I say seventy-five fathoms, though I had no instrument
by which to judge the distance. But I knew that even in the clearest waters the solar rays could not penetrate farther. And accordingly the darkness deepened. At ten paces not an object was visible. I was groping my way, when I suddenly saw a brilliant white light. Captain Nemo had just put his electric apparatus into use; his companion did the same, and Conseil and I followed their example. By turning a screw I established a communication between the wire and the spiral glass, and the sea, lit by our four lanterns, was illuminated for a circle of thirty-six yards.
Captain Nemo was still plunging into the dark depths of the forest, whose trees were getting scarcer at every step. I noticed that vegetable life disappeared sooner than animal life. The medusae had already abandoned the arid soil, from which a great number of animals, zoophytes, articulata, molluscs, and fishes still obtained sustenance.
As we walked, I thought the light of our Ruhmkorff apparatus could not fail to draw some inhabitant from its dark couch. But if they did approach us, they at least kept at a respectful distance from the hunters. Several times I saw Captain Nemo stop, put his gun to his shoulder and after some moments drop it and walk on. At last, after about four hours, this marvelous excursion came to an end. A wall of superb rocks in an imposing mass rose before us, a heap of gigantic blocks, an enormous, steep granite shore, forming dark grottoes, but presenting no practicable slope; it was the prop of the Island of Crespo. It was the earth! Captain Nemo stopped suddenly. A gesture of his brought us all to a halt, and, however desirous I might be to scale the wall, I was obliged to stop. Here ended Captain Nemo’s domains. And he would not go beyond them. Farther on was a portion of the globe he might not trample upon.
The return began. Captain Nemo had returned to the head of his little band, directing their course without hesitation. I thought we were not following the same route to return to the Nautilus. The new road was very steep, and consequently very painful. . . . For one hour a plain of sand lay stretched before us. Sometimes it rose to within two yards and some inches of the surface of the water. I then saw our image clearly reflected, drawn inversely, and above us appeared an identical group reflecting our movements and our actions—in a word, like us in every point, except that they walked with their heads downward and their feet in the air.
Another effect I noticed was the passage of thick clouds which formed and vanished rapidly; but on reflection I understood that these seeming clouds were due to the varying thickness of the reeds at the bottom, and I could even see the fleecy foam which their broken tops multiplied on the water, and the shadows of large birds passing above our heads, whose rapid flight I could discern on the surface of the sea.
On this occasion, I was witness to one of the finest gunshots which ever made the nerves of a hunter thrill. A large bird of great breadth of wing, clearly visible, approached, hovering over us. Captain Nemo’s companion shouldered his gun and fired when it was only a few yards above the waves. The creature fell stunned, and the force of its fall brought it within the reach of the dextrous hunter’s grasp. It was an albatross of the finest kind.
Our march had not been interrupted by this incident. For two hours we followed these sandy plains, then fields of algae very disagreeable to cross. Candidly, I could do no more when I saw a glimmer of light, which, for a half mile, broke the darkness of the waters. It was the lantern of the Nautilus. . . .
I had remained some steps behind, when I presently saw Captain Nemo coming hurriedly toward me. With his strong hand he bent me to the ground, his companion doing the same to Conseil. At first I knew not what to think of this sudden attack, but I was soon reassured by seeing the Captain lie down beside me and remain immovable.
I was stretched on the ground, just under shelter of a bush of algae, when, raising my head, I saw some enormous mass, casting phosphorescent gleams, pass blusteringly by.
My blood froze in my veins as I recognized two formidable sharks ... It was a couple of tintoreas, terrible creatures, with enormous tails and a dull glassy stare, the phosphorescent matter ejected from holes pierced around the muzzle. Monstrous brutes which would crush a whole man in their iron jaws. I did not know whether Conseil stopped to classify them; for my part, I noticed their silver bellies, and their huge mouths bristling with teeth, from a very unscientific point of view, and more as a possible victim than as a naturalist.
