watching in
absorbed fascination a phenomenon which, to him, was as rare as it was common
to a herdsman on the rim of the aqua-sphere.
Keston, bom and bred a
rim-runner and trained as a scientist's assistant and potential micropalaentologist, and by choice and for a living a
member of the Emperor's watch-sharks, was torn between the two extremes.
His drawn gun was in his hand cocked and ready. Then he waited, coasting
quietly along on the turboflier and watching the
flitting shape of the breathless-winged-one as it chased fish. It was quite
large, nearly as large as Keston himself. Its jaws—a beak, to give it its scientific name—were agape and collecting fish at a
prodigious rate. Every now and then a webbed foot flicked down to turn the
lithe body in a graceful curve. Strings of silvery bubbles followed its passage
through the disturbed aquasphere.
These were wild fish, broken loose from the
herds. Abruptly, Keston had no desire to kill the
breathless-winged-one. Where it came from—ah, now, that was the question!
He had spent night after night at the
University, arguing heatedly with his fellow students. Some said this, others
that. Above the sky . . . What lay above the sky?
The breathless-winged-one cavorted past,
turning a beady eye on him. Evidendy it thought
better of attacking the large and ponderous mass of turboflier
and man. Veering off, it shot skywards once again. In a shattering of splintering
shards, it vanished through the sky. Coins danced up there, throwing light in
radiant speckles across Keston's upturned face.
Those of his comrades who argued that the
breathless-winged-ones were essentially the same as the great manta rays spoke
arrant nonsense, according to others. Certainly, Keston
could see little similarity between the manta's ponderous wings and the
incredibly fragile structures, covered with clinging spines,
that had been dissected from slain specimens of the visitors from
beyond the sky. He shook his head. The incident had settled something for him.
Without a backward glance, without a look
either for the cave or for Ochiltree, he turned the turboflier
and set it full throtde back to the capital, back to
the barracks of the Emperor's watchsharks.
Ill
Whetheh or not he believed the story about the first
compressed-gas guns, had never bothered Keston; it
was a good tall story. It went that men in those distant days used to fabricate
a metal tube with a piston equipped with a spring-loaded catch. They filled the
tube, sealed at one end, with gas produced with much laborious care from
blended chemicals, and lowered it at the end of a cable into the great deeps.
Mounting pressure steadily forced the piston up the cylinder, compressing the
gas, until the spring-loaded catch clicked shut, bottling up the gas imprisoned
within. All that was then necessary was the drawing up of the cylinder.
Now, of course, a good few million seasons or
so later, men merely used their nuclear power sources to produce gas at
pressures inconceivable to those early men. And yet, his own researches as a
student working with Professor Lansing had taught him that men had existed on
Earth for millions of seasons before that. The more you delved into the past,
the more the time scales stretched, the longer the perspectives of time opened
up, reeling in the mind an intoxicating vista of forgotten epochs.
Empires had risen and fallen, republics waxed
and waned. Through them all men had gone steadily on, cultivating their farms,
building their villages and cities, as each upheaval subsided sending out fresh
waves of exploring ships to open up lands that had only yesterday teemed with
the activity of their ancestors.
Old Professor Lansing, long hair bleached
under the artificial lighting, had roundly castigated Keston
the day he had told the old man that he was leaving University and entering the
watchsharks.
"Those butchering
maniacs I" Lansing had exclaimed, peering up with eyes more used to the
delicate world in a microscope. "Well, young Keston,
if you must. But think of what you are giving upl You have a great future. Micropalaentology
and archaeology are in their infancy. We have great work to do, great
work."
"Perhaps, when I have served my hitch, Professor . . ."
"Well, go then, go. Rattle your sword.
Use the light-given power of science to fire off guns instead of seeking to unearth
more knowledge of this world we live on. This world is all there is to us. It
is all we have."
"And it is shrinking."
"Yes. Well, one day, one day . . ."
And so that day had dawned. Just like any other day. He'd risen on the
watch alarm, dressed, donning his uniform with skilled and obedient hands,
buckled on his weapons and reported at the guardroom. Echelon-leader Faro was
there.
"Keston,
old son.
You're in for it. Report to no less a person than Guard Commander Nardun himself. In ■ person."
Faro had laughed, his teeth blue and gleaming in the
dawn light. "I'm taking over your duty here. And may the Great Light have
mercy on your soul!"
Guard Commander Nardun,
middle-aged, burly, tough as the sharkskin shield hanging on the wall at his
back, was curt.
"You are asked to
volunteer for an expedition. Professor Lansing specifically requested you. Why,
I cannot imagine." "Yes, sir."
"I cannot tell you what it is. Just report to him. And if you let the watchsharks
down I'll feed you to the stone-fish pen myself. Hear?"
"I hear, guard
commander."
"Fin, then!"
Keston had finned.
So that had brought him here, fleeing from a decision he could not
summon up the courage to take, fleeing from his family after unsatisfactory
goodbyes, fleeing from his own mother and father and brother and sister and the
awful menace that descended upon them more narrowly season after season and
could have but one end and one finale.
He sent the turboflier
skimming over the ground, hurdling dangerously upflung
rock formations, skirting the flanks of knolls, riding across crags that leered
with sharp-fanged edges. The further he went with the dim and ghosüy outlines of massive cliffs rising and falling
across his horizon, the deeper he penetrated into the aquasphere.
The dimpled sky receded, fading, shading from blue into green. The deep
darkness opened out beneath him into which he could plunge bodily and feel at
home. Damage to the flier suddenly seemed of small consequence beside the
inscrutable menace of that silver sky.
Only once, as a headstrong and willful child,
had he ever dared thrust his head through.
Nightmares had plagued him for days afterwards. The memory of heat, of
scorching barrenness, of a condition for which he had no words to describe even
now could bring him up in his hammock, shaking and shuddering. His eyes had
felt as though struck by a sword dipped in nuclear acids. The bludgeoning
impact of that experience had never left him.
The
religious aspects did not fret him overmuch; the taboos about even thinking of
celestial phenomena were still strong and fierce upon his people, especially in
the rankly superstition-ridden outer keeps. But those bonds were slackening
and men's minds were opening out to new ideas, new concepts and new adventures.
The stark terror of the experience stayed
with him as an elemental example of punishment. And yet, standing in the
familiar vaulted rooms at University, idly finning
with curved hands, seeing Professor Lansing smiling at him and proposing his
fantastic expedition, Keston had said yes without
hesitation.
Thinking of Ochiltree, of his family, of his
new little nephew who was a Hopeless One, and of the crushing might of that
descending sky, he felt a negative reassurance, as though he would be leaving
nothing good and nothing worse could befall him.
All across fabled Nablus, the capital city of
the Empire of Goldenzee, the colored watch fires
flared. From tower to spire, cascading down arched and turreted wall, shooting
unexpectedly from recessed embankment, lambent from pendant globes, shedding a
refulgence over the crowds finning in the streets, and
rising and falling from doorwindows set at all
levels, the nuclear flames poured forth their radiance. Nablus was a wonder
city of light and color, sparkling in the crystal aquasphere
like some fabulous gem of mysterious antiquity.
To Keston, nursing his turboflier
with curses and impatient fingers, the city boiled with life and noise and
color and movement. The weed cluster that had been gulped by his motor and
entangled in the turbofan had been partially cleared in a rushed emergency
repair in the current-shelter of a coral outcrop, dead these million of
seasons. Some weed had resisted his poking instruments, so that he had to creep
back along Global Way, heading for the palace and the barracks like some
miserable fish poacher on an outer homestead.
At last the very frenzy of the movement all
about, the intense tone of the clamor, with fighting turbofliers
scudding, crammed with armed men, the absence of women in their brighdy colored trailing garments, the smoothly effortless
sweep of a squadron of shark-mounted cavalry and the current-creating passage
of batteries of heavy artillery drawn by harnessed and electrically controlled
sharks—all this, at last, aroused in him an awareness that all was not as well
with fabled Nablus as when he had left it.
Were all returns then to be dogged by this
brooding menace of imminent disaster?
A passing militiaman, brilliandy
accoutered, swinging from his swordfish mount, seeing his uniform gave him a
wave of his arm. His hair swirled widly. "We
need every man, watchshark. We'll give them bloody
bellies!"
Keston began to understand then.
And to Nablus. To the sprawling, many-leveled, mighty
Nablus, capital of the whole Empire of Goldenzee,
even here, the Zammu had no fear of penetrating.
A shiver touched his spine and he urged on the limping turboflier with an impatient hand on the throtde. He was feeling the pulse of the city now, smelling
the familiar scents, becoming one with the breathing surge of the ten million
inhabitants all about him. This was life as he had come to understand it, a
life so far removed from all that he had known at Ochiltree that here his
father would have been as a little child.
And that thought brought up an unpleasant
memory so that he was scowling under his mop of waving hair as he reported in
to the barracks guardroom.
As
luck had it Echelon-leader Faro was on duty. His young, open, reckless face,
already deeply scarred by a swordfish snout, lit up at sight of Keston.
"Keston, my wandering pilot fish! Back so soon? Bah, you always had a nose for
trouble. No sooner do the Zammu threaten attack than
you are here, arising in our midst." He peered more closely at Keston. "And why the ferocious scowl, lad?"
"I
had no idea the Zammu were attacking, or even that
they would ever dare."
"I agree," Faro rattled on in his
reckless way. "That they dream to attack Nablus, sacred city of Goldenzeel They will be destroyed this time, every last
belly of them."
"Maybe." Keston was not
thinking as he spoke.
Faro finned up, swirling his flippers before Keston's nose. "You dare to say that? You doubt—"
"No, no, Faro, not
that." Keston was tired, irritable, anxious, if there was to be a
fight, to get it started right away. "No, lad, you mistake me. I merely
mean that I may not be on hand when the massacre begins."
"Ah!" Faro said, wisely. "Professor Lansing."
"Yes. And now, if you'll just do your
duty and sign me in instead of flippering about like
a sardine, I'll go to my quarters and change into fighting gear."
"Right. And when you have done
that, report to Guard Commander Nardun. And,
my lad, fin!"
Had Keston been
other than he was he might have considered speaking to Nardun,
of unburdening the load oppressing his spirit, and of seeking help and advice.
He knew that he had broken the strict letter of the law. At the time he had
justified that.
Justification had been easy with the
silver-dappled sky pressing in on Long Mile Reef, overwhelming his private
cave. The breathless-winged-one, spearing in from some remote
and unthinkably mysterious region—region? was
there a place beyond the silver sky?—had given added
impetus to his feelings that a mere tiny Hopeless One could have no further
significance in the scheme of things.
But now he was back in Nablus, back in the
hub of the Empire with the bustle' and throb of a great metropolis all about
him, he was thinking once more as a civilized man.
Yet to speak to Guard Commander Nardun would be useless. The advice Keston
would receive would be simple; Nardun might even
consider it necessary to have him arrested and charged. His own shifting sense
of proportion, of what was right and what was wrong,
must go down in face of that possibility, no matter how he sought to excuse it.
When the Zammu were attacking sacred Nablus, when
there was the silver descending sky to consider, the place for Kes-ton was in the fighting ranks, not mouldering
in some slime and weed-infested dungeon.
So that meant he had to five with his conscience.
One way of doing that was to throw himself into his work here, adhere
with the blind devotion of a sharksman to his duty
and shut out from his foolishly questing mind any other unwelcome intrusive
thoughts. And at this very moment Guard Commander Nardun
would have been alerted by Echelon-leader Faro's audio call from the guardroom.
Probably Nardun was even now calling back, demanding
of Faro why young Keston hadn't reported in yet, his
dominating, domineering face staring out of the audio-visual screen set in the
angle of the guardroom roof, hectoring Faro, giving him hell.
Keston finned rapidly to his room, leaving the
damaged turbo-flier temporarily by the guardroom gate. He could pick it up
later. His own room, bare, austere, sleeping hammock the main feature, seemed
suddenly to welcome him with an anthropomorphic pleasure. He flung the uniform
cabinet doors open and selected his second-best uniform.
He was wearing his fourth-best, his best was
still strapped with his baggage aboard the turboflier.
The third—hahl That was
being repaired from the wreck ensuing from an enjoyable tavern brawl with the
atomic artillery boys down along Global Way.
His fingers were sure and
steady as he strapped on the wide skin underbelt,
adjusted the shoulder harness and the rank badges which, in covering his
operculum over his gill slits also performed the necessary function of modesty.
A girl might show anything, within reason, but to no man save her husband would
she reveal her operculum. Most women, Keston heard,
fiercely resisted showing their naked gill slits even to a husband of many
seasons familiarity. This was just another of those unspoken-of mysteries
stretching back into the womb of time.
A man breathed in through his mouth, the
ambient fluid entered his lungs where oxygen was extracted and was then,
recharged with carbon dioxide, passed out again to be ejected through the gill
slits which also, in their fashion, carried on a minor oxygen-carbon dioxide
exchange. This was a mere physiological function. But many a man had been
stabbed to death for merely raising a girl's cloak over her operculum.
Oh, well, all this merely brought back bad
memories of that other mystery-shrouded law that he had flouted, and
drastically slowed down his time to Guard Commander Nar-dun, which was, all
things considered, an extremely bad thing.
He drew up the three-cornered skin loincloth, working his thighs into a
comfortable position, and strapped the wide bronze-studded belt across over the
suspension belt beneath. He settled the harness leathers with their overlapping
bronze scales over his shoulders and chest. Then his sword.
After Kaley, never, never would he
leave his weapons again.
Even though the sword was of use only against
close-action fish, it was of some sacred significance and had before this
saved his life. That time when the cudas had snapped
his trident and his gas gun had been expended and they had driven at him from
the blue dimness ....
It was all very well for the atomic artillery
boys to laugh at a sharksman's sword; they weren't up at the sharp end where out of the blue veil sudden peril
could strike quicker than an atomic shell could be thought of, let alone loaded
and fired. A sword stopped an enemy, cold, stone dead, no
matter how fast he came nor how near he managed to reach. Without a
sword a sharskman of the Emperor's watchsharks not only felt naked, but was naked. Which reminded him of his third-best uniform, and back again to Nardun. He blew into the aquasphere,
chuckling. Already, back in the busde of the big city,
with walls and lights and traffic all about, with the threat of danger and
perilous adventure beckoning, he was finding his good humor.
He slid on his most flexible fins and sped off to Nardun.
Guard Commander Nardun
kept him waiting. Calling back to Faro, indeedl How
come Echelon leader Keston
thought himself such a big fish that the guard commander would worry his head
over him? It was a suitably chastened Keston who
reported into the big room with the desks and wall charts and the aquasphere globes lining the ranked shelves. Each globe
contained a sample of the liquid from all known areas of the world that had
been reached and surveyed by explorers from the Empire of Goldenzee.
