Complete Short Fiction (Jerry eBooks)

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Complete Short Fiction (Jerry eBooks) Page 69

by James H. Schmitz


  Trigger Argee sat thoughtfully silent for a while. “So there really wasn’t anyone waiting up in the Moon Belt for Ramog?”

  Holati shook his head. “No,” he said almost casually. “We never laid a finger on him. Wouldn’t have been quite ethical—we had no proof.” Her face began working curiously. “And there was that plankton beep you had me copying for you—Did you ever find out whether it attracted the Harvesters, too?”

  He nodded. “Chow call, pure and simple. Now, pilot, do you spot that singleton on your screen over there?” Trigger’s head was swimming for a moment; then she saw the distant dark blob. “Yes,” she said faintly.

  “Move in on it, adjust to the drift, and stop.” She heard him stand up.

  “Holati!” It wasn’t much more than a gasp. “Are you going out?”

  “Well, what else? It won’t take long.”

  Trigger closed her eyes slowly, opened them again and grimly maneuvered the sluggishly gliding boat in on its dark target. From behind her came a series of vague metallic sounds, followed by the snaps of the magnetic suit clamps. She stopped the boat and stared out at the shadow shape swimming like a whale in the tides of space beside them. Soft heavy footsteps passed behind her, moving toward the lock. Waves of horror began crawling over her skin.

  The lock hissed, and presently stopped hissing. She was alone. The boat turned slowly, and she found herself staring again at the green blaze of Manon’s sun. But the dark thing still floated at the edge of her vision, and now and then it seemed to move slightly. She felt like screaming. Then the lock began hissing again, and stopped again.

  He came in slowly and turned to the back of the ship. Something went dragging and bumping heavily across the floor behind him.

  She nodded slowly, though he couldn’t see that from the back of the ship.

  Riding a directional beam, she thought—and the beam pre-set to cut out when he hit the altitude where the Plankton Drift is thickest. So there he hangs wondering what’s happened, while the suit is broadcasting to those—whew!

  “Holati,” she said evenly, “I think I’m going to faint.”

  “Not you,” his voice came from the back of the ship. “Or I wouldn’t have picked you for the trip.” He was breathing heavily. “You can start us back to base now.”

  Trigger didn’t faint. The ship began to move and the thing outside vanished. The thing he had brought inside went with them. Holati made no stir for the moment; she guessed he was glad of a chance to rest.

  The happy little monster is right, her thoughts ran on. It wasn’t a murder; it wasn’t even an execution. They couldn’t prove Ramog was a killer, so they tested him. He couldn’t climb into that suit until he’d got Holati Tate out of the way. And once he’d done that, he couldn’t send anyone else because, with stakes that big there was never anyone else a man like Ramog could trust.

  The Society had it set up, all right—

  There was a loud metal clang from the back of the ship, and a pale purple glow grew in the dark behind Trigger. The little fuel converter door had been opened. At the same time, something seemed to shut off her breathing.

  Holati said conversationally, “Precol Service was a pretty fair organization before the Academy took over, Trigger. Shouldn’t be long before it’s back in good shape again now—”

  He stopped and grunted with effort, and there was a sharp cracking sound like a stick of dry wood being broken.

  “The Academy’s all right,” he went on, breathing unevenly again, “for raising funds and things like that. We’ll keep it around. But it’s out in the field where the fun is, and we intend to keep the fun clean from now on.”

  The purple light faded; the converter door clanged shut. The little boat’s interior lights came on. “All right,” Holati said. “You can look around now.”

  Trigger looked around. There were dark streaks on the floor before the converter door, but the thing that had been brought in from outside was gone. Holati Tate was climbing out of his space-duty suit. He looked at her and closed one eye in a wink that was not, in the slightest degree, humorous.

  “Processed!” he said.

  THE END

  1959

  SUMMER GUESTS

  No birds were these, and surely not of a feather, and there was no need to tell Mel by the company he kept—it told him!

