Across the Spectrum
Page 50
“Oh, we know, we know,” warbled Amarga again, regarding him soulfully. “You mustn’t think us irreverent, Great Casey, if we intrude on your hours of dedicated creative contemplation!”
“Huh. . . hoo. . . hah. . . wha. . . what?” stammered Casey. “Uh. . . that’s all right, Miss. . . er. . . Amarga, I wasn’t, whatdyacallit, contemplating. I was just asleep.”
Roald Ruill and Amarga exchanged bug-eyed glances of awe. “He actually sleeps,” Amarga cooed, and Roald Ruill remarked, “Quite, quite. I had forgotten. The fatigue-center is vestigial in our race, of course, Great Casey.” He glanced about. “May I sit down?”
“Why, ah, sure.” For the first time since they had awakened him, Casey began to feel as if he were really awake and not having a humdinger of a cheese-sandwich nightmare. He began to think of unwrapping the blanket around him and getting up; then he remembered his violently polka-dotted pajamas. Like most men, Casey considered pajamas effeminate and preferred to sleep in his suntan; but it was February, and the landlady was miserly with the coal and the blankets, so it had to be either his color-blind Aunt Jane’s present from last Christmas or freezing to death.
He swung his feet over the edge of the bed, running a hand through dark, pillow-tangled hair.
“Look,” he said, “to tell the sober truth, friend, I’m just now getting wide enough awake to know for sure what you’ve been saying. You told me you came from the future, or maybe I dreamed that. What goes?”
Amarga’s whisper was clearly audible. “Roald, can he be what the records call a madjenius?”
Roald Ruill frowned. “No, no, my dear, you don’t understand the physiological peculiarities of homo neanderthalensis—no, I believe it was almost homo sapiens by your time, was it not, O revered Casey? You must forgive my daughter, Great Casey, this is only her third or fourth journey into Time, and she has never been farther from our own era than the Ninth Time Cycle, so of course she is still a little naïve.”
“Why, I went through the Ninth Martian transit-war,” Amarga protested.
Roald Ruill sat down. More accurately, his elongated legs collapsed like accordions and he squatted on the rug. Amarga perched daintily on the edge of Casey’s bureau. Her legs were so long that it was exactly the right height. The sight fascinated Casey. He blinked again. “Of course. From the future. Time travel. Buck Rogers and Martians and all. Ha ha.” And suddenly he shuddered.
“Oooh, look,” Amarga shrilled, “the inspired writings of creative torment!”
And the green skin of the intruders from the future was positively suffused with robin’s-egg blue.
Casey gulped. Pajamas or no pajamas, he’d face this on his feet. He planted his feet firmly on the worn linoleum, threw off the blanket, and stood up.
“Oooh,” Amarga tweetled, and covered her face with long dainty hands.
Casey, in a shocked glance, saw that the exquisite fingers were at least nine inches long. His artist’s eyes saw an elegant, surrealistic beauty in the elongated girlish form, but he turned to Roald Ruill.
“You say you’re from the future. Okay, I’ll buy that—I mean, I believe you, because you’re surely not like anything I ever saw in the here and now. But would you mind telling me what you’re doing in my bedroom, and why you keep calling me Great Casey?”
“Great Casey—” Roald Ruill began again, then his eyes swiveled, and he said gently “I am accustomed to the lewd customs of the past, Great Casey, but will you humor an old man’s whims and make yourself decent? My daughter is young and naïve, and your clothedness distresses her.”
Casey gulped. Well, the pajamas were an eyesore, all right. He reached for his robe, and Amarga blinked rapidly, turned blue, and turned around with her back to him.
Roald Ruill’s voice grew stern. “Even the whims of a barbarian genius cannot excuse this deliberate display of indecency before a young female,” he thundered. “Great Casey, I implore you to remove from your limbs enough of that lewd and superfluous organic substance to spare my young daughter’s modesty!”
“You mean, you want me to take off—”
“At least enough for decency,” Roald Ruill commanded, and Casey shook his head. Oh well, if this was a dream, it was a lulu, and what did it matter anyway? He shrugged, hauled off his pajama shirt, paused, shrugged again and compromised by rolling his pajama legs to the knees, feeling acutely self-conscious about his long shanks. Amarga peered shyly at him again; even Roald Ruill looked relieved. “Now you appear civilized,” he commented, “not like an animal covered with—” he blushed aquamarine again, “organic substance!”
