The Illustrated Man

Home > Literature > The Illustrated Man > Page 16
The Illustrated Man Page 16

by Ray Bradbury


  A crowd gathered to watch the film being made. And Susan watched the crowd and the streets.

  "Seen anyone suspicious?"

  "No. What time is it?"

  "Three o'clock. The car should be almost ready."

  The test film was finished at three forty-five. They all walked down to the hotel, talking. William paused at the garage. "The car'll be ready at six," he said, coming out, worried.

  "But no later than that?"

  "It'll be ready, don't worry.

  In the hotel lobby they looked around for other men traveling alone, men who resembled Mr. Simms, men with new haircuts and too much cigarette smoke and cologne smell about them, but the lobby was empty. Going up the stairs, Mr. Melton said, "Well, it's been a long hard day. Who'd like to put a header on it? You folks? Martini? Beer?"

  "Maybe one."

  The whole crowd pushed into Mr. Melton's room and the drinking began.

  "Watch the time," said William.

  Time, thought Susan. If only they had time. All she wanted was to sit in the plaza all of a long bright day in October, with not a worry or a thought, with the sun on her face and arms, her eyes closed, smiling at the warmth, and never move. Just sleep in the Mexican sun, and sleep warmly and easily and slowly and happily for many, many days. . . .

  Mr. Melton opened the champagne.

  "To a very beautiful lady, lovely enough for films," be said, toasting Susan. "I might even give you a test."

  She laughed.

  "I mean it," said Melton. "You're very nice. I could make you a movie star."

  "And take me to Hollywood?" cried Susan.

  "Get the hell out of Mexico, sure!"

  Susan glanced at William and he lifted an eyebrow and nodded. It would be a change of scene, clothing, locale, name, perhaps; and they would be traveling with eight other people, a good shield against any interference from the Future.

  "It sounds wonderful," said Susan.

  She was feeling the champagne now. The afternoon was slipping by; the party was whirling about her. She felt safe and good and alive and truly happy for the first time in many years.

  "What kind of film would my wife be good for?" asked William, refilling his glass.

  Melton appraised Susan. The party stopped laughing and listened.

  "Well, I'd like to do a story of suspense," said Melton. "A story of a man and wife, like yourselves."

  "Go on."

  "Sort of a war story, maybe," said the director, examining the color of his drink against the sunlight.

  Susan and William waited.

  "A story about a man and wife who live in a little house on a little street in the year 2155, maybe," said Melton. "This is ad lib, understand. But this man and wife are faced with a terrible war, super-plus hydrogen bombs, censorship, death in that year, and--here's the gimmick--they escape into the Past, followed by a man who they think is evil, but who is only trying to show them what their duty is."

  William dropped his glass to the floor.

  Mr. Melton continued: "And this couple take refuge with a group of film people whom they learn to trust. Safety in numbers, they say to themselves."

  Susan felt herself slip down into a chair. Everyone was watching the director. He took a little sip of wine. "Ah, that's a fine wine. Well, this man and woman, it seems, don't realize how important they are to the Future. The man, especially, is the keystone to a new bomb metal. So the Searchers, let's call them, spare no trouble or expense to find, capture, and take home the man and wife, once they get them totally alone, in a hotel room, where no one can see. Strategy. The Searchers work alone, or in groups of eight. One trick or another will do it. Don't you think it would make a wonderful film, Susan? Don't you, Bill?" He finished his drink.

  Susan sat with her eyes straight ahead of her.

  "Have a drink?" said Mr. Melton.

  William's gun was out and fired three times, and one of the men fell, and the others ran forward. Susan screamed. A hand was clamped to her mouth. Now the gun was on the floor and William was struggling, held.

  Mr. Melton said, "Please," standing there where he had stood, blood showing on his fingers. "Let's not make matters worse."

  Someone pounded on the hall door.

  "Let me in!"

  "The manager," said Mr. Melton dryly. He jerked his head. "Everyone, let's move!"

  "Let me in! I'll call the police!"

  Susan and William looked at each other quickly, and then at the door.

