(There is still) “Work to do,” he said.
She shook her head. (Not for me. It is not a work I want or understand.) Taking up the cigarette lighter, she dropped it into her purse, smiling a little.
Grunewald and Manzelli traded another look. This time Manzelli made a sign of agreement.
(We have been) “Doing work” (here which might—interest you), said Grunewald. Give you hope. Give you back your tomorrows.
The brown eyes that turned to him were almost unfocused. He thought that her face was like white paper, stretched across the bones; and some Chinese artist had penned the delicate blue tracery of veins across her temples and hands.
He tried awkwardly to explain. The nature of the inhibitor field had been more fully worked out since the star ship left. Even before that time, it had been possible to generate the field artificially and study its effects; now Grunewald and Manzelli had gotten together on a project of creating the same thing on a huge scale. It shouldn’t take much apparatus—a few tons, perhaps; and once the field was set up, using a nuclear disintegrator to furnish the necessary power, solar energy should be enough to maintain it.
The project was highly unofficial: now that the first press of necessity was gone, those scientists who chose were free to work on whatever suited their own fancy, and materials weren’t difficult to obtain. There was a small organization which helped get what was necessary; all that Grunewald and Manzelli were doing here at the Institute was testing, the actual construction went on elsewhere. Their labor seemed harmless to everyone else, a little dull compared to what was going on in other lines of endeavor. No one paid any attention to it, or reasoned below the surface of Grunewald’s public explanation.
Sheila regarded him vaguely, and he wondered about the regions into which her inner self had gone. “Why?” she asked. “What is it you’re really doing?”
Manzelli smiled, with a harshness over him. (Isn’t it obvious? We mean to) “Build an orbital space station” (and set it going several thousand miles above the surface). “Full-scale field generators” (in it. We’ll bring mankind back to the) “Old days.”
She didn’t cry out, or gasp, or even laugh. She only nodded, as if it were a blurred image of no meaning.
(Retreat from reality—how sane are you?) asked Grunewald’s eyes.
(What reality?) she flashed at him.
Manzelli shrugged. He knew she wouldn’t tell anyone, he could read that much in her, and that was what counted. If it didn’t give her the excited joy Grunewald had hoped for, it was no concern of his.
Sheila wandered over to one side of the room. A collection of apparatus there looked peculiarly medical. She saw the table with its straps, the drawer with hypodermic needles and ampules, the machine which crouched blackly near the head of the table—“What is this?” she asked. Her tone should have told them that she knew already, but they were too immersed in their own wishes.
“Modified electric-shock treatment,” said Grunewald. He explained that in the first weeks of the change there had been an attempt to study the functional aspects of intelligence by systematic destruction of the cerebral cortex cells in animals, and measurement of the effects. But it had soon been abandoned as too inhumane and relatively useless. “I thought you knew” (about it), he finished. (It was) “In the biology and psych departments when Pete” (was still here. I remember he) “protested strongly” (against it Didn’t he gripe to) “you” (about it too)?
Sheila nodded dimly.
“The change” (made) “men cruel,” said Manzelli. (And) “Now” (they) “aren’t” (even that, any longer. They’ve become something other than man, and this world of rootless intellect has lost all its old dreams and loves. We want to restore humanness).
Sheila turned away from the ugly black machine. “Good-by,” she said.
“I—well—” Grunewald looked at the floor. “Keep in touch, won’t you?” (Let us know where you are, so if Pete comes back—)
Her smile was as remote as death. (He will never come back. But good-by, now.)
She went out the door and down the corridor. Near the staircase was a washroom door. It was not marked “Men” or “Women,” even the Western world had gone beyond such prudery, and she went in and looked in a mirror. The face that regarded her was hollow, and the hair hung lank and dull to her shoulders. She made an effort with comb and water to spruce up, not knowing or caring why she did, and then went down the stairway to the first floor.
The door to the director’s office stood open, letting a breeze find its way between the windows and the building entrance. There were quiet machines inside, probably doing the work of a large secretarial staff. Sheila went past the outer suite and knocked on the open door of the inner office.
