by John Brunner
Lex bit his lip. He saw Baffin frown, and Minty and Aykin exchange worried glances. On the off-chance that they might have constructive ideas, he looked an invitation at them.
“That Manager Nanseltine!” said Minty, and spat over the edge of the rock on which they were grouped.
“Not so much him as his wife,” Zanice corrected in her quiet voice. “I know. The doc has sent me around to answer their calls—for a scratched finger or a bruised shin, they take to their beds, and they think every little headache is due to some fatal disease. I’ve seen how their setup operates. If there was any hope of getting them involved in something that useful, I’d say Lex should recruit them to his salvage team and quietly tip the boat over a mile from shore.”
Baffin chuckled.
“No suggestions from this end, Doc,” Lex said to the radio. “We’ll just go find that blockage and let you know how soon the flow is likely to resume. OK?”
“Make it soon, please. Someone will be standing by here night and day.” A pause; then, faintly as though picked up by accident, “What does he want?… Oh, tell him I’ll be out in a moment!”
A sigh, and more loudly: “Lex, Rothers is after me now. I’ll have to go. Do your best for all our sakes, and get back as quickly as you can.”
They were very silent as they finished their food and gathered their equipment to move on. The blue-white sunlight felt suddenly oppressive and cold.
Baffin was leading on the next stretch, with Lex bringing up the rear. Now the vegetation had thinned to mere scrub, there was less need for watchfulness, but they could progress no faster because every few hundred yards was a dry falls, a wall of friable rock six, ten, or twenty feet high, up which they had to clamber on exiguous toeholds.
Encountering one of these, about eight feet high, Baffin prepared to do as usual. He poised himself before it, flexed his lean legs, and sprang up to get his arms and the upper part of his body over the brow. He hung there for a second, staring at something out of sight of the rest of the party, and then instead of levering himself up and over he fell back with a gasp.
“What is it?” Lex snapped.
“We’ve found our blockage all right,” Baffin said, wiping his forehead. “Take a look for yourself.”
Lex pulled himself up the rocks, swung his legs to the higher level, and stood up. Shading his eyes, he stared at what had so astonished Baffin. From here on, the river’s course was straight toward the crags that fringed the plateau. A couple of hundred yards ahead, just about where he had imagined a landslide might occur, there was a wall. It not only blocked the riverbed, but extended a considerable distance either side, joining with natural slopes to form a continuous barrier. At its foot were highpiled heavy rocks; at intervals it was braced by wooden posts, and between the latter were what Lex judged to be hurdles of woven branches made watertight by plastering them with leaves and clay.
He was still gazing at it when Baffin scrambled up beside him and turned to help the others follow.
“What is it?” Minty called from below.
“It’s a dam,” Lex said harshly. He went on studying it. At the sides of the riverbed there were two extra-sturdy posts, and the hurdles between them seemed not to be fixed in place, but only lashed, so that they constituted a makeshift sluice-gate.
But—! He took a pace forward out of sheer surprise. A glance to right and left showed him the approximate level the pent-up water would eventually reach. Making the most generous possible allowance for the strength of those posts and hurdles, this dam was simply not going to last!
Now they were all up beside him, exclaiming in amazement. Aykin was putting their common thought into words when the soft-spoken interruption came.
“This thing is man-made! That means—”
“Stand quite still, all of you.”
They froze. From among the rocks where he had been crouching a man in a tattered gray shirt and brown breeches rose into view. He was burned teak-brown by the sun and his eyes were narrowed against the glare. But he held an energy gun, and it didn’t waver.
“We were expecting you,” he said conversationally. “Been monitoring your radio as you came upriver. All right, go and take their guns!” he added more loudly, and other men as sunburned as he emerged from their hiding-places.
“What do you think you’re doing?” Baffin burst out. “You don’t have any right to hold us up like—like robbers!”
“You weren’t going to break down our dam?” the man said. “You weren’t going to take away our chief natural resource?”
