A Large Anthology of Science Fiction

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A Large Anthology of Science Fiction Page 96

by Jerry


  “See that!” whispered Philip excitedly, waving the light from side to side to show the forty-foot swath that stretched away before them. “Not a trace of life left, not a blade of grass—nothing but dust!”

  The only response was a gurgling sound that issued from Nukharin’s throat.

  “Look!” Quest formed the word with Philip’s lips under the urge of the Master Will. “Here was a tall bush. What do you see now? Just a teaspoonful of ash. When you examine the remains by daylight, you will find that even the root has disintegrated to a depth of two feet.”

  “Enough of this,” croaked Nukharin in horror. “The deal is closed.”

  His face was convulsed with fear. Without another word he whirled about and fled toward his airplane. Philip gave a start as if to follow.

  “Halt! you slob,” growled Keane, whose composure had returned with the successful outcome of the test. “I have use for your company, even though you are as great a coward as our Slavic friend.”

  Coward! The epithet stung Quest like a flaming goad. One of the fine, intangible lines that bound him under the will of Keane Clason severed, and his own will exploded into action like a thunderbolt. With startling agility he whirled Philip about, the flashlight clubbed in his hand. But Keane was quicker still. A clip on the wrist sent the weapon flying. Then Philip reeled backward from a kick in the stomach, and his clutching hands beat the air as he sank unconscious in the dust.

  WITH a violent tug, Quest lifted Philip’s body to a sitting posture. The phone was ringing, and by the pull on the will-fibers he knew that Keane was at the other end of the wire. Philip’s body was failing under the strain of the part it was forced to play, and the blow of the night before had further weakened it. Now he sat rocking his head painfully between his hands. But Quest lifted him to his feet by sheer will, and he staggered across the room.

  “Hello!” he said in a hoarse voice.

  “Get the hell out here to the factory!” rasped Keane, and the crash of the receiver emphasized the command.

  It was one o’clock as Philip whirled his sedan into Olmstead Avenue. At three, reflected Quest as the car scorched over the pavements, he must be at the downtown office to deliver the papers and receive the money.

  Then he was face to face with Keane, reeling dizzily at the hatred that blazed from the latter’s accusing eyes.

  “Double-crossed me, eh!” The voice was a low snarl, and as he spoke Keane thumped the extra outspread on his desk. “But you’re not going to get away with it—neither of you!”

  Dismay, hope, dread, wonder robbed Quest of the power to speak. But he whirled around behind the desk with such unexpected violence that Keane staggered back in alarm. Then he was devouring the screaming headlines of the newspaper. Three seconds, like a slow exposure, and every word of the Record’s great scoop was etched upon his mind as if with caustic:

  DOOM LAUNCH ADRIFT ON LAKE

  Physician Baffled by Condition of Five Bodies Found in Craft

  Blighted Area on Shore Said to Have Bearing on Tragedy

  THAW HARBOR, IND., June 6.—Five Chicago sportsmen, most of them prominent in business and society, perished in the early hours this morning while returning in the launch of A. Gaston Andrews from a weekend camping party near Hook Spit on the Michigan shore.

  The boat was towed into this port at daybreak by the Interlake Tug Mordecai after being found adrift less than a mile off shore. According to Captain Goff of the Mordecai the death craft carried no lights and he barely avoided running her down. The weather along the Indiana shore was perfect throughout the night and there is nothing to indicate that the launch was in trouble at any time. The bodies are unmarked, and this little community is agog with rumors ranging all the way from murder and suicide to the supernatural.

  Dr. J. M. Addis of Thaw Harbor, the first physician to examine the bodies, says that they appear to have suffered some violent electro-chemical action the nature of which cannot be determined at the moment. This statement is considered significant in view of the reported discovery ashore of a large blighted area almost directly opposite the point where the launch was found. Joseph Sleichert, a farmer who lives in that vicinity, reports that this patch of ground extending back from the lakeshore was completely stripped of vegetation overnight. He ascribes the damage to some unknown insect pest. Others say that the condition of the ground indicates that it has been burned at incinerator temperatures. Nothing is left of the soil but a blue powder.

