INTRODUCTION Though it is contrary to my general practice to intro- duce my own works, I decided to say a few words to go before this collection and some before each story itself because I have put this one together out of materials drawn from the beginning, middle and recent sections of the eighteen-year period I have been writing. I have changed during that time, a condition I share with the world around me, and I redden now or blanche (as the case my be) to read over much that I once considered adequate. For this reason, there are dozens of stories that I prefer keeping interred beneath bright covers in yel- lowing sheets, stories that 1 will never willingly see re- printed. I feel some affection for the ones I have gathered here, however, and I will say some things about them in the proper places. The nature of my work and my working habits shifted radically in the late 60's, when I went in more heavily for the writing of novels. I had started out as a short story writer, and I still enjoy writing short stories though I no longer do nearly as many as I used to in a year's time. The reason is mainly economic. I went full- time in the late 60's, and it is a fact of writing life that, word for word, novels work harder for their creators when it comes to providing for the necessities and joys of existence. Which would sound cold and cynical, except that I enjoy writing novels, too. I have no desire to explain, attempt to justify or apol- ogize for anything that I have written. I have always felt that a story should be able to deal with such matters itself. My individual forepieces are intended only to place them within the context of my own evolving experience —which makes this an autobiographical work for me, if not for anyone else. So, to even things up and answer a number of re- quests, I'll tell you a little about myself (purely subjec- tive, not dust jacket material)— If I couldn't write worth a damn, I think I'd like to 2 THE LAST -DEFENDER OF CAMELOT own a hardware store. I've long been fascinated by the enormous varieties of tools used to maintain our society, as well as the clips, hinges, pins, brads, screws, pulleys, wires, chains, clamps and pipes that hold it together. Not to mention the putty, piaster, cement and paint that keep it looking well io places. Even more than a book store, where I probably wouldn't get to read much anyway, I believe that I could have been fairly happy m a good general hardware shop, But then, I would probably open late and stay open late because I'm a night person- I prefer sunsets to sun- rises. I pick up steam in the late hours. I've probably done most of my best writing after midnight. There is a group of writers living within about a 100- mile diameter circle around here who get together once a month for lunch. On one such occasion, Stephen Donald- son asked me what book by someone else I wished I had written. I gave him a quick answer which seemed ap- propriate at the moment. I thought about it later, though, and changed my mind. Something like War and Peace or Ulysses, while impressive or dazzling, massively tragic or comic and invested with tons of scholarly and lay mana would only be egotistical choices, not things that I could have enjoyed writing as well as enjoyed having written— if I were able. I got it down to two books—one tragic, one comic—and I couldn't decide between them: Mal- raux's Man's Fate and Norman Douglas' South Wind. I have nothing deeply philosophical to say about either of them here, just a wistful bit of self-revelation and an attempt to answer Steve's question honestly in a place where I am talking about myself, anyway. The most encouraging thing I have seen in recent years was nothing at all. That is to say, nothing where I had expected to see something. Back m 1975, I visited Trinity Site, which is open to the public one day a year. It had been some thirty years since the first atomic bomb was detonated over that hot, dusty, windy plain. A long line of cars was met by a military escort at a shopping center north of Alamogordo and taken some seventy miles out into the White Sands Missile Range. We finally parked, disembarked and walked to Ground Zero. There was realty nothing to see. I had read how that first blast had left a crater of fused aluminum silicates twenty-five feet deep and a quarter-mile across. It was gone. The desert THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 3 winds had filled it in, the desert plants (unmutated) had taken root above it. The radiation level was only slightly above normal background. The place looked pretty much like parts of my backyard. After a moment's disappoint- ment at the absence of a spectacle following the long drive, I suddenly felt elated as I realized how completely the earth had recovered in the span of a single genera- tion, Life's resilience. Some years ago, a scientist who was planning on beaming some television pictures outward, in an attempt to communicate something concerning us and our ways to whatever might be watching the late show, asked me to suggest some of the content for the program. Along with a lot of predictable technical and social stuff, I re- call suggesting a symphony orchestra with closeups of the individual instruments being played, sailboats and—I be- lieve—a flight of hot air balloons—as these seemed three sorts of objects where form has been so perfectly and uniquely married to function that our tools have become works of art—which I suppose puts even my esthetic thinking into a kind of Platonic hardware store. I enjoy being a writer and I even like the paperwork. That's enough about the author. Here are the stories. PASSION PLAY This was my first published story, as it states below. A while back, Jonathan Ostrowsky-Lantz, the editor of Unearth: The Magazine of Science Fiction Discoveries— a noble publication dedicated to the encouragement of new science fiction writers—began a policy of reprinting first stories by professionals in the area, along with introductory essays by the authors telling how the stories came to be written and including some advice to begin- ning writers. For whatever such a preface may be worth in this place, 1*11 cause it to occur between here and the story itself— INTRODUCTION I had wanted to write for many years, but did not have an opportunity until I had completed my master's thesis and taken a job with the government. I was assigned to an office in Dayton, Ohio for training, and I reported there on February 26, 1962. As I had decided to try writing science fiction, I spent a week reading all the current science fiction magazines and some random paperbacks. I then sat down and began writing, every evening, turning out several stories a week and sending them off to the magazines. I drew a number of rejection slips, and then in March I received a note from Cele Goldsmith at Ziff-Davis, saying that she was buying this story, "Passion Play." It appeared in the August, 1962 issue of Amazing Stories. Whether it actually was or was not, it seemed to me an almost classic case of applied insight, because I had done something right before I wrote it which I had not done before. I had gathered together all of my rejected stories and spent an evening reading through them to see whether I could determine what I was doing wrong. One thing struck me about all of them: I was overexplaining. I was describing settings, events and character motiva- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 5 tions in too much detail. I decided, in viewing these stories now that they had grown cold, that I would find it insulting to have anyone explain anything to me at that length. I resolved thereafter to treat the reader as I would be treated myself, to avoid the unnecessarily explicit, to use more indirection with respect to character and moti- vation, to draw myself up short whenever I felt the tendency to go on talking once a thing had been shown. Fine. That was my resolution. I still had to find a story idea to do it with, as I was between stories just then. Now, I do not know how other people do it, but there is a certain receptive state of mind that I switch on when I am looking for a short story notion. This faculty is dulled when I am working on a novel, as I Usually am these days, so that if I want it now it generally takes me a full day to set up the proper mental climate. It comes faster if I am between books. Whatever, in those days I kept it turned on almost all the time. The government wanted everyone in my class to have a physical examination. They gave me the forms and I drove up to Euclid over a weekend to see the closest thing we had to a family doctor, to have him complete them. When I sat down in his waiting room, I picked up a copy of Life and began looking through it. Partway along, I came upon a photospread dealing with the death of the racing driver Wolfgang von Tripps. Something clicked as soon as I saw it, and just then the doctor called me in for the checkup. While I was breathing for him and coughing and faking knee jerks and so forth, I saw the entire incident that was to be this short short. I could have written it right then. My typewriter was in Dayton, though, and I'd the long drive ahead of me. The story just boiled somewhere at the back of my mind on the way down, and when I reached my apartment I headed straight for the typewriter and wrote it through. I even walked three blocks to a mailbox in the middle of the night, to get it sent right away. Cele's letter of acceptance was dated March 28, almost a month after I'd begun writing. Strangely, the day that it arrived I had gotten the idea for what was to be my next sale ("Horseman!", Fantastic Stories, August, 1962). I returned the contracts on "Passion Play" and followed them with "Horseman!" 1 sold fifteen other stories that year. I was on my way. 6 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT I cannot really say whether I owe it to that resolution I made on reviewing my rejects, but it felt as if I did and I have always tried to keep the promise I made that day about not insulting the reader's intelligence. Another factor did come into operation after I sold this story. It is a subtle phenomenon which can only be experienced. I suddenly felt like a writer. "Confidence" is a cheap word for it, but I can't think of a better one. That seems the next phase in toughening one's writing— a kind of cockiness, an "I've done it before" attitude. This feeling seems to feed something back into the act of compo- sition itself, providing more than simple assurance. Actual changes in approach, structure, style, tone, began to occur for me almost of their own accord. Noting this, I began to do it intentionally. I made a list of all the things I wanted to know how to handle and began writing them into my stories. This is because I felt that when you reach a certain point as a writer, there are two ways you can go. Having achieved an acceptable level of compe- tence you can keep producing at that level for the rest of your life, quite possibly doing some very good work. Or you can keep trying to identify your weaknesses, and then do something about them. Either way, you should grow as a writer—but Ihe second way is a bit more difficult, because it is always easier to write around a weakness than to work with it, work from it, work through it. It takes longer, if nothing else. And you may fall on your face. But you might learn something you would not have known otherwise and be better as a result. These are the things I learned, or fancy I learned, from "Passion Play" and its aftereffects. I do have one other thing to say, though, which came to me slowly, much later, though its roots are tangled somewhere here: Occasionally, there arises a writing situation where you see an alternative to what you are doing, a mad, wild gamble of a way for handling something, which may leave you looking stupid, ridiculous or brilliant—you just don't know which. You can play it safe there, too, and proceed along .the route you'd mapped out for yourself. Or you can trust your personal demon who delivered that crazy idea in the first place. Trust your demon. THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 7 At the end of the season of sorrows comes the time of rejoicing. Spring, like a well-oiled clock, noiselessly indi- cates this time. The average days of dimness and moisture decrease steadily in number, and those of brilliance and cool air begin to enter the calendar again. And it is good that the wet times are behind us, for they rust and corrode our machinery; they require the most intense standards of hygiene. With all the bright baggage of spring, the days of the Festival arrive. After the season of Lamentations come the sacred stations of the Passion, then the bright Festival of Resurrection, with its tinkle and clatter, its exhaust fumes, sorched rubber, clouds of dust, and its great prom- ise of happiness. We come here each year, to the place, to replicate a classic. We see with our own lenses the functioning prom- ise of our creation. The time is today, and I have been chosen. Here on the sacred grounds of Le Mans I will perform every action of the classic which has been selected. Be- fore the finale I will have duplicated every movement and every position which we know occurred. How fortu- nate! How high the honor! Last year many were chosen, .but it was not the same. Their level of participation was lower. Still, I had wanted so badly to be chosen! I had wished so strongly that I, too, might stand beside the track and await the flaming Mercedes. But I was saved for this greater thing, and all lenses are upon me as we await the start. This year there is only one Car to watch—number 4, the Ferrari-analog. The sign has been given, and the rubber screams; the smoke balloons like a giant cluster of white grapes, and we are moving. Another car gives way, so that I can drop into the proper position. There are many cars, but only one Car. We scream about the turn, in this great Italian classic of two centuries ago. We run them all here, at the place, regardless of where they were held originally. "Oh gone masters of creation," I pray, "let me do it properly. Let my timing be accurate. Let no random var- iable arise to destroy a perfect replication." The dull gray metal of my arms, my delicate gyro- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT scopes, my special gripping-hands, all hold the wheel in precisely the proper position as we roar into the straight- away. How wise the ancient masters were! When they knew they must destroy themselves in a combat too mystical and holy for us to understand, they left us these cere- monies, in commemoration of the Great Machine. All the data was there: the books, the films, all; for us to find, study, learn, to know the scared Action. As we round another turn, I think of our growing cities, our vast assembly lines, our iube-bars, and our beloved executive computer. How great all things are! What a well-ordered day! How fine to have been chosen! The tires, little brothers, cry out, and the pinging of small stones comes from beneath. Three-tenths of a sec- ond, and I shall depress the accelerator an eighth of an inch further. R-7091 waves to me as I enter the second lap, but I cannot wave back. My finest functioning is called for at this time. All the special instrumentation which has been added to me will be required in a matter of seconds. The other cars give way at precisely the right instant. I turn, I slide. I crash through the guard rail. 