“Do as he says, Baffin,” Lex ordered. He tossed his own gun to the ground.
“But—!”
“Do as he says,” Lex repeated firmly. Fuming, they complied.
“Very sensible,” the first of the ambushers approved. To his companions he rapped, “Hurry up, there!”
“I believe we met last year,” Lex went on. “Cardevant—isn’t that your name?”
“Correct.” The sunburned man peered at him. “Oh, yes. I recall you came up with Captain Arbogast. Tried to talk us into going along with your defeatist policy, abandon everything up here and taking orders from you instead. I seem to recognize that man next to you, too.” He gave a sour grin and holstered his gun; his companions were now in possession of all the newcomers’ weapons.
“What do you think of it, hm?” he added, jerking his thumb at the dam. “Isn’t that something? That’s our reservoir, back of there!”
“Calling us robbers!” Minty cried. “When you’ve stolen our whole river from us!”
“Oh, you can have the spillage back when the reservoir is full.”
“Sooner than that,” Lex said calmly.
“Oh, you’re very cocksure, aren’t you? It’ll be a long time, I tell you.” He laughed. “And like I said, we’ve been listening to your base calling up. Just a short while back, didn’t your doctor complain your sewage is stinking?”
“What’s that got to do with it? The water will come back to us of its own accord. I’d say—hmm…. Well, I’d need to see the other side of the dam to be sure, but I estimate it’ll break in three days, maybe less.”
As though he had been struck in the belly, Cardevant snapped his teeth together and drew his breath in with a hiss. “You cheap little defeatist bastard! I’m not going to stand here listening to your sneers!”
He whirled, gesturing to his companions. “Get them moving!” he barked. “Take ’em up and show ‘em to Captain Gomes!”
XIII
By the time they were hustled in front of Captain Gomes Lex was feeling actually ill. The amount of effort that had been expended here was unbelievable. And the decision to expend it was incontestably insane.
The river, whose source was among the unexplored mountains beyond this plateau, was now flooding into the basin behind the dam. It was plain how it had been built. The sides had been erected first, then piles of rocks had been dropped into the water for the builders to stand on while they drove the uprights, and then the hurdles had been lowered into place, lashed, finally coated with mud and leaves. It must have taken the combined labor of a hundred or more people working like slaves to erect such a large structure in so short a time. And it was definitely going to fail soon.
Like slaves, it seemed to Lex, was the right term. For as his party was being herded up the last few hundred yards to the plateau he had seen gangs of men and women, filthy and hunger-lean, sweating to reinforce the dam with a man screaming orders at them. On the plateau itself, at the edge of which the ship rested—like a squashed egg, Lex recalled dismally—one would have expected to see constructions of some kind, but not what were actually there: mere shacks of the same mud-plastered hurdles, set up like animal-stalls. There was a stink of sewage and smoke; there were open fires burning in mudbrick grates over which hung crude pots on tripods.
Dullfaced, men and women stared at the outsiders going past, and overseers howled them back to their tasks.
Around the ship a fram
e of timber had been erected; ropes dangled from it untidily. Lex had thought the work involved in dragging the uprights of the dam all the way from the nearest stand of tall trees remarkable; it was miles from here. But bringing so many big trunks! It beggared the imagination.
Under the hull, stones were being hammered in by weary, gaunt workers, and others were leaning on long wooden levers. A child about ten years old was beating on a metal pan to mark the rhythm of their grunting heaves. Clearly an attempt was being made to jack up the ship so that its crushed lower plates could be welded tight.
Lunacy! Lunacy! Lex clenched his fists. He had had a score of possibilities in mind when he wondered what they might find here. The reality was infinitely worse than any of them.
Face like thunder, Cardevant was striding ahead. Too horrified to contain himself any longer, Minty exclaimed to Lex as they were driven in his wake:
“Lex, they’ll never do it before the winter! And if they don’t make proper preparations, they’ll—”
Cardevant spun around, so rapidly that Minty didn’t even have time to flinch, and slapped her across the face.