Helga Arnulfsen glanced up from her desk. She’d grown a little thin too, Sheila realized, and there was a darkness in her eyes. But even if she was more informally dressed than had once been her habit, she was strong and smooth to look on. Her voice, which had always been husky, lifted a trifle in surprise: “Sheila!”
“How do you do?”
“Come in,” (do come in, sit down. It’s been a long time since I saw you). Helga was smiling as she came around the desk and took Sheila’s hand, but her fingers were cold.
She pressed a button and the door closed. (Now we can have) “Privacy,” she said. (This is the sign I’m not to be bothered.) She pulled up a chair across from Sheila’s and sat down, crossing her long trim legs man-fashion. “Well, good” (to see you. I hope you’re feeling well.) You don’t look well, poor kid.
“I—” Sheila clasped her hands and unclasped them again and picked at the purse in her lap. “I—” (Why did I come?)
Eyes: (Because of Pete.)
Nod: (Yes. Yes, that must be it. Sometimes I don’t know why—But we both loved him, didn’t we?)
“You,” said Helga without tone, “are the only one he cared for.” And you hurt him. Your suffering was grief within him.
I know. That’s the worst of it. (And still) “He wasn’t the same man,” said Sheila. (He changed too much, like all the world. Even as I held him, he slipped by me, time itself carried him away.) “I lost him even before he died.”
“No. You had him, it was always you.” Helga shrugged. “Well, life goes on,” (in an amputated fashion. We eat and breathe and sleep and work, because there is nothing else we can do.)
“You have strength,” said Sheila. (You have endured where I couldn’t.)
“Oh, I kept going,” answered Helga.
“You still have tomorrow.”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
Sheila smiled, it trembled on her mouth. (I’m luckier than you are. I have yesterday.)
“They may come back,” said Helga. (There’s no telling what has happened to them. Have you the courage to wait?)
“No,” said Sheila. “Their bodies may come back,” (but not Pete. He has changed too much, and I can’t change with him. Nor would I want to be a weight around his neck.)
Helga laid a hand on Sheila’s arm. How thin it was! You could feel the bones underneath. “Wait,” she said. “Therapy” (is progressing. You can be brought up to) “Normal” (in—well—a) “few years, at most.”
“I don’t think so.”
There was a touch of contempt, thinly veiled, in the cool blue eyes. Do you want to live up to the future? Down underneath, do you really desire to keep pace? “What else” (can you do) “but wait? Unless suicide—”
“No, not that either.” (There are still mountains, deep valleys, shining rivers, sun and moon and the high stars of winter.) “I’ll find my—adjustment.”
(I’ve kept in touch with) “Kearnes.” (He) “Seemed (to) “think” (you were) “progressing.”
“Oh, yes.” I’ve learned to hide it. There are too many eyes in this new world. “But I didn’t come to talk about myself, Helga.” (I just came to say) “Good-by.”
“Where” (are you going? I have to keep in touch with you, if he should come ba
ck.)
“I’ll write” (and let you know).
“Or give a message to a Sensitive.” (The postal system is obsolete.)
That too? I remember old Mr. Barneveldt, shuffling down the street in his blue uniform, when I was a little girl. He used to have a piece of candy for me.
“Look, I’m getting hungry,” said Helga. (Why don’t we go have) “Lunch?”
(No, thank you. I don’t feel like it.) Sheila got up. “Good-by, Helga.”
“Not good-by, Sheila. We’ll see you again, and you’ll be well then.”
“Yes,” said Sheila. “I’ll be all right. But good-by.”
She walked out of the office and the building. There were more people abroad now, and she mingled with them. A doorway across the street offered a hidden place.
She felt no sense of farewell. There was an emptiness in her, as if grief and loneliness and bewilderment had devoured themselves. Now and then one of the shadows flitted across her mind, but they weren’t frightening any longer. Almost, she pitied them. Poor ghosts! They would die soon.
She saw Helga emerge and walk alone down the street, toward some place where she would swallow a solitary lunch before going back to work. Sheila smiled, shaking her head a little. Poor efficient Helga!
