Before the Universe
Page 10
Mechanically he swallowed two tablets of the drug and threw the bottle away. A little plastic case … and as he stared at it, a diamond-hard lump in his throat, a fine, thin whistle shrilled from its depths.
Master’s call! He was wanted!
Moray climbed from the plane under the frowning Andes and almost floated into the corridor of his Master’s dwelling. The oppressive heat smote him in the face, but he was near laughing for joy when he opened the door and saw his Master sitting naked in the gloom.
`You are slow, Moray,’ said the Master, without inflection.
Moray experienced a sudden chill. He had not expected this. Confusedly he had pictured a warm reconciliation, but there was no mistaking the tone of the Master’s voice. Moray felt very tired and discouraged. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘You called me when I was out at the fields.’
The Master did not frown, nor did he smile. Moray knew these moods of the cold, bleak intellect that gave him the greater part of his own intelligence and personality. Yet there was no greater tragedy in the world of his people than to be deserted – or, rather, to lose rapport with this intelligence. It was not insanity, and yet it was worse.
`Moray,’ said the Master, ‘you are a most competent laboratory technician. And you have an ability for archaeology. You are assigned to a task which involves both these divisions. I wish you to investigate the researches of Carter Hawkes, time, about the Fifteenth Century Anno Cubriensis. Determine his conclusions and develop, on them, a complete solution to what he attempted to resolve.’
`Yes,’ said Moray dully. Normally he would have been elated at the thought that he had been chosen, and he consciously realized that it was his duty to be elated, but the chilly voice of his conscience told him that this was no affectionate assignment, but merely the use of a capable tool.
`What is the purpose of this research?’ he asked formally, his voice husky with fatigue and indulgence in the stimulant drug.
`It is of great importance. The researches of Hawkes, as you know, were concerned with explosives. It was his barbarous intention to develop an explosive of such potency that one charge would be capable of destroying an enemy nation. Hawkes, of course, died before his ambition was realized, but we have historical evidence that he was on the right track.’
`Chief among which,’ interrupted Moray – deferentially –‘is the manner of his death.’
There was no approval in the Master’s voice as he answered, `You know of the explosion in which he perished. Now, at this moment, the world is faced with a crisis more terrible than any ancient war could have been. It involves a shifting of the continental blocks of North America. The world now needs the Hawkes explosive, to provide the power for re-stabilizing the continent. All evidence has been assembled for your examination in the workroom. Speed is essential if catastrophe is to be averted.’
Moray was appalled. The fate of a continent in his hands! `I shall do my best,’ he said nervelessly, and walked from the room.
Moray straightened his aching body and turned on the lights. He set the last of a string of symbols down on paper and leaned back to stare at them. The formula – complete!
Moray was convinced that he had the right answer, through the lightning-like short cuts of reasoning, which humans called `canine intuition.’ Moray might have felt pride in that ability –but, he realized, it was a mirage. The consecutivity of thought of the Masters – not Moray nor any of his people could really concentrate on a single line of reasoning for more than a few seconds. In the synthesis of thought Moray’s people were superb. In its analysis …
A check-up on the formula was essential. Repeating the formula aloud, Moray’s hands grasped half a dozen ingredients from the shelves of the lab, and precisely compounded them in the field of a micro-inspection device. Actually, Moray was dealing with units measured in single molecules, and yet his touch was as sure as though he were handling beakers-full.
Finally titrated, the infinitesimal compound was set over a cherry-red electric grid to complete its chain of reactions and dry. Then it would explode, Moray realized – assuming he had the formula correct. But, with such a tiny quantity, what would be the difference?
Perhaps – at utmost – the room would be wrecked. But there was no time to take the stuff to the firing-chambers that were suspended high over the crater of the extinct volcano on flexible steel masts, bent and supported to handle almost any shock.
Moray swallowed two more pellets of the drug. He had to wait for its effect upon him, now, but he dared not take a larger dose.
He strode from the room, putting the formula in his pocket.
