He looked into her eyes and read the mindless l.u.s.t. Never had he perceived such graphic yearning in a woman. She had no brain, only a hungry pudendum.
She was, after all, an animal, not a human being. Fornication with her would be tantamount to b.e.s.t.i.a.lity, and the concept repelled him even as his member throbbed in response to the urgent pressure of her v.u.l.v.a.
"Get away from me!" he cried, shoving her roughly aside. G.o.d! They had even reduced women to animal cycles, in lieu of human periodicy. To control freshening, no doubt, and forestall restlessness at inconvenient times. There would be no mooning in the absence of male company, this way, except for those few days when the repressed s.e.xuality of a year or more was triggered.
She hunched against the wall, tears coming. He saw that her emotions were human, though her mind was not. She felt rejection as keenly as anyone, but lacked the sophistication to control or conceal her reaction.
He had been too harsh with her. "Take it easy, Iota. I didn"t mean to yell at you. I wasn"t wasn"t yelling at you!" No-he had been shouting across the worlds at Iolanthe, who had teased him similarly for so long. Arousing the urge, but unavailable for the gratification. The difference was that this time yelling at you!" No-he had been shouting across the worlds at Iolanthe, who had teased him similarly for so long. Arousing the urge, but unavailable for the gratification. The difference was that this time he he had called it off. Taking out his suppressions on this innocent wanton who could not know what drove him. had called it off. Taking out his suppressions on this innocent wanton who could not know what drove him.
She peered at him uncertainly, her face bearing the sheen of smeared tears. He lifted the harness and shook it. "I have to put this on you and take you to the bull. That"s all. Do you understand?"
Still she hesitated. How could could she understand? She was an animal. The tone of his voice was all she followed. she understand? She was an animal. The tone of his voice was all she followed.
Or was was it? it?
The animals here were incredibly stupid, considering their human origin. Obviously they had been somehow bludgeoned into this pa.s.sivity. Drugs, perhaps-the biscuits could contain a potent mix. Probably most of the subjects finally gave up thinking; it was easier just to go along. But what of a young one? Her metabolism might have greater resource, particularly when she was ready to mate. To be in heat-it was the animal way to be in potent s.e.xual love. Powerful juices there, very powerful. Counter-actants?
But more: suppose an individual succeeded for a time in throwing off the mind-suppressant? Started protesting?
What was the reply of any any tyranny to insurrection? The smart cow would keep her mouth shut, at least in the barn. She would conform. Her life depended on it. tyranny to insurrection? The smart cow would keep her mouth shut, at least in the barn. She would conform. Her life depended on it.
Iota might not be stupid at all. She might be doing exactly what was expected of her. Concealing her awareness.
She was still d.a.m.ned attractive in her primeval way.
She had been watching him with that preternatural alertness of hers, and now she approached him again, cautiously.
He set the harness over her shoulders and reached around her body to fasten the straps. "Can you talk?" he whispered into her ear, afraid of being overheard. He doubted there were hidden mikes-that would not be economically feasible for a r.e.t.a.r.ded technology like this-but other farmhands could be in the area.
She lifted her arms to facilitate the tightening of the clasps. A thick strand of hair curved around her left shoulder and the inside arc of her left breast. She was not as scantily endowed as he had thought at first; he had merely become acclimatized to the monstrosities of the milkers. She was clean, too, except for the feet, and there was an alluring woman-smell about her.
"Can you talk, Iota!" he whispered more urgently. "Maybe I can help you."
She perked up at the sound of her name. Her breathing became rapid again. She rested her forearms against his shoulders and looked into his face. Her eyes were large, the irises black in this light. But she did not smile or speak.
"You can trust me, Iota," he said. "Just give me some sign. Some evidence that you"re not-"
She closed her arms gently around his neck and drew him in to her. Again her b.r.e.a.s.t.s touched him; again her hips nudged his groin. The woman-smell became stronger.
Was she trying to show him that she comprehended, or was it merely a more careful s.e.xual offering?
What difference did it make?
He had fastened the straps long since, but his arms were still about her. He slid his hands across her smooth back, down to the slight indentations above her b.u.t.tocks. She responded, putting increasing pressure against him.
