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Collected Fiction

Page 501

by Henry Kuttner

“I’ll see if I can gun her out,” he said. “Wait out here a minute, Jo, and yell if a car comes.”

  HE played the clutch and gunned the motor. Then, with catastrophic suddenness, he saw the reflected gleam of headlights approaching.

  It was too late to avoid a crash. He jammed his foot on the accelerator, felt the rear wheels skid around without traction—and suddenly, incredibly, the car jumped. There was no other word for it. Someone or something had lifted the sedan and thrust it forward on to the road.

  Instinctive reflex made him jockey accelerator and steering-wheel. The other car sped by, missing him by a fraction. Whitefaced, Tim eased the sedan to the side of the road and got out.

  A dark figure loomed through the snowy gusts.

  “Joanna?”

  There was a pause.

  “Yes, Tim.”

  “What happened?”

  “I—don’t know.”

  “You didn’t try to lift the car!” But he knew that was impossible.

  Yet Joanna hesitated.

  “No,” she said suddenly. “There must have been solid ground under the snow back there.”

  “Sure,” Tim said. He got a flashlight, went back to the ditch, and made a brief examination.

  “Yeah,” he said unconvinced.

  They were both silent on the way home. Tim had caught a glimpse of Joanna’s grease-smeared gloves.

  A small thing—yet it was the beginning. For Tim knew quite well that the car had been lifted out of the ditch, and a frail woman of Joanna’s build couldn’t possibly have managed it.

  But their doctor, Farleigh, an endocrinologist, talked to Tim a few weeks later.

  “Tell Joanna to come in and see me,” he said. “She hasn’t been around for quite a while.”

  “She’s healthy enough,” Tim said. Farleigh put his finger-tips together.

  “Is she?”

  “She’s never sick.”

  “She may be. One of these days.”

  “There’s nothing—”

  “I want to keep an eye on her,” Farleigh said. “I want to give her another complete check-up—x-rays and everything.”

  Tim took out a cigarette and lighted it very carefully.

  “Okay. Let’s have it. What’s wrong?”

  “I didn’t say.”

  Tim looked at him. Farleigh scowled and took some x-ray plates from his drawer.

  “Changes take place,” he said. “The glands have a lot to do with it. I’m wondering if I haven’t made a mistake.”

  “How?”

  “If I called in a specialist. Joanna is—ah—it may be a form of hypothyroidism. Her skin, the exoderm, is thickening.”

  “I hadn’t noticed.”

  “You wouldn’t. Unless you tried to put a hypodermic needle through it. These x-rays—” He seemed oddly reluctant to show them to Tim.

  “I gave her a gastro-intestinal series, and some iodine stains. One way to get a look at interior organs. It’s peculiar. There’s some sort of intestinal atrophy—the appendix has entirely disappeared, and the heart’s much enlarged. Other things—”

  “What?”

  “Probably nothing,” Farleigh said, putting the plates away again. “Just ask Joanna to run in and see me, will you?”

  “Yeah,” Tim said and left.

  When he got home that night, the living-room was dark and empty. A low crooning noise came from the bedroom. He went quietly to the door and looked in. He couldn’t see Joanna, but he saw something else, moving across the floor.

  It might have been the Pekingese, except that it was even smaller than Tzu-Ling, and it walked, with the automatic precision of a clockwork figure.

  The low crooning changed pitch. It became insistent. The tiny figure altered its movement. It attempted something grotesquely like a ballet position, an entrechat and an arabesque, which it couldn’t hold. It fell with a soft thump on the carpet.

  The crooning stopped.

  “Tim?” Joanna said.

  His middle cold and wet with sweat, Tim stepped into the bedroom and switched on the light. Joanna was sitting on the bed, her knees drawn up. For a moment he thought of how lovely she was, her dark hair tumbling in ringlets, her face bright and interested like a girl of seventeen. Then he looked down.

  A few years ago, a casual friend had given Joanna a doll, an expensive one, completely articulated and quite lifelike, for all its tinyness. It was a foot and a half high. Now it lay crumpled at Tim’s feet.

