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American Science Fiction Five Classic Novels 1956-58

Page 31

by Gary K. Wolfe


  “You’re Ben Forrest, leading spaceman. Formerly aboard the Presteign ‘Vorga.’ ”

  Forrest cried out in terror.

  “You were aboard the ‘Vorga’ on September 16, 2436.”

  The man sobbed and shook his head.

  “On September sixteen you passed a wreck. Out near the asteroid belt. Wreck of the ‘Nomad,’ your sister ship. She signalled for help. ‘Vorga’ passed her by. Left her to drift and die. Why did ‘Vorga’ pass her by?”

  Forrest began to scream hysterically.

  “Who gave the order to pass her by?”

  “Jesus, no! No! No!”

  “The records are all gone from the Bo’ness & Uig files. Someone got to them before me. Who was that? Who was aboard ‘Vorga’? Who shipped with you? I want officers and crew. Who was in command?”

  “No,” Forrest screamed. “No!”

  Foyle held a sheaf of bank notes before the hysterical man’s face. “I’ll pay for the information. Fifty thousand. Analogue for the rest of your life. Who gave the order to let me die, Forrest? Who?”

  The man smote the bank notes from Foyle’s hand, leaped up and ran down the beach. Foyle tackled him at the edge of the surf. Forrest fell headlong, his face in the water. Foyle held him there.

  “Who commanded ‘Vorga,’ Forrest? Who gave the order?”

  “You’re drowning him!” Robin cried.

  “Let him suffer a little. Water’s easier than vacuum. I suffered for six months. Who gave the order, Forrest?”

  The man bubbled and choked. Foyle lifted his head out of the water. “What are you? Loyal? Crazy? Scared? Your kind would sell out for five thousand. I’m offering fifty. Fifty thousand for information, you son of a bitch, or you die slow and hard.” The tattooing appeared on Foyle’s face. He forced Forrest’s head back into the water and held the struggling man. Robin tried to pull him off.

  “You’re murdering him!”

  Foyle turned his terrifying face on Robin. “Get your hands off me, bitch! Who was aboard with you, Forrest? Who gave the order? Why?”

  Forrest twisted his head out of the water. “Twelve of us on ‘Vorga,’ ” he screamed. “Christ save me! There was me and Kemp—”

  He jerked spasmodically and sagged. Foyle pulled his body out of the surf.

  “Go on. You and who? Kemp? Who else? Talk.”

  There was no response. Foyle examined the body.

  “Dead,” he growled.

  “Oh my God! My God!”

  “One lead shot to hell. Just when he was opening up. What a damned break.” He took a deep breath and drew calm about him like an iron cloak. The tattooing disappeared from his face. He adjusted his watch for 120 degrees east longitude. “Almost midnight in Shanghai. Let’s go. Maybe we’ll have better luck with Sergei Orel, pharmacist’s mate off the ‘Vorga.’ Don’t look so scared. This is only the beginning. Go, girl. Jaunte!”

  Robin gasped. He saw that she was staring over his shoulder with an expression of incredulity. Foyle turned. A flaming figure loomed on the beach, a huge man with burning clothes and a hideously tattooed face. It was himself.

  “Christ!” Foyle exclaimed. He took a step toward his burning image, and abruptly it was gone.

  He turned to Robin, ashen and trembling. “Did you see that?”

  “Yes.”

  “What was it?”

  “You.”

  “For God’s sake! Me? How’s that possible? How—”

  “It was you.”

  “But—” He faltered, the strength and furious possession drained out of him. “Was it illusion? Hallucination?”

  “I don’t know. I saw it too.”

  “Christ Almighty! To see yourself . . . face to face . . . The clothes were on fire. Did you see that? What in God’s name was it?”

  “It was Gully Foyle,” Robin said, “burning in hell.”

  “All right,” Foyle burst out angrily. “It was me in hell, but I’m still going through with it. If I burn in hell, Vorga’ll burn with me.” He pounded his palms together, stinging himself back to strength and purpose. “I’m still going through with it, by God! Shanghai next. Jaunte!”

  Ten

  At the costume ball in Shanghai, Fourmyle of Ceres electrified society by appearing as Death in Dürer’s “Death and the Maiden” with a dazzling blonde creature clad in transparent veils. A Victorian society which stifled its women in purdah, and which regarded the 1920 gowns of the Peenemunde clan as excessively daring, was shocked, despite the fact that Robin Wednesbury was chaperoning the pair. But when Fourmyle revealed that the female was a magnificent android, there was an instant reversal of opinion in his favor. Society was delighted with the deception. The naked body, shameful in humans, was merely a sexless curiosity in androids.

