The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One 1929-1964--The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time Chosen by the Members of the Science Fiction Writers of America

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The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One 1929-1964--The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of All Time Chosen by the Members of the Science Fiction Writers of America Page 62

by Robert Silverberg


  “I think he will—they said he would be in pretty soon.” On the viewscreen Lotus Lake had gone into the shadow but for the thin blue line of its western edge and it was apparent he had overestimated the time she would have in which to talk to her brother. Reluctantly, he said to her, “His camp will be out of radio range in a few minutes; he’s on that part of Woden that’s in the shadow”—he indicated the viewscreen—“and the turning of Woden will put him beyond contact. There may not be much time left when he comes in—not much time to talk to him before he fades out. I wish I could do something about it—I would call him right now if I could.”

  “Not even as much time as I will have to stay?”

  “I’m afraid not.”

  “Then—” She straightened and looked toward the air lock with pale resolution. “Then I’ll go when Gerry passes beyond range. I won’t wait any longer after that—I won’t have anything to wait for.”

  Again there was nothing he could say.

  “Maybe I shouldn’t wait at all. Maybe I’m selfish—maybe it would be better for Gerry if you just told him about it afterward.”

  There was an unconscious pleading for denial in the way she spoke and he said, “He wouldn’t want you to do that, to not wait for him.”

  “It’s already coming dark where he is, isn’t it? There will be all the long night before him, and Mama and Daddy don’t know yet that I won’t ever be coming back like I promised them I would. I’ve caused everyone I love to be hurt, haven’t I? I didn’t want to—I didn’t intend to.”

  “It wasn’t your fault,” he said. “It wasn’t your fault at all. They’ll know that. They’ll understand.”

  “At first I was so afraid to die that I was a coward and thought only of myself. Now, I see how selfish I was. The terrible thing about dying like this is not that I’ll be gone but that I’ll never see them again; never be able to tell them that I didn’t take them for granted; never be able to tell them I knew of the sacrifices they made to make my life happier, that I knew all the things they did for me and that I loved them so much more than I ever told them. I’ve never told them any of those things. You don’t tell them such things when you’re young and your life is all before you—you’re afraid of sounding sentimental and silly.

  “But it’s so different when you have to die—you wish you had told them while you could and you wish you could tell them you’re sorry for all the little mean things you ever did or said to them. You wish you could tell them that you didn’t really mean to ever hurt their feelings and for them to only remember that you always loved them far more than you ever let them know.”

  “You don’t have to tell them that,” he said. “They will know—they’ve always known it.”

  “Are you sure?” she asked. “How can you be sure? My people are strangers to you.”

  “Wherever you go, human nature and human hearts are the same.”

  “And they will know what I want them to know—that I love them?”

  “They’ve always known it, in a way far better than you could ever put in words for them.”

  “I keep remembering the things they did for me, and it’s the little things they did that seem to be the most important to me, now. Like Gerry—he sent me a bracelet of fire-rubies on my sixteenth birthday. It was beautiful—it must have cost him a month’s pay. Yet, I remember him more for what he did the night my kitten got run over in the street. I was only six years old and he held me in his arms and wiped away my tears and told me not to cry, that Flossy was gone for just a little while, for just long enough to get herself a new fur coat and she would be on the foot of my bed the very next morning. I believed him and quit crying and went to sleep dreaming about my kitten coming back. When I woke up the next morning, there was Flossy on the foot of my bed in a brand-new white fur coat, just like he had said she would be.

  “It wasn’t until a long time later that Mama told me Gerry had got the pet-shop owner out of bed at four in the morning and, when the man got mad about it, Gerry told him he was either going to go down and sell him the white kitten right then or he’d break his neck.”

  “It’s always the little things you remember people by; all the little things they did because they wanted to do them for you. You’ve done the same for Gerry and your father and mother; all kinds of things that you’ve forgotten about but that they will never forget.”

  “I hope I have. I would like for them to remember me like that.”