What the h.e.l.l.
Hitch looked about. There was no one in the stable, apart from the cows in the special stalls. He tightened his embrace and carried her upright into her own compartment, "You want to get bred, OK," he muttered.
He put her down in the straw. She yielded to his directions, eager to oblige. He kneeled between her spread legs, released his belt and opened his trousers, watching her. Then, unable to restrain himself any longer, he put his left hand on her cleft to work the l.a.b.i.a apart. The entire area was slick and hot. He transferred the hand to his own loin, supporting the weight of his body with the other hand as he descended, and guided himself down the burning crevice and in. He was reminded strikingly of the manner he had placed the thermometer not long ago. There didn"t seem to be any hymen.
He spread himself upon her, embedded to the hilt. He tried to kiss her, but the position was wrong and she didn"t seem to understand. What opportunity would she have had to learn about kissing?
He had expected an immediate and explosive climax, but was disappointed. Iota had a dismayingly capacious v.a.g.i.n.al tract; he could neither plumb the well to its depth nor find purchase at its rim. He realized belatedly that cows would naturally be selected for ready breeding and birthing. Entry had been too easy; there was no internal resistance, no friction.
After all his buildup, he couldn"t come. It was like dancing alone in a s.p.a.cious ballroom.
She lay there pa.s.sively, waiting for him to proceed.
Angry, now, he pulled back, plunged, withdrew and plunged again, his sword impaling only phantoms.
And felt his weapon growing flaccid. "b.i.t.c.h," he said. But it was the bovine, not the canine, image that had unmanned him. It just wasn"t in him to fornicate with a placid, mindless cow.
She looked up at him reproachfully as he disengaged and covered up, but he was too disturbed to care. "Get up, animal. You want bull, you"ll get get bull." bull."
She stood up and he took hold of the harness leash and jerked her forward. "Move," he said firmly, and she moved. There was, it seemed, a trick to handling animals, and he had mastered it out of necessity. He was becoming an experienced farmer.
They traveled down long dim corridors to the bullpen, she tugging eagerly at the leash and seeking to poke into side pa.s.sages. She had forgotten the frustration of the recent episode already. Obviously she had never been in this section of the barn before, and curiosity had not been entirely suppressed along with intelligence. She was was stupid, of course; otherwise he would not have failed with her. stupid, of course; otherwise he would not have failed with her.
He didn"t know much about lobotomy, but this didn"t seem like it. Yet what technique...?
The bull was a giant of a man, full-bearded and hirsute. His feet and hands were crusted with callus and there was dirt on his belly. His tremendous p.e.n.i.s hoisted, derrick-like, the moment he winded Iota, and he hurled himself around his large pen. Only the stout double harness and chained collar that bound him to the far rail inhibited his savage lunges. He stank of urine.
Hitch loosed Iota and shoved her into the pen. He was anxious to have the bull cover up any guilty traces of his own abortive gesture.
She was abruptly hesitant, standing just beyond the range of the man-monster that reared and chafed and bellowed to get at her and bucked awesomely with his tumescence. She wasn"t afraid of him, though his ma.s.s was easily twice hers; she was merely uncertain how to proceed in the face of so much meat.
She made as if to step forward, then withdrew. She was trying to flirt! Hitch found quick sympathy for the bull, allied with his own apprehension. "You idiotic tease, get over there!" he cried at her.
Startled, she did.
The bull reached out and grabbed her by one shoulder, employing the same five-fingered mitten-grip Hitch had observed with the cows. Iota spun under the force of it, thrown off-balance, and the bull caught at her opposite hip and hauled her in to his chest backwards. He clubbed her so that she doubled over and rammed his spurting organ into her narrow cleft, thrusting again and again so fiercely that her abdomen bowed out with each lunge.
That was the treatment she had been waiting for! She hadn"t even been aware of Hitch"s effort, thinking it only the preliminary inspection. was the treatment she had been waiting for! She hadn"t even been aware of Hitch"s effort, thinking it only the preliminary inspection.
