“I will,” said Jill.
“One more item,” he said. He got out of the car and closed the door quickly. He went to the back. There was the sound of breaking glass. He returned, saying, “No brake lights will go on now. I’ll try to do something about that dome light.” With a sharp blow he shattered it. “Now we could be as hard to trail as that Wild Life truck was the other night.”
Jill groped as the car got into motion again.
“You mean it was—Oh!”
“Most likely,” agreed Lockley, “it was the thing that went out of the park and occupied Maplewood, flinging terror beams in all directions. Some of the truck’s crew would have had footgear to make hoofprints. They committed a token burglary or two. And there was the illusion of aliens studying these queer creatures, men.”
They went on at not more than fifteen miles an hour. The car was almost soundless. They heard insects singing in the night. There was a steady, monotonous rumbling high above where Air Force planes patrolled outside the Park. After a time Jill said, “You seemed discouraged when you talked to that general.”
“I was,” said Lockley. “I am. He played it safe, refused to admit that anybody in authority over him could possibly be mistaken. That’s sound policy, and I was contradicting the official opinion of his superiors. I’ve got to find somebody of much lower rank, or much higher. Maybe—”
Jill said in a strained voice, “Stop!”
He braked. She said unsteadily, “Holding the wire, I smell that horrible smell.”
He put his hand on the wire’s end. He shared the sensation.
“Terror beam across the highway,” he said calmly. “Maybe on our account, maybe not. But there was a side road a little way back.”
He backed the car. He’d smashed the backing lights, too. He guided himself by starlight. Presently he swung the wheel and faced the car about. He drove back the way he had come. A mile or so, and there was another hard-surface road branching off. He took it. Half an hour later Jill said quickly, “Brakes!”
The road was blocked once more by an invisible terror beam, into which any car moving at reasonable speed must move before its driver could receive warning.
“This isn’t good,” he said coldly. “They may have picked some good places to block. We have to go almost at random, just picking roads that head away from the Park. I don’t know how thoroughly they can cage us in, though.”
There was a flicker of light in the sky. Lockley jerked his head around. It flashed again. Lightning. The sky was clouding up.
“It’s getting worse,” he said in a strained voice. “I’ve been taking every turn that ought to lead us away from the Park, but I’ve had to use the stars for direction. I didn’t think that soldiers would keep us from getting away from here. I was almost confident. But what will I do without the stars?”
He drove on. The clouds piled up, blotting out the heavens. Once Lockley saw a faint glow in the sky and clenched his teeth. He turned away from it at the first opportunity. The glow could be Serena, and he could have been forced back toward it by the windings of the highway he’d followed without lights. Twice Jill warned him of beams across the highway. Once, driven by his increasing anxiety, his brakes almost failed to stop him in time. When the car did stop, he was aware of faint tinglings on his skin. There were erratic flashings in his eyes, too, and a discordant composite of sounds which by association with past suffering made him nauseated. Perhaps this extra leakage from the terror beam was through the metal of the car.
When he got out of that terror beam the sky was three-quarters blacked out and before he was well away from the spot there was only a tiny patch of stars well down toward the horizon. There were lightning flickers overhead. After a time he depended on them to show him the road.
Then the rain came. The lightning increased. The road twisted and turned. Twice the car veered off onto the road’s shoulders, but each time he righted it. As time passed conditions grew worse. It was urgent that he get as far as possible from Serena, because of the Wild Life truck which could seize Jill and himself if its beam generators were repaired, and whose occupants could murder them if they weren’t. But it was most urgent that he get away beyond the military cordon to find men who would listen to his information and see that use was made of it. Yet in driving rain and darkness, without car lights and daring to drive only at a crawl, he might be completely turned around.
“I think,” he said at last, “I’ll turn in at the next farm gate the lightning shows us. I’ll try to get the car into a barn so it won’t show up at daybreak. We might be heading straight back into the Park!”
He did turn, the next time a lightning flash showed him a turn-off beside a rural free delivery mailbox. There was a house at the end of a lane. There was a barn. He got out and was soaked instantly, but he explored the open space behind the wide, open doors. He backed the car in.
“So,” he explained to Jill, “if we have a chance to move we won’t have to back around first.”
They sat in the car and looked out at the rain-filled darkness. There was no light anywhere except when lightning glittered on the rain. In such illuminations they made out the farmhouse, dripping floods of water from its eaves. There was a chicken house. There were fences. They could not see to the gate or the highway through the falling water, but there had been solid woodland where they turned off into the lane.
“We’ll wait,” said Lockley distastefully, “to see if we are in a tight spot in the morning. If we’re well away—and I’ve no real idea where we are—we’ll go on. If not, we’ll hide till dark and hope for stars to steer by when we go.”
Jill said confidently, “We’ll make it. But where to?”
“To any place away from Boulder Lake Park, and where I’m a human being instead of a crackpot civilian. To where I can explain some things to people who’ll listen, if it isn’t too late.”
“It’s not,” said Jill with as much assurance as before.
There was a pause. The rain poured down. Lightning flashed. Thunder roared.
