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The Works of Clifford D. Simak Volume Two

Page 46

by Clifford D. Simak


  There is no thing, no matter how created, how born or how conceived or made, which knows the pulse of life, that goes alone. That assurance I can give you.…

  He closed the book and held it clasped between the palms of his two hands.

  “… how born or how conceived or made …”

  Made.

  All that mattered was the pulse of life.

  Comfort.

  And it must be kept.

  I did my duty, he told himself. My willing, almost eager, duty. I still am doing it.

  I acted the part, he told himself, and I think I acted well. I acted a part when I carried the challenge to Asher Sutton’s room. I acted a part when I came to him as a part of the estate duella … the saucy, flippant part of any common android.

  I did my duty for him … and yet not for him, but for comfort, for the privilege of knowing and believing that neither I nor any other living thing, no matter how lowly it may be, will ever be alone.

  I hit him. I hit him on the button and I knocked him out and I lifted him in my arms and carried him.

  He was angry at me, but that does not matter. For his anger cannot wash away a single word of the thing he gave me.

  Thunder shook the house, and the window, for a moment, flared with sudden crimson.

  Herkimer came to his feet and ran to the window and stood there, gripping the ledge, watching the red twinkle of dwindling rocket tubes.

  Fear hit him in the stomach and he raced out of the door and down the hall, to Sutton’s room.

  He did not knock nor did he turn the knob. He hit the door and it shattered open, with a wrecked and twisted lock dangling by its screws.

  The bed was empty and there was no one in the room.

  XXVIII

  Sutton sensed resurrection and he fought against it, for death was so comfortable. Like a soft, warm bed. And resurrection was a strident, inistent, maddening alarm clock that shrilled across the predawn chill of a dreadful, frowzy room. Dreadful with its life and its bare reality and its sharp, sickening reminder that one must get up and walk into reality again.

  But this is not the first time. No, indeed, said Sutton. This is not the first time that I died and came to life again. For I did it once before and that time I was dead for a long, long time.

  There was a hard, flat surface underneath him and he lay face down upon it and for what seemed an interminable stretch of time his mind struggled to visualize the hardness and smoothness beneath him. Hard and flat and smooth, three words, but they did not help one see or understand the thing that they described.

  He felt life creep back and quicken, seep along his legs and arms. But he wasn’t breathing and his heart was still.

  Floor!

  That was it … that was the word for the thing on which he lay. The flat, hard surface was a floor.

  Sounds came to him, but at first he didn’t call them sounds, for he had no word for them at all, and then, a moment later, he knew that they were sounds.

  Now he could move one finger. Then a second finger.

  He opened his eyes and there was light.

  The sounds were voices and the voices were words and the words were thoughts.

  It takes so long to figure things out, Sutton told himself.

  “We should have tried a little harder,” said a voice, “and a little longer. The trouble with us, Case, is that we have no patience.”

  “Patience wouldn’t have done a bit of good,” said Case. “He was convinced that we were bluffing. No matter what we’d done or said, he’d still have thought we were bluffing and we would have gotten nowhere. There was only one thing to do.”

  “Yes, I know,” Pringle agreed. “Convince him that we weren’t bluffing.”

  He made a sound of blowing out his breath. “Pity, too,” he said. “He was such a bright young man.”

  They were silent for a time and now it was not life alone, but strength, that was flowing into Sutton. Strength to stand and walk, strength to lift his arms, strength to vent his anger. Strength to kill two men.

  “We won’t do so badly,” Pringle said. “Morgan and his crowd will pay us handsomely.”

  Case was squeamish. “I don’t like it, Pringle. A dead man is a dead man if you leave him dead. But when you sell him, that makes you a butcher.”

  “That’s not the thing that’s worrying me,” Pringle told him. “What will it do to the future, Case? To our future. We had a future with many of its facets based on Sutton’s book. If we had managed to change the book a little it wouldn’t have mattered much … wouldn’t have mattered at all, in fact, the way we had it figured out. But now Sutton’s dead. There will be no book by Sutton. The future will be different.”

  Sutton rose to his feet.

  They spun around and faced him and Case’s hand went for his gun.

  “Go ahead,” invited Sutton. “Shoot me full of holes. You won’t live a minute longer for it.”

  He tried to hate them, as he had hated Benton during that one fleeting moment back on Earth. Hatred so strong and primal that it had blasted the man’s mind into oblivion.

  But there was no hate. Just a ponderous, determined will to kill.

  He moved forward on sturdy legs and his hands reached out.

  Pringle ran, squealing like a rat, seeking to escape. Case’s gun spat twice and when blood oozed out and ran down Sutton’s chest and he still came on, Case threw away his weapon and backed against the wall.

  It didn’t take long.

  They couldn’t get away.

  There was no place to go.

  XXIX

  Sutton maneuvered the ship down against the tiny asteroid, a whirling piece of debris not much bigger than the ship itself. He felt it touch and his thumb reached out and knocked over the gravity lever and the ship clamped down, to go tumbling through space with the twisting chunk of rock.