'Turn over now, please!" I pray, twisting the wheel, "and bum." Suddenly we are rolling, skidding, upside-down. Smoke fills the Car. To the crashing noise that roars within my receptors, the crackle and lick of flames is now added. My steel skeleton—collapsed beneath the impact- stresses. My lubricants—burning. My lenses, all but for a tiny area—shattered. My hearing-mechanism still functions weakly. Now there is a great hom sounding, and metal bodies rush across the fields. Now. Now is the time for me to turn off all my func- tions and cease. But I will wait. Just a moment longer. I must hear them say it Metal arms drag me from the pyre. I am laid aside. Fire extinguishers play white rivers upon the Car. Dimly, in the distance, through my smashed receptors, I hear the speaker rumble: THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "Von Tripps has smashed! The Car is dead!** A great sound of lamenting rises from the rows of unmoving spectators. The giant fireproof van arrives on the field, just as the attendants gain control of the flames. Four tenders leap out and raise the Car from the ground. A fifth collects every smouldering fragment. And I see it all! "Oh, let this not be blasphemy, pleasel" I pray. "One instant more'" Tenderly, the Car is set within the van. The great doors close. The van moves, slowly, bearing off the dead warrior, out through the gates, up the great avenue and past the eager crowds. To the great smelter. The Melting Pot! To the place where it will be melted down, then sent out, a piece used to grace the making of each new per- son. A cry of unanimous rejoicing arises on the avenue. It is enough, that I have seen all thisi Happily, I turn myself off. HORSEMAN! Horseman! was my second published story. As with the previous one (and within a few weeks of that sale), it was purchased by a lady I met only once—Cele Gold- smith, a charming person, whose taste I considered im- peccable. She bought stories from a great number of now well-known writers at the beginnings of their careers—Ursula K. Le Guin, Piers Anthony, Thomas Disch . . . Amazing Stories and Fantastic Adventures came into an autumn bloom in those final Ziff-Davis days. This story was suggested to me while driving south on Route 71 in Ohio, by a pre-storm cloud formation which resembled a group of horsemen. ^ When he was thunder in the hills the villagers lay dreaming harvest behind shutters. When he was an ava- j| lanche of steel the cattle began to low, mournfully, II deeply, and children cried out in their sleep. 10 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT He was an earthquake of hooves, his armor a dark tabletop of silver coins stolen from the night sky, when the villagers awakened with fragments of strange dreams in their heads. They rushed to the windows and flung their shutters wide. And he entered the narrow streets, and no man saw the eyes behind his visor. When he stopped so did time. There was no movement anywhere. —Neither was there sleep, nor yet full wakefulness from the last strange dreams of stars, of blood. ... Doors creaked on leather hinges. Oil lamps shivered, pulsated, then settled to a steady glowing. The mayor wore his nightshirt and a baggy, tossled cap. He held the lamp dangerously near his snowy whisk- ers, rotating a knuckle in his right eye. The stranger did not dismount. He faced the doorway, holding a foreign instrument in one hand. "Who are you, that comes at this hour?" "I come at any hour—I want directions, I seek my companions." The mayor eyed the beast he rode, whiter than his beard, whiter than snow, than a feather ... "What manner of animal is that?" "He is a horse, he is the wind, he is the steady pound- ing of surf that wears away rocks. Where are my com- panions?" "What is that tool you carry?" "It is a sword. It eats flesh and drinks blood. It frees souls and cleaves bodies. Where are my companions?" "That metal suit you wear, that mask . .. ?" "Armor and concealment, steel and anonymity—pro- tection! Where are my companions?" "Who are they that you seek, and where are you from?" "I have ridden an inconceivable distance, past nebulae that are waterspouts in rivers of stars. I seek the others, like myself, who come this way. We have an appoint- ment." "I have never seen another like yourself, but there are many villages in the world. Another lies over those hills," he gestured in the direction of a distant range, "but it is two days travel." THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 11 "Thank you, man, I will be there shortly." The horse reared and made a sound terrible to hear. A wave of heat, greater than the lamp's, enveloped the mayor, and a burst of wind raced by, bowing the golden blades of grass which had not already been trampled. In the distance, thunder pealed on the slopes of the hills. The horseman was gone, but his last words hung upon the wind: "Look to the skies tonight!" The next village was already lighted, like a cluster of awakened fireflies, when the hooves and steel grew si- lent before the door of its largest dwelling. Heads appeared behind windows, and curious eyes appraised the giant astride his white beast. This mayor, thin as the gatepost he leaned upon, blew his nose and held his lantern high. "Who are you?" "I have already already wasted too much time with questions! Have others such as myself passed this way?" "Yes. They said they would wait atop the highest hill, overlooking that plain." He pointed down a gentle slope which ran through miles of fields? stopping abruptly at the base of a black massif. It rose like a handless arm, turned to stone, gesturing anywhere. "There were two," he said. "One bore strange tools, as you do. The other," he shuddered, "said, 'Look to the skies, and sharpen your scythes. There will be signs, won- ders, a call—and tonight the sky will fall.' " The horseman had already become an after-image, ha- loed in the sparks thrown from struck cobblestones. He drew rein atop the highest hill overlooking the plain, and turned to the rider of the black horse. "Where is he?" he asked. "He has not yet arrived." He regarded the skies and a star fell. "He will be late." "Never." The falling star did not burn out. It grew to the size of a dinner plate, a house, and bung in the air, exhaling souls of suns. It dropped toward the plain. A lightning-run of green crossed the moonless heavens, 12 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT and the rider of the pale green horse, whose hooves make no sound, drew up beside them. "You are on time." "Always," he laughed, and it was the sound of a scythe mowing wheat. The ship from Earth settled upon the plain, and the wondering villagers watched. Who or what did it bear? Why should they sharpen their scythes? The four horsemen waited upon the billtop. THE STAINLESS STEEL LEECH There came a point when I was turning out lots of short stories, so many that Cele suggested running two per issue to use up my backlog, with a pen name on the second tale. She suggested Harrison Denmark as the nom de typewriter. I agreed and this, my first effort at something slightly humorous, appeared under that by- line. It never occurred to me that Harry Harrison, living at the time in Snekkerson, Denmark and author of The Stainless Steel Rat might somehow be assumed to be the author. It occurred to Harry, however, and he pub- lished a letter disclaiming authorship. • I was not certain he was convinced when I later told him that it had never occurred to me. But it had never occurred to me. They're really afraid of this place. During the day they'll clank around the headstones, if they're ordered to, but even Central can't make them search at night, despite the ultras and the infras—and they'll never enter a mausoleum. Which makes things nice for me. They're superstitious; it's a part of the circuitry. They were designed to serve man, and during his brief time on earth, awe and devotion, as well as dread, were auto- matic things. Even the last man, dead Kennington, com- manded every robot in existence while he lived. His person was a thing of veneration, and all his orders were obeyed. And a man is a man, alive or dead—which is why the THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 13 graveyards are a combination of hell, heaven, and strange feedback, and will remain apart from the cities so long as the earth endures. But even as I mock them they are looking behind the stones and peering into the gullies. They are searching for—and afraid they might find—me. I, the unjunked, am legend. Once out of a million as- semblies a defective such as I might appear and go un- detected, until too late. At will, I could cut the circuit that connected me with Central Control, and be a free 'bot, and master of my own movements. I liked to visit the cemeteries, because they were quiet and different from the maddening stamp- stamp of the presses and the clanking of the crowds; I liked to look at the green and red and yellow and blue things that grew about the graves. And I did not fear these places, for that circuit, too, was defective. So when I was discovered they removed my vite-box and threw me on the junk heap, But the next day I was gone, and their fear was great. I no longer possess a self-contained power unit, but the freak coils within my chest act as storage batteries. They require frequent recharging, however, and there is only one way to do that. The werebot is the most frightful legend whispered among the gleaming steel towers, when the night wind sighs with its burden of fears out of the past, from days when non-metal beings walked the earth. The half-lifes, the preyers upon order, still cry darkness within the vite- box of every 'bot. I, the discontent, the unjunked, live here in Rosewood Park, among the dogwood and myrtle, the headstones and broken angels, with Fritz—another legend—in our deep and peaceful mausoleum. Fritz is a vampire, which is a terrible and tragic thing. He is so undernourished that he can no longer move about, but he cannot die either, so he lies in his casket and dreams of times gone by. One day, he will ask me to carry him outside into the sunlight, and I will watch him shrivel and dim into peace and nothingness and dust. I hope he does not ask me soon. We talk. At night, when the moon is full and he feels strong enough, he tells me of his better days, in places 14 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT called Austria and Hungary, where he, too, was feared and hunted. "... But only a stainless steel leech can get blood out of a stone—or a robot," he said last night. "It is a proud and lonely thing to be a stainless steel leech—you are possibly the only one of your kind in existence. Live up to your reputation! Hound theml Drain theml Leave your mark on a thousand steel throatsl" And he was right. He is always right. And he knows more about these things than I. "Kenningtoni" his thin, bloodless lips smiled. "Oh, what a duel we fought! He was the last man on earth, and I the last vampire. For ten years I tried to drain him. I got at him twice, but he was from the Old Country and knew what precautions to take. Once he learned of my existence, he issued a wooden stake to every robot—but I had forty-two graves in those days and they never found me. They did come close, though.... "But at night, ah, at night!" he chuckled. "Then things were reversed! I was the hunter and he the preyl "I remember his frantic questing after the last few sprays of garlic and wolfsbane on earth, the crucifix assembly lines he kept in operation around the clock— irreligious soul that he was! I was genuinely sorry when he died, in peace. Not so much because I hadn't gotten to drain him properly, but because he was a worthy op- ponent and a suitable antagonist. What a game we played!" His husky voice weakened. "He sleeps a scant three hundred paces from here, bleaching and dry. His is the great marble tomb by the gate. . . . Please gather roses tomorrow and place them upon it." I agreed that I would, for there is a closer kinship between the two of us than between myself and any 'hot, despite the dictates of resemblance. And I must keep my word, before this day passes into evening and although there are searchers above, for such is the law of my na- ture. "Damn them! (He taught me that word.) Damn them!" I say. "I'm coming up! Beware, gentle *bots! I shall walk among you and you shall not know me. I shall Join in the search, and you will think I am one of you. I THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 15 shall gather the red flowers for dead Kennington, rubbing shoulders with you, and Fritz will smile at the joke." I climb the cracked and hollow steps, the east already Spilling twilight, and the sun half-Udded in the west I emerge. The roses live on the wall across the road. From great twisting tubes of vine, with heads brighter than any rust, they bum like danger lights on a control panel, but moistly. One, two, three roses for Kennington. Four, five... **What are you doing, 'hot?" "Gathering roses." **You are supposed to be searching for the werebot Has something damaged you?" **No, I'm all right," I say, and I fix him where he stands, by bumping against bis shoulder. The circuit com- pleted, I drain his vile-box until I am filled. 'Tfou are the wereboti" he intones weakly. He falls with a crash. . . . Six, seven, eight roses for Kennington, dead Kennington, dead as the *bot at my feet—more dead— for he once lived a full, organic life, nearer to Fritz's or my own than to theirs. "What happened here, •hot?" ' "He is stopped, and I am picking roses," I tell them. There are four *bots and an Over. "It is time you left this place," I say. "Shortly it will be night and the werebot will walk. Leave, or he will end you." "You stopped himi" says the Over. "You are the wereboti" I bunch all the flowers against my chest with one arm and turn to face them. The Over, a large special-order *bot, moves toward me. Others are approaching from all directions. He had sent out a call. "You are a strange and terrible thing," he is saying, and you must be junked, for the sake of the community." He seizes me and I drop Kennington's flowers. I cannot drain him. My coils are already loaded near their capacity, and he is specially insulated. There are dozens around me now, fearing and hating. They will junk me and I will lie beside Kennington. **Rust in peace," they will say. ... I am sony that I cannot keep my promise to Fritz. 