The Seventh Science Fiction Megapack

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The Seventh Science Fiction Megapack Page 51

by Robert Silverberg


  Don grinned. “Going on?”

  “Three months past. How old are you, Mr. Cort?”

  “Don’s the name I’ve had for twenty-six years. Please use it.”

  “Gladly. And now, Don, unless you want another cup of coffee, I’ll go with you to the end of the world.”

  “On such short notice?” Don was intrigued. Last night the redhead from the club car had repelled an advance that hadn’t been made, and this morning a blonde was apparently making an advance that hadn’t been solicited. He wondered where Geneva Jervis was, but only vaguely.

  “I’ll admit to the double entendre,” Alis said. “What I meant—for now—was that we can stroll out to where Superior used to be attached to the rest of Ohio and see how the Earth is getting along without us.”

  “Delighted. But don’t you have any classes?”

  “Sure I do. Non-Einsteinian Relativity 1, at nine o’clock. But I’m a demon class-cutter, which is why I’m still a Senior at my advanced age. On to the brink!”

  * * * *

  They walked south from the campus and came to the railroad track. The train was standing there with nowhere to go. It had been abandoned except for the conductor, who had dutifully spent the night aboard.

  “What’s happening?” he asked when he saw them. “Any word from down there?”

  “Not that I know of,” Don said. He introduced him to Alis Garet. “What are you going to do?”

  “What can I do?” the conductor asked.

  “You can go over to Cavalier and have breakfast,” Alis said. “Nobody’s going to steal your old train.”

  The conductor reckoned as how he might just do that, and did.

  “You know,” Don said, “I was half-asleep last night but before the train stopped I thought it was running alongside a creek for a while.”

  “South Creek,” Alis said. “That’s right. It’s just over there.”

  “Is it still? I mean hasn’t it all poured off the edge by now? Was that Superior’s water supply?”

  Alis shrugged. “All I know is you turn on the faucet and there’s water. Let’s go look at the creek.”

  They found it coursing along between the banks.

  “Looks just about the same,” she said.

  “That’s funny. Come on; let’s follow it to the edge.”

  The brink, as Alis called it, looked even more awesome by daylight. Everything stopped short. There were the remnants of a cornfield, with the withered stalks cut down, then there was nothing. There was South Creek surging along, then nothing. In the distance a clump of trees, with a few autumn leaves still clinging to their branches, simply ended.

  “Where is the water going?” Don asked. “I can’t make it out.”

  “Down, I’d say. Rain for the Earth-people.”

  “I should think it’d be all dried up by now. I’m going to have a look.”

  “Don’t! You’ll fall off!”

  “I’ll be careful.” He walked cautiously toward the edge. Alis followed him, a few feet behind. He stopped a yard from the brink and waited for a spell of dizziness to pass. The Earth was spread out like a topographer’s map, far below. Don took another wary step, then sat down.

  “Chicken,” said Alis. She laughed uncertainly, then she sat down, too.

  “I still can’t see where the water goes,” Don said. He stretched out on his stomach and began to inch forward. “You stay there.”

  Finally he had inched to a point where, by stretching out a hand, he could almost reach the edge. He gave another wriggle and the fingers of his right hand closed over the brink. For a moment he lay there, panting, head pressed to the ground.

  “How do you feel?” Alis asked.

  “Scared. When I get my courage back I’ll pick up my head and look.”

  Alis put a hand out tentatively, then purposefully took hold of his ankle and held it tight. “Just in case a high wind comes along,” she said.

  “Thanks. It helps. Okay, here we go.” He lifted his head. “Damn.”

  “What?”

  “It still isn’t clear. Do you have a pocket mirror?”

  “I have a compact.” She took it out of her bag with her free hand and tossed it to him. It rolled and Don had to grab to keep it from going over the edge. Alis gave a little shriek. Don was momentarily unnerved and had to put his head back on the ground. “Sorry,” she said.

  Don opened the compact and carefully transferred it to his right hand. He held it out beyond the edge and peered into it, focusing it on the end of the creek. “Now I’ve got it. The water isn’t going off the edge!”

  “It isn’t? Then where is it going?”

