The COMPLEAT Collected SFF Works 1911-1987

Home > Nonfiction > The COMPLEAT Collected SFF Works 1911-1987 > Page 62
The COMPLEAT Collected SFF Works 1911-1987 Page 62

by C. L. Moore


  -

  Vanning sat down, fingering the smock and staring at the metal locker. It was a cube, approximately 3 × 3 × 5, lined with what seemed to be grayish paint, sprayed on. Outside, it was shiny black.

  "How'd you do it?"

  "Huh? I dunno. Just fiddling around." Galloway sipped his zombie. "Maybe it's a matter of dimensional extension. My treatment may have altered the spatio-temporal relationships inside the locker. I wonder what that means?" he murmured in a vague aside. "Words frighten me sometimes."

  Vanning was thinking about tesseracts. "You mean it's bigger inside than it is outside?"

  "A paradox, a paradox, a most delightful paradox. You tell me. I suppose the inside of the locker isn't in this space-time continuum at all. Here, shove that bench in it. You'll see." Galloway made no move to rise; he waved toward the article of furniture in question.

  "You're right. That bench is bigger than the locker."

  "So it is. Shove it in a bit at a time. That corner first. Go ahead."

  Vanning wrestled with the bench. Despite his shortness, he was stockily muscular.

  "Lay the locker on its back. It'll be easier."

  "I ... uh! ... O. K. Now what?"

  "Edge the bench down into it."

  Vanning squinted at his companion, shrugged, and tried to obey. Of course the bench wouldn't go into the locker. One corner did, that was all. Then, naturally, the bench stopped, balancing precariously at an angle.

  "Well?"

  "Wait."

  The bench moved. It settled slowly downward. As Vanning's jaw dropped, the bench seemed to crawl into the locker, with the gentle motion of a not-too-heavy object sinking through water. It wasn't sucked down. It melted down. The portion still outside the locker was unchanged. But that, too, settled, and was gone.

  Vanning craned forward. A blur of movement hurt his eyes. Inside the locker was—something. It shifted its contours, shrank, and became a spiky sort of scalene pyramid, deep-purple in hue.

  It seemed to be less than four inches across at its widest point.

  "I don't believe it," Vanning said.

  Galloway grinned. "As the Duke of Wellington remarked to the subaltern, it was a demned small bottle, sir."

  "Now, wait a minute. How the devil could I put an eight-foot bench inside of a five-foot locker?"

  "Because of Newton," Galloway said. "Gravity. Go fill a test tube with water and I'll show you."

  "Wait a minute ... O. K. Now what?"

  "Got it brim-full? Good. You'll find some sugar cubes in that drawer labeled 'Fuses.' Lay a cube on top of the test tube, one corner down so it touches the water."

  Vanning racked the tube and obeyed. "Well?"

  "What do you see?"

  "Nothing. The sugar's getting wet. And melting."

  "So there you are," Galloway said expansively. Vanning gave him a brooding look and turned back to the tube. The cube of sugar was slowly dissolving and melting down.

  Presently it was gone.

  "Air and water are different physical conditions. In air a sugar cube can exist as a sugar cube. In water it exists in solution. The corner of it extending into water is subject to aqueous conditions. So it alters physically, though not chemically. Gravity does the rest."

  "Make it clearer."

  -

  "The analogy's clear enough, dope. The water represents the particular condition existing inside that locker. The sugar cube represents the workbench. Now! The sugar soaked up the water and gradually dissolved it, so gravity could pull the cube down into the tube as it melted. See?"

  "I think so. The bench soaked up the ... the x condition inside the locker, eh? A condition that shrank the bench—"

  "In partis, not in toto. A little at a time. You can shove a human body into a small container of sulphuric acid, bit by bit."

  "Oh," Vanning said, regarding the cabinet askance. "Can you get the bench out again?"

  "Do it yourself. Just reach in and pull it out."

  "Reach in? I don't want my hand to melt!"

  "It won't. The action isn't instantaneous. You saw that yourself. It takes a few minutes for the change to take place. You can reach into the locker without any ill effects, if you don't leave your hand exposed to the conditions for more than a minute or so. I'll show you." Galloway languidly arose, looked around, and picked up an empty demijohn. He dropped this into the locker.

