Code Of The Lifemaker
Page 6
space-engineering corporations, and the decision has been made to conduct
comprehensive experiments to assess the effects of the extraterrestrial
environment on parapsychological phenomena. . . ."
Zambendorf went on to outline the Mars project, at the same time managing to
imply a somewhat exaggerated role for the team without actually saying anything
too specific. Jackson listened intently, nodded at the right times, and injected
appropriate responses, but he kept his eye on the auditorium for the first signs
of restlessness. "It sounds fascinating, Karl," he said when he judged the
strain to have increased to Just short of breaking point. "We wish you all the
success in the world, or maybe I should say out of the world—this one,
anyhow—and hope to see you back here on the show again, maybe, after it's all
over."
"Thank you. I hope so," Zambendorf replied.
Jackson swiveled to face Zambendorf directly, leaned back to cross one foot over
the opposite knee, and allowed his hands to fall from his chin to the armrests
of his chair, his change of posture signaling the change of mood and subject. He
grinned mischievously, in a way that said this was the part everyone knew had to
come eventually. Zambendorf maintained a composed expression. "I have an object
in my pocket," Jackson confided. "It's an item of lost property that was handed
in at the theater office earlier this evening, probably belonging to somebody in
the audience here. Somebody thought Zambendorf might be able to tell us
something about it." He turned away for a second and made a palms-up gesture of
candor toward the cameras and the audience. "Honestly, folks, this is absolutely
genuine. I swear it wasn't set up or anything like that." He turned back to
resume talking to Zambendorf. "Well, we thought it was a good idea, and as I
said, I have the object with me right here in my pocket. Can you say anything
about it ... or maybe about the owner? ... I have to say I don't know a lot
about this kind of thing, whether this would be considered too tough an
assignment, or what, but—" He broke off as he saw the distant look creeping over
Zambendorf's face. The auditorium became very still.
"It's vague," Zambendorf murmured after a pause. "But I think I might be able to
connect to it. ..." His voice became sharper for a moment. "If anyone here has
lost something, please don't say anything. We'll see what we can do." He fell
silent again, and then said to Jackson. "You can help me, Ed. Put your hand
inside your pocket, if you would, and touch the object with your fingers."
Jackson complied. Zambendorf went on, "Trace its outline and visualize its image
. . . Concentrate harder . . . Yes, that's better . . . Ah! I'm getting
something clearer now . . . It's something made of leather, brown leather ... A
man's wallet, I think. Yes, I'm sure of it. Am I right?"
Jackson shook his head in amazement, drew a light tan wallet from his pocket,
and held it high for view. "If the owner is here, don't say anything, remember,"
he reminded the audience, raising his voice to be heard above the gasps of
amazement and the burst of applause that greeted the performance. "There might
be more yet." He looked back at Zambendorf with a new respect. When he spoke
again, he kept his voice low and solemn, presumably to avoid disturbing the
psychic atmosphere. "How about the owner, Karl? Do you see anything there?"
Zambendorf dabbed his forehead and returned his handkerchief to his pocket. Then
he took the wallet, held it between the palms of his hands, and stared down at
it. "Yes, the owner is here," he announced. He looked out to address the
anonymous owner in the audience. "Concentrate hard, please, and try to project
an image of yourself into my mind. When contact is established, you will feel a
mild tingling sensation in your skull, but that's normal." A hush fell once
more. People closed their eyes and reached out with their minds to grasp the
tenuous currents of strange forces flowing around them. Then Zambendorf said, "I
see you . . . dark, lean in build, and wearing light blue. You are not alone
here. Two people very close to you are with you . . . family members. And you
are far from home . . . visiting this city, I think. You are from a long way
south of here." He looked back at Jackson. "That should do."
Jackson swiveled to speak to the audience. "You can reveal yourself now if
you're here, Mr. Dark, Lean, and Blue," he called out. "Is the owner of this
wallet here? If so, would he kindly stand up and identify himself, please?"
Everywhere, heads swung this way and that, and turned to scan the back of the
theater. Then, slowly and self-consciously, a man rose to his feet about halfway
back near one of the aisles. He was lean in build, Hispanic in appearance, with
jet-black hair and a clipped mustache, and was wearing a light-blue suit. He
seemed bewildered and stood rubbing the top of his head with his fingers,
looking unsure of what he was supposed to do. A boy in the seat beside him
tugged at his sleeve, and a dark-skinned woman in the next seat beyond was
saying something and gesticulating in the direction of the stage. "Would you
come forward and identify your property, please, sir," Jackson said. The man
nodded numbly and began picking his way along the row toward the aisle while
applause erupted all around, lasting until he had made his way to the front of
the auditorium. The noise abated as Jackson came forward to the edge of the
stage and inspected the wallet's contents. "This is yours?" he said, looking
down. The man nodded. "What's the name inside here?" Jackson enquired.