  ALL through that Saturday night, rain drummed down mercilessly and unseasonably on Sweetwater Beach, Thunder pealed and lightning flared. In between, Mel Armstrong heard the steady boom of the Pacific surf not a block from his snug little duplex apartment. Mel didn’t mind any of it. He was in bed, slightly swacked and wholly comfortable. He dozed, and now and then woke up far enough to listen admiringly to the racket.

  At nine A.M., when he opened his eyes once more, he discovered the room was full of summer sunshine. Beyond his window gleamed a cloudless sky, and only the occasional gusts of wind indicated there had been anything like a storm during the night.

  An exceptionally beautiful Sunday morning—made more beautiful, perhaps, by the fact that it marked the beginning of Mel Armstrong’s annual two-week paid vacation. Mel was a salesman for Marty’s Fine Liquors, a wholesale house. He was twenty-eight and in fairly good shape, but his job bored him. This morning, for the first time in months, he was fully aware of that. Perhaps it was the weather. At any rate, he had a sense, almost a premonition, of new and exciting events approaching him rapidly. Events that would break down the boundaries of his present humdrum existence and pitch him into the life of romantic adventure that, somehow, he seemed to have missed so far . . .

  Recognizing this as a daydream, but unwilling to give it up completely, Mel breakfasted unhurriedly in his pajamas. Then, struck by a sudden, down-to-earth suspicion, he stuck his head out of his living room window.

  As he’d guessed, there were other reminders of the storm in the narrow courtyard before the window. Branches and assorted litter had blown in, including at least one soggily dismembered Sunday paper. The low rent he paid for his ground-floor apartment in the Oceanview Courts was based on an understanding with the proprietor that he and the upstairs occupant of the duplex would keep the court clean. The other five duplexes that fronted on the court were bulging with vacationing visitors from the city, which made it a real chore in summer.

  Unfortunately, he couldn’t count on his upstairs neighbor, a weird though rather amiable young character who called herself Maria de Guesgne. Maria went in for painting abstractions, constructing mobiles, and discussing the works of Madame Blavatsky. She avoided the indignity of manual toil.

  Mel made himself decent by exchanging his pajamas for swimming trunks. Then he got a couple of brooms and a hose out of a garage back of the court and went to work.

  HE’D cleared the courtyard by the time the first of the seasonal guests began to show up in their doorways, and went on to inspect another, narrower court behind his duplex, which was also his responsibility. There he discovered Maria de Guesgne propped on her elbows on her bedroom window sill, talking reproachfully to a large gray tomcat that was sitting in the court. Both turned to look at Mel.

  “Good morning, Mel!” Maria said, with unusual animation. She had long black bangs which emphasized her sallow and undernourished appearance.

  “Morning,” Mel replied. “Scat!” he added to the cat, which belonged to somebody else in the neighborhood but was usually to be found stalking about the Oceanview Courts.

  “You shouldn’t frighten poor Cat,” said Maria. “Mel, would you look into the bird box?”

  “Bird box?”

  “The one in the climbing rose,” said Maria, leaning precariously from the window to point. “To your left. Cat was trying to get at it.”

  The bird box was a white-painted, weather-beaten little house set into a straggly rose bush that grew out of a square patch of earth beside Mel’s bedroom window. The box was about ten feet above the ground.

  Mel looked up at it.

  “I’m sure I heard
little birds peeping in it this morning!” Maria explained sentimentally.

  “No bird in its senses would go into a thing like that,” Mel assured her. “I don’t hear anything. And besides—”

  “Please, Mel! We don’t want Cat to get them!”

  Mel groaned, got a wobbly stepladder out of the garage and climbed up. The gray cat walked over and sat down next to the ladder to watch him.

  He poked at the box and listened. No sound.

  “Can’t you open the top and look in?” Maria inquired.

  Holding the box in one hand, Mel tentatively inserted his thumbnail into a crack under its top and pushed. The weathered wood splintered away easily.

  “Don’t break it!” Maria cried.

