by Gerard Klein
“We’ll have to get over the hill,” he said. “Maybe on the far side we’ll find . . . something.”
There was no hope of locating an ally, and probably not even a rational being. They were trapped in this war—this inconceivable war.
A black dot had just appeared overhead. It left a line of smoke and with it was tracing signs in the sky. The first group meant nothing to Corson. In the second he thought he detected a vague likeness to Cyrillic, used on a world he had never visited. The third was just a String of dashes. But he didn’t have to wait for the craft to complete its mission before reading the last
“Welcome to Aergistal!”
Then the black dot made off at high speed over the crest of their hill, while the symbols and letters drifted lazily toward the mountains.
With a shrug, Corson said, “Well, we might as well move on as stay here.”
As quickly as they could they scaled the steep slope. When they reached the top, he cautiously poked his head over, all his back muscles knotting at the idea of the fine target they would make if someone had a scope or an automissile trained on this spot.
What he saw astonished him so much he nearly lost his footing. The far side of the hill slanted gently down to a beach so straight it might have been drawn with a ruler. A blue and perfectly calm sea stretched away to infinity. A few cable lengths from shore a dozen sailing ships were swapping cannonballs, and a dismasted hulk was on fire. On the beach, only a few hundred meters away, two military encampments faced each other. The tents of one were blue and of the other red. Banners saluted a rising wind. Between the two camps soldiers dressed in bright colors, drawn up as though on parade, were firing at each other turn by turn. Although he was too far away to be sure, Corson thought he saw men falling now and then. He heard rolling musket volleys, the sharp cries of the officers, the sound of trumpets, and from time to time the deep boom of the ships’ cannon.
Glancing inland, he saw bulging from a hollow which hid it from the view of both armies something huge, gray, soft, and almost round. A stranded whale?
But much closer to them, at most a hundred meters distant, at the rear of the blue camp, a man was sitting quietly writing at a wooden table. He wore a blue cocked hat with a white cockade, a peculiar frock coat in white and sky blue with gold braid and epaulettes, and from his belt the scabbard of a large saber hung down to touch the ground.
Corson climbed over the hilltop and led the way toward this extraordinary scribe. When they were only a few paces from him, the latter turned his head and said without displaying either surprise or alarm, “Want to join up, young fellers? We just increased our prize money, you know. I can give you a bonus of five crowns even before you put on our fine uniform.”
“I haven’t—” Corson began.
“Ah, I can tell you’re dying to serve under Good King Victor— ‘Old Whiskers,' as we call him, you know. Conditions are good and promotion comes quickly. The war will last a century or two and you can look forward to winding up as a field marshal. As for the lady, she’ll get on fine with our jolly boys and I predict she’ll make her fortune in next to no time.”
“All I’d like to know,” Corson said, “is where the nearest town is.” “I believe Minor is the nearest,” said the man. “Directly ahead of Us, only twenty or thirty leagues away. We’re going to take it as soon as we’ve dealt with these clowns in red. I admit I’ve never been there, but there’s nothing odd about that, for the good and sufficient reason that it’s in enemy hands. Still, the trip there will be worth it. Come on, sign here—if you know how to write—so that everything is done according to the book.”
And he jingled some discs of yellow metal that awoke a vague memory in Corson. He guessed they must be cash—no, what was the word? Coik? Coins! On the table in front of the man, on either side of a big ledger, lay two peculiar hand weapons which he would have liked to examine more closely. But Antonella was squeezing his arm hard, and he felt her trembling.
“What about those ships?” he demanded, pointing out to sea.
"That, my friend, has nothing to do with us. Everybody here gets on with his own war, without worrying about what his neighbors are up to. That is, until you’ve got rid of the current opposition. Then you sign up the survivors and go looking for someone else to take on. You’re on the run yourselves, aren’t you? I never saw uniforms like yours before, at any rate.”
“We don’t want to join up,” Corson said firmly. “We only want to —well, find work somewhere.”
