by Eando Binder
For a long moment I stared. I heard no sound from the other body. It lay utterly rigid, quiet. And then I realized it was dead. The brain had died first. My final blow had killed Eve…
I stood looking down at the battered wreck. I looked beyond it. I could almost see a body like Kay’s lying there, a human body, the real Eve. Her eyes were closed. Perhaps there was a peaceful smile on the lips.
I turned slowly.
Slowly, my steps dragging, I strode for the cabin, to confront the man who had killed my Eve. The man who considered us nothing more than mechanical puppets, with which he could play as he desired.
Hillory darted out of the door. His face was a ghastly white. I clutched at him, caught his coat, but he tore loose. He ran, as though from some monster. And at that moment, I was a monster. I pounded after him. What things I screeched, I do not know.
He ran past the edge of the cliff, taking the shortest course to the road. Abruptly a great piece of the cliff-edge parted from its matrix. The stupendous vibrations of the previous battle had loosened the piece. It plunged below. Hillory was on it.
I dug my foot-plates into the soil and leaned backward, barely halting at the edge of the fissure. I looked down. I saw the white dot of Hillory’s body land. I knew he hadn’t survived the fall, as I had.
CHAPTER 11
Sherlock of Steel
Then I went back, staring at Eve’s dead body. She was gone, my mate. I was alive. Why did it have to turn out this way, I groaned mentally. Why had it not ended for me too? There might not be a Heaven for robots. But there was a Hell—earth.
It had begun to rain. I knelt motionless beside Eve’s broken form. There would have to be a funeral, burial, all that. Kay and Jack Hall found me that way when they arrived. Police were with them.
“Adam!” Jack yelled. “Hillory is dead. We saw him plunge over the cliff. Your troubles are over.”
“Over?” I echoed hollowly, staring at Eve. “Yes, it’s over—for Eve.”
I started. I heard a moan. A raspy, metallic sound. It came from Eve’s microphonic throat.
“You poor fool,” Jack said witheringly. “Did you think she was dead? Haven’t you heard of someone being knocked cold? She’s coming to.”
“Adam—” One of her hands reached for mine. It was all she could say in her joy. I couldn’t say anything.
“Just a minute!”
The police captain stepped forward. “I have a warrant for the arrest of Adam Link, for the robbery of Midcity Bank.”
Jack whirled. “But Dr. Hillory caused that. You see, Hillory used remote-control radio and had Adam and Eve Link in his power. He is the true robber.”
The police officer was terse. “Sorry, I’m following orders. Evidence shows that a robot did the crime. Adam Link must come with me.”
“But it wasn’t Adam Link,” Tom spoke up suddenly. “It was Eve Link.”
“No, it was me,” I snapped quickly. I didn’t want Eve to go through all the turmoil of a court trial and face possible sentence, if worst came to worst. I sent an angry glance at Tom Link, trying to shut him up.
“Eve, I say,” Tom insisted.
“I’ll have to take them both along,” said the captain. He and his men were faintly smiling. The whole thing, I could see, struck them as queerly humorous. One robot trying to “shield” another, like humans might. Only Jack and Kay and Tom really understood.
But I noticed that behind their smiles, the police were tense, ready to grab for their pistols. We were fearsome metal monsters nine feet tall, with our former heads attached to our new bodies. I could see that inevitable thought coursing through their minds—Frankenstein!
No use to resist, of course. It would have been easy—Eve and I rushing through them and laughing at their guns. Yes, but then what? Hounded, persecuted. State militia called as a last resort. No, that was the last thing in the world I would do.
I had patterned my life in the human way. We would face the agencies of law, though I hated the thought of again going through its legal mazes.
“Come, Eve,” I said quietly. “We must deal with humans on their own footing.”
We were taken down the mountain road to the city in the two squad cars. The engines groaned with our separate weights of nearly a half-ton each. Jack, Kay and Tom followed in their car.
Before the indictment a few hours later, Tom managed to whisper to me.
