“Did I ever tell you that you should jump in feet first without facts?”
“Please, gentlemen,” Iverson interrupted them. “I won’t have dissension in my own house when we’re trying to save that house. I’d rather you didn’t go out, Linc, but if you feel you must, I won’t argue with you.”
“Thanks, Doc. I’ll try to make it only an hour or two.”
“Do you want company?” Wes asked. “I’d like the ride.”
“I’ll bet you’re just crazy for it,” Linc grinned, then nodded. “I’ll be glad to have you along.” He headed for the door.
The side streets they traveled were deserted. The lamps lit the cement in little pools and thrust their radiance upward into the trees, making splotches of orange and yellow and red out of the fall-turned leaves. It was a beautiful time of year, the time Linc liked best; the time of crispness and new energy, wind, and wild leaves swirling; the time when a man could hear himself make a sound upon the earth as he walked through the crackle of leaves. But it was robbed of that feeling tonight. Because this was the time of something else—of monstrous things with unholy stares, sailing against the sky, hovering with the falling leaves.
This journey was incredible, too. People should all have been home, cowering, perhaps peering from their windows. Yet the reports said they were downtown—having come out of curiosity, out of fear and the need for the strength of numbers, and then finding too late that they were caught in traffic jams.
Linc pulled to the curb two blocks from the main street. As he got out of the car, he caught the sound of shouting and the blare of horns. Grand Street made a brightness ahead of them, and they strode toward it, shoulder to shoulder. All Linc could see of the thoroughfare was a tight-packed line of cars. Occasionally the figure of a man or woman hurried across the intersection. But there were no Eyes.
They took the last block at a slow lope. As they rounded the corner onto Grand, Linc thought, “Now we’ll see,” and drew in his breath to face the unexpected.
But it was too unexpected. He stopped in mid-stride and groped for the glass show window of the store nearest him, bumping into Wes, dragging the other man back with him. Ten feet away—ten feet away and two feet above the ground—hovered the hideous oval of an Eye. It had widened in startled surprise as he came into view, and now, as he skittered sideways, the blue iris followed him, rolling sideways between the lids until red appeared at the corners.
They stood, backs to the wall, huddled together. Linc couldn’t force his legs to move. His knees were limp and he feared he would fall. Something pulled at him that he didn’t understand. But it was compelling and powerful, and the urge of it revolted him until fear was a taste in his mouth, and the acid of it jolted him back to sense.
“Cross the street!” he hissed at Wes, and took off at a dead run. As he edged between the cars and climbed over the hoods of others, he cursed himself for a fool. He should have gone back around the corner, back to safety. Why had he chosen to stay?
He stopped in the shelter of a doorway and Wes panted up beside him. Wes was no longer a tanned, gentle giant of a man. His face was dead white and his lips gray. He pointed toward the center of town, and Linc stepped out of the shelter to see.
The street, itself, was a tangle of stalled cars, some climbing the backs of others, wrecked and abandoned. Glass gleamed broken on the cement, and water ran in streams into the gutters.
People sat in some of the cars, their heads visible in the street lights and the flash of neon signs. More people ran among them, or clamored up and down the sidewalks, or peered frozen from the shops.
And over the street, caught here and there in the light, were six Eyes. They glided back and forth with an even beat as though they were breathing. They sailed up and down the street, turning their whole enormous bulk, tilting downward to gaze into the cars and the stores. Their blinking was a vast closing and opening, their bodiless rolling was a horror against nature. They moved quickly, tipping, and coming low. The street lights caught them and were reflected in their depths and the glint was almost phosphorescent, alien and eerie.