Presently Grunewald and Manzelli came out and went the same way, lost in conversation. Sheila’s heart gave a small leap. The palms of her hands were cold and wet. She waited till the men were out of sight, then crossed the street again and re-entered the Institute.
The noise of her shoes was hard on the stairway. She breathed deeply, trying for steadiness. When she came out on the seventh floor, she stood for a minute waiting for the self-control she needed. Then she ran down the hall to the physical laboratory.
The door gaped ajar. She hesitated again, looking at the unfinished machine within. Hadn’t Grunewald told her about some fantastic scheme to—? No matter. It couldn’t work. He and Manzelli, that whole little band of recidivists, were insane.
Am I insane? she wondered. If so, there was an odd strength in her. She needed more resolution for what she was going to do than it took to put a gun barrel in her mouth and squeeze a trigger.
The shock machine lay like some armored animal beside the table. She worked swiftly, adjusting it. Memory of Pete’s anger at its early use had, indeed, come back to her in the house of isolation; and Kearnes had been pleased to give her all the texts she asked for, glad that she was finding an objective interest. She smiled again. Poor Kearnes! How she had fooled him.
The machine hummed, warming up. She took a small bundle from her purse and unwrapped it. Syringe, needle, bottle of anesthetic, electrode paste, cord to tie to the switch so she could pull it with her teeth. And a timer for the switch, too. She had to estimate the safe time for what was necessary, she would be unconscious when the process must be stopped.
Maybe it wouldn’t work. Quite likely her brain would simply fry in her skull. What of it?
She smiled out the window as she injected herself. Good-by, sun, good-by, blue heaven, clouds, rain, airy song of home-bound birds. Good-by and thank you.
Stripping off her clothes, she lay on the table and fastened the electrodes in place. They felt cold against her skin. Some of the straps were easy to buckle, but the right arm—well, she had come prepared, she had a long belt that went under the table, around her wrist, a padlock she could snap shut. Now she was immobile.
Her eyes darkened as the drug took hold. It was good to sleep.
Now—one quick jerk with her teeth.
THUNDER AND FIRE AND SHATTERING DARKNESS
RUIN AND HORROR AND LIGHTNING
PAIN PAIN PAIN
CHAPTER 19
“HELLO, Earth. Peter Corinth calling Earth from Star Ship I, homeward bound.”
Buzz and murmur of cosmic interference, the talking of the stars. Earth a swelling blue brilliance against night, her moon like a pearl hung on the galaxy’s breast, the sun wreathed in flame.
“Hello, Earth. Come in, come in. Can you hear me, Earth?”
Click, click, zzzzz, mmmmmm, voices across the sky.
Hello, Sheila!
The planet grew before them. The ship’s drive purred and rumbled, every plate in the hull trembled with thrusting energies, there was a wild fine singing in the crystals of the metal. Corinth realized that he was shaking too, but he didn’t want to control himself, not now.
“Hello, Earth,” he said monotonously into the radio. They were moving well under the speed of light and their signal probed blindly ahead of them, through the dark. “Hello, Earth, can you hear me? This is Star Ship I, calling from space, homeward bound.”
Lewis growled something which meant: (Maybe they’ve given up radio since we left. All these months—”
Corinth shook his head: “TLey’d still have monitors of some kind, I’m sure.” To the microphone: “Hello, Earth, come in, Earth. Anyone on Earth hear me?”
“If some ham—a five-year-old kid, I bet, in Russia or India or Africa—picks it up, he’ll have to get the word to a transmitter which can reach us,” said Lewis. “It takes time. Just relax, Pete.”
“A matter of time!” Corinth turned from the seat. “You’re right, I suppose. We’ll make planetfall in hours, anyway. But I did want to have a real welcome prepared for us!”