“Don’t shield Eve, Adam. Let her go through the trial. She will then acquire human status, as you did in yours. I’m certain I can save her from the charges—but only with you as witness of Hillory’s evil control. You are a ‘person’ in court records. Therefore your testimony will be official.”
I nodded. Tom’s clear legal reasoning had foreseen all that. My thoughts leaped ahead. Eve exonerated, legally a “human.” Then both of us would apply for citizenship, as my creator, Dr. Link, had visioned from the first day of my “birth.” And even—my heart sang—a church wedding for Eve and me. Why not? Then we would be the moral equals of humans in the eyes of the world.
The words of the official reading the indictment crashed into my thoughts. . .
“Eve Link is hereby accused of the robbery of Midcity Bank, and of the murders of John Deering, Tony Pucelli, and Hans Unger, all of this city.”
Tom started. “What?” he demanded. “Why is Eve Link being accused of three murders?”
The official looked up with hard cynicism.
“Investigation reports just came in, before we drew up the final indictment. The next night, after the bank robbery, those three men were murdered—Deering, Pucelli and Unger. In each case, clues pointed to a robot. Marks on their bodies could only have been made by a metal instrument. Even bits of metal filing were found.”
Jack groaned, at my side.
“I get it. You remember how the papers played up the robot angle immediately after the robbery. Everybody read it the next morning. Some clever criminal organization in the city, seeing that, promptly carried out three gang murders the next night. Using metal clubs and leaving metal filings as obvious clues, it all points to Eve as the culprit. She was framed.”
Tom groaned, too. “How clever. How damnably clever.”
The official shrugged. “You’ll have to prove your claims in court. The trial will be held in a month.”
Tom turned a pale face to me. He didn’t have to say it.
Eve was doomed.
Frankenstein! Frankenstein! Already I could hear the word shrieking through the city, in every newspaper and from every radio speaker. Eve had the noose around her neck.
Jack put a hand on my arm. I think I was trembling. When my thoughts are disorganized, my internal machinery is also.
“We’ll put detectives on the job,” Jack said. “We have a month’s time—” But he exchanged a hopeless glance with Tom.
Detectives. A month’s time. A clever criminal ring that had covered up its trail cunningly. A whole city aroused against the robots parading as humans, taking life in secret. It added up to zero—for Eve. My thoughts crashed to that conclusion in seconds.
I warned Tom and Jack to say no more. I turned to Eve.
“Go to your cell. They will lock you in. On no account must you try to leave.” I paused. “We must accept what comes. The case is hopeless. Do you understand, dear?”
Eve was shocked. I could detect that in the way her internal hum had missed a moment, exactly as a human heart may skip. She had been waiting for one word of hope from me. I gave her none. She was led away in a dead silence.
“I’ll visit her every day,” Kay said sympathetically. “Poor child, she’ll feel so frightened and alone.” She glanced at me almost contemptuously for my brutal dismissal.
“Drive to my mountain cabin-laboratory,” I directed, when we were outside.
“Out with it,” Jack demanded shrewdly. “Something’s seething in that brain of yours.”
“I thought you were a man, Adam Link,” Kay said furiously. “A man who woul
d fight for one he loves. You could at least have said one word of encouragement. Why did you tell Eve that the case was hopeless?”
I winced a little under her scorn. But I spoke firmly. “For the benefit of the officials. And the reporters waiting for the least little rumor or report to play up. And most important, for the benefit, eventually, of the criminal ring dumping their murders in Eve’s lap. They’ll sit back now, confident that we won’t try a thing. They won’t know that a detective is on the case. A detective by the name of—Adam Link.”
They gasped.
“You?” Jack snapped.
“Yes, why not? Without meaning to boast, I think quicker than any human. I have super-keen ears and eyes. I have strength and quickness and powers no human detective has. I can do more in a month than ten men.”
Jack shook his head sadly. “You’ve forgotten one thing, Adam. You’ve naturally come to think of yourself as human. But the whole meaning of the word detective is spying in secret. How can you do that—with your metal body?”