Happily the voracious creatures do not see well. They
passed without seeing us, brushing us with their brownish fins, and we escaped by a miracle from a danger certainly greater than meeting a tiger full face in the forest. Half an hour after, guided by the electric light, we reached the Nautilus. The outside door had been left open, and Captain Nemo closed it as soon as we had entered the first cell. He then pressed a knob. I heard the pumps working in the midst of the vessel, I felt the water sinking from around me, and in a few moments the cell was entirely empty. The inside door then opened, and we entered the vestry.
There our diving dress was taken off, not without some trouble; and, fairly worn out from want of food and sleep, I returned to my room, in great wonder at this surprising excursion at the bottom of the sea.
Among those who wrote about television before it came into existence were Hugo Gernsback, Theodore Sturgeon and John W. Campbell, Jr. (who said it would never be popular); after it happened, most stories in which it appeared took the form of virtuous yelps of disapproval, like “The Pedestrian,” by Ray Bradbury (whose television credits cannot be listed here for lack of space).
Almost alone among the new crop of s.f. writers, Will Stanton does not view with alarm our habit of sitting glassy-eyed in front of an electronic box. On the contrary, he suggests that with a little more refinement, and a certain amount of luck, TV may become preferable to, and indistinguishable from, “real life”
YOU ARE WITH IT!
BY WILL STANTON
“The deep freeze has been acting up again.” Kay Dobbs slid into the breakfast nook across from her husband. “I wish you’d call the man as soon as you get to the office.” Stanley Dobbs folded his paper to the editorial page. “All right”
“Tell him it hasn’t worked right since the last time he was here.” She reached across and folded back a corner of the paper to examine an advertisement for handbags. “Did you remember to call your friend about the speaker for the P.T.A.?”
“I’ll do it first thing.”
“Better phone the phone company too. Find out about that long-distance call they charged us for.”
“Yes, I’d better do that.”
“I think it makes more of an impression coming from a man,” Kay said.
Stanley backed his car out to the street. Kay waved goodbye from the picture window. It was the custom in Belle Acres for wives to wave goodbye from their picture windows.
At the end of the block Stanley joined a small stream of commuters winding their way down to the station. Here, along with the members of other tributaries, they were picked up by the train much like a river picking up silt to be deposited at the end of its run.
Stanley was reviewing his schedule for the day as he stepped into his office and closed the door. Immediately he was aware of certain changes. In fact, the office bore slight resemblance to the room he had left the night before. It was more like a half-lighted stage with billows of mist rising from various points on the floor. In the center, seated at a small round table, was a solitary figure in evening clothes. When he spoke his voice had a hollow, artificial quality, rather like an actor rehearsing in the bottom of a well.
“How do you do?” he remarked in a faintly bogus British accent. “Won’t you join me? For the next ninety minutes I am to be your host.”
“How do you do?” said Stanley. He hesitated and then walked over, placed his hat and briefcase on the table and sat down.
“You are now where no mortal has ever been.” The Host was projecting his voice as if addressing a vast audience. “You
are just over the horizon. The exact spot? Well, you won’t find it on any map, nor the date on any calendar.”
“It’s the seventeenth,” said Stanley. “Tuesday.”
“It is twenty-five hours past midnight on the thirty-first of November,” said the Host. “You are about to start your perilous journey into the unknown.”
Stanley looked at his watch. “I did have a couple of phone calls to make—”
The Host smiled. “Perhaps I have been needlessly mystifying you,” he remarked in a more conversational tone. “This, as you may have guessed, is a new sort of television program. It is a combination of adventure, supernatural and audience participation. A chap from Duke University suggested it.” Stanley nodded politely. “It sounds very interesting.”
“It is more than interesting,” said the Host. “It is voodoo, black magic and witchcraft brought into every home through the marvels of modern communication. For the first time a member of the viewing audience will actually be able to take part in the violence and terror that have brought happiness to so many.”