16 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "Release himi" No! It is shrouded and moldering Fritz in the doorway of the mausoleum, swaying, clutching at the stone. He al- ways knows.... "Release himi I, a human, order it" He is ashen and gasping, and the sunlight is doing awful things to him. —The ancient circuits click and suddenly I am free. "Yes, master," says the Over. "We did not know. ., .*' "Seize that robotF He points a shaking emaciated finger at him. "He is the werebot," he gasps. "Destroy biro! The one gathering flowers was obeying my orders. Leave him here with me." He falls to his knees and the final darts of day pierce his flesh. "And got All the rest of you! QuicklyI It is my order that no robot ever enter another graveyard againi" He collapses within and I know that now there are only bones and bits of rotted shroud on the doorstep of our home. Pritz has had his final joke—a human masquerade. I take the roses to Kennington, as the silent *bots file out through the gate forever, bearing the unprotesting Overbot with them. I place the roses at the foot of the monument—Kennington's and Fritz's—the monument of the last, strange, truly living ones. Now only I remain unjunked. In the final light of the sun I see them drive a stake through the Over's vite-box and bury him at the cross- roads. Then they hurry back toward their towers of steel, of plastic. I gather up what remains of Fritz and carry him down to his box. The bones are brittle and silent. . . , It is a very proud and very lonely thing to be a stainless steel leech. A THING OF TERRIBLE BEAUTY I rather liked this one when I wrote it, but I don't re- member why or how I came to write it. Perhaps Ham- son Denmark had taken on a life of his own. Perhaps he's that gentleman I see walking along Bishop's Lodge Road every day, sometimes in both directions.... How like a god of the Epicureans is the audience, at a time like this! Powerless to alter the course of events, yet better informed than the characters, they might rise to their feet and cry out, "Do not!"—but the blinding of Oedipus would still ensue, and the inevitable knot in Jocasta*s scarlet would stop her breathing still. But no one rises, of course. They know better. They, too, are inevitably secured by the strange bonds of the tragedy. The gods can only observe and know, they can- not alter circumstance, nor wrestle with ananke. My host is already anticipating the thing he calls "ca- tharsis." My search has carried me far, and my choice was a good one. Phillip Devers lives in the theater like a worm lives in an apple, a paralytic in an iron lung. It is his world. And I live in Phillip Devers. For ten years his ears and eyes have been my ears and eyes. For ten years I have tasted the sensitive preceptions of a great critic of the drama, and he has never known it He has come close—his mind is agile, his imagination vivid—but his classically trained intellect is too strong, his familiarity with psychopathology too intimate to per- mit that final leap from logic to intuition, and an ad- mission of my existence. At times, before he drops off to sleep, he toys with the thought of attempting communica- tion, but the next morning he always rejects it—which is well. What could we possibly have to say to one an- other? —Now that inchoate scream from the dawn of time, and Oedipus stalks the stage in murky terror! 17 18 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT How exquisitel I wish that I could know the other half. Devers says there are two things in a complete experience—a moving toward, called pity, and a moving away from, called terror. It is the latter which I feel, which I have always sought; I do not understand the other, even when my host quivers and his vision goes moistly dim. I should like very much to cultivate the total re- sponse. Unfortunately, my time here is limited. I have hounded beauty through a thousand stellar cells, and here I learned mat a man named Aristotle defined it. It is unfortunate that I must leave without knowing the entire experience. But I am the last. The others have gone. The stars move still, time runs, and the clock will strike ... The ovation is enormous. The resurrected Jocasta bows beside her red—socketted king, smiling. Hand in hand, they dine upon our applause—but even pale Tiresias does not see what I have seen. It is very unfortunate. And now the taxi home. What time is it in Thebes? Devers is mixing us a strong drink, which he generally does oot do. I shall appreciate these final moments all the more, seen through the prism of his soaring fancy. His mood is a strange one. It is almost as if he knows what is to occur at one o'clock—almost as if he knows what will happen when the atom expands its fleecy chest, shouldering aside an army of Titans, and the Mediter- ranean rushes to dip its wine-dark muzzle into the vacant Sahara. But he could not know, without knowing me, and this time he will be a character, not an observer, when the thing of terrible beauty occurs. We both watch the pale gray eyes on the sliding panel. He takes aspirins in advance whea he drinks, which means he will be mixing us more. But his hand ... It stops short of the medicine chest Framed in the tile and stainless steel, we both regard reflections of a stranger. "Good evening." After .ten years, those two words, and on the eve of the last performancel Activating his voice to reply would be rather silly, even THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 19 if I could manage it, and it would doubtless be upsetting. I waited, and so did he. Finally, like an organ player, I pedalled and chorded the necessary synapses: Good evening. Please go ahead and take your aspirins. He did. Then he picked up his drink from the ledge, "I hope you enjoy Martinis." / do. Very much. Please drink more. He smirked at us and returned to the living room. "What are you? A psychosis? A dybbuk?" Oh, no! Nothing like that—Just a member of the audience. "I don't recall selling you a ticket" You did not exactly invite me, but I didn't think you would mind, if I kept quiet. .. . "Very decent of you." He mixed another drink, then looked out at the build- ing across the way. It had two lighted windows, on differ- ent floors, like misplaced eyes. "Mind if I ask why?" Not at all. Perhaps you can even help me. I am an itinerant esthetician. I have to borrow bodies on the worlds I visit—preferably those of beings with similar interests. - "I see—you're a gate-crasher.'* Sort of, I guess. I try not to cause any trouble, though. Generally, my host never even learns of my existence. But I have to leave soon, and something has been trou- bling me for the past several years. . . . Since you have guessed at my existence and managed to maintain your stability, I've decided to ask you to resolve it. "Ask away." He was suddenly bitter and very of- fended. I saw the reason in an instant Do not think, I told him, that I have influenced any- thing you have thought or done. I am only an observer. My sole function is to appreciate beauty. "How interesting!" he sneered. "How soon is it going to happen?" What? "The thing that is causing you to leave." Oh, that... I was not certain what to tell him. What could he do, anyhow? Suffer a little more, perhaps. 20 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "Well?" My time is up, I told him. "I see flashes," he said. "Sand and smoke, and a flam- ing baseball." He was too sensitive. I thought I had covered those thoughts. Well. . . The world is going to end at one o'clock,. ... "That's good to know. How?" There is a substratum of fissionable material, which Project Eden is going to detonate. This will produce an enormous chain reaction.... "Can't you do something to stop it?*' / don't know how. I don't know what could stop it. My knowledge is limited to the arts and the life-sciences.— You broke your leg when you were skiing in Vermont last winter. You never knew. Things like that, I can manage. ... "And the horn blows at midnight," he observed. One o'clock, I corrected. Eastern Standard Time. "Might as well have another drink," he said, looking at his watch. "Ifs going on twelve." My question ... I cleared an imaginary throat. "Oh, yes, what did you want to know?" —The other half of the tragic response. I've watched you go through it many times, but I can't get at it. I feel the terror part, but the pity—the pity always eludes me. "Anyone can be afraid," he said, "that part is easy. But you have to be able to get inside people—not exactly the way you do—and feel everything they feel, just before they go smash—so that it feels you're going smash along with them—and you can't do a damn thing about it, and you wish you could—that's pity." Oh? And being afraid, too? "—and being afraid. Together, they equal the grand catharsis of true tragedy." He hiccupped. And the tragic figure, for whom you feel these things? He must be great and noble, mustn't he? "True," he nodded, as though I were seated across the room from him, "and in the last moment when the unalterable jungle law is about to prevail,, he must stare into the faceless mask; of God, and bear himself, for that THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 21 brief moment, above the pleas of his nature and the course of events." We both looked at his watch. **What time will you be leaving?" In about fifteen minutes. **Good. You have time to listen to a record while I dress." He switched on his stereo and selected an album. I shifted uneasily. // it isn't too long.... He regarded the jacket. "Five minutes and eight seconds. I've always main- tained that it is music for the last hour of Earth." He placed it on the turntable and set the arm. "If Gabriel doesn't show up, this will do." He reached for his tie as the first notes of Miles Davis* Saefa limped through the room, like a wounded thing climbing a hill. He hummed along with it as he reknotted his tie and' combed his hair. Davis talked through an Easter my with a tongue of brass, and the procession moved before us: Oedipus and blind Gloucester stumbled by, led by Antigone and Edgar—Prince Hamlet gave a fencer's salute and plunged forward, whUe black Othello lumbered on behind—Hippolytus, all in white, and the Duchess of Malfi, sad, paraded through memory on a thousand stages. Phillip buttoned his jacket as the final notes sounded, and shut down the player. Carefully rejacketting the rec- ord, he placed it among his others. What are you going to do? **Say good-bye. There's a party up the street I hadn*t planned on attending. I believe I'll stop in for a drink. Good-bye to you also. "By the way," he asked, "what is your name? I've known you for a long time, I ought to call you something now.'* He suggested one, half-consciously. I had never really had a name before, so I took it. Adrastea, I told him. He smirked again. **No thought is safe from you, is it? Good-bye." Good-bye. He closed the door behind him, and I passed through 22 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT the ceilings and floors of the apartments overhead, then up, and into the night above the city. One eye in the building across the street winked out; as I watched, the other did the same. Bodiless again, I fled upward wishing there was some- thing I could feel. HE WHO SHAPES This is the original novella for which they gave me a Nebula Award at that first, very formal SFWA ban- quet at the Overseas Press Club, and which I expanded at Damon Knight's suggestion into the book The Dream Master. The novel contains some material which I am very happy to have written, but reflecting upon things after the passage of all this time I find that I prefer this, the shorter version. It is more streamlined and as such comes closer to the quasi-Classical notions I had in mind, in terms of economy and directness, in describing a great man with a flaw. Lovely as it was, with the blood and all. Render could sense that it was about to end. Therefore, each microsecond would be better off as a minute, he decided—and perhaps the temperature should be increased . . . Somewhere, just at the periphery of everything, the darkness halted its constriction. Something, like a crescendo of subliminal thunders, was arrested at one raging note. That note was a distillate of shame and pain and fear. The Forum was stifling. Caesar cowered outside the frantic circle. His fore- arm covered his eyes but it could not stop the seeing, not this time. The senators had no faces and their garments were spattered with blood. All their voices were like the cries of birds. With an inhuman frenzy they plunged their dag- gers into the fallen figure. All, that is, but Render. THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 23 The pool of blood in which he stood continued to widen. His arm seemed to be rising and falling with a mechan- ical regularity and his throat might have been shaping bird-cries, but he was simultaneously apart from and a part of the scene. For he was Render, the Shaper. Crouched, anguished and envious, Caesar wailed his protests. "You have slain him! You have murdered Marcus Antonius—a blameless, useless fellow!" Render turned to him and the dagger in his hand was quite enormous and quite gory. "Aye," said he. The blade moved from side to side. Caesar, fascin- ated by the sharpened steel, swayed to the same rhythm. "Why?" he cried. "Why?" "Because," answered Render, "he was a far nobler Roman then yourself.** "You lie* It is not sol" Render shrugged and returned to the stabbing. "It is not true!" screamed Caesar. "Not truel" Render turned to him again and waved the dagger. Puppetlike, Caesar mimicked the pendulum of the blade. "Not true?" smiled Render. "And who are you to question an assassination such as this? You are no one! You detract from the dignity of this occasion! Begone!" Jerkily, the pink-faced man rose to his feet, his hair half-wispy, half-wetplastered, a disarray of cotton. He turned, moved away; and as he walked, he looked back over his shoulder. He had moved far from the circle of assassins, but the scene did not diminish in size. It retained an elec- tric clarity. It made him feel even further removed, ever more alone and apart. Render rounded a previously unnoticed corner and stood before him, a blind beggar. Caesar grasped the front of his garment. "Have you an ill omen for me this day?" "Beware!" jeered Render. "Yest Yes!" cried Caesar. "'Bewarel' That is good! Beware what?" "The ides—" ^Yes? The ides—?- "—of Octember." 