“Okay, okay,” Casey said wearily. “Now would you mind telling me what you’re doing here in my bedroom?”
“Oh!” Roald Ruill looked startled, “I presumed you had tele-empathized the reason for my presence. Well, we’re on a little time-traveling jaunt to celebrate my daughter’s two hundred and fortieth Seasonal Festival. Yes, she’s only a little chicken, but she knows what she wants,” he added, with an air of parental indulgence, “and nothing would suit Amarga but that she must have an Old Master to complete her collection. And then we had the great idea!” He positively beamed with benevolence. “Antique paintings are so expensive, and so rare, I decided we would travel into the past, and—” he brought it out with a gurgle, “have the child’s portrait actually painted by the greatest of all the Old Masters! Hence, Great Casey, we are here!”
“Golly,” said Casey. It sounded inadequate.
And then he said, “Who, me?”
And then he said, “Holy smoke! Me, an Old Master?” Slowly Roald Ruill’s words seeped in. He, Dan Webster Casey, in some still-inconceivable future, was revered as a great painter—and judging by the way they were bowing and scraping, an Old Master!
But what an idea! To collect art objects in Time! To commission a chair from Duncan Pfyfe’s workshop, to watch Leonardo brushing in the incomparable smile of the Mona Lisa, to watch the chips fall in the studio of Phidias!
He swallowed. “Sure,” he said, “I’ll paint her portrait. But—are you sure you mean me? I’m no great painter! You mean that in your time, I’m—an Old Master?”
“You mean that you are not yet successful?” Roald Ruill asked in amazement. “Amarga, imagine it! We have the incredible fortune of acquiring a portrait by the Casey of the Eternity Fragment! From a time when he was a mere unrecognized genius!” He paused. “Can it be true, Great Casey, that the multitudes do not yet revere your gift!?”
“They sure don’t,” Casey muttered, “I don’t know where I’ll get my next week’s rent money!”
Roald Ruill said, “I tele-empathized that you refer to negotiable credits. Would a few pounds of—oh, gold, or uranium, or platinum, help you any?”
“Would they!”
“Well, we will reimburse you generously,” Roald Ruill beamed. “When can you begin Amarga’s portrait?” His accordioned legs zoomed to full height. “We have mastered Time to some extent, Great Casey, but we are still somewhat limited in duration within your continuum. You accept?”
“Why—sure.”
Amarga murmured, “Is that your studio I see through the wall? Oh, how exciting! The studio of Great Casey! Can I see it?”
“Be my guest,” Casey said expansively.
Amarga squealed and grabbed Casey’s hand. “Let’s see it now!”
Roald Ruill faded bodilessly through the wall. Amarga sailed after him, dragging Casey by the hand, headlong. She floated through the wallpaper, and Casey, cracking his head against the molding, picked himself up, half-stunned.
Amarga thrust her head back through the wall; Casey, looking up through spinning stars, shivered at the effect of her long pale-green neck protruding through the wallpaper.
“What’s the matter?” Amarga fretted, “I thought you said we could come in here!”
Casey shook his head, groggily. “I can’t walk through walls,” he said, exasperated, and disregarded Amarga’s tweetles of dismay and curiosity,
striding to the connecting door and flinging it open. He surprised Roald Ruill light-heartedly forcing a fine sable brush into the neck of a tube of cadmium yellow. “Don’t do that,” Casey snapped. “How do you do that walking-through-walls trick?” After he said it, he reflected that if they could take short-cuts through a few thousands of years, then walking through a wall was no trick at all.
“You mean you can’t even rearrange your atoms?” Amarga squeaked.
Roald Ruill put down the ruined brush. “Never mind that now. You will paint my daughter?”
“Of course,” Casey said. “But am I—on the level? Am I honestly a famous painter in your era?”
“The Greatest,” intoned Roald Ruill solemnly. “We have a mere half-dozen names from all of pre-space art, and yours is among them. You are, I believe, roughly a contemporary of Michelangelo? Is he a friend of yours? Your pupil, perhaps?”
“Hardly,” Casey said wryly. Maybe four hundred years was merely a flash in the pan to these people. Then he asked, curiously, “Which of my paintings survived—you said, fourteen thousand years?”