There were a great many; their colors, salinity, plankton content and all other
pertinent data neatiy recorded below them on beryl
plates.
■"Ah, Echelon-leader Keston. Come in, come in."
Keston entered and allowed himself to float down to
the indicated bench. He waited.
"I am pleased that you cut your furlough
short, Keston. I assume it was not because you heard
that the Zammu were attacking Nablus itself; but I am
not going to inquire into your reasons. Suffice it that you are here."
"Yes, sir."
"Good. You know the position. The sky
can no longer be considered stable and we must plan therefore on a basis of a
series of continuous attacks upon the Empire." The shadow of pain crossed
Nardun's granite face. "That those attacks
should begin in full strength upon Nablus itself is bad fortune; I see it in no
other light."
"No, sir."
"Where the Zammu
came from we do not yet know. They have plagued us for fifty thousand seasons,
on and off. We thought once, back in the Republic of the Three Fins, that we
could bargain with them come to an agreement. But much has happened since then.
Time has passed. The world has changed and there is a shrinking aquasphere to be shared between two intelligent races and
far too many other animals."
"Man has always won before, sir."
"And he will again, against the Zammu."
There was no need to elaborate that thought.
Even though the world might be dying, man would still go on fighting for his
share of its goodness, right up to the last day when the aquasphere
finally vanished and the sky touched the ground and that blinding fight and
heat and that scorching otherness that Keston so
vividly remembered consumed them all.
"Now then, Keston. I know you are not just a plain fighting man. I know of your
scientific work before you joined the Emperor's watchsharks—by
the way, you might be interested to hear of Professor Dinar's latest work. I
happened to be sitting next to him at the Lord Chancellor's dinner party the
other night. A dedicated man, Professor Dinar. He has
developed a system of mirrors which is extensible and which he hopes to extend
through the sky to observe what might lie beyond. If anything does," he
added, with a shiver.
"I am interested, sir. This is
wonderful! Although I have heard the theory that a mixture of gases lies beyond
the sky, and what they might be and their extent is so far beyond
knowledge."
"A theory, surely? Well, then, my time is limited. I know of
your proposed journey with Professor Lansing, of course. However, in this
moment of dire peril to your city and Empire, I feel that you may wish to join
the ranks of your comrades fighting shoulder to—oh, hell, Keston,
you know what I mean. I can offer you a squadron, you know." The last was
said indifferently, as though Nardun wished it to be
made clear that he was not offering this promotion in the way of a bribe.
"A squadronl"
Keston's pulses quickened. After all, he was a sharksman, promotion in his
corps was the road of his career. And to lead a squadron, to feel the
undulating forms of a hundred tiger sharks at his back, each with its two
riders clinging to their harness, guns and weapons ready, the gay banners
flying—it was a heady picture. He'd have his own trumpeter, too.
It was what he had signed up for, what he had
planned that day back in primary school.
"May I have time to think, sir? I feel I could handle a squadron,
but ..."
"Still a scientist at heart, eh, Keston?
Well, go see Professor Lansing. But I will add that the regiment can do with
you. We are going to be desperately short of trained men."
"Yes, I know, sir. But-"
The screen set above the wide desk lit up as
the audios struck in. "A call for you, sir, from General Zwohl. Urgent."
"Put the general on, please. You will excuse me, Keston?"
Keston saluted and retired. As he finned through
the door he glanced back, past his billowing regimental cape. General Zwohl was on the screen, thick-lipped, scowling, impatient. "We must put a screen across the bad lands
to the north, Nardun. I'm sending two squadrons of
your sharksmen and a detachment of artillery and what
turbofliers I can scrape together. The damned Zammu are everywhere ..."
Then Keston was in
the corridor, under the calm lights, just hearing the tail end of General Zwohl's complaint.
"... in the ancient days they would have sent a
fleet of battleships with atomic cannon to blast these damned Zammu. As it is we must make shift with shark-mounted
cavalry and popguns."
Yes, that was it, Keston's thoughts rode the idea somberly. The whole world
ran in cycles, up and down. And the Empire of Goldenzee
was on the slope of the trough, laboriously climbing the incline. A couple of
thousand seasons ago there would have been no popguns, even, only bronze swords
and bone crossbows against the impervious Zammu. But
a few hundred seasons in the future and perhaps once again mighty fleets of manned
battleships would roam the aquasphere, clearing the
world of the Zammu, sweetening it and making it clean
for the children of those who fought so desperately today.
Few hundred seasons in the
future? By
then, perhaps, the sky would have engulfed all of the ground and with it all of
mankind.
He flippered casually out into the courtyard and headed for the guardroom gate. His turbo flier was not there.
"Commandeered," Faro told him. "They'd use the Imperial
refuse carts if they were self-propelled."
Keston could not feel outraged. Sacred Nablus was
hard-pressed and the inhabitants must sacrifice right down to bone if the city
was not to be overrun and hurled forever into the primeval ooze.
"Well," he said. "I'll turn over payment of the installments to
the government."
"You do that," Faro said, oddly serious. "They'll be glad
to pay."
He rose until he was level with the topmost tower where he hung
inconspicuously. He could look about him now with the hypersensitive sight
possessed by all men. In him the lassitude of his thoughts made any energetic
movement, any decision, eminently postponable. He
would fin idly over to see Professor Lansing. That squadron beckoned like the
juicy meat in a lobster claw. The impending tragedy for all of mankind was
inextricably bound up with his own fate and yet that
race doom far overshadowed his own puny problems. Why worry, when whatever you
did posterity just would not exist either to acclaim or condemn?
Much as he might be aware of mankind's gift
for overcoming problems as was so clearly shown through all the past ages, he
yet felt as one with those who would retire from the cuda-race
and drift gently in a roseate cloud of their own imaginings.
Once, long ago in the golden age of the
Commonwealth of the Five Oceans—no one knew now what the word ocean meant—they had found their idealistic mode of
living unable to cope with their discovery and abandoned use of nuclear power.
They had smashed up their world in the titanic blasts of hydrogen bombs. When
was that, now? A hundred—no, more like five hundred thousand seasons ago. Yet,
here was mankind still, and again facing a definite threat that would end him
forever.
Because this time there would be no welcoming
world awaiting the creeping emergence of mankind again from his caves and
hovels huddled against the coral reefs.
Movement far below attracted his attention and he let his gaze wander
idly down the many levels. Far down there a marching column was finning steadily out and away, gradually inclining
upwards, heading out and into the great deeps. He could make out the sleek
forms of swordfish with their harnessed riders, the many flittering figures of infan-tryfinning in an eight-deep phalanx, their
thirty-foot tridents all meticulously aslant forming a bristling hedge of beryl
fangs. Poor devils! At best the steadfast beryllium wall against which the
maddened onslaughts of the Zammu would break in a red
welter of confusion and bloodied bellies.
And—he'd heard through the coral line that
the infantry phalanxes were being equipped with plastic shields, tougher and
more maneuverable than the old sharkskin targes that
hung, exuding their odors of sharkskin oil, at every old man's back. The
arsenals of the Empire, too, were hiving day and night producing gas guns and
the unlimited store of bolts that fighting on this world-spread scale demanded.
Turning away, he looked across the steepling spires and towers of golden Nablus and wondered
if all this color and life and gaiety would end with the marching fins of lines
of fighting men and the thin dolorous howling of husbandless wives and
fatherless children. That had happened so often before, back through the
fleeting mists of time, odd comers only of which were raised by the painstaking
toil of men like Professor Lansing. Reluctantly, he finned slowly down towards
the University.
The age-old stones again
extended a welcome to him as his room in barracks had done. But this time the
greeting was warmer, more profound, more personal. Here,
he felt with a sudden wave of understanding, lay his
true vocation in life.
"Surely," he'd said as a young man supping eagerly from the
overflowing cup of wisdom held out to him by the willing hands and brains of
the University, "surely a man can be more than just one simple thing in
life? Surely," he had said, "a man might be a student, seeking to
learn all he could of the wisdom of men and to grasp what might be of an
understanding albeit dim and fragmentary of the wonder that was human life, and
yet, at the same time, be in the fullest sense a sharksman
ready and able to fight for his empire and his race against the darkness that
threatened?"
So he had thought; and the dream had grown dim and tarnished during long
hours of picketting and guarding and spasmodic fierce
forays against the raiders from out of the deeps. He had grown calloused; a
fighting man, living in his war harness, his sword hilt growing into a
permanent part of his body like the weapon set in the jaw of a sword-fish. Then
had come the summons from Professor Lansing to
accompany him on the strangest expedition ever known in the history of mankind.
And he had jumped at it, despite the primeval fears and childish experience. He
had leaped at the chance.
And now the Zammu
were everywhere attacking and his duty called him to rank himself by the side
of his comrades when they met the oncoming shock of the alien wedge. Alien?
Well, what was alien, if not a man or being who was not bom within sight and sound of your own nuclear reactor?
Flying down towards the University and
hovering for a reflective moment above those time-hallowed walls, he allowed
his mind to roam back upon the men he had killed. Men who
were aliens because they hailed from a different quadrant of the habitable aquasphere. Men, yet enemies
because they did not own allegiance to the Empire of Gold-enzee.
Now they were all men together, facing the truly alien threat of the Zammu.
And yet the Zammu
had been spawned on this world, bom like men under
the same silver-dappled sky.
Truly, all of life was a puzzle. And perhaps
one of the greatest, yet the smallest-seeming of all, was the problem of the
Hopeless Ones; men who yet were not men. Men like his little nephew, bom with a membraneous web
linking fingers and toes, a true adaptation to life in the aquasphere.
Yet they were not wanted, were abhorred, were condemned and therefore cut out
from mankind's heredity with the swift and impersonal precision of the
surgeon's scalpel.
With these vague and grandiose thoughts
thronging his brain he finned into central corridor, heading for Professor
Lansing's extensive laboratories, and came face to face with Soyle.
The lecturer backed up momentarily and then
as he recognized the uniformed sharksman before him,
his coarse face creased into a mocking smile.
"Assistant Keston! Or should that be sharksman Keston? Or what? Hey, Keston, or what?"
Keston was completely taken aback.
Certainly, he remembered lecturer Soyle as a loudmouth, a cuda-eyed
vicious wart. Now the man was garbed fashionably and rufllingly
in a oversmart militiaman's
uniform, the rank patches over his operculum denoting the rank of
Echelon-leader. He fingered his sword which was ostentatious and overelaborate, the hilt a
congested mass of precious stones.
"Hullo, Soyle. I'm in a hurry. Let me by,
please."
"In a hurry.
Yes, that sums it up, Keston. In a
hurry to get away from the fighting now that it has come. You were fresh
enough to join the watchsharks when it was all a case
of ruffling it down Global Way. But now that there is business to hand, you
slither off like an eel to join Lansing's fantastic circus."
"Out of my way, wart."
Soyle's sword flashed once as he drew it, twice as
he lunged.
Keston was not taken by surprise. He was not a shaksman who was still alive after seasons of battle and
sudden death to be taken by surprise by a jumped-up militiaman. His own plain,
ridged hilt snugged sweedy
into his palm. The first wild thrust was parried in a screech of blades. Then
his point was inches from Soyle's throat and his left
hand was bending the other's right hand backwards.
Soyle shrilled in pain as his hand bent against
the bones.
The sword dropped. It stirred silt as it
struck the floor. The scintillating magnificence of the hilt dulled. Keston drew his left hand back and struck, edge-on, across Soyle's cheek. The red stained up like a chameleon-fish.
Then he let the man drop, kicked him aside and finned up and over the sprawled
figure.
He didn't even bother to look back. Soyle had been wearing no gun. Had he been Keston would probably have killed him then, and there, in
the sacred precincts of the University.
Red confusion and shame hammered in Keston's
overstrained brain. Soyle accusing him of cowardice because he was contemplating joining
Lansing's expedition. Didn't the fool comprehend the dangers involved?
Or was he merely jealous that he had not been invited? Lansing was a wise old
turtle. He'd known that a ready sword and a crack shot would be needed; not
some half-cocked amateur militiaman too ready with his mouth and too slow with
his blade.
There was no valid reason why a braggart's
maggot-mind should upset him or make him ashamed. But to Keston
there had been too much of his own smothered feelings in what
Soyle had said for his own comfort. If he went
with Lansing on this madcap scheme, which, when it had been broached, had
seemed of such high scientiffic purpose, he would be
running away from the battle and the noise and tumult of the conflict. Keston had run away, quite recently. He had run out on a
decision he could not make. And in that flight he had left behind a Hopeless
One to live and blaspheme the law and he had left behind the shreds of his own
self-respect.
So it was that he finned harshly through
Lansing's open door, filled with ugly self-doubts and a smouldering
desire to hurt someone—preferably himself—and the cold decision lying like a
lump in his stomach to spurn the professor's offer and to rejoin his comrades
and march against the Zammu.
Courtesy halted the
thronging, angry thoughts in Keston's mind when he
saw that Professor Dinar was with Professor Lansing. The two elderly men were
so much alike they made a fit subject for a funny cartoon that might be
published in one of Nablus' many plastic comic news sheets. Keston
halted by the door, finning gently, politely taking
care not to disturb the aquasphere and inconvenience
the two scientists. Alike they may have appeared, but Keston
was too astute an observer of human nature to imagine that they were alike in
any other material respect. Human beings were like those splinters of light
that danced down from the sky. They might seem to the casual observer to be exacdy the same, but you never found two to match. Without
embarrassment he listened to their conversation.
"... even if it should rum out to be a mixture of
gases, as now seems relatively certain, the problems are still of the order
with which we are familiar in laboratory work."
"My dear Lansing, I agree absolutely. The pressures and
temperatures with which we juggle, the incredible advances, incredible even to
a physics man like myself, of the past few seasons lead me irresistibly to the
conclusion that no matter what we may find will be overcome and all problems
solved."
Dinar paused and delicately inhaled from his
cut-glass perfume dispenser, a luxury that Keston
could not afford and so rationalized into a vice. "I am reminded of the
work of Doctor Somes some fifteen seasons ago.
Nothing much came of it in the final fin—I believe he was chopped by the Zammu on a fresh scientific expedition beyond the safe
areas."
"That is so," Lansing nodded.
"I know the work to which you refer. He found caverns within certain
mountain ranges where the sky unaccountably and arbitrarily appeared where no
one expected it."