I left the question unanswered till we had reached my place. Then I stepped to my workbench and brought back a bowl of sticky, rubbery plastic. “I was working on this before Hillory upset my plans. I was toying with the idea of—well, look—” I smeared some of the plastic over my frontal-plate with a spatula. It was opaque, hiding the metal. Its color was that of human flesh.
“My disguise,” I said. “Human disguise.”
The three of them stared at me, wonderingly. “You might just be able to work a miracle,” said Kay finally.
Yes, it would almost have to be a miracle at that. Tom might prove Hillory’s actual guilt in the case of mere robbery. But three human lives had also been allegedly taken, cold-bloodedly, by the Frankenstein monster named Eve Link. That was what we were up against.
I turned to the thought-helmet, the one with which Hillory had diabolically controlled Eve. Now there would be at least one benefit from the hell we had been through. The thought-helmets were a godsend in this hour of need.
Switching on the power, I sent a radio-beam searching for Eve’s mind. My electrical thoughts modulated the beam, in a process akin to telepathy.
“Eve,” I called silently. “Can you hear me?”
“Adam!” came back almost instantly over the two-way conducting beam. “I’ve been so afraid—”
“Don’t be, darling,” I soothed. “And forgive me for leaving you so coldly. It was necessary. I’m going to save you, Eve. I’m going to save you. I promise.”
But it was not till two precious weeks later that I began.
I had had to work day and night, perfecting the plastic, giving it the rubbery consistency of human flesh. And also making it adhere firmly to metal. I think a human chemist would not have solved the problem in a year. But I was driven by a demon. Every tick of my internal electrical distributor counted off the hours with the noose tightening around Eve’s neck.
I used my former, smaller body, before adopting the giant one in my battle against Eve’s giant one. It stood five feet ten—human height. Covered with plastic, my torso was rather thick, giving me the appearance of a burly man. The legs and arms were easy, though it was a trick to pat the plastic into folds at my joints. I cut my flat feet-plates down, to the proportions of a human foot. Covered with clothes, the imperfections of my pseudo-human body weren’t glaring. The important thing was that my hard metal was covered with a softer medium.
Molding my face and hands took the most delicate labor. They would be exposed to constant sight. Jack and Kay were my faithful assistants. Tom was down in the city, delving into the case.
My hands came out as big hams, worthy of a prize-fighter. The fingers were rather stiff, because of the metal “bone” beneath. Jack carefully set human hair into the plastic, over the knuckles, in keeping with my general appearance as a big, brawny man. He molded my facial features with a master’s touch—outjutting chin, heavy straight lips, low forehead. He couldn’t resist giving me a slight pug nose and a cauliflower ear. Over my shiny skull he glued a wig of matted black hair. And a rather heavy mustache on my upper lip, to conceal the fact that it didn’t move when I talked.
The eyes were a problem. I made them myself, two little hemispheres of clear thin glass. My vision was somewhat distorted, and it was a blue world after Jack applied blue-stain for irises.
Kay did her part, rouging the cheeks and lips cleverly, to take away the dead-flesh texture. Little touches of cosmetics around the eyes and nose blended the features properly.
“There!” Jack grunted finally, with his irrepressible sense of humor. “Didn’t know I was a master sculptor down underneath.”
They surveyed me critically, from top to toe. I wore a dark tweed suit and a cap pulled low. Suddenly, though they tried to resist, they burst out laughing. I could not blame them when I looked in a full-length mirror.
In the glare of electric light, I was perhaps the strangest looking being imaginable. A big, hulking-shouldered man with a dead “pan” and clumsy arms and legs. Jack stopped laughing and substituted a shaded lamplight for the overhead glare. And there, in the half-gloom with imperfections hidden, I suddenly came to life.
“You’ll do,” Jack nodded soberly. “You can work only at night, though. And keep out of bright lights. Outside of a certain stiffness in your carriage—which might come from being muscle-bound like any has-been fighter—you’re Pete Larch, the pug.”
