“Yeah. I’d thought the same thing. That’s why I came here, Stevie. I can’t face them alone. Will you come with me?”
“Of course.”
“Let’s go.”
“But, Lewis, I can’t now. Not for an hour. I’ve got my sister’s children here! I can’t leave them alone . . .”
“Get a sitter,” Lewis growled. “You know Hasslein. He’s likely to go down there tonight.”
“It will take a few minutes to get a sitter,” Stevie said. “Lewis, if it’s that urgent, you better drive down right now. I’ll join you as soon as I can. I won’t be long, not more than half an hour behind you.”
“But that half hour could be crucial. All right darling. Hurry. And—I love you.”
“I’m glad.” She smiled, but there was pain in her eyes as well, and she stood watching him drive away for nearly half a minute before running inside to the telephone. Her nieces couldn’t understand why she was crying.
EIGHTEEN
“Here’s your wife back, sir,” Tommy Billings said. He wheeled Zira into the suite she had shared with Cornelius. “I know you’ve been worried about her, sir. Here she is, safe and sound.” The orderly helped Zira to her feet, then left them alone.
“Three days,” Cornelius said. “I’ve been nearly out of my mind!”
“Didn’t they tell you I was all right?” Zira asked.
“Of course they said so,” he answered. “But after what they did I wouldn’t believe anything they said. Savages! Barbarians! Jabbing needles into a pregnant woman! Even gorillas wouldn’t think of that.”
“Yes, dear.” She moved closer to him. “Aren’t you glad to see me?”
“O Lord, yes.” He took her in his arms, then led her to a chair. “You shouldn’t be standing. Sorry the furniture’s so—” he shrugged, “functional.” He gestured at the plain room with its government-issued equipment.
“It’s all right,” Zira said. She took a seat and watched as Cornelius paced around the room.
“Savages,” Cornelius repeated.
“I’ve done as much to humans as they did to me,” Zira said. “And more. Much worse things.” She shuddered. “If we’d only known—you must remember, Colonel Taylor thought we were savages. At first.”
Cornelius looked frantically around the room. “They’re probably listening to us,” he said.
“So what? They know about Taylor.”
“They made you tell about him, too?”
“They made me tell about everything, Cornelius. We no longer have anything to hide.”
“Brutes!”
“And may I tell you something? I’m glad, Cornelius. I’m glad because now there’s nothing to lie about. I hated that. We can’t live with lies.”
“If we live at all,” Cornelius muttered. “They may not let us live, you know.”
“That’s nonsense.” She rubbed her swollen belly. “It is nonsense, isn’t it? They aren’t really savages . . .”
“I don’t know.” He took her hand and held it to his cheek. “How long, now?”
“A week. Not more. Perhaps less.”
“So close. And they treated you that way. Savages. How could they do that?”
“Cornelius . . . you didn’t really mean it, did you? They won’t—they wouldn’t hurt us? Not now?” She touched her swollen abdomen again. “They wouldn’t—oh!” A key rattled in the lock. Zira looked fearfully at the door.
It opened, slowly, to admit Tommy Billings. “Chow time,” he said. He carried a tray with soup, juice, and sliced fruit. “Time to eat up.”
“Bah,” Cornelius said. “Get out.”
“Aw, that’s no way to talk.”
“I’m not hungry, either,” Zira said.
“Well, maybe you aren’t, Ma’am, but maybe someone else who can’t talk yet is. Come on, at least drink your juice. You need the vitamins. And the soup. You ought to eat, if only for the sake of the little monkey inside you.”
“Damn you!” Cornelius shouted. He seized the tray and shoved it in Tommy’s face.
“Here, now!” Tommy shouted. His arms flailed wildly, as the hot soup blinded him and he struggled to get his balance. “Here, what are you doing?”
“Damn you, damn you, DAMN YOU!” Cornelius shouted again. He took the tray and struck at Tommy’s head.
“But what did I do?” Tommy wailed. He staggered forward, and his foot slipped in the spilled soup and juice on the floor. He toppled forward and struck his head against the table; then he was very still.