Wandering aimlessly through the building, he was suddenly assailed by the hot, wet aura of his Master. He paused, then nudged the door open a trifle and peered longingly within.
The Master was engaged in solitary clairvoyance, his head sagging down on his scrawny chest, veins and muscles visibly pulsing. Even in the utter darkness of his room, he was visible by a thin blue light that exuded from the points and projections of his body to flow about the entire skin.
The Master was utterly unconscious of the presence of his servant. Though Moray was not a child or a fool, he stemmed directly from the beautiful, intelligent creatures that used to hunt and play with men, and he could not stand up to the fierce tide of intellect that flowed in that room. With a smothered sound he turned, about to leave.
Then Moray heard a noise – quiet and almost restful at first, like a swarm of bees passing overhead. And then it rumbled into a mighty crash that made the elastic construction of the Master’s house quiver as though stricken.
Suddenly he realized – the Hawkes explosive! It had worked! He looked at his Master, to see the blue glare fade as though it were being reabsorbed into his body. As the last of it vanished, lights glowed on around the room, bringing it to its accustomed shadowy twilight. The Master’s head lifted.
`Moray,’ he whispered tensely. Was that the explosive?’
A thin little ripple of delight surged along Moray’s spine. They could both be blown to splintered atoms in the explosion, and the continent they were trying to save along with them – he didn’t care! His Master had spoken to him!
He knew what he had to do. With a little growl that was meant to say, `Pardon!’ he raced to the Master’s side, picked him up and flung him over a shoulder – gently. They had to get out of the building, for it might yet topple on them.
Moray tottered to the door, bent under the double burden; pushed it open and stepped into the corridor. The Master couldn’t walk, so Moray had to walk for him. They made slow progress along the interminable hall, but finally they were in the open. Moray set his burden down, the gangling head swaying, and—Felt unutterably, incontrovertibly idiotic! For the air was still and placid; and the building stood firm as a rock; and the only mark of the Hawkes explosive was a gaping mouth of a pit where the laboratory had been. Idiot! Not to have remembered that the Hawkes would expend its force downward!
Moray peered shamefacedly at his Master. Yet there was some consolation for him, because there was the skeleton of a smile on the Master’s face. Clearly he had understood Moray’s Motives, and … perhaps Moray’s life need not finally be blighted.
For a long second they stood there looking into each other’s eyes. Then the Master said, gently, ‘Carry me to the plane.’ Not stopping to ask why, Moray picked him up once more and strode buoyantly to the waiting ship. Letting the Master down gently at the plane’s door, he helped him in, got in himself, and took his place at the controls.
`Where shall we go?’ he ask.
The Master smiled that ghost of a smile again, but Moray could detect a faint apprehension in his expression, too. ‘Up, Moray,’ he whispered. ‘Straight up. You see, Moray, these mountains are volcanic. And they’re not quite extinct. We must go away now, up into the air.’
Moray’s reflexes were faster than an electron-stream as he whipped around to the knobs and levers that sent the little ship tearing up
into the atmosphere. A mile and a half in the sky, he flipped the bar that caused the ship to hover, turned to regard the scene below.
The Master had been right! The explosion had pinked the volcano, and the volcano was erupting in retaliation — a hot curl of lava-was snaking into the atmosphere now, seemingly a pseudo-pod reaching to bring them down. But it was thrown up only a few hundred feet; then the lava flow stopped; cataclysmic thunderings were heard and vast boulders were hurled into the sky. It was lucky they’d got away, thought Moray as he watched the ground beneath quiver and shake; and luckier that no other person had been around, for the ship could carry but two.
And as he stared, fascinated, at the turmoil below, he felt a light, soft touch on his arm. It was the Master! — the first time in all Moray’s life when the Master had touched him to draw attention, Moray suddenly knew, and rejoiced — he had found his Master again!
`Let us go on, Moray,’ whispered the Master. ‘We have found that the explosive will work. Our job, just now, is done.’
