The Collected Stories of Frank Herbert

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The Collected Stories of Frank Herbert Page 78

by Frank Herbert


  It was a painful, monotonous refrain—schismatic, important. The Tegas had to separate its identity from this fading flesh. Behind the chant lay a sense of many voices clamoring.

  Awareness began to divide, a splitting seam that separated him from the compressed contact which controlled the host. There came a sensation of tearing fabric and he rode free, still immersed in the dying neural system because he had no other place to go, but capable of the identity leap.

  Bacit and Tegas now functioning together, sticking him to each instant. He searched his surroundings: twenty meters … twenty meters …

  Flickering, pale emotions registered on his awareness. Another attendant. The man passed out of range. Cold-cold-cold.

  Nothing else.

  What a rare joke this was, he thought. What a mischievous thing for fate to do. A Tegas to be caught like this! Mischievous. Mischievous. It wasn’t fair. Hadn’t he always treated the captive flesh with gentle care? Hadn’t he made fun-lovers out of killers? Fate’s mischief was cruel, not kindly in the manner of the Tegas.

  The Bacit negative identity projected terror, accusation, embarrassment. He had lived too long in the William Bailey flesh. Too long. He had lived down where men were, where things were made—in the thick of being. He’d loved the flesh too much. He should’ve stopped occasionally and looked around him. The great Tegas curiosity which masqueraded as diffidence to hide itself had failed to protect him.

  Failed … failed …

  Within the dying neural system, frantic messages began darting back and forth. His mind was a torrent, a flare of being. Thoughts flew off like sparks from a grinding wheel.

  “It’s decided,” the Tegas transmitted, seeking to quiet his negative self. The communicative contact returned a sharp feeling of shame and loss.

  The Bacit shifted from terror to fifth-order displeasure, which was almost as bad as the terror. All the lost experiences. Lost … lost … lost …

  “I had no idea the Euthanasia Center would be that simple and swift,” the Tegas transmitted. “The incident is past changing. What can we do?”

  He thought of the one vid-call he’d permitted himself, to check on the center’s hours and routine. A gray-haired, polished contact-with-the-public type had appeared on the screen.

  “We’re fast, clean, neat, efficient, sanitary, and reverent,” the man had said.

  “Fast?”

  “Who would want a slow death?”

  The Tegas wished in this instant for nothing more than a slow death. If only he’d checked further. He’d expected this place to be seething with emotions. But it was emotionally dead—silent as a tomb. The joke-thought fell on inner silence.

  The Bacit transfixed their composite self with a projection of urgent measurement—the twenty meters limit across which the Tegas could launch them into a new host.

  But there’d been no way of knowing this place was an emotional vacuum until the Tegas element had entered here, probed the place. And these chambers where he now found himself were much farther from the street than twenty meters.

  Momentarily, the Tegas was submerged in accusatory terror. This death isn’t like murder at all!

  Yet, he’d thought it would be like murder. And it was murder that’d been the saving device of the Tegas/Bacit for centuries. A murderer could be depended upon for total emotional involvement. A murderer could be lured close … close … close, much closer than twenty meters. It’d been so easy to goad the human creatures into that violent act, to set up the ideal circumstances for the identity leap. The Tegas absolutely required profound emotions in a prospective host. One couldn’t focus on the neural totality without it. Bits of the creature’s awareness center tended to escape. That could be fatal—as fatal as the trap in which he now found himself.

  Murder.

  The swift outflow of life from the discarded host, the emotional concentration of the new host—and before he knew it, the murderer was captive of the Tegas, captive in his own body. The captive awareness cried out silently, darting inward with ever tightening frenzy until it was swallowed.

  And the Tegas could get on about its business of enjoying life.

  This world had changed, though, in the past hundred years of the William Bailey period. Murder had been virtually eliminated by the new predictive techniques and computers of the Data Center. The android law-niks were everywhere, anticipating violence, preventing it. This was an elliptical development of society and the Tegas realized he should’ve taken it into account long ago. But life tended to be so pleasant when it held the illusion of never ending. For the Tegas, migrating across the universe with its hosts, moving as a predator in the dark of life, the illusion could be a fact.