“Is—is he all right?” Zira asked.
“Of course he’s all right,” Cornelius snapped. “You know how thick human skulls are. Serves him right. Nobody makes a fool of my wife.”
“He’s not moving.”
“He’s unconscious. Let’s get out of here.”
“But—Cornelius! Shouldn’t we call for a—”
“We call for nobody and nothing. We leave. We’re intelligent beings; it’s about time we showed some intelligence instead of waiting around to see what these savages will do with us. Let’s go.”
The hall was empty. Cornelius led Zira to its end, and peered out the glass in the door. There were Marines outside.
“Guards out there,” he whispered. “Probably all around the place.”
“Then how do we get out?” Zira demanded. “Cornelius, I think we ought to go back and—”
“No.” He looked around the low building, then went into one of the empty offices, where he examined the ceiling. He looked especially at the ceiling of the closet in the office, then led Zira into another office, where he did the same thing. “Aha,” he said. He pointed to the closet ceiling. “I knew there had to be a way up in this building. There’s an attic up there, and I’ll bet we can find a way onto the roof.”
“And what does that do for us?” Zira asked coldly.
“Humans can’t climb,” Cornelius said. “They don’t think of looking up when they guard a place. I know—I’ve been watching them while I nearly went out of my mind worrying about you. And you can climb better in your present condition than humans can in the peak of health.”
“All right.”
He swarmed up the closet shelves and opened the trap door, then, once up, reached down to help Zira. They were in a dusty attic, and at its end they found a ventilator. Cornelius cautiously removed it, and looked out onto the roof. “Now be very quiet,” he whispered. “There are guards below. But notice, they never look at that tree over there—and we can just reach it from up here. Once we’re out on the roof, don’t talk and don’t stop. Just make for the tree and get down on the far side of it. I’ll be right behind you.”
“All right. I—hope everything will be all right.”
“So do I,” he whispered. “I love you.”
“And I love you.” She climbed out onto the roof.
Lewis glared angrily at Victor Hasslein. The scientist’s pale eyes glared back, and Lewis found it difficult to keep from reaching across the desk and smashing Hasslein in the face. “You could give them a few days,” Lewis said.
“The instructions said immediately,” Hasslein told him. “Immediately does not mean in a few days. Damn it, Dr. Dixon, if something unpleasant must be done, putting it off makes it neither easier nor less unpleasant.”
“So you admit this is unpleasant.”
“Unpleasant?” Hasslein said. “It’s a tragedy! Dixon, do you think I enjoy this? Do you?”
“Yes, I rather think you do,” Lewis said.
“How wrong you are,” Hasslein said. “Sit down, Dr. Dixon. You may as well. I doubt that either of us will convince the other of anything, but you can be comfortable while we argue. When the argument is finished—I don’t suppose you would care to perform the operation yourself?”
“Jesus Christ, Hasslein! I won’t be a part of your monstrous—”
“You don’t have to, Dr. Dixon. I merely suggested it in case you loved them enough to want to be sure it was done as painlessly and efficien
tly, and as safely, as possible. I see that you do not.”
“That’s hardly fair,” Lewis said. He sat heavily in the padded chair across from Hasslein. “Got another of those cigarettes?”
“Certainly.” Hasslein passed the pack across the desk. “I didn’t know you smoked.”
“I haven’t, for five years. It seems like the thing to do tonight.”
“You are very concerned, and it is fitting,” Hasslein said. “Have you thought that I am also concerned? Consider, Dixon. I am sacrificing what may be one of the most important discoveries in history. Talking animals—intelligent, nonhuman creatures, who are aware and conscious, and who breed true. Marvelous. And I am as uncomfortably aware as you that I have no philosophical grounds for thinking myself any better than they are.”
“But—Dr. Hasslein, if you believe that, why are you doing this?”
“Because if I am right, the human race will be sacrificed if we preserve these animals. If I am wrong, then we have sacrificed only two individuals. Charming. Innocent. But only two.”
