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Complete Short Fiction (Jerry eBooks)

Page 29

by James H. Schmitz


  She realized the Lannai was holding the filled cup to her lips.

  “Drink that!” the cool voice ordered. “Whatever you’ve got it’s good tor. Then just settle back, relax, and let’s hear what you know!”

  The liquid she had gulped, Jasse noticed, wasn’t really rose-colored as she had thought, but a deep, dim, ruby red, almost black—an enormously quiet color—and with a highly curious slowing-down effect on things, too! For instance, you might realize perfectly well that somewhere, but around the edges of you, you were still horribly upset, with fear-thoughts racing about everywhere at a dizzy speed. Every so often, one of them would turn inwards and come shooting right at you, flashing like a freezing arrow into the deep-red dusk where you were. But just as you started. to shrink away from it, you noticed it was getting slower and slower, the farther it came; until finally it just stayed where it was, and then gradually melted away.

  They never could get through to reach you. It was rather comical!

  It appeared she had asked some question about it, because the big-eyed little humanoid was saying: “You like the effect, eh? That’s just antishock, little chum! Thought you knew the stuff . . . don’t they teach you anything at Cultures?” That was funny, too! Cultures, of course, taught you everything there was to know! But wait—hadn’t there been . . . what had there been that she—? Jasse decided to examine that point about Cultures very carefully, some other time.

  By and large there seemed to be a good deal of quiet conversation going on around her. Perhaps she was doing some of it, but it was hard to tell; since, frankly, she wasn’t much interested in those outside events any more. And then, for a while, the two tall shapes, the man and the woman, came up again to the barrier in her past and tried to talk to her, as they always did when she was feeling anxious and alone. A little puzzled, because she didn’t feel that way now, Jasse watched them from her side of the barrier, which was where the explosions and shrieking lights were, that had brought terror and hurt and the sudden forgetting which none of Culture’s therapists had been able to lift. Dimly, she could sense the world behind them, to which they wanted her to go—the star-glittering cold and the great silent flows of snow, and the peace and enchantment that were there. But she could make no real effort to reach it now, and in the end the tall shapes seemed to realize that and went away.

  Or else, they merely faded out of her sight as the color about her deepened ever more from ruby redness into the ultimate, velvety, all-quieting, all-slowing-down black—

  “Wonderful—” Jasse murmured contentedly, asleep.

  “Hallerock?”

  “Linked in, Pag! I’m back on the Observation Ship again. Go ahead.”

  “Just keep this thought-line down tight! Everything’s working like a charm, so far. I tripped the D.C.’s shield open when I took her aboard, and our good friend Moyuscane came right in, all set to take control and find out whether we actually knew something about him and his setup here or not. Then he discovered I was around, and he’s been lying quiet and just listening through her ever since.”

  “What makes him shy of you?” Hallerock inquired.

  “He tried a long-range probe at my shields a couple of weeks ago. I slapped him on the beak—some perfectly natural startled-reaction stuff by another telepath, you understand. But lie certainly didn’t like it! He went out fast, that time—”

  “I don’t blame him,” Hallerock said thoughtfully. “Sometimes you don’t realize your own strength. Does the D.C. really have anything on him?”

  “No. It’s about as we suspected. She made some sort of innocent remark—I couldn’t take the chance of digging around in her mind long enough to find out just what—and Moyuscane jumped to the wrong conclusions.”

  “I was wondering, you know,” Hallerock admitted, “whether you mightn’t have done some work on the Cultures girl in advance—something that would get her to drop a few bricks at some appropriate occasion.”

  “Well, you’re just naturally a suspicious little squirt!” Pagadan replied amiably. “To use Confederacy personnel against their will and knowledge for any such skulduggery is strictly counter-regulation. I advise you to make a note of the fact! However, it was the luckiest sort of coincidence. It should save us a week or two of waiting, especially since you have the hospital ship and staff all prepared. Moyuscane’s got himself a listening-post right in our ranks now, and that’s all he needs to stay reasonably safe—he thinks!”