“Then I’ll have to persuade you, my friends,” the man said. “That’s both my vocation and my avocation.”
He seized his weapons and pointed them at Corson.
“Kindly sign your name here before I get annoyed and withdraw the offer of your recruiting fee!”
Corson flung Antonella to the ground and leaped at the table, kicking it over. But his opponent, forewarned, dodged back and pulled both his triggers. A bang deafened Corson in the same moment as he felt a violent blow on his left arm. Almost at once he also heard a sort of fizzing noise. One of the pistols had not gone off properly.
He hurled himself forward into thick smoke. The man in the cocked hat had dropped his guns and was frantically drawing his sword. This time Corson was the faster. Jumping the overturned table, he kicked him in the guts and then punched him on the temple. Not too hard. He didn’t want to kill him.
The man keeled over, clutching his belly with both hands.
Corson felt his left biceps, expecting to find that he was bleeding. But the suit had been tough enough to stop the bullet. He almost laughed aloud; he was going to escape with no more than a gigantic bruise. When he turned, though, his smile froze on his face. The explosion had attracted attention, and from the camp a small squad of men was hurrying toward them.
Corson dragged Antonella to her feet, and—pausing only to possess himself of the fallen saber—broke into a run, forcing her to keep pace. There was only one way open to them. The sole escape route led toward the hollow where they had seen what he imagined to be the body of a whale.
Explosions sent bullets whistling past their ears. Luckily, either their pursuers weren’t taking the time to aim properly or they merely wanted to scare them off. It was obvious that their guns were not self-sighting, and when the fusillade broke off, Corson realized with amazement that they did not even reload automatically. It took quite a while for them to be charged again.
Panting, they scrambled up the outer slope of the hollow. Breasting the top of the rise, they saw it was an old crater, far deeper and wider than they had expected. And the “whale” was a colossal ball of rubberized cloth, enclosed by a net. It floated in midair, tethered to a thick rope that moored it to a boulder. A wicker gondola, half in contact with the ground, hung beneath it. A man in red trousers and tunic, with a sort of turban on his head, was busy making adjustments to a whole collection of valves. His skin was a magnificent black.
He grinned on seeing Corson and Antonella approaching. The grin vanished when he noticed the saber. He reached for a gun, whose muzzle jutted over the edge of the gondola, but Corson checked him with the flat of the sword.
“We’re being chased,” he said. “Can this thing of yours carry three?”
“The regulations don’t allow—” the black man began, casting an anxious glance at Corson. Then he looked further, and saw how at the rim of the hollow heads topped with cocked hats were starting to appear.
“I think it might be a good idea to get away from here,” he finished.
Followed by Corson and Antonella, he jumped into the gondola and hastily began to tip sandbags overboard. The gondola left the ground and began to sway dangerously.
“Lie down on the bottom!” Corson shouted at Antonella. Then, seeing that the black man was wasting precious time on undoing the mooring rope, he slashed at it. A few strands parted. A second cut severed the core of the cable and a gust of wind did the rest. Suddenly released, the balloon took off like a rocket. Shots rang out, but the bul
lets passed beneath them. By the time the guns had been reloaded the runaways would have made too much height to be hit by the inaccurate fire of Good King Victor’s bullyboys.
Corson, clutching the rim of the gondola, pulled himself up. The abruptness of the ascent had thrown him to the wicker floor, which creaked alarmingly. He glanced at the black man, who was hanging on to the suspension ropes with both hands, and set down his saber before helping Antonella to her feet.
“Whoever’s side you’re on,” he said to the stranger, “I’m glad we ran into you. My name is Corson, and I belong to the crew of the . . ."
The words tailed away. How ridiculous to speak here of the Archimedes, a battle cruiser involved in the interstellar war between Earth and Uria! Now he really was a soldier with neither an army nor a cause to fight for, a soldier lost. And if it had not been for the enormous battlefield of Aergistal, he might well have forgotten that he was a soldier.