  “Down, of course, but it’s as if it’s going into a well, or a vertical tunnel, just short of the edge.”

  “Why? How?”

  “I can’t see too well, but that’s my impression. Hold on now. I’m coming back.” He inched away from the edge, then got up and brushed himself off. He returned her compact. “I guess you know where we go next.”

  “The other end of the creek?”

  “Exactly.”

  South Creek did not bisect Superior, as Don thought it might, but flowed in an arc through a southern segment of it. They had about two miles to go, past South Creek Bridge—which used to lead to Ladenburg, Alis said—past Raleigh Country Club (a long drive would really put the ball out of play, Don thought) and on to the edge again.

  But as they approached what they were forced to consider the source of the creek, they found a wire fence at the spot. “This is new,” Alis said.

  The fence, which had a sign on it, warning—electrified, was semicircular, with each end at the edge and tarpaulins strung behind it so they could see the mouth of the creek. The water flowed from under the tarp and fence.

  “Look how it comes in spurts,” Alis said.

  “As if it’s being pumped.”

  Smaller print on the sign said: Protecting mouth of South Creek, one of two sources of water for Superior. Electrical charge in fence is sufficient to kill. It was signed: Vincent Grande, Chief of Police, Hector Civek, Mayor.

  “What’s the other source, besides the faucet in your bathroom?” Don asked.

  “North Lake, maybe,” Alis said. “People fish there but nobody’s allowed to swim.”

  “Is the lake entirely within the town limits?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “If it were on the edge, and if I took a rowboat out on it, I wonder what would happen?”

  “I know one thing—I wouldn’t be there holding your ankle while you found out.”

  She took his arm as they gazed past the electrified fence at the Earth below and to the west.

  “It’s impressive, isn’t it?” she said. “I wonder if that’s Indiana way over there?”

  He patted her hand absent-mindedly. “I wonder if it’s west at all. I mean, how do we know Superior is maintaining the same position up here as it used to down there?”

  “We could tell by the sun, silly.”

  “Of course,” he said, grinning at his stupidity. “And I guess we’re not high enough to see very far. If we were we’d be able to see the Great Lakes—or Lake Erie, anyway.”

  They were musing about the geography when a plane came out of a cloudbank and, a second later, veered sharply. They could make out UAL on the underside of a wing. As it turned they imagined they could see faces peering out of the windows. They waved and thought they saw one or two people wave back. Then the plane climbed toward the east and was gone.

  “Well,” Don said as they turned to go back to Cavalier, “now we know that they know. Maybe we’ll begin to get some answers. Or, if not answers, then transportation.”

  “Transportation?” Alis squeezed the arm she was holding. “Why? Don’t you like it here?”

  “If you mean don’t I like you, the answer is yes, of course I do. But if I don’t get out of this handcuff soon so I can take a bath and get into clean clothes, you’re not going to like me.”

 
“You’re still quite acceptable, if a bit whiskery.” She stopped, still holding his arm, and he turned so they were face to face. “So kiss me,” she said, “before you deteriorate.”

  They were in the midst of an extremely pleasant kiss when the brief case at the end of Don’s handcuff began to talk to him.

  CHAPTER III

  Much of the rest of the world was inclined to regard the elevation of Superior, Ohio, as a Fortean phenomenon in the same category as flying saucers and sea monsters.

  The press had a field day. Most of the headlines were whimsical:

  TOWN TAKES OFF

  SUPERIOR LIVES UP TO NAME

  A RISING COMMUNITY

  The city council of Superior, Wisconsin, passed a resolution urging its Ohio namesake to come back down. The Superiors in Nebraska, Wyoming, Arizona and West Virginia, glad to have the publicity, added their voices to the plea.

  The Pennsylvania Railroad filed a suit demanding that the state of Ohio return forthwith one train and five miles of right-of-way.

  The price of bubble gum went up from one cent to three for a nickel.

  In Parliament a Labour member rose to ask the Home Secretary for assurances that all British cities were firmly fastened down.

  An Ohio waterworks put in a bid for the sixteen square miles of hole that Superior had left behind, explaining that it would make a fine reservoir.