"The name is Miguel," Zambendorf supplied from where he was still sitting.
"He's right!" Jackson made an appealing gesture as if inviting the audience to
share his awe, looked back at Zambendorf, and then stooped to hand the wallet to
Miguel. "Where are you from, Miguel?" he asked.
Miguel found his voice at last. "From Mexico ... on vacation with my wife and
son . . . Yes, this is mine, Mr. Jackson. Thank you." He cast a final nervous
glance at Zambendorf and began walking hastily back up the aisle.
"Happy birthday, Miguel," Zambendorf called after him.
Miguel stopped, turned round, and looked puzzled.
"Isn't it your birthday?" Jackson asked. Miguel shook his head.
"Next week," Zambendorf explained. Miguel gulped visibly and fled the remaining
distance back to his seat.
"Well, how about that!" Jackson exclaimed, and stood with his arms outstretched
in appeal while the house responded with sustained applause and shouts of
approval. Behind Jackson, Zambendorf sipped from his water glass and allowed the
atmosphere to reinforce itself. He could also have revealed that the unknown
benefactor who had turned the wallet in after picking Miguel's pocket, and whose
suggestion it had been to make a challenge out of it, had also been of swarthy
complexion —Armenian, in fact—but somehow that would have spoiled things.
Now the mood of the audience was right. Its appetite had been whetted, and it
wanted more. Zambendorf rose and moved forward as if to get closer to them, and
Jackson moved away instinctively to beco
me a spectator; it had become
Zambendorf's show. Zambendorf raised his arms; the audience became quiet again,
but this time tense and expectant. "I have said many times that what I do is not
some kind of magic," he told them, his voice rich and resonant in the hall. "It
is anyone's to possess. I will show you ... At this moment I am sending the
impression of a color out into your minds—all of you—a common color. Open your
minds . . . Can you see it?" He looked up at the camera that was live at that
moment. "Distance is no barrier. You people watching from your homes, you can
join us in this. Focus on the concept of color. Exclude everything else from
your thoughts. What do you see?" He turned his head from side to side, waited,
and then exclaimed, "Yellow! It was yellow! How many of you got it?" At once a
quarter or more of the people in the audience raised their hands.
"Now a number!" Zambendorf told them. His face was radiating excitement. "A
number between one and fifty, with its digits both odd but different, such as
fifteen ... but eleven wouldn't do because both its digits are the same. Yes?
Now . . . think! Feel it!" He closed his eyes, brought his fists up to his
temples, held the pose for perhaps five seconds, then looked around once more
and announced, "Thirty-seven!" About a third of the hands went up this time,
which from the chorus of "ooh"s and "ah"s was enough to impress significantly
more people than before. "Possibly I confused some of you there," Zambendorf
said. "I was going to try for thirty-five, but at the last moment I changed my
mind and decided on—" He stopped as over half the remaining hands went up to add
to the others, but it looked as if every hand in the house was waving eagerly.
"Oh, some of you did get that, apparently. I should try to be more precise."
But nobody seemed to care very much about his having been sloppy as the
conviction strengthened itself in more and more of those present that what they
were taking part in was an extremely unusual and immensely significant event.
Suddenly all of life's problems and frustrations could be resolved effortlessly
by the simple formula of wishing them away. Anyone could comprehend the secret;
anyone could command the power. The inescapable became more palatable; the
unattainable became trivial. There was no need to feel alone or defenseless. The
Master would guide them. They belonged.
"Who is Alice?" Zambendorf demanded. Several Alices responded. "From a city far
to the west . . . on the coast," he specified. One of the Alices was from Los
Angeles. Zambendorf saw a wedding imminent, involving somebody in her immediate
family—her daughter. Alice confirmed that her daughter was due to be married the
following month. "You've been thinking about her a lot," Zambendorf said.
"That's why you came through so easily. Her name's Nancy, isn't it?"
"Yes . . . Yes, it is." Gasps of astonishment.
"I see the ocean. Is her fiance a sailor?"
"In the navy ... on submarines."
"Involved with engineering?"
"No, navigation . . . but yes, I guess that does involve a lot of engineering
these days."
"Exactly. Thank you." Loud applause.
Zambendorf went on to supply details of a successful business deal closed that
morning by a clothing salesman from Brooklyn, to divine after some hesitation
the phone number and occupation of a redheaded young woman from Boston, and to
supply correctly the score of a football game in which two boys in the second
row had played the previous Tuesday. "You can do it too!" he insisted in a voice
that boomed to the rear of the house without aid of a microphone. "I'll show
you."
He advanced to the edge of the stage and stared straight ahead while behind him
Jackson wrote numbers on a flip-chart. "Concentrate on the first one,"
Zambendorf told everybody. "All together. Now try and send it ... Think it ...