24 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT He released the garment. "What is that you say? What is Octember?" "A month." "You liel There is no month of Octemberi" "And that is the date noble Caesar need fear—the "non-existent time, the never-to-be-calendared occasion." Render vanished around another sudden corner. "Wait! Come backl" Render laughed, and the Forum laughed with him. The bird-cries became a chorus of inhuman jeers. "You mock me!" wept Caesar. The Forum was an oven, and the perspiration formed like a glassy mask over Caesar's narrow forehead, sharp nose and chinless jaw. "I want to be assassinated tool" he sobbed. "It isn't fairl" And Render tore the Forum and the senators and the grinning corpse of Antony to pieces and stuffed them into a black sack—with the unseen movement of a single finger—and last of all went Caesar. Charles Render sat before the ninety white buttons and the two red ones, not really looking at any of them. His right arm moved in its soundless sling, across the lap-level surface of the console—pushing some of the buttons, skip- ping over others, moving on, retracing its path to press the next in the order of the Recall Series. Sensations throttled, emotions reduced to nothing, Representative Erikson knew the oblivion of the womb. There was a soft click. Render's hand had glided to the end of the bottom row of buttons. An act of conscious intent—will, if you like—was required to push the red button. Render freed his arm and lifted off his crown of Me- dusa-hair leads and microminiature circuitry. He slid from behind his desk-couch and raised the hood. He walked to the window and transpared it, fingering forth a cigarette. One minute in the ro-womb, he decided. No more. This is a crucial one. . . . Hope it doesn't snow till later— those clouds look mean.... It was smooth yellow trellises and high towers, glassy and gray, all smouldering into evening under a shale- colored sky; the city was squared volcanic islands, glow- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 25 ing in the end-of-day light, rumbling deep down under the earth; it was fat, incessant rivers of traffic, rushing. Render turned away from the window and approached the great egg that lay beside his desk, smooth and glit- tering. It threw back a reflection that smashed all aq- uilinity from his nose, turned his eyes to gray saucers, transformed his hair into a light-streaked skyline; his reddish necktie became the wide tongue of a ghoul. He smiled, reached across the desk. He pressed the second red button. With a sigh, the egg lost its dazzling opacity and a horizontal crack appeared about its middle. Through the now-transparent shell. Render could see Erikson grim- acing, squeezing his eyes tight, fighting against a return to consciousness and the thing it would contain. The upper half of the egg rose vertical to the base, exposing him knobby and pink on half-shell When his eyes opened he did not look at Render. He rose to his feet and began dressing. Render used this time to check the ro-womb. He leaned back across his desk and pressed the but- tons: temperature control, full range, check; exotic sounds—he raised the earphone—check, on bells, on buzzes, on violin notes and whistles, on squeals and moans, on traffic noises and the sound of surf; check, on the feedback circuit—holding the patient's own voice, trapped earlier in analysis; check, on the sound blanket, the moisture spray, the odor banks; check, on the couch agitator and the colored lights, the taste stimulants . . . Render closed the egg and shut off its power. He pushed the unit into the closet, palmed shut the door. The tapes had registered a valid sequence. "Sit down," he directed Erikson. The man did so, fidgeting with his collar. "You have full recall," said Render, "so there is no need for me to summarize what occurred. Nothing can be hidden from me. I was there." Erikson nodded. "The significance of the episode should be apparent to you." Erikson nodded again, finally finding his voice. "But was it valid?" he asked. "I mean, you constructed the dream and you controlled it, all the way. I didn't really 26 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT dream it—in the way I would normally dream. Your ability to make things happen stacks the deck for what- ever you're going to say—doesn't it?" Render shook his head slowly, flicked an ash into the southern hemisphere of his globe-made-ashtray, and met Erikson's eyes. "It is true that I supplied the format and modified the forms. You, however, filled them with an emotional sig- nificance, promoted them to the status of symbols corre- sponding to your problem. If the dream was not a valid analogue it would not have provoked the reactions it did. It would have been devoid of the anxiety-patterns which were registered on the tapes. "You have been in analysis for many months now," he continued, "and everything I have learned thus far serves to convince me that your fears of assassination are with- out any basis in fact." Erikson glared. "Then why the hell do I have them?" "Because," said Render, "you would like very much to be the subject of an assassination." Erikson smiled then, his composure beginning to return. "I assure you, doctor, I have never contemplated suicide, nor have I any desire to stop living." He produced a cigar and applied a flame to it. His band shook. "When you came to me this summer," said Render, "you stated that you were in fear of an attempt on your life. You were quite vague as to why anyone should want to kill you—" "My position! You can't be a Representative as long as I have and make no enemies!" "Yet," replied Render, "it appears that you have managed it. When you permitted me to discuss this with your detectives I was informed that they could unearth nothing to indicate that your fears might have any real foundation. Nothing." "They haven't looked far enough—or in the right places. They'll turn up something." "I'm afraid not." "Why?" "Because, I repeat, your feelings are without any ob- jective basis. —Be honest with me. Have you any infor- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 27 mation whatsoever indicating that someone hates you enough to want to kill you?" "I receive many threatening letters... .** "As do all Representatives—and all of those directed to you during the past year have been investigated and found to be the work of cranks. Can you offer me one piece of evidence to substantiate your claims?'* Erikson studied the tip of his cigar. "I came to you on the advice of a colleague," he said, "came to you to have you poke around inside my mind to find me something of that sort, to give my detectives something to work with. —Someone I've injured severely perhaps—or some damaging piece of legislation I've dealt with ..." **—And I found nothing," said Render, "nothing, that is, but the cause of your discontent. Now, of course, you are afraid to hear it, and you are attempting to divert me from explaining my diagnosis—" "I am not!" *Then listen. You can comment afterward if you want, but you've poked and dawdled around here for months, unwilling to accept what I presented to you in a dozen different forms. Now I am going to tell you outright what it is, and you can do what you want about it." "Fine." "First," he said, "you would like very much to have an enemy or enemies—" "Ridiculous!" **—Because it is the only alternative to having friends—" **I have lots of friends!" **—Because nobody wants to be completely ignored, to be an object for whom no one has really strong feelings. Hatred and love are the ultimate forms of human regard. Lacking one, and unable to achieve it, you sought the other. You wanted it so badly that you succeeded in con- vincing yourself it existed. But there is always a psychic pricetag on these things. Answering a genuine emotional need with a body of desire-surrogates does not produce real satisfaction, but anxiety, discomfort—because in these matters the psyche should be an open system. You did not seek outside yourself for human regard. You were closed eff. You created that which you needed from the stuff of 28 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT your own being. You are a man very much in need of strong relationships with other people." "Manure 1" 'Take it or leave it," said Render. '*! suggest you take it." "I've been paying you for half a year to help find out who wants to kill me. Now you sit there and tell me I made the whole thing up to satisfy a desire to have some- one hate me." "Hate you, or love you. That's right." "It's absurd! I meet so many people that I carry a pocket recorder and a lapel-camera, just so I can recall them all...." "Meeting quantities of people is hardly what I was speaking of. —Tell me, did that dream sequence have a strong meaning for you?" Erikson was silent for several tickings of the huge wall- clock. "Yes," he finally conceded, "it did. But your interpreta- tion of the matter is still absurd. Granting though, just for the sake of argument, that what you say is correct—what would I do to get out of this bind?" Render leaned back in his chair. "Rechannel the energies that went into producing the thing. Meet some people as yourself, Joe Erikson, rather than Representative Erikson. Take up something you can do with other people—something non-political, and per- haps somewhat competitive—and make some real friends or enemies, preferably the former. I've encouraged you to do this all along." "Then tell me something else." -Gladly." "Assuming you are right, why is it that I am neither liked nor hated, and never have been? I have a responsi- ble position in the Legislature. I meet people all the time. Why am I so neutral a—thing?" Highly familiar now with Erikson's career. Render had to push aside his true thoughts on the matter, as they were of no operational value. He wanted to cite him Dante's observations concerning the trimmers—those souls who, denied heaven for their lack of virtue, were also denied entrance to hell for a lack of significant vices—in short, the ones who trimmed their sails to move them with every wind of the times, who lacked direction, who were not THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 29 really concerned toward which ports they were pushed. Such was Erikson's long and colorless career of migrant loyalties, of political reversals. Render said: "More and more people find themselves in such circum- stances these days. It is due largely to the increasing complexity of society and the depersonalization of the in- dividual into a sociometric unit. Even the act of cathect- ing toward other persons has grown more forced as a result. There are so many of us these days." Erikson. nodded, and Render smiled inwardly. Sometimes the gruff line, and then the lecture ... "I've got the feeling you could be right," said Erikson. -Sometimes I do feel like what you just described—a unit, something depersonalized...." Render glanced at the clock. "What you choose to do about it from here is, of course, your own decision to make. I think you'd be wasting your time to remain in analysis any longer. We are now both aware of the cause of your complaint. I cant take you by the hand and show you how to lead your life. I can indicate, I can commiserate—but no more deep prob- ing. Make an appointment as soon as you feel a need to discuss your activities and relatff them to my diagnosis." "I will," nodded Erikson, "and—damn that dream! It got to me. You can make them seem as vivid as waking life—more vivid. ... It may be a long while before I can forget it." "I hope so.** "Okay, doctor." He rose to his feet, extended a hand. "Ill probably be back in a couple weeks. I'll give this socializing a fair try." He grinned at the word he nor- mally frowned upon. "In fact, I'll start now. May I buy you a drink around the corner, downstairs?" Render met the moist palm which seemed as weary of (he performance as a lead actor in too successful a play. He felt almost sorry as he said, "Thank you, but I have an engagement." Render helped him on with his coat then, handed him his hat and saw him to the door. "Well, good night." -Good night" As the door closed soundlessly behind him. Render re- 30 THE LAST DEFENDER OP CAMELOT crossed the dark Astrakhan to his mahogany fortress and flipped his cigarette into the southern hemisphere of a globe ashtray. He leaned back in his chair, hands behind his head, eyes closed. "Of course it was more real than life," he informed no one in particular, "I shaped it." Smiling, he reviewed the dream sequence step by step, wishing some of his former instructors could have wit- nessed it. It had been well-constructed and powerfully executed, as well as being precisely appropriate for the case at hand. But then, he was Render, the Shaper— one of the two hundred or so special analysts whose own psychic makeup permitted them to enter into neurotic patterns without carrying away more than an esthetic gratification from the mimesis of aberrance—a Sane Hatter. Render stirred his recollections. He had been analyzed himself, analyzed and passed upon as a granite-willed, ultra-stable outsider—tough enough to weather the basilisk gaze of a fixation, walk unscathed amidst the chimarae of perversions, force dark Mother Medusa to close her eyes before the caduceus of his art. His own analysis had not been difficult. Nine years before (it seemed much longer) he had suffered a willing injection of novocain into the most painful area of bis spirit It was after the auto wreck, after the death of Ruth, and of Miranda, their daughter, that he had begun to feel detached. Perhaps he did not want to recover certain empathies; perhaps his own world was now based upon a certain rigidity of feel- ing. If this was true, he was wise enough in the ways of the mind to realize it, and perhaps he had decided that such a world had its own compensations. His son Peter was now ten years old. He was at- tending a school of quality, and he penned his father a letter every week. The letters were becoming progressively literate, showing signs of a precociousness of which Ren- der could not but approve. He would take the boy with him to Europe in the summer. As for Jill—Jill DeVille (what a luscious, ridiculous namel—he loved her for it)—she was growing if any- thing, more interesting to him. (He wondered if this was an indication of early middle age.) He was vastly taken by her unmusical nasal voice, her sudden interest in archi- tecture, her concern with the unremovable mole on the THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 31 right side of her otherwise well-designed nose. He should really call her immediately and go in search of a new restaurant For some reason though, he did not feel like it. It had been several weeks since he had visited his club. The Partridge and Scalpel, and he felt a strong de- sire to eat from an oaken table, alone, in the split-level dining room with the three fireplaces, beneath the arti- ficial torches and the boars' heads like gin ads. So he pushed his perforated membership card into the phone- slot on his desk and there were two buzzes behind the voice-screen. "Hello, Partridge and ScalpeL" said the voice. "May I help you?" "Charles Render," he said. "I'd like a table in about half an hour.