The fantastic scene went on for blocks. The Eyes bobbed and sailed, flushing people out of hiding places. In the street, a man tried to gain the safety of a car, an Eye close behind him. A woman in the car struck his grasping hand with the steel spike of a shoe, rolled up the window and locked her door. The man ran on, but the Eye stayed over his head. As he came to a black sedan, a little girl cried and ran from her hiding place, another man behind her. The father caught the child but the Eye had fastened on him now. It swung low, its lashes brushing the child’s head. He pushed the child through the car window, reached in the back and pulled out an umbrella, and climbed to the roof of the sedan. The Eye rose up even with his face and he slashed at it with the umbrella; short, vicious stabs. The Eye recoiled, blinking rapidly. The man slashed again, and as the Eye turned away, its interest shifted to a group of four people creeping along behind its back, and went after them.
“Look down at the corner,” Wes said into Linc’s ear.
Collected in a side street at the intersection was a crowd—a large crowd of fifty or sixty people. And they didn’t seem frightened. Linc walked closer to get a better view until he was only a few stores away from them. They stood together, yet apart, their shoulders limp, their hands at their sides, and their eyes glazed over in a hard stare. He had seen them before, only then they were walking double file, and being run down by impatient cars. They belonged to the Eyes. And they, in turn, would walk into the fields and the woods until they came to that black thing down among the trees.
The six Eyes were still sailing up and down the street, passing from light to light, glowing red or blue or green from the neon. Here and there, he saw a person brought up short, go limp, and follow the glide of an Eye, to join the group at the corner.
“Have you seen enough?” he asked Wes.
“Too much.” Wes’ voice was hoarse. “Look out!”
Linc ducked just in time to miss being caught by the rushing lashes of one of the Eyes. As he regained his feet, the Eye stopped and swiveled to come back for him. Wes’ hand was strong on his arm, pulling him out into the street, and he broke away from the watery stare of the six-foot thing, dodging between the cars. They gained the other side. The Eye didn’t follow.
He ran around the corner, into the dimness of the side street. Wes’ feet sounded beside him, and he didn’t stop running until he reached his car. Underneath his revulsion and terror were the facts he had gathered, and in them somewhere had to be something to provide him with an answer.
* * * *
They reported to Iverson, then went down the corridor to a smaller office where they could have some privacy out of Collins’ line of fire. Linc gulped the coffee Wes heated and said nothing, trying to get his thoughts under control.
There was one thing on his mind that he could be rid of, and now. He said, “Wes, this afternoon at the game, and then at the house—all that arguing I did—I want to apologize.”
“There’s no need for that, and you know it. You have a crooked idea of friendship if you think that every little difference of opinion needs forgiveness.”
“Nevertheless, I felt like a fool when you overlooked it and came along with me. Nobody else offered to come.
You keep jolting me, you know? What I said this afternoon about friends and the obligations they create, I guess if I’m honest with myself, those are the easy ways I’ve used to soothe my own rejections. You’re the first man who has ever put up with me long enough to see if there is anything inside me to be friendly with.”
Wes was grinning. “I managed to get by your ugly face, if that’s what you mean.”
“Okay,” Linc surrendered, “I won’t say any more.”
“I think Kelly’s beginning to soften you up a bit.”
“Could be,” Linc agreed. “I
hope she’s all right there alone.”
“She’s got Ichabod, and from the sound of him when we left, he’s not likely to cower from those things. Like that man downtown, he’d probably face an Eye and bark his heart out at it.”
That man downtown. Linc remembered him as he fought the Eye with the umbrella. Raw courage. That man was probably an average guy, a father with a little girl; and the little girl was probably an average brat most of the time; but at that particular moment she had become priceless, and he had been valiant in his fight to save her. And he had saved her. The Eye had moved off. True, it had gone after bigger game, but the thrusts had made it retreat.
“The simplest solution.” And it was so simple that he had overlooked it!
“I see that trouble-shooting expression on your face,” Wes commented. “Have you got an idea?”
He nodded. “Even simple enough to satisfy Collins. Let’s get Iverson down here and I’ll lay it out.”
Iverson came alone. Collins had gone home, confident that nothing would be settled tonight. Iverson’s face was gaunt with weariness. “I’ve just had a call from the mayor,” he said. “Martial law has been declared. The governor’s here and the National Guard is coming.”