“Two? The orders said nothing about the parents. Only the unborn child. You want the parents dead as well, don’t you, Hasslein? Damn it, answer me!”
Hasslein shrugged. “I would be more comfortable if they were all dead. Yes. But the orders are precise, and I will carry them out to the letter. That is why I asked if you wish to perform the operations—so that you can be certain that no more is to be done than we have been ordered to do. I would not care to be accused of killing the adults if—if anything goes wrong.”
“What could go wrong?” Lewis demanded. “There better not be anything. If you murder those chimpanzees, you’ll answer for it.”
“How you misunderstand me,” Hasslein said. “I carry out my duties, Dr. Dixon. I think we are taking sufficient measures to safeguard the human race. I only want to see them accomplished, and until the job is done, I will worry. We are attempting to change the future, and although I believe in theory we can do that, I confess some doubts. Have another cigarette?”
“No, thank you—what’s that?”
There was a disturbance outside in the hall. “It sounds as if someone is shouting,” Dr. Hasslein said. “Come, let us go see what it is . . .”
Cornelius looked back at the chain-link fence of Camp Pendleton. “I think that is the last of them, my dear,” he said. “We are outside the camp entirely now, if my memory is correct.”
“But what will we do?” Zira asked. They stumbled along in the light of a quarter moon. The narrow road seemed eerie, and they heard rustlings in the chaparral and scrub oak of the fields around them.
“We’ll have to find clothing,” Cornelius said. “Hats. Enough clothes to disguise ourselves as humans.”
“I don’t think we can do that—oh. Uh!”
“What’s the matter?”
“Calmly, Cornelius. Calmly. Now. Are you calm?”
“Yes—"
“Good. I think my labor has started.”
“You what?”
“It must have been the exertion of climbing. I wonder what it was like for primitive apes, when they had to climb trees all the time, right up to the time—”
“But—but—we have to do something!” Cornelius protested. “I’ll have to go back for help!”
“Nonsense. We had children for thousands of years without help. I’ll manage. And I do have you.”
“But—”
“We had better get off the road, though,” Zira said. “Come on.” She took his hand and led him down the embankment and into the chaparral. “There’s a road on the other side.”
“Same road,” Cornelius said. “It makes a big U here to get up the side of the bluff. Are you sure you’re all right?”
“Of course—oh!”
“Again? We’d better—” he broke off, as there was a thunder of wings. A California quail took to the air from beneath their feet.
“Like a machine gun,” Zira said. “Will they come looking for us? With their army?”
“Possibly. You’d better get some rest. Only—if you can still walk—”
“Of course I can still walk. I’m a perfectly healthy female chimpanzee.”
“Then I would like to get further away while we can—” he stopped to listen.
“What do you hear?” Zira asked.
There was the faint wail of a siren behind them. Cornelius turned back to his wife. “Nothing. Just another bird.” He took her hand and led her down the embankment.
NINETEEN
Lewis Dixon knelt beside the white-coated body. There was no pulse at all. He motioned for a blanket, then looked up to Victor Hasslein who stood in the doorway. “Dead,” Lewis said. His voice was incredulous.
“I’m sorry to hear that,” Hasslein said.
“Sure you are,” Lewis said. He covered the dead orderly and stood. “Sure.”
“I really am. I don’t know why your opinion is important to me, Dr. Dixon, since it is obvious that you will never think well of me, but I find myself trying to convince you that I’m not a monster thirsting for innocent blood.”
“You want the chimpanzees dead. You’ll use this as an excuse to hunt them down.”
“Certainly. They are a threat to humanity, to civilization, to science, to everything I hold dear, and they must be destroyed. I wish they were evil. It would make this easier.” Hasslein waited until the attendants had finished covering Tommy, then turned away. “Even this, I expect, was an accident; but it will make things easier.” He walked rapidly to his office and began telephoning. Within minutes there were sirens throughout Camp Pendleton, and jeeps of armed men drove rapidly through and around the camp grounds.