*' "How many will there be?** "Just me." "Very good, sir. Half an hour, then.—That's 'Render'? —R-e-n-d-er-?" "Right." *Thank you.'* He broke the connection and rose from his desk. Out- side, the day had vanished. The monoliths and the towers gave forth their own light now. A soft snow, like sugar, was sifting down through the shadows and transforming itself into beads on the windowpane. Render shrugged into his overcoat, turned off the lights, locked the inner office. There was a note on Mrs. Hedges' blotter. Miss DeVille called, it said. He crumpled the note and tossed it into the waste- chute. He would call her tomorrow and say he had been working until late on his lecture. He switched off the final light, clapped his hat onto his head and passed through the outer door, locking it as he went. The drop took him to the sub-subcellar where his auto was parked. It was chilly in the sub-sub, and his footsteps seemed loud on the concrete as he passed among the parked ve- hicles. Beneath the glare of the naked lights, his S-7 Spinner was a sleek gray cocoon from which it seemed turbulent wings might at any moment emerge. The double 32 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT row of antennae which fanned forward from the slope of its hood added to this feeling. Render thumbed open the door. He touched the ignition and there was the sound of a lone bee awakening in a great hive. The door swung soundlessly shut as he raised the steering wheel and locked it into place. He spun up the spiral ramp and came to a roiling stop before the big overhead. As the door rattled upward he lighted his destination screen and turned the knob that shifted {he broadcast map. —Left to right, top to bottom, section by section he shifted it, until he located the portion of Carnegie Ave- nue he desired. He punched out its coordinates and lowered the wheel. The car switched over to monitor and moved out onto the highway marginal. Render lit a cigarette. Pushing his seat back into the centerspace, he left all the windows transparent. It was pleasant to half-recline and watch the oncoming cars drift past him like swarms of fireflies. He pushed his hat back on his head and stared upward. He could remember a time when he had loved snow, when it had reminded him of novels by Thomas Mann and music by Scandanavian composers. In his mind now, though, there was another element from which it could never be wholly dissociated. He could visualize so clearly the eddies of milk-white coldness that swirled about his old manual-steer auto, flowing into its fire- charred interior to rewhiten that which had been black- ened; so clearly—as though he had walked toward it across a chalky lakebottom—it, the sunken wreck, and he, the diver—unable to open his mouth to speak, for fear of drowning; and he knew, whenever he looked upon falling snow, that somewhere skulls were whitening. But nine years had washed away much of the pain, and he also knew that the night was lovely. He was sped along the wide, wide roads, shot across high bridges, their surfaces slick and gleaming beneath his lights, was woven through frantic cloverieafs and plunged into a tunnel whose dimly glowing walls blurred by him like a mirage. Finally, he switched the windows to opaque and closed his eyes. He could not remember whether he had dozed for a moment or not, which meant he probably had. He felt the THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 33 car slowing, and he moved the seat forward and turned on the windows again. Almost simultaneously, the cut-off buzzer sounded. He raised the steering wheel and pulled into the parking dome, stepped out onto the ramp and left the car to the parking unit, receiving his ticket from that bos-headed robot which took its solemn revenge on mankind by sticking forth a cardboard tongue at every- one it served. As always, the noises were as subdued as the lighting. The place seemed to absorb sound and convert it into warmth, to lull the tongue with aromas strong enough to be tasted, to hypnotize the ear with the vivid crackle of the triple hearths. Render was pleased to see that his favorite table, in the comer off to the right of the smaller fireplace, had been held for him. He knew the menu from memory, but he studied it with zeal as he sipped a Manhattan and worked up an order to match his appetite. Shaping ses- sions always left him ravenously hungry. "Doctor Render ... ?" "Yes?" He looked up. "Doctor Shallot would like to speak with you," said the waiter. "I don't know anyone named Shallot," he said. "Are you sure he doesn't want Bender? He's a surgeon from Metro who sometimes eats here... ,** The waiter shook his head, *'No, sir—'Render'. See here?" He extended a three- by-five card on which Render's full name was typed in capital letters. "Doctor Shallot has dined here nearly every night for the past two weeks," he explained, "and on each occasion has asked to be notified if you came in." "Hm?" mused Render. 'That's odd. Why didn't he just call me at my office?" The waiter smiled and made a vague gesture. "Well, tell him to come on over," he said, gulping his Manhattan, "and bring roe another of these." "Unfortunately, Doctor Shallot is blind," explained the waiter. "It would be easier if you—" "All right, sure." Render stood up, relinquishing his favorite table with a strong premonition that he would not be returning to it that evening. 34 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "Lead on," They threaded their way among the diners, heading up to the next level. A familiar face said "hello" from a table set back against the wall, and Render nodded a greeting to a former seminar pupil whose name was Jurgens or Jirkans or something like that. He moved on, into the smaller dining room wherein only two tables were occupied. No, three. There was one set in the comer at the far end of the darkened bar, partly masked by an ancient suit of armor. The waiter was heading him in that direction. They stopped before the table and Render stared down into the darkened glasses that had tilted upward- as they approached. Doctor Shallot was a woman, somewhere in the vicinity of her early thirties. Her low bronze bangs did not fully conceal the spot of silver which she wore on her forehead like a caste-mark. Render inhaled, and her head jerked slightly as the tip of his cigarette flared. She appeared to be staring straight up into his eyes. It was an uncomfortable feeling, even knowing that all she could distinguish of him was that which her minute photo- electric cell transmitted to her visual cortex over the hair- fine wire implants attached to that oscillator converter: in short, the glow of his cigarette. "Doctor Shallot, this is Doctor Render," the waiter was saying. "Good evening," said Render. "Good evening," she said. "My name is Eileen and I've wanted very badly to meet you." He thought he detected a slight quaver in her voice. "Will you join me for dinner?" "My pleasure," he acknowledged, and the waiter drew out the chair. Render sat down, noting that the woman across from him already had a drink. He reminded the waiter of his second Manhattan. "Have you ordered yet?" he inquired. "No." ". . . And two menus—" he started to say, then bit his tongue. "Only one," she smiled. "Make it none," he amended, and recited the menu. They ordered. Then: "Do you always do that?" THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 35 "What?" "Carry menus in your head." **0nly a few," he said, "for awkward occasions. What was it you wanted to see—talk to me about?" "You're a neuroparticipant therapist," she stated, "a Shaper." "And you are—?" **—a resident in psychiatry at State Psych. I have a year remaining." "You knew Sam Riscomb then." "Yes, he helped me get my appointment. He was my adviser." "He was a very good friend of mine. We studied to- gether at Menninger." She nodded. "I'd often heard him speak of you—that's one of the reasons I wanted to meet you. He's responsible for en- couraging me to go ahead with my plans, despite my handicap." Render stared at her. She was wearing a dark green dress which appeared to be made of velvet About three inches to the left of the bodice was a pin which might have been gold. It displayed a red stone which could have been a ruby, around which the outline of a goblet was cast. Or was it really two profiles that were outlined, staring through the stone at one another? It seemed vaguely familiar to him, but he could not place it at the moment. It glittered expensively in the dim light. Render accepted his drink from the waiter. "I want to become a neuroparticipant therapist," she told him. And if she had possessed vision Render would have thought she was staring at him, hoping for some response in his expression. He could not quite calculate what she wanted him to say. "I commend your choice," he said, "and I respect your ambition." He tried to put his smile into his voice. "It is not an easy thing, of course, not all of the requirements being academic ones." "I know," she said, "But then, I have been blind since birth and it was not an easy thing to come this far." "Since birth?" he repeated. "I thought you might have lost your sight recently. You did your undergrad work 36 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT then, and went on through med school without eyes. . .. That's—rather impressive." "Thank you," she said, "but it isn't. Not really. I heard about the first neuroparticipants—Bartelmetz and the rest —when I was a child, and I decided then that I wanted to be one. My life ever since has been governed by that desire." "What did you do in the labs?" be inquired. "—Not being able to see a specimen, look through a micro- scope ... ? Or all that reading?" "I hired people to read my assignments to me. I taped everything. The school understood that I wanted to go into psychiatry and they permitted a special arrangement for labs. I've been guided through the dissection of ca- davers by lab assistants, and I've had everything de- scribed to me. I can tell things by touch . . . and I have a memory like yours with the menu," she smiled. " 'The quality of psychoparticipation phenomena can only be gauged by the therapist himself, at that moment outside of time and space as we normally know it, when he stands in the midst of a world erected from the stuff of another man's dreams, recognizes there the non- Euclidian architecture of aberrance, and then takes his patient by the hand and tours the landscape. ... If he can lead him back to the common earth, then his judg- ments were sound, his actions valid.' " "From Why No Psychometrics in This Place," reflected Render. "—by Charles Render, M.D." "Our dinner is already moving in this direction,'* he noted, picking up his drink as the speed-cooked meal was pushed toward them in the kitchen-buoy. "That's one of the reasons I wanted to meet you," she continued, raising her glass as the dishes rattled before her. "I want you to help me become a Shaper." Her shaded eyes, as vacant as a statue's, sought him again. "Yours is a completely unique situation," he com- mented. "There has never been a congenitally blind neu- roparticipant—for obvious reasons. I'd have to consider all the aspects of the situation before I could advise you. Let's eat now, though. I'm starved." "All right. But my blindness does not mean that I have never seen." THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 37 He did not ask her what she meant by that, because prime ribs were standing in front of him now and there was a bottle of Chambertm at bis elbow- He did pause long enough to notice though, as she raised her left hand from beneath the table, that she wore no rings. "I wonder if it's still snowing," he commented as they drank their coffee. "It was coming down pretty hard when I pulled into the dome." "I hope so," she said, "even though it diffuses the light and I can't 'see' anything at all through it. I like to feel it falling about me and blowing against my face." "How do you get about?" "My dog, Sigmund—I gave him the night off," she smiled, "—he can guide me anywhere. He's a mutie Shep- herd." "Oh?" Render grew curious. "Can he talk much?" She nodded. "That operation wasn't as successful on him as on some of them, though. He has a vocabulary of about four hundred words, but I think it causes him pain to speak. He's quite intelligent. You'll have to meet him sometime." Render began speculating immediately. He had spoken with such animals at recent medical conferences, and had been startled by their combination of reasoning abil- ity and their devotion to their handlers. Much chromo- some tinkering, followed by delicate embryo-surgery, was required to give a dog a brain capacity greater than a chimpanzee's. Several followup operations were neces- sary to produce vocal abilities. Most such experiments ended in failure, and the dozen or so puppies a year on which they succeeded were valued in the neighborhood of a hundred thousand dollars each. He realized then, as he lit a cigarette and held the light for a moment, that the stone in Miss Shallot's medallion was a genuine ruby. He began to suspect that her admission to a medi- cal school might, in addition to her academic record, have been based upon a sizeable endowment to the col- lege of her choice. Perhaps he was being unfair though, he chided himself. *'Yes," he said, "we might do a paper on canine neu- roses. Does he ever refer to his father as 'that son of a female Shepherd'?" 