Collected Fiction

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Collected Fiction Page 518

by Henry Kuttner


  Sue was following her own ideas. “Can I get in on this? I’d like to make a success out of my career.”

  “All I can do is show you how to avoid some of the natural obstacles that would ordinarily thwart you. Go to Chez Coq at ten next Wednesday night and wear a green hat.”

  “Is that all?”

  “No. Get drunk. Now I must rest.”

  It closed its eyes and rested.

  It had been to world beyond world. Time varied in various continua, and it could not tell now how many years or centuries or millennia had passed since the iGlann first gave it life. In the block it lay quiescent, to the human gaze. But it was not in the block. The block was merely the three-dimensional window through which it could gaze into the world it had first known.

  A small, strange thing, less than a foot high, brown and wrinkled as a root, and as immobile. It rested, watching and waiting wearily.

  But Fessier was reading an old book, and studying Picasso, Cretan art, and other matters, Thursday evening he was in his own apartment when the buzzer sounded and he got up to let Sue Daley in. She was pink and gay.

  “Keep your fingers crossed.” she said. “I’ve got an awful hangover, but it’s been worth it. Where were you today? I phoned.”

  “Up at the Met.” Fessier told her, putting out his cigarette. “I was making some sketches. What happened?”

  Sue sat down and touched a book lying on a coffee table near her. a small volume with dozens of scraps of paper sticking out of it. “Is this . . . oh. Where’s our talisman?”

  “I locked it away in a closet, it’s still asleep.”

  “It doesn’t sleep,” Sue said. “Remember? Anyway, I wanted to tell you what happened last night.”

  “Maybe you’d better. Since you wouldn’t let me go along.” Fessier sounded faintly jealous.

  “It’s just as well. I met a man. A funny little fat man who’s incredibly sentimental.”

  “Uh-huh. And is he going to give you a million dollars?”

  “Not quite,” Sue said. “He was drunk as a lord. So was I, or I wouldn’t have talked to him. He came over to my table and introduced himself. It seems he liked my hat—the green one. It’s a symbol to him. Back in the Twenties, Arlen’s “Green Hat” was the fashion, and his wife was wearing one when he met her. They’re divorced now, but Tubby practically carries around a bucket to cry into when he remembers the good old days.”

  “Tubby?”

  “I can’t help it,” Sue said, gurgling. “He is. Very. His name’s Robert Cowan Cook, and he’s just bought into some business that does things with chemicals. Ink eradicator or something. It’s all much too complicated, but Tubby wants to open an advertising account for his new firm, and what he found out I was in that business, he decided I was Heaven’s blessing to Robert Cowan Cook. He saw the boss today, and I gather something’s going to come of it.”

  “Swell,” Fessier said, in a markedly half-hearted tone. Sue hastily got up and kissed him.

  “Oh, Sam. Don’t act that way.”

  “I know,” he said, relaxing into a grin. “You’ll become rich and famous, and I’ll have to marry you for your money.”

  “Well, won’t you?”

  “Sure. But I’d rather—”

  “You’ll be rich and famous, too. “Remember? What are we talking about?” Sue ended. “It’s all coincidence. It must be.”

  Fessier made marks on a sketch pad with a charcoal pencil. “I suppose so. I believe in our . . . little critter, but not in his good works. Not yet. He forgot to convince me about those.”

  “Maybe he couldn’t. He’s limited, you know.”

  “Poor old fellow,” Sue said. “He’d be hell on wheels with the iGlanns, but he is handicapped here. Humans must seem strange to him.”

  “Everything human is alien—to him.” Fessier drew a curve, rubbed it out, and tried again. Sue craned.

  “What’s that? Oh.” She squinted. “.Something new?”

  “I don’t know. I’ve been getting some ideas. That book our talisman recommended—”

  “Is this it? ‘Tristram Shandy.’ I never read it.”

  “Neither did I,” Fessier said. “It’s a curious book. The author wrote it just the way he wanted to. He had a cockeyed sort of view of the world. It’s . . . funny.”

  He got up abruptly, unlocked a closet, and took out the transparent cube. He placed it on the coffee table.