  A company that leased out big advertising signs in Times Square offered Superior a quarter of a million dollars for exclusive rights to advertising space on its bottom, or Earthward, side. It sent the offer by air mail, leaving delivery up to the post office.

  In Washington, Senator Bobby Thebold ascertained that his red-haired secretary, Jen Jervis, had been aboard the train levitated with Superior and registered a series of complaints by telephone, starting with the Interstate Commerce Commission and the railroad brotherhoods. He asked the FBI to investigate the possibility of kidnaping and muttered about the likelihood of it all being a Communist plot.

  A little-known congressman from Ohio started a rumor that raising of Superior was an experiment connected with the United States earth satellite program. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration issued a quick denial.

  * * * *

  Two men talked earnestly in an efficient-looking room at the end of one of the more intricate mazes in the Pentagon Building. Neither wore a uniform but the younger man called the other sir, or chief, or general.

  “We’ve established definitely that Sergeant Cort was on that train, have we?” the general asked.

  “Yes, sir. No doubt about it.”

  “And he has the item with him?”

  “He must have. The only keys are here and at the other end. He couldn’t open the handcuff or the brief case.”

  “The only known keys, that is.”

  “Oh? How’s that, General?”

  “The sergeant can open the brief case and use the item if we tell him how.”

  “You think it’s time to use it? I thought we were saving it.”

  “That was before Superior defected. Now we can use it to more advantage than any theoretical use it might be put to in the foreseeable future.”

  “We could evacuate Cort. Take him off in a helicopter or drop him a parachute and let him jump.”

  “No. Having him there is a piece of luck. No one knows who he is. We’ll assign him there for the duration and have him report regularly. Let’s go to the message center.”

  * * * *

  Senator Bobby Thebold was an imposing six feet two, a muscular 195, a youthful-looking 43. He wore his steel-gray hair cut short and his skin was tan the year round. He was a bachelor. He had been a fighter pilot in World War II and his conversation was peppered with Air Force slang, much of it out of date. Thebold was good newspaper copy and one segment of the press, admiring his fighting ways, had dubbed him Bobby the Bold. The Senator did not mind a bit.

  At the moment Senator Thebold was pacing the carpet in the ample working space he’d fought to acquire in the Senate Office Building. He was momentarily at a loss. His inquiries about Jen Jervis had elicited no satisfaction from the ICC, the FBI, or the CIA. He was in an alphabetical train of thought and went on to consider the CAA, the CAB and the CAP. He snapped his fingers at CAP. He had it.

  The Civil Air Patrol itself he considered a la-de-da outfit of gentleman flyers, skittering around in light planes, admittedly doing some good, but by and large nothing to excite a former P-38 pilot who’d won a chestful of ribbons for action in the Southwest Pacific.

  Ah, but the PP. There was an organization! Bobby Thebold had been one of the founders of the Private Pilots, a hard-flying outfit that zoomed into the wild blue yonder on week ends and holidays, engines aroar, propellers aglint, white silk scarves aflap. PP’s members were wealthy industrialists, stunt flyers, sportsmen—the elite of the air.

  PP was a paramilitary organization with the rank of its officers patterned after the Royal Air Force. Thus Bobby Thebold, by virtue of his war record, his charter membership and his national eminence, was Wing Commander Thebold, DFC.

  Wing Commander Thebold swung into action. He barked into the intercom: “Miss Riley! Get the airport. Have them rev up Charger. Tell them I’ll be there for oh-nine-fifty-eight take-off. Ten-hundred will do. And get my car.”

  Charger was Bobby the Bold’s war surplus P-38 Lightning, a sleek, twin-boomed two engine fighter plane restored to its gleaming, paintless aluminum. Actually it was an unarmed photo-reconnaissance version of the famous war horse of the Pacific, a fact the wing commander preferred to ignore. In compensation, he belted on a .45 whenever he climbed into the cockpit.

  Thebold got onto Operations in PP’s midwestern headquarters in Chicago. He barked, long distance:

  “Jack Perley? Group Captain Perley, that is? Bobby, that’s right. Wing Commander Thebold now. We’ve got a mission, Jack. Scramble Blue Squadron. What? Of course you can; this is an emergency. We’ll rendezvous north of Columbus—I’ll give you the exact grid in half an hour, when I’m airborne. Can do? Good-o! ETA? Eleven-twenty EST. Well, maybe that is optimistic, but I hate to see the day slipping by. Make it eleven-forty-five. What? Objective? Objective Superior! Got it? Okay—roger!”

