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Stowaway to Mars

Page 16

by John Wyndham


  ‘And on Earth,’ she put in.

  ‘I wonder? It seems to me that your race may be in grave danger almost as if you may be losing the power to adapt. Man’s rise and his survival depend on his adaptability. It was because the old masters of the world could not adapt that they lost their mastery. New conditions defeated them. You have created new conditions, but you have scarcely disturbed your ways of living to suit them. It is little wonder to me that you fear the Machine. Even while you use it you try to live the lives of craftsmen. You resent the change because you know subconsciously, and will not admit openly, that it means an utter break with the past. A new force has come into your world which makes an end inevitable. Which is it to be an end of your system of life; or of your system and yourselves together?’

  Joan looked puzzled. ‘But do you mean that all tradition is to be thrown aside? Why, you talked just now of your own glorious past.’

  ‘Tradition is a useful weed for binding the soil, but it grows too thickly and chokes the rest. Periodically it must be burned out. Consider where you would be now if the traditions of your ancient races had not been destroyed from time to time.’

  She was silent a while, looking back at the practices of earlier civilisations. Human sacrifice, enslavement, cannibalism, religious prostitution, trial by ordeal, exposure of girl children and plenty more of them, all honourable customs at some age. Most of them had been burnt out, as Vaygan put it, in the west, at any rate. Others were due to be dropped: war, execution, gold fetishism….

  ‘It is not sensible to use only one eye when one has the power to focus with two,’ Vaygan said. ‘The problems you have raised will have to be examined with your whole intelligence, they cannot be left to solve themselves.’

  ‘Did your people face them once?’ she asked.

  ‘With us it was different. Our machines put order into a disorganised world. Yours have done the opposite.’

  ‘I think I see. But what are these queer machines of yours? They’re nothing like ours. They seem to think for themselves.’

  ‘Why should they not?’

  ‘I don’t know, except that it seems fantastic to me. It was the theme of those tales I told you about and I find it rather frightening. Do your machines rule you, or do you rule them?’

  Vaygan was first puzzled and then amused.

  ‘You are determined to assume an antagonism between machines and men. You don’t understand them. It’s your persistent mishandling of them that makes you afraid of them. Why should there be antagonism? There was a time when we could not exist without them nor they without us, and now, though that no longer holds, the collaboration continues. Doubtless if they wished they could make an end of us today, but why should they? We are doomed inevitably: they will go on.’

  ‘You mean that they will survive you?’ Joan asked incredulously.

  ‘Certainly they will survive. I think that if you were to dig down deeply into our real motives you would find that the chief reason why we have not committed suicide or died out already from discouragement at the futility of existence is our faith in the machines. For many thousands of years we have fought Nature and held our own, but at last she has the upper hand. She is sweeping us away as she has swept the rest on to her huge rubbish heap where the bones of the dinosaurs moulder on the fossils of a million ages. What has been the good of us? Nothing, it seems, and yet…our minds will not accept that. There lingers, perhaps illogically, the idea of a purpose behind it all…. But physically we can go on no longer.

  ‘For any other species of animal it would mean utter extinction, but we have what the other animals have never had mind. That is our last trick. Our minds will not die yet. The machines are as truly the children of our minds as you are the child of your mother’s body. They are the next step in evolution, we hand over to them.’

  ‘Evolution! But evolution is a gradual modification. It is impossible to evolve from flesh to metal.’

  ‘You think so? Because hitherto it has been so? But you overlook the factor which never was in evolution until we came mind, again: the greatest factor of all, and it is producing the greatest mutation of all.’

  Joan objected. ‘But what is a machine? Why should it go on? It’s not alive, it has no soul, it can’t love. Why should a collection of metal parts go on?’

  ‘Why should a collection of chemical parts go on? You do not understand our machines. The stuff of life is in them as it is in you. A slightly different form of life, perhaps, but you tend to judge too much by appearances. After all, if a man is equipped with four artificial limbs of metal, if he needs glasses to see with, instruments to hear with and false teeth to eat with, he is still alive. So there is life of a kind in the machines’ casings. That their frames are of metal and not of calcium is neither here nor there.