  “They will.”

  “I wish—” She swallowed. “The way I’ll die—I wish they wouldn’t ever think of that. I’ve read how people look who die in space—their insides all ruptured and exploded and their lungs out between their teeth and then, a few seconds later, they’re all dry and shapeless and horribly ugly. I don’t want them to ever think of me as something dead and horrible, like that.”

  “You’re their own, their child and their sister. They could never think of you other than the way you would want them to; the way you looked the last time they saw you.”

  “I’m still afraid,” she said. “I can’t help it, but I don’t want Gerry to know it. If he gets back in time, I’m going to act like I’m not afraid at all and—”

  The signal buzzer interrupted her, quick and imperative.

  “Gerry!” She came to her feet. “It’s Gerry, now!”

  He spun the volume control knob and asked: “Gerry Cross?”

  “Yes,” her brother answered, an undertone of tenseness to his reply “The bad news—what is it?”

  She answered for him, standing close behind him and leaning down a little toward the communicator, her hand resting small and cold on his shoulder.

  “Hello, Gerry.” There was only a faint quaver to betray the careful casualness of her voice. “I wanted to see you—”

  “Marilyn!” There was sudden and terrible apprehension in the way he spoke her name. “What are you doing on that EDS?”

  “I wanted to see you,” she said again. “I wanted to see you, so I hid on this ship—”

  “You hid on it?”

  “I’m a stowaway … I didn’t know what it would mean—”

  “Marilyn!” It was the cry of a man who calls hopeless and desperate to someone already and forever gone from him. “What have you done?”

  “I … it’s not—” Then her own composure broke and the cold little hand gripped his shoulder convulsively. “Don’t, Gerry—I only wanted to see you; I didn’t intend to hurt you. Please, Gerry, don’t feel like that—”

  Something warm and wet splashed on his wrist and he slid out of the chair, to help her into it and swing the microphone down to her own level.

  “Don’t feel like that—Don’t let me go knowing you feel like that—”

  The sob she had tried to hold back choked in her throat and her brother spoke to her. “Don’t cry, Marilyn.” His voice was suddenly deep and infinitely gentle, with all the pain held out of it. “Don’t cry, Sis—you mustn’t do that. It’s all right, Honey—everything is all right.”

  “I—” Her lower lip quivered and she bit into it. “I didn’t want you to feel that way—I just wanted us to say good-by because I have to go in a minute.”

  “Sure—sure. That’s the way it will be, Sis. I didn’t mean to sound the way I did.” Then his voice changed to a tone of quick and urgent demand. “EDS—have you called the Stardust? Did you check with the computers?”

  “I called the Stardust almost an hour ago. It can’t turn back, there are no other cruisers within forty light-years, and there isn’t enough fuel.”

  “Are you sure that the computers had the correct data—sure of everything?”

  “Yes—do you think I could ever let it happen if I wasn’t sure? I did everything I could do. If there was anything at all I could do now, I would do it.”

  “He tried to help me, Gerry.” Her lower lip was no longer trembling and the short sleeves of her blouse were wet where she had dried her tears. “No one can help me and I’m not going t
o cry any more and everything will be all right with you and Daddy and Mama, won’t it?”

  “Sure—sure it will. We’ll make out fine.”

  Her brother’s words were beginning to come in more faintly and he turned the volume control to maximum. “He’s going out of range,” he said to her. “He’ll be gone within another minute.”

  “You’re fading out, Gerry,” she said. “You’re going out of range. I wanted to tell you—but I can’t, now. We must say good-by so soon—but maybe I’ll see you again. Maybe I’ll come to you in your dreams with my hair in braids and crying because the kitten in my arms is dead; maybe I’ll be the touch of a breeze that whispers to you as it goes by; maybe I’ll be one of those gold-winged larks you told me about, singing my silly head off to you; maybe, at times, I’ll be nothing you can see but you will know I’m there beside you. Think of me like that, Gerry; always like that and not—the other way.”