  Sue said, “He . . . it’s asleep.”

  “You said it couldn’t sleep.”

  “Well, it’s resting.”

  Fessier rubbed the cube. The mannikin didn’t stir.

  After a while he said, “Pluck, luck, and sweat eh? O.K. I’ll respect the DO NOT DISTURB sign.”

  The super-iGlann went back into the closet—for a while.

  Tubby, or Robert Cowan Cook, took a great, though platonic, interest in Sue. The girl saw to that. Cook Chemicals, Inc., was a new firm, and needed advertising. Tubby had decided that Sue was the only one who could carry out his ideas, and so he had insisted that she be put in complete charge of his campaign. This irritated Sue’s boss, but the account was too big to be lost through lack of diplomacy. Besides, he thought he could keep Sue in line.

  But he couldn’t. Sue planned her campaign along unorthodox lines, working out ideas that had built up in her scrapbook for years. She had an excellent mind for advertising, and, given a free hand, she did things that made her boss long to be twenty years younger so he could tear his hair. Robert Cowan Cook beamed, approved everything Sue did, and felt his business acumen justified when the response made itself known, Sue Daley was obviously going places, and realized that when other agencies began to bid for her services.

  And Sam Fessier had begun to find his way. too. There was always a small, uneasy, nagging doubt inside him, intensified when he looked at what he kept in his closet, but a publisher wanted to make a book of his collected cartoons. Not his early ones, and there weren’t enough of the new ones yet to fill a volume, but he had no difficulty in turning them out. He had established a new genre.

  Neither the drawing or the caption alone could have accounted for the humor factor in Fessier’s cartoons. His drawings and the ideas behind them were singularly funny. He had developed a new viewpoint, and found a new way of expressing it, both in line and in caption. It was derivative, of course, but the result was a synthesis that was peculiarly Fessier’s own. It was not Tristram Shandy’s viewpoint, but that of Tristram Shandy mingled with Fessier’s, emerging in a cockeyed style of line drawing that made people laugh. Humor has its formulae. The spring had found a new outlet, and Fessier had discovered the right vehicle for his mind and the creative energy in it.

  Six months later Fessier threw a party. He and Sue were getting married the next day, and this presupposed quite a binge. His apartment wasn’t large enough, so they used Tubby’s, and within two hours everyone was joyously tight. Fessier found himself with a wildeyed chemist who worked for Cook Chemicals, Inc.

  “Perfect solvent,” said the chemist, whose name was MacIntyre. “Dissolves everything. Meaningless. meaningless.”

  Fessier, wet-nursing a highball on his knee, tried to look solemn. “Why?”

  “Impractical. Not my job to think up a use for it. Plugging that new stink-remover Fessier worked out. Heavy advertising for that. Don’t want to release anything new to compete with it. Told me to wait. I got it patented, though. I mean the company did. Perfect solvent.”

  “It dissolves everything?” Fessier inquired.

  “You’re crazy,” MacIntyre said, shocked. “What could you keep a perfect solvent in? Perfect solvent for some materials, I said. Clean, quick, accurate. Lots of uses. Pour it on. Pfffst! Gone.”

  “I don’t believe it,” Fessier said.

  They ended in MacIntyre’s laboratory in the Cook works at Long Island. Perhaps Fessier wouldn’t have walked out on the party if a movie actor, who was present, hadn’t been rushing Sue violently. As it was, Fessier decided
that Sue would be sorry when she found him dead, and went unsteadily to Long Island with the argumentative chemist. There was one disadvantage, they found. The laboratory had MacIntyre’s solvent in it, and plenty of other materials, but no liquor at all. The next logical step was obvious. Fessier forgot about the party and headed like a homing bird for his own apartment, trailing MacIntyre.

  “Perfect solvent for some things, anyhow,” MacIntyre insisted, spoiling Fessier’s coffee table by spilling some of the magic liquid on it. “There, see? It eats right through.”

  “Didn’t hurt the metal, though,” Fessier said.

  “You’re crazy. No such thing as a perfect solvent. What would you keep the stuff in?”

