“Someone of scholar grade in both psychology and telepathy,” said Catherine.
I thought it over for a moment. “It seems to me that whoever did it—if it was done—was well aware that a good part of this urge would be generated by Catherine’s total and unexplicable disappearance. You’d have saved yourselves a lot of trouble—and saved me a lot of heartache if you’d let me know something. God! Haven’t you any feelings?”
Catherine looked at me from hurt eyes. “Steve,” she said quietly, “A billion girls have sworn that they’d rather die than live without their one and only. I swore it too. But when your life’s end is shown to you on a microscope slide, love becomes less important. What should I do? Just die? Painfully?”
That was handing it to me on a platter. It hurt but I am not chuckleheaded enough to insist that she come with me to die instead of leaving me and living. What really hurt was not knowing.
“Steve,” said Marian. “You know that we couldn’t have told you the truth.”
“Yeah,” I agreed disconsolately.
“Let’s suppose that Catherine wrote you a letter telling you that she was alive and safe, but that she’d reconsidered the marriage. You were to forget her and all that. What happens next?”
Unhappily I told him. “I’d not have believed it.”
Phillip nodded. “Next would have been a telepath-esper team. Maybe a perceptive with a temporal sense who could retrace that letter back to the point of origin, teamed up with a telepath strong enough to drill a hole through the dead area that surrounds New Washington. Why, even before Rhine Institute, it was sheer folly for a runaway to write a letter. What would it be now?”
I nodded. What he said was true, but it did not ease the hurt.
“Then on the other hand,” he went on in a more cheerful vein, “Let’s take another look at us and you, Steve. Tell me, fellow, where are you now?”
I looked up at him. Phillip was smiling in a knowing-superior sort of manner. I looked at Marian. She was half-smiling. Catherine looked satisfied. I got it.
“Yeah. I’m here.”
“You’re here without having any letters, without leaving any broad trail of suspicion upon yourself. You’ve not disappeared, Steve. You’ve been a-running up and down the country all on your own decision. Where you go and what you do is your own business and nobody is going to set up a hue and cry after you. Sure, it took a lot longer this way. But it was a lot safer.” He grinned wide then as he went on, “And if you’d like to take some comfort out of it, just remember that you’ve shown yourself to be quite capable, filled with dogged determination, and ultimately successful.”
He was right. In fact, if I’d tried the letter-following stunt long earlier, I’d have been here a lot sooner.
“All right,” I said. “So what do we do now?”
“We go on and on and on, Steve, until we’re successful.”
“Successful?”
He nodded soberly. “Until we can make every man, woman, and child on the face of this Earth as much physical superman as we are, our job is not finished.”
I nodded. “I learned a few of the answers at the Macklin Place.”
“Then this does not come as a complete shock.”
“No. Not a complete shock. But there are a lot of loose ends still. So the basic theme I’ll buy. Scholar Phelps and his Medical Center are busy using their public position to create the nucleus of a totalitarian state, or a physical hierarchy. You and the Highways in Hiding are busy tearing Phelps down because you don’t want to see any more rule by the Divine Right of Kings, Dictators, or Family Lines.”
“Go on, Steve.”
“Well, why in the devil don’t you announce yourselves?”
“No good, old man. Look, you yourself want to be a Mekstrom. Even with your grasp of the situation, you resent the fact that you cannot.”
“You’re right.”
Phillip nodded slowly. “Let’s hypothesize for a moment, taking a subject that has nothing to do with Mekstrom’s Disease. Let’s take one of the old standby science-fiction plots. Some cataclysm is threatening the solar system. The future of the Earth is threatened, and we have only one spacecraft capable of carrying a hundred people to safety—somewhere else. How would you select them?”
I shrugged. “Since we’re hypothecating, I suppose that I’d select the more healthy, the more intelligent, the more virile, the more—” I struggled for another category and then let it stand right there because I couldn’t think of another at that instant.
Phillip agreed. “Health and intelligence and all the rest being pretty much a matter of birth and upbringing, how can you explain to Wilbur Zilch that Oscar Hossenpfeiffer has shown himself smarter and healthier and therefore better stock for survival? Maybe you can, but the end-result is that Wilbur Zilch slaughters Oscar Hossenpfeiffer. This either provides an opening for Zilch, or if he is caught at it, it provides Zilch with the satisfaction of knowing that he’s stopped the other guy from getting what he could not come by honestly.”
“So what has this to do with Mekstrom’s Disease and supermen?”
“The day that we—and I mean either of us—announces that we can ‘cure’ Mekstrom’s Disease and make physical supermen of the former victims, there will be a large scream from everybody to give them the same treatment. No, we’ll tell them, we can’t cure anybody who hasn’t caught it. Then some pedagogue will stand up and declare that we are suppressing information. This will be believed by enough people to do us more harm than good. Darn it, we’re not absolutely indestructible, Steve. We can be killed. We could be wiped out by a mob of angry citizens who saw in us a threat to their security. Neither we of the Highways nor Phelps of The Medical Center have enough manpower to be safe.”
“So that I’ll accept. The next awkward question comes up: What are we going to do with me?”