  ‘And as for love…. Does an amoeba love? Do fish love? But they go on they reproduce. Love is just our particular mechanism for continuation; the fish have another; the machines yet another.’

  ‘A machine with the urge to reproduce!’ Joan could not keep the scoffing note out of her voice.

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘But it is metal not flesh and blood.’

  ‘A tree is wood, but it reproduces. Continuity has a deeper cause than the call of flesh to flesh if it were not so, our race would long ago have declined the discomforts of breeding. It is the will to power which leads us love is its very humble servant.’

  ‘And your machines have this will to power?’

  ‘Can you doubt it? Consider the inexorability of machines; add intelligence to that and what can withstand their will?’

  Joan shrugged her shoulders. She said, with hesitation

  ‘I can’t really understand. Our machines are so very different. The bare idea of an intelligent machine is difficult for me to grasp.’

  ‘You have discovered the machine so lately you have no broad idea yet of what you have found.’

  ‘We have got far enough to build a machine which could bring us here….’

  She stopped abruptly. For these hours she had completely forgotten her companions of the Gloria Mundi. She had last seen them standing disarmed beside the great canal while Burns led her away. She wondered with a rush of remorseful anxiety how they had fared; whether they, too, had fallen victims to the things that moved in the bushes. Turning to Vaygan again she asked not very hopefully if he had news of them. He smiled at her tone.

  ‘Certainly. I will show them to you if you like.’

  ‘Show me?’

  He turned a switch on the board beside her. One of the grey panels shone translucently. The scene was blurred, but as he worked the controls it cleared, steadied and focused. One seemed to be looking down on desert, scrub and a part of the canal from a great height. In one corner of the screen there gleamed a small silvery bullet shape. He made another adjustment. With a dizzying effect, as though she were falling towards it, Joan watched the rocket enlarge until it filled the whole screen. She frowned a little; it looked wrong somehow perhaps an odd effect of perspective? Vaygan manipulated his instrument to give a view as of one walking slowly round the ship. Joan grew more puzzled, but not until they had, in effect, rounded the nose did she speak.

  ‘But that’s not the Gloria Mundi,’ she said. ‘It’s got queer letters on it; I can’t read them. I don’t understand what’s happened.’

  Vaygan looked incredulous.

  ‘But wait a minute.’ He pressed another switch. A metallic voice came from another speaker. Vaygan asked a question and listened attentively to the reply. He turned back to Joan.

  ‘They say another rocket landed two hours before dawn.’

  ‘Then this must be it, but where is ours?’

  He altered the switches. Again the panel appeared as a window through which they saw a scene from far above. The country seemed to move slowly beneath them as on a panorama. A second silver shell came into view.

  ‘There she is,’ Joan said quickly.

  Again there ca
me that uncanny sense of falling. This time there was no doubt. She could read Gloria Mundi in large letters just abaft the cabin windows.

  Through the fused quartz of the window she was even able to make out Dale’s features. He was staring intently at something beyond their field of view. Before she could suggest it, Vaygan had altered the controls to show a party of men crossing the sand with that odd, high stepping action which the low gravity induced. She noticed that they wore oxygen masks of an unfamiliar pattern and that they carried rifles.

  ‘The men from the other rocket,’ she said.

  ‘Your friends don’t seem pleased to see them,’ he remarked.

  Again the screen altered. The familiar living room of the Gloria Mundi appeared so that Joan was almost able to believe herself seated in it. She could see Dale’s back as he stood staring out of the window. The doctor was rubbing his eyes and yawning. Dugan had taken a pistol from a locker and was loading a clip with cartridges. Froud had set up a movie camera beside Dale at the window. He was attempting to prevent all three legs of the tripod from slipping on the metal floor and to work the instrument at the same time.

  ‘We will listen to them, and you shall tell me what they are saying,’ Vaygan suggested. He pressed over another small switch.