Hasslein hesitated before making the next telephone call. As he stared at the phone, Lewis Dixon came into his office. Hasslein looked up with a frown. “Yes?”
“What orders did you give them?” Lewis demanded. “Are they going to shoot on sight?”
“I merely told the Admiral that the prisoners had escaped, and that they had killed one of his Marines doing so.”
“Jesus! That’ll make the others trigger-happy . . .”
“Possibly. I hope so,” Hasslein said. “I can admit that to you. Dixon, don’t you care? In future times, another Shakespeare, another Edison, another Einstein, may be crawling on all fours, unable to speak, a brute with no culture doomed to a life of misery—and all because of these apes. Can’t you understand it’s them or us?”
“Even if I believed that, I couldn’t condone killing them out of hand.”
“No. I suppose not.” Hasslein lifted the telephone. “General Brody, please. If you’ll excuse me, Dr. Dixon, I must report to the president.” He waited until Lewis had gone, then lit a cigarette. They took a long time getting Brody on the phone, and it took even longer for Hasslein to explain what had happened.
“What orders do the Marines have?” Brody demanded.
“To recapture them, of course—”
“Yeah. Recapture them, but they know these monkeys have killed one of their buddies. They won’t do it without damned strong orders. You’ll see that they get those orders, Hasslein. We want those chimps alive. Is that understood?”
“I thought you were in agreement with me, General,” Hasslein protested.
“What’s that got to do with it?” Brody demanded. “The president’s going to insist on the same damned thing. Those apes are to be recaptured, alive, and to hell with what they’ve done or haven’t done. Have you got that? I’ve seen the Harris poll on those monkeys, Hasslein. You shoot them down out of hand and you’ll make a political crisis. The people think of those apes as human. Every science type in the country wants an interview with ’em. And so on. I want them back alive, Hasslein, and so will the boss. You got that?”
“Yes, General.”
“I’ll make bloody sure of it, Victor. I’m calling Admiral Jardin right now. Meanwhile, you issue the proper orders. And call me if anything new happens.”
They watch
ed the cars full of soldiers race back and forth on the road, and felt increasing horror. Zira moaned again, and finally Cornelius could not stand it any longer.
“I’m going to go get help,” he said. “I’ll find Lewis.”
“No . . . please.” She looked around their small hollow. Chaparral grew thick on all sides, so that they were invisible from the road.
“Look, I only lost my temper with that boy. I hurt him, but he’ll be all right. I owe him an apology. I’ve felt miserable ever since I struck him—and it wasn’t his fault. We’ve got to go back, we’ve got to have help.”
“I can walk,” Zira said. “Or I can have the baby here. We’ll be—”
“No.” Cornelius was firm. “They may punish us, but at least the baby will be delivered with proper care. I’m going to get help. You wait here.” Before she could protest, he scrambled down the hill toward the lower loop of the road.
There were soldiers there. They had a barrier across the road, and they carried rifles. Cornelius waited, afraid, hoping to see someone he recognized. Finally a car came, its lights showing the dozen Marines clearly. One of them came forward and shined a light into the car.
“Miss, I’m afraid this road’s closed,” the soldier said.
“I am Dr. Branton,” she said. “Captain, I have a pass. Here.”
“Oh. Right, Miss.”
Cornelius recognized Stevie and felt relief. He started forward through the bushes, ready to show himself, and the Marine continued to speak. “Better be careful, Dr. Branton. Those monkeys killed one of our troopers, that young orderly Corporal Billings, and they’re on the loose. Out there somewhere. I ought to send a trooper with you, but I don’t really have the men to spare. You lock all your doors and don’t open them ’till you’re at the compound, you hear?”
Cornelius turned away in horror. What had he done? The boy was dead! Dead! What of the law now? He saw Stevie’s car drive away, and remembered how the road looped here.
Quickly, he thought. I have to catch her. He ran uphill, through the chaparral, heedless of noise but silently all the same, ten thousand years of instinct protecting him from being heard. He reached the upper section of the road and stood panting, waiting, as Stevie’s car came up the hill.
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