  "The manager wishes to come in," said Mr. Melton. Quick!"

  A camera was carried forward. From it shot a blue light which encompassed the room instantly. It widened out and the people of the party vanished, one by one.

  "Quickly!"

  Outside the window, in the instant before she vanished, Susan saw the green land and the purple and yellow and blue and crimson walls and the cobbles flowing down like a river, a man upon a burro riding into the warm hills, a boy drinking Orange Crush, she could feel the sweet liquid in her throat a man standing under a cool plaza tree with a guitar, she could feel her hand upon the strings, and, far away, the sea, the blue and tender sea, she could feel it roll her over and take her in.

  And then she was gone. Her husband was gone.

  The door burst wide open. The manager and his staff rushed in.

  The room was empty.

  "But they were just here! I saw them come in, and now--gone!" cried the manager. "The windows are covered with iron grating. They couldn't get out that way!"

  In the late afternoon the priest was summoned and they opened the room again and aired it out, and had him sprinkle holy water through each corner and give it his blessing.

  "What shall we do with these?" asked the charwoman.

  She pointed to the closet, where there were 67 bottles of chartreuse, cognac,creme de cacao, absinthe, vermouth, tequila, 106 cartons of Turkish cigarettes, and 198 yellow boxes of fifty-cent pure Havana-filler cigars. . . .

  * * *

  The Visitor

  SAUL WILLIAMS awoke to the still morning. He looked wearily out of his tent and thought about how far away Earth was. Millions of miles, he thought. But then what could you do about it? Your lungs were full of the "blood rust." You coughed all the time.

  Saul arose this particular morning at seven o'clock. He was a tall man, lean, thinned by his illness. It was a quiet morning on Mars, with the dead sea bottom-flat and silent--no wind on it. The sun was clear and cool in the empty sky. He washed his face and ate breakfast.

  After that he wanted very much to be back on Earth. During the day he tried every way that it was possible to be in New York City. Sometimes, if he sat right and held his hands a certain way, he did it. He could almost smell New York. Most of the time, though, it was impossible.

  Later in the morning Saul tried to die. He lay on the sand and told his heart to stop. It continued beating. He imagined himself leaping from a cliff or cutting his wrists, but laughed to himself--he knew he lacked the nerve for either act.

  Maybe if I squeeze tight and think about it enough, I'll just sleep and never wake, he thought. He tried it. An hour later he awoke with a mouth full of blood. He got up and spat it out and felt very sorry for himself. This blood rust--it filled your mouth and your nose; it ran from your ears, your fingernails; and it took a year to kill you. The only cure was shoving you in a rocket and shooting you out to exile on Mars. There was no known cure on Earth, and remaining there would contaminate and kill others. So here he was, bleeding all the time, and lonely.

  Saul's eyes narrowed. In the distance, by an ancient city ruin, he saw another man lying on a filthy blanket.

  When Saul walked up, the man on the blanket stirred weakly.

  "Hello, Saul," he said.

  "Another morning," said Saul. "Christ, I'm lonely!"

  "It is an affliction of the rusted ones," said the man on the blanket, not moving, very pale and as if he might vanish if you touched him.

  "I wish to God," said Saul
, looking down at the man, "that you could at least talk. Why is it that intellectuals never get the blood rust and come up here?"

  "It is a conspiracy against you, Saul," said the man, shutting his eyes, too weary to keep them open. "Once I had the strength to be an intellectual. Now, it is a job to think."

  "If only we could talk," said Saul Williams.

  The other man merely shrugged indifferently.

  "Come tomorrow. Perhaps I'll have enough strength to talk about Aristotle then. I'll try. Really I will." The man sank down under the worn tree. He opened one eye. "Remember, once we did talk on Aristotle, six months ago, on that good day I had."

  "I remember," said Saul, not listening. He looked at the dead sea. "I wish I were as sick as you, then maybe I wouldn't worry about being an intellectual. Then maybe I'd get some peace."

