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Collected Fiction

Page 661

by Henry Kuttner


  Beside me Murray hunched over the controls, slowly bending forward. I could not see his face. That instant of relief passed in a flashing time-beat.

  AGAIN the pulse throbbed through me.

  And again it was shut off. There was something terribly wrong with gravity. The earth stood upright in a blurred line that bisected the sky and was slowly, slowly toppling over from left to right. The weight of Murray’s body, slumped heavily forward, was throwing the ship out of control.

  I couldn’t move—not while those erratic jumping shocks kept pounding at me.

  But I had to move. I had to get hold of the controls. And then, as I put forth all my strength, the explosion channeled into my brain—different, somehow incomplete. I could feel a swiftly-fading ebb-tide draining into the empty void.

  Then it was gone altogether.

  Another part of my mind must have taken over then. And it must have been efficient. Myself, I seemed to be floating somewhere in a troubled void with the image of Murray’s lolling head and limp arms. Murray—dead. Dead? He must be dead. I knew that nekronic shock too well.

  In the mindless void where my awareness floated I knew that I was a bad spot temporally. Jerry Cortland was in a bad spot. Murray’s headquarters must be expecting him in already with a murder suspect in tow. I was the murder suspect and murder had been done again. And Murray and I had been alone in mid-air when it happened.

  The efficient part of my mind knew what to do. I left it at that. I had no recollection whatever of fighting the plane out of its power dive or of turning in a long high circle as I got lost altitude back. But that must have happened. Time and distance meant nothing to the half of my mind that floated but the other half very efficiently flew the plane.

  * * * * *

  “All right now?” De Kalb’s voice inquired.

  I sat up shakily. The room was swimming around me but it was a familiar room. I could see Dr. Essen bending above a couch and I could see polished boots and a shoulder with something shiny on it. I must have brought Murray back. Murray—dead?

  “It was—it was the nekron,” I said thickly.

  “I know, I know,” De Kalb said. “You told us. Don’t you remember?”

  “I don’t remember anything except Murray.”

  “I don’t think we can save him,” De Kalb said in a flat voice.

  “Then he’s alive?”

  “Just.”

  We both looked automatically toward the couch, where Dr. Essen lifted a worried face.

  “The adrenalin’s helping,” she said, “but there’s no real improvement. He’ll sink again as soon as the effect wears off.”

  “Can’t we get him to a hospital?” I asked.

  “I don’t think medical treatment will help him,” De Kalb said. “Dr. Essen has a medical degree, you know. She’s already done everything the hospitals have tried on the other victims.

  “That creature strikes a place that scalpels and oxygen and adrenaline can’t reach. I don’t know what or where, but neither do the doctors.” He moved his shoulders impatiently. “This is the first time the killer hasn’t finished its job. You interrupted it, you know—somehow. Do you know how?”

  “It was intermittent,” I said hesitantly.

  “It kept going away and coming back.” I explained in as much detail as I could. It wasn’t easy.

  “The plane was moving fast, eh?” De Kalb murmured. “So. Always before the victims have been practically immobilized. That might explain part of it. If the nekronic creature is vibrating through time it might need a fixed locus in space. And the plane was moving very fast in space, That could explain why the attack was incomplete—but complete enough, after all.”

  I nodded. “This is going to be pretty hard to explain to Murray’s headquarters,” I said.

  “There’s been one call already,” De Kalb told me. “I didn’t say anything. I had to think.” He struck his fist into his palm impatiently and exclaimed: “I don’t understand it! I saw Murray with us in that cave! I saw him!”

  “Has it occurred to you, Ira,” Dr. Essen’s gentle voice interrupted, “that what you may have seen in the time-chamber was Colonel Murray’s dead body, not Colonel Murray asleep?”

  HE TURNED to stare at her.

  “It seems clear to me,” she went on, “that Mr. Cortland is a sort of catalyst in our affairs. From the moment he entered them things have speeded up rather frighteningly. I suggest it’s time to make a definite forward move. What do you think, Ira?”