  “A perfect insolvent,” Fessier suggested, “I was, six months ago. All I had to do was change my name to Aladdin. Why not call your stuff Aladdin Mixture.”

  “That’s a lousy idea,” MacIntyre said disgustedly. “A very lousy idea.” He got up and wandered around, spilling his perfect solvent here and there.

  Fessier was feeling very sorry for as himself and wanted to talk. He told MacIntyre all about the mandrake. MacIntyre was worse than skeptical; he was disinterested. “I only said it was perfect for some things,” he explained. “Silicon, too. Seer Pfffst!”

  “But—”

  “Gone. Oops. Maybe you needed that window, after all. Catch me.”

  Fessier was opening the closet, and MacIntyre managed to recover his balance through his own efforts. The transparent block came out and was exhibited on the damaged coffee table.

  “Go on, convince this dumb lug.” Fessier urged. “Wake up, pal.”

  Nothing happened. Fessier disgustedly took another drink. After a time, he was surprised to find himself sitting at the other end of the room, not quite awake, watching MacIntyre examine the crystal block.

  The chemist poured some of his perfect solvent on it.

  Sobriety suddenly chilled Fessier. He jumped up, staggered, oriented himself, and sprang at MacIntyre. He pushed the man violently away. MacIntyre sat down off the couch, holding an empty metal vial in his hand, looking surprised. “T couldn’t help it!” he was saying dazedly.

  “No,” Fessier said thickly. “No. No!”

  The transparent substance around the mannikin was melting away. The solvent was swiftly eating through, working down to the gnarled little root-figure that stood motionless in the block. It was no longer a block, however. It was a jagged, irregular stone, crumbling and crumbling.

  And then it began to build up again.

  Facet by shining facet, crystal grew around the mannikin. It didn’t take long. The glittering translucence shimmered and faded, and the original transparent block stood on the coffee table, apparently unchanged, the mandrake figure fixed within it.

  On the tiny, wizened face was—rage. Incandescent rage that made the little eyes hot crimson for a moment. The red glance swept from the unsteady MacIntyre to Fessier, and then to MacIntyre again. The rage flickered and faded. The small eyes dulled; the mandrake body went passive that had for a moment seemed to quiver with a dreadful aliveness.

  The thought of the super-iGlann moved sluggishly through Fessier’s mind “Failure,” was that thought. “Failure again. It will have to be quicker than that, when the time comes again. Unless I am destroyed very fast, before I have time to adapt, I cannot be destroyed at all.”

  There was another thought after that, slow and calmer than before. “You may forget,” it said. “You have failed me, but I grant you forgetfulness.”

  Petronius tells of a Sybilline oracle kept in a glass bottle. She was very, very old. When the schoolboys of that time gathered around and rapped on the bottle, they would ask, “Sybil, what wouldst thou?” And the Sybil answered, “I would die.”

  The super-iGlann was a racial failure. The iGlann had made it invulnerable and adaptable in the highest degree they knew, but the iGlann were not homo sapiens. They could not give it powers they did not possess themselves. They could give it only intensifications of their own talents.

  They were not imaginative. They were not creatively intelligent. And perhaps, subconsciously, they died because they did not want to find a way to live. No one will ever know that.

  In the super-iGlann’s unconscious mind was firmly fixed the instinct for self-preservation, a trigger reaction that would enable it to use its adaptability in the face of personal danger. In spite of itself—

  It was old, this withered little brown mandrake root, and it could not create, even in its own mind. It would die. In other continua to which it had access, and through Earth’s history, it had sought a weapon it could turn against itself. It could not sleep. The Sybil in the bottle was very, very old.

  But its powers were limited. Among iGlann it might have turned that exotic race to its own purposes, but it was not superhuman. It could only chart the probabilities of human progress, and try to place itself in a position where a weapon would strike at it.