“I’m afraid I haven’t been keeping up with TV lately,” Stanley admitted. “Since we put in the new patio we’ve been sitting out there a great deal.”
“When the time comes you will know what to do,” the Host assured him. “You are not being asked to play a part— you are going to live the part. Mr. Stanley Dobbs—You Are With It!” The last words were picked up by echoing voices and repeated in tones that faded with the light until Stanley found himself alone in the dark and the silence.
As the lights came on again Stanley discovered he was standing beneath the marquee of a night club. The doorman bowed. “The Commissioner was here looking for you,” he said.
Nodding absently, Stanley went inside and sat down at a quiet table in the corner. There was a good crowd present, eating, drinking and listening to the music of Arabella and her All-Girl Orchestra.
After a moment he was joined by the proprietress—Big Yvette. “We haven’t seen you for quite a while,” she observed. He shrugged. “You know how it is.”
“Yes, I know.” Big Yvette placed her hand on his. “I worry about you.”
“I have a job to do,” Stanley said.
“I suppose we shouldn’t complain about that,” she said, “with so much unemployment and all.”
A waiter approached the table. He was carrying a bottle of
Napoleon brandy. “Compliments of Arabella and her All Girl Orchestra,” he explained.
“Oh.” Abruptly he realized that the music had stopped.
“They’re backstage,” the waiter told him.
“I’d like to thank them,” Stanley said. He went back and entered the dressing room.
The orchestra leader looked up with a cry of delight. “Darling, we’ve missed you.” She put her arms around his neck.
“I just wanted to thank you,” he said, “before I left”
“Before you left?”
He nodded. “I have a job to do.”
“Oh.” There was disappointment in her voice. “We were hoping you could come up to our place after the show.”
“Our place?” he repeated.
“We share an apartment.” She indicated the other members of the band. “We’ve taken the top floor of the U.N. Hilton.”
“Let’s just say I’ll make it if I can,” he said. “You know I’d like to.”
Her arms tightened around his neck. “You really mean it?”
He looked down into her eyes. Turning his head, he looked into the eyes of Francine and Iris and Millie-Jo and Ursula and Gretchen and Dee and Carlotta and the rest. “I mean it,” he said.
Outside the club he caught a taxi. “I got a message for you,” the driver told him, “from the Big Boy himself. He said to lay off.”
“He did?” said Stanley, coolly lighting a cigarette. “I heard the Big Boy was knocked off last week.”
“He was,” the driver said. “But I been in bed with a cold. This is the first chance I had to deliver the message.”
“Let me out at the next corner,” Stanley said. He paid the driver. “Better take care of that cold,” he said.
“They say summer colds are the worst kind,” the driver said.
Stanley went into a vacant garage and down three flights of stairs and rapped on the door. It was opened by a man whose face was known to no more than three or four persons in the entire country.
“Good evening, Chief,” Stanley said, following him into the luxuriously appointed office.
“I don’t believe you have met the Contessa.” The Chief gestured toward a beautiful young woman sitting at one side of the room in an ermine wrap. “She will accompany you as far as Budapest. After that you will be on your own.”
Stanley bowed. The Chief unrolled a map. “We have learned that the secret police are holding the Professor in a fortress at this spot. It will be your job to get him out of the country unharmed. You will follow our standard procedure in dealing with the guards. As for the electric fence, the dogs and the mine fields, you will no doubt wish to use your own methods.”
“It seems pretty much routine,” Stanley said. “I should think one of your regular operatives could handle the job.”
“The Professor himself presents no particular problem,” the Chief conceded. “However, smuggling his cyclotron out of the country may prove more difficult. I think it only fair to warn you that it may involve considerable risk.”
Stanley shrugged. “That’s what I get paid for.”