  Philip faced his brother with eyes that were dull with agony.

  “You have made me a murderer!” Quest forced out the words in painful gasps.

  But Keane snapped back at him like a rabid dog.

  “You did it—you did it yourself! You tampered with the Projector. You tried to spoil the test. You changed the range. You tried to kill me, and instead you killed these others. And you’re going to pay—both of you. You hear me?—you’re going to pay!”

  His voice mounted the scale to a scream. It was a wail of unreasoning terror, of the dread of exposure, of the fear that he would fail to collect the fortune now so nearly in his grasp. The accident that had jarred his well-laid plans had unnerved him.

  FRANTICALLY Quest strove to answer him, to explain his utter subjection, as Agent, to say that if he had possessed the will to oppose or trick him he would have turned him over to the police, or might even have killed him, at the very outset. But in his frenzy, Keane had so tightened his control that Quest was speechless. Now he tried to substitute gesture for words, but Philip was rooted to the spot like a statue; even his hands were immovable.

  He might have remained in this state indefinitely had not Keane’s fears withdrawn his mind from his immediate surroundings. Momentarily he forgot Quest, Philip—everything but himself and his predicament. And in the instant that his vigilance relaxed, Quest’s enslaved will experienced a sudden lease of strength and hope. Independently of his Control, he found that he could move Philip’s hand, could take a faltering step.

  But now, what to do? How might he fan this feeble spark of volition to sufficient strength for decisive resistance? The idea came to him: if only he could place distance between himself and Keane, perhaps with one titanic effort he might launch himself against the Master Will, take him by surprise, crush him down, and reverse him to the status of Agent instead of Control.

  With infinite effort Quest forced Philip’s body step by step across the room. He must reach that window, get a signal of distress to someone in the street.

  But Keane began to sense a mutiny. He followed. He crossed the floor with slinking, tigerish steps and snaking body. His wet lips writhed back over his teeth, and his contorted features wove the leer of the abyss. Now as his Control drew physically near, Quest felt his mite of strength ebbing fast. Slowly Keane reached up with his clawed fingers and grasped his Agent by the arm.

  “Remember!” he hissed, “if these deaths are traced to us, you break down—you confess—you take the blame—you paint me lily white—you describe the cowardly means by which you moulded me to your will—you plead only for a quick trial and the full penalty of the law. You understand?”

  Quest made no reply, but he understood all too well the hideous intention of his betrayer. What a fool he had been to imagine that Keane Clason would ever restore him to his body! Philip to the chair, Quest a homeless spirit wandering in space, and for the body at the bottom of the tank, the brief regrets of the Department!

  A SUDDEN rushing sound filled the air with a sense of action and alarm.

  Two—three—four speeding automobiles swung in recklessly to the curb and shrieked to a standstill under smoking brakes. Men leaped out and deployed on the run to surround the factory. Keane darted to the door and twisted the key.

  “Come on!” he spat at Philip as he snatched back the rug and threw open the trap door.

  The command galvanized Quest to action. In two bounds he had Philip on the stairs. A heavy impact rattled the office door just as he dropped the
trap into place over his head. Then, infected with Keane’s panic, he was running down the passageway like mad.

  Inside the tank chamber the brilliantly colored rings of liquid flashed back the rays of the arclight. Half crazed with anxiety, Keane danced on the black ledge like a monkey on a griddle. His face was ashen, drool ran from his twisted mouth, his eyes were two black pools of terror.

  Again Quest experienced the peculiar sensation which came with the slackening of control. New hope sprang up in his agonized being as heavy blows boomed against the air-locked door. Great waves of fear poured along the conduits, betraying to the Agent the state of mind of his Control. Now what would Keane do? What could he do? Why, of all places, had he fled down into this blind burrow?

  Thud, thud! Then came a series of sharp reports. Outside, they were trying to shoot away the deep-sunk disk hinges.