  Dimmed to a whisper by the turning of Woden, the answer came back:

  “Always like that, Marilyn—always like that and never any other way.”

  “Our time is up, Gerry—I have to go, now. Good—” Her voice broke in mid-word and her mouth tried to twist into crying. She pressed her hand hard against it and when she spoke again the words came clear and true:

  “Good-by, Gerry.”

  Faint and ineffably poignant and tender, the last words came from the cold metal of the communicator:

  “Good-by, little sister—”

  She sat motionless in the hush that followed, as though listening to the shadow-echoes of the words as they died away, then she turned away from the communicator, toward the air lock, and he pulled the black lever beside him. The inner door of the air lock slid swiftly open, to reveal the bare little cell that was waiting for her, and she walked to it.

  She walked with her head up and the brown curls brushing her shoulders, with the white sandals stepping as sure and steady as the fractional gravity would permit and the gilded buckles twinkling with little lights of blue and red and crystal. He let her walk alone and made no move to help her, knowing she would not want it that way. She stepped into the air lock and turned to face him, only the pulse in her throat to betray the wild beating of her heart.

  “I’m ready,” she said.

  He pushed the lever up and the door slid its quick barrier between them, inclosing her in black and utter darkness for her last moments of life. It clicked as it locked in place and he jerked down the red lever. There was a slight waver to the ship as the air gushed from the lock, a vibration to the wall as though something had bumped the outer door in passing, then there was nothing and the ship was dropping true and steady again. He shoved the red lever back to close the door on the empty air lock and turned away, to walk to the pilot’s chair with the slow steps of a man old and weary.

  Back in the pilot’s chair he pressed the signal button of the normal-space transmitter. There was no response; he had expected none. Her brother would have to wait through the night until the turning of Woden permitted contact through Group One.

  It was not yet time to resume deceleration and he waited while the ship dropped endlessly downward with him and the drives purred softly. He saw that the white hand of the supplies closet temperature gauge was on zero. A cold equation had been balanced and he was alone on the ship. Something shapeless and ugly was hurrying ahead of him, going to Woden where its brother was waiting through the night, but the empty ship still lived for a little while with the presence of the girl who had not known about the forces that killed with neither hatred nor malice. It seemed, almost, that she still sat small and bewildered and frightened on the metal box beside him, her words echoing hauntingly clear in the void she had left behind her:

  I didn’t do anything to die for—I didn’t do anything—

  FONDLY FAHRENHEIT

  by Alfred Bester

  He doesn’t know which of us I am these days, but they know one truth. You must own nothing but yourself. You must make your own life, live your own life and die your own death … or else you will die another’s.

  The rice fields on Paragon III stretch for hundreds of miles like checkerboard tundras, a blue and brown mosaic under a burning sky of orange. In the evening, clouds whip like smoke, and the paddies rustle and murmur.

  A long line of men marched across the paddies the evening we escaped from Paragon III. They were silent, armed, intent; a long rank of silhouetted statues looming against the smoking sky. Each man carried a gun. Each man wore a walkie-talkie belt pack, the speaker button in his ear, the microphone bug clipped to his throat, the glowing viewscreen strapped to his wrist like a green-eyed watch. The multitude of screens showed nothing but a multitude of individual paths through the paddies. The annunciators uttered no sound but the rustle and splash of steps. The men spoke infrequently, in heavy grunts, all speaking to all. “Nothing here.”

  “Where’s here?”

  “Jenson’s fields.”

  “You’re drifting too far west.”

  “Close in the line there.”

  “Anybody covered the Grimson paddy?”

  “Yeah. Nothing.”

  “She couldn’t have walked this far.”

  “Could have been carried.”

  “Think she’s alive?”

  “Why should she be dead?”