“More or less,” Roald Ruill admitted. “As a matter of fact, Great Casey, no single painting has survived. But the mere fact that your name has been handed down across the ages indicates your unique greatness. In our greatest museum, on Mars, is preserved what’s called the Eternity Fragment—generally conceded to be of Earth-origin—containing a brief critical description of your painting.”
Casey was suffused with awe. He would, then, outlast Picasso, Renoir, Gainsborough, Rubens? A hint of humility made him wonder if his name would be preserved, maybe, by mere chance—how do we know how many great Greeks and Romans wrote or painted only to have their works perish in the rubble of the Dark Ages?
But the pride and the humility vanished together when he got out a stick of charcoal and fixed a sheet of rough paper on the easel. “Let me make a rough preliminary sketch now. Yes, that’s fine, Miss—Amarga. Now—” If she was in that position, the obscene thigh-patch didn’t show. He sketched swiftly, drawing with long, easy strokes. It was ridiculously easy to get a likeness; the danger would be that he’d turn it into caricature.
Amarga gurgled, “Oooh, I’m excited—”
Roald Ruill was strolling around the room, examining a few of Casey’s sketches and paintings. “Fantastic, of course,” he remarked, pausing before a few fashion sketches Casey had done for a newspaper assignment that hadn’t quite come off. “Such incredibly strange people, and their—er—” again the aquamarine blush, “attitude to clothedness. I—hem—like this very much—”
Amarga said, in an embarrassed warble, “Father, you may not indulge your taste for pornography!”
“T-t-t-,” reproved Roald Ruill, “the Universality of Art, my dear—the Universality of Art! And, now, I fear, we must be going. If convenient, Great Casey, may we return tomorrow for a sitting?”
“Sure, sure.” Casey could joke about it by now. “Don’t get mixed up and come yesterday by mistake.”
“Amarga is so fond of having her portrait painted,” Roald Ruill said fondly. “We have twelve contemporary interpretations, each by a different modern artist. In the most recent, by my friend Cloass Clenture, she is portrayed as a winged lamia, with all her erotic fantasies flying around her head. And Tarnby Torris did an impression of her in carved soapstone, with fourteen eyes and two heads to imply that she is twice as beautiful and seven times as foresighted. Arc you a pre-cubist or a neo-surrealist, Great Casey?”
Casey was busy sketching and, in his preoccupation, hardly heard what Roald Ruill said. (He was to wish, later, that he had listened more carefully.) As it was, Casey only snapped out of his concentrated effort when Roald Ruill said, “We must go now,” and added, “I tele-empathize that you are pressed for credit. I love to help struggling young artists, even when—” he squeaked laughter, “they are famous Old Masters. It’s like having a part in the cultural history of the Ages. I should like to buy one of your paintings.” He picked up one of the illustrations, a woman swathed in a luxurious fur coat.
“Roald!” said Amarga, embarrassed reproach in her eyes. “We must surely have an original Casey, but let’s have one we can display with pride to our friends!”
“Come, you mustn’t be narrow-minded,” Roald Ruill rebuked, but he put aside the offending picture. Casey busied himself with fixative, struggling against a howl of laughter. Then, halfway between a real desire to be helpful, and a wicked longing to help the joke along, he hauled out a couple of pin-up nudes he had done a few months ago, advance sketches for a prospective calendar. They had been turned down because the client considered their bikini suits too skimpy even for pin-ups.
“There!” Amarga said with relief.
“Can’t I buy the other too, my dear? Just to show to, er, my own friends?”
“What would my maternal parent have thought?” nagged Amarga, and Roald Ruill sighed.
“Well, well, my dear, if you think—will this be sufficient remuneration, O Great Casey?” With an air of negligent confidence, he stuck one hand out into empty air, twiddled his long, skinny fingers in a weaving pattern. Something, a few grains of yellow dust, began to shine in his palm, then tumbled swiftly upward into a small pile. After a little, it began to weigh his hand down, and Roald Ruill snapped his fingers, then yawned. “Gold. I see you haven’t a lead-purse for the standard uranium coinage.”
He dumped the gold on a spare palette. “We will return tomorrow for a sitting,” he said. “Come along, Amarga.”
They walked casually through an outside wall and were gone, leaving Casey staring at a little heap of yellow dust—and his half-finished charcoal sketch of an eight-foot, feather-headed, green-skinned girl.
