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The World That Couldn't Be

Page 5

by Clifford Donald Simak


  The six inched closer and he raised the rifle.

  But they stopped and moved no farther. Their ears lifted just a little, as if they might be listening, and the grins dropped from their faces. They squirmed uneasily and assumed a look of guilt and, like shadows, they were gone, melting away so swiftly that he scarcely saw them go.

  Duncan sat quietly, listening, but he could hear no sound.

  Reprieve, he thought. But for how long? Something had scared them off, but in a while they might be back. He had to get out of here and he had to make it fast.

  If he could find a longer lever, he could move the tree. There was a branch slanting up from the topside of the fallen tree. It was almost four inches at the butt and it carried its diameter well.

  He slid the knife from his belt and looked at it. Too small, too thin, he thought, to chisel through a four-inch branch, but it was all he had. When a man was desperate enough, though, when his very life depended on it, he would do anything.

  He hitched himself along, sliding toward the point where the branch protruded from the tree. His pinned leg protested with stabs of pain as his body wrenched it around. He gritted his teeth and pushed himself closer. Pain slashed through his leg again and he was still long inches from the branch.

  He tried once more, then gave up. He lay panting on the ground.

  There was just one thing left.

  He'd have to try to hack out a notch in the trunk just above his leg. No, that would be next to impossible, for he'd be cutting into the whorled and twisted grain at the base of the supporting fork.

  Either that or cut off his foot, and that was even more impossible. A man would faint before he got the job done.

  It was useless, he knew. He could do neither one. There was nothing he could do.

  or the first time, he admitted to himself: He would stay here and die. Shotwell, back at the farm, in a day or two might set out hunting for him. But Shotwell would never find him. And anyhow, by nightfall, if not sooner, the screamers would be back.

  He laughed gruffly in his throat—laughing at himself.

  The Cytha had won the hunt hands down. It had used a human weakness to win and then had used that same human weakness to achieve a viciously poetic vengeance.

  After all, what could one expect? One could not equate human ethics with the ethics of the Cytha. Might not human ethics, in certain cases, seem as weird and illogical, as infamous and ungrateful, to an alien?

  He hunted for a twig and began working again to clean the rifle bore.

  A crashing behind him twisted him around and he saw the Cytha. Behind the Cytha stalked a donovan.

  He tossed away the twig and raised the gun.

  "No," said the Cytha sharply.

  The donovan tramped purposefully forward and Duncan felt the prickling of the skin along his back. It was a frightful thing. Nothing could stand before a donovan. The screamers had turned tail and run when they had heard it a couple of miles or more away.

  The donovan was named for the first known human to be killed by one. That first was only one of many. The roll of donovan-victims ran long, and no wonder, Duncan thought. It was the closest he had ever been to one of the beasts and he felt a coldness creeping over him. It was like an elephant and a tiger and a grizzly bear wrapped in the selfsame hide. It was the most vicious fighting machine that ever had been spawned.

  He lowered the rifle. There would be no point in shooting. In two quick strides, the beast could be upon him.

  The donovan almost stepped on him and he flinched away. Then the great head lowered and gave the fallen tree a butt and the tree bounced for a yard or two. The donovan kept on walking. Its powerfully muscled stern moved into the brush and out of sight.

  "Now we are even," said the Cytha. "I had to get some help."

  Duncan grunted. He flexed the leg that had been trapped and he could not feel the foot. Using his rifle as a cane, he pulled himself erect. He tried putting weight on the injured foot and it screamed with pain.

  He braced himself with the rifle and rotated so that he faced the Cytha.

  "Thanks, pal," he said. "I didn't think you'd do it."

  "You will not hunt me now?"

  Duncan shook his head. "I'm in no shape for hunting. I am heading home."

  "It was the vua, wasn't it? That was why you hunted me?"

  "The vua is my livelihood," said Duncan. "I cannot let you eat it."

  The Cytha stood silently and Duncan watched it for a moment. Then he wheeled. Using the rifle for a crutch, he started hobbling away.

  The Cytha hurried to catch up with him.

  "Let us make a bargain, mister. I will not eat the vua and you will not hunt me. Is that fair enough?"

  "That is fine with me," said Duncan. "Let us shake on it."

  He put down a hand and the Cytha lifted up a paw. They shook, somewhat awkwardly, but very solemnly.

  "Now," the Cytha said, "I will see you home. The screamers would have you before you got out of the woods."

  VI

  hey halted on a knoll. Below them lay the farm, with the vua rows straight and green in the red soil of the fields.

  "You can make it from here," the Cytha said. "I am wearing thin. It is an awful effort to keep on being smart. I want to go back to ignorance and comfort."

  "It was nice knowing you," Duncan told it politely. "And thanks for sticking with me."

  He started down the hill, leaning heavily on the rifle-crutch. Then he frowned troubledly and turned back.

  "Look," he said, "you'll go back to animal again. Then you will forget. One of these days, you'll see all that nice, tender vua and—"

  "Very simple," said the Cytha. "If you find me in the vua, just begin hunting me. With you after me, I will quickly get smart and remember once again and it will be all right."

  "Sure," agreed Duncan. "I guess that will work."

  The Cytha watched him go stumping down the hill.

  Admirable, it thought. Next time I have a brood, I think I'll raise a dozen like him.

  It turned around and headed for the deeper brush.

  It felt intelligence slipping from it, felt the old, uncaring comfort coming back again. But it glowed with anticipation, seethed with happiness at the big surprise it had in store for its new-found friend.

  Won't he be happy and surprised when I drop them at his door, it thought.

  Will he be ever pleased!

  —CLIFFORD D. SIMAK

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  Clifford Donald Simak

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