That's better ... A three! I see three. Now the next . . ."He got seven right
out of eight. "You see!" he shouted exultantly. "You're good—very good. Let's
try something more difficult."
He picked up the black velvet bag provided by prior arrangement and had Jackson
and a couple of people near the front verify that it was opaque and without
holes. Then he turned his back and allowed Jackson to secure the bag over his
head as a blindfold. Then, following Zambendorf's instructions, Jackson pointed
silently to select a woman in the audience, and the woman chose an item from
among the things she had with her and held it high for everyone to see. It
happened to be a green pen. She then pointed to another member of the audience—a
man sitting a half dozen or so rows farther back—to repeat the procedure. The
man held up a watch with a silver bracelet, and so it went. Jackson noted the
objects on the flip-chart. When he had listed five, he covered the chart, turned
the stand around to face the wall for good measure, and told Zambendorf he was
free to remove the blindfold.
"Remember, I'm relying on every one of you," Zambendorf said. "You must all help
if we're going to make this a success. Now, the first of the objects—recall it
and picture it in your minds. Now send it to me. . . ." He frowned,
concentrated, and pounded his brow. The audience redoubled its efforts. Viewers
at home joined in. "Writing . . . something to do with writing," Zambendorf said
at last. "A pen! Now the color. The color is ... green! I get green. Were you
sending green?" By the time he got the fifth item correctly, the audience was
wild.
For his finale Zambendorf produced his other prop—a solid-looking metal rod
about two feet long and well over an inch thick. Jackson couldn't bend it when
challenged, and neither could three men from near the front of the audience.
"But the power of the mind overcomes matter," Zambendorf declared. He gave
Jackson the rod to hold, and touched it lightly in the center with his fingers.
"This will require all of us," Zambendorf called out. "All of us here, and
everybody at home. I want you all to help me concentrate on bending. Think
it—bending. Say it—bending! Bending!" He looked at Jackson and nodded in time
with the rhythm as he repeated the word.
Jackson caught on quickly and began motioning with a hand like a conductor
urging an orchestra. "Bending! Bending! Bending! Bending! . . ." he recited, his
voice growing louder and more insistent.
Gradually, the audience took up the chant. "Bending! Bending! Bending! Bending!"
Zambendorf turned fully toward them and threw his arms wide in exhortation. His
eyes gleamed in the spotlights; his teeth shone white. "Bending! Bending!
Bending!" He laid a hand on the rod. Jackson gasped and stared down wide-eyed as
the metal bowed. Some of the audience were staring ashen-faced. Zambendorf took
the rod and held it high over his head in one hand, gazing up at it triumphantly
while it continued to bend in full view while a thousand voices in unison raised
themselves to a frenzy. Women had started screaming. A number of people fled
along the aisles toward the exits. A bearded, hawk-faced man with an open Bible
in one hand climbed onto the stage, pointed an
accusing finger at Zambendorf,
and began reading something unintelligible amid the pandemonium before security
guards grabbed him and hustled him away.
A frantic viewer in Delaware was trying to get past a jammed NBC switchboard to
report that her aluminum chair had buckled at the precise moment that Zambendorf
commanded the rod to bend. Another's lighting circuits all blew at the same
instant. A hen coop in Wyoming was struck by lightning. A washing machine caught
fire in Alabama. Eight people had heart attacks. A clock began running backward
in California. Two expectant mothers had had spontaneous abortions. A nuclear
reactor shut itself down in Tennessee.
In the control room on a higher level behind the stage area, one of the video
engineers on duty stared incredulously at the scenes on the main panel monitor
screens. "My God!" he muttered to the technician munching a tuna sandwich in the
chair next to him. "If he told them to give him all their money, rip off their
clothes, and follow him to China, you know something, Chet—they'd do it."
Chet continued eating and considered the statement. "Or to Mars, maybe," he
replied after a long, thoughtful silence.
4
EARLY THE FOLLOWING EVENING, CONLON AND WHITTAKER arrived at Gerold Massey's
house, situated at the end of a leafy cul-de-sac on the north side of
Georgetown. Although lofty, spacious, and solidly built, it was an untidy and in
some ways inelegant heap of a house—a composition of after-thoughts, with walls
and gables projecting in all directions, roofs meeting at strange angles, and a
preposterous chateau-style turret adorning the upper part of one comer. The
interior was a warren of interconnecting rooms and passages, with cubbyholes and
stairways in unexpected places, old-fashioned sash windows, and lots of wood
carving and paneling. The part of the cellars not dedicated to storing the junk
that Massey had been accumulating through life contained a workshop-lab which he
used mainly for developing psychological testing equipment and perfecting new
magic props, while the floors above included, in addition to the usual living
space, an overflowing library, a computer room, and accommodations for his
regular flow of short-term guests, who varied from students temporarily out on