And as Moray worked the controls that hurled the ship ahead, toward a new home for his Master and toward Birch for himself, he knew that the wings of the ship were of no value at all. Tear them off! he thought, and throw them away! His heart was light enough to bear a world!
BEFORE THE UNIVERSE
“Before the Universe” was the first story Cyril and I published in collaboration. I published it myself, and watched the reader mail with considerable apprehension when the story hit the stands; we weren’t very sure of ourselves. But the response was good. That was all we needed. We sat right down and wrote a sequel, “Nova Midplane,” and then a third story in the series, “The Extrapolated Dimwit”
Unfortunately, by the time we came to the third story we discovered we were running out of things to say about our characters, and so we had to have help. In the Fulurian way, we solved the problem by inviting in a Third collaborator, Robert W. Lowndes, better known then as “Doc.”
Lowndes had been a fan as long as any of us, but mostly by correspondence. It was the time of the Great Depression. Most of us were young enough to be sheltered by our families from the harsher aspects of that long deep sickness of the thirties, but Lowndes was all by himself in the world. He had to earn a living any way he could, and one of the ways was by working in a hospital in Connecticut (Whence the “Doc.”) We knew each other almost entirely by correspondence for several years, during which time I remember that he introduced me to J. K Huysmans and I introduced him to J. B. Cabell (we didn’t only read SF, you know), before things healed enough for him to visit, then move to, New York City. He became a resident of The primitive Futurian communes (dull, drugless, all-male pads that they were) pursued his writing, ultimately achieved every fan’s dearest dream by getting a Job as a professional editor (Future Fiction, Science Fiction Quarterly and others) and has continued as one ever since. “The Extrapolated Dimwit” was first published in one of his magazines.
I. The Nobel Prize Twins
Jocelyn Earle was listening closely to her employer’s instructions. That was one of the things about Jocelyn; she always listened closely, even if she paid no attention to suggestions once she stopped listening and started doing. He was telling her how to get the story he wanted for the Helio; he knew she would get the story her own way, but he told her anyway. The important thing was, she would get the story.
“Do you know anything at all about Clair and Gaynor?” he asked.
“No,” she said.
“Well, you’re the only one in the world who doesn’t. Don’t you ever read the papers?” She shook her head. He sighed and went on. “They are the Nobel Prize winners for the last half-dozen years. They’re the ones who wiped out cancer, made possible the beam-transmission of power, created about fifty new alloys that have revolutionized industry, and originated the molecular-stress theory which is the cornerstone of the new physics.
“Gaynor is the kid of the pair. He’s the one that never went to grade school, completed high school in eighteen months, and had a Ph.D. by the time he was fifteen. A child prodigy. Unlike most of those, he never burnt out. He’s still going stronger than ever.
“Clair is the older and not quite so bright. He was almost old enough to vote by the time he brought out his thesis on Elementary Arithmetic (Advanced), which is a little bit harder to master than vector analysis. But, as I say, he’s older than Gaynor, and he’s had a chance to learn a lot more. So I guess you could say that they’re about even, mentally.
“Now, this is what I want: the complete and exclusive story of what they’re working on now. It won’t be easy, because they don’t want to give out any information. And they’re smart enough to be able to keep a secret for a long, long time. That’s why I want you to take the job. I wouldn’t think of giving it to anybody else on the staff.”
Jocelyn smiled. “I’m smart too. Is that what you mean?”
“Sure you’re smart. Maybe, even, you’re smart enough to get the story…. Oh, one more thing. They’re both a little childish in some ways. They have a habit of playing practical jokes on people. Don’t let them joke you out of the story.”
“I won’t,” said Jocelyn Earle. “That’s all?” she asked, rising.
“That’s enough, isn’t it?” her employer said. “What are you going to do?”
“I don’t know yet. But don’t worry about it—I’ll try to have the story by deadline tomorrow. Goodbye.”
“Goodbye,” said her employer, and Jocelyn Earle walked out of the room….