  Wing Commander Bobby Thebold took his Lindbergh-style helmet and goggles from a desk drawer, caressing the limp leather fondly, and put them in a dispatch case. He gave a soft salute to the door behind which Jen Jervis customarily worked, more as his second-in-command than his secretary, and said half aloud:

  “Okay, Jen, we’re coming to get you.”

  He didn’t know quite how, but Bobby the Bold and Charger would soon be on their way.

  * * * *

  Don Cort regretfully detached himself from Alis Garet.

  “What was that?” he said.

  “That was me—Alis the love-starved. You could be a bit more gallant. Even ‘How was that?,’ though corny, would have been preferable.

  “No—I mean I thought I heard a voice. Didn’t you hear anything?”

  “To be perfectly frank—and I say it with some pique—I was totally absorbed. Obviously you weren’t.”

  “It was very nice.” The countryside, from the edge to the golf course, was deserted.

  “Well, thanks. Thanks a bunch. Such enthusiasm is more than I can bear. I have to go now. There’s an eleven o’clock class in magnetic flux that I’m simply dying to audit.”

  She gave her shoulder-length blonde hair a toss and started back. Don hesitated, looked suspiciously at the brief case dangling from his wrist, shook his head, then followed her. The voice, wherever it came from, had not spoken again.

  “Don’t be angry, Alis.” He fell into step on her left and took her arm with his free hand. “It’s just that everything is so crazy and nobody seems to be taking it seriously. A town doesn’t just get up and take off, and yet nobody up here seems terribly concerned.”

  Alis squeezed the hand that held her arm, mollified. “You’ve got lipsti
ck on your whiskers.”

  “Good. I’ll never shave again.”

  “Ah,” she laughed, “gallantry at last. I’ll tell you what let’s do. We’ll go see Ed Clark, the editor of the Sentry. Maybe he’ll give you some intelligent conversation.”

  The newspaper office was in a ramshackle one-story building on Lyric Avenue, a block off Broadway, Superior’s main street. It was in an ordinary store front whose windows displayed various ancient stand-up cardboard posters calling attention to a church supper, a state fair, an auto race, and a movie starring H. B. Warner. A dust-covered banner urged the election as president of Alfred E. Smith.

  There was no one in the front of the shop. Alis led Don to the rear where a tall skinny man with straggly gray hair was setting type.

  “Good morning, Mr. Clark,” she said. “What’s that you’re setting—an anti-Hoover handbill?”

  “Hello, Al. How are you this fine altitudinous day?”

  “Super. Or should it be supra? I want you to meet Don Cort. Don, Mr. Clark.”

  The men shook hands and Clark looked curiously at Don’s handcuff.

  “It’s my theory he’s an embezzler,” Alis said, “and he’s made this his getaway town.”

  “As a matter of fact,” Don said, “the Riggs National Bank will be worried if I don’t get in touch with them soon. I guess you’d know, Mr. Clark—is there any communication at all out of town?” By prearrangement, a message from Don to Riggs would be forwarded to Military Intelligence.

  “I don’t know of any, except for the Civek method—a bottle tossed over the edge. The telegraph and telephone lines are cut, of course. There is a radio station in town, WCAV, operated from the campus, but it’s been silent ever since the great severance. At least nothing local has come over my old Atwater Kent.”

  “Isn’t anybody doing anything?” Don asked.

  “Sure,” Clark said. “I’m getting out my paper—there was even an extra this morning—and doing job printing. The job is for a jeweler in Ladenburg. I don’t know how I’ll deliver it, but no one’s told me to stop so I’m doing it. I guess everybody’s carrying on pretty much as before.”

  “That’s what I mean. Business as usual. But how about the people who do business out of town? What’s Western Union doing, for instance? And the trucking companies? And the factories? You have two factories, I understand, and pretty soon there’s going to be a mighty big surplus of kitchen sinks and chewing gum.”

 

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