“We’ll get through the winter like we got through the last one!” he declared. “And if the weaklings die it’ll be no loss, understand?”
“Hit my woman, would you?” Aykin said. He could move fast for all his brawn; even the weight of the radio and accumulator which he was still packing didn’t seem to slow him. His fist traveled quicker than even Lex could follow with his eyes, and suddenly Cardevant was reeling backward to lose his footing and sprawl on the stony ground.
He was no danger, but the others were. Lex judged instantly which of them was most likely to use the gun he had taken, and made for him. Just in time he struck up the man’s arm, and the bolt intended for Aykin went sizzling to the sky.
“Cardevant!” Lex rapped, catching the wrist of the man who had fired. “You’d better not let us come to any harm, understand? We have more than eight hundred well-fed and well-housed people, and you have half that number of starved cowed slave-laborers!”
“You dirty defeatist!” Cardevant blasted back, forcing himself to his feet. The word, Lex noticed, had apparently acquired what he classed to himself as political force. “Well-fed, well-housed, hm? What about thirsty?”
Lex just looked at him. After a few seconds his anger subsided, though his tone remained as harsh as before.
“OK, I guess I didn’t have to slap your loudmouthed girlfriend. But if your people are fat and comfortable it’s because they’ve given up hope. We haven’t. We’re working to get off this ball of mud, working damned hard. And we’re not going to let anything stand in our way, least of all you!”
Under an awning improvised from bedding, Captain Gomes sat on a stool made from the buttend of a tree-trunk poring over notes made on scraps of paper. Clearly these people hadn’t chanced on the river-plant used in the town. There was another man with him whom Lex had met last year, his second officer, Probian.
“Good work, Cardevant,” Gomes said, leaning back as the seven captives were forced into a group before him. He was a gross man; he wore only shorts, and his hairy torso gleamed with greasy perspiration. He was an amazing contrast to the scrawniness of almost everyone else. “So these are the buggers who came to smash our dam, hm? Not willing to let anyone prove they have more guts, apparently!”
Lex and his companions stood in sullen silence.
“You haven’t searched their packs yet?” Gomes went on.
“No, sir”—from Cardevant. “Didn’t see why we should carry them up here.”
Gomes chuckled. “All right, do it now. Come on, you—drop that gear!” He folded his arms.
Lex shrugged and complied. The others followed his example, and Cardevant and Probian moved to inspect the contents of the packs.
“We took their guns, of course, Captain,” Cardevant said, reaching into Lex’s pack. “They had one apiece.”
“Seven guns!” Gomes raised his eyebrows. “And you took them with one? Well, that’s a fair return on investment. And a radio too, by the look of it—right, Probian?”
“Yes, sir.” Probian was going through Aykin’s load. “With a GD accumulator in first-class condition. That’ll be useful.”
“Not as useful as the guns,” Gomes grunted. If that was his honest opinion, Lex thought, everything about this place was already explained.
“Medical supplies here, I guess,” Cardevant muttered, moving on to Zanice’s pack. He took them out: a few tubes of tablets, some surgical dressings and emergency instruments, a jar of tissue regenerant, what few other items Jerode had been able to spare. “And—what’s this?”
He held up a jar containing Bendle’s synthetic antal-lergen, which rendered a valuable number of plants edible. It did look very strange. It was a coarse crystalline powder of a shade between lavender and purple—ground-up sea-salt tinted with a solution of the chemical.
The rest of the party looked to Lex for a lead. He said after a moment’s reflection, “It’s an antallergen. You can sprinkle it on a wet dressing and use it to treat inflammation caused by blisterweed.” Which was perfectly true; the poison in the leaves was chemically similar to the substance which made native vegetation indigestible. He went on, “I imagine you have a different name for that. It’s a trailing plant which stings when you brush against it. It looks very like—”
“Oh, I don’t want to hear about your damned plants!” Gomes broke in. “We’re not going to be here long enough to worry about them!”