“I didn’t know,” said Jill tentatively, “that you believed the invaders—the monsters—had people helping them.”
“The overall picture isn’t a human one,” he told her. “But there’s a design that shows somebody knows us. For instance, nobody’s been killed. At least not publicly. That was arranged by somebody who understood that if there was a massacre, we’d fight to the end of our lives and teach our children to fight after us.”
She thought it over. “You’d be that way,” she said presently. “But not everybody. Some people will do anything to stay alive. But you wouldn’t.”
The rain made drumming sounds on the barn roof. Lockley said, “But what’s happened isn’t altogether what humans would devise. Humans who planned a conquest would know they couldn’t make us surrender to them. If this was a sort of Pearl Harbor attack by human enemies—and you can guess who it might be—they might as well start killing us on the largest possible scale at the beginning. If monsters with no information about us landed, they might perpetrate some massacres with the entirely foolish idea of cowing us. But there haven’t been any massacres. So it’s neither a cold war trick nor an unadvised landing of monsters. There’s another angle in it somewhere. Monster-human cooperation is only a guess. I’m not satisfied, but it’s the best answer so far.”
Jill was silent for a long time. Then she said irrelevantly, “You must have been a good friend of…of.…”
“Vale?” Lockley said. “No. I knew him, but that’s all. He only joined the Survey a few months ago. I don’t suppose I’ve talked to him a dozen times, and four of those times he was with you. Why’d you think we were close friends?”
“What you’ve done for me,” she said in the darkness.
He waited for a lightning flash to show him her expression. She was looking at him.
“I didn’t do it for Vale,” said Lockley.
“Then why?”
“I’d have done it
for anyone,” said Lockley ungraciously.
In a way it was true, of course. But he wouldn’t have gone up to the construction camp to make sure that anyone hadn’t been left behind. The idea wouldn’t have occurred to him.
“I don’t think that’s true,” said Jill.
He did not answer. If Vale was alive, Jill was engaged to him; although if matters worked out, Lockley would not be such a fool as to play the gentleman and let her marry Vale by default. On the other hand, if Vale was dead, he wouldn’t be the kind of fool who’d try to win her for himself before she’d faced and recovered from Vale’s death. A girl could forgive herself for breaking her engagement to a living man, but not for disloyalty to a dead one.
“I think,” said Lockley deliberately, “that we should change the subject. I will talk about why I went to the Lake after you when everything has settled down. I had reasons. I still have them. I will express them, eventually, whether Vale likes it or not. But not now.”
There was a long silence, while rain fell with heavy drumming noises and the world was only a deep curtain of lightning-lighted droplets of falling water.
“Thanks,” said Jill very quietly. “I’m glad.”
And then they sat in silence while the long hours went by. Eventually they dozed. Lockley was awakened by the ending of the rain. It was then just the beginning of gray dawn. The sky was still filled with clouds. The ground was soaked. There were puddles here and there in the barnyard, and water dripped from the barn’s eaves, and from the now vaguely visible house, and from the two or three trees beside it.
Lockley opened the car door and got out quietly. Jill did not waken. He visited the chicken house, and horrendous squawkings came out of it. He found eggs. He went to the house, stepping gingerly from grass patch to grass patch, avoiding the puddles between them. He found bread, jars of preserves and cans of food. He inspected the lane. The car’s tracks had been washed out. He nodded to himself.
He went back to the barn. There was still only dusky half-light. He pulled the doors almost shut behind him, leaving only a four-inch gap to see through. Now the car was safely out of sight and there was no sign that any living being was near.
“You closed the doors,” said Jill. “Why?”
He said reluctantly, “I’m afraid we’re as badly off as we were at the beginning. Unless I’m mistaken, we got turned around in that rainstorm on those twisty roads, and the Park begins nearby. This isn’t the highway I drove up on to find you, the one where my car’s wrecked. This is another one. I don’t think we’re more than twenty miles from the Lake, here. And that’s something I didn’t intend!”
He began to unload his pockets.
“I got something for us to eat. We’ll just have to lie low until night and fumble our way out toward the cordon, with the stars to guide us.”
There was silence, save for the lessened dripping of water. Lockley was filled with a sort of baffled impatience with himself. He felt that he’d acted like an idiot in trying to escape the evacuated area by car. But there’d been nothing else to do. Before that he’d stupidly been unsuspicious when the Wild Life truck came down a highway that he’d known was blocked by a terror beam. And perhaps he’d been a fool to refuse to discuss why he’d gone up to the construction camp to see to her safety when by all the rules of reason it was none of his business.
The gray light paled a little. Through the gap between the barn doors, he could see past the house. Then he could see the length of the lane and the trees on the far side of the highway.
He was laying out the food when suddenly he froze, listening. The stillness of just-before-dawn was broken by the distant rumble of an internal-combustion engine. It was a familiar kind of rumbling. It drew nearer. Except for the singularly distinct impacts of drippings from leaves and roof to the ground below, it was the only sound in all the world.
It became louder. Jill clenched her hands unconsciously.