  Unless it ended here.

  It didn’t help matters that decisions had been forced upon him. Despite a fairly youthful appearance, the host flesh of William Bailey had been failing. The Tegas could keep its host going far beyond the normal span, but when the creature began to fail, collapse could be massive and abrupt.

  I should’ve tried to attack someone in circumstances where I’d have been killed, he thought. But he’d seen the flaw there. The emotionless law-niks would have been on him almost instantly. Death might’ve escaped him. He could’ve been trapped in a crippled, dying host surrounded by android blankness or, even worse, surrounded by humans rendered almost emotionless by that damnable “Middle Way” and “Eight-fold Karma.”

  And the hounds were on his trail. He knew they were. He’d seen plenty of evidence, sensed the snoopers. He’d lived too long as William Bailey. The ones who thrived on suspicion had become suspicious. And they couldn’t be allowed to examine a Tegas host too closely. He knew what’d put them on his trail: that diabolical “total profile of motives.” The Tegas in William Bailey was technically a murderer thousands of times over. Not that he went on killing and killing; once in a human lifetime was quite enough. Murder could take the fun out of life.

  Thoughts were useless now, he realized. He had, after all, been trapped. Thinking about it led only to Bacit accusations. And while he jumped from thought to thought, the William Bailey body moved nearer and nearer to dissolution. The body now held only the faintest contact with life, and that only because of desperate Tegas efforts. A human medic would’ve declared Bailey dead. Breathing had stopped. Abruptly, the heart fibrillated, ceased function.

  Less than five minutes remained for the Tegas. He had to find a new host in five minutes with this one.

  “Murder-murder-murder,” the Bacit intruded. “You said euthanasia would be murder.”

  The Tegas felt William Bailey–shame. He cursed inwardly. The Bacit, normally such a useful function for a Tegas (driving away intellectual loneliness, providing companionship and caution) had become a distracting liability. The intrusion of terrifying urgency stopped thought.

  Why couldn’t the Bacit be silent and let him think?

  Momentarily, the Tegas realized he’d never before considered the premises of his own actions.

  What was the Bacit?

  He’d never hungered after his own kind, for he had the Bacit. But what, after all, was the Bacit? Why, for example, would it let him captivate only males? Female thinking might be a help in this emergency. Why couldn’t he mix the sexes?

  The Bacit used the inner shout: “Now we have time for philosophy?”

  It was too much.

  “Silence!” the Tegas commanded.

  An immediate sense of loneliness rocked him. He defied it, probed his surroundings. Any host would do in this situation—even a lower animal, although he hadn’t risked one of those in aeons. Surely there must be some emotional upset in this terrible place … something … anything …

  He remembered a long-ago incident when he’d allowed himself to be slain by a type who’d turned out to be completely emotionless. He’d barely managed to shift in time to any eyewitness to the crime. The moment had been like this one in its sudden emergency, but who was eyewitness to this killing? Where was an
alternative host?

  He searched fruitlessly.

  Synapses began snapping in the William Bailey neural system. The Tegas withdrew to the longest-lived centers, probed with increasing frenzy.

  A seething emotional mass lifted itself on his awareness horizon. Fear, self-pity, revenge, anger: a lovely prospect, like a rescue steamer bearing down on a drowning mariner.

  “I’m not William Bailey,” he reminded himself and launched outwards, homing on that boiling tangle of paradox, that emotional beacon …

  There came the usual bouncing shock as he grabbed for the new host’s identity centers. He poured out through a sensorium, discovered his own movements, felt something cold against a wrist. It was not yet completely his wrist, but the eyes were sufficiently under control for him to force them towards the source of sensation.

  A flat, gray metallic object swam into focus. It was pressed against his wrist. Simultaneously, there occurred a swarming sense of awareness within the host. It was a sighing-out—not submission, but negative exaltation. The Tegas felt an old heart begin to falter, looked at an attendant: unfamiliar face—owlish features around a sharp nose.