  The change wasn't immediate. It occurred slowly, the demijohn altering its shape and size till it was a distorted cube the apparent size of a cube of sugar. Galloway reached down and brought it up again, placing the cube on the floor.

  It grew. It was a demijohn again.

  "Now the bench. Look out."

  Galloway rescued the little pyramid. Presently it became the original workbench.

  "You see? I'll bet a storage company would like this. You could probably pack all the furniture in Brooklyn in here, but there'd be trouble in getting what you wanted out again. The physical change, you know—"

  "Keep a chart," Vanning suggested absently. "Draw a picture of how the thing looks inside the locker, and note down what it was."

  "The legal brain," Galloway said. "I want a drink." He returned to his couch and clutched the siphon in a grip of death.

  "I'll give you six credits for the thing," Vanning offered.

  "Sold. It takes up too much room anyway. Wish I could put it inside itself." The scientist chuckled immoderately. "That's very funny."

  "Is it?" Vanning said. "Well, here you are." He took credit coupons from his wallet. "Where'll I put the dough?"

  "Stuff it into Monstro. He's my bank ... Thanks."

  "Yeah. Say, elucidate this sugar business a bit, will you? It isn't just gravity that affects the cube so it slips into a test tube. Doesn't the water soak up into the sugar—"

  "You're right at that. Osmosis. No, I'm wrong. Osmosis has something to do with eggs. Or is that ovulation? Conduction, convection—absorption! Wish I'd studied physics; then I'd know the right words. Just a zoot stoop, that's me. I shall take the daughter of the Vine to spouse," Galloway finished incoherently and sucked at the siphon.

  "Absorption," Vanning scowled. "Only not water, being soaked up by the sugar. The ... the conditions existing inside the locker, being soaked up by your workbench—in that particular case.

  "Like a sponge or a blotter."

  "The bench?"

  "Me," Galloway said succinctly, and relapsed into a happy silence, broken by occasional gurgles as he poured liquor down his scarified gullet. Vanning sighed and turned to the locker. He carefully closed and latched the door before lifting the metal cabinet in his muscular arms.

  "Going? G'night. Fare thee well, fare thee well—"

  "Night."

  "Fare—thee—well!" Galloway ended, in a melancholy outburst of tunefulness, as he turned over preparatory to going to sleep.

  -

  Vanning sighed again and let himself out into the coolness of the night. Stars blazed in the sky, except toward the south, where the aurora of Lower Manhattan dimmed them. The glowing white towers of skyscrapers rose in a jagged pattern. A sky-ad announced the virtues of Vambulin—"It Peps You Up."

  His speeder was at the curb. Vanning edged the locker into the trunk compartment and drove toward the Hudson Floataway, the quickest route downtown. He was thinking about Poe.

  The Purloined Letter, which had been hidden in plain sight, but re-folded and re-addressed, so that its superficial appearance was changed. Holy Hutton! What a perfect safe the locker would make! No thief could crack it, for the obvious reason that it wouldn't be locked. No thief would want to clean it out. Vanning could fill the locker with credit coupons and instantly they'd become unrecognizable. It was the ideal cache.

  How the devil did it work?

  There was little use in asking Galloway. He played by ear. A primrose by the river's rim a simple primrose was to him—not Primula vulgaris. Syllogisms were unknown to him. He reached the conclusion without the
aid of either major or minor premises.

  Vanning pondered. Two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time. Ergo, there was a different sort of space in the locker—

  But Vanning was pumping at conclusions. There was another answer—the right one. He hadn't guessed it yet.

  Instead, he tooled the speeder downtown to the office building where he maintained a floor, and brought the locker upstairs in the freight lift. He didn't put it in his private office; that would have been too obvious. He placed the metal cabinet in one of the store-rooms, sliding a file cabinet in front of it for partial concealment. It wouldn't do to have the clerks using this particular locker.

  Vanning stepped back and considered. Perhaps—

  A bell rang softly. Preoccupied, Vanning didn't hear it at first. When he did, he went back to his own office and pressed the acknowledgment button on the Winchell. The gray, harsh, bearded face of Counsel Hatton appeared, filling the screen.

  "Hello," Vanning said.