“I don’t think there are any car tracks at the turn-off where we came in,” said Lockley in a level voice. “The rain should have washed them out. It’s not likely they’re looking for us here anyhow. But I’ve only got three bullets left in the pistol. Maybe you’d better go off and hide in the cornfield. Then if things go wrong they’ll believe I left you somewhere.”
“No,” said Jill composedly, “I’d leave tracks in the ploughed ground. They’d find me.”
Lockley ground his teeth. He got out the pistol he’d taken from the truck driver in the lighted room in Serena. He looked at it grimly. It would be useless, but.…
Jill came and stood beside him, watching his face.
The rumbling of the truck was still nearer and louder. It diminished for a moment where a curve in the road took the vehicle behind some trees that deadened its noise. But then the sound increased suddenly. It was very loud and frighteningly near.
Lockley watched through the gap between the barn doors. He stayed well back lest his face be seen.
The trailer-truck with the Wild Life Control markings on it rumbled past. It growled and roared. The noise seemed thunderous. Its wheels splashed as they went through a puddle close by the gate.
It went away into the distance. Jill took a deep breath of relief. Lockley made a warning gesture.
He listened. The noise went on steadily for what he guessed to be a mile or more. Then they heard it stop. Only by straining his ears could Lockley pick up the sound of an idling motor. Maybe that was imagination. Certainly at any other less silent time he could not possibly have heard it. Jill whispered, “Do you think—”
He gestured for silence again. The distant heavy engine continued to idle. One minute. Two. Three. Then the grinding of gears and the roar of the engine once more. The truck went on. Its sound diminished. It faded away altogether.
“They got to a place where the road’s blocked with a terror beam,” said Lockley evenly. “They stopped and called by short wave and the beam was cut off, then they went past the block-point and undoubtedly the beam was turned on again.”
He debated a decision.
“We’ll have breakfast,” he said shortly. “We’ll have to eat the eggs raw, but we need to eat. Then we’ll figure things out. It may be that we’d be sensible to forget about cars and try to get to the cordon on foot, robbing farmhouses of food on the way. There can’t be too many…collaborators. And we could keep out of sight.”
He opened a jar of preserves.
“But it would be better for you to be travelling by car, if tonight’s clear and there’s starlight to drive by.”
Jill said practically, “There might be some news.…”
Her hands shook as she put the pocket radio on the hood of the car. Lockley noticed it. He felt, himself, the strain of their long march through the wilderness with danger in every breath they drew. And he was shaken in a different way by the proof that humans were cooperating fully with the invading monsters. It was unthinkable that anybody could be a traitor not only to his own country but to all the human race. He felt incredulous. It couldn’t be true! But it obviously was.
The radio made noises. Lockley turned it in another direction. There was music. Jill’s face worked. She struggled not to show how she felt.
The radio said, “Special news bulletin! Special news bulletin! The Pentagon announces that for the first time there has been practically complete success in duplicating the terror beam used by the space invaders at Boulder Lake! Working around the clock, teams of foreign and American scientists have built a projector of what is an entirely new type of electronic radiation which produces every one of the physiological effects of the alien terror beam! It is low-power, so far, and has not produced complete paralysis in experimental animals. Volunteers have submitted themselves to it, however, and report that it produces the sensations experienced by members of the military cordon around Boulder Lake. A crash program for the development of the projector is already under way. At the same time a crash program to develop a counter to it is already showing p
romising results. The authorities are entirely confident that a complete defense against the no longer mysterious weapon will be found. There is no longer any reason to fear that earth will be unable to defend itself against the invaders now present on earth, or any reinforcements they may receive!”
The newscast stopped and a commercial called the attention of listeners to the virtues of an anti-allergy pill. Jill watched Lockley’s face. He did not relax.
The broadcast resumed. With this full and certain hope of a defense against the invasion weapon, said the announcer, it remained important not to destroy the alien ship if it could be captured for study. The use of atom bombs was, therefore, again postponed. But they would be used if necessary. Meanwhile, against such an emergency, the areas of evacuation would be enlarged. People would be removed from additional territory so if bombs were used there would be no humans near to be harmed.
Another commercial. Lockley turned off the radio.
“What do you think?” asked Jill.
“I wish they hadn’t made that broadcast,” said Lockley. “If there were only monsters involved and they didn’t understand English, it would be all right. But with humans helping them, it sets a deadline. If we’re going to counter their weapon, they have to use it before we finish the job.”
After a moment he said bitterly, “There was a time, right after the last big war, when we had the bomb and nobody else did. There couldn’t be a cold war then! There were years when we could destroy others and they couldn’t have fought back. Now somebody else is in that position. They can destroy us and we can’t do a thing. It’ll be that way for a week, or maybe two, or even three. It’ll be strange if they don’t take advantage of their opportunity.”
Jill tried to eat the food Lockley had laid out. She couldn’t. She began to cry quietly. Lockley swore at himself for telling her the worst, which it was always his instinct to see. He said urgently, “Hold it! That’s the worst that could happen. But it’s not the most likely!”
The Murray Leinster Megapack Page 208