  The slow refrain swept up and down the long line of beaters advancing towards the smoky sunset. The line of beaters wavered like a writhing snake, but never ceased its remorseless advance. One hundred men spaced fifty feet apart. Five thousand feet of ominous search. One mile of angry determination stretching from east to west across a compass of heat. Evening fell. Each man lit his search lamp. The writhing snake was transformed into a necklace of wavering diamonds.

  “Clear here. Nothing.”

  “Nothing here.”

  “Nothing.”

  “What about the Allen paddies?”

  “Covering them now.”

  “Think we missed her?”

  “Maybe.”

  “We’ll beat back and check.”

  “This’ll be an all night job.”

  “Allen paddies clear.”

  “God damn! We’ve got to find her!”

  “We’ll find her.”

  “Here she is. Sector seven. Tune in.”

  The line stopped. The diamonds froze in the heat. There was silence. Each man gazed into the glowing screen on his wrist, tuning to sector seven. All tuned to one. All showed a small nude figure awash in the muddy water of a paddy. Alongside the figure an owner’s stake of bronze read: VANDALEUR. The end of the line converged towards the Vandaleur field. The necklace turned into a cluster of stars. One hundred men gathered around a small nude body, a child dead in a rice paddy. There was no water in her mouth. There were fingermarks on her throat. Her innocent face was battered. Her body was torn. Clotted blood on her skin was crusted and hard.

  “Dead three-four hours at least.”

  “Her mouth is dry.”

  “She wasn’t drowned. Beaten to death.”

  In the dark evening heat the men swore softly. They picked up the body. One stopped the others and pointed to the child’s fingernails. She had fought her murderer. Under the nails were particles of flesh and bright drops of scarlet blood, still liquid, still uncoagulated.

  “That blood ought to be clotted too.”

  “Funny.”

  “Not so funny. What kind of blood don’t clot?”

  “Android.”

  “Looks like she was killed by one.”

  “Vandaleur owns an android.”

  “She couldn’t be killed by an android.”

  “That’s android blood under her nails.”

  “The police better check.”

  “The police’ll prove I’m right.”

  “But androids can’t kill.”

  “That’s android blood, ain’t it?”

  “Androids can’t kill. They’re made that way.”

  “Looks li
ke one android was made wrong.”

  “Jesus!”

  And the thermometer that day registered 91.9° gloriously Fahrenheit.

  So there we were aboard the Paragon Queen en route for Megaster V, James Vandaleur and his android. James Vandaleur counted his money and wept. In the second class cabin with him was his android, a magnificent synthetic creature with classic features and wide blue eyes. Raised on its forehead in a cameo of flesh were the letters MA, indicating that this was one of the rare multiple aptitude androids, worth $57,000 on the current exchange. There we were, weeping and counting and calmly watching.

  “Twelve, fourteen, sixteen. Sixteen hundred dollars,” Vandaleur wept. “That’s all. Sixteen hundred dollars. My house was worth ten thousand. The land was worth five. There was furniture, cars, my paintings, etchings, my plane, my—And nothing to show for everything but sixteen hundred dollars. Christ!”

  I leaped up from the table and turned on the android. I pulled a strap from one of the leather bags and beat the android. It didn’t move.

  “I must remind you,” the android said, “that I am worth fifty-seven thousand dollars on the current exchange. I must warn you that you are endangering valuable property.”

  “You damned crazy machine,” Vandaleur shouted.

  “I am not a machine,” the android answered. “The robot is a machine. The android is a chemical creation of synthetic tissue.”

  “What got into you?” Vandaleur cried. “Why did you do it? Damn you!” He beat the android savagely.

  “I must remind you that I cannot be punished,” I said. “The pleasure-pain syndrome is not incorporated in the android synthesis.”

  “Then why did you kill her?” Vandaleur shouted. “If it wasn’t for kicks, why did you—”

  “I must remind you,” the android said, “that the second class cabins in these ships are not soundproofed.”

  Vandaleur dropped the strap and stood panting, staring at the creature he owned.

  “Why did you do it? Why did you kill her?” I asked.

  “I don’t know,” I answered.

 

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