“We can use the soldiers, but why the martial law? People need protection from the Eyes, not from each other,” Wes said.
“Things have changed since you left downtown. The people have run amuck. They’re breaking into stores. Can you imagine it? With those Eyes hanging over them, they’re looting. There isn’t a store left intact on Grand Street. I’ll never understand human beings, if I live to be six hundred.”
“It’s all born of the same thing,” Wes said. “Sanity is gone, so they follow any impulse. There will be mobs, too. Any leader in a storm.”
Iverson said, “You called me down here, Linc. What do you have in mind?”
“The obvious, Doc. We must attack. Fight. Destroy the Eyes before they take more people out to that place in the woods.”
“But how? If it could be done, someone would have started it by now.”
“You haven’t seen those Eyes up close. You don’t understand what they do to a man. You don’t have any inclination to fight—you either want to vomit or run. I’ll bet no one has attempted to fight them except one little man with an umbrella. We were close to them—and I found out one thing for sure. They are not machines. I don’t know what they are, but they’re not machinery. They are eyes. And they’re like human eyes. Therefore, they should be as vulnerable as human eyes.”
“Right,” Wes said. “Nothing’s more vulnerable than an eye. It has no armor—nothing but a blink to protect it.” He was suddenly out of the lethargy and eager over Linc’s idea.
Linc hurried on to convince Iverson. ‘“They’re big—anyone could hit them, with a bullet, a shotgun, an arrow, anything. I don’t know how they live so I can’t say such a wound would kill them, but blinded, they’d be harmless and we could dispose of them.”
Iverson’s head jerked up, his weariness gone. “Yes. Yes.” He smiled slightly as he visualized the battle in his mind.
“The only problem is,” Linc said, “we have to find people who are willing to go up against them. It will take courage—more than most men have except when it’s forced on them. Then who?”
Iverson was quick with the answer. “We’ll wait for the National Guard. They’ll act under orders.”
“I don’t think we can wait. When will they get here?”
“Tomorrow or the next day. The roads into town have to be cleared. If they can’t clear them, they’ll have to come through the fields. The highways are just masses of wrecked cars.”
“Then we can’t wait. Every hour that we delay means more people given up to that black thing in the woods. I couldn’t sit here with a workable plan knowing they were being led away.”
Iverson bobbed his head. “You’re right—as usual.”
“Then where do we get the men?” Wes asked. “Police?”
“That’s a good possibility. Police,” Linc answered, “and maybe some of the R.O.T.C. students from the campus. They know how to handle weapons. Then, of course, there are us.”
“I think we can probably pick our own ground,” Wes said. “The Eyes will undoubtedly come anyplace they see a crowd.”
Iverson stood up. “You two go ahead and plan a strategy. I’ll make the calls to the police and students. I think I carry enough weight around here to get them. In fact, I know I do—I’ve got the whole reactor behind me for blackmail.”
He left, and Linc pulled out a piece of paper and bent with Wes over the desk, setting up a plan of action. Tomorrow morning, with the first light, he would win back his beautiful time of the year by wrenching it violently away from the ungodly things that had stolen it.
CHAPTER FOUR
Dawn had climbed two hours up the sky, and the sun slanted through the east windows of the lab. The assembled men were restless; forty of them, shifting about, fingering their rifles and shotguns with eager hands. Linc waited close to Wes for Iverson to join them and give the final word. The excitement inside him was a bubbling, a churning in his stomach.
This morning would be his. A real fight, a hand-to-hand battle—this kind of action he knew backward and forward, and the feel and taste of it, the pending wildness of it, were spurs that made his feet want to stride outside on their own will, made his voice want to come up shouting.
“I think we’re going to do it,” Wes’s voice was thick with enthusiasm. “Look at those men, Linc. They’re like tigers, every one of them. I think we’re going to do it this morning.”