“My name is Touray,” said the black. “I’m a Zouave. Provost marshal and pro tem balloonist with a communications regiment. Originally this balloon of mine was supposed to be captive, but a lucky shot—or maybe an unlucky one—turned it loose.” With a wry smile. “Also I’m a qualified medical orderly, and . .
He hesitated. “And—?” Corson prompted.
“Your uniforms made me remember something. I wasn’t always a balloonist. I was an engineer. And a helicopter pilot. That’s why they wished this balloon on me.”
He started to laugh. “You see, I told them I knew a bit about flying. It seemed better to be above the battle than mixed up in the middle of it. . . And what about you? What war do you hail from?” It was Corson’s turn to hesitate.
“From a war between planets,” he said after a moment. “But I didn’t come direct from there to here.”
“A war between planets,” Touray said thoughtfully. “So you must come from a much later period than me. In my day we were just getting interested in space travel. I can still recall the day the first man landed on Mars. Quite an event!”
He jerked his thumb toward Antonella.
“What about her? Is she from the same war as you?”
Corson shook his head. “No, she comes from . . . from a period of peace.”
The black face froze. “Then she ought not to be here!”
“Why do you say that?”
“In this world there’s nobody but soldiers, warriors, people who for one reason or another have been declared war criminals. Me, I fired rockets at a village where there were only civilians, somewhere in Europe, on an island that I still remember was called Sicily. I won’t say I realized what I was doing, but I can’t claim that I didn’t know, either. That’s war for you, I’m afraid.”
A question sprang to Corson’s mind.
“You’re talking Pangal. I thought that wasn’t developed until after the invention of star travel.”
“Oh, it isn’t my mother tongue. I learned it here. Everyone at Aergistal speaks Pangal, with some local differences. Dialects, I suppose you’d call them.”
“So what was your mother tongue?”
“It was a language called French.”
“I see,” Corson said. But he didn’t; the word meant nothing to him.
His mind was swarming with insoluble mysteries. Those, though, would have to wait for an answer. So far the balloon had been drifting along the shoreline, but it was showing a disturbing tendency to wander out to sea, and that level ocean seemed to reach to infinity.
CHAPTER 18
They floated over a group of galleys that were madly trying to ram each other but were hindered by the slackness of the wind and only making progress by the use of slow oars. A little farther on, they spotted some honeycomb-shaped structures that a crowd of spiderlike creatures were fighting for. There were not only humans at Aergistal, then, although in the region they had so far explored humans appeared to be in the majority. Once or twice they discerned great shadows beneath the sea.
The balloon moved farther and farther from the coast, but remained in sight of it.
“Well, it’s no good starving, is it?” Touray said, and turned to open a wicker basket that took up part of the space within the gondola.
Automatically Corson felt on his shoulder for the sling of his ration bag. It wasn’t there. He must have dropped it during his struggle with the recruiting officer.
“There’s some sausage,” the Negro said. “And some bread that’s still fairly fresh, and some red wine.”
From his loose-fitting trousers he produced a huge pocket knife and set about carving up the bread and sausage. Then he uncorked the bottle of wine and offered it to Antonella. Corson watched him with fascination.
“Never seen anything like it, hm?” Touray said, noticing his amazement. “I bet in your time you lived off pills and chemicals! But this isn’t too bad, you know. When at war you make the best of what you’ve got.”
The wine, Corson found, was warming and comforting. He bit into a chunk of bread and decided that it was time to ask a few questions. After all, here was a man who had had far more experience of this weird world.
“What surprises me,” he said cautiously, “is that the sky is practically empty. You’d expect aerial warfare to spread all over the place.” “There are regulations,” Touray said. “At least, I assume there are. In this sector of Aergistal there are no planes, no rockets and no copters. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t dogfights going on somewhere else. In fact I’d be rather surprised if there weren’t.” “Regulations,” Corson repeated thoughtfully.