"Yes. The darkness was absolute and
artificial lighting had to be used continuously. But his report, which did not
receive a wide circulation, stressed the theory that above the sky lay an
almost impossibly thin mixture of gases. When we liberate gases from the aquasphere with heat we cannot always trace their final
conclusion ..."
Lansing laughed. "You will bring up the
hoary old one, my dear Dinar. What is in a bubble and where did it come from
and where does it go?"
Both
men chuckled. That problem had been a conundrum for many generations of men. Keston listened avidly. This talk was of the sort he sorely
missed in the machinelike barracks of the watchsharks.
He remained silent.
Despite
his caution the languid currents reached the two scientists and they turned,
smiles lighting up their faces.
"My
dear Keston]" Lansing finned forward, hand outstretched.
Keston grasped it, warming to the affection in the
old man's glance and clasp.
"Professor
Dinar, may I present to you Assistant Keston, a most
able young man who chooses to waste his talents—as you may observe from the
barbaric uniform he wears." Lansing chuckled as though at a private joke.
Dinar laughed and shook hands. "It seems
to me that many of us will be donning uniform and reverting to barbarism if the
Zammu do not allow us to live in peace. Were I a
younger man . . . Well, my fighting days are done."
Lansing cocked his wise old head. "If you are serious in your
quest, my dear Dinar, that remark may strike you as exceedingly funny in a
season's time."
"Oh?"
Lansing brushed that aside. "What
happens, Keston, when a pressure valve jams on a
flier motor and she descends to great depths!
Keston grimaced. "Implosion."
"Precisely. Now we are desigining
a turboflier that may have to operate in conditions entirely
the reverse from those extant in the normal world. A hundred seasons or so ago
to mention anything as existing beyond the silver sky would have brought frowns
and immediate incarceration in a lunatic asylum. A hundred seasons before
that, and before you'd framed your remark, you would have received eight inches
of sword in your abdomen for blasphemy. The Great Light, it was said, would not
be mocked."
"But we live in a more materialistic age now. Science is pushing
back the frontiers of the known all the time."
"True. We now no longer credit the Great
Light with a supernatural origin. No longer is the grand procession of days and
nights thought to be the Great Fisherman crossing the sky with His catch of firefish which he needs for . . . But you know the
teachings as well as I."
"Yes, but if you visit the outer keeps,
where the rule of Goldenzee weakens and the sky may
be close upon you,. you'll
find the same fanatical belief in the old teachings as any that obsessed men a
hundred seasons ago."
"We still render token
obedience to our childhood teaching; religion must form part of any thinking
man's mental makeup. These tremendous phenomena didn't just happen. There was a
thinking brain and heart behind them." Professor Lansing glanced up
quickly at Keston, a look at once profound and yet
impish. "But, I venture to suggest, no one has ever dared to ask what exacdy, In material
terms, the Great Light is."
Keston felt hot and cold, Childhood memories of
teaching at his mother's gendy waving fins seized
him with the vertigo of past time. Sacrilege, blasphemey—well,
what right had he, a man who allowed a Hopeless One to go on living, to cavil
at a little more blasphemy?
"Go on, professor," he said queidy.
"You were invited to join my expedition
for the obvious reason that you had worked with me. We both know what we
seek." Again that mischievous smile. "At
least, I trust that you do?"
Keston nodded. While what he sought was not crystal
clear to him he had enough of an idea, so he thought,
not to need to contradict Lansing.
"Well then, imagine that armed with the
standard Imperial infantry pattern sword you are in the ring facing a swordfish, a big and ugly swordfish. Who will win?"
Keston laughed. "A man will win every
time."
"Again, true. But suppose it were I, or
Professor Dinar, in the ring with our swords facing the swordfish. Who then do
you suppose might win?"
"Well ..." Keston hesitated.
Dinar said heavily: "The fish would win."
"Yes," Lansing said, "because
we are no longer trained fighting men. Keston here
is. That is the other reason why you have been invited. Not because you are a fighting man, but because you have been trained in aptitudes that we may
need. It is easier to train a scientist, when caught young, to be a fighting
man, especially when as a youth he was a rim-runner, than it is to try to knock scientific ways of thought into
the thick cranium of a fighter."
"So that's why you made no real effort to prevent me from joining
the sharksmen!"
Lansing chuckled and patted Keston on the
shoulder.
"This trip has been planned for a long
time. I have picked my men and women well."
"And I?" asked Dinar eagerly.
"There is room. The
dangers are great. There is a strong
possibility that we will not return." "I'll go and pack right
away."
"Wait, waitl"
Lansing laughed. "Tell young Keston here of your
latest experiments."
"You mean in the extensible optical
system?" asked Keston.
"My, my!" Dinar marveled. "You keep up to date,
young man."
"He fins sharply," said Lansing, with a sly smile.
"Well, the results are what matter. I
managed to get my apparatus through the sky and looked."
Dinar's manner changed. Like so many other
scientists who discover earth-shaking truths in holes and comers, working like
guppies in the obscurity of great buildings, he was profoundly moved by the
importance of his own work, a little scared, and deeply humble in gratitude for
his own part in the work. This particular experiment, Keston
was well aware, would have brought imprisonment and an ugly death only a very
short time ago.
Men were not allowed to peer past the veil of the sky and seek to
confront the Great Light face to face. If Dinar had carried out the experiment
too close to one of the outer keeps—the Marhall keep,
for instance—inquiring riders might have felt it incumbent upon them to slip
their tridents through his body and leave him to be eaten by crabs rather than
risk the blasting revenge they were certain would fall from the sky. "I
chose night," Dinar said. "All I saw was an appar-endy
limidess area of firefish,
thousands upon thousands of them. They did not move. They just swam there,
motionless, glittering, cold and seemingly infinitely remote and yet,
strangely, close at hand. The scale had no meaning." "And
during the day?"
"One assistant was temporarily blinded
by the Great Light. We did not dare resume our experiments for some time. Then
I risked it. We had not so far been blasted for blasphemy."
"And?"
"I find it hard to describe. The optical system allowed only a
hundred and eighty degree traverse, up and down and and
around. Direcdy ahead lay mountains, as you might see
any time in the aquasphere rising from the floor. The
visibility was incredible. I had the impression that everything was very
bright and very tiny. Just a limidess space, the
mountains rising in the distance, and ..."
"Well go on, Dinar." exploded Lansing.
"Above me, finning
like mantas, were creatures. I took them to be the breathless-winged-ones, for
like mantas their wings were extended and beating."
"So that there is a place above the
sky!" exclaimed Kes-ton.
"And our problem," added Lansing
soberly, "is to know how to reach it."
A caravan
was entering the Amethyst
Gate as Keston left the University buildings and
finned a circuitous and moody route back to the barracks. The sight held him.
Here was the spectacle of shark-mounted outriders with their flaring cloaks and
handy weapons. Bunched spans of marlin towed plastic floats bundled high with
bales and packages, one behind the other.
Here were inevitable snarls as the fish were
coaxed through the expectant throng. He heard the jeers and catcalls, and
watched the quick dart of city urchins ready to pilfer the slightest loose
object.
Around him was the portly pomp and splendor
of the fat merchants with their beringed hands and
gorgeous costumes. Occasionally there was the thrilling glimpse of some strange
fish never before seen in Nablus, or of exotic women
veiled and bejeweled like a cluster of rainbow-fins.
The whole exciting, stirring, entirely
wondrous pageant held him, had always held him from the time he had first
experienced it as a young and raw rim-runner, and would always, he hoped, hold
him for as long as he lived in sacred Nablus and the caravans pulled in from
every corner of the world.
In the old days there would have almost
certainly been, herded at the tail of the caravan with sharp-tined goads, a
miserable, staggering collection of human beings, chained together, old and
young, strong and weak, dragged from their homes and loved ones and sent to
labor for as long as they lived. Thankfully, the suppression of the slave trade
had been an accomplished act of mercy long before Keston
had been born.
Keston moved his fins gently, keeping station a few
spears' lengths away from the caravan, ever mindful that the trigger-happy
outriders would not think twice of pricking him aside with their tridents,
Emperor's sharksman or no.
The smell of a caravan had power to send the
blood drumming through Keston's veins. The mingled odors of distant places, unknown peoples half across the
world, the spine-tingling aromas from bales and bundles that might conceal the
wealth of a city's ransom—these all thrilled him.
Once, Keston
remembered, he had seen with his own eyes a gift from the Great Light,
reverently tied by itself in place of honor to the broad back of a marlin. In
appearance it was long and thin, cylindrical, with a few minor appendages
branching off at each end like anemones. It was hard and yet could be cut with
a knife. Puzzled, science, while still obsequiously regarding it as a gift
from the Great Light, had to find a scientific name as well.
Numbers were found from time to time, always
at the very limit of the sky, moving up and down, half in thé
aqua-sphere and half in that other place that
was so much in Keston's thoughts. So science had
found a name for these eerie
phenomena and had called
them logs.
But no man would dare to reach out to see
them entirely. Invariably they would be dragged down and brought in triumph
home. And, like many good things of this world, they were by Imperial decree
peculiar to the Emperor and must be taken, at once, to the palace and there
offered up with due rite and solemnity.
Keston flippered
casually to avoid the lazily turning snout of a shark. The, beast looked in poor condition and the
rider's harness was patched and thin.
"What news, friend, of the world?"
The outrider lifted his
trident with a gesture that spoke eloquently of a tired resignation. "The Zammu," he said. "That we know. Where do you hail
from, friend?" "From far Strathcorbus have
we come. I have no wish to speak of it. Our leader is
to see the Emperor at once. We tangled with a mad mob of Hopeless Ones who were
cutting out a school of Breathless Ones."
By the way he said this, Keston
knew he meant Breathless Ones and not merely breathless-ones.
Despite his bright arid clear-thinking
modernism, the imagined vision of the Breathless Ones brought a tingling
shiver to Keston. He knew what ProfessoT
Lansing and Professor Dinar would say. And he knew, too, what he would answer.
The Breathless Ones were a mere part of the world, another form of life living
within the aquasphere. Yet, with that firm reasoning
bolstering him, he felt the age-old thrill of wondering dread.
"Your leader will have difficulty in
seeing the Emperor with the cares and duties upon his shoulders, friend."
The outrider touched his mount and veered
away. "Hell see the Emperor, never fear. The
Emperor is jealous of his rights over the Breathless Ones."
And that was true.
Keston in turn flippered
off, making for the barracks.
Checking the duty rota
he discovered, not without a twinge of displeasure, that he was guardroom
officer this coming night. He collected his baggage from where it had been
piled outside the guardroom doonyindow and finned off
to his room. Then he joined his comrades in the mess and ate a prodigious meal.
All the talk—tearing the unwritten taboos to shreds—was of the Zammu.
He had just finished and was sitting back to
allow the orderly to remove the pile of empty oyster shells when the call
sounded.
"Orderly officer! Report to Guard Commander Nardun."
Faro looked up, mouth full of algae pie.
"That's you, old son," he said indistinctly.
He at once protested, but Faro, swallowing,
pointed out that this duty fell to Keston today and
that he, Faro, had jolly well been proving a pal and filling in. Keston had the grace to say thanks and rose, flippering off fast. A second interview with Nardun today might not go as well as the first.
General Zwohl's
features were just fading from the screen as Keston
entered.
Nardun turned with a smile. "You,
Keston? You are orderly officer?"
"Yes, sir."
"So be it. The position is this. Some
fat merchant has brought in a tale of the Emperor's Breathless Ones being
interfered with, rusded off, most likely, by a crazy
bunch of Hopeless Ones. You are to take an echelon and deal. Here are the
co-ordinates and pertinent data. Understood?"
"Understood, sir."
"Well, fin then! And, Keston,
good luck."
Keston said, "Thank you, sir," and
finned.
Only when Echelon-sergeant Ronel had roused out the men, saddled the tigersharks and seen the sharksmen
harnessed up and steady on parade, did the amusing thought occur to Keston that Faro had been taking him for a ride. Crafty
Faro, no doubt thinking of the many times he had taken Keston's
place on guard, had confidendy worked this one off on
him. Keston, returning Ronel's
impeccable salute, chuckled. Poor Faro! He'd passed up the chance of an independent
command, the exercise of unimpeded authority and the chance of action.
Keston led his echelon—he had naturally called out
his own sharksmen—through the guardroom gateway and
swung his hand into a fast fin forward. With the scrap of colored bunting atop
the lance socketed in the bucket on the ensign's tigershark, the cavalcade finned hard up and away into the
dim blue reaches of the aquasphere.
The co-ordinates were useful only so long as
the ground was kept in view. After that he would have to rely on the sense
possessed by all men, the ability to fix his position in the aquasphere and know in which direction lay
Nablus, when surrounded only by the impenetrable blue veil.
Echelon-sergeant Ronel
was a good man, his tough barrel body in the bronze-scaled harness striped with
the scars of past battles. He urged his tigershark up
alongside Keston's in the lead. As the senior men on
each shark they automatically took the right-hand flank, the left flanks each
being guarded by a grizzled veteran of many campaigns.
"What's the flap, sir?"
Keston filled him in by pithy sentences.
"Let's hope the men stay steady, sergeant. You know how the Breathless
Ones are still regarded by some."
"Don't worry about that, sir. Ill have my trident ready for anyone who panics."
Soldiers were notoriously unimpressed by the
stories of the superstitious and the credulous. But a Breathless One was a
different kettle of fish. Except that they weren't fish at all. Like the
breathless-winged-ones—and like men—they possessed lungs. But for some strange
quirk of evolution, their lungs could serve no useful purpose. If restrained in
the aquasphere too long, they died. Most odd. Like those Jogs of science, they drifted on the
edge of the sky and no man sought to disturb them there.
Except,
as now seemed the case, a crazed bunch of Hopeless Ones sought to drive them
off.
"Getting close now,
sir."
They had made good progress. All about the
blue veil stretched, vast and comfortless to a man without a weapon, yet
friendly and cloaking to this band of well-armed sharks-men.
"Close the men up, sargeant.
No straggling." "Sir."
The thing happened with trident-like
rapidity.
The technician-sharksman
had just looked up from his audio search gear strapped to the back of his
tiger, when a vast gray wall appeared out of the veil. The
wall was ascending at a prodigious speed. Keston
reacted with instinctive violence.
He shouted, flinging up a hand. "Form echelon!"
The sharks curved away in graceful arcs, even numbers to the left, odd
numbers to the right. The aquasphere boiled in the
thrash of many fins.
And then the greatest of all fins rushed
past, making a noise like an unregulated turboflier.