  An eruption of outrageous profanity in Froud’s voice tore through the room.

  Vaygan looked startled.

  ‘What was that?’ he asked.

  Joan laughed.

  ‘Quite untranslatable, I’m afraid. Poor dear! How I must have cramped his style all these weeks.’

  Chapter 20. Karaminoff Makes Proposals

  ‘And may the blasted thing blister in hell,’ Froud hoped fervently. He looked round wildly for inspiration and caught sight of the doctor.

  ‘Here, Doc, drop the exercises and for Heaven’s sake come and hold this thundering contraption while I work it. Must get a shot of these chaps, whoever they are.’

  The doctor ambled across amiably and laid hold of the tripod. Froud busied himself with focus and aperture awhile. Dugan slipped the loaded pistol into his pocket and joined them.

  ‘Who the dickens do you think they are?’ he asked. The question was directed at Dale, but it was Froud who answered.

  ‘Well, there’s one thing they’re not, and that’s Martians. See the way they keep on nearly falling over themselves? Wonder if we looked as damn silly at first?’ he said, as he set the camera going.

  The approaching party stopped a hundred yards away and appeared to consult. Of the six men, the tallest was obviously the leader. They watched him raise his arm and point to the Union Jack which Dale had set up. He made some remark which amused the rest. Dale frowned as he watched, not so much at their actions as at his inability to identify the leader. He had no longer any doubt that this second rocket also came from Earth, and the number of men capable of making the flight was limited. It was practically impossible that he should not have met or at least known the man by hearsay. But the oxygen masks worn by all six were fitted with goggles and completely obscured the faces save for chins and mouths.

  The party resumed its clumsy advance, making for the window. In the Gloria Mundi’s living room there was silence save for the clicking of the camera. Froud broke it.

  ‘This ought to make a good picture: “March of the Bogey Men of Mars”,’ he said.

  A few paces away the newcomers halted again. One could catch the gleam of eyes behind the glasses, but it was still impossible to identify the features. The leader was looking at Dale. He was making signs, pointing first to himself and then to the Gloria Mundi. Dale hesitated, then he held up three fingers and nodded, indicating the position of the entrance. He turned to Dugan.

  ‘See to the airlock, but don’t let more than three of them in, to begin with.’

  Dugan crossed the room and pulled over the lever opening the outer door. The glow of a small bulb told him that someone had stepped into the lock. He pressed back the lever, spun the wheel of a stopcock and watched the pointer of the pressure dial slide back from the neighbourhood of seven towards the normal fifteen pounds. Froud swivelled his camera round and reset it.

  ‘This,’ he remarked to the unresponsive Dale, ‘is where you step forward with a bright smile and say: “Doctor Livingstone, I presume”.’

  The inner door of the lock swung open and the tall man entered, stooping a little to avoid striking his head. Inside the room he straightened up and then raised his hand to slip the mask from a long, tanned face. His black, deep sunk eyes watched Dale keenly as he nodded a greeting.

  ‘How do you do, Mr. Curtance?’ he said. He spoke in good enough English, but it lacked tonal variation. He turned to the journalist.

  ‘Hullo, Froud.’

  Froud’s mouth opened, he blinked slightly and quickly recovered himself.

  ‘Well! Well! Well!’ he remarked.

  ‘You might introduce me,’ the man suggested.

  ‘Of course. Gentlemen, may I present Comrade Karaminoff, he is Commissar of….’ He broke off. ‘What are you Commissar of just now?’ he inquired.

  The tall man shrugged. ‘Suppose you say Commissar without portfolio at present. One hopes in time to be Commissar for Interplanetary Affairs.’

  ‘Oh,’ said Froud mildly. ‘Your hopes were never modest, were they, Karaminoff? Do you remember the time I met you at Gorki? It I remember rightly you were hoping then to be Commissar for the North American Continent.’

  ‘I know. We were misled. The country is still too bourgeois but it is improving. Quite soon now it will become a Soviet.’