  De Kalb frowned a little. “How’s Murray?” he asked.

  “He’s dying,” she said flatly. “I know of only one thing that could possibly postpone his death.”

  “The neo-hypnosis, you mean,” De Kalb said. “Well, yes—if it works. We’ve used it on sleeping subjects, of course, but with a man who is as far gone as Murray, I don’t know.”

  “We can try,” Dr. Essen said. “It’s a chance. I don’t think he’d ever have entered the time-axis of his own volition but this way we can take him along. Things are working out, Ira, very surprisingly.”

  “Can we keep him alive until we reach the shaft?” De Kalb asked.

  “I think so. I can’t promise but—”

  “We can’t save him,” De Kalb said. “The People of the Face—maybe. And after all, Murray did go with us. I saw him. Mr. Cortland, do you think that plane would carry the four of us as far as the Laurentians?”

  “Obviously, Mr. De Kalb,” I said with somewhat hysterical irony, “obviously, if I guess what you have in mind, it did!”’

  * * * * *

  You could see the shaft-mouth from a long way up, dark above the paler slide of dug earth, and shadowed by the thick green of the Canadian mountains.

  It was easier to spot from the air than to reach on foot.

  We left the plane in a little clearing at the bottom of the slope. It seemed wildly reckless, but what else could we do? And we carried Murray’s body up the mountain with us, De Kalb and I, while Dr. Essen, carrying a square case about two feet through, kept a watchful eye on the unconscious man. Once she had to administer adrenalin to Murray.

  I still hadn’t come to any decision. I could simply have walked away but that would have meant shutting the last door of escape behind me. I told myself that I’d think of some other way before the final decision had to be made. Meanwhile I went with the others.

  “It wouldn’t be as though I were running away from punishment,” I told De Kalb wryly as we paused to catch our breath on the lip of the shaft. Tree-tops swayed and murmured below us, and the mountains were warm in the late, slanting sunlight of a summer evening.

  “If your theories are right I won’t be escaping from anything. The moment I step into your time-trap my alter ego steps out and goes on down the mountain to take his medicine. All I can say is I hope he has a fine alibi ready.”

  “He will have—you will have,” De Kalb said. “We’ll have all time at our disposal to think one up in. Remember what our real danger is, Cortland—the nekron. An infection of the mind. An infection of the earth itself and perhaps an infection in our own flesh, yours and mine.

  “What it is that I turned loose on the world when I opened that box I don’t yet know but I expect to know when I go down that mountain again—ten minutes from now, a million years from now. Both.” He shook his head.

  “Let’s get on with it.” he said.

  CHAPTER VIII

  Fantastic Journey

  I DON’T think I ever really meant to embark on that fantastic journey along the time axis. I helped carry Colonel Murray’s body down the dusty shaft but it was a nightmare I walked through, not a real experience. I knew at the bottom of the tunnel I’d wake up in my hotel in Rio.

  At the foot of the shaft was a hollowed out room. Our flash-beams moved searchingly across the rough walls. We carried Murray into the cave and laid him down gently on a spot the scientist indicated. Dr. Essen immediately became busy with her patient. Presently she looked up and nodde
d reassuringly.

  “There’s time,” she said.

  But De Kalb waved his arm, sending light sliding erratically up the rock, and said, “Time—there is time here! This space and this air form one immutable axis upon which all the past and the future turn like a wheel.” It was bombastic but it was impressive too. Dr. Essen and I were silent, trying to grasp that imponderable concept, trying perhaps to catch the sound of that vast turning’. But De Kalb had moved into action.

  “Now,” he said, kneeling beside the black suitcase Dr. Essen had set down. “Now you shall see. Murray is all right for a while? Then—” He snapped open the case and laid down its four sides so that the compact instruments within stood up alone, light catching in their steel surfaces.

  He squatted down and began to unpack them, to set up from among part of the shining things a curious little structure like a tree of glass and blinking lights, fitting tiny jointed rods together, screwing bulbs like infinitesimal soap-bubbles into invisible sockets.