  But no emotional intensity, no central hook of being to be grabbed and captivated.

  The room was a twin to the one in which he’d been captured by this system. The ceiling’s time read-out said only eight minutes had passed since that other wrist had been touched by death.

  “If you’ll be so kind as to go through the door behind you,” the owl-faced attendant said. “I do hope you can make it. Had to drag three of you in there already this shift; I’m rather weary. Let’s get moving, eh?”

  Weary? Yes—the attendant radiated only emotional weariness. It was nothing a Tegas could grasp.

  The new host responded to the idea of urgency, pushed up out of a chair, shambled towards an oval door. The attendant hurried him along with an arm across the old shoulders.

  The Tegas moved within the host, consolidated neural capacity, swept in an unresisting awareness. It wasn’t an awareness he’d have taken out of choice—defeated, submissive. There was something strange about it. The Tegas detected a foreign object pressed against the host’s spine. A capsule of some kind—neural transmitter/receiver. It radiated an emotional-damper effect, commands of obedience.

  The Tegas blocked it off swiftly, terrified by the implications of such an instrument.

  He had the host’s identity now: James Daggett; that was the name. Age seventy-one. The body was a poor, used-up relic, weaker, more debilitated than William Bailey had been at 236. The host’s birdlike awareness, giving itself up to the Tegas as it gave up to death, radiated oddly mystical thoughts, confusions, assumptions, filterings.

  The Tegas was an angel “come to escort me.”

  Still trailing wisps of William Bailey, the Tegas avoided too close a linkage with this new host. The name and self-recognition centers were enough.

  He realized with a twisted sense of defeat that the old body was being strapped on to a hard surface. The ceiling loomed over him a featureless gray. Dulled nostrils sniffed at an antiseptic breeze.

  “Sleep well, paisano,” the attendant said.

  Not again! the Tegas thought.

  His Bacit half reasserted itself: “We can jump from body to body—dying a little each time. What fun!”

  The Tegas transmitted a remote obscenity from another world and another aeon, describing what the Bacit half could do with its bitterness.

  Vacuity replaced the intrusion.

  Defeat … defeat …

  Part of this doomed mood, he realized, came out of the James Daggett personality. The Tegas took the moment to probe that host’s memories, found the time when the transmitter had been attached to his spine.

  Defeat-obedience-defeat …

  It stemmed from that surgical instant.

  He restored the blocks, quested outwards for a new host. Questing, he searched his Tegas memory. There must be a clue somewhere, a hint, a thought—some way of escape. He missed the Bacit contribution, parts of his memory felt cut off. The neural linkage with the dying James Daggett clung like dirty mud to his thoughts.

  Ancient, dying James Daggett remained filled with mystical confusions until he was swallowed by the Tegas. It was a poor neural connection. The host was supposed to resist. That strengthened the Tegas grip. Instead, the Tegas ran into softly dying walls of other-memory. Linkages slipped. He felt his awareness range contracting.

  Something swam into the questing field—anger, outrage of the kind frequently directed against stupidities. The Tegas waited, wondering if this could be another client of the center.

  Now, trailing the angry one came another identity. Fear dominated this one. The Tegas went into a mental crouch, focused its awareness hungrily. An object of anger, a fearful one—there was a one a Tegas could grab.

  Voices came to him from the hallway outside the alcove—rasping, attacking and (delayed) fearful.

  James Daggett’s old and misused ears cut off overtones, reduced volume. There wasn’t time to strengthen the host’s hearing circuits, but the Tegas grasped the sense of the argument.

  “… told to notify … immediately if … Bailey! William Bailey!… saw the … your desk…”

  And the fearful one: “.… busy … you’ve no idea how … and understaffed and … teen an hour … only … this shift…”

  The voices receded, but the emotional auras remained within Tegas range.

  “Dead!” It was the angry one, a voice-blast accompanied by a neural overload that rolled across the Tegas like a giant wave.

  At the instant of rage, the fearful one hit a momentary fear peak: abject retreat.