  Still the door stood fast, but the fury of the assault on it whipped the faltering Keane to action. In a bound he was on the platform. With a lightning hand he threw the switch to plus, starting electrolytic action in the tank. Then he pressed a button concealed under the edge of the switch-mount and a panel slid silently aside in the wall, revealing a narrow outlet.

  TO Quest everything went a flaming red. He might have known that this fox would have something in reserve—a way of escape when danger threatened!

  But his Control gave him no time for independent thought. He forced Quest to turn Philip’s eyes up to his own. Without disconnecting that grip of his glittering eyes, Keane leaped back to the ledge. Quest felt the silent order:

  “Get up on that plank! Dive into the tank! Get back into your own body, let Philip have his! Then come up—the two of you—and face the music. For I’ll be gone, and your story will sound like the ravings of a maniac.”

  Quest took an obedient step toward the platform. But at the same instant a tremendous crash shivered the door. It seemed to unnerve Keane Clason. With a gasp he sank down upon the steps, his body doubled in pain, his hand clutching at his heart. Another crash followed, and he shuddered and cried out.

  Instantly Quest felt an expansion of the will. Keane’s sudden physical weakness had loosened his control. Philip’s lips worked painfully as Quest forced him to pause, to disobey the command of the Master Will. In a spasm of will he fought to wrench himself free from the countless clinging tentacles of his Control. In great surges, Quest’s reviving volition pounded against the walls of his borrowed body. Now he sought to force this sluggish body back to the wall, so that he might release the airlock and spring the door. But Philip seemed to ossify, every cord and muscle of his body frozen to stone by the conflict that raged within him.

  Braced against the wall, Keane was rising slowly to his feet. His seizure was easing, and so he was able to exert a better pressure upon his rebellious Agent.

  “Come!” he gasped, realizing that he lacked the strength to escape alone and must therefore change his plan. “Lift me—quick! Carry me out! Slide the panel back into place. We will escape together!”

  THE spoken command turned the balance against Quest. His will yielded to the master. At the same instant Philip’s body relaxed like an object relieved of a great excess of electrical potential. Suddenly strong and supple, he lifted the trembling Keane and tossed him across his shoulder.

  For a moment there had been a lull in the assault on the door. Now the battering resumed with a fury that jarred the whole chamber and sent ripples dancing across the varicolored liquids in the osmotic tank.

  “Quick!” gasped Keane. “Move! I say. Carry me out.”

  But he was in a fainting condition. Crash after crash rocked the chamber, and with every blow Quest’s will felt a stimulation that enabled him to stand off the commands of his Control. Then a wave of nausea swept over him and left him reeling. It seemed that Philip’s blood had turned to boiling oil. A dazzling mist swallowed him up, and with a weird sense of inflation he felt full strength returning to his will.

  A booming blow that bulged the door inward acted upon him like a stage player’s cue. He leaped to the platform. The gurgling sound of remonstrance rattled from Keane’s throat. But Quest paid no heed. Philip was walking the plank—away from the open panel—out over the tank.

  Rapidly he dropped down the ladder to the bottom rung, snatched Keane’s wrist in a gorillalike grip, and hurled him down into the vat.

  Then Philip was clinging desperately to the ladder, his strength gone, his body shivering as if with ague.

  “Go on up!” came a strange, impatient voice from below him. “For heaven’s sake let me out of here!”

  A DOWNWARD glance, and with a shout of alarm Philip was scrambling up the ladder, for there was a head down there, and a pair of naked shoulders, and the face of a man he had never seen before. Hand over hand Quest followed. Philip had collapsed and lay prone on the plank. Quest lifted him to his feet and shook him anxiously.

  “Philip!” he urged. “Philip! Can you walk?”

  The tattoo on the battered door helped to revive the older man.

  “Quick!” whispered Quest, kneading Philip’s arms. “There’s barely an hour left. Get to your office. Burn the papers. Refuse the money. Do you hear me?”

  Philip nodded dazedly.

  “Hurry!” puffed Quest, thrusting him through the opening that Keane had reserved for his own escape, and sliding the panel back into place.