  At midnight, Fourmyle auctioned off the android to the gentlemen of the ball.

  “The money to go to charity, Fourmyle?”

  “Certainly not. You know my slogan: Not one cent for entropy. Do I hear a hundred credits for this expensive and lovely creature? One hundred, gentlemen? She’s all beauty and highly adaptable. Two? Thank you. Three and a half? Thank you. I’m bid— Five? Eight? Thank you. Any more bids for this remarkable product of the resident genius of the Four Mile Circus? She walks. She talks. She adapts. She has been conditioned to respond to the highest bidder. Nine? Do I hear any more bids? Are you all done? Are you all through? Sold, to Lord Yale for nine hundred credits.”

  Tumultuous applause and appalled ciphering: “An android like that must have cost ninety thousand! How can he afford it?”

  “Will you turn the money over to the android, Lord Yale? She will respond suitably. Until we meet again in Rome, ladies and gentlemen . . . The Borghese Palace at midnight. Happy New Year.”

  Fourmyle had already departed when Lord Yale discovered, to the delight of himself and the other bachelors, that a double deception had been perpetrated. The android was, in fact, a living, human creature, all beauty and highly adaptable. She responded magnificently to nine hundred credits. The trick was the smoking room story of the year. The stags waited eagerly to congratulate Fourmyle.

  But Foyle and Robin Wednesbury were passing under a sign that read: “DOUBLE YOUR JAUNTING OR DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK” in seven languages, and entering the emporium of “DR. SERGEI OREL, CELESTIAL ENLARGER OF CRANIAL CAPABILITIES.”

  The waiting room was decorated with lurid brain charts demonstrating how Dr. Orel poulticed, cupped, balsamed, and electrolyzed the brain into double its capacity or double your money back. He also doubled your memory with anti-febrile purgatives, magnified your morals with tonic roborants, and adjusted all anguished psyches with Orel’s Epulotic Vulnerary.

  The waiting room was empty. Foyle opened a door at a venture. He and Robin had a glimpse of a long hospital ward. Foyle grunted in disgust.

  “A Snow Joint. Might have known he’d be running a dive for sick heads too.”

  This den catered to Disease Collectors, the most hopeless of neurotic-addicts. They lay in their hospital beds, suffering mildly from illegally induced para-measles, para-flu, para-malaria; devotedly attended by nurses in starched white uniforms, and avidly enjoying their illegal illness and the attention it brought.

  “Look at them,” Foyle said contemptuously. “Disgusting. If there’s anything filthier than a religion-junkey, it’s a diseasebird.”

  “Good evening,” a voice spoke behind them.

  Foyle shut the door and turned. Dr. Sergei Orel bowed. The good doctor was crisp and sterile in the classic white cap, gown, and surgical mask of the medical clans, to which he belonged by fraudulent assertion only. He was short, swarthy, and oliveeyed, recognizably Russian by his name alone. More than a century of jaunting had so mingled the many populations of the world that racial types were disappearing.

  “Didn’t expect to find you open for business on New Year’s Eve,” Foyle said.

  “Our Russian New Year comes two weeks later,” Dr. Orel answered. “Step this way, ple
ase.” He pointed to a door and disappeared with a “pop.” The door revealed a long flight of stairs. As Foyle and Robin started up the stairs, Dr. Orel appeared above them. “This way, please. Oh . . . one moment.” He disappeared and appeared again behind them. “You forgot to close the door.” He shut the door and jaunted again. This time he reappeared high at the head of the stairs. “In here, please.”

  “Showing off,” Foyle muttered. “Double your jaunting or double your money back. All the same, he’s pretty fast. I’ll have to be faster.”

  They entered the consultation room. It was a glass-roofed penthouse. The walls were lined with gaudy but antiquated medical apparatus: a sedative-bath machine, an electric chair for administering shock treatment to schizophrenics, an EKG analyzer for tracing psychotic patterns, old optical and electronic microscopes.

  The quack waited for them behind his desk. He jaunted to the door, closed it, jaunted back to his desk, bowed, indicated chairs, jaunted behind Robin’s and held it for her, jaunted to the window and adjusted the shade, jaunted to the light switch and adjusted the lights, then reappeared behind his desk.