Then Iota tumbled to the floor, stunned by the impact of the courtship but hardly miserable. She was in heat, after all, and now that she had found out what it was all about, she liked it. She lay on her back in the soiled straw, smiling, legs lifted, though Hitch was sure she would suffer shortly from terrible bruises inside and out. What a performance!
The beast was on her again, this time from the front, biting at her b.r.e.a.s.t.s while trying to get into position for another a.s.sault. His organ glistened moistly, still erect.
"Get that heifer out of there!" someone shouted, and Hitch started. It was another farmhand. "Want to sap our best stud?"
Hitch ran out into the pen, wary of the bull, and caught hold of one of Iota"s blissfully outstretched arms. It was obvious that she would happily absorb all the punishment the creature chose to deliver. A festoon of white goo stretched downward from the bull"s p.e.n.i.s as he made a last attempt at the vanishing target. Then Hitch hauled Iota across the floor until they were entirely out of range of the monster and stood her on her feet. She was still dazed as he reharnessed her, not even wincing as the strap chafed across the deep toothmarks on her breast.
The other farmhand glanced at him as they trooped by, but did not say anything. Just as well.
About halfway back, Hitch remembered that he had forgotten to post the time of service on the bull"s chart. He decided not to risk further embarra.s.sment by returning for that errand. The bull seemed to have sufficient pep to go around, anyway.
Iota was dreamily contented as he returned her to her stall, though there was a driblet of gluey blood on one leg. Apparently there had had been a hymen...Well, she was out of heat now, and she wasn"t a virgin heifer any more! been a hymen...Well, she was out of heat now, and she wasn"t a virgin heifer any more!
There was trouble in the final stall. He had been so occupied with the prior ch.o.r.es on the schedule that he hadn"t bothered to read ahead, and now he regretted it. He had just witnessed, per instructions, a copulation, and it was as though gestation had occurred in minutes. This next cow was delivering!
She lay on her side, legs pulled up, whimpering as her body strained. There was something funny about her tongue too, as it projected between her teeth. Was there a physical physical reason these animals never spoke? The head of the calf had already emerged, its hair brown like that of the mother. Hitch had thought all babies were bald. All reason these animals never spoke? The head of the calf had already emerged, its hair brown like that of the mother. Hitch had thought all babies were bald. All human human babies... babies...
Should he summon help? He was no obstetrician!
But then he would have to explain why he hadn"t notified anyone earlier, and he had no excuse apart from carelessness and personal concupiscence. Better to stick with it himself.
Odd, he thought, how one could become committed against his intention. This laboring cow was not really his problem, and she belonged literally to another world, yet he had to do what he could for her. The activities of this brutal barn were as important to him at this moment as anything he could remember. Even its most repulsive aspects fascinated him. It represented a direct personal challenge as well as an intellectual one. Iota- As the cow struggled to force out the ma.s.sive bundle, Hitch skimmed nervously through the manual. Good-the stock was generally hardy, and seldom required more than nominal supervision during parturition. Signs of trouble? No, none of the alarm signals itemized were evident. This was a normal delivery.
But the text stressed the importance of removing the new-birthed calf immediately and taking it to the nursery for proper processing. The mother was not supposed to have any opportunity to lick it down, suckle it or develop any attachment.
And how about the father? How about How about any any observer with a trace of human feeling? It was as though he observer with a trace of human feeling? It was as though he had had impregnated a cow, and now his offspring was being manifested. He had failed with Iolanthe, he had failed with Iota, but he still had something to prove. Something to salvage from this disaster of a world. impregnated a cow, and now his offspring was being manifested. He had failed with Iolanthe, he had failed with Iota, but he still had something to prove. Something to salvage from this disaster of a world.
The cow heaved again, and more of the balled-up calf emerged. There was blood soaking into the pallet, but the manual a.s.sured him callously that this was normal. He wanted to do do something, but knew that his best bet was noninterference. He was sure now that a human woman could not have given birth so readily without anesthetic or medication. In some ways the animals were fortunate, not that it justified any part of this. That large, loose v.a.g.i.n.a- something, but knew that his best bet was noninterference. He was sure now that a human woman could not have given birth so readily without anesthetic or medication. In some ways the animals were fortunate, not that it justified any part of this. That large, loose v.a.g.i.n.a- "What"s going on here?"