The gigantic fluke swished past Keston's head, the
wash toppling him and his shark away so that the animal had to fight hard to
regain station. Keston clung on and looked about,
trying to see what had happened to his echelon of twenty-five tigersharks.
He was responsible for fifty men and he did
not intend to lose one of them.
Sergeant Ronel was shouting, high and shrill. Keston saw him firing his gun, saw
the leaping bolts hurtling away into dimness. Lights Bashed up as his men
switched on their battlelamps. Confusion broke in a
roaring wash of sound and movement.
The Hopeless Ones who by their very existence
blasphemed the law had been caught completely by surprise. They had been
herding the Breathless Ones along, always a slow business, and had made little
progress from the point at which they had been seen and reported by the
caravan.
In a smothering swirl of bubbles, Keston saw a man diving across his front. But the man was
not a man. He did not wear flippers. Instead, his feet were webbed and clawed,
and his body grew its own natural coat of scales. His mouth was wide and gaping
and his eyes shone red in the battle-lamps' glow.
Even as the veteran riding at his side fired,
Keston saw in that ferocious picture of the Hopeless
One another picture superimposed: the picture of a tiny infant, uncurling
coral—like hands and feet, while his father and Kaley
looked on ... .
Then the bloody action milled all about. Sharksmen and Hopeless Ones clashed and fought and died.
The aquasphere reddened across the lights. Drifting
clumps of blood, like the ejected ink of cuttlefish, stained the scene. The
tiger-sharks, despite their rigorous training, despite the electrical controls
buried in their flat heads, despite all that men could do, reverted to their
natural ferocity. Thus it always was and perhaps thus it would always be in
battles fought under conditions of such primeval savagery.
The tigersharks went mad.
And through it all, bellowing along with
their flukes thumping and their shrill, yattering
cries, the immense bodies of the Breathless Ones drove remorselessly on. These
were the ones, Keston saw, that held in their heads
enough oil to grease a regiment's equipment for days on end, to give pleasure
at the gourmet's table for more days, and to be devoured in the myriads of chemical
uses that science every season discovered for the benefit of man.
They belonged to the Emperor as his personal
perquisite, and the duty of Keston and his echelon of
sharksmen was to preserve
them for the good of the Emperor and the Empire of Goldenzee.
Which, in the final fin, meant for the good of all men living
in the Empire.
"They're finning, sir!" Sergeant Ronel swept past, his tigershark
streaming blood, the veteran on his left flank firing coolly and methodically
though his shoulder stained the aquasphere about him.
Keston saw the ensign crouching low, the echelon
battle guidon lowered and driving cruelly into the
belly of a screeching Hopeless One, who lashed it with a spined
and finned tail.
It was a mad swirling fight.
Round and round circled the tigershark-mounted men. Rising and falling in the limpid aquasphere so hideously stained, they outfought, thrashed
and sent into tumbled ruin the savage bitterness of the Hopeless Ones. Men
fought men who were not Men. And, as always, as always must be, Men won.
Keston's sword was a blade of gleaming fire, ruddy
with blood in the battlelamps' light, striking with
sure and steady purpose into the vitals of the Hopeless Ones. The sharksmen rallied together, turned and in one final charge
routed completely the monstrosities who should never have been allowed to
live.
After that it was a matter of administration.
There had been nothing of joy in the
fighting. Keston had not experienced the welcome
elation, the heightening of the pulses, the quickening of the blood, that could
be found only in the thick of the fray and the bloodiest of the conflict. Trailing back with his echelon—minus four tiger-sharks
and seven men—he was deflated, despondent, wondering why the joy of battle had
deserted him and yet knowing only too well the answer and refusing to heed it.
Fighting the Hopeless Ones was a fit service for a manl
From his mind's eye the picture of the
red-gleaming-eyed monstrosity with its webbed hands and feet and its scaled
skin would not be banished, nor would the superimposed image of his nephew,
with the pathetic mouth seeking in puckering desire and those blasphemous hands
and feet. He knew the law and he thought he understood the world into which he
had been bom. But now he could no longer understand
himself.
"Keep the men formed up, Sergeant Ronel."
"Sir."
The Echelon-sergeant went about his work with
the swaggering panache possessed by every member of the Emperor's watchsharks. But Keston saw with
half an eye that he, too, was uneasy and fully aware of his leader's
displeasure. Serrefiles were posted and the echelon
finned on.
They passed the regular herdsmen, rather
comically, to Keston's people, mounted on tarpon. The
reasons for that were plain enough. The herdsmen waved, crouching among their
sonic appartus festooned along their mounts. They
were no doubt quite happy to go back to their peaceful pursuits with the fear
of the Hopeless Ones removed. But Kes-ton could not
stop the black thoughts. How long did they expect to go on in the old ways,
with Hopeless Ones, the Zammu? And
the silver descending sky?
He set a cracking flippering speed back to
barracks.
Guard Commander Nardun
expressed approval at Keston's report. The tigersharks had been cleaned down and stabled,
the men had furbished up their weapons and equipment and had been fed and sent
off duty. Keston had snatched a mouthful and changed
and reported in.
"That the Hopeless Ones venture so close
is ample proof that our normal patrols have been drastically thinned," Nardun said, waving Keston to
fin easy. "There is talk of an armistice—"
"An armisticel With
them?" exclaimed Keston.
"Oh,
I know it sounds unspeakable, blasphemous. But the Zammu
press and harry us all indiscriminately." Nardun brisked
up. "What have you decided, lad? The coral fine has it that we
march out soon. Faro is ready for that squadron if you feel, that is, if you
decide, otherwise."
Into
Keston's mind came Professor Lansing's wise old
voice, speaking with the detached and yet fanatically dedicated voice of the
scientist. "This trip has been planned for a long time."
And
of himself: "So that there is a place beyond the silver skyl"
And Lansing: "And our problem is to know
how to reach it."
He remembered with a shiver of savagery that
brief and bloody fight out there mixed up with the great Breathless Ones and of
the joyless swinging of the sword that brought nothing but agony of spirit and
discomfiture of mind.
He said firmly, "With your permission,
sir. I feel it is my duty—to the Emperor as well as to science—to go with Professor
Lansing."
Nardun smiled, a little sadly, and held out his
hand.
"Good luck, lad. You're a very brave man."
So
that was that.
He felt at once elated, sloughed of the
worries that had plagued him. One fighting man more or less would make no
difference to the Zammu. While his comrades fought to
the bitter end, he would be away—somewhere, out there beyond the silver sky.
On
the day that
he was to see for the first time the gas ship and to make the acquaintance of
the vehicle in which he was to spend possibly the rest of his fife, his own
regiment, the Emperor's watchsharks, moved out to the
front. He went to see them off. Out of an ashamed decency, he discarded his
bright uniform and donned simple civilian clothing, blending with the cheering
multitudes as they finned excitedly along the various levels, watching the
fighting men marching out.
Emotions tore at Keston
but he was able to see quite clearly where his destiny lay. He watched the long
array of undulating tigersharks, each with its
two-man load strapped into their harness. Their gas guns were sheathed, bolt
bandoliers filled, their swords scabbarded, their
shields slung low and handily. Their tridents were aslant at the regulation
fifty degrees slope. The banners heading up each squadron were the regulation
number of shark-lengths in rear of the squadron leader and his trumpeter, whose
great conch shell curved over his shoulder, streamlined into the current..
Among all that colorful, glittering and
heart-catching panoply, one man more or less made no difference.
Faro was there with his reckless face and his
scar, Squadron-leader Faro now, marching out at the head of the squadron that
might have been Keston's.
He watched them go, hearing the shrill lilt
of the trumpets, seeing the current-fluttered banners, critically observant
of their alignment and bearing. Through it all he desperately wished that he
could rush out from the onlookers, break ranks and fall in to march as a simple
sharksman strapped to the coarse banded flank of a
tiger.
He turned away, flippering awkwardly, colliding with the stone supports to
balconies and archways. Then he shook himself roughly. By the Great Light! What
was he, anyway, a miserable little tiddler, squirming
on the end of barbed emotions, or a mature man, a scientist before he was a
sharks-man? He finned on more strongly now, sure of his fate in life.
Bolstering his new-found resolution, he did
not visit the taverns along Global Way as he had planned to recapture something
of the golden past. Instead, he flew straight back to University and to the new
laboratories where the gas ship had been building in secret for the past six
seasons.
Professor Lansing met him finning
awkwardly with his arms full of plastic sheets. Keston
relieved him of the load.
"Ah, Keston,
my lad. All gone?"
"Yes, professor. They're gone. And
now?"
"Dinar is almost incoherent with impatience.
I left him at the valves. The others will be joining us later. These plastics—I
must have them with me, many of my calculations need reworking now that the
damned Zammu have pressed in so close. After all, we
are the first men in the history of the world to build, man and fly a gas
ship."
"Has she flown then?"
"Hum, no. But she will, lad, she will."
"I am familiar with the theory by
now," Keston said, falling in beside Lansing.
"But just how you have applied it exercises my imagination."
Lansing laughed. "Here are the valves.
This is the day. All you have to do to satisfy your imaginative conjectures is
to allow me to open the sonic lock, usher Professor Dinar and yourself through,
switch on the fights, and . . . ."
For a space thereafter both Dinar and Keston
remained silent.
Surely, he had been familiar with the theory.
A descent from the upper levels into the great deeps demanded the greatest care
over valves and pressures, the skeleton ships used allowing free access to all
enclosed parts by the surrounding, crushing aquasphere.
Yes, he understood that all right.
Conversely, although the concept was harder to grasp, a reduction of the
pressure of the aquasphere demanded either a skeleton
frame to allow for compensation or a very strong container to withstand the
explosive, instead of implosive, force. The pressure at the interface should be
the same as the upper level of the aquasphere. But
who knew what lay above that? Keston had seen fish
snared from the deeps, expanded and bloated with the speed of their ascent,
and he had no wish to share that experience.
The container of the gas ship was strong.
Fabricated from beryl alloy it bulked like the grandfather of all giant fish,
like a Breathless One itself; immense, looming, crushingly overpowering. The
frame was not complete; gaping eye sockets showed where observation ports were
to be fitted. He guessed that was where Dinar would come in. Turbo-flier motors
were fitted aft, with simple steering controls. Keston
was not interested, for the moment, in those familiar objects. He directed his
attention to the weird and outer contraptions along the belly of the ship.
Lansing sensed his thoughts. "The aquasphere, my dear Keston,"
he said with soft seriousness, "is capable of supporting a body as massive
as the gas ship. I doubt that above or beyond the sky we will find anything to
support us. We will be chained to the ground—that is, if there is ground
there."
"I saw mountains—"
"Yes, Dinar. And where there are mountains there may very
well be land from which they spring. At least, so it is on this side of the
sky."
Keston's pulses quickened. These concepts were being
bandied about with an almost reckless freedom. Two sides to the sky? And yet, why not?
Superstition, fear, religion, had kept men's eyes and brains fixed below.
Surely there was nothing sacriligeous in supposing
that once through the sky another place might
be found? Lansing and Dinar had no compunctions.
"To punch clean through the sky . .
." And then he banished the wonder of that thought and concentrated on
its accomplishment.
"We are calling the gas ship the Turtle," Lansing told them. "Just exactly when the last turtle swam in the
aqua-sphere is a matter of heated argument. Certainly from the levels at which
their shells and fossils have been excavated it must have been several millions
of seasons."
"But the ground levels have been subject
to titanic convulsions," Dinar broke in, ready to battle on the old and
familiar ground of the correct time sequence to be assigned the myriad life
forms of past ages, preserved through the seasons as fossils. "Latousec says from the specimens he recovered on Shan Reef
that the last turtle swam at least five hundred million seasons ago."
"Who can grasp that sort of time scale?
Anyway, it does not matter." The old professor spoke brusquely and, to Kes-ton's alert ears, with a hint of evasiveness; Lansing
didn't believe in that last particular statement. He went on rapidly, turning
to gesture. "At least, Keston, you can see at a
glance why we have called the ship the Turtle."
"Yes." Keston
ran his eye over the protuberances appended to the keel of the ship. Now, once
the clue had been given him, he could deduce their
function.
Then he found himself embarrassed. "What
was that fantastic theory evolved by Latousec?
Something about the tur-de always going to
reproduce—"
Lansing nodded wisely. "I see you have
not lost your finning ability, my dear Keston. Yes, there was more to the choice of name than the
mere fact that turtles possessed four legs. Latousec
suggested, from an ichnological study carried out
under extreme difficulty, what you were about to comment upon. From fossil
imprints held and preserved in compressed rocks that had been mud when the
prints were formed, he suggested the theory that the turtles had the power of
breaking through the sky."
"Little publicity was given to that
report, like so many others of the time," cut in Dinar. "Latousec was nearly chopped by the mob after his first and
only lecture."
"Yes." Lansing laughed quietly.
"I swung a mean sword in those days. Lorim and I
covered Latousec's back when we broke from the
hall." He sighed. "I think what most upset the mob was Latousec's quite casual reference to his work out along the
rim of the sky, where the aquasphere drifts thin.
Ignorant people have always been mortally terrified of those distant
regions."
Dinar grimaced. "And
with reason. Even all my so-called scientific absorption does not
prevent an itchy feeling down my back when the aquasphere
is pinched out between earth and sky. You feel trapped, short of breath."
"Ah, well," said Lansing. "Lorim, with whom I worked for a goodly time, was chopped in
his turn by the damned Zammu, a few seasons later.
Life goes on, life goes on."
"And you have remembered their work and
carried it on all along," said Keston, realizing
afresh the many facets to the dedicated scientist in Lansing.
"Yes,
well," brisked Lansing. "There you have a
gas ship equipped with not four but sixteen legs, like a super turtle. Perhaps we
shall see if legs can break us free of the sky and carry us where we need to
go." He paused, then added, "I mean by that, of course, carry us through the
sky."
Both Dinar and Keston
were staring at Lansing. The slip of the tongue had been so pat, so effortless,
that it opened up vistas of dizzying surmise. Had Lansing
other, hitherto undreamed of information.
No further information to support this
disturbing theory came to Keston's notice in the
hectic days following his introduction to the first gas ship in the world. He
met the other three adventurers who were as keen and full of bounce as Dinar.
Of them all, only Keston was filled with doubts. And
these, as befitted his resolution when he had seen his regiment march away to
the front, he suppressed as well as he could. The task, with the increasingly
bad news, was not easy. The Zammu were everywhere and
in strength that hitherto had appeared impposible.
Professor Lansing seized the opportunity to
have an audience of the Emperor when that august personage spent a fleeting
day in his capital city between traveling from front to front. Keston warmed to the thought that in the midst of the
battle, the Emperor could spend precious time on matters of pure science.