  "You'll get just as bad as I am now in about six months," said the dying man. "Then you won't care about anything but sleep and more sleep. Sleep will be like a woman to you. You'll always go back to her, because she's fresh and good and faithful and she always treats you kindly and the same. You only wake up so you can think about going hack to sleep. It's a nice thought." The man's voice was a bare whisper. Now it stopped and a light breathing took over.

  Saul walked off.

  Along the shores of the dead sea, like so many emptied bottles flung up by some long-gone wave, were the huddled bodies of sleeping men. Saul could see them all down the curve of the empty sea. One, two, three--all of them sleeping alone, most of them worse off than he, each with his little cache of food, each grown into himself, because social converse was weakening and sleep was good.

  At first there had been a few nights around mutual campfires. And they had all talked about Earth. That was the only thing they talked about. Earth and the way the waters ran in town creeks and what homemade strawberry pie tasted like and how New York looked in the early morning coming over on the Jersey ferry in the salt wind.

  I want Earth, thought Saul. I want it so bad it hurts. I want something I can never have again. And they all want it and it hurts them not to have it. More than food or a woman or anything, I just want Earth. This sickness puts women away forever; they're not things to be wanted. But Earth, yes. That's a thing for the mind and not the weak body.

  The bright metal flashed on the sky.

  Saul looked up.

  The bright metal flashed again.

  A minute later the rocket landed on the sea bottom. A valve opened, a man stepped out, carrying his luggage with him. Two other men, in protective germicide suits, accompanied him, bringing out vast cases of food, setting up a tent for him.

  Another minute and the rocket returned to the sky. The exile stood alone.

  Saul began to run. He hadn't run in weeks, and it was very tiring, but he ran and yelled.

  "Hello, hello!"

  The young man looked Saul up and down when he arrived.

  "Hello. So this is Mars. My name's Leonard Mark."

  "I'm Saul Williams."

  They shook hands. Leonard Mark was very young--only eighteen; very blond, pink-faced, blue-eyed and fresh in spite of his illness.

  "How are things in New York?" said Saul.

  "Like this," said Leonard Mark. And he looked at Saul. New York grew up out of the desert, made of stone and filled with March winds. Neons exploded in electric color. Yellow taxis glided in a still night. Bridges rose and tugs chanted in the midnight harbors. Curtains rose on spangled musicals.

  Saul put his hands to his head, violently.

  "Hold on, hold on!" he cried. "What's happening to me? What's wrong with me? I'm going crazy!"

  Leaves sprouted from trees in Central Park, green and new. On the pathway Saul strolled along, smelling the air.

  "Stop it, stop it, you fool!" Saul shouted at himself. He pressed his forehead with his hands. "This can't be!"

  "It is," said Leonard Mark.

  The New York towers faded. Mars returned. Saul stood on the empty sea bottom, staring limply at the young newcomer.

  "You," he said, putting his hand out to Leonard Mark."You did it. You did it with your mind."

  "Yes," said Leonard Mark.

  Silently they stood facing each other. Finally, trembling, Saul seized the other exile's hand and wrung it again and again, saying, "Oh, but I'm glad you're here. You can't know how glad I am!"

  They drank their rich brown coffee from the tin cups.

  It was high noon. They had been talking all through the warm morning time.

  "And this ability of yours?" said Saul over his cup, looking steadily at the young Leonard Mark.

  "It's just something I was born with," said Mark, looking into his drink. "My mother was in the blowup of London back in '57. I was born ten months later. I don't know what you'd call my ability. Telepathy and thought transference, I suppose. I used to have an act. I traveled all around the world. Leonard Mark, the mental marvel, they said on the billboards. I was pretty well off. Most people thought I was a charlatan. You know what people think of theatrical folks. Only I knew I was really genuine, but I didn't let anybody know. It was safer not to let it get around too much. Oh, a few of my close friends knew about my real ability. I had a lot of talents that will come in handy now that I'm here on Mars."

  "You sure scared the hell out of me," said Saul, his cup rigid in his hand. "When New York came right up out of the ground that way, I thought I was insane."

  "It's a form of hypnotism which affects all of the sensual organs at once--eyes, ears, nose, mouth, skin--all of them. What would you like to be doing now most of all?"