“A dozen Limfjord oysters on the half shell, with lots of lemon juice,” said Lewis dreamily, speaking all the words aloud. “Rhine wine, of course—say a ’37. Baby shrimp in fresh mayonnaise, on French bread with freshchurned butter. Smoked eel with cold scrambled eggs on pumpernickel, don’t forget the chives—”
Corinth grinned, though half his mind was lost with Sheila, off alone with her in some place of sunlight. It was good, it felt strangely warm, to sit and exchange commonplaces, even if those were overtly little more than a word and a shift of expression. All the long way home, they had argued like drunken gods, exploring their own intellects; but it had been a means of shutting out the stupendous dark quiet. Now they were back to man’s hearth fire.
“Hello, Star Ship I.”
They jerked wildly about to face the receiver. The voice that came was faint, blurred with the noise of sun and stars, but it was human. It was home.
“Why,” whispered Lewis in awe, “why, he’s even got a Brooklyn accent.”
“Hello, Star Ship I. This is New York calling you. Can you hear me?”
“Yes,” said Corinth, his throat dry, and waited for the signal to leap across millions of miles.
“Had a devil of a time getting you,” said the voice conversationally, after the time lag had gone by in whining, crackling blankness. “Had to allow for Doppler effect—you must be coming in like a bat out of Chicago, are your pants on fire or something?” He mentioned nothing of the engineering genius which had made communication possible at all; it was a minor job now. “Congratulations, though! All okay?”
“Fine,” said Lewis. “Had some trouble, but we’re coming home in one piece and expect to be greeted properly.” He hesitated for a moment. “How’s Earth?”
“Good enough. Though I’ll bet you won’t recognize the place. Things are changing so fast it’s a real relief to talk good old United States once again. Prolly the last time I’ll ever do it. What the devil happened to you, anyway?”
“We’ll explain later,” said Corinth shortly. “How are our—associates?”
“Okay, I guess. I’m just a technician at Brookhaven, you know, I’m not acquainted. But I’ll pass the word along. You’ll land here, I suppose?”
“Yes, in about—” Corinth made a swift estimate involving the simultaneous solution of a number of differential equations. “Six hours.”
“Okay, we’ll—” The tone faded away. They caught one more word, “—band—” and then there was only the stillness.
“Hello, New York, you’ve lost the beam,” said Corinth. “Ah, forget it,” said Lewis. “Turn it off, why don’t you?”
“But—”
&
nbsp; “We’ve waited so long that we can wait six hours more. Isn’t worthwhile tinkering around that way.”
“Ummmm—well—” Corinth yielded. “Hello, New York. Hello, Earth. This is Star Ship I signing off. Over and out.”
“I did want to talk to Sheila,” he added.
“You’ll have plenty of time for that, laddy,” answered Lewis. “I think right now we ought to be taking a few more observations on the drive. It’s got a fluttery note that might mean something. Nobody’s ever operated one continuously as long as we have, and there may be cumulative effects—”
“Crystal fatigue, perhaps,” said Corinth. “Okay, you win.” He gave himself to his instruments.
Earth grew before them. They, who had crossed light-years in hours, had to limp home now at mere hundreds of miles a second; even their new reactions weren’t fast enough to handle translight speeds this near a planet. But theirs would probably be the last ship so limited, thought Corinth. At the fantastic rate of post-change technological advance, the next vessel should be a dream of perfection: as if the Wright brothers had built a transatlantic clipper for their second working model. He imagined that his own lifetime would see engineering carried to some kind of ultimate, reaching the bounds imposed by natural law. Thereafter man would have to find a new field of intellectual adventure, and he thought he knew what it would be. He looked at the swelling lovely planet with a kind of tenderness. Ave atque vale!
The crescent became a ragged, cloudy disc as they swung around toward the day side. Then, subtly, it was no longer before them but below them, and they heard the first thin shriek of cloven air. They swept over a vastness of moonlit Pacific, braking, and saw dawn above the Sierra Nevada. America fell beneath them, huge and green and beautiful, a strong-ribbed land, and the Mississippi was a silver thread across her. Then they slanted down, and the spires of Manhattan rose against the sea.
Corinth’s heart slammed in the cage of his breast. Be still, he told it, be still and wait. There is time now. He guided the ship toward Brookhaven, where the spacefield was a slash of gray, and saw another bright spear cradled there. So they had already begun on the next ship.
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