“You must have noticed something right away,” Touray went on. “Nobody around here is using nuclear bombs, right? I imagine that puzzles you. But on the other side of those mountains atom bombs do go off now and then. Big ones at that!”
Corson recalled the pillars of fire and mushrooms of smoke which they had seen beyond the mountains. He nodded.
“And who makes sure the rules are obeyed?”
“If only I knew, I’d file a polite request for him to get me out of here! Oh, probably a god—or a devil!”
“Do you really think we might be in hell?”
Corson used the word readily enough, but it had little personal meaning for him. By his time, in an age dominated by cold and calculating pragmatism, its only referent was half-forgotten mythologies. And the nearest term available to match it in the galactic tongue meant no more than somewhere especially unpleasant.
Still, Touray took his point. “I’ve been wondering a lot about that,” he admitted. “But this strikes me as a pretty material kind of hell, if it is one. I managed to make some sightings on the sky as I went up and down with this balloon, and I’m convinced the ceiling is only about ten or twelve kilometers above us. Of course, even if it is made of ordinary matter, this place doesn’t look much like a natural planet. No horizon, an absolutely level surface ... Or if the planet were big enough to give this impression, we ought to have been squashed flat by the gravity in the first minute.”
Corson agreed, surprised that this man from a period so long before his own should know so much.
“I don’t think we’re in normal space at all,” Antonella said. “I can’t cog anything—not a thing. At first I wasn’t worried because our foresight does fade away now and then. But never so completely. Here it’s as though I were . . . well, as though I were blind.”
Corson stared at her. “When does your talent let you down?”
She flushed. “For a few days every month, that’s one thing. But that’s not what’s happening at the moment. And during a space flight, but I haven’t flown space very often. And when I’ve just made a jump across time, but that never lasts for long. And lastly when the probabilities in favor of several different outcomes are almost exactly balanced. But I always retain at least the ghost of the power. Here, there’s nothing at all.”
“What power is she talking about?” Touray demanded.
“Antonella’s people have a certain ability to see into the f
uture. They call it ‘cogging’, from precognition. They can foretell events before they happen, usually a couple of minutes ahead.”
“I see. It must be like having a periscope capable of breaking through the surface of the present. But it sounds like a pretty shortsighted kind of periscope. Two minutes—that isn’t very long.”
Corson sought to organize what Antonella had told him into a pattern that would make sense. He knew that if prescience were possible—and it was—it must be dependent in some way on Mach’s cosmogonic principle, the uniqueness of each point in the universe in relation to the whole. Would a total breakdown of the power imply that they were no longer in the universe to which Antonella’s nervous system was attuned? Were they in fact dead, without remembering that they had been killed?
“You know, it’s very funny,” Touray said. “In Africa, long before I was born, there were witch doctors who claimed they could foresee the future. Nobody believed that any longer, in my day. Yet that wasn’t in the past; it was in the future they claimed they could look into!”
“What about this bread?” Corson asked, brandishing the remains of his sandwich. “Where does it come from?”
“Oh, from whoever runs this place. Now you mention it, I must say I haven’t seen plowed land anywhere, let alone factories or bakeries. But it’s always like that in wartime, isn’t it? Guns, uniforms, medicines, rations, all come from far, far away, in what might as well be a mythical country. If the war lasts long enough, you just stop wondering about that sort of thing. The only fields you see are the ones you bum over because they’re in enemy hands.”
“Where are the high command? Why do they carry on with these crazy battles?”
“Oh, they’re a long way up the ladder from you. A long, long way. In the normal course of events you’ll never see them.”
“But what if they get killed?”
“They’re replaced,” Touray said. “By those who come next in line. You see, in a really all-out war you go on fighting because for one thing there’s the enemy and for another you don’t have any alternative. Maybe the brass hats have reasons of their own, but those must be—well, brass-type.”