  And it had tried. Time after endless time it had tried. All created things it had tried. Now it sought the new, and sought it deviously, among-the devious paths of human relationship. The web it had woven for Sue and Fessier was only one of many webs, each separate thread anchored carefully to some point of apparent inconsequence. But when the web was complete, then a tug at the outermost edge set the whole structure quivering and the pattern rose clearly out of its tangle—

  Sue must wear a green hat and write outrageous copy and borrow Tubby Cook’s apartment for a party. Fessier must strike a perfect balance that his work might put him on a financial parallel with Sue’s work, for without that equality the betrothal party could never have been. Fessier would not marry a woman more successful than himself. Fessier must be present to meet MacIntyre, and so must the movie actor be present, to drive Fessier out. And the end and purpose of all this devious contriving was—

  Failure again.

  Long ago the contriving had ceased to have value as amusement. Long ago, when those who were puppets to the super-iGlann’s manipulations still wore skin cloaks and woad, or carried bronze eagles along the roads of Rome. But the puppets went on, and the super-iGlann went on, and the end was not yet.

  For the seed was too deep in the unconscious mind that controlled that mandrake body, and could not control its own dark places. The action was pure reflex that set up an adaptive defense against whatever weapon was turned against it. A man may wish to commit suicide, but shrink instinctively from the knife’s edge. And the super-iGlann’s reaction was far more efficient than that.

  It could invent no effective weapon for suicide, because it was not creative. It could only wait, while men studied and worked out their technologies—and when a new death was to be found, the little brown rootlet made deviously certain it would be in the path of that destruction.

  By now the effort in itself was reflex that sent the crystal block which was a window into new nuclei of death. World after world it had tried, and returned at last as it must always return to press as close as it could come against this window into the world the iGlann once knew. Here, if anywhere—it had told itself time after time. Here, if anywhere—

  A flicker of a new scheme began to move through the timeless mind of the super-iGlann. Somewhere, the hope of a new doorway to success began to glimmer. And if that, too, failed—

  The spring flowed on without ceasing. It could not make basic changes, but it could alter a little, here and there, through one Aladdin or another, so that new channels were opened, so that it might sometime, somehow, somewhere, cease to be.

  They had been married for a week. Sue leaned on the parapet of the roof garden and said, “This is better than taking a trip. I mean, we can fix up our honeymoon to suit ourselves, right here in New York.”

  Fessier put his arm about her. “Sure. But it’s only a rain check. We’ll take a real honeymoon later, when your work lets up. Just the same, some day you’re going to quit your job.”

  She smiled at the night. “Oh, let
me be a career woman for a while longer. There’s no hurry about a rain check.”

  “Of course not,” he said. He put his hands on her shoulders and kissed her gently. “No hurry at all. We’ve always got our talisman, anyhow.”

  Sue frowned a little. “Oh. We don’t, any more. Didn’t I tell you?”

  Fessier said, “Eh? What do you mean, Sue?”

  “I shipped it off today to some museum. As a gift.”

  “You . . . did what? Shipped off the—”

  She opened her mouth. “I . . . oh, Sam! I must be insane! I sent it away—gave it away . . . I couldn’t have!”

  Fessier said quietly, “It’s all right, darling. But tell me just what happened.”

  “I don’t know. I mean, I do know, but I’m just realizing now how crazy I was. I looked up a museum in the library, wrapped up the . . . our talisman, and mailed it there. But—I don’t know why I did it!”

  Fessier said, “Maybe you were hypnotized. What museum was it?”

  She came closer, shivering, and they stood together there between the ancient incandescence of the stars and the fragile lights of the city below. “I’d never heard of it before,” she said. “Some museum in Japan. Is there a place called Hiroshima?”

  THE END.

  VINTAGE SEASON

  Everybody seemed to want the old house during May—and seemed willing to pay fantastic prices for the privilege. Strange tourists they were, too. The Cafe Society of another time.

  Three people came up the walk to the old mansion just at dawn on a perfect May morning. Oliver Wilson in his pajamas watched them from an upper window through a haze of conflicting emotions, resentment predominant. He didn’t want them there.

  They were foreigners., He knew only that much about them. They had the curious name of Sancisco, and their first names, scrawled in loops on the lease, appeared to be Omerie, Kleph and Klia, though it was impossible as he looked down upon them now to sort them out by signature. He hadn’t even been sure whether they would be men or women, and he had expected something a little less cosmopolitan.

 

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