“You’ve agreed that we cannot move until we know how to inoculate healthy flesh. We need normal humans, to be our guinea pigs. Will you help bring to the Earth’s People the blessing that is now denied them?”
“If you are successful, Steve,” said Marian, “You’ll go down in History along with Otto Mekstrom. You could be the turning point of the human race, you know.”
“And if I fail?”
Phillip Harrison’s face took on a hard and determined look. “Steve, there can be no failure. We shall go on and on until we have success.”
That was a fine prospect. Old guinea-pig Cornell, celebrating his seventieth birthday as the medical experimentation went on and on.
Catherine was leaning forward, her eyes bright. “Steve,” she cried, “You’ve just got to!”
“Just call me the unwilling hero,” I said in a drab voice. “And put it down that the condemned specimen drank a hearty dinner. I trust that there is a drink in the house.”
There was enough whiskey in the place to provide the new specimen with a near-total anesthesia. The evening was spent in forced badinage, shallow laughter, and a pointed avoidance of the main subject. The whiskey was good; I took it undiluted and succeeded in getting boiled to the eyebrows before they carted me off to bed.
I did not sleep well despite my anesthesia. There was too much on my mind and very little of it was the fault of the Harrisons. One of the things that I had to face was the cold fact that part of Catherine’s lack of communication with me was caused by logic and good sense. Both History and Fiction are filled with cases where love was set aside because consummation was impossible for any number of good reasons.
So I slept fitfully, and my dreams were as unhappy as the thoughts I had during my waking moments. Somehow I realized that I’d have been far better off if I’d been able to forget Catherine after the accident, if I’d been able to resist the urge to follow the Highways in Hiding, if I’d never known that those ornamental road signs were something more than the desire of some road commissioner to beautify the countryside. But no, I had to go and poke my big bump of curiosity into the problem. So here I
was, resentful as all hell because I was denied the pleasure of living in the strong body of a Mekstrom.
It was not fair. Although Life itself is seldom fair, it seemed to me that Life was less fair to me than to others.
And then to compound my feelings of persecution, I woke up once about three in the morning with a strong urge to take a perceptive dig down below. I should have resisted it, but of course, no one has ever been able to resist the urge of his sense of perception.
Down in the living room, Catherine was crying on Phillip Harrison’s shoulder. He held her gently with one arm around her slender waist and he was stroking her hair softly with his other hand. I couldn’t begin to dig what was being said, but the tableau was unmistakable.
She leaned back and looked at him as he said something. Her head moved in a ‘No’ motion as she took a deep breath for another bawl. She buried her face in his neck and sobbed. Phillip held her close for a moment and then loosed one hand to find a handkerchief for her. He wiped her eyes gently and talked to her until she shook her head in a visible effort to shake away both the tears and the unhappy thoughts.
Eventually he lit two cigarettes and handed one to her. Side by side they walked to the divan and sat down close together. Catherine leaned against him gently and he put his arm over her shoulders and hugged her to him. She relaxed, looking unhappy, but obviously taking comfort in the strength and physical presence of him.
It was a hell of a thing to dig in my mental condition. I drifted off to a sleep filled with unhappy dreams while they were still downstairs. Frankly, I forced myself into fitful sleep because I did not want to stay awake to follow them.
As bad as the nightmare quality of my dreams were, they were better for me than the probable reality.
• • •
Oh, I’d been infernally brilliant when I uncovered the first secret of the Highways in Hiding. I found out that I did not know one-tenth of the truth. They had a network of Highways that would make the Department of Roads and Highways look like a backwood, second-rate, political organization.
I’d believed, for instance, that the Highways were spotted only along main arteries to and from their Way Stations. The truth was that they had a complete system from one end of the country to the other. Lanes led from Maine and from Florida into a central main Highway that laid across the breadth of the United States. Then from Washington and from Southern California another branching network met this main Highway. Lesser lines served Canada and Mexico. The big Main Trunk ran from New York to San Francisco with only one large major division: A heavy line that led down to a place in Texas called Homestead. Homestead, Texas, was a big center that made Scholar Phelps’ Medical Center look like a Teeny Weeny Village by comparison.
We drove in Marian’s car. My rented car, of course, was returned to the agency and my own bus would be ferried out as soon as it could be arranged so that I’d not be without personal transportation in Texas. Catherine remained in Wisconsin because she was too new at being a Mekstrom to know how to conduct herself so that the fact of her super-powerful body did not cause a lot of slack jaws and high suspicion.
We drove along the Highways to Homestead, carrying a bag of the Mekstrom Mail.
The trip was uneventful.
* * *
XIII
Since this account of my life and adventures is not being written without some plan, it is no mere coincidence that this particular section comes under Chapter Thirteen. Old Unlucky Thirteen covers ninety days which I consider the most dismal ninety days of my life. Things, which had been going along smoothly had, suddenly got worse.
We started with enthusiasm. They cut and they dug and they poked needles into me and trimmed out bits of my hide for slides. I helped them by digging my own flesh and letting their better telepaths read my results for their records.