  Quest was himself now—young, strong, free. Instantly he threw the electrolytic switch to minus. For Keane had failed to emerge from the tank, and since he was submerged alone, he could not escape until electrolysis was halted.

  Just as Quest leaped from the platform to release the airlock, the door burst in and three men with drawn guns rushed into the chamber.

  The leader stopped with a startled oath and stood blinking his unbelieving eyes. Quest was poised like a statue, his naked body gleaming an unearthly white against the lusterless black of the wall.

  “Quest,” came from the three in chorus. Then a rush of questions: “What’s the matter? What’s happened to you? Where are the Clasons?”

  Quest turned toward the platform, expecting to see Keane.

  “Something’s wrong!” he shouted. “Quick! Somebody get Philip. He’s gone to his Loop office. Keane Clason’s at the bottom of this tank. I’m not sure how this thing works, but Philip can get him out! I’m sure of it!”

  DESPITE the confident predictions of both Quest and Philip Clason, osmotic association failed to restore Keane to life, and at last the coroner ordered the removal of the body. The autopsy revealed heart disease as the cause of his death.

  For reasons best understood at Washington, the cause of the five launch deaths was withheld from the public. Quest’s punishment for his part in the crime consisted of a promotion and a warm personal letter from the President of the United States.

  THE VAPOR INTELLIGENCE

  Jack Barnette

  MODERN science believes that the chances are one in a million that intelligent beings on any other planet should be constituted the same as we. It is almost certain at any rate that, if such an intelligent being from another world should visit us, the result would be far more grotesque than even our most audacious science fiction authors can imagine. What such an intelligence will look like, it is impossible to even conjecture. It may be invisible, for all we know, or it may have a physical constitution that to us appears absurd. The present author has given us in this interesting story one such possibility, written in a most striking manner you will not forget it so soon. Incidentally, the great mystery of it all keeps you spellbound until the end.

  I DO not wish to be considered responsible for the veracity of any of the statements or theories contained in the following pages.

  I have only tried to give a chronological account of the series of events which still form one of the main topics of discussion in the little town where I spent one night this past summer. Any one with an investigative turn of mind who desires additional information about that
Thing to which Ruberg usually refers to as “the Ghos’ ”, would find it well worth their while to go to Ruberg. They should talk with Mayor Fisher, with Doctor Clancy, with old Ruberg himself, and with Joe Bones. If a suitable consideration is mentioned, Joe may be induced to act as guide to the bare spots about Loon Marsh; always providing he is assured that the round trip will be made before the sun sinks behind the mountain that lies to the west of Loon Marsh.

  Why Ruberg was originally settled is a mystery. For hundreds of years it had nestled between two mountains, its inhabitants living their quiet uneventful lives in a monotonous peacefulness until a young man named Ford developed a “gasoline buggy”. His and other makes of small automobiles brought the necessity for building good roads; and the state built a paved highway straight through the heart of Ruberg, permanently destroying the peacefulness of the little rural hamlet. The road brought me to Ruberg in the course of my wanderings and I stopped because I was hungry and tired, and Ruberg was as good a place to spend the night as I was likely to find by driving farther.

  It was in the evening after dinner and I was seated on the verandah smoking my pipe and gazing into the dark valley. At my right was seated old Ruberg himself, a short, fat jolly descendant of that proud race of Swiss innkeepers. We had been talking of nothing of any importance—when suddenly a light flashed across the sky and disappeared in the hills that lay beyond the valley before us!

  “A whopping meteor!” I exclaimed trying to break the monotony of the evening by a new field of conversation.

  The old man was silent as he gazed into the night. “Do you see many of them here?” I ventured further. His silence after his voluble commercial chatter interested me.

  “Um-um,” he half whispered: “Sometimes.”

  “The thing seems to have affected you,” I said smiling.

  “Yes,” he nodded his head, “The Thing! You have heard of it then?”

  I professed my ignorance: “I referred to that meteor just now.”

 

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