  Hallerock appeared to be digesting this information for a moment. Then his thought came again:

  “Where are you at present?”

  “Down at the Central City spaceport, still in the Viper’s skiff. The D.C.’s under antishock and asleep on the bunk here!”

  “Oh,” said Hallerock, “you’re all ready to start the drive then?”

  “Wake up, little brother!” Pagadan advised him. “It started ten minutes ago! The last thing I told the girl before she went down deep was that a Vegan, Fleet Hospital Ship was approaching Ulphi with a brand-new, top-secret drug against space-fear, called Kynoleen—a free gift from the Confederacy to the afflicted population of this planet!”

  “Well . . . I Suppose I’d better set the H-Ship down at the spaceport about an hour from now, then?”

  “One Hour would be about right. Moyuscane must be in a considerable stew at the prospect of having the Kynoleen disclose the fact that most of the local population is suffering from an artificially imposed space-fear psychosis, but it won’t take him long to see to it that the drug won’t actually be used around here for quite some time. When that’s settled, we’ll let him breathe easier for about three hours. Then I’ll wake tip the D.C., make sure he’s listening through her and feed him the big jolt. So see I get that message we’ve prepared half an hour beforehand—three hours and thirty minutes from now! And send it as a straight coded communication, to make it look authentic.”

  “All right,” Hallerock said doubtfully. “But wouldn’t it be better to check over the entire schedule once more—just to be sure nothing can go wrong?”

  “There’s no need for that!” the Lannai said, surprised. “We’ve got Moyuscane analyzed down to the length of his immortal whiskers, and we’ve worked out the circumstances required to produce the exact effects we want. It’s just a matter of timing it now! You’re not letting yourself get rattled by a Telepath of the Second Order, are you? If he didn’t happen to have the planet under control, this wouldn’t he a job for Galactic Zones at all.”

  “Possibly not,” said Hallerock reasonably, “but then he does have it under control. Enough to hash it up from one pole to the other if he panics. That’s what keeps putting this dew on my brow.”

  “Agent-Trainee Hallerock,” Pagadan replied impatiently, “I love you like a son or something, but at times you talk like a dope. Even a Telep-Two doesn’t panic, unless you let him get the idea he’s cornered. All we’ve got to do is keep Moyuscane’s nose pointed towards the one way out and give him time enough to use it when we switch on the pressure—but not quite time enough to change his mind again! If it makes you feel any better, you could put trackers on any unprotected Vegans for the next eight hours.”

  Hallerock laughed uneasily. “I just finished doing that,” he admitted.

  Pagadan shrugged. Gloomy old Hallerock! From here on out, he’d be waiting for the worst to happen, though this kind of a job, as anyone who had studied his training records would know, was right up his alley. And it had been a pleasure, at that, to observe the swift accuracy with which he’d planned and worked out the schedule and details of this operation, in spite of head-shakings and forebodings. The only thing he couldn’t possibly have done was to take the responsibility for: it himself!

  She smiled faintly, and came over to sit down for a while beside the bunk on which Jasse was lying.

  Two hours later, when her aide contacted her again, he seemed comparatively optimistic.

  “Reaction as predicted,” he reported laconically. “I’m b
eginning to believe you might know what you’re doing.”

  “Moyuscane’s got the Kynoleen space-tests stalled?”

  “Yes. The whole affair was hushed up rather neatly. The H-Ship is down now at some big biochemical center five hundred miles from Central City, and the staff was routed through to top officials immediately. The question was raised then whether Ulphian body-chemistry mightn’t have varied just far enough from standard A-Class to make it advisable to conduct a series of local lab experiments with the drug before putting it to use. Our medics agreed and were asked, as between scientists, to keep the matter quiet meanwhile, to avoid exciting the population unduly. There also was the expected vagueness as to how long the experiments might take.”

  “It makes it so much easier,” Pagadan said gratefully, “when the opposition is using its brains! Was anyone shown around the ship?”