They gave me lessons in walking and swinging my arms naturally. I learned to slouch a little, and take short strides instead of my long, ponderous ones. A rough job, all in all, but we only had two weeks. I would pass for a human to all but the most searching eyes in bright light.
“One thing, though,” Jack said worriedly. “That damned jingling noise you make inside.” He had the answer to that quickly. He drew out a large watch that made a loud ticking. “Put it in your vest pocket. Kay never liked it anyway. At strategic moments, take it out, so they think it’s just that turnip clattering away, and not your gear-and-cog innards. Well, Adam old boy—go out and get your man.”
He had tried to lighten the moment I left them with a flippant tone. But beneath it we were solemn. I had a big job ahead of me, with no inkling of how it would come out.
I contacted Eve as I drove toward the city on my errand. The ESP radio-beam oscillator was in my chest-space, connected to my battery for power, with push-button controls wired into my trouser belt.
“Eve! I’m starting out now to find the murderers who hope to see you pay for their crimes. Be patient, loved one.”
“I will, Adam. I trust you. I know you’ll save me.”
I parked the car in a downtown garage, then strode toward the criminal quarter of town. I chose the least frequented streets, where lamplights were dim. Whenever I approached another pedestrian, I watched him narrowly. Most humans unconsciously glance at someone passing. Their glances at me showed nothing of surprise or suspicion. Only at times, a slight repugnance. A wholly naturally reaction, in that I was no debonair fashion-plate, but a seedy, degenerate looking individual.
I was satisfied, as I went along. My human disguise, despite first misgivings, was adequate.
In the criminal quarter, I made my way toward one of the “dives” that were distributed in the neighborhood, frequented by hoodlums, gunmen and all specimens of the lower element. Jack had named three of the places as the most likely hangout for members of the ring we were after. The one victim, Pucelli, pinned the crimes on a certain organization that Jack knew about from his newspaper work.
“Probably the biggest, most powerful gang in the city,” Jack had said. “Racketeers, strong-arm men, kidnappers—they’ve had their hand in everything vicious. The rumor is that the brains, or Boss, of the outfit is a well-protected, solid citizen, known only to his organization. You can’t get at him. Just try to find out who did the actual killings, at his orders. Tom will do the rest.”
I paused, outside the dive. Adam Link, detective, took a bre
ath—figuratively, at least. Pete Larch walked in.
The dive was noisy, smoke-filled, dim. Thankful for that, I slumped in a chair in a dark corner. A bartender came.
“Whiskey,” I ordered, in a low gruff voice, striving to hide its mechanical inflection.
“Chaser?”
“Soda.”
Jack had posted me on all these trivial, yet important details. The drink came and I tossed down the coins. The bartender gave me a searching glance. For a moment I was stunned. Did he suspect? Had I done something wrong, in my guise as a human? Then I realized that in a place such as this, every human was given an inspection. A once-over. He shrugged slightly, and from that I gathered that he had put me down as a common drifter.
To anyone observing me, I must have given the impression of a morose chap with nothing to do, here for a few drinks, unconcerned with anyone else. I was quite the contrary. My photo-electric eyes—my real vision behind the glass camouflage—took in every individual in the place. My sensitive tympanums, behind their plastic dummies, were listening to every conversation in the room. To every word whispered between men seated in a far corner, for instance. I have the capacity to select sounds, from behind a background of din.
Sixty feet away, with a tinny piano banging in between, I heard one man mutter to another: “So I says to him, I says, look here—”
Senseless, brainless mouthings. I began to wonder, as I listened all over the room, what life meant to these creatures. It was all so pitifully meaningless. Dr. Link, my creator, did not tell me that so much of humanity drinks the dregs of existence. That so many of his fellow beings were further removed from him, in mentality, than I could ever be.
It happened so quickly, I had no chance to think.
A soft form plumped into my lap. I looked around at one of the painted women whose shrill voices and hard laughter filled the room.
“All alone, big boy?” she said in false sweetness. “Come on, pep up. Have a little fun. You look like a funeral on two feet.” My plastic face, of course, could not smile.