  He forced himself to stoop and pick it up. The wig felt like real hair under his fingers.

  “Joanna,” he said, and an empty, gray helplessness gripped him as he stared at his wife. For he knew what he had seen. It was impossible, but the moonlight had been sufficiently bright. The movements of the doll had not been those of a puppet or an automaton.

  AND she knew that he had seen. She drew her robe closer about her shoulders, shivering.

  “Close the window, Tim, will you, please? It’s cold.”

  He obeyed silently. By the time he faced her again, she had made her decision.

  “Sit down, Tim,” she said, patting the bed beside her. “Put the doll here. It won’t move now. Not unless I . . . Tim, I don’t know if you’ll understand. If you can understand. But I hope you do.”

  “And I—rather hope that I’m insane,” he said slowly. “What is it, Joanna? For heaven’s sake!”

  “Don’t. It’s nothing terrible. I’ve felt it coming for a long while now. I’m changing—that’s ah.”

  “Changing?”

  “I was afraid at first. But now I—my mind works so much better. So does my body. I can feel things—sense things—and the doll was just an experiment. I can control inanimate objects from a distance. It takes practice.

  “I did it with the car, that night in the snowstorm. Didn’t you notice how white I was—after? It drained so much of my energy. But I could do it now without any difficulty at all.”

  “Joanna,” he said, “I think you’re insane.”

  She looked away.

  “It’s hard to begin at the beginning,” she said reflectively.

  “I’ve come so far since—since I noticed there was a change. And I’m so far beyond you now, Tim. I can see into your mind, and it’s full of blocks and walls that won’t let truth in.”

  “How did you make that doll move?”

  Her dark eyes watched him for a moment Then something cold and very strange seemed to lance into his brain, a whirling maelstrom like a twisting snow-flurry.

  It was gone instantly. But now Joanna’s voice seemed stronger and clearer. And he could understand, curiously, without questioning, what she was saying.

  And—in essence—what she said was this—she was becoming a completely new type of human being. Human didn’t describe it too accurately. As man evolved, through mutation, an enormous step beyond Neanderthaler, so the new race would come, similarly through mutation.

  “But not in the conventional way, Tim. Not the way fiction writers have it. There won’t be babies born with heads three feet in diameter and shriveled little bodies. Nothing like that.

  “The higher an animal in the evolutionary scale, the longer is the period before maturity. It’s natural selection. The super-race wouldn’t be safe if it revealed its superiority too soon. It’s protective camouflage.

  “I think I’m the first mutation of this type, Tim. And not until lately—thirty-five years after my birth—have I begun to mature. Till now, I was adolescent—merely human.”

  There had been unsuccessful mutations in the past—freaks, abortions, failures. But more and more often now the mutations would occur.

  “And we’ll breed true. It may take many, many years before another super-human of my type appears. But I don’t think I’ll die for a long time. It’s taken me thirty-five years to mature, so—”

  She flung out her arms.

  “And I’ll change! I’ll change! I’m seeing the world through new eyes now, the eyes of an adult! Up until now I
’ve been like a child!”

  Her eyes glowed.

  “There will be more of us. I think I know how it happened in my case. You remember my father? He was connected with the Museum. Before my birth, he was out with that research expedition in Mexico, investigating the great meteoric crater there. My mother was with him.

  “The radiations from that buried meteor brought about some rearrangement of genes in the germ-plasm, so the mutation was successful. And now there’s so much new work in electronics. So much radiation being broadcast! I’m the only one of my kind now, but in a hundred years, or less—”

  Tim looked at her. Yes, she had changed. He could see that now. She looked quite different, with an odd combination of new youthfulness and an underlying firm self-realization—a new maturity.

  And there was more than that. As a child gains an intangible quality when he matures, so Joanna had gained something that was no more to be described than the blaze of a candle-flame shining through thin white porcelain.

  Yet she was—Joanna. He knew, deep in his mind, how illogical her words were. But he could not disbelieve them. It was as though unseen fingers had reached out and moulded his thoughts into new patterns.