  “Now, Letta,” he said presently, squinting up at her in the dusty flash-beams, “your turn.”

  “Ira—” She hesitated, shrugged uneasily. “Very well.”

  I field the light for them while they worked.

  After what seemed a long while De Kalb grunted and sat back on his heels. There was a thin, very high singing noise and the tiny tree began to move. I let my flashlight sink upon my knee. De Kalb reached over and switched it off. Dr. Essen’s beam blinked out with a soft click. It was dark except for the slowly quickening spin of the tree, the flicker of its infinitesimal lights.

  Very gradually it seemed to me that a gray brightness was beginning to dawn around us, almost as if the whirling tree threw off light that was tangible and accumulated in the dusty air, hanging there upon every mote of dust, spinning a web that grew and grew.

  It was gathering in an egg-shaped oval that nearly filled the chamber.

  BY THE gray luminous dimness I could see Dr. Essen with her hands on a flat thick sheet of metal which she held across her knees. There were raised bars of wire across its upper surface and she seemed almost to be playing it like a musical instrument as her fingers moved over the bars. There was no sound but the light slowly, very slowly, broadened around us.

  “In theory,” Dr. Essen said, “this would have worked years ago. But in practice, only this very special type of space provides the conditions we need. I published some papers in Forty-one on special atomic structures and the maintenance of artificial matrix. But the displacement due to temporal movement made practical application impossible. Only at the time-axis would that displacement theory become invalid.

  “I am creating a rigid framework of matter now. Call it a matrix, except that the vibratory period is automatically adaptive, so that it’s self-perpetuating and can’t be harmed. Really, the practical application would be something like this—if you were driving a car and saw another car about to collide with you, your own vehicle could automatically adjust its structure and become intangible. So—”

  “It isn’t necessary for Mr. Cortland to understand this,” De Kalb said, his voice suddenly almost gay. “Eager seeker after truth though he may be. There is still much I don’t understand. We go into terra incognita—but I think we will come to the Face in the end.

  “Somehow, against apparent logic, we have managed to follow the rules of the game. Somehow events have arranged themselves—in an unlikely fashion—so that all four of us are entering the time axis where all four of us lie asleep—intangible, impalpable and invisible except under ultraviolet.

  “Murray may die. But since the nekronic creature attacked through time, as I believe, then perhaps sympathetic medicine may cure the Colonel. Some poisons kill but cure in larger doses. I don’t know. Perhaps the long catalepsy outside time will enable Murray’s wound to heal—wherever it is. I suspect that the people of the Face may have foreseen all this. Are you getting drowsy, Mr. Cortland?”

  I was. The softly whirling tree, the sweet, thin, monotonous sound of its turning were very effective hypnotics though I hadn’t realized it fully till now’. I made a sudden convulsive effort to rise. On the very verge of the plunge I realized that my decision had been made for me.

  I FELT my nerve going. I didn’t want to embark on this crazy endeavor at all. A suicide must know this last instant of violent revulsion the moment after he has pulled the trigger or swallowed the poison. I put out every ounce of energy I had—and moved with infinite sluggishness, perhaps a quarter of an inch from where I sat.

  De Kalb’s voice said, “No, no. The matrix has formed.”

  My head was ringing.

  The gray light was like a web that sealed my eyes.

  Through it, dimly, remotely, far off in space and time, I thought I could see motion stirring that was not our motion—and perhaps was—

  And perhaps was ourselves, at the other end of the closing temporal circle, rising from sleep after adventures a million years in the future, a million years in the past. But that motion was wholly theirs. I could not stir.

  Sealed in sleep, sealed in time, I felt my consciousness sinking down like a candle-flame, like a sinking fountain, down and down to the levels below awareness.

  The next thing I saw’, I told myself out of that infinite drowsiness, would be the Face of Ea looking out over the red twilight of the world’s end. And then the flame went out, the fountain sank back upon the dark wellspring of its origin far below the surfaces of the mind.