  Mel put his eye to the crack he’d made. Then he gasped, jerked back, letting go of the box, teetered wildly a moment and fell over with the step-ladder. The cat fled, spitting.

  “Oh, my!” said Maria, apparently with some enjoyment. “Poor Mel! Are you hurt?”

  Mel stood up slowly. The bright morning world seemed to be spinning gently around him, but it wasn’t because of his fall. “Of course not,” he said. His voice quavered somewhat.

  “Oh?” said Maria. “Well, then—are there any little birds in the nest?”

  Mel swallowed hard. “No,” he said. He bent over and carefully picked up the ladder and placed it against the wall. The action made it unnecessary to look at her.

  “Eggs?” she asked in a hopeful tone.

  “No eggs either! No nothing!” His voice was steady again, but he had to get rid of Maria. “Well, I’ll clean up this court now, I guess. Uh—maybe you’d like to come down and lend a hand?”

  Maria replied promptly that she certainly would like to, but she hadn’t had breakfast yet; and with that she vanished from the window.

  Mel looked round stealthily. The cat was watching from the door of the garage, but no one else was in sight.

  Hurriedly, he replaced the stepladder under the bird nest and climbed up again.

  SETTING the box carefully down on the table in his living room, he locked the apartment door and closed the Venetian blinds. All this had been done in a sort of quiet rush, as if every second counted, which it did in a way. Mel wasn’t going to believe, even for a moment, that what he thought he’d seen in that box could be really there; and he couldn’t disprove it fast enough to suit him. But something warned him that he wouldn’t want to have any witnesses around when he did take his second look.

  Then, as he turned from the window, he heard a thin piping cry, a voice as tiny as the peeping of a mouse, coming from the table, from the box.

  An instant fright reaction froze him where he stood. The sounds stopped again. There was a brief, faint rustle, like the stirring of dry parchment, and then quiet.

  The rustling, he thought, must have been the wings—he’d been sure they had wings. Otherwise—

  It could all have been an illusion, he told himself. An illusion that transformed a pair of featherless nestlings into something he still didn’t want to give a name to. Color patterns of jade and pink flashed into his memory next, however, which made the bird theory shaky. Say a rather small green-and-pink snake then, or a lizard—

  Except, of course, for the glassy glitter of the wings. So make it instead, Mel thought desperately, a pair of big insects, like dragonflies, only bigger . . .

  He shook his head and moistened his lips. That wouldn’t explain that tiny voice—and the more he tried to rationalize it all, the more scared he was getting. Assume, he took the mental jump, he really had seen the figures of two tiny, naked, green-and-pink people in there—with wings! One didn’t have to drag in the supernatural to explain it. There were things like flying saucers, presumably, and probably such beings might exist on other worlds.

  The thought was oddly reassuring. He still felt as if he’d locked himself in the room with things potentially in the class of tarantulas, but there was excitement and wonder coming up now. With a surge of jealous proprietorship, he realized that he didn’t want to share this discovery with anybody else. Later, perhaps. Right now, it was his big adventure.

  The room was too dim to let him distinguish anything inside the box as he had outdoors, and he was still reluctant to get his face too close to it. He gave it a gingerly rap with his knuckle and waited. No sound.

  He cleared his throat. “Hello?” he said. Immediately, that seemed like an idiotic approach. Worse than that, it also brought no reaction.

  For the first time, Mel had a sense of worry for the occupants of the box. There was no way of guessing how they’d got in there, but they might be sick or dying. Hurriedly he brought a lamp over to the table and tried to direct light inside, both through the round hole in its side and through the opening he’d made in the top. It wasn’t very effective and produced no stir within.

  With sudden decision, he shoved one hand into the opening, held the box with the other and broke off the entire top. And there they were.

  Mel stared at them a long time, his fears fading slowly. They were certainly alive! One was green, a tiny body of luminous jade, and the other was silkily human-colored, which was why he had been confused on that point. The wings could hardly be anything else, though they were very odd-looking, almost like thin, flexible glass.