  “One year ago,” he smiled, “I could not jaunte at all. Then I discovered the secret, the Salutiferous Abstersive which . . .”

  Foyle touched his tongue to the switchboard wired into the nerve endings of his teeth. He accelerated. He arose without haste, stepped to the slow-motion figure “Bloo-hwoo-fwaamawwing” behind the desk, took out a heavy sap, and scientifically smote Orel across the brow, concussing the frontal lobes and stunning the jaunte center. He picked the quack up and strapped him into the electric chair. All this took approximately five seconds. To Robin Wednesbury it was a blur of motion.

  Foyle decelerated. The quack opened his eyes, stirred, discovered where he was, and started in anger and perplexity.

  “You’re Sergei Orel, pharmacist’s mate off the ‘Vorga,’ ” Foyle said quietly. “You were aboard the ‘Vorga’ on September 16, 2436.”

  The anger and perplexity turned to terror.

  “On September sixteen you passed a wreck. Out near the asteroid belt. It was the wreck of the ‘Nomad.’ She signalled for help and ‘Vorga’ passed her by. You left her to drift and die. Why?”

  Orel rolled his eyes but did not answer.

  “Who gave the order to pass me by? Who was willing to let me rot and die?”

  Orel began to gibber.

  “Who was aboard ‘Vorga’? Who shipped with you? Who was in command? I’m going to get an answer. Don’t think I’m not,” Foyle said with calm ferocity. “I’ll buy it or tear it out of you. Why was I left to die? Who told you to let me die?”

  Orel screamed. “I can’t talk abou— Wait I’ll tell—”

  He sagged.

  Foyle examined the body.

  “Dead,” he muttered. “Just when he was ready to talk. Just like Forrest.”

  “Murdered.”

  “No. I never touched him. It was suicide.” Foyle cackled without humor.

  “You’re insane.”

  “No, amused. I didn’t kill them; I forced them to kill themselves.”

  “What nonsense is this?”

  “They’ve been given Sympathetic Blocks. You know about SBs, girl? Intelligence uses them for espionage agents. Take a certain body of information you don’t want told. Link it with the sympathetic nervous system that controls automatic respiration and heart beat. As soon as the subject tries to reveal that information, the block comes down, the heart and lungs stop, the man dies, your secret’s kept. An agent doesn’t have to worry about killing himself to avoid torture; it’s been done for him.”

  “It was done to these men?”

  “Obviously.”

  “But why?”

  “How do I know? Refugee running isn’t the answer. ‘Vorga’ must have been operating worse rackets than that to take this precaution. But we’ve got a problem. Our last lead is Poggi in Rome. Angelo Poggi, chef ’s assistant off the ‘Vorga.’ How are we going to get information out of him without—” He broke off.

  His image stood before him, silent, ominous, face burning blood-red, clothes flaming.

  Foyle was paralyzed. He took a breath and spoke in a shaking voice. “Who are you? What do you—”

  The image disappeared.

  Foyle turned to Robin, moistening his lips. “Did you see it?” Her expression answered him. “Was it real?”

  She pointed to Sergei Orel’s desk, alongside which the image had stood. Papers on the desk had caught fire and were burning briskly. Foyle backed away, still frightened and bewildered. He passed a hand across his face. It came away wet.

  Robin rushed to the desk and tried to beat out the flames. She picked up wads of paper and letters and slammed helplessly. Foyle did not move.

  “I can’t stop it,” she gasped at last. “We’ve got to get out of here.”

  Foyle nodded, then pulled himself together with power and resolution. “Rome,” he croaked. “We jaunte to Rome. There’s got to be some explanation for this. I’ll find it, by God! And in the meantime I’m not quitting. Rome. Go, girl. Jaunte!”

  Since the Middle Ages the Spanish Stairs have been the center of corruption in Rome. Rising from the Piazza di Spagna to the gardens of the Villa Borghese in a broad, long sweep, the Spanish Stairs are, have been, and always will be swarming with vice. Pimps lounge on the stairs, whores, perverts, lesbians, catamites. Insolent and arrogant, they display themselves and jeer at the respectables who sometimes pass.

  The Spanish Stairs were destroyed in the fission wars of the late twentieth century. They were rebuilt and destroyed again in the war of the World Restoration in the twenty-first century. Once more they were rebuilt and this time covered over with blast-proof crystal, turning the stairs into a stepped Galleria. The dome of the Galleria cut off the view from the death chamber in Keats’s house. No longer would visitors peep through the narrow window and see the last sight that met the dying poet’s eyes. Now they saw the smoky dome of the Spanish Stairs, and through it the distorted figures of corruption below.