  “And now we wait,” De Kalb’s voice said, ghostly, infinities away. “Now we wait—a million years.”

  CHAPTER IX

  Strange Awakening

  THERE was a rhythmic ebb and flow of waves on some murmurous shore. It must, I thought, be part of my dream . . . Dream?

  I couldn’t remember. The murmur was a voice, but the things it said seemed to slip by over the surface of my mind without waking any ripples of comprehension. Sight? I could see nothing. There was movement somewhere, but meaningless movement. Feeling? Perhaps a mild warmth, no more. Only the voice, very low—unless, after all, it were some musical instrument.

  But it spoke in English.

  Had I been capable of surprise that should have surprised me. But I was not. I was utterly passive. I let sensations come and go in the darkness that lay just beyond me, on the other side of that wall of the silenced senses. What world? What time? What people? It didn’t matter yet.

  “—of waiting here so long,” the voice said on a minor chord of sadness so intensely sweet that my throat seemed to tighten in response. Then it changed. It pleased—and I knew even in my stupor that no one of flesh and blood could possibly deny whatever that strange sweet voice demanded.

  “So I may go now, Lord? Oh, please, please let me go!” The English was curious, at once archaic and evolved. “An hour’s refreshment in the Swan Garden,” the plaintive voice urged, “and I shan’t droop so.” Then a sigh, musical with a deliberate lilt.

  “My hair—look at it, Lord! The sparkles all gone, all gone. Poor sparkles! But only an hour in the Swan Gardens and I’ll serve you again. May I go, Lord? May I go?” No one could have denied her. I lay there enthralled by the sheer music of that voice. It was like the shock of icy water in the face to hear a man’s brisk voice reply.

  “Save your tongue, save your tongue. And don’t flatter me with the name of Lord. This is business.”

  “But so many hours already—I’ll die, I know I’ll die! You can’t be so cruel—and I’ll call you Lord anyhow. Why not? You are my Lord now, since you have the power to let me live or—” Heart-rending sorrow breathed in the sigh she gave.

  “My poor hair,” she said. “The stars are quite gone out of it now. Oh, how hideous I am! The sight of me when he wakes will be too dreadful, Lord! Let me take one little hour in the Swan Garden and’—”

  “Be quiet. I want to think.”

  There was silence for a moment or two. Then the sweet voice murmured something in a totally unfamilia
r language, Sullenly. The man said, “You know the rules, don’t you?”

  “Yes, Lord. I’m sorry.”

  “No more impudence, then. I know impudence, even when I can’t understand it. Pay attention to me now. I’m going to put an end to this session. When this man wakes bring him—”

  “To the Swan Garden? Oh, Lord Paynter, now? I will love you forever!”

  “It isn’t necessary,” the crisp voice said. “Just bring him to the right station. The City’s the nearest connection since this is confidential so far. Do you understand?”

  “The City? Walk through the City? I’ll die before I’ve gone a dozen steps. My poor slippers—oh, Lord Paynter, why not direct transmission?”

  “You’ll have new slippers if you need them. I don’t want to remind you again all this is secret work. We don’t want anybody tuning in accidentally on our wave-length. The transmitter in the City has the right wave-band, so you can bring him—”

  HIS voice trailed off. The girl’s tones interrupted, dying away in the distance in a faint, infinitely pitiable murmuring quaver. There was a pause, then the sound of light feet returning on some hard surface and a rush of laughter like a spurt of bright fountaining water.

  “Old fool,” she said, and laughed again.

  “If you think I care—” The words changed and were again incomprehensible, in some language I had never heard even approximated before.

  Then movement came, and light—a brief, racking vertigo wrenched my brain around.

  I opened my eyes and looked up into the face of the girl, and logic was perfectly useless after that. Later I understood why, knew what she was and why men’s hearts moved at the sight and sound of her. But then it was enough to see that flawless face, the lovely curve of her lips, the eyes that shifted from one hue to another, the hyacinth hair where the last stars pulsed and died.

 

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