  He couldn’t force himself to touch them. Instead, he laid a folded clean towel on the table and tilted the box very slowly over it. A series of careful tappings and shakings brought the two beings sliding gently out onto the towel.

  Two delicately formed female figurines, they lay there a moment, unmoving. Then the green one passed a tiny hand over her forehead in a slow, completely human gesture, opened slanted golden eyes with startled suddenness and looked up at Mel.

  He might still have thought he was dreaming, if his attention hadn’t been caught just then by a detail of undream-like realism. The other, the human-colored one, seemed to be definitely in a family way.

  THEY were sitting on the folded bath towel in a square of afternoon sunlight which came in through the kitchenette window. The window was high enough up so nobody could look in from outside, and they seemed to want the warmth of the sun more than anything else. They did not appear to be sick, but they were still rather languid. It wasn’t starvation, apparently. Mel had put bits of a variety of foods on a napkin before them, and he changed the samples as soon as his guests indicated they weren’t interested. So far, canned sardine was the only item that had attracted them at all, and they hadn’t done much more than test that.

  Between moments of just marveling at them, assuring himself they were there and not an illusion, and wondering what they were then and where they’d come from, Mel was beginning to get worried again. For all he knew, they might suddenly die on the bath towel.

  “Miss Green,” he said in a very low voice—he didn’t want to give Maria de Guesgne any indication he was in the house—“I wish you could tell me what you like to eat!”

  Miss Green looked up at him and smiled. She was much more alert and vivacious than the other one who, perhaps because of her condition, merely sat or lay there gracefully and let Miss Green wait on her. The relationship seemed to be about that of an elf princess and her personal attendant, but they were much too real-seeming creatures to have popped out of a fairy tale, though their appearance did arouse recurrent bursts of a feeling of fairy tale unreality, which Mel hadn’t known since he was ten. But, tiny as they were, Miss Green and the princess primarily gave him the impression of being quite as functional as human beings or, perhaps, as field mice.

  He would have liked to inspect the brittle-seeming wings more closely. They seemed to be made up of numerous laminated, very thin sections, and he wondered whether they could fly with them or whether their race had given up or lost that ability.

  But touching them might have affected their present matter-of-fact acceptance of him, and he didn’t want to risk that . . .

  A door banged suddenly in the apartment overhead. A m
oment later, he heard Maria coming down the hall stairs.

  Mel stood up in sudden alarm. He’d known for some time that his neighbor had supplied herself with a key to his apartment, not to pry but with the practical purpose of borrowing from the little bar in Mel’s living room when she was out of both money and liquor. She rarely took much, and until now he’d been more amused than annoyed.

  HE went hurriedly into the living room, closing the door to the kitchenette behind him. If Maria knocked, he wouldn’t answer. If she decided he was out and came in to steal his liquor, he would pretend to have been asleep in the chair and scare the hell out of her!

  She paused before the apartment door a moment, but then went out into the court.

  Mel waited until her footsteps died away, going toward the street. As he opened the door to the kitchenette, something buzzed noisily out of the living room past his shoulder—a big, unlovely looking horsefly. The apartment screens didn’t fit too well, and the fly probably had been attracted by the smell of food.

  Startled, he stopped to consider the new problem. There was a flyswatter hanging beside the door, but he didn’t want to alarm his guests—and then, for the first time, he saw Miss Green’s wings unfold!

  She was up on her feet beside the princess, who remained sitting on the towel. Both of them were following the swift, erratic course of the big fly with more animation than they’d shown about anything so far.

  Miss Green gave a sudden piping cry, and the glassy appendages on her back opened out suddenly like twin transparently gleaming fans, and blurred into motion too swift for Mel to follow.

  Miss Green rose into the air like a tiny human helicopter, hands up before her as if she were praying.

  It wasn’t till the horsefly swerved from the kitchenette window and came buzzing back that Mel guessed her purpose.

 

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