  The Tegas pounced, quitting James Daggett in the blink-out as life went under. It was like stepping off a sinking boat into a storm-racked cockleshell. He was momentarily lost in the tracery of material spacetime which was the chosen host. Abruptly, he realized the fearful one had husbanded a reserve of supercilious hate, an ego corner fortified by resentments against authority accumulated over many years. The bouncing shock of the contact was accompanied by an escape of the host’s awareness into the fortified corner.

  The Tegas knew then he was in for a fight such as he’d never before experienced. The realization was accompanied by a blurred glimpse through host-eyes of a darkly suspicious face staring at him across a strapped-down body. The death-locked features of the body shook him—William Bailey! He almost lost the battle right there.

  The host took control of the cheeks, contorted them. The eyes behaved independently: one looking up, the other down. He experienced direct perception, seeing with the fingertips (pale glowing), hearing with the lips (an itch of sound). Skin trembled and flushed. He staggered, heard a voice shout: “Who’re you? What you doing to me?”

  It was the host’s voice, and the Tegas, snatching at the vocal centers, could only burr the edges of sound, not blank out intelligibility. He glimpsed the dark face across from him in an eye-swirling flash. The other had recoiled, staring.

  It was one of the suspicious ones, the hated ones, the ones-who-rule. No time to worry about that now. The Tegas was fighting for survival. He summoned every trick he’d ever learned—cajolery, mystical subterfuges, a flailing of religious illusion, love, hate, word play. Men were an instrument of language and could be snared by it. He went in snake-striking dashes along the neural channels.

  The name! He had to get the name!

  “Carmy … Carmichael!”

  He had half the name then, a toehold on survival. Silently, roaring inward along synaptic channels, he screamed the name—

  “I’m Carmichael! I’m Carmichael!”

  “No!”

  “Yes! I’m Carmichael!”

  “You’re not! You’re not!”

  “I’m Carmichael!”

  The host was bludgeoned into puzzlement: “Who’re you? You can’t be me. I’m … Joe—Joe Carmichael!”

  The Tegas exulted, snapping up the whole name
: “I’m Joe Carmichael!”

  The host’s awareness spiralled inward, darting, frenzied. Eyes rolled. Legs trembled. Arms moved with a disjointed flapping. Teeth gnashed. Tears rolled down the cheeks.

  The Tegas smashed at him now: “I’m Joe Carmichael!”

  “No … no … no…” It was a fading inner scream, winking out … back … out …

  Silence.

  “I’m Joe Carmichael,” the Tegas thought.

  It was a Joe Carmichael thought faintly touched by Tegas inflections and Bacit’s reproving: “That was too close.”

  The Tegas realized he lay flat on his back on the floor. He looked up into dark features identified by host-memories: “Chadrick Vicentelli, Commissioner of Crime Prevention.”

  “Mr. Carmichael,” Vicentelli said. “I’ve summoned help. Rest quietly. Don’t try to move just yet.”

  What a harsh, unmoving face, the Tegas thought. Vicentelli’s was a Noh mask face. And the voice: wary, cold, suspicious. This violent incident wasn’t on any computer’s predictives.… Or was it? No matter—a suspicious man had seen too much. Something had to be done—immediately. Feet already could be heard pounding along the corridor.

  “Don’t know what’s wrong with me,” the Tegas said, managing the Carmichael voice with memory help from the Bailey period. “Dizzy … whole world seemed to go red.…”

  “You look alert enough now,” Vicentelli said.

  There was no give in that voice, no love. Violence there, suspicious hate contained in sharp edges.

  “You look alert enough now.”

  A Tegas shudder went through the Carmichael body. He studied the probing, suspicious eyes. This was the breed Tegas avoided. Rulers possessed terrible resources for the inner battle. That was one of the reasons they ruled. Tegas had been swallowed by rulers—dissolved, lost. Mistakes had been made in the dim beginnings before Tegas learned to avoid ones such as this. Even on this world, the Tegas recalled early fights, near things that had resulted in rumors and customs, myths, racial fears. All primitives knew the code: “Never reveal your true name!”

 

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