  Hatton nodded. "I've been trying to reach you at your home. Thought I'd try the office—"

  "I didn't expect you to call now. The trial's tomorrow. It's a bit late for discussion, isn't it?"

  "Dugan & Sons wanted me to speak to you. I advised against it."

  "Oh?"

  Hatton's thick gray brows drew together. "I'm prosecuting, you know. There's plenty of evidence against MacIlson."

  "So you say. But peculation's a difficult charge to prove."

  "Did you get an injunction against scop?"

  "Naturally," Vanning said. "You're not using truth serum on my client!"

  "That'll prejudice the jury."

  "Not on medical grounds. Scop affects MacIlson harmfully. I've got a covering prognosis."

  "Harmfully is right!" Hatton's voice was sharp. "Your client embezzled those bonds, and I can prove it."

  "Twenty-five thousand in credits, it comes to, eh? That's a lot for Dugan & Sons to lose. What about that hypothetical case I posed? Suppose twenty thousand were recovered—"

  "Is this a private beam? No recordings?"

  "Naturally. Here's the cut-off." Vanning held up a metal-tipped cord. "This is strictly sub rosa."

  "Good," Counsel Hatton said. "Then I can call you a lousy shyster."

  "Tch!"

  "Your gag's too old. It's moth-eaten. MacIlson swiped five grand in bonds, negotiable into credits. The auditors start checking up. MacIlson comes to you. You tell him to take twenty grand more, and offer to return that twenty if Dugan & Sons refuse to prosecute. MacIlson splits with you on the five thousand, and on the plat standard, that ain't hay."

  "I don't admit to anything like that."

  "Naturally you don't, not even on a closed beam. But it's tacit. However, the gag's moth-eaten, and my clients won't play ball with you. They're going to prosecute."

  "You called me up just to tell me that?"

  "No, I want to settle the jury question. Will you agree to let 'em use scop on the panel?"

  "O. K.," Vanning said. He wasn't depending on a fixed jury tomorrow. His battle would be based on legal technicalities. With scop-tested talesmen, the odds would be even. And such an arrangement would save days or weeks of argument and challenge.

  "Good," Hatton grunted. "You're going to get your pants licked off."

  Vanning replied with a mild obscenity and broke the connection. Reminded of the pending court fight, he forced the matter of the fourth-dimensional locker out of his mind and left the office. Later—

  -

  Later would be time enough to investigate the possibilities of the remarkable cabinet more thoroughly. Just now, he didn't want his brain cluttered with nonessentials. He went to his apartment, had the servant mix him a short highball, and dropped into bed.

  And, the next day, Vanning won his case. He based it on complicated technicalities and obscure legal precedents. The crux of the matter was that the bonds had not been converted into government credits. Abstruse economic charts proved that point for Vanning. Conversion of even five thousand credits would have caused a fluctuation in the graph line, and no such break existed. Vanning's experts went into monstrous detail.

  In order to prove guilt, it would have been necessary to show, either actually or by inference, that the bonds had been in existence since last December 20th, the date of their most recent check-and-recording. The case of Donovan vs. Jones stood as a precedent.

  Hatton jumped to his feet. "Jones later confessed to his defalcation, your honor!"

  "Which does not affect the original decision," Vanning said smoothly. "Retroaction is not admissible here. The verdict was not proven."

  "Counsel for the defense will continue."

  Counsel for the defense continued, building up a beautifully intricate edifice of casuistic logic.

  Hatton writhed. "Your honor! I—"

  "If my learned opponent can produce one bond—just one of the bonds in question—I will concede the case."

  The presiding judge looked sardonic. "Indeed! If such a piece of evidence could be produced, the defendant would be jailed as fast as I could pronounce sentence. You know that very well, Mr. Vanning. Proceed."

  "Very well. My contention, then, is that the bonds never existed. They were the result of a clerical error in notation."

  "A clerical error in a Pederson Calculator?"

  "Such errors have occurred, as I shall prove. If I may call my next witness—"

  Unchallenged, the witness, a math technician, explained how a Pederson Calculator can go haywire. He cited cases.