  The Galleria of the Stairs was illuminated at night, and this New Year’s Eve was chaotic. For a thousand years Rome has wel comed the New Year with a bombardment . . . firecrackers, rockets, torpedoes, gunshots, bottles, shoes, old pots and pans. For months Romans save junk to be hurled out of topfloor windows when midnight strikes. The roar of fireworks inside the Stairs, and the clatter of debris clashing on the Galleria roof, were deafening as Foyle and Robin Wednesbury climbed down from the carnival in the Borghese Palace.

  They were still in costume: Foyle in the livid crimson-andblack tights and doublet of Cesare Borgia, Robin wearing the silver-encrusted gown of Lucrezia Borgia. They wore grotesque velvet masks. The contrast between their Renaissance costumes and the modern clothes around them brought forth jeers and catcalls. Even the Lobos who frequented the Spanish Stairs, the unfortunate habitual criminals who had had a quarter of their brains burned out by prefrontal lobotomy, were aroused from their dreary apathy to stare. The mob seethed around the couple as they descended the Galleria.

  “Poggi,” Foyle called quietly. “Angelo Poggi?”

  A bawd bellowed anatomical adjurations at him. “Poggi? Angelo Poggi?” Foyle was impassive. “I’m told he can be found on the Stairs at night. Angelo Poggi?” A whore maligned his mother.

  “Angelo Poggi? Ten credits to anyone who brings me to him.”

  Foyle was ringed with extended hands, some filthy, some scented, all greedy. He shook his head. “Show me, first.”

  Roman rage crackled around him.

  “Poggi? Angelo Poggi?”

  After six weeks of loitering on the Spanish Stairs, Captain Peter Y’ang-Yeovil at last heard the words he had hoped to hear. Six weeks of tedious assumption of the identity of one Angelo Poggi, chef ’s assistant off the “Vorga,” long dead, was finally paying off. It had been a gamble, first risked when Intelligence had brought the news to Captain Y’ang-Yeovil that someone was making cautio
us inquiries about the crew of the Presteign “Vorga,” and paying heavily for information.

  “It’s a long shot,” Y’ang-Yeovil had said, “but Gully Foyle, AS:128/127:006, did make that lunatic attempt to blow up ‘Vorga.’ And twenty pounds of PyrE is worth a long shot.”

  Now he waddled up the stairs toward the man in the Renaissance costume and mask. He had put on forty pounds with glandular shots. He had darkened his complexion with diet manipulation. His features, never of an Oriental cast but cut more along the hawklike lines of the ancient American Indian, easily fell into an unreliable pattern with a little muscular control.

  The Intelligence man waddled up the Spanish Stairs, a gross cook with a larcenous countenance. He extended a package of soiled envelopes toward Foyle.

  “Filthy pictures, signore? Cellar Christians, kneeling, praying, singing psalms, kissing cross? Very naughty. Very smutty, signore. Entertain your friends . . . Excite the ladies.”

  “No,” Foyle brushed the pornography aside. “I’m looking for Angelo Poggi.”

  Y’ang-Yeovil signalled microscopically. His crew on the stairs began photographing and recording the interview without ceasing its pimping and whoring. The Secret Speech of the Intelligence Tong of the Inner Planets Armed Forces wigwagged around Foyle and Robin in a hail of tiny tics, sniffs, gestures, attitudes, motions. It was the ancient Chinese sign language of eyelids, eyebrows, fingertips, and infinitesimal body motions.

  “Signore?” Y’ang-Yeovil wheezed.

  “Angelo Poggi?”

  “Si, signore. I am Angelo Poggi.”

  “Chef ’s assistant off the ‘Vorga’?” Expecting the same start of terror manifested by Forrest and Orel, which he at last understood, Foyle shot out a hand and grabbed Y’ang-Yeovil’s elbow. “Yes?”

  “Si, signore,” Y’ang-Yeovil replied tranquilly. “How can I serve your worship?”

  “Maybe this one can come through,” Foyle murmured to Robin. “He’s not scared. Maybe he knows a way around the Block. I want information from you, Poggi.”

  “Of what nature, signore, and at what price?”

  “I want to buy all you’ve got. Anything you’ve got. Name your price.”

 

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