  “A few dozen types of specialists are still prowling all over it. They’ve been introduced to our personnel. It seems a pretty safe bet,” Hallerock acknowledged hesitantly, “that Moyuscane has discovered there isn’t a shielded mind among them, and that he can take control of the crate and its crew whenever he wants.” He paused. “So now we just wait a while?”

  “And let him toy around with the right kind of ideas,”-agreed Pagadan. “He should be worried just enough by now to let them come floating up naturally.”

  Night had fallen over Central City when the message she was expecting was rattled suddenly from the skiff’s communicator. She decoded it, produced evidence of considerable emotional shock, shook Jasse awake and, in a few dozen suitably excited sentences, handed Moyuscane his jolt. After that, though, there were some anxious moments before she got her patient quieted down enough to let the antishock resume its overall effect.

  “She kept wanting to get up and do something about it!” Pagadan reported to Hallerock, rubbing a slightly sprained wrist. “But I finally got it across that it wasn’t Cultures’ job to investigate undercover mass homicide on a foreign planet, and that one of our own Zone Agents, no less, was landing secretly tomorrow to take charge of the case.”

  “And that,” said Hallerock darkly, “really is switching on the pressure!”

  “Just pressure enough for our purpose! It’s still a big, hidden organization that’s suspected of those fancy murder rituals, and not just one little telepath who’s played at being planetary god for the past few centuries. Of course, if we’d pointed a finger straight at Moyuscane himself, he would have cracked right there!”

  She passed a small handkerchief once, quickly, over her forehead. “This kind of thing is likely to be a bit nerve-wracking until you get used to it,” she added reassuringly. “I can remember when I’ve felt just about as jumpy as you’re feeling now. But all we have to do is to settle down and let Moyuscane work out his little problem by himself. He can’t help seeing the answer—”

  But a full two hours passed then, and the better part of a third, while Pelial, the minor official of Galactic Zones, continued to work quietly at her files of reports and recordings, and received and dispatched various coded communications connected with the impending arrival of her superior—the hypothetical avenging Zone Agent.

  By now, she conceded at last, she might be beginning to feel a little disturbed, though, naturally, she had prepared alternative measures, in case—

  Hallerock’s thought flashed questioningly into her mind then. For a moment, Pagadan stopped breathing.

  “Linked!” she told him crisply. “Go ahead!”

  “The leading biochemists of Ulphi,” Hallerock informed her, “have just come up with a scientific achievement that would be regarded as noteworthy almost anywhere—”

  “You subhuman comic!” snapped Pagadan. “Tell me!”

  “. . . Inasmuch as they were able to complete—analyze, summarize and correlate—all tests required to establish the complete harmlessness of the new space-fear drug Kynoleen for all type-variations of Ulphian body-chemistry. They admit that, to some extent, they art? relaying—”

  “Hallerock,” Pagadan interrupted, in cold sincerity now, “you drag in one more unnecessary detail, and the very next time I meet you, you’re going to be a great, big, ugly-looking dead body!”

  “That’s not like you, Pag!” Hallerock complained. “Well, they rushed fifty volunteers over to the H-Ship anyway, to have Kynoleen given a final check in space right away—all Ulphi is now to have the benefit of it as soon as possible! But nobody seemed particularly upset when our medics reminded them they had been informed that the ship was equipped to conduct tests on only one subject at a time—”

  Pagadan drew a shivery breath and sat suffused for a moment by a pure, bright glow of self-admiration.

  “When will they take off with him?” she inquired with quiet; triumph.

  “They took off ten minutes ago,” her aide returned innocently, “and headed straight out. As a matter of fact, just before I beamed you, the test-subject had discovered that ten minutes in space will get you a whole lot farther than any Telep-Two can drive a directing thought. It seemed to disturb him to lose contact with Ulphi-WOW! Watch it, Pag! Supposing I hadn’t been shielded when that lethal stunner of yours landed!”