“So you do.” The Chief put down the map and picked up his pipe. “Is that the real reason you do it?” he inquired casually. “For the money?” •
Stanley smiled a tight, cryptic little smile. “There are certain persons who criticize what we call the American way of life. I don’t happen to be among them. And when something threatens that way of life—” he paused to smile again—“I do what has to be done.”
The Chief nodded. “How soon can you leave?” he asked. The next morning Stanley was late coming down to breakfast. “You’ll have to hurry or you’ll miss your train,” his wife said.
Stanley swallowed his juice. “If I have to hurry I’ll hurry,” he said, “I’ve done it before.” ’
“I wish you didn’t have to work late so often,” Kay said, “I didn’t even hear you come in.”
“I didn’t notice the time.”
“I don’t suppose you remembered to call the deep-freeze man? Well, we’re going to have to do something about the water softener too.”
“All right.”
“I’ve made out a list,” she said. “I’ve put it in your breast pocket. For one thing I think you ought to call several boarding kennels. You know how busy they’re going to be at vacation time, and last year I’m sure they didn’t remember to give Mr. Toidy his grated carrots.”
“I’ll make a point of that,” he said.
“I simply can’t stand it when an animal doesn’t receive proper care,” she said. “It does something to me.”
Stanley was a little late getting to the office, but the truck was waiting. He climbed up in the cab beside the driver. “Do you know that old warehouse down on Sixth?” he asked. ‘ The driver nodded. “Sure, but it won’t be open this time of night.”
“I’ve got a tip that they’re running a brewery there,” Stanley said. “How much speed can you get out of this truck?” “Could be fifty—maybe fifty-five,” the driver said. He revved up the engine. “It ought to be enough to break through the doors.”
“It’s worth a try,” Stanley said.
They rammed the doors and came to a halt in the middle of the warehouse. On both sides of them were rows of barrels. There was no one in sight.
Stanley seized an ax and handed one to the driver. “I’ll take this side and you take that one,” he said. Raising the ax, he drove it into the top of the first barrel. Then he went on to the next. He and the driver reached the end of their rows at the same time. He leaned his ax against t
he wall. “How’s it going?” he asked.
The driver wiped his forehead. “All the barrels on this side got dishes in them,” he said.
“Same here,” Stanley said. “It looks like somebody gave me a wrong steer.”
“Well,” said the driver, “you can’t win them all.”
Stanley rolled down his sleeves. “There’s just one other possibility,” he said.
In the gambling room Stanley moved from table to table, killing time. One of the dealers beckoned. “The Boss wants to see you,” he said. “Upstairs.”
Stanley nodded. Upstairs the door was opened by a hardfaced man, who motioned him inside. The Boss was seated at the head of a long table. On either side were assembled all the notorious names of the underworld.
“We’ve been expecting you,” the Boss remarked in a silky tone. He moved his hand to indicate the others. “I believe you may know some of these gentlemen.”
“I believe so.” Stanley nodded. “Abdul . . . Agasis . . . Albrecht . . . Alvarado . . . Andradi . . . Antorski . . . Aristides . . . Aspasian . . .”
“Yes,” said the Boss, “now, then—”
“Bakunin . . . Baldini . . . Bauman . . .** Stanley continued strolling beside the table. “Beckhold . . . Bernardo . . . Bjomstrom . . . Black Eagle . .
“Let’s get down to business,” the Boss said. “You’ll find a package at the end of the table.”
Stanley gave it a casual glance. “What’s in it?”
“What does it look like?”
Stanley opened the package. “It looks like two and a half million dollars,” he said, “in small bills.” He tossed it back on the table.
“It’s yours,” the Boss said. “Take it. Go on a vacation somewhere.”
“Perhaps I forgot to tell you,” Stanley said. “I have a job to do.”
The Boss studied him, his eyes narrowed. “We’ll double it.”
Stanley returned the stare. “There is such a thing as the American Dream,” he remarked softly, “and when any group or organization threatens to destroy it, well—” he smiled briefly—“there are a few of us who do what we can.”
A Century of Science Fiction Page 42