Hitch jumped again. The voice behind him was that of the owner! For an experienced investigator, he had been inexcusably careless about his observations. Twice now, men had come upon him by surprise.
"She"s birthing," he said. "Routine, so I didn"t-"
"In the nightstall? nightstall?" the man demanded angrily, his white hair seeming to stand on end. It was the way he combed it, Hitch decided irrelevantly. "On a bare pallet?"
Oops-he must have missed a paragraph. "I told you it"s been a while since I-the other farm didn"t have separate places to-"
"That farm was in violation of the law, not to mention the policies of compa.s.sionate procedure." The owner was already inside the stall and squatting down beside the laboring cow. "It was a mistake, Esmeralda," he said soothingly. "I never meant to put you through this here. I had a special delivery-booth for you, with fresh clean straw and padded walls..." He stroked her hair and patted her shoulder, and the animal relaxed a little. Obviously she recognized the gentle master. Probably he came by the stables periodically to encourage the beasts and grant them lumps of sugar. "In just a moment I"ll give you a shot to ease the pain, but not just yet. It will make you sleepy, and we have to finish this job first. You"ve been very good. You"re one of my best. It"s all right now, dear."
Hitch realized with a peculiar mixture of emotions that it wasn"t all acting. The farmer really did care about the comfort and welfare of his animals. Hitch had somehow a.s.sumed that brutality was the inevitable concomitant of the degradation of human beings. But actually he had seen no harshness; this entire barn was set up for the maximum creature comfort compatible with efficiency, with this backward technology. Had he misjudged the situation?
Under the owner"s sure guidance the calving was quickly completed. The man lifted the infant-a female-and spanked her into awareness before cutting and tying off the umbilical cord. He wrapped her in a towel that materialized from somewhere and stood up. "Here," he said to Hitch, "take it to the nursery."
Hitch found himself with babe in arms.
"All right, Esme," the owner said to the cow, his voice low and friendly. "Let"s take care of that afterbirth. Here-I"ll give you that shot I promised. It only stings for a second. Hold still-there. You"ll feel much better soon. Just relax, and in a moment you"ll be asleep. In a few days you"ll be back with the herd where you belong, the finest milker of them all." He looked up and spied Hitch still standing there. "Get moving, man! Do you want her to see it?"
Hitch got moving. He did not feel at all comfortable carrying the baby, for all his determination of a moment ago to help it in some way, but that was the least of it. Its cries, never very loud (did they breed for that, too?), had subsided almost immediately as it felt the supposed comfort of human arms, and probably that was fortunate because otherwise the mother would have been attracted to the sound. But this removal of the baby so quickly from its parent, so that it could never know a true family-how could that be tolerated? Yet he was cooperating, carrying it down the dusky pa.s.sages to the nursery.
The fact that he had witnessed its arrival did not make him responsible for it, technically-but the baby had, in more than a manner of speaking, been given into his charge. His prior mood returned, intensified; he did did feel responsible. feel responsible.
"I"ll take care of you, little girl," he said inanely. "I"ll keep you safe. I"ll-"
He was talking like a hypocrite. There was very little he could do for this baby except put it in the nursery. He didn"t know the first thing about child care. And-he was no longer entirely certain that he should should do anything specific if he had the opportunity. do anything specific if he had the opportunity.
He had been ready to condemn this entire world out of hand, but in the face of this last development he wasn"t sure, oddly. This breeding and milking of human beings was shocking-but was it actually evil? The preliminary report had remarked on the strange peacefulness of this alternate Earth: computer a.n.a.lysis suggested that there was no war here, and had not been for some time. That was another riddle of #772. Was it because those who ruled it were compa.s.sionate men, despite the barbarity of their regime?
Which was better: to have a society peacefully unified by a true segregation of functions-men-men vs animal-men-or to have every person born to contend so selfishly for the privileges of humanity that all succeeded only in being worse than animals? Earth-Prime remained in serious jeopardy of self-extermination; was that the preferred system to impose on all the alternate Earths too?