  Tim reached for his wife’s hand. That, at least, was familiar. The slim fingers lay warm and relaxed against his palm. He tightened his grip.

  There was nothing to say, against the overpowering certainty, the deep belief, that possessed him. She had made him believe, somehow.

  “Joanna,” he whispered. “You mustn’t.”

  SHE shook her head.

  “You mustn’t,” he repeated. “So it’s happened once. Once in a million years it could happen like this—perhaps. But you can change it.”

  “I can’t,” she said. “A plant can’t stop growing. It can’t grow down again into a seed.”

  “What about us?”

  “I don’t know.” Her voice was sombre. “I don’t think we can go on this way—not for long.”

  “You know I—”

  “And I love you, too, Tim. But I’m afraid. You see, I love Tzu-Ling in a different way. He’s an inferior species. Later, after I’ve matured farther, you might be an inferior species to me too.”

  “You mean I am now,” he said bitterly.

  “No, Tim. You’re not! But don’t you see—I can’t help this change. I can’t stop it. And eventually we’ll grow farther and farther apart, until—”

  “Tzu-Ling. I-see.”

  “And that would be horrible. For both of us. It might not be for me—then. It would depend on how much I’d changed by that time. But you understand, darling, don’t you? It’s better to make the break now, so we’ll each have the right memories.”

  “No,” he said, “I don’t see that at all. There couldn’t be any change that couldn’t be compensated for.”

  “Human logic, based on emotion. You know it isn’t true.”

  “You mustn’t leave me, Joanna.”

  “I won’t go tonight, anyway,” she said, looking away. “I’m still too human. That makes me vulnerable. I think, in the end, our race will conquer and rule because we won’t be vulnerable through emotions. We’ll have emotions, yes, but they won’t rule us. Logic will be the highest law.”

  Tim flung the doll into a corner, where it lay crumpled grotesquely. Tzu-Ling wakened at the noise and padded in from the next room to sniff at the doll. Satisfied, he lay down, head on his fluffy golden paws, and slept again.

  But Tim did not sleep well that night. For a long while he lay awake, listening to Joanna’s quiet breathing beside him, watching her profile in the faint moonlight. He was remembering a great deal. In the end he had come to no conclusion.

  He slept at last.

  And in the morning Joanna was gone.

  For a year there was no trace of her. Tim put a detective agency on the track without result. He told no one the truth. They would not have believed. And he felt that if they did believe . . .

  Sometimes he had a sickening picture of Joanna, outcast and alien, hunted like an animal by the humans who were no longer akin to her. He did hint a little to Dr. Farleigh, but the physician was so obviously skeptical that Tim didn’t pursue the subject.

  He waited, though, and followed the newspapers avidly. Somewhere, sometime, he felt, he would see Joanna’s face looking up at him from a half-tone reproduction, or read her name in some news item.

  When it came, Tim almost missed it. He had read and finished the weekly newsmagazine. cast it aside and was smoking idly, listening to the radio. Joanna’s face kept materializing in his thoughts. It wasn’t quite the same—there was some subtle difference.

  Then he knew. He picked up the magazine, found the photograph and examined it closely. It wasn’t Joanna. It didn’t look like her at all.

  And yet, beyond the contour of cheek and jaw, beyond the outward difference, there was something of Joanna in the picture. It was impossible that the bony structure of the skull could have changed. And it was equally impossible that Joanna could have grown younger. This woman was scarcely twenty.

  Quite young, Tim thought, for her to have such a remarkable discovery in the electronic-radiation field. Unless—

  He took a plane to Berkeley, California, the next morning. He did not see Marion Parkhurst—that was the girl scientist’s name. She had left for a brief vacation in the Rockies—a vacation from which she didn’t return.

  Marion Parkhurst dropped out of sight.

  FOR two years after that nothing happened. There were a few new inventions patented and put on the market, all of them connected with radiations—an ingenious improvement on the magnetron, for example, and a gadget that brought a new concept into the television field. Little things, none of them important singly, but Tim kept a scrapbook.

  Five years.

  Seven years.