38 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "He never met his father," she said, quite soberly. "He was raised apart from other dogs. His attitude could hardly be typical. I don't think you'll ever learn the func- tional psychology of the dog from a mutie." "I imagine you're right," he dismissed it. "More coffee?" "No, thanks." Deciding it was time to continue the discussion, he said, "So you want to be a Shaper...." "Yes." "I hate to be the one to destroy anybody's high ambi- tions," he told her. "Like poison, I hate it. Unless they have no foundation at all in reality. Then I can be ruth- less. So—honestly, frankly, and in all sincerity, I do not see how it could ever be managed. Perhaps you're a fine psychiatrist—but in my opinion, it is a physical and men- tal impossibility for you ever to become a neuropartici- pant. As for my reasons—" "Wait," she said. "Not here, please. Humor me. I'm tired of this stuffy place—take me somewhere else to talk. I think I might be able to convince you there is a way." "Why not?" he shrugged. "I have plenty time. Sure—• you call it. Where?" "Blindspin?" He suppressed an unwilling chuckle at the expression, but she laughed aloud. "Fine," he said, "but I'm still thirsty." A bottle of champagne was tallied and he signed the check despite her protests. It arrived in a colorful "Drink While You Drive" basket, and they stood then, and she was tall, but he was taller. Blindspin. A single name of a multitude of practices centered about the auto-driven auto. Flashing across the country in the sure hands of an invisible chauffeur, windows all opaque, night dark, sky high, tires assailing the road be- low like four phantom buzzsaws—and starting from scratch and ending in the same place, and never knowing where you are going or where you have been—it is pos- sible, for a moment, to kindle some feeling of individu- ality in the coldest brainpan, to produce a momentary awareness of self by virtue of an apartness from all but a sense of motion. This is because movement through dark- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 39 ness is the ultimate abstraction of life itself—at least that's what one of the Vital Comedians said, and everybody in the place laughed. Actually now, the phenomenon known as blindspin first became prevalent (as might be suspected) among certain younger members of the community, when moni- tored highways deprived them of the means to exercise their automobiles in some of the more individualistic ways which had come to be frowned upon by the Na- tional Traffic Control Authority. Something had to be done. It was. The first, disastrous reaction involved the simple en- gineering feat of disconnecting the broadcast control unit after one had entered onto a monitored highway. This resulted in the car's vanishing from the ken of the moni- tor and passing back into the control of its occupants. Jealous as a deity, a monitor will not tolerate that which denies its programmed omniscience: it will thunder and lightning in the Highway Control Station nearest the point of last contact, sending winged seraphs in search of that which has slipped from sight. Often, however, this was too late in happening, for the roads are many and well-paved. Escape from detection was, at first, relatively easy to achieve. Other vehicles, though, necessarily behave as if a rebel has no actual existence. Its presence cannot be allowed for. Boxed-in on a heavily-traveled section of roadway, the offender is subject to immediate annihilation in the event of any overall speedup or shift in traffic pattern which involves movement through his theoretically vacant posi- tion. This, in the early days of monitor-controls, caused a rapid series of collisions. Monitoring devices later be- came far more sophisticated, and mechanized cutoffs re- duced the collision incidence subsequent to such an action. The quality of the pulpefactions and contusions which did occur, however, remained unaltered. The next reaction was based on a thing which had been overlooked because it was obvious. The monitors took people where they wanted to go only because people told them they wanted to go there. A person pressing a random series of coordinates, without reference to any map, would either be left with a stalled automobile and 40 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT a "RECHECK YOUR COORDINATES" light, or would suddenly be whisked away in any direction. The latter possesses a certain romantic appeal in that it offers speed, unexpected sights, and free hands. Also, it is per- fectly legal: and it is possible to navigate all over two continents in this manner, if one is possessed of sufficient wherewithal and gluteal stamina. As is the case in all such matters, the practice diffused upwards through the age brackets. School teachers who only drove on Sundays fell into disrepute as selling points for used autos. Such is the way a world ends, said the entertainer. End or no, the car designed to move on monitored highways is a mobile efficiency unit, complete with latrine, cupboard, refrigerator compartment and gaming table. It also sleeps two with ease and four with some crowding. On occasion, three can be a real crowd* Render drove out of the dome and into the marginal aisle. He halted the car. "Want to jab some coordinates?" he asked. "You do it. My fingers know too many." Render punched random buttons. The Spinner moved onto the highway. Render asked speed of the vehicle then, and it moved into the high-acceleration lane. The Spinner's lights burnt holes in the darkness. The city backed away fast; it was a smouldering bonfire on both sides of the road, stirred by sudden gusts of wind, hidden by white swirlings, obscured by the steady fall of gray ash. Render knew his speed was only about sixty percent of what it would have been on a clear, dry night. He did not blank the windows, but leaned back and stared out through them. Eileen "looked" ahead into what light there was. Neither of them said anything for ten or fifteen minutes. The city shrank to sub-city as they sped on. After a time, short sections of open road began to appear. "Tell roe what it looks like outside," she said. "Why didn't you ask me to describe your dinner, or the suit of armor beside our table?" "Because I tasted one and felt the other. This is dif- ferent." "There is snow falling outside. Take it away and what you have left is black." THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 41 "What else?" "There is slush on the road. When it starts to freeze, traffic will drop to a crawl unless we outrun this storm. The slush looks like an old, dark syrup, just starting to get sugary on top." "Anything else?" "That's it, lady." "Is it snowing harder or less hard than when we left the club?" "Harder, I should say." "Would you pour me a drink?" she asked him. "Certainly." They turned their seats inward and Render raised the table. He fetched two glasses from the cupboard. "Your health," said Render, after be had poured. "Here's looking at you." Render downed his drink. She sipped hers. He waited for her next comment. He knew that two cannot play at the Socratic game, and he expected more questions be- fore she said what she wanted to say. She said: "What is the most beautiful thing you have ever seen?" Yes, he decided, he had guessed correctly. He replied without hesitation: "The sinking of Atlantis." "I was serious." "So was I." "Would you care to elaborate?" lt! sank Atlantis," he said, "personally. "It was about three years ago. And Godi it was lovely! It was all ivory towers and golden minarets and silver balconies. There were bridges of opal, and crimson penants and a milk-white river flowing between lemon- colored banks. There were jade steeples, and trees as old as the world tickling the bellies of clouds, and ships in the great sea-harbor of Xanadu, as delicately constructed as musical instruments, all swaying with the tides. The twieve princes of the realm held court in the dozen- pillared Colliseum of the Zodiac, to listen to a Greek tenor sax play at sunset "The Greek, of course, was a patient of mine— paranoiac. The etiology of the thing is rather complicated, but that's what I wandered into inside his mind. I gave him free rein for awhile, and in the end I had to split 42 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT Atlantis in half and sink it full fathom five. He's playing again and you've doubtless beard his sounds, if you like such sounds at all. He's good. I still see him periodically, but he is no longer the last descendent of the greatest minstrel of Atlantis. He's just a fine, late twentieth- century saxman. "Sometimes though, as I look back on the apocalypse I worked within his vision of grandeur, I experience a fleeting sense of lost beauty—because, for a single mo- ment, his abnormally intense feelings were my feelings, and he felt that his dream was the most beautiful thing in the world." He refilled their glasses. "That wasn't exactly what I meant," she said. "I know." "I meant something real." "It was more real than real, I assure you.'* "I don't doubt it, but..." "—But I destroyed the foundation you were laying for your argument. Okay, I apologize. I'll hand it back to you. Here's something that could be real: "We are moving along the edge of a great bowl of sand," he said. "Into it, the snow is gently drifting. In the spring the snow will melt, the waters will run down into the earth, or be evaporated away by the heat of the sun. Then only the sand will remain. Nothing grows in the sand, except for an occasional cactus. Nothing lives here but snakes, a few birds, insects, burrowing things, and a wandering coyote or two. In the afternoon these things will look for shade. Any place where there's an old fence post or a rock or a skull or a cactus to block out the sun, there you will witness life cowering before the elements. But the colors are beyond belief, and the elements are more lovely, almost, than the things they destroy." "There is no such place near here," she said. "If I say it, then there is. Isn't there? I've seen if "Yes ... you're right." "And it doesn't matter if it's a painting by a woman named O'Keefe, or something right outside our window, does it? If I've seen it?" "I acknowledge the truth of the diagnosis," she said. "Do you want to speak it for me?" "No, go ahead." He refilled the small glasses once more. THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 43 "The damage is in my eyes," she told him, "not my brain." He lit her cigarette. "I can see with other eyes if I can enter other brains." He lit his own cigarette. "Neuroparticipation is based upon the fact that two nervous systems can share the same impulses, the same fantasies. .. ." "Controlled fantasies." "I could perform therapy and at the same time ex- perience genuine visual impressions." "No," said Render. "You don't know what it's like to be cut off from a whole area of stimuli! To know that a Mongoloid idiot can experience something you can never know—and that he cannot appreciate it because, like you, he was con- demned before birth in a court of biological hapstance, - in a place where there is no justice—only fortuity, pure and simple." "The universe did not invent justice. Man did. Un- fortunately, man must reside in the universe." "I'm not asking the universe to help me—I'm asking you.'* "I'm sorry," said Render. "Why won't you help me?" "At this moment you are demonstrating my main rea- son." "Which is .. .T "Emotion. This thing means far too much to you. When the therapist is in-phase with a patient he is narco- electrically removed from most of his own bodily sensa- tions. This is necessary—because his mind must be completely absorbed by the task at hand. It is also nec- essary that his emotions undergo a similar suspension. This, of course, is impossible in the one sense that a per- son always emotes to some degree. But the therapist's emotions are sublimated into a generalized feeling of exhilaration—or, as in my own case, into an artistic re- verie. With you, however, the 'seeing' would be too much. You would be in constant danger of losing control of the dream." "I disagree with you." "Of course you do. But the fact remains that you would be dealing, and dealing constantly, with me abnormal. 44 THE LAST DEFHNDER OF CAMELOT The power of a neurosis is unimaginable to ninety-nine point etcetera percent of the population, because we can never adequately judge the intensity of our own—let alone those of others, when we only see them from the outside. That is why no neuroparticipant will ever under- take to treat a full-blown psychotic. The few pioneers in that area are all themselves in therapy today. It would be like diving into a maelstrom. If the therapist loses the upper hand in an intense session, he becomes the Shaped rather than the Shaper. The synapses respond like a fis- sion reaction when nervous impulses are artificially aug- mented. The transference effect is almost instantaneous. "I did an awful lot of skiing five years ago. This is be- cause I was a claustrophobe. I had to run and it took me six months to beat the thing—all because of one tiny lapse that occurred in a measureless fraction of an instant. I had to refer the patient to another therapist. And this was only a •minor repercussion. —If you were to go ga- ga over the scenery, girl, you could wind up in a rest home for life." She finished her drink and Render refilled the glass. The night raced by. They had left the city far behind them, and the road was open and clear. The darkness eased more and more of itself between the falling flakes. The Spinner picked up speed. "AH right," she admitted, "maybe you're right. Still, though, I think you can help me." "How?" he asked. "Accustom me to seeing, so that the images will lose their novelty, the emotions wear off. Accept me as a pa- tient and rid me of my sight-anxiety. Then what you have said so far will cease to apply. I will be able to undertake the training then, and give my full attention to therapy. I'll be able to sublimate the sight-pleasure into something else." Render wondered. Perhaps it could be done. It would be a difficult under- taking, though. It might also make therapeutic history. No one was really qualified to try it, because no one had ever tried it before. But Eileen Shallot was a rarity—no, a unique item— for it was likely she was the only person in the world who THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 45 combined the necessary technical background with the unique problem. He drained his glass, refilled it, refilled hers. He was still considering the problem as the "RECO- ORDINATE" light came on and the car pulled into a cutoff and stood there. He switched off the buzzer and sat there for a long while, thinking. It was not often that other persons heard him acknowl- edge his feelings regarding his skill. His colleagues con- sidered him modest. Offhand, though, it might be noted that he was aware that the day a better neuroparticipant began practicing would be the day that a troubled homo sapien was to be treated by something but immeasurably less than angels. Two drinks remained. Then he tossed the emptied bot- tle into the backbin. "You know something?" he finally said. **What?" *1t might be worth a try." He swiveled about then and leaned forward to reco- ordinate, but she was there first. As he pressed the buttons and the S-7 swung around, she kissed him. Below her dark glasses her cheeks were moist. The suicide bothered him more than it should have, and Mrs. Lambert had called the day before to cancel her appointment. So Render decided to spend the morning being pensive. Accordingly, he entered the office wearing a cigar and a frown. "Did you see ... ?" asked Mrs. Hedges. "Yes." He pitched his coat onto the table that stood in the far corner of the room. He crossed to the window, stared down. "Yes," he repeated, "I was driving by with my windows clear. They were still cleaning up when I passed." "Did you know him?" "I don't even know the name yet. How could I?" "Priss Tully just called me—she's a receptionist for that engineering outfit up on the eighty-sixth. She says it was James Irizarry, an ad designer who had offices down the hall from them— That's a long way to fall. He must have been unconscious when he hit, huh? He bounced off 46 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT the building. If you open the window and lean out you can see—off to the left there—where..." "Never mind, Bennie. —Your friend have any idea why he did it?" "Not really. His secretary came running up the hall, screaming. Seems she went in his office to see him about some drawings, just as he was getting up over the sill. There was a note on his board. 