#772 did have its positive side. Economically it functioned well, and it would probably never have runaway inflation or population increase or cla.s.s warfare. Could it be that with the breakup of the family system, the human rights and dignities system, the all-men-are-created-equal system-could it be that this was the true key to permanent worldwide peace?
He had not seen a single discontented cow.
By taking this baby from its mother and conveying it to the impersonal nursery, was he in fact doing it the greatest favor of its existence?
He wondered.
The nursery caught him by surprise. It was a cool quiet area more like a laboratory than the playroom he had antic.i.p.ated. A series of opaque tanks lined the hall. As he pa.s.sed between them he heard a faint noise, like that of an infant crying in a confined s.p.a.ce, and the baby in his arms heard it and came alive loudly.
Hitch felt suddenly uneasy, but he took the squalling bundle hastily up to the archaically garbed matron at a central desk. "This is Esmeralda"s offspring," he said.
"I don"t recognize you," the woman said, glowering at him. Epitome of grade-school disciplinarian. He almost flinched.
"I"m a new man, just hired this morning. The boss is in with the mother now. He said to-"
"Boss? What nonsense is this?"
Hitch paused, nonplussed, before he realized that he had run afoul of another slang expression. This one evidently hadn"t carried over into #772. "The owner, the man who-"
"Very well," she snapped. "Let me see it."
She took the bundle, put it unceremoniously on the desk, and unwrapped it. She probed the genital area with a harsh finger, ignoring the baby"s screams. This time Hitch did flinch. "Female. Good. No abnormalities. Males are such a waste."
"A waste? Why?"
She unrolled a strip of something like masking tape and tore it off. She grasped one of the baby"s tiny hands. "Haven"t you worked in a barn before? You can"t get milk from a bull."
Obviously not. But a good bull did have his function, as Iota"s experience had shown. Hitch watched the woman tape the miniature thumb and fingers together, forming a bandage resembling a stiff mitten, and something unpleasant clicked. Hands so bound in infancy could not function normally in later life; certain essential muscles would atrophy and certain nerves would fail to develop. It was said by some that man owed his intelligence to the use of his opposable thumb...
"I haven"t been involved with this end of it," he explained somewhat lamely. "What happens to the males?"
"We have to kill them, of course, except for the few we geld for manual labor." She had finished taping the hands; now she had a bright scalpel poised just above the little face.
Hitch a.s.sumed she was going to cut the tape away or take a sample of hair. He wasn"t really thinking about it, since he was still trying to digest what he had just learned. Slaughter of almost all males born here...
She hooked thumb and forefinger into the baby"s cheeks, forcing its mouth open uncomfortably. The knife came down, entered the mouth, probed beneath the tongue before Hitch could protest. Suddenly the screams were horrible.
Hitch watched, paralyzed, as bubbling blood overflowed the tiny lip. "What-?"
"Wouldn"t want it to grow up talking," she said. "Amazing how much trouble one little cut can save. Now take this calf down to tank seven."
"I don"t-" There was too much to grapple with. They cut the tongues so that speech would be impossible? There went another bastion of intelligence, ruthlessly excised.
With the best intentions, he had delivered his charge into this enormity. He felt ill.
The matron sighed impatiently. "That"s right, you"re new here. Very well. I"ll show you so you"ll know next time. Make sure you get it straight I"m too busy to tell you twice."
Too busy mutilating innocent babies? But he did not speak. It was as though his own tongue had felt the blade. But he did not speak. It was as though his own tongue had felt the blade.
She took the baby down to tank seven, ignoring the red droplets that trailed behind, and lifted the lid. The container was about half full of liquid, and a harness dangled from one side. She pinned the baby in the crook of one elbow and fitted the little arms, legs and head into the loops and tightened the fastenings so that the head was firmly out of the fluid. Some of it splashed on Hitch when she immersed the infant, and he discovered that it was some kind of thin oil, luke-warm.
The baby screamed and thrashed, afraid of the dark interior or perhaps bruised by the crude straps, but only succeeded in frothing redly and making a few small splashes with its bound hands. The harness held it secure and helpless.