∞
“It’s gold, all right,” the jeweler said, “and very fine quality—looks like filings from a goldsmith’s shop. Would you mind telling me where you got it?”
“I didn’t steal it, if that’s what you mean,” Casey said, then improvised on the truth; he always went by the idea that if the unadorned truth wouldn’t do, half a truth was safer than a lie. “A queer old duck wanted to buy one of my pictures, and he asked if I’d take this for it. It looked like gold, so I took the chance.”
The jeweler thought for a minute. “All right, I’ll take one too,” he said. “Fifty-five dollars for what’s here, if you’ll give me the name of someone who knows you and can vouch for your character.”
“Sure.” Casey gave him the name of Chad Stanton, managing editor of a chain of pulp magazines to which Casey sometimes sold illustrations. The jeweler took the gold away, and somewhere in the back of the shop, Casey heard a number being dialed. In a few minutes, the man came back and counted out the money.
Freed of worry about next week’s rent, Casey enjoyed a decent meal, for a change, in a decent restaurant. He was halfway through a steak when he looked up and saw Chad Stanton coming in the door. The editor crossed the room to Casey’s side, took a seat across from him.
“Thought I might find you here,” he said. “Did you know you’re a suspicious character? Whose watch did you hock today? Somebody called up and asked did I know you, and were you a solid citizen. So you owe me a drink on that.”
“Sure, I’m loaded,” Casey said, “only weren’t you with a party?”
Chad Stanton chuckled. “Just the office crowd,” he said, “and I’m better off over here, where I don’t have to listen. We’re bringing out a new title, next month—science fiction monthly—and the fellows will do their planning better when I’m not there to say no. How about that drink?”
Casey ordered it. He had to break a twenty, and Chad Stanton, used to his friend’s near-empty wallet, whistled rudely. “Not whose watch did you hock, but whose bank did you rob?”
“None,” Casey said. “But it’s a funny business, just the same. I’d like to tell you about it. Want to drop up to my room?”
“I can’t make a night of it,” Stanton warned, “not even if you hav
e a bottle of Haig and Haig. I’ve got a foot-deep slush pile to read for that science fiction magazine.”
“And I’ve got a. . . a client coming to sit for a portrait,” Casey said, “but stop in for a few minutes on you way home, will you?”
“Can do,” Stanton said.
∞
At five that afternoon he knocked at the hall door of Casey’s bedroom. Casey brought him into the studio.
“It was about two-thirty in the morning,” he began, and told the whole story. Stanton blinked.
“If I read it in the slush pile, I’d laugh my head off,” he scoffed. “What had you been drinking?”
“A glass of cold milk,” Casey said in annoyance.
“Then you ought to stick to beer.”
“Look, Chad, I’m serious. If not—if I’m crazy—where did the gold come from?”
Stanton squinted at the few shining grains still adhering to the palette. His comment was profane and unprintable. “Yes, it looks like gold all right.”
“And look here,” Casey urged, handing him the sketch of Amarga.
Stanton whistled, turning the sketch in his hands. “Oh, brother,” he said, “if that stable of dry-brush pushers we’ve got down there could see this! This is science fiction art—the real stuff! This is a Bug-Eyed Monster to end all BEMs! I never knew you could do fantasy art, Casey.”
“I can’t. I tell you, this was a life sketch,” Casey said. “I don’t even read that crazy science fiction stuff.”
“Maybe you ought to take up writing it, judging by that yarn you spun,” Stanton snorted. “Look, seriously, Casey—I don’t handle the artwork over at the shop, but you work up that sketch into a painting, and show it to Donaldson, over at Vector Pubs. Tell him I said to think about featuring it for a cover, and we’ll assign somebody to write a story around it.”
“But Chad—” Casey began, then stopped at the sight of the other man’s face; Stanton’s mouth was open in a long O, his eyes bugged out, and he was staring fixedly at something just behind Casey. “Now I’m seeing it,” he yipped. “I must have been reading too much slush—gotta catch my train—gotta take a rest—” he gabbled, shut his eyes hard, turned and piled pell-mell down the stairs. Casey turned slowly around, not in a hurry to see what he knew Stanton had seen: Roald Ruill’s feathery green skull, sticking out of the wallpaper.