Lansing returned with high-priority chits for requisitioning of materials
needed for the Turtle and the expedition. Nothing was to be allowed
to delay them.
Within the hull of the gas ship and cunningly
bedded down against possible shocks had been built a compact yet versatile
laboratory. Enough experiments could be carried out there to determine beyond
possible doubt just where the gas ship might be once she had burst up beyond
the sky.
Alongside the laboratory and the
isotope-powered motors, which drove the sixteen legs in a pulsating rhythm very
comical to watch as they pounded back and forth in the limpid aquasphere, there lay the algae tanks. These guaranteed a
continuous supply of oxygen, and of the raw material with which many of the
staples to which they were accustomed could be manufactured. And Allaree, as it turned out, besides being a competent
biochemist, was a charmingly efficient cook.
Apart from that, and the quick supposition
that she would make an excellent mother for some man's children, Keston had little time to spare in gallantries. She was
tall and lithe and with hair that flamed to gold when the lights showed its
natural color. Her figure, usually cloaked in the traditional female trailing garment, had caused him to blink. Then he
banished that sort of frivolousness althogether.
Had he been merely a ruffling sharksman along Global Way he would have pursued her with a
single-minded determination until he had won her, seizing brief pleasure in
shadow of the dooms threatening sacred Nablus. But as a scientist working day
and night on a project so vast that he still trembled a little at the thought,
he treated her as just another scientist
He was man enough, in these days of dire
danger for all mankind, to deny his inherent manhood in this one thing.
Anyway, there wasn't time.
Shena, the other girl, a quiet-eyed, calm and
highly trained philologist, together with Hallam, the
engineer, completed the crew. Hallam and Shena were quite beautifully aware of each other and yet
ridden by the same compulsions that kept Keston from
his instincts. For them it was worse. They had an understanding dating from
before the Turtle expedition and now fate had caught them up
and there was no time to be married.
All the crew doubled and tripled up on tasks,
performing crew functions that normally—if there was anything about the Turtle that could be called normal—would have been undertaken by a fair-sized
crew.
Days of equipping the Turtle dragged. Yet they dragged only one after
another; each one was crammed with frenzied activity. Provisions, arms, maps,
scientific equipment, recorders, a whole welter of paraphernalia was thrust
within the stout hull and found some sort of resting place. The gas suits were
tested out and checked and racked. The ship took on the look of an overloaded
stall in the Open Aqua-sphere Market, stinking to high- sky behind the turboflier berths.
On the day they took her for a trial flight, Keston had difficulty in refraining from shouting:
"Let's go nowl Let's
cut this shilly-shallying and start now. At oncel"
He had a good idea that the others felt the
same. All except Professor Lansing. He fussed like a
broody shark over her young.
"Heat," he mumbled to himself one
day. "We must have adequate refrigeration." So that was attended to.
"Light," he said. "We must
assume that the Great Light which so nearly blinded your assistant, Dinar,
would also do the same to us if we gave the chance. Filters."
So that was attended to.
"Lubrication," he grumbled.
"If there is no aquasphere but only a thin and ghosdy mist of gases, we must provide proper lubrication
for the ship's legs." So that was attended to.
And all these attentions took time.
Throughout the fabled city of Nablus the
hospitals were filling. Wounded men, finning wearily
back from the front, arrived in a steadily mounting stream that threatened to
tax the resources of the entire medical and surgical faculty of the city's
health services. Keston although bone-weary managed
to scrape time to visit men of his own regiment lying with pseudo cheerfulness
in their ranked ward hammocks. He listened with a grim, set face to their
stories, tried to smooth out the worry-lines and give the men hope.
Significantiy, no prisoners reached the city.
Keston was realist enough to know that prisoners
were being taken. But he knew, too, as a fighting man that all their
information could be sucked from them long before they need be transported back
here. No one cared to contemplate the terrifying prospect of a prison pen of Zammu within the sacred city's precincts.
All across the wide-flung metropolis the
watch fires burned. Deep-buried beneath the city's heart the nuclear power reactors
worked at full stretch, providing power and heat, recharging gas guns, priming
atomic shells, giving a purpose and a direction to the myriad activities in the
levels above.
Unobtrusively the daily news plastics began to publish a certain figure.
Under the heading 'fathoms' the figure expressed the height from the tallest
tower of Nablus to the edge of the silver sky. With a slow and remorseless
contraction the figure shrank and with its shrinking concentrated the awful
weight of fear lurking in every man's mind.
Of what price the Zammu, that figure seemed to
ask, when on an accelerating curve I descend to zero?
Yet despite the twin pressures bearing down
on the people of Nablus there was no orgy, no abandonment to saturnalia, lust,
drunkenness, licence, no slipping of the casually believed
in yet tenaciously held moral code that had built the Empire of Goldenzee from the ruins of the silted-over Frangian Empire of two thousand seasons ago. Men were Men.
They would stay Men despite the Zammu, despite the
Hopeless Ones born to them through the evil power of unwanted mutations and—a
flickering hope—despite the shrinking of the silver sky.
"You might as
well," Professor Lansing said with impatient scornfulness, "try to
persuade me that the breathless-winged-ones are still what they were once
believed."
Hallam, the engineer, a young, earnest scientist
who regarded Professor Dinar as some sort of elder being, looked
uncomfortable. They were sitting and finning in the
control room of the Turtle, checking through their various positions.
"The two propositions aren't on the same
level," he said quietiy. "We are far enough
advanced to understand that the breathless-winged-ones are not the spirits of
the dead, breaking back through the silver sky to punish and terrorize we
humans left alive in the world."
"Yet
that was a firm belief for thousands of seasons."
"Speaking personally," put in
Dinar, lolling with a flick of the fins above the forward observation ports,
"I support young Hallam. The case of the
Hopeless Ones bears a resemblance to the discredited beliefs of our
ancestors."
"But it does not." Lansing was stubborn. "You have proved
that ancient superstitions are unfounded nonsense. But you have not proved that
the law is in the same category. I say, and I shall continue to say, that we
should have no truck with the Hopeless Ones." He snorted in disgust.
"That they live and breed out on the far ranges at all is a disgrace to
us! Weakling parents who couldn't bring themselves to kill their blasphemous
offspring as the law demands should be severely chastized."
"If you can find them." Allaree sat
placidly, watching the interplay of emotions.
"Out there beyond the frontiers," spluttered Lansing,
"thousands, probably millions, of nightmare creatures which sprang from
the loins of men! It is nothing short of monstrous. Scaly-hided horrors,
web-footed half-men—"
"And crowding in past the
frontiers," said Keston, remembering.
"Why," demanded Lansing, "if
they're allowed to proliferate unchecked do you know
what will happen?"
"Yes," Keston rose and flew towards
the exit. "They indicate that Man will revert to a fish ..." And he finned out.
As he went he heard Lansing say triumphantiy: "So I say we should not seek them as allies.
They may kill and be killed by the Zammu. Let them.
We fight them both."
But allies, allies of almost any sort, would
be desperately welcome now in the Empire of doomed Goldenzee.
The fathom figure in the daily press was shrinking to a numbing quality
of horror. The Zammu, or the contracting sky?
The brightly glittering metal chips of money
that once had meant so much were now as a broken handful of coral. But under
the Emperor's beneficial administrators no one went hungry,
no one went cold down into the deeps. The few pitifully unhuman
profiteers were put down, all sources of supply were
controlled for the common weal. Yes, Keston decided
with savage mockery, the sacred Empire of Goldenzee
was all smooth and ship-shape and neady on parade for
its final dissolution.
The tearing desire in him to visit once again the old homestead and to
prowl the familiar reefs and fields of Ochiltree was a live ache demanding all
his willpower to control. Only the numbed realization that Ochiltree could
never again be as he remembered it held him chained fast to sacred Nablus. The
dread touched him with chill fingers; Ochiltree might already have been
swallowed up by the sacred, dappled, mocking sky.
But no. His father and mother, Kaley
and his wife, tittle Miramee-^they
would be here, then, facing with all the other dispossessed the final act of
the drama.
He stared up, past the highest levels, stared into radiance-shot
blueness where fish flitted and men finned about their business and shuddered
to think how soon from sacred Nablus itself he would be able to discern the
pearly-gray, silver-veined, laughing, tumbled, hateful sky.
"Ignore everything, Hallam,
and bear straight on. We must put the outlying pickets behind us before
nightfall."
Professor Lansing, acknowledged captain of
the expedition, gave his orders in a firm voice. They all knew and understood
the reason for haste. In a wild dawn with the aqua-sphere reaching down with
fingers of pounding power even to the upper levels of fabled Nablus, the Turtle started out with her crew well aware that they must quickly clear the
fighting lines of the men from the Empire of doomed Gold-enzee.
Once beyond that beryl hedge they would be penetrating perilously into
the untamed aquasphere, piercing through the areas
claimed by the Hopeless Ones, by the Zammu, and by
all the fearsome hordes of savage fish escaped from domesticity ages since. Keston had protested. "Why not," he had said,
head for the buckling edge of the sky where it lies within the power and
jurisdiction of Goldenzee?"
But in face of his and the others' protests,
Lansing had held stubbornly to his own orders, and now the Turtle drove on through the blue dimness heading for an adventure that even the
beryl-nerved Keston did not dwell upon for too long.
He sat up alongside Hallam
for a time close to the gas gun turret set in the deck of the ship. At any
moment of danger, that was his post. As of now, with the ship cleaving the
aqua-sphere and with the turbo motors running sweetly, he had time to look
through the observation ports. There was nothing to see. The Turtle bore on and still Keston sat there, not moving
his feet from which the swim fins had been removed, wondering if he would ever
again see golden Nablus and the ancient homestead of Ochiltree.
The Zammu operated
a type of audio search gear similar to the rig installed in the Turtle; Keston could only hope that the gas ship could slip
through unobserved.
Behind him he could visualize the far-flung
lights of fabled Nablus slipping away, dimming and guttering, sliding into the
encompassing blueness, becoming as one with the lambent enveloping mist. He
did not bother to look back. In him skulked a deflation, a feeling of lassitude
and anticlimax. In face of a whole race, a whole world seeing before them utter extinction, what could these four men and two
women aboard their fantastic craft hope to achieve? Of what importance, after
all, was it to pierce through the mystery of the shining silver sky?
Allaree roused him after a time and they ate in the
inner, windowless cabin. The Turtle soared
on. At regular intervals they passed parties of fighting men, coming and going
and presently the activity was stepped up so that soon they were threading
their way through masses of infantry. Back at his gun station, Keston saw with a wry smile that the infantry were all
floating supinely in the manner of infantry the world over awaiting orders
where to fin next.
A few fighting turbofliers
and larger cruisers and a handful of artillery passed. Keston
took a professional interest in all the activity outside the hull of the ship.
Even so, he could not throw off the cloak of ineffective onlooker that suited
him so ill.
Some time elapsed before he
realized that they were not going to pass any more fighting men of Goldenzee. They were out on their own.
At once, perversely, his instincts of conflict aroused and he clambered
back up the narrow turret and swung the gas guns experimentally.
They felt good under his hands.
Designed to operate in the theoretical
absence of the aqua-sphere—a topsy-turvey concept, if
you liked!—they could yet function drastically in the normal world and Keston felt a sadistic desire for Zammu
to rise up, belly white and glistening, before his sights. The heavy metal
bolts would rip through that alien flesh and blood like a reaper harvesting
weed.
Gradually, he realized that the day was drawing to a close. The light
fell with lessening power through the misty levels; the blue veil subdy changed, shifting through the end of the spectrum,
dropping into deeper and deeper indigo, shadowing into positive blackness
unrelieved by a single mote of light. Lansing did not switch on the ship's
internal or external lights. They drove on, a blundering metal monster, one
with the blackness.
Over the next meal, crouched with the others in the inner cabin,
windowless, where a dim illumination showed him their hands and the gleam from
eye and teeth, Keston could not refrain from saying:
"How can the scientific way of life be reconciled with the sword? I am
torn; wrenched apart.
"I want more than anything else to
accompany you on this trip. I am here, willingly going. And yet, again more
than anything else, I want to be with my regiment, weapons in hand, fighting the
Zammu. Can you explain it, Professor? Can you give me
some guide, some idea why it is that two opposites struggle so fiercely in a
simple man's breast?"
Lansing was not disturbed by this uncharacteristic outburst. He must, Keston realized dully, have been clinically observing his
assistant and following the shifts and turns in his emotions. Now the professor
spoke.
"The answer is not simple, my dear Keston. I, too, once upon a time, swaggered
my fins with a sword at my side. But then I began to see that the sword is
useful only when it is serving some noble purpose. In my instance that purpose
was the dedication to science. It may be that we will have to fight before we
reach our goal. We may have to kill. Yet if that goal is reached and our
scientific enterprises are crowned with success, then the sword will have
justified its purpose."
"But you're just putting forward the
theory that the end justifies the means," objected Allaree,
her mouth full of processed algae pie. "I thought that had been discredited."
"I think what is troubling Keston more," said Dinar precisely, "is the
apparent contradiction in terms. On the one hand we have a growing civilization
with nuclear power, atomically charged weapons, turbofliers,
a mounting interest in and understanding of many branches of science, a
humanitarian system of social services. And yet we still wear swords, still
carry tridents and shields, and still ride tiger sharks and swordfish as beasts
of burden."
"That's easily understood," Lansing
said' casually, brushing the argument aside. "We're steadily rebuilding a
smashed empire. You don't just turn easily from a shark mount to a turboflier. Civilization is a painful process. It takes
time, and the time scales become jumbled."
"So all right," said Keston, regretting his outburst and clearly and resignedly
aware that they hadn't followed what was biting him at all. "If we get
through to the rim, then we can start worrying. I take first watch, I
believe?" He rose, finning instinctively to
avoid half-seen obstructions in the crowded cabin. "I'll just go up and
relieve Hallam at the controls."
As he flew out he felt that the others would be discussing him.
Strangely, that did not disturb him. Allaree, alone,
had seemed to understand what was troubling him.
He told himself that this uneasiness, this
lurking fear, had nothing to do with the enterprise upon which they were
engaged. Breaking through the sky . . . No, he trusted that he was not
afflicted with supernatural fears. But, still . . . He would be glad when it
was done.
Up in the control room after he had relieved Hallam, he sat, conning the ship forward and watching
through the ports. Once he saw a distant string of lights, fitful through the
misty levels of the aquasphere, rising and falling
and spelling out in dread and terror one word: Zammu.