  Sutton let his hands fall to his side, sat quietly in the pilot’s chair. In front of him, space was black and friendless, streaked by the pinpoint stars that spun in lines of fire across the field of vision, writing cryptic messages of cold, white light across the cosmos as the asteroid bumbled on its erratic course.

  Safe, he told himself. Safe for a while, at least. Perhaps safe forever, for there might be no one looking for him.

  Safe with a hole blasted through his chest, with blood splashed down his shirt front and running down his legs. Handy thing to have, he thought grimly, this second body of mine. This body that was grafted on me by the Cygnians. It will keep me going until … until …

  Until what?

  Until I can get back to Earth and walk into a doctor’s office and say, “I got shot up some. How about a patching job?”

  Sutton chuckled.

  He could see the doctor dropping dead.

  Or going back to Cygni?

  But they wouldn’t let me in.

  Or just going back to Earth the way I am and forgetting about the doctor.

  I could get other clothes and the bleeding will stop when the blood’s all gone.

  But I wouldn’t breathe, and they would notice that.

  “Johnny,” he said, but there was no answer, just a feeble stir of life within his brain, a sign of recognition, as a dog would wag its tail to let you know it heard but was too busy with a bone to let anything distract it.

  “Johnny, is there any way?”

  For there might be a way. It was a hope to cling to, it was a thing to think about.

  Not even yet, he suspected, had he begun to plumb the strange depth of abilities lodged within his body and his mind.

  He had not known that his hate alone could kill, that hate could spear out from his brain like a lance of steel and strike a man down dead. And yet Benton had died with a bullet in the arm … and he had been dead before the bullet hit him. For Benton had fired and missed and Benton, alive, never would have missed.

  He had not known that by mind alone he could control the energy that was needed to lift the dead weight of a ship from a
boulder bed and fly it across eleven years of space. And yet that is what he’d done, winnowing the energy from the flaming stars so far away they dimmed to almost nothing, from the random specks of matter that floated in the void.

  And while he knew that he could change at will from one life to another, he had not known for certain that when one way of life was killed, the other way would take over automatically. Yet that was what had happened. Case had killed him and he had died and he had come to life again. But he had died before the change had started. Of that much he was sure. For he remembered death and recognized it. He knew it from the time before.

  He felt his body eating … sucking at the stars as a human sucks an orange, nibbling at the energy imprisoned in the bit of rock to which the ship was clamped, pouncing on the tiny leaks of power from the ship’s atomic motors.

  Eating to grow strong, eating to repair …

  “Johnny, is there any way?”

  And there was no answer.

  He let his head sag forward until it lay upon the inclined panel that housed the instruments.

  His body went on eating, sucking at the stars.

  He listened to the slow drip of blood falling from his body and splashing on the floor.

  His mind was clouding and he let it cloud, for there was nothing to do … there was no need to use it, he did not know how to use it. He did not know what he could do or what he couldn’t do, nor how to go about it.

  He had fallen, he remembered, screaming down the alien sky, knowing a moment of wild elation that he had broken through, that the world of Cygni VII lay beneath his hand. That what all the navies of the Earth had failed to do, he’d done.

  The planet was rushing up and he saw the tangled geography of it that snaked in black and gray across his visionplate.

  It was twenty years ago, but he remembered it, in the gray fog of his mind, as if it were yesterday or this very moment.

  He reached out a hand and hauled back on a lever and the lever would not move. The ship plunged down and for a moment he felt a rising panic that exploded into fear.

  One fact stood out, one stark, black fact in all the flashing fragments of thoughts and schemes and prayer that went screeching through his brain. One stark fact … he was about to crash.

  He did not remember crashing, for he probably never knew exactly when he crashed. It was only fear and terror and then no fear or terror. It was consciousness and awareness and then a nothingness that was a restfulness and a vast forgetting.

  Awareness came back … in a moment or an aeon—which, he could not tell. But an awareness that was different, a sentiency that was only partly human, just a small percentage human. And a knowledge that was new, but which it seemed he had held forever.

  He sensed or knew, for it was not seeing, his body stretched out on the ground, smashed and broken, twisted out of human shape. And although he knew it was his body and knew its every superficial function and the plan of its assembly, he felt a twinge of wonder at the thing which lay there and knew that here was a problem which would tax his utmost ingenuity.

  For the body must be put together, must be straightened out and reintegrated and co-ordinated so that it would work and the life that had escaped it be returned to it again.

  He thought of Humpty Dumpty and the thought was strange, as if the nursery rhyme were something new or something long forgotten.

  Humpty Dumpty, said another part of him, supplies no answer, and he knew that it was right, for Humpty, he recalled, could not be put together.

  He became aware there were two of him, for one part of him had answered the other part of him. The answerer and the other, and although they were one, they were also separate. There was a cleavage he could not understand.

  I am your destiny, said the answerer. I was with you when you came to life and I stay with you till you die. I do not control you and I do not coerce you, but I try to guide you, although you do not know it.