“And there goes another tube, Art,” called Gaynor. “Shot to hell.”
Clair walked over to the meter board with a sigh, stripping off his gloves as he came. “The damn things act so funny. They test fine, no flaws, and the math says they ought to work. But you shoot the juice into them, and all that’s left when the smoke clears away is a thoroughly ruptured tube. Why do you suppose that is, Paul?”
He got no answer from Gaynor but a strangling gasp. He looked up to find his colleague pointing at the door, his face a mask of horror. There stood a hideous creature, presumably female, apparently Scandinavian. “Ay bane call from de agency,” it said. Gaynor recovered himself first, and asked,
“How the hell did you get through seven locked doors, woman? What do you want?”
The creature began to talk rapidly and excitedly, and the two scientists looked at each other. “This is just like the Nobel ceremony,” howled Clair over the woman’s voice. “What do you suppose she’s saying?”
“Haven’t the faintest notion. Let’s sit down. Let’s kill her. Let’s do something to shut her up. How about a shot of static at her?”
“Should help,” agreed Clair. He swung a cumbersome machine on, the figure in the door and pressed a button. A feeble but spectacular bolt of electricity shot at the woman with a roar, pinking her neatly. Suddenly her stream of Swedish was shut off. “You brace of heels!” she snapped. “If you don’t know how to treat a lady, I’m leaving.”
Gaynor sprang for the door and slammed it. “No,” he said, “not until you explain— ” But she cut him off with a snake-swift clip of the palm to his solar plexus and he folded. Clair swung a switch and the machine roared again, this time louder, and the woman fell beside Gaynor.
Clair knelt and felt his colleague’s pulse. “She moves fast, that one” said Gaynor, without opening his eyes. “Did you get her?”
“Sure—with just enough static to put her out for a while. Get some cable and we’ll see what kind of scrub-woman can breeze through locked doors.”
They tied her securely; then Clair unceremoniously dumped a bucket of water over her. She came to with a sputter and gasp. “Was that thing a death-ray?” she asked with professional interest.
“No. Just high tension. Who are you and what’s your business with us?”
“With a hefty tug you can take off my wig,” the woman answered. Gaynor laid hold of a strand of hair and pulled. “My God!” he cried. “Her face comes with
it!”
“Mask,” she said briefly. “I am a reporter for the Helio, name being Earle. I want to congratulate you. gentlemen. This get-up fooled Billikin, Zweistein, and Current. You aren’t the ordinary brand of scientist.”
“Nor are you the ordinary brand of reporter,” said Clair raptly studying her cameo-like features. “Gaynor, you ape, untie the lady.”
“Not I,” said his colleague hastily backing away. “It’s your turn to get socked.”
“I promise to behave,” she said with a smile. Reluctantly the scientist cut the cables that confined her and she rose. “Do you mind if I take off this thing?” she asked indicating her horrible dress. The men stared; Clair finally said, “Not at all.”
She pulled a long slide-fastener somewhere in the garment and it fell away to reveal a modish street-outfit. Gaynor gulped strangely. “Won’t you sit down, Miss Oil,” he said.
She settled gracefully into a chair. “Earle,” she corrected him. Clair was looking fixedly at an out-of-date periodic table tacked high on the wall, aware that this peculiar woman was studying him. Approvingly? he wondered.
“Now, just what was it that you wanted with us, Miss Earle,” he inquired. “Maybe we can work out some arrangement….”
II. The Prototype
If Jocelyn hadn’t been a pretty girl, the deal would never have been made. But pretty Jocelyn was, and moreover she was smart enough to capitalize on her good looks.
So, it was decided that Jocelyn, in return for a promise of strict secrecy until the experiment was concluded, would be included in the maneuvers of the two scientists, would have every opportunity of finding things out and a promise that no other paper would get a crumb of information. That was a very good bargain, for Jocelyn didn’t have to put anything at all up in exchange. She was pretty, and smart. That was enough.