They were nice to me. I got the best of everything. But being nice to me was not enough; it sort of made me feel like Gulliver in Brobdingnag. They were so over-strong that they did not know their own strength. This was especially true of the youngsters of Mekstrom parents. I tried to re-diaper a baby one night and got my ring finger gummed for my efforts. It was like wrestling Bad Cyril in a one-fall match, winner take all.
As the days added up into weeks, their hope and enthusiasm began to fade. The long list of proposed experiments dwindled and it became obvious that they were starting to work on brand new ideas. But brand new ideas are neither fast in arriving nor high in quantity, and time began to hang dismally heavy.
They began to avoid my eyes. They stopped discussing their attempts on me; I no longer found out what they were doing and how they hoped to accomplish the act. They showed the helplessness that comes of failure, and this feeling of utter futility was transmitted to me.
At first I was mentally frantic at the idea of failure, but as the futile days wore on and the fact was practically shoved down my throat, I was forced to admit that there was no future for Steve Cornell.
I began at that time to look forward to my visit to reorientation.
Reorientation is a form of mental suicide. Once reoriented, the problems that make life intolerable are forgotten, your personality is changed, your grasp of everything is revised, your appreciation of all things comes from an entirely new angle. You are a new person.
Then one morning I faced my image in the mirror and came to the conclusion that if I couldn’t be Me, I didn’t want to be Somebody Else. It is no good to be alive if I am not me, I told my image, who obediently agreed with me.
I didn’t even wait to argue with Me. I just went out and got into my car and sloped. It was not hard; everybody in Homestead trusted me.
* * *
XIV
I left homestead with a half-formed idea that I was going to visit Bruce, Wisconsin, long enough to say goodbye to Catherine and to release her from any matrimonial involvement she may have felt binding. I did not relish this idea, but I felt that getting it out, done, and agreed was only a duty.
But as I hit the road and had time to think, I knew that my half-formed intention was a sort of martyrdom; I was going to renounce myself in a fine welter of tears and then go staggering off into the setting sun to die of my mental wounds. I took careful stock of myself and faced the fact that my half-baked idea was a sort of suicide-wish; walking into any Mekstrom way station now was just asking for capture and a fast trip to their reorientation rooms. The facts of my failure and my taking-of-leave would be indication enough for Catherine that I was bowing out. It would be better for Catherine, too, to avoid a fine, high-strung, emotional scene. I remembered the little bawling session in the Harrison living room that night; Catherine would not die for want of a sympathetic hand on her shoulder. In fact, as she’d said pragmatically, well balanced people never die of broken hearts.
Having finally convinced myself of the validity of this piece of obvious logic, I suddenly felt a lot better. My morose feeling faded away; my conviction of utter uselessness died; and my half-formed desire to investigate a highly hypothetical Hereafter took an abrupt about-face. And in place of this collection of undesirable self-pities came a much nicer emotion. It was a fine feeling, that royal anger that boiled up inside of me. I couldn’t lick ‘em and I couldn’t join ‘em, so I was going out to pull something down, even if it all came down around my own ears.
I stopped long enough to check the Bonanza .375 both visually and perceptively and then loaded it full. I consulted a road map to chart a course. Then I took off with the coal wide open and the damper rods all the way out and made the wheels roll towards the East.
I especially gave all the Highways a very wide berth. I went down several, but always in the wrong direction. And in the meantime, I kept my sense of perception on the alert for any pursuit. I drove with my eyes alone. I could have made it across the Mississippi by nightfall if I’d not taken the time to duck Highway signs. But when I got good, and sick, and tired of driving, I was not very far from the River. I found a motel in a rather
untravelled spot and sacked in for the night.
I awoke at the crack of dawn with a feeling of impending something. It was not doom, because any close-danger would have nudged me on the bump of perception. Nor was it good, because I’d have awakened looking forward to it. Something odd was up and doing. I dressed hastily, and as I pulled my clothing on I took a slow dig at the other cabins in the motel.
Number One contained a salesman type, I decided, after digging through his baggage. Number Two was occupied by an elderly couple who were loaded with tourist-type junk and four or five cameras. Number Three harbored a stopover truck driver and Number Four was almost overflowing with a gang of schoolgirls packed sardine-wise in the single bed. Number Five was mine. Number Six was vacant. Number Seven was also vacant but the bed was tumbled and the water in the washbowl was still running out, and the door was still slamming, and the little front steps were still clicking to the fast clip of high heels, and——
I hauled myself out of my cabin on a dead gallop and made a fast line for my car. I hit the car, clawed myself inside, wound up the turbine and let the old heap in gear in one unbroken series of motions. The wheels spun and sent back a hail of gravel, then they took a bite out of the parking lot and the take-off snapped my head back.
Both esper and eyesight were very busy cross-stitching a crooked course through the parking lot between the parked cars and the trees that were intended to lend the outfit a rustic atmosphere. So I was too busy to take more than a vague notice of a hand that clamped onto the doorframe until the door opened and closed again. By then I was out on the highway and I could relax a bit.
“Steve,” she said, “why do you do these things?”
Yeah, it was Marian Harrison. “I didn’t ask to get shoved into this mess,” I growled.
“You didn’t ask to be born, either,” she said.
Highways in Hiding (1956) Page 12