Linc glanced over the forty men again, a frown edging between his blue eyes. “Some of those kids are so blatantly kids. Nineteen, twenty. I wish Iverson could have enlisted some seniors, at least. I worry about them.”
“Don’t,” Wes said. “They’re eager. They’ll be your best men this morning. Just wait and see.”
Iverson’s entrance interrupted them. “Are we all set?”
“All set,” Linc nodded.
“Good. Then we’ll move out in ten minutes. You men will go out in a group, so that we can lure the Eyes simply by our show of numbers. The police first, and then the students.” He lowered his voice and addressed Linc directly. “We’ll follow behind, at a safe distance.”
Linc glanced up quickly to meet the old man’s gaze. “What do you mean, safe distance? You’ve got this all wrong, Doc, if you think I’m here to be an observer, or some back-line general. I’ve brought my gun, and I’m going to fight.”
Iverson shook his head. “You’re not going to fire one shot. The lab needs you; if this doesn’t work, then who knows, maybe the whole town needs you for another try. However it is, you’re not going to join the fight. No one from the Lab is to engage in combat. And for once, I won’t stomach any arguments. Argue, and you’re out altogether. Understood?”
Iverson stepped away before Linc could protest. He faced the men and began to outline the plan.
“I don’t like this,” Linc said to Wes. “I don’t like to be counted out of something I planned myself.”
“We have no choice. Who knows—” Wes tried to joke the scowl off Linc’s face—“maybe we can get rich by selling our observations to the Sunday magazines.”
A moment later, the quiet was broken by the sharp shuffling of eighty feet. The men were moving out. Linc reached for his gun, but Wes’ hand closed over his arm, and he laid it back down. “Okay,” Linc grunted, “so I’m out—put to pasture—an observer. Let’s go. I guess our battle group is forming over there.”
He indicated Iverson and the knot of lab men who had formed around him. None of them had guns, and their empty hands were nervously clenching and unclenching. The morning was warm, the Indian summer sun lying on Linc’s shoulders like a sweater. He stayed beside Wes, walking along the concrete of the par
king lot, then across trimmed grass, through the crackle of fallen leaves. The students and police were well in advance, already off the lab grounds, onto the brushy weed growth of the open meadow.
A woods loomed one thousand feet ahead of them, and a pheasant took flight at their approach, its bright head glinting metallic green in the sunshine. Everything was strangely quiet. Somewhere in the forest, a flicker sounded its jungle cry, warming up for its journey south to tropical forests.
Fifteen minutes had passed, and the guns in the hands of the men had dropped from the ready position. Conversations had sprung up, carried to Linc’s hearing by the breeze that rustled the leaves and parachuted others to the ground.
“I guess the Eyes are late sleepers,” chuckled Myers, “and just can’t get themselves open this early.”
Linc winced at the levity; yet he felt an answering laugh within himself. Relief? He didn’t know. There was as yet nothing to be relieved about. Maybe the battle wouldn’t be fought and no men would die this morning; but there would be another morning.
With a whir of wings that shattered the morning stillness, the forest suddenly erupted, spewing forth birds of all sizes. They soared up from the trees, a cloud of them, noisy flaps that were crows, and whirring flutters that were warblers. Joining in a crowded sky, they drove straight over the approaching men and off toward the lab. Their calls were loud, and the men stopped still, startled by the sudden activity.
Squirrels which had been nibbling along the edge of the woods suddenly were dashing headlong into the dimness, making for cover, and rabbits leaped after them.
Then, up and over the highest elm came the skin and ball of a giant Eye. It sailed up in a great swoop, clearing the forest, and arcing down for the field.
“There’s another one.” Wes grabbed his arm. “To the west.”
They came in a steady dive, now, eight of them—oval obscenities, wide-open, staring in a challenge that sent quivers of gooseflesh down Linc’s back. They banked and rolled and settled groundward with a swaying motion from side to side.
The Flying Eyes Page 3