  Ten years.

  He had not forgotten. He would never forget, while he lived. Tim had loved Joanna very deeply, and sometimes, in his dreams, he would be St. George, rescuing Joann from a dragon that wore the terrible shape of the future.

  Sometimes he saw that future in his dreams—a world peopled by men and women like gods, alien and inhuman as gods. They were giants and crushed humans like ants beneath their titan feet.

  But giants could be killed, Tim knew. The mutation was more deadly, for it masqueraded as human. It had been ten years since Joanna’s disappearance, and during that decade she had not been unmasked. She had been perfectly free to do—what?

  Fifteen years.

  Seventeen.

  And then, one warm summer night in Central Park, he saw her again. Some fantastic radiation from her mind must have impinged on his. For she wasn’t Joanna any more. She didn’t look like Joanna, or warlike Joanna.

  After he had stopped her, Tim had a sick feeling that he must be mistaken. But he gripped her arms and swung her about into the glare of an overhead light. She could have wrenched free. Tim was sixty-two and older than his years.

  She stood there, waiting, watching him while he searched her face. He could have seen more clearly with his glasses, but he felt embarrassed about putting them on. Net that his age didn’t show clearly in his face, but—

  She was between twenty and twenty-five, he guessed, and she bore not the slightest resemblance to Joanna. He didn’t look for anything physical, though. He searched for that burning, ardent spark, more than human, that blazed within her like incandescent flame.

  It was not there.

  So he had been wrong. It was another false hope, after so many others. Tim’s shoulders slumped. He felt very weary and very old. He muttered something—an apology—and turned away. Then a slim hand touched his arm.

  “Tim,” she said.

  He looked at her, incredulous. It wasn’t possible. It couldn’t be happening after seventeen years. This girl didn’t have the—the dame.

  She read his thought. She leaned toward him, and that tremendous wave of vitality, of godlike fire, pulsed out from her. Tim was s
haken by its strength.

  “Joanna,” he said. “You can’t be—”

  “I learned,” she said very softly. “I learned to control the Power. It was too dangerous. Men might have learned to recognize me by it.”

  He couldn’t say anything. He fumbled for her hand, but she drew away.

  “Don’t touch me, Tim,” she said. “It’s a mistake. I shouldn’t have—but when I read your mind and saw all that lost, lonely unhappiness—I couldn’t let you go without—”

  “I’ll never let you go now,” he said. “You’ve forgotten. I’ve changed—more than you realize now.”

  “It’s you who’ve forgotten. Look.” He swept out an arm, indicating the tremendous lighted towers of New York that stood like cyclopean guardians ringing the Park.

  This had been their favorite view when they were first married. On such warm summer evenings as this they had walked together along the dim paths, listening to the distant music of the carousel, laughing at nothing, talking.

  He dropped his hand quickly. The light had mercilessly revealed the brown-splotched skin, the blue veins of age.

  “Do you think age matters?” Joanna asked. “I could make you young again, Tim. But you’d still be human. And I’m not anymore.”

  “You could do that?”

  “Yes. My power has grown. But it’s a question of different species, not of age.”

  “Joanna,” he said, “what do you want? What are you trying to do?”

  “Now?” She smiled a little crookedly. “I’m just waiting. For many years I did electronic research, trying to cause an artificial mutation that would duplicate my own.

  “But I failed. I’m afraid there’s nobody else like me on earth, Tim, and perhaps there never will be. I’ll live for a long time—a thousand years or more—and I’ll be very lonely. I’m lonely now.

  “My heritage—a new race—sustained me for years, but I’ve waited until I know how hopeless my wait may be. I’m the first of the new race, and I may be the last.”

  “Give it up,” he said. “You’ve wasted years.”

  “I have so many. Too many.”

  “Come back to me, Joanna. Forget all—” For an instant he thought she was on the verge of yielding. But something stirred in the bushes near them. A shaggy, unkempt form loomed in the light, black against the green. Tim saw Joanna turn her head. He felt that tremendous wave of power beat out, and he was suddenly blind and giddy.

 

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