They passed into the encompassing blackness
and he felt himself consciously relax. Back there, watching those far-off
fights he had been stricken with the mad and sadistic impulse to switch on the
Turtles fight, to welcome the fight and to battle, come what may.
What were the things in life that mattered to
a fighting man? To wage a good fight, to joy in the battle and to leave a
shining and untarnished reputation ....
When he had completed his watch and slept for
the remaining period of night when the Great Light, too, slept, and arose to
find a blue-dim dawn seeping through the portholes, he felt more alert, more
fit, more swaggeringly uncaring of what might be. He took great care over his
toilet. He strapped on his weapons as though preparing for a full-dress parade
before the exalted person of the Emperor himself. He regretted that in the
turmoil of the present days the Emperor had had no time to meet the members of
the expedition at the last and wish them good luck as he had promised to do.
The Emperor was away on one of the fronts, deep in consultation with his
generals while the mass of Zammu onslaughts never
weakened.
Presently they all clustered in the control
cabin. Steadily, the levels outside lightened, brightening with the return of
the Great Light. Would they, this day, see the Great Light in awesome majesty,
naked, stripped, revealed in all its mighty power to
their puny human senses?
There was a silence between them. The ground
rose steadily, forcing the Turtle to
fly higher and higher, and soon, frighteningly soon, they could see the dimpled
sky up there, dancing and glittering, flashing a thousand reflections upon the
firm, packed sand beneath. Here was where any normal man would turn back. Here
began that uneasy area of the world where the sky and the ground together
sandwiched so small an amount of aquasphere that only
the smallest of indifferent fish chose to swim and chance what horrific results
might accrue to such foolhardiness. And now, four men and two women were
venturing where before only brainless fish had swum.
The legs of the Turtle struck the ground.
Lansing roused himself. "Let in the
power, Hallam," he ordered. His voice was not as
firm as it had been. Hallam obeyed.
The vibration and feeling of motion changed.
Now they were rocked and rolled as the sixteen legs outside bent and
straightened, seeking firm grips upon the sand, carrying them unhesitatingly
onward. The motion was upsetting. -Shena and Allaree paled and even Keston
felt a nausea plunging in his stomach.
"Do not be alarmed," Lansing said.
He sounded alarmed himself. "We carried out ground tests before, you remember.
This queasy feeling is only gas sickness. It will wear off."
Keston remembered the old legends. Of how the aqua-sphere moved, all in a solid body, unaccountable,
first this way and then that. Of how, if you ventured too close to the
buckled edge of the sky the whole aquasphere would
drain away behind you. Impossible, fantastic, fear-ridden myths, and yet
stories that gripped him now in the strangeness of the moment.
He mentioned it in a shaky voice. Hallam laughed, once, too shrilly. The girls were silent,
but their hands clasped in mutual search for reassurance.
Dinar said: "The old legends. Hahl That the bulk of the aquasphere could so move up and down is preposterous nonsensel"
Lansing did not say anything.
Ahead lay a shelving sandy ground, trending steadily upwards at a gende incline that, suddenly and
anticlimactic-ally, maintained the Turtle's rounded
back some few spear-lengths from the silver sky. The legs outside clanked on,
their noise a droning, regular rhythm oddly comforting.
Periods of time passed. Lansing consulted his private plastics. The
tremble in his arms was marked now. Dinar kept a watchful eye on the engines
and Hallam sat with the controls gripped in hands
that had the need of something to cling to and steady their tremble. Slowly,
eerily, the sky crept down.
Presendy Keston felt he
could endure this no more. He finned upright and wormed his way into the gas
gun turret.
Up here, through the vision slit toughly protected by transparent
plastic produced at fantastic temperatures in the empire's mammoth nuclear
factories, he watched with heavily twitching eye. He was afraid. So he was
afraid. He wasn't the only one.
Now he could see only by ducking his head
down and peering upward at an acute angle. The dancing silver light was
blinding. Incredibly, here, at the edge of the world, myriads of brilliant fish
were sporting. A few weeds trailed away in the turbulence of their passage.
He sat back, his eyes smarting.
When he once more applied his eye to the
vision slit he could not at first understand what it was that he was seeing.
Across the plastic sprawled a succession of
spear points, silver, constandy moving, upright
wedges of some transparent material that held all the fear-loaded emphasis of
beckoning fingers. He started back with an involuntary exclamation.
As he watched, awe-struck, the wavering line
of dancing points slid down the plastic. Bright blueness below, a brilliance
such as he had never experienced before above. With trembling fingers he pulled
the filters designed by Professor
Lansing into position over the plastic. At once he felt a profound shock of dismay,
of disappointment, of despair.
He was staring at the same sandy floor that
the Turtle had been legging it over before. The sand lay smooth and undisturbed
before him and all the fish had gone. He raised his vision. Ahead lay a long
vista of sand and rocks, then a rocky rim, small and distant with a few tumbled
weeds growing from its summit.
So they hadn't broken through the sky after alii
They had in some miraculous fashion merely carried on
traveling and were now simply crawling along the floor, bathed still in the
omnipresent aquasphere. A twist of dimensional wizardry,
a flashback in time, a subtle and not to be understood distortion of the known
world had perhaps brought them back in a full circle so that they were now
moving clumsily back to their starting point. He choked down the bitterness and
slid from the turret, rejoined the others in the control room.
Their faces, their features, the stark
disbelief written large there staggered him. Did he, then, look like that?
Lansing said in a choked voice, "Comrades, we have left the sky behind
us."
Keston said, "But that is impossible. The
Great Light has rejected us, turned us back—" Then he followed the gaze of
the others, and turned, and looked back through the rear ports.
A picture he could not understand; a scene
for which he had no words ....
Brightness. Infinite distance. A sensation of smallness. A vertigo,
seizing him, making his eyes dizzy and his brain spin. A smooth, shimmering
veil spread out over all the ground, split by vagrant shafts of fight, green
and blue and silver and gold. Blueness above, unthinkable,
remote, tremendous blueness. And in that blueness were gigantic monsters
of white, formless, groping, piled as though by the
maniacal hand of a madman playing with current-cast sand.
He swallowed. He had no words. He had no
brain to weigh, to assess, to measure. He had only eyes, to see and marvel and
fail to comprehend.
Lansing rusded
his plastics. His
face held now the fanatical glow of a man whose wildest dreams have come true.
He was elevated, possessed, driven by a force that had given him no rest; that
was now demanding still further efforts.
"We will leg it up to that rocky
crest," he said, his voice shaking; but shaking now with elation and wild
surmise. "We will then stop and look about. What we may see ..."
The Turtle crept
over the sand. Now Kestoii felt that the motion was
more rapid, freer, as though some clinging weight had been removed. In this
brilliant place above the sky perhaps everything was
insubstantial, ghostlike, not bound by the normal earthly values obtaining in
the familiar aqua-sphere that must now he beneath them?
Lansing gave the order and the Turtle stopped. They peered over the ridge.
A cry of utter amazement, of sheer disbelief,
burst from Keston.
Directiy ahead lay a mass of weeds, huge weeds, thick
stemmed and growing directly upwards, sprouting into tufty
heads that held still and silent and without motion. He felt he was going
crazy, adrift now in the impossible place.
"They are," he said, choking a
little over it. "They must be the source of the Emperor's logs."
"Probably," Lansing said, his attempt
at matter-of-fact scientific poise shattered by the tremble in voice and hands.
"Note that there are no currents
here," said Dinar. "What you would expect in a thin mist of
gases." He glanced at Hallam. "We'd better
check the packing. If the aquasphere inside starts to
leak out—as it must do—then we will be in trouble."
"Aren't we now?" said Shena
unexpectedly.
"No, my dear, we are
not," said Lansing. He was recovering rapidly now after the experience.
"Now, all of you, please gather around me."
He spread his plastics. "Here you see a map. It was drawn up by Doctor Lorim—"
"Who was chopped by the Zammu after Latousec's lecture?"
"The same. Although it was not
directly afterwards. He wanted to prove Latousec
right. He found strange facts on his travels and passed on much information to
me. We worked together, you know. On his last expedition I came into possession
of his notes.
"So before he died he had passed on to me details of his latest
discoveries. Briefly, he discovered the ages-dead ruins of a city, close to the
buckled edge of the sky. In all the confusion of warfare and empire building
and Zammu fighting that has gone on, this information
was only too easy to keep secret. The Emperor knows, of course."
Keston nodded. "That would explain how you
acquired those priorities."
"Yes. Well, Lorim's
city should have been passed over by us in our passage—"
"But we didn't."
"Precisely. That city has been engulfed by the
sky."
Keston looked uneasily through the viewport. The
shadows of objects, he saw, lay thick and hard and unmoving. No one so far had
broached the single topic that, it now seemed, had still the power of frightening
them. No one had yet suggested coupling in the viewports that would allow them
to see direcdy above.
"This city, like so many that we uncover
in our archaeological diggings all over the ground known to Man, was not one
but many cities, each built upon the ruins of its predecessor. Lorim dug through twenty strata and found many hitherto
unknown artifacts, devices that have been lost to us and some which are
laboriously being rediscovered."
Still no one wanted,to
look upwards.
"When he had reached back in time so far
that all figures lose their meaning, he had still not reached a city that had
been built when the last turtle roamed the aquasphere.
Then-fossil remains lay in even, lower horizons. But
he persevered. On the thirtieth level he—" Lansing paused. He finned a refreshing
current across his face.
Well, were they going to take a look upward?
"Lorim, you
must remember, carried out this work according to a strict archaeological
regimen. He rushed nothing. So it was that at the thirty-first level he
realized that he could not carry on at his regular rate and achieve success
before he would be forced to return to Nablus for supplies. The aquasphere deals harshly with artifacts left exposed. The
protecting silt and mud covering the vanished cities preserves them for all
time for our inspection—"
And, fumed Keston,
are we to sit here for all time listening to this ancient tale of dead cities,
when outside lay-lay what?
"What
is the relevance of this?" asked Dinar.
"Simply, for now, that
the city partially excavated by Doctor Lorim lies
ahead of us. My
measurements—if my maps are correct—show that we have broken through the sky
where when Lorim was here the aquasphere
stretched ... "
So there it was. Now they had to think. Keston finned up and reached for the control catches on the
upward view ports. He turned to the others. Lansing swallowed and nodded.
Keston
opened the ports.
A bar of brilliant golden light struck down,
shaped like the port, struck like a sword, splashed fire in all their faces.
Instinctively, hands flew up to cover eyes.
When at last Keston
peered out he saw the strange and clear blueness extending and—he staggered
back, dropping to the deck of the ship. Daggers of fire clawed at his eyes.
Chips
of flame flashed in his retinas. He was blinded, in agony, shaking all over and
more frightened than he had ever before known in his life. He groped
desperately for comfort and reassurance in the cabin of the ship.
"Evidently my assistant did not leam from yours, my dear Dinar." Lansing swung the
filters into position. Some long time after that Keston
again looked out. The blueness was dimmed to a deep violet and in that violet
field swam a monstrous, single inflamed eye. He stared for a very long time.
No one could explain what a single ball of
flame was doing suspended in mid-nothing, and no one, for the moment, tried.
But Keston felt a weird elation in him. He had
seen the Great Light!
For that, without the shadow of a doubt, was
what that single lambent eye of light must be.
In their confident struggle to rebuild a shattered
civilization from the ruins of the Empire of Frangia,
the people of the Empire of Coldenzee had adapted and
turned to their own ends a gnosis that incorporated belief in life after death
—as witness the fantastic idea that the breathless-winged-ones were the spirits
of the departed and uneasy dead—a reverence for the older beliefs and an
understanding that beyond the silver sky lay the Great Light, whom or which no
one would see this side of final dissolution.
Now Keston was
seeing the Great Light at first hand, face to face. No wonder his blindness had
been so painful, no wonder he felt like a shrimp clicking along in the shadow
of a barracuda.
"And is this all," Professor Dinar
was asking vehemendy, "that we have dared for? To burst through the sky to seek a lost and forgotten city?"
Professor Lansing was not perturbed. "That, and other things, my dear professor. Already our
laboratory has turned out enough riddles to last our colleges many seasons. No,
I feel it much wiser not to tell you just yet what this city means to us
until we have found it and reach down again to the thirty-first level."
And with that they had to be content.
The Turtle rumbled on over the strange ground. Nothing
moved outside. Weeds remained upright, shivering only occasionally,
the ground maintained a perfectiy firm appearance, completely lacking the
shifting streaks of color and liquid reflection so typical of the normal world.
Every now and then one of the mysterious white monsters high above would sail
between them and the Great Light. Keston felt a touch
of blasphemy then.
Looking out he was continuouosly
struck by the impossibly infinite depths of vision. Allaree
had worked with Lansing on meticulous dissections of breathless-winged-ones
and had reported the structure of the eyes. Different from those of a man, the
retinas were far more flat. Keston knew that Allaree believed human being's eyes ill adapted for this place. Everything was incredibly tiny—he had at first thought that his eyes had
shrunk when he had observed the distance and the curvature of the Turtles hull. Out there in a gas suit, he felt, he would be reaching immense
distances for the most near and trivial objects.
He remembered standing perched on the topmost tower of far-away
Nablus—breaking the law into the bargain—and thinking how far he could see. Now
that experience receded.
It had the remembered effect of being in the
center of a confining globe of light, with details more distant than about
thirty fins vague and formless and undefined. Now he would not care to hazard a
guess as to the number of fins' distance he could see. In that abnormal vision
the ruins took a long time to reach. They were scattered about the plain before
the Turtle, gray, sharp, unthinkably ancient and—and pathetic.
"That is where Lorim
pitched camp," Lansing said,- excitement making
him hop from port to port. No one wore fins inside the ship; had they done so
Lansing would have bludgeoned someone in his enthusiastic violence.
"The last time men were here this was
part of the normal world," Lansing whispered, half to himself.
The Turtle crawled
like a monstrous crab up to the depression in the sand. Shattered walls of
metal reared everywhere. At irregular intervals widely-opened excavations
gaped, dark and blackly inviting. Even through the filters light bounced in
cruel fangs from the metal, showed it to be scarred and corroded.
The strangest item to Keston was the lack of smothering weed. A few wisps of
green tufted here and there over the crumbled masonry; back in the normal world
any ancient object would be smothered in weeds and shellfish and all the myriad
life forms battening on'decay.
And Keston
chuckled, suddenly, freely.
Allaree smiled at him, her mouth tremulous.
"I
was just thinking of one of the sharksmen who went to
sleep on duty outside the palace's rear gateway and woke up to find his
fighting harness smothered with limpets."