  Sutton, the small part of him that was Sutton, said, “I know it now.”

  He knew it as if he’d always known it and that was queer, for he had only learned it. Knowledge, he realized, was all tangled up, for there were two of him … he and destiny. He could not immediately distinguish between the things he knew as Sutton alone and those he knew as Sutton plus Sutton’s destiny.

  I cannot know, he thought. I could not know then and I cannot know now. For there still is deep within me the two facets of my being, the human that I am and the destiny that guides me to a greater glory and a greater life if I will only let it.

  For it will not coerce me and it will not stop me. It will only give me hunches, it will only whisper to me. It is the thing called conscience and the thing called judgment and the thing called righteousness.

  And it sits within my brain as it sits within the brain of no other thing, for I am one with it as is no other thing. I know of it with a dreadful certainty and they do not know at all or, if they do, they only guess at the great immensity of its truthfulness.

  And all must know. All must know as I know.

  But there is something going on to keep them from knowing, or to twist their knowledge so their knowing is all wrong. I must find out what it is and I must correct it. And somehow or other I must strike into the future, I must set it aright for the days I will not see.

  I am your destiny, the answerer had said.

  Destiny, not fatalism.

  Destiny, not foreordination.

  Destiny, the way of men and races and of worlds.

  Destiny, the way you made your life, the way you shaped your living … the way it was meant to be, the way that it would be if you listened to the still, small voice that talked to you at the many turning points and crossroads.

  But if you did not listen … why, then, you did not listen and you did not hear. And there was no power that could make you listen. There was no penalty if you did not listen except the penalty of having gone against your destiny.

  There were other thoughts or other voices. Sutton could not tell which they were, but they were outside the tangled thing that was he and destiny.

  That is my body, he thought. And I am somewhere else. Someplace where there is no seeing as I used to see … and no hearing, although I see and hear, but with another’s senses and in an alien way.

  The screen let him through, said one thought, although screen was not the word it used.

  And another said, the screen has served its purpose.

  And another said that there was a certain technique he had picked up on a planet, the name of which blurred and ran and made a splotch and had no meaning at all so far as Sutton could make out.

  Still another pointed out the singular complexity and inefficiency of Sutton’s mangled body and spoke enthusiastically of the simplicity and perfection of direct energy intake.

  Sutton tried to cry out to them for the love of God to hurry, for his body was a fragile thing, that if they waited too long it would be past all mending. But he could not say it and as if in a dream he listened to the interplay of thought, the flash and flicker of individual opinion, all molding into one cohesive thought that spelled eventual decision.

  He tried to wonder where he was, tried to orient himself, and found that he could not even define himself. For himself no longer was a body or a place in space or time, nor even a personal pronoun. It was a hanging, dangling thing that had no substance and no fixture in the scheme of time and it could not recognize itself no matter what it did. It was a vacuum that knew it existed and it was dominated by something else that might as well have been a vacuum for all the recognition he could make of it.

  He was outside his body and he lived. But where or how there was no way of knowing.

  I am your destiny, the answerer that seemed a part of him had said.

  But destiny was a word and nothing more. An idea. An abstraction. A tenuous definition for something that the mind of Man had conceived, but could not prove … that the mind of Man was willing to agree was an idea onl
y and could not be proved.

  You are wrong, said Sutton’s destiny. Destiny is real although you cannot see it. It is real for you and for all other things … for every single thing that knows the surge of life. And it has always been and it will always be.

  This is not death? asked Sutton.

  You are the first to come to us, said destiny. We cannot let you die. We will give you back your body, but until then you will live with me. You will be part of me. And that is only fair, for I have lived with you; I have been part of you.

  You did not want me here, said Sutton. You built a screen to keep me out.

  We wanted one, said destiny. One only. You are that one; there will be no more.

  But the screen?

  It was keyed to a mind, said destiny. To a certain mind. The kind of mind we wanted.

  But you let me die.

  You had to die, destiny told him. Until you died and became one of us you could not know. In your body we could not have reached you. You had to die so that you would be freed and I was there to take you and make you part of me so you would understand.

  I do not understand, said Sutton.

  You will, said destiny. You will.

  And I did, thought Sutton, remembering. I did.

  His body shook as he remembered and his mind stood awed with the vast, unsuspected immensity of destiny … of trillions upon trillions of destinies to match the teeming life of the galaxy.

  Destiny had stirred a million years before and a shaggy ape thing had stooped and picked up a broken stick. It stirred again and struck flint together. It stirred once more and there was a bow and arrow. Again, and the wheel was born.

  Destiny whispered and a thing climbed dripping from the water and in the years to come its fins were legs and its gills were nostrils.

  Symbiotic abstractions. Parasites. Call them what you would. They were destiny.

  And the time had come for the galaxy to know of destiny.

  If parasites, then beneficial parasites, ready to give more than they could take. For all they got was the sense of living, the sense of being … and what they gave, or stood ready to give, was far more than mere living.

 

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