  Saul put down his cup. He tried to hold his hands very steady. He wet his lips. "I'd like to be in a little creek I used to swim in in Mellin Town, Illinois, when I was a kid. I'd like to be stark-naked and swimming."

  "Well," said Leonard Mark and moved his head ever so little.

  Saul fell back on the sand, his eyes shut.

  Leonard Mark sat watching him.

  Saul lay on the sand. From time to time his hands moved, twitched excitedly. His mouth spasmed open; sounds issued from his tightening and relaxing throat.

  Saul began to make slow movements of his arms, out and back, out and back, gasping with his head to one side, his arms going and coming slowly on the warm air, stirring the yellow sand under him, his body turning slowly over.

  Leonard Mark quietly finished his coffee. While he drank he kept his eyes on the moving, whispering Saul lying there on the dead sea bottom.

  "All right," said Leonard Mark.

  Saul sat up, rubbing his face.

  After a moment he told Leonard Mark, "I saw the creek. I ran along the bank and I took off my clothes," he said breathlessly, his smile incredulous. "And Idived in and swam around!"

  "I'm pleased," said Leonard Mark.

  "Here!" Saul reached into his pocket and drew forth his last bar of chocolate. "This is foryou."

  "What's this?" Leonard Mark looked at the gift. "Chocolate? Nonsense, I'm not doing this for pay. I'm doing it because it makes you happy. Put that thing back in your pocket before I turn it into a rattlesnake and it bites you."

  "Thank you, thank you!" Saul put it away. "You don't know how good that water was." He fetched the coffeepot. "More?"

  Pouring the coffee, Saul shut his eyes a moment.

  I've got Socrates here, he thought; Socrates and Plato, and Nietzsche and Schopenhauer. This man, by his talk, is a genius. By his talent, he's incredible! Think of the long, easy days and the cool nights of talk we'll have. It won't be a bad year at all.

  Not half.

  He spilled the coffee.

  "What's wrong?"

  "Nothing." Saul himself was confused, startled.

  We'll be in Greece, he thought. In Athens. We'll be in Rome, if we want, when we study the Roman writers. We'll stand in the Parthenon and the Acropolis. It won't be just talk, but it'll be a place to be, besides. This man can do it. He has the power to do it. When we talk the plays of Racine, he can make
a stage and players and all of it for me. By Christ, this is better than life ever was! How much better to be sick and here than well on Earth without these abilities! How may people have ever seen a Greek drama played in a Greek amphitheater in the year 31 B.C.?

  And if I ask, quietly and earnestly, will this man take on the aspect of Schopenhauer and Darwin and Bergson and all the other thoughtful men of the ages . . . ? Yes, why not? To sit and talk with Nietzsche in person, with Plato himself . . . !

  There was only one thing wrong. Saul felt himself swaying. The other men. The other sick ones along the bottom of this dead sea.

  In the distance men were moving, walking toward them.

  They had seen the rocket flash, land, dislodge a passenger. Now they were coming, slowly, painfully, to greet the new arrival.

  Saul was cold. "Look," he said. "Mark, I think we'd better head for the mountains."

  "Why?"

  "See those men coming? Some of them are insane."

  "Really?"

  "Yes."

  "Isolation and all make them that way?"

  "Yes, that's it. We'd better get going."

  "They don't look very dangerous. They move slowly."

  "You'd be surprised."

  Mark looked at Saul. "You're trembling. Why's that?"

  "There's no time to talk," said Saul, getting up swiftly. "Come on. Don't you realize what'll happen once they discover your talent? They'll fight over you. They'll kill each other--kill you--for the right to own you."

  "Oh, but I don't belong to anybody," said Leonard Mark. He looked at Saul. "No. Not even you."

  Saul jerked his head. "I didn't even think of that."

  "Didn't you now?" Mark laughed.

  "We haven't time to argue," answered Saul, eyes blinking, cheeks blazing. "Come on!"

  "I don't want to. I'm going to sit right here until those men show up. You're a little too possessive. My life's my own."

 

‹ Prev