Lex fell obediently silent.
“What’s that you’ve got?” Probian said suddenly to Cardevant as the latter drew out a transparent bag containing green-yellow leaves. “I found one of them, too.”
“Botanical samples!” Gomes roared, and burst into loud laughter at his own joke.
Reasoning, however, that if there was one of these packages in each person’s gear, they must be more interesting than that, Cardevant opened the one he had in his hand. Unconsciously he licked his lips.
“Say, it’s their rations!”
Gomes responded to that, hunching forward and laying his hands on the table. But it was Probian who sighed on seeing the synthesizer cake, and hastily started to un-wrap the identical package he was holding. The cake was folded inside salad-tree leaves, which he looked at suspiciously.
“What’s this for?” he demanded. “To keep the cake moist? Isn’t it dangerous? You don’t know what you might catch from it!”
“We never had that kind of trouble,” Lex murmured.
Probian gave him a distrustful glare, but after a moment he threw the leaves away and laid the cake on the table. A few crumbs adhered to his palm; he licked them off.
“Got something else,” Probian said. He was at Baffin’s pack now. “Explosives!”
He produced four precious blocks salvaged from the starship’s disaster box, designed to hurl an instrument monitor and a subradio bleeper well clear of a drive explosion or other catastrophe, which packed enough power to clear the river if a mountain had fallen into it. They were shaped; one could touch them off at arm’s length without harm.
That they were here on the planet at all was a source of endless self-reproach to Lex. He had been so fuddled with oxygen-lack, and his head aching so badly as they approached this world, he—along with everyone else-had overlooked the possibility of leaving at least this weak little beacon in orbit until it was too late for him to calculate a firing-trajectory for it.
Those also were laid like an offering on the captain’s table.
“That all?” Gomes said.
“Everything of interest.”
“Pity. Still, it’s a windfall. I wonder what else they have down there….” Gomes rubbed his bearded chin. On Zarathustra it had been customary to extirpate the facial follicles; however, there was no reason to expect Gomes, a spaceman, to follow Zarathustran fashion.
“Eight hundred well-fed and healthy people,” Lex said. What a fantastic misc
hance had overtaken the others, up here! He could see it all now. Lacking anyone capable of making rational plans to prepare for a permanent, or at any rate indefinite, stay here, they must have turned to Gomes pleading for not guidance but orders. But Gomes was a spaceman, and could conceive no other course than repairing his ship. Whether or not he realized it was impossible, he had staked everything on it, and he was long past the point at which he could have changed his mind. By this time, perhaps, it had taken on the force of an obsession, and a contagious obsession at that. Those who argued that repairing the ship was out of the question (and judging by Gomes’s estimate of the value of guns there must be many) were being driven to work regardless.
Consequently nothing of any practical value was being done!
“Yes!” Gomes was saying. “Eight hundred people—but without a ship of their own!”
“How do you know?” The words burst from Minty.
“Why, you told us!” Gomes retorted. “We were fully intending to enlist your cooperation in getting our ships aloft again. Even if we couldn’t fly all the way back to civilization, we could at least put one or both of them into orbit and beam subradio signals for the searchers to home on. There are bound to be searches going on. Aren’t there?”
That was a question which had long been exhausted down at the town. None of the strangers answered. There was no way of knowing. When the ships evacuating Zarathustra fled they had beamed continuously—but they were racing at such velocity to escape the nova, it was probable that drivenoise would have drowned the signals out.
In any case, the nova itself emitted noise.
“And—?” Lex said.
“Well, we got our antenna back up when the thaw came, and what should we hear but some extraordinary woman moaning at the mike, announcing that your ship was in the sea of all places!” Gomes uttered a cynical laugh. “Oh, I’d have liked to see Arbogast’s face after what he said about my landing. It’s a shame you didn’t bring him with you.”
“We couldn’t,” Lex said stonily. “He killed himself.”