  Hatton caught him up on one point. "I protest this proof. Rhodesia, as everyone knows, is the location of a certain important experimental industry. Witness has refrained from stating the nature of the work performed in this particular Rhodesian factory. Is it not a fact that the Henderson United Company deals largely in radioactive ores?"

  "Witness will answer."

  "I can't. My records don't include that information."

  "A significant omission," Hatton snapped. "Radioactivity damages the intricate mechanism of a Pederson Calculator. There is no radium nor radium by-product in the offices of Dugan & Sons."

  Vanning stood up. "May I ask if those offices have been fumigated lately?"

  "They have. It is legally required."

  "A type of chlorine gas was used?"

  "Yes."

  "I wish to call my next witness."

  The next witness, a physicist and official in the Ultra Radium Institute, explained that gamma radiations affect chlorine strongly, causing ionization. Living organisms could assimilate by-products of radium and transmit them in turn. Certain clients of Dugan & Sons had been in contact with radioactivity—

  "This is ridiculous, your honor! Pure theorization—"

  Vanning looked hurt. "I cite the case of Dangerfield vs. Austro Products, California, 1963. Ruling states that the uncertainty factor is prime admissible evidence. My point is simply that the Pederson Calculator which recorded the bonds could have been in error. If this be true, there were no bonds, and my client is guiltless."

  "Counsel will continue," said the judge, wishing he were Jeffries so he could send the whole damned bunch to the scaffold. Jurisprudence should be founded on justice, and not be a three-dimensional chess game. But, of course, it was the natural development of the complicated political and economic factors of modern civilization. It was already evident that Vanning would win his case.

  And he did. The jury was directed to find for the defendant. On a last, desperate hope, Hatton raised a point of order and demanded scop, but his petition was denied. Vanning winked at his opponent and closed his brief case.

  That was that.

  -

  Vanning returned to his office. At four-thirty that afternoon trouble started to break. The secretary announced a Mr. MacIlson, and was pushed aside by a thin, dark, middle-aged man lugging a gigantic suedette suitcase.

  "Vanning! I've got to see you—"

  The attorney's eye ho
oded. He rose from behind his desk, dismissing the secretary with a jerk of his head. As the door closed, Vanning said brusquely, "What are you doing here? I told you to stay away from me. What's in that bag?"

  "The bonds," MacIlson explained, his voice unsteady. "Something's gone wrong—"

  "You crazy fool! Bringing the bonds here—" With a leap Vanning was at the door, locking it. "Don't you realize that if Hatton gets his hands on that paper, you'll be yanked back to jail? And I'll be disbarred! Get 'em out of here."

  "Listen a minute, will you? I took the bonds to Finance Unity, as you told me, but ... but there was an officer there, waiting for me. I saw him just in time. If he'd caught me—"

  Vanning took a deep breath. "You were supposed to leave the bonds in that subway locker for two months."

  MacIlson pulled a news sheet from his pocket. "But the government's declared a freeze on ore stocks and bonds. It'll go into effect in a week. I couldn't wait—the money would have been tied up indefinitely."

  "Let's see that paper." Vanning examined it and cursed softly. "Where'd you get this?"

  "Bought it from a boy outside the jail. I wanted to check the current ore quotations."

  "Uh-huh. I see. Did it occur to you that this sheet might be faked?"

  MacIlson's jaw dropped. "Fake?"

  "Exactly. Hatton figured I might spring you, and had this paper ready. You bit. You led the police right to the evidence, and a swell spot you've put me in."

  "B-but—"

  Vanning grimaced. "Why do you suppose you saw that cop at Finance Unity? They could have nabbed you any time. But they wanted to scare you into heading for my office, so they could catch both of us on the same hook. Prison for you, disbarment for me. Oh, hell!"

  MacIlson licked his lips. "Can't I get out a back door?"

  "Through the cordon that's undoubtedly waiting? Orbs! Don't be more of a sap than you can help."

  "Can't you—hide the stuff?"

  "Where? They'll ransack this office with x rays. No, I'll just—" Vanning stopped. "Oh. Hide it, you said. Hide it—"

  He whirled to the dictograph. "Miss Horton? I'm in conference. Don't disturb me for anything. If anybody hands you a search warrant, insist on verifying it through headquarters. Got me? O. K."

 

‹ Prev