Well, he felt better, at that.
"Ah, hm,"
Lansing said, and paused. Keston smiled.
"Me."
Allaree raised one hand in an involuntary gesture.
Lansing smiled in return and patted Keston on the
shoulder.
So
they both donned gas suits, checked that their own
portable supply of aquasphere was functioning
smoothly within the suits, and entered the lock. Hallam
checked, calling out reassuringly. The inner valves closed. The aqua-sphere
was pumped back into the ship. What lay around him now, Keston
had no desire to dwell on.
The
outer valves opened and he stepped awkwardly through, wanting always to lean
forward and fly out. Like the Turtle, he
would have to use his legs not only to support himself in an upright position,
but as a means of moving along actually fixed to the ground. He felt
undignified. Legs weren't made for thatl
He
saw Lansing stagger and collapse and then he, too, was falling. He.pushed out
both hands. The ground came up with unbelievable force and rapidity.
Everything was tiny and far away and bright.
Like an ungainly crab he crawled along on
hands and feet, his rear high above his head, panting so that the confined aquasphere circulated through his lungs and gill-slits at
an accelerated rate. Stumblingly, head cricked to see where he was going, he
crawled after the professor.
The two men were actually crawling along on
the ground in this place beyond the silver sky. Momentarily, Keston expected the sky to fall back onto him; it would
have been reassuring, at that. He tried to stand up as he would have done back
at Ochiltree; each time he felt himself falling.
How like life, he thought crossly. Strip away superstitiion,
strip away your own fears and venture out onto a great and glorious expedition,
with the magical aid of science pry past the barrier set by nature, and what
did you end up with?
Two red-faced men crawling
along on their hands and knees.
With the aid of the
mechanical cutters and grabs and shovels swinging from derricks on the exterior
of the Turtle
they dug their way in the succeeding days down
into the buried cities. Every now and then someone went outside in a gas suit
to superintend some finicky operation, but this frolicsome exercise was kept to
a minimum. Keston had at once protested his teacher's
barbaric attack upon the site. Lansing had simply said: "There is no time left,
Keston. No time! The Zammu
are destroying fabulous Goldenzee while you prate
about the proper archaeological digging system. We must find what Lorim talked about in his last delerium."
"What do you seek, professor?"
"When the shovels strike a substance
through which they cannot cut, I will tell you more." Lansing was looking
tired. "I scarcely credit the theory myself. I must be sure that what Lorim said—what I have until now fervendy
believed —is indeed true. The whole expendition is
meaningless otherwise. Yet the nearer we come to testing that truth the more
undecided and disbelieving I grow."
Allaree, smiling, said, "That's just human
nature, professor."
Hallam glanced across the control cabin. His face
was set. "The cutters are whining off a surface they cannot pierce,"
he said.
It was the catalyst.
By the time the others had assisted in
scraping away the peculiar ground and uncovered a sloping wedge of the object,
Lansing had rested and regained his usual urbanity.
Up here, wherever here was, the ground had no cohesion; it slipped through mechanical fingers
and fell straight and unpluming, oddly disturbing.
Scraping away the hard-packed earth, they marveled at its brittleness. There
was an absence here, a lack of something with which they had been so familiar
throughout their fives that they could put no name to it.
They clustered at the viewports.
From the angles of the curve, Hallam and Dinar calculated that the dome formed a perfect
hemisphere. The material of which it was composed defied their means of
analysis. Dinar was not sure, even, that it was a solid material and talked to
himself of semisolid states and lines of force and magnetic cages. The others
left Dinar and Hallam to work on the dome and
contented themselves with looking at it. It shone, dull-gray, sheening still through the millions of seasons it had lain
here, covering—covering what? Lansing sat down, finning
limply, elated 3nd yet calm and scientifically triumphant.
He said: "Lorim,
then, spoke the truth. He spoke of this featureless dome of metal, or of
whatever material it turns out to be. Lorim could not
decide, either. But he did not have the advantage of having with him Goldenzee's foremost physicist."
Dinar grunted.
Keston wondered whether or not the compliment was a
trifle late. Dinar, he felt, would have preferred to have been told the problem
before setting off so that he could have brought any special equipment he
anticipated would be needed. He might, too, have begun to form theories. But
that was always dangerous. Maybe shrewd old Lansing knew best, after all.
As though fully understanding these thoughts,
Lansing said with a little smile: "I could not tell you before, my dear
Dinar, for a number of reasons. But the chief one, I think you will readily
see, was that I simply could not be sure that this great dome existed. It could
so easily have been a phantasm, conjured up in Lorim's
mind, excited as it was by the potentialities this discovery led him—and us—to
consider."
"Nothing can be certain up here,"
Dinar said, not taking his eyes from the dome. "Except
uncertainty."
Hallam's expressive face was alight. "The
potentialities you mention . . ."
"Must by now be obvious to you all."
Dinar swung round sending currents swirling.
"It is my considered opinion that this
dome is more than mere metal. We know it to be unthinkably old. I doubt that
untreated metal would have remained intact over time spans of this order and so
I assume that an energy source exists which creates a field of force within, or
about, the material to provide a continuous support. We have played with such
things in the nuclear labs."
"One
item there, my dear Dinar." Lansing's face shadowed. "When Lorim reached the dome and removed, as we have done, the
overlying silt and rubble, he said that he stumbled across a crack, a fissure,
in the surface. And into that crack the aquasphere
poured with titanic force."
"A rupture of the fieldl" said Dinar, dismayed.
But Keston had finned beyond that. "The aquasphere that for millions of seasons had lain above the
dome poured into it when the crack was uncovered. That means—"
"You all understand what that
means?" asked Lansing somberly.
The
concept, once grasped, was astoundingly simple. "Yes, but—" someone
said. "That means—"
"The aquasphere poured in and down—"
Today the aquasphere
is shrinking upon our world," said Dinar didactically. "There is extant
the idea that this may have happened in previous ages. The sky is falling upon
the world we know, and yet here we are upon another part of this globe. Might
not there be a movement about the world, with the aquasphere
not Becessarily anchored to one portion of it?"
"The old legends that the aquasphere
breathed—"
Lansing moved a hand. "Lorim said that the force was so great that their spoil was
moved back and redeposited in the crack, taking two
men with it, and sealing off the fissure. They were lucky not to be swept away,
camp and all. Disheartened at the end of the digging, he came home— and was
caught by the Zammu. Only his notes survive."
"And so we are here," said Keston in a whisper. "Again we uncover this age-old
secret." He stared around at the others. "But what lies
beneath?"
No
answer to that question was to be found that day. The Great Light became
veiled. Movement stirred noticeably in the strange tall, stiff weeds. A massive
darkness spread over the world. Into that darkness, hurled like flung harpoons
and blazing with elemental wrath, shafts and lances of fire scorched across
their retinas. Noise bellowed down from some unknown sphere. Even though sound
traveled here at only a quarter of its normal speed they were bewildered by
the crashing crescendoes of sheer volume.
A few scattering drops pitted the ground with
round dark splotches. No one ventured to guess what they might be.
As
soon as the Great Light reappeared—to Kes ton's heartfelt
relief— the strange dark dots vanished.
Brushing all these eerie scientific
manifestations aside, Lansing pushed on with excavation of the dome. Their stay
above the sky was limited; the great deeps and the battling city of Nablus
called.
Daily, as the work progressed, Dinar grew more and more irritable. The
trouble was that his work did not progress and he felt himself responsible and
lacking in some vital fashion in the eyes of his comrades. Clumsily, Keston tried to reassure him and had his head bitten off in
response.
During the short nights they often tried to work out what those
far-off—or quite near?—firefish were. They did move,
in a great wheeling arc all across the—well, Keston
had to face it—across the sky. If they had broken through the sky into this place, then what was above here must be this place's sky. No other great
radiance lit the night sky apart from those myriads of tiny chips of fight all
during their stay; nothing else shared this uncanny region's sky with the Great
Light by day and the swarming firefish by night.
They found the crack reported by Lorim. They scraped and shoveled away congested earth and
rocks and uncovered the pitiful remains of the two men swept away. Burial
presented a problem; how could you bury a man if there was no aquasphere in which to set him tenderly adrift? These two
men had already reached past the silver sky. In the end they piled a huge mass
of boulders and rocks above them and committed their spirits to the Great Light
just as that weird luminosity sank below the distant hills.
Staring down into the fissure and allowing his mind to roam ahead of his
body, Keston was besieged by his familiar twin-devils
in emotions. He wanted to retire hurriedly, not to go down into those black
depths, and hide away from the fear he clearly sensed rising from the pit like
ink from a cuttlefish. And yet, at the same time, he was eager, anxious,
recklessly wanting to descend and to pry back the millions of seasons, to open
up a window onto past ages. There was only one course open to him and that he
knew well enough. And so he threw off any thoughts he had about not going down.
That was what they had come here for, wasn't
it? To go into whatever lay beneath the dome and rend away the secret of is construction.
"We must get in," Dinar said emphatically.
"If we are to create our own domes then every portion of the technology
used must be fully understood. It goes without saying that the thinking
involved here is in advance of our own."
"Does that mean, though," asked Allaree, "that we may not ever be able to understand
how the dome was made?"
Hallam answered, as usual backing up his chief. "Oh, no, Allaree. But it does
mean that we will have to copy everything exactly. Until we fully understand
how to make a dome, we are like children following the instructions of their
teachers and creating objects for which they are fully responsible. But, one
day, we will understand just what we are doing."
Lansing moved about with his demeanor of hard
purpose showing starkly through the facade of the kindly, bumbling old
professor. He contained himself with difficulty against the delays and the
frustrations.
"We have come here on the chance that Lorim's reports were accurate. They were. Now it is all up
to us. Nablus, Goldenzee, our whole
way of life, rest squarely on our shoulders." His face was
animated. "I look forward to the day when the first dome goes up over Nablusl Then we will extend outwards and at each fresh
advance the Zammu will be pressed back and back until
all the aquasphere once again rightly belongs to
mankind!"
It was a grandiose, a wonderful and yet so
common sense a vision that Keston felt that it must
succeed, come what might.
Dinar and Hallam
worked out between them the best method of approach. By descending the fissure
and advancing in a straight line they calculated that they should reach the
exact centre of the hemisphere. Dinar was confident that there, at that spot,
they would find the energy source that maintained the dome through the millenia.
The two girls were quite prepared to stay
with the Turtle. Nothing had been seen that gave any
alarm—alarm, that is, on the purely physical level. A few
breathless-winged-ones sailed past overhead from time to time, but the gas
ship's guns could take care of them if the need arose.
Crawling in his gas suit towards the lip of
the fissure, Keston wondered why he'd strapped on his
sword. The dangers they were facing were not likely to be those a man could cut
into with a keen edge or thrust with a point that would settle the question
finally. Only when he was waiting to go down was the answer given him.
He was going into unknown dangers, facing
hidden terrors, fighting a battle that his comrades of the Emperor's watchsharks would never know. He needed the reassurance of
their intangible presence, the comradeship with them in the hour of strife. And
the sword was a sacred symbol, a symbol of the best in life, striving through
turmoil to the peace that might lie beyond.
Chapter
IX
At last Keston stood on the rim, balancing precariously
with grasping hand-manipulators, staring down into remote and shivery
blackness.
He was not looking forward with the same zeal
to this descent as he had to the ascent above the sky. They had risen to pierce
beyond the silver sky; it seemed foolish and topsy-turvy now to be venturing
down into the depths again. There was something cold, illogically primitive,
about this voluntary descent into solid earth and rock.
And
yet it wasn't solid, was it? Lorim had reported that 1
the aquasphere had flowed strongly until choked off. Kes-toh adjusted his helmet light, glanced across at
Lansing and then began the precipitous descent.
Again and again he wished that, he was
descending this cliff of rubble in the aquashphere.
Then he would have dived freely, joying in the
experience. Now he had to slip and slide a few fins' length, grasp a projecting
boulder, let himself go on again, fetch up against a sheet of metal, curved,
extruding from the debris. Then the cautious heart-stopping descent could begin
again to bring fresh dangers. He lost all count of time. Lansing followed
closely with Hallam assisting Dinar a few
spear-lengths in the rear.
Shaking with reaction, Keston
at last reached a broad and sand-strewn area which their light failed to reveal
in its entirety. They all looked about.
In the strange absence of the aquasphere their lamps threw bewildering lances of light in
which silvery motes gyrated like frenzied reef fish. All
about stretched eerie shadows, looming and half-seen masses of debris and
wrecked machinery, the hint of the work of titans. At their backs,
soaring away the slope of rubble down which they had so painfully crawled, the
scale was enormous.
They began to crawl across the ground which
was littered and craggy and which puffed up in billowing spurts of the all-prevading crumbly detritus. The fever of exploration
gripped Keston and he marveled that said scientists
could still experience the pure and unalloyed thrill of reaching past the
frontiers of the known even when their whole world was threatened. Without the
shining prize of the dome-technology to be unearthed, he knew they would still
experience that urge for discovery; it owed nothing to any consideration of
reward. The four men fell into a frenzy of discovery and a high elation of
adventure. Time passed.
This had been a city. That, at the least,
they could determine. That it had been like no city understood or even
envisaged by Keston did not enter the matter for he
knew that in some distant and forgotten time long since choked with the weeds
of decay and ruin, men and women and children had flown through these streets,
had lived in these houses, had made love, lived and died.
Even their rough, preliminary estimates of a
date astounded and awed them. So long ago, so long ago.
.. .
Then Lansing shattered those comforting illusions.
They touched helmets, relishing this alive human contact in that city of the past, there beneath
the broken columns of a titanic arch, and Lansing's voice vibrated in Keston's helmet.
"This city is one unknown to menl Men have never lived here. Look at the architecture.
Look at the way the place has been designed, run your eyes along the street
facades— where are the balconied doorwindows allowing
ingress conveniently at every level? Where are the turboflier
landing stages. Those flat roofs there appear strangely
different."
"You must expect a difference,"
objected Dinar. "This city is old." But
the eerie acceptance of the truth of Lansing's statement rang hollowly in his
voice.
"I see what you
mean," Keston said slowly. "These people
lived on a monolevel. They could not fly freely
through the aquasphere as we do and so they built
their city difierendy. Those levels there with many
little floors one above another. You could crawl up those if you were chained
to the ground by gravity as we are now—" He stopped, horrified by what he
had said: As we are now!
"Yes." Lansing was wearily
triumphant, as though having finned a long, hard race. "The people who
lived here could not have been men. Lorim said the aquasphere flowed in. So that means they were living here
above the sky before the aquasphere, if our
speculations are correct, moved across and brought with it the normal
world."