'I've had everything I wanted,' it said. 'Why wait around?' Sort of funny, huh? I don't mean funny. . . ." "Yeah. —Know anything about his personal affairs?" "Married. Coupla kids. Good professional rep. Lots of business. Sober as anybody. —He could afford an office in this building." "Good Lordi" Render turned. "Have you got a case file there or something?" "You know," she shrugged her thick shoulders, *'I*ve got friends all over this hive. We always talk when things go slow. Prissy's my sister-in-law, anyhow— "You mean that if I dived through this window right now, my current biography would make the rounds in the next five minutes?" "Probably," she twisted her bright lips into a smile, "give or take a couple. But don't do it today, huh? —You know, it would be kind of anticlimactic, and it wouldn't get the same coverage as a solus. "Anyhow," she continued, "you're a mind-mixer. You wouldn't do it." "You're betting against statistics," he observed. "The medical profession, along with attorneys, manages about three times as many as most other work areas." "Hey!" She looked worried. "Go 'way from my win- dowl "I'd have to go to work for Doctor Hanson then," she added, "and he's a slob." He moved to her desk. "I never know when to take you seriously," she de- cided. "I appreciate your concern," he nodded, "indeed I do. As a matter of fact, I have never been statistic-prone—I should have repercussed out of the neuropy game four years ago." "You'd be a headline, though," she mused. "All those THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 47 reporters asking me about you . . . Hey, why do they do it, huh?" "Who?" "Anybody." "How should I know, Bennie? I'm only a humble psyche-stirrer. If I could pinpoint a general underlying cause—and then maybe figure a way to anticipate the tiling—why, it might even be better than my jumping, for newscopy. But I can't do it, because there is no single. ample reason—I don't think." "Oh." "About thirty-five years ago it was the ninth leading cause of death in the United States. Now it's number six for North and South America. I think it's seventh in Eu- rope." "And nobody will ever really know why Irizarry pimped?" Reader swung a chair backward and seated himself. He knocked an ash into her petite and gleaming tray. She emptied it into the waste-chute, hastily, and coughed a significant cough. "Oh, one can always speculate," he said, "and one in my profession will. The first thing to consider would be the personality traits which might predispose a man to periods of depression. People who keep their emotions under rigid control, people who are conscientious and rather compulsively concerned with small matters . . ." He knocked another fleck of ash into her tray and watched as she reached out to dump it, then quickly drew her hand back again. He grinned an evil grin. "In short," he finished, "some of the characteristics of people in professions which require individual, rather than group performance—medicine, law, the arts." She regarded him speculatively. "Don't worry though," he chuckled, "I'm pleased as hell with life." "You're kind of down in the mouth this morning." "Pete called me. He broke his ankle yesterday in gym class. They ought to supervise those things more closely. I'm thinking of changing his school." "Again?" "Maybe. I'll see. The headmaster is going to call me this afternoon. I don't like to keep shuffling him, but I do want him to finish school in one piece." 48 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "A kid can't grow up without an accident or two. It's —statistics." "Statistics aren't the same thing as destiny, Bennie. Everybody makes his own." "Statistics or destiny?" "Both, I guess." "I think that if something's going to happen, it's going to happen." "I don't. I happen to think that the human will, backed by a sane mind can exercise some measure of control over events. If I didn't think so, I wouldn't be in the racket I'm in." 'The world's a machine—you know—cause, effect. Sta- tistics do imply the prob—" "The human mind is not a machine, and I do not know cause and effect. Nobody does." "You have a degree in chemistry, as I recall. You're a scientist. Doc." "So I'm a Trotskyite deviationist," he smiled, stretch- ing, "and you were once a ballet teacher." He got to his feet and picked up his coat. "By the way. Miss DeVille called, left a message. She said: 'How about St. Moritz?' " "Too ritzy," he decided aloud. "It's going to be Davos." Because the suicide bothered him more than it should have. Render closed the door to his office and turned off the windows and turned on the phonograph. He put on the desk light only. How has the quality of human life been changed, he wrote, since the beginnings of the industrial revolution? He picked up the paper and reread the sentence. It was the topic he had been asked to discuss that coming Sat- urday. As was typical in such cases he did not know what to say because he had too much to say, and only an hour to say it in. He got up and began to pace the office, now filled with Beethoven's Eighth Symphony. "The power to hurt," he said, snapping on a lapel microphone and activating his recorder, "has evolved in a direct relationship to technological advancement." His imaginary audience grew quiet. He smiled. "Man's po- tential for working simple mayhem has been multiplied THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 49 by mass-production; his capacity for injuring the psyche through personal contacts has expanded in an exact ratio to improved communication facilities. But these are all matters of common knowledge, and are not the things I wish to consider tonight Rather, I should like to dis- cuss what I choose to call autopsychomimesis—the self- generated anxiety complexes which on first scrutiny appear quite similar to classic patterns, but which actually represent radical dispersions of psychic energy. They are peculiar to our times... .** He paused to dispose of his cigar and formulate his next words. "Autopsychomimesis," he thought aloud, "a self- perpetuated imitation complex—almost an attention- getting affair. —A jazzman, for example, who acted hopped-up half the time, even though he had never used an addictive narcotic and only dimly remembered any- one who had—because all the stimulants and tranquilizers of today are quite benign. Like Quixote, he aspired after a legend when his music alone should have been sufficient outlet for his tensions. "Or my Korean War Orphan, alive today by virtue of the Red Cross and UNICEF and foster parents whom he never met. He wanted a family so badly that be made one up. And what then?—He hated his imaginary father and be loved his imaginary mother quite dearly—for he was a highly intelligent boy, and he too longed after the half-true complexes of tradition. Why? "Today, everyone is sophisticated enough to under- stand the time-honored patterns of psychic disturbance. Today, many of the reasons for those disturbances have been removed—not as radically as my now-adult war orphan's, but with as remarkable an effect We are living in a neurotic past. —Again, why? Because our present times are geared to physical health, security and well- being. We have abolished hunger, though the backwoods orphan would still rather receive a package of food con- centrates from a human being who cares for him than to obtain a warm meal from an automat unit in the middle of the jungle. "Physical welfare is now every man's right in excess. The reaction to this has occurred in the area of mental health. Thanks to technology, the reasons for many of the 50 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT old social problems have passed, and along with them went many of the reasons for psychic distress. But be- tween the black of yesterday and the white of tomorrow is the great gray of today, filled with nostalgia and fear of the future, which cannot be expressed on a purely mate- rial plane, is now being represented by a willful seeking after historical anxiety-modes...." The phone-box buzzed briefly. Render did not hear it over the Eighth. "We are afraid of what we do not know," he continued, "and tomorrow is a very great unknown. My own special- ized area of psychiatry did not even exist thirty years ago. Science is capable of advancing itself so rapidly now that there is a genuine public uneasiness—I might even say 'distress'—as to the logical outcome: the total mechaniza- tion of everything in the world. . . ." He passed near the desk as the phone buzzed again. He switched off his microphone and softened the Eighth. "Hello?" "Saint Moritz," she said. "Davos," he replied firmly. "Charlie, you are most exasperatingi" "Jill, dear—so are you." "Shall we discuss it tonight?" "There is nothing to discussi" "You'll pick me up at five, though?" He hesitated, then: "Yes, at five. How come the screen is blank?" "I've had my hair fixed. I'm going to surprise you again." He suppressed an idiot chuckle, said, "Pleasantly, I hope. Okay, see you then," waited for her "good-bye," and broke the connection. He transpared the windows, turned off the light on his desk, and looked outside. Gray again overhead, and many slow flakes of snow— wandering, not being blown about much—moving down- ward and then losing themselves in the tumult. . . . He also saw, when he opened the window and leaned out, the place off to the left where Irizarry had left his next-to-last mark on the world. He closed the window and listened to the rest of the symphony. It had been a week since he had gone blind- THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 51 spuming with Eileen. Her appointment was for one o'clock, He remembered her fingertips brushing over his face, like leaves, or the bodies of insects, learning his appear- ance in the ancient manner of the blind. The memory was not altogether pleasant. He wondered why. Far below, a patch of hosed pavement was blank once again; under a thin, fresh shroud of white, it was slippery as glass. A building custodian hurried outside and spread salt on it, before someone slipped and hurt himself. Sigmund was the myth of Fenria come alive. After Render had instructed Mrs. Hedges, "Show them in," the door had begun to open, was suddenly pushed wider, and a pair of smoky-yellow eyes stared in at him. The eyes were set in a strangely misshapen dog-skull. Sigmund's was not a low canine brow, slanting up slightly from the muzzle; it was a high, shaggy cranium making the eyes appear even more deep-set than they actually were. Render shivered slightly at the size and aspect of that head. The muties he had seen had all been puppies. Sigmund was full-grown, and his gray-black fur had a tendency to bristle, which^nade him appear some- what larger than a normal specimen of the breed. He stared in at Render in a very un-doglike way and made a growling noise which sounded too much like, "Hello, doctor," to have been an accident. Render nodded and stood. "Hello, Sigmund," he said. "Come in." The dog turned his head, sniffing the air of the room— as though deciding whether or not to trust his ward within its confines. Then he returned his stare to Render, dipped his head in an affirmative, and shouldered the door open. Perhaps the entire encounter had taken only one discon- certing second. Eileen followed him, holding lightly to the double- leashed harness. The dog padded soundlessly across the thick rug—head low, as though he were stalking some- thing. His eyes never left Render's. "So this is Sigmund . . . ? How are you, Eileen?" "Fine. —Yes, he wanted very badly to come along, and I wanted you to meet him." Render led her to a chair and seated her. She un- 52 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT snapped the double guide from the dog's harness and placed it on the floor. Sigmimd sat down beside it and continued to stare at Render. "How is everything at State Psych?" "Same as always. —May I bum a cigarette, doctor? I forgot mine." He placed it between her fingers, furnished a light. She was wearing a dark blue suit and her glasses were flame blue. The silver spot on her forehead reflected the glow of his lighter; she continued to stare at that point in space after he had withdrawn his hand. Her shoulder- length hair appeared a trifle lighter than it had seemed on the night they met; today it was like a fresh-minted cop- per coin. Render seated himself on the corner of his desk, draw- ing up his world-ashtray with his toe. "You told me before that being blind did not mean that you had never seen. I didn't ask you to explain it then. But I'd like to ask you now." "I had a neuroparticipation session with Doctor Ris- comb," she told him, "before he had his accident. He wanted to accommodate my mind to visual impressions. Unfortunately, there was never a second session." "I see. What did you do in that session?" She crossed her ankles and Render noted they were well-turned. "Colors, mostly. The experience was quite overwhelm- ing." "How well do you remember them? How long ago was it?" "About six months ago—and I shall never forget them. I have even dreamed in color patterns since then." "How often?" "Several times a week." "What sort of associations do they carry?" "Nothing special. They just come into my mind along with other stimuli now—in a pretty haphazard way." "How?" "Well, for instance, when you ask me a question it's a sort of yellowish-orangish pattern that I 'see'. Your greet- ing was a kind of silvery thing- Now that you're just sitting there listening to me, saying nothing, I associate you with a deep, almost violet, blue." THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 53 Sigmund shifted his gaze to the desk and stared at the side panel. Can he hear the recorder spinning inside? wondered Render. And if he can, can he guess what it is and what it's doing? If so, the dog would doubtless tell Eileen—not that she was unaware of what was now an accepted practice— and she might not like being reminded that he considered her case as therapy, rather than a mere mechanical adap- tation process. If he thought it would do any good (he smiled inwardly at the notion), be would talk to the dog in private about it Inwardly, he shrugged. "I'll construct a rather elementary fantasy world then," he said finally, "and introduce you to some basic forms today." She smiled; and Render looked down at the