  “That’s a beautiful supposition!” hissed Pagadan. “Some day, you won’t be! But the planet’s safe, anyway—I guess I can forgive you. And now, my friend, you may start worrying about the ship!”

  IV.

  “I’ve got to compliment you,” she admitted a while later, “on the job you did when you installed those PT-cells. What I call perfect coverage! Half the time I don’t know myself from just what point of the ship I’m watching the show.”

  She was curled up now in a large chair, next to the bunk on which Jasse still slumbered quietly; and she appeared almost as completely relaxed as her guest. The upper part of her head was covered by something like a very large and thick-walled but apparently light helmet, which came down over her forehead to a line almost with her eyes, and her eyes were closed.

  “Just at the moment”—Hallerock hesitated—“I think you’re using the Peeping Tommy in the top left corner of the visitank Moyuscane’s looking into. He still doesn’t really like the: idea of being out in deep space, does he?”

  “No, but he’s got his dislike of it under control,” Pagadan said lazily. “He’s the one,” she added presently, “who directed the attack on our D.C. today at the Historical Institute. She has a short but very sharp memory-picture of him. So it is Moyuscane, all right!”

  “You mean,” Hallerock asked, stunned, “you weren’t really sure of it?”

  “Well—you can’t ever, be sure till everything’s all over,” Pagadan informed him cheerfully. “And then you sometimes wonder.” She opened her eyes, changed her position in the chair and settled back carefully again. “Don’t you pass out on me, Hallerock!” she warned. “You’re supposed to be recording every single thing that happens on the H-Ship for Lab!”

  There hadn’t been, Hallerock remarked, apparently still somewhat disturbed, very much to record as yet. The dark-skinned, trimly bearded Ulphian volunteer was, of course, indulging in a remarkable degree of activity, considering he’d been taken on board solely as an object of scientific investigation. But no one about him appeared to find anything odd in that. Wherever he went, padding around swiftly on bare feet and dressed in a set of white hospital pajamas, the three doctors who made up the ship’s experimental staff followed him earnestly, with a variety of instruments at the ready, rather like a trio of mother hens trailing an agitated chicken. Occasionally, they interrupted whatever he was doing and carried out some swift examination or other, to which he submitted indifferently.

  But he spoke neither to them nor to any of the ship’s officers he passed. And they, submerged in their various duties with an intentness which alone might have indicated that this was no routine flight, appeared unaware of his presence.

  “The old boy’s an organizer,” Pagadan conceded critically. “He’s put a
flock of experts to work for him, and he’s smart enough to leave them alone. They’ve got the ship on her new course by now, haven’t they? Can you make out where they think they’re going?”

  Hallerock told her.

  “An eighty-three day trip!” she said thoughtfully. “Looks like he didn’t want to have anything at all to do with us any more! Someone on board must know what’s in that region—or was able to get information on it.”

  Up to the end, that was almost all there was to see. At a velocity barely below the cruising speed of a Vegan destroyer, the 11-Ship moved away from Ulphi. Like a harried executive, too involved in weighty responsibilities to bother about his informal attire, the solitary Ulphian continued to roam about within the ship, disregarded by all but his attendant physicians. “But finally—he was back in the ship’s big control room by then and had just cast another distasteful glance at the expanse of star-glittering blackness within the visitank between the two pilots— Moyuscane began to speak.

  It became startlingly clear in that instant how completely alone lie actually was among the 11-Ship’s controlled crew. Like a man who knows he need not act with restraint in a „ dream peopled by phantoms, the exruler of Ulphi poured forth what was in his mind, in a single screaming spurt of frustrated fury and fears and hopes that should have swung the startled attention of everybody within hearing range upon hint, like the sudden ravings of a madman.

  The pilots became involved with the chief navigator and his two assistants in a brisk five-cornered discussion of a stack of hitherto unused star-plates. The three doctors—gathered about the couch on which Moyuscane sat—exchanged occasional comments with the calm unhurriedness of men observing the gradual development of a test, the satisfactory conclusion of which already is assured.

 

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