"But how did they breathe?"
demanded Dinar, the physics man.
"Think of the
breathless-winged-ones—" "But they fly."
"These people, long since dead and gone, must have breathed too,
and not flown."
"Amazing!" said Hallam.
He looked about uneasily.
"Dead and gone," breathed Keston. "Their bones mouldering in the eternal ooze." Then:
"But there would be no ooze."
"Precisely." Professor Lansing's voice trembled. "I
would dearly love to uncover fossils. Their physiology must have been widely variant from ours. We can barely move about here, crawling
and scrabbling like undignified crabs. What system of locomotion did they
possess? If they had legs they must have been immensely thick and strong and
dumpy. What were their faces like—if they had faces? Weird,
bizarre, different. And yet still a mere product of this Earth." He
would have gone on but the monstrous idea had occurred to Keston
and he could not keep it down. He voiced it now, conscious of its enormity.
"We have often speculated where the
other races of intelligent beings have come from," he said diffidently and
yet with angry purpose underlining his words. "The octopoids
we know evolved in far-distant reaches of our own aquasphere-covered
land. But what of the rat-people? The
Hermaphrodilia? The genus of
the corporate entities? Maybe they originated here? Maybe, even, the Zammu—" The idea shook them all.
"It's almost unbelievable," whispered Lansing. "But our
concepts are being overturned continuously since we broke through the silver
sky. Maybe this was a city of the Zammu.
Maybe they did evolve so they could live in our normal
world."
"It might account for their deviltry," growled Dinar.
"The time scales don't match, though," observed Lansing.
"This city is older, far older than fifty thousand seasons, when we first
have records of the Zammu."
Keston felt the bilious fear in him. Ghostly
essences reached out with groping fingers to pluck at his nerves. He laughed, a
short,. savage,
self-conscious burst of sound.
"Whilst I am still a thinking man and
can wield a sword I will not fear a thousand-million season's old ghost. Come
on. The centre should be along here."
And he broke contact and led the shambling advance through the crumbling
gloom-infested city.
How long it took they could never be sure;
but they found the decaying heart of the city and stood, propped against
shattered archways, marveling and amazed, filled with awe. The dome testified
that the entities who had built here had built well, and whoever or whatever
they had been, they seemed now to congregate about the four men, huddled
together in converse, and huddled, too, against the unknown. Dinar and Hallam threw off that opressive
feeling of being overlooked and set about the task. They found the energy
source located in a plain, simple and intact building set at the junction of
eight streets.
More than that they did not find out.
They could not enter the
building.
It stood, enigmatic,
serene, undisturbed by the passage of time and the long procession of the ages.
"This must be the place," Dinar
said. His voice rang hollow with disillusion in their helmets. "Everything
points to that building holding the key to the domes."
"And to our future protection against
the Zammu," said Keston.
"And," Lansing said mildly—so
mildly that Keston broke contact for a moment so as
to look closely at the old professor. His face was quite blank, quite
unmarked, quite unlike himself. He went on: "If a building can stand, impregnable,
for a thousand-million seasons, there must be a reason. There seems to be no
way in and perhaps that is just what the builders intended. We have no tools to
break in. The energy upholding the dome must come from a ' source we can only
guess at. From deep in the Earth, perhaps; hardly from
fusion power in the lack of an aquasphere.
Perhaps—I offer this as a suggestion—perhaps this building and the dome are in
some way energized by the Great Light itself."
No one could find the strength to argue that now.
Lansing looked around on them, then he regained contact and said with sorrow shading his
voice: "Gentlemen, we have failed."
After that, for a space, they raged and
ramped at the building. To have come all this way, to have ventured so much—and
to be beaten in the endl Keston
beat upon the phlegmatic walls with his sword. Then the blessed sanity of the
everyday rescued him and he desisted because he was taking the edge off his
weapon.
"We may have the chance to return. I
very much doubt it. But we may." Lansing brisked
around, herding them. "We must return now. This is not the first defeat we
have suffered in the cause of science."
Keston accepted that. It was facile and, in the
present situation, ludicrous, but a man had to cling to something when
everything he had planned on had fallen apart. They were not in this thing, not
so deeply committed, purely in abstract cause of science. Fabulous Nablus and
the Empire of Goldenzee weighed in the balance
against their failure.
Defeated, dejected, they crawled back the way
they had come.
A flicker ahead in the ruins arrested Keston's attention, and he stopped crawling
the better to lift his head and look. Half a dozen strange gray creatures were
going swifdy across the street. He had no words to
describe them. They had no fins and no scales and they did not fly. Beneath
their bodies was a blur.
Lansing said: "I have examined fossils of the rat-people. They had
large spatulate tails and webbed hands and feet.
Those creatures had long worm-like tails. But in all else, in all else . .
."
"Let us follow them." Dinar
scrabbled away, followed at once by Hallam. Lansing
looked over at Keston, smiled half-heartedly, and
began to crawl after Hallam. His expression said
quite clearly: "Having failed, we might as well see what this will lead
to."
Keston had not liked the look of those strange
creatures. He remembered his thoughts when the breathless-winged-one had broken
through on Long Mile Reef and smiled a litde as
he saw how truly he had predicted the reaction of a scientist.
But he followed the others. This might turn
out to be why he had been taken along.
In a tumbling slither of fallen masonry and
twisted beams, squeezing beneath prostrate girders, slipping and sliding down
mounds of unidentifiable debris, he followed. He reached an octogonal
chamber, roofless, decaying, smothered with the
strange gritty material in which their movements left streaky smears. He threw
his fight ahead.
At once his sword was out of his scabbard,
the mechanical grips giving him an odd sensation as they grasped the familiar
ridged hilt.
His legs thrust hard in an automatic reflex that would in aquasphere have sent "him gliding forward in an attacking
dive. He skittered forward wildly.
Dinar was down, a creature—a
rat-person?—worrying him with jaws that, for all their smallness, were yet a
potent danger. Lansing was fending off the combined attacks of three others and
Hallam was kicking desperately at more as he lay on
his. back, flailing with arms and legs. The situation
was not pretty and cast a grave reflection on the sagacity of the men. That
men could be killed by animals of this stamp was insane.
Then, again, were they animals? Suppose the breathless-ones were in very truth the
departed of Earth. Were their spirits reborn in different flesh and blood? Keston gripped his sword and fought away the demons that
clawed at his mind.
He put in a thrust that skewered a rat-person
and he swung the sword high and hard so that the pierced body hurtled bloodily
away, keening, to disappear. Those little fangs might puncture a weak spot of a
gas suit; one of his friends might suddely be bereft
of aquasphere and what manner of death he would die
was past comprehension. Keston's sword flashed again
and Lansing was able to scrabble up and keep his helmet away from flashing
fangs.
Their helmet lights criss-crossed
in confusing brilliance.
A rat-person scuttled away from Hallam, turned on Keston.
Bringing the sword around in a slicing sideways stroke was an extraordinary
experience; there was nothing to clog and slow his sword arm down. The two
halves of the rat-person toppled away.
From then on the fight was relatively
enjoyable. He found that he could bring the sword around so fast that a sideways
blow from the edge could cleave a rat-person down the backbone. They had
backbones all right; Keston saw the shattered
vertebrae gleaming whitely in the lamp's blaze.
They had blood, too. . . .
He stopped using the old reliable point and
hacked his way across the octogonal room. In moments
it was all over. Thankfully, they checked up to find no one's suit punctured.
But it had been a near thing.
And then Keston threw his light upon the
walls.
Lansing forgot the rapid dissection of the
body beneath his grips, a body a good three fins' length from nose to rump and
with a whiplike tail another two fins' length after
that. He, together with the others, stared at the walls and what their lamps
revealed.
Recognition that this long dead decaying
building had been a hospital was slow in coming. The mouldering,
defaced yet still achingly modem pictures adorning the walls brought instant
acceptance once they had been understood. The four lozenges of light splayed
over the murals, picking out color, detail, story.
"An allegory," Keston said,
unheeding that the others could not hear him. It was all there. They made their
halting way around the circuit of the room scarcely crediting that what they
saw could ever have existed, and marveling at every fresh and sudden spark of
life from the past, revealed in a twist of limb, the expression of a face or
the grace of a mother cradling her baby.
They touched helmets.
There in some forgotten cavern deep beneath
the crust of the world, buried by tons of earth and rock, four men clad in
their incongruous gas suits sought comfort and reassurance from one another in
the time-shattered rubble of the ages-old city.
"So they were
men."
Professor
Lansing spoke, but it could have been any one of the four. "Men."
"Men with arms and
legs, with heads and eyes and noses and faces. Men who must have thought
much as we do. Men who lived here millions on millions
of seasons ago; who did not posses gill-slits and who did not live in the aquasphere of the normal world."
"Yet they were like us!"
"So very like
us."
No matter who spoke, no matter who voiced the
same thoughts thronging all their brains.
"Perhaps, as we speculated about the Zammu, these long-gone men evolved—"
"Perhaps they are not gone long."
"Perhaps they were faced with the
self-same problem that faces us. Perhaps their sky was falling upon them. And
so they sought sanctuary in the normal world, in the aquasphere."
"Yet this would have been their normal
world." "And the sky still exists. . ."
"So they evolved. Some great catastrophe
forced them to the mass migration. They adapted, through directed surgical
control and irradiation bathing of the genes and chromosomes. Perhaps there was
a great migration from this awful, lonely place above the sky into the safety and saneness of the aquasphere."
"Perhaps," Keston
finished for them all. "Perhaps they are us."
Each
man dwelt a little with his thoughts.
Then Dinar said abrupdy:
"A few days ago I would have found this conversation, this idea,
impossible. But in face of a changing world a man must change too, or die. We
believe these people changed in order to live." He lifted the oxygen meter
attached to his respiratory tanks. "Our supply is dwindling. The suits' aquaspheres will be foul by the time we have flown—that is,
crawled—out of here."
"Yes. Yes, we must leave," Lansing said with regret.
"Oxygen
. . ." said Keston.
"Yes." Dinar turned his control, conserving
the gas. "Ironic that in the thin mists about us now oxygen is there,
denied to us, locked away—" He stopped talking. All four men swung again
to look at the murals. Depicted there were men and women and children, alike in
all respects to themselves, except that they possessed no gill-slits.
"The breathless-ones?"
"If they were men then they breathed.
They couldn't fly if there was no aquasphere and the
pictures show them always upright, not crawling. Perhaps, then, they had
another system not only of getting about but of taking oxygen. The great
Breathless Ones die in the aquasphere. We may . .
." And Dinar's voice was lost as he began to hump himself out of the
octagonal room.
The others followed. Each
in his own shell of isolation, each scrabbling on hands and knees. In
the pictures men had gone upright, lightiy, fleetly,
on their legs.
All the way back through that terrible climb
the thoughts battered in Keston's mind. He felt
bemused. If the whole world was changing and" growing hostile to men, then
men would have to change to face that challenge, in bending to the violence of
nature he would outwit her and continue a life that to him, if to no other, was
of use and value and beauty.
Oxygen?
The aquasphere, or a thin drift of gases?
But men had lived here! They had been men, indisputably.
Men lived in the normal world enclosed safely in the comfort and
protection of the ambient aquasphere. Keston recalled what Professor Lansing, in an idle moment,
had dubbed this thin drift of atomized gases. So split, so tenuous was it, he
had declared, ironically, that- it could be called the atmosphere. Strange concept.
They batded their
way up the cleft, leaving the dead and silent city far below, emerged at last
into the radiance of the Great Light and the comforting bulk of the Turtle.
Maybe they had also found the reason why the
ancient law proscribed so severely the Hopeless Ones? Webbed hands and feet, a
scaly body or a fish's tail would be of little use out here beyond the limits
of the sky. A curious twisting concept grew in him, spiraling backwards
through past time, that perhaps the law had been framed in the long ago in
expectation of just such a journey?
Just such a return journey?
Then, if men crawled up seeking a new world,
dragged themselves from the aquasphere into this new
and frightening atmosphere, who knew what wonders would be theirs for the
finding? He looked first at Allaree as he came in
through the lock. With the great ideas burgeoning in him he opened up a vision
of what was to come, a clear sight that humanity could still defeat the Zammu by beating the descending silvery sky; there would
still be a life to lead and a future to plan.
His
fears that in his heredity lay the seeds of the Hopeless Ones, generated in
such panic when he had first looked down upon that pitiful web-footed nephew,
were brushed aside now in the new wonder that was vouchsafed him. Allaree responded to the smile in his eyes and deep in her
eyes the answer to the unspoken question was plain for all to see.
"We must take back samples of the
atmosphere," he told her. "So that you and other
scientists may work on the great metamorphosis. One
generation, two, who knows?"
"We will do it, Keston,"
Allaree said. "For the sake of the children yet
to come, who must never be Hopeless Ones."
And then what might still be the greatest
wonder of all stole upon him, so that he smiled with great tenderness upon Allaree.
For if men prevailed and adapted and left the
long seasons of development in the aquasphere behind
them and ventured out again upon what had once been theirs—why, then Keston might himself, one day, again see the familiar
fields and buildings and live out a life of peace in the old homestead of Ochiltree.
Here's a quick checklist of recent releases
of
ACE
SCIENCE-FICTION BOOKS
D-457
VULCAN'S HAMMER by
Philip K. Dick and THE
SKYNAPPERS by
John Brunner
D-461 THE TIME TRADERS by Andre Norton
D-465 THE MARTIAN MISSILE by David Grinnell and THE ATLANTIC ABOMINATION
by John Brunner
D-468 SENTINELS OF SPACE by Eric Frank Russell
D-471 SANCTUARY IN THE SKY by John Brunner
and THE SECRET MARTIANS by Jack Sharkey
D-473 THE GREATEST ADVENTURE by John Taine
D-479
TO THE TOMBAUGH STATION by Wilson Tucker and EARTHMAN, GO HOMEI by Poul Anderson
D-482 THE WEAPON SHOPS OF ISHER
by
A.E. Van Vogt
D-485 THE PUZZLE PLANET by Robert A.W. Lowndes and THE ANGRY ESPERS by Lloyd Biggie, Jr.
D-490 ADVENTURES ON OTHER PLANETS
Edited
by Donald A. Wollheim
D-491 THE BIG TIME by Fritz Leiber
and THE MIND SPIDER by Fritz Lieber
35*
If
you are missing any of these, they can be obtained directly from the publisher
by sending 35?!
per book (plus 5£ handling fee) to Ace Books, Inc. (Sales Dept.), 23 W. 47th St., New York
36, N.Y.