myth who crouched by her side, its tongue a piece of beefsteak hanging over a picket fence. Is he smiling too? "Thank you," she said. Sigmund wagged his tail. "Well then," Render disposed of his cigarette near Madagascar, "I'll fetch out the 'egg' now and test it. In the meantime," he pressed an unobstrusive button, "per- haps some music would prove relaxing." She started to reply, but a Wagnerian overture snuffed out the words. Render jammed the button again, and there was a moment of silence during which he said, **Heh heh. Thought Respighi was next." It took two more pushes for him to locate some Ro- man pines. "You could have left him on," she observed. "I'm quite fond of Wagner." "No thanks," he said, opening the closet, "I'd keep stepping in all those piles of leitmotifs." The great egg drifted out into the office, soundless as a cloud. Render heard a soft growl behind as he drew it toward the desk. He turned quickly. Like the shadow of a bird, Sigmund had gotten to his feet, crossed the room, and was already circling the ma- chine and sniffing at it—tail taut, ears flat, teeth bared. "Easy, Sig," said Render. "It's an Omnichannel Neural 54 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT T & R Unit. It won't bite or anything like that. It's Just a machine, like a car, or a teevee, or a dishwasher. That's what we're going to use today to show Eileen what some things look like." "Don't like it," rumbled the dog. "Why?" Sigmund had no reply, so he stalked back to EUeen and laid his head in her lap. "Don't like it," he repeated, looking up at her. "Why?" "No words," he decided. "We go home now?" "No," she answered him. "You're going to curl up in the corner and take a nap, and I'm going to curl up in that machine and do the same thing—sort of." "No good," he said, tail drooping. "Go on now," she pushed him, "lie down and behave yourself." He acquiesced, but he whined when Render blanked the windows and touched the button which transformed his desk into the operator's seat. He whined once more—when the egg, connected now to an outlet, broke in the middle and the top slid back and up, revealing the interior. Render seated himself. His chair became a contour couch and moved in hallway beneath the console. He sat upright and it moved back again, becoming a chair. He touched a part of the desk and half the ceiling dis- engaged itself, reshaped itself, and lowered to hover over- head like a huge bell. He stood and moved around to the side of the ro-womb. Respighi spoke of pines and such, and Render disengaged an earphone from beneath the egg and leaned back across his desk. Blocking one ear with his shoulder and pressing the microphone to the other, he played upon the buttons with his free hand. Leagues of surf drowned the tone poem; miles of traffic overrode it; a great clanging bell sent fracture lines run- ning through it; and the feedback said: ". . . Now that you are just sitting there listening to me, saying nothing, I associate you with a deep, almost violet, blue...." He switched to the face mask and monitored, one— cinnamon, two—leaf mold, three—deep reptilian musk . . . and down through thirst, and the tastes of honey and vinegar and salt, and back on up through lilacs and wet concrete, a before-the-storm whiff of ozone, and all the THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 55 basic olfactory and gustatory cues for morning, afternoon and evening in the town. The couch floated normally in its pool of mercury, magnetically stabilized by the walls of the egg. He set the tapes. The ro-womb was in perfect condition. "Okay," said Render, turning, "everything checks." She was just placing her glasses atop her folded gar- ments. She had undressed while Render was testing the machine. He was perturbed by her narrow waist, her large, dark-pointed breasts, her long legs. She was too well-formed for a woman her height, he decided. He realized though, as he stared at her, that his main annoyance was, of course, the fact that she was his pa- tient. "Ready here," she said, and he moved to her side. He took her elbow and guided her to the machine. Her fingers explored its interior. As he helped her enter the unit, he saw that her eyes were a vivid seagreen. Of this, too, he disapproved. "Comfortable?" "Yes." "Okay then, we're set. I'm going to close it now. Sweet dreams." The upper shell dropped slowly. Closed, it grew opaque, then dazzling. Render was staring down at his own distorted reflection. He moved back in the direction of his desk. Sigmund was on his feet, blocking the way. Render reached down to pat his head, but the dog jerked it aside. "Take me, with," he growled. "I'm afraid that can't be done, old fellow," said Render. "Besides, we're not really going anywhere. We'll just be dozing, right here, in this room." The dog did not seem mollified. "Why?" Render sighed. An argument with a dog was about the most ludicrous thing he could imagine when sober. "Sig," he said, "I'm trying to help her learn what things look like. You doubtless do a fine job guiding her around in this world which she cannot see—but she needs to know what it looks like now, and I'm going to show her." "Then she, will not, need me." 56 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT "Of course she will." Render almost laughed. The pa- thetic thing was here bound so closely to the absurd thing that he could not help it. "I can't restore her sight," he explained. "I'm just going to transfer her some sight- abstractions—sort of lend her my eyes for a short time. Savvy?" "No," said the dog. "Take mine." Render turned off the music. The whole mutie-master relationship might be worth six volumes, he decided, in German. He pointed to the far corner. "Lie down, over there, like Eileen told you. This isn't going to take long, and when it's all over you're going to leave the same way you came—you leading. Okay?" Sigmund did not answer, but he turned and moved off to the corner, tail drooping again. Render seated himself and lowered the hood, the op- erator's modified version of the ro-womb. He was alone before the ninety white buttons and the two red ones. The world ended in the blackness beyond the console. He loosened his necktie and unbuttoned his collar. He removed the helmet from its receptacle and checked its leads. Donning it then, he swung the halt- mask up over his lower face and dropped the darksheet down to meet with it. He rested his right arm in the sling, and with a single tapping gesture, he eliminated his patient's consciousness. A Shaper does not press white buttons consciously. He wills conditions. Then deeply-implanted muscular reflexes exert an almost imperceptible pressure against the sensi- tive arm-sling, which glides into the proper position and encourages an extended finger to move forward. A button is pressed. The sling moves on. Render felt a tingling at the base of his skull; he smelled fresh-cut grass. Suddenly he was moving up the great gray alley be- tween the worlds. After what seemed a long time. Render felt that he was footed on a strange Earth. He could see nothing; it was only a sense of presence that informed him he had arrived. It was the darkest of all the dark nights he had ever known. He willed that the darkness disperse. Nothing hap- pened. THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 57 A part of his mind came awake again, a part he had not realized was sleeping; he recalled whose world be had entered. He listened for her presence. He heard fear and an- ticipation. He willed color. First, red ... He felt a correspondence. Then there was an echo. Everything became red; he inhabited the center of an infinite ruby. Orange- Yellow . . . He was caught in a piece of amber. Green now, and he added the exhalations of a sultry sea. Blue, and the coolness of evening. He stretched his mind then, producing all the colors at once. They came in great swirling plumes. Then he tore them apart and forced a form upon them. An incandescent rainbow arced across the black sky. He fought for browns and grays below him. Self- luminescent, they appeared—in shimmering, shifting patches. Somewhere, a sense of awe. There was no trace of hysteria though, so he continued with the Shaping. He managed a horizon, and the blackness drained away beyond it. The sky grew faintly blue, and he ven- tured a herd of dark clouds. There was resistance to his efforts at creating distance and depth, so he reinforced the tableau with a very faint sound of surf. A transfer- ence from an auditory concept of distance came slowly then, as he pushed the clouds about. Quickly, he threw up a high forest to offset a rising wave of acrophobia. The panic vanished. Render focused his attention on tall trees—oaks and pines, poplars and sycamores. He hurled them about like spears, in ragged arrays of greens and browns and yel- lows, unrolled a thick mat of morning-moist grass, dropped a series of gray boulders and greenish logs at irregular intervals, and tangled and twined the branches overhead, casting a uniform shade throughout the glen- The effect was staggering. It seemed as if the entire world was shaken with a sob, then silent. Through the stillness he felt her presence. He had de- cided it would be best to lay the groundwork quickly, to set up a tangible headquarters, to prepare a field for 58 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT operations. He could backtrack later, be could repair and amend the results of the trauma in the sessions yet to come; but this much, at least, was necessary for a be- ginning. With a start, he realized that the silence was not a withdrawal. Eileen had made herself immanent in the trees and the grass, the stones and the bushes; she was personalizing their forms, relating them to tactile sensa- tions, sounds, temperatures, aromas. With a soft breeze, he stirred the branches of the trees. Just beyond the bounds of seeing he worked out the splashing sounds of a brook. There was a feeling of joy. He shared it. She was bearing it extremely well, so he decided to extend the scope of the exercise. He let his mind wander among the trees, experiencing a momentary doubling of vision, during which time he saw an enormous hand rid- ing in an aluminum carriage toward a circle of white. He was beside the brook now and he was seeking her, carefully, He drifted with the water. He had not yet taken on a form. The splashes became a gurgling as he pushed the brook through shallow places and over rocks. At his in- sistence, the waters became more articulate. "Where are you?" asked the brook. Here! Herel Here! . . . and here! replied the trees, the bushes, the stones, the grass. "Choose one," said the brook, as it widened, rounded a mass of rock, then bent its way down a slope, heading toward a blue pool. / cannot, was the answer from the wind. "You must." The brook widened and poured into the pool, swirled about the surface, then stilled itself and reflected branches and dark clouds. "Nowl" Very well, echoed the wood, in a moment. The mist rose above the lake and drifted to the bank of the pool. "Now," tinkled the mist. Here. then . .. She had chosen a small willow. It swayed in the wind; it trailed its branches in the water. "Eileen Shallot," he said, "regard the lake." THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT 59 The breezes shifted; the willow bent. It was not difficult for him to recall her face, her body. The tree spun as though rootless. Eileen stood in the midst of a quiet explosion of leaves; she stared, fright- ened, into the deep blue mirror of Render's mind, the lake, She covered her face with her hands, but it could not stop the seeing. "Behold yourself," said Render. She lowered her hands and peered downward. Then she turned in every direction, slowly; she studied herself. Finally: "I feel I am quite lovely," she said. "Do I feel so be- cause you want me to, or is it true?" She looked all about as she spoke, seeking the Shaper. "It is true," said Render, from everywhere. "Thank you." There was a swirl of white and she was wearing a belted garment of damask. The light in the distance brightened almost imperceptibly. A faint touch of pink began at the base of the lowest cloudbank. "What is happening there?" she asked, facing that di- rection. "I am going to show you a sunrise," said Render, "and I shall probably botch it a bit—but then, it's my first professional sunrise under these circumstances." "Where are you?" she asked. "Everywhere," he replied. "Please take on a form so that I can see you." "All right." "Your natural form." He willed that he be beside her on the bank, and he was. Startled by a metallic flash, he looked downward. The world receded for an instant, then grew stable once again. He laughed, and the laugh froze as he thought of some- thing. He was wearing the suit of armor which had stood beside their table in the Partridge and Scalpel on the night they met. She reached out and touched it. "The suit of armor by our table," she acknowledged, running her fingertips over the plates and the junctures. "I associated it with you that night." 60 THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT ". . . And you stuffed me into it just now," he com- mented. "You're a strong-willed woman." The armor vanished and he was wearing his gray- brown suit and looseknit bloodclot necktie and a profes- sional expression. "Behold the real me," he smiled faintly. "Now, to the sunset. I'm going to use all the colors. Watchi" They seated themselves on the green park bench which had appeared behind them, and Render pointed in the direction he had decided upon as east. Slowly, the sun worked through its morning attitudes. For the first time in this particular world it shone down like a god, and reflected off the lake, and broke the clouds, and set the landscape to smouldering beneath the mist that arose from the moist wood. Watching, watching intently, staring directly into the ascending bonfire, Eileen did not move for a long while, nor speak. Render could sense her fascination. She was staring at the source of all light; it reflected back from the gleaming coin on her brow, like a single drop of blood. Render said, "That is the sun, and those are clouds," and he clapped his hands and the clouds covered the sun and there was a soft rumble overhead, "and that is thunder," he finished. The rain fell then, shattering the lake and tickling their faces, making sharp striking sounds on the leaves, then soft tapping sounds, dripping down from the branches overhead, soaking their garments and plastering their hair. running down their necks and falling into their eyes, turning patches of brown earth to mud. A splash of lightning covered the sky, and a second later there was another peal of thunder. ". . . And this is a summer storm," he lectured. "You see how the rain affects the foliage and ourselves. What you just saw in the sky before the thunderclap was light- ning."