  Dale stepped forward. He spoke brusquely:

  ‘Are we to understand that you are the commander of a ship sent here by the Russian Government?’

  ‘That is so, Mr. Curtance. The Tovaritch of the U.S.S.R.’

  ‘The Tovaritch’ But the rumours of her existence were expressly denied by your government.’

  ‘Yes, it seemed politic to us after all, it was our own affair. The Americans kept quiet about theirs, too.’ The entire personnel of the Gloria Mundi gaped at him stupidly. ‘The Americans! Good God! You don’t mean to say that they’ve got one, too?’

  ‘But certainly. The Keuntz people. Your information does not seem to have been very full, Mr. Curtance.’

  But words failed Dale. He stood dumbfounded, staring at the Russian.

  ‘It would seem to be raining rockets. Most disappointing,’ said Froud. ‘Tell us, Karaminoff, how many more?’

  The other shook his head. ‘No more. There was an – er – accident to the German one. Possibly you read about it: it was reported as an explosion in a munitions factory. It would probably have been the best of the lot. The Germans are very clever, you know, and very anxious for colonies.’

  ‘And so there was an – er – accident, was there? H’m, Dale only just frustrated an – er – accident to the Gloria Mundi. Very interesting.’ There was a pause during which Karaminoff introduced the other two Russians whom Dugan had admitted. He added ‘And now, I think, it is necessary for us to have some discussion.’

  ‘Just a minute,’ Froud put in. ‘I’m a bit puzzled by several things. Did you start after or before us?’

  ‘A day or so later.’

  ‘And with millions of square miles of planet to choose from you had the luck to land next door to us?’

  ‘Oh, no, not luck.’ The Russian shook his head emphatically. ‘We followed you with telescopes. We saw the flames of your rockets as you landed and we marked the spot. Then we held off a little.’

  ‘You what?’ Dugan burst in.

  ‘We held off.’

  Dugan stared first at him and then at Dale. Both of them knew that the Gloria Mundi could never have performed such a manoeuvre. An involuntary tinge of respect came into Dugan’s voice as he said

  ‘Your Tovaritch must be a wonderful ship.’

  ‘She is,’ Karaminoff told him with complacence.

  There was a pause. Karaminoff crossed to the western windo
w and looked out thoughtfully. The dreary bushes were waving their papery leaves, the breeze raised occasional scurries of reddish dust, but his eyes were not on these things. He was watching an entirely terrestrial phenomenon the Union Jack fluttering from its pole.

  ‘I see that you have what you call staked a claim,’ he said, turning to face Dale.

  ‘By the authority of Her Majesty I have annexed this territory to the British Commonwealth of Nations,’ Dale told him, not without slight pomposity.

  ‘Dear me! The entire planet? I suppose so. There is nothing modest about the English in matters of territory.’

  ‘You’d have done the same if you had got here first,’ Dugan put in impatiently. ‘But you’ve been unlucky, that’s all.’

  Karaminoff smiled. He said conversationally:

  ‘The English man of action amazes me. He has the unique gift of living simultaneously in the twentieth and seventeenth centuries. Technically he is advanced, socially or should I say anti-socially, he has stagnated for three hundred years. It needs no straining for my imagination to see an ancestor Curtance planting a flag on a Pacific island in sixteen something and saluting it with the same words as the modern Mr. Curtance must have used here only, of course, with the word ‘Empire” instead of “Commonwealth”.’

  ‘Well, why not? It’s a fine tradition,’ Dugan said with uncertain resentment of the other’s tone. ‘It made the finest Empire in the world.’

  ‘I agree. But the Romans once had the finest Empire in the world, so did the Greeks, and the Assyrians, they are historical; so is the building of the British Empire. Can’t you see that this cool annexation of property is outdated. Your method is a quaint anachronism. Do you really think that just because you have planted that flag here your sovereign right will be recognised? That the other peoples of Earth will stand by and allow you to take this place and do what you like with it? The trouble about you English is that you always think you are playing some kind of game, with the rules conveniently made up by yourselves.’

 

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