He pulled his arm free.
"I"m sorry," he said again. "I"ll be back in a week at the outside. You might be thinking of how to wind up things, here."
He turned with that, and went away, around the building toward the parking spot of the station copters.
Mal, stunned, watched the tall, slim, broad-shouldered figure move into darkness.
"It doesn"t matter," said the gentle voice of Jane comfortingly at his ear. He jerked about and saw her facing him. "You won"t need the Willernie funds any more."
"He told you?" Mal stared at her as she shook her head, smiling in the growing dimness. "You heard?
From way over there?"
"Yes," she said. "And you were right about Brayt. I got your answer for you. He was a hatchet man sent here by the Willernie people to decide whether the station deserved further funds."
"But we"ve got to have them!" Mal said. "It won"t take much more, but we"ve got to go into the sea and work out ways to talk to the dolphins in their own mode. We"ve got to expand to their level of communication, not try to compress them to ours. You see, this afternoon, I had a breakthrough "
"I know," she said. "I know all about it."
"You know?" He stared at her. "How do you know?"
"You"ve been under observation all afternoon," she said. "You"re right. You did break through the environmental barrier. From now on it"s just a matter of working out methods."
"Under observation? How?" Abruptly, that seemed the least important thing at hand. "But I have to have money," he said. "It"ll take time and equipment, and that costs money "
"No." Her voice was infinitely gentle. "You won"t need to work out your own methods. Your work is done, Mal. This afternoon the dolphins and you broke the bars to communication between the two races for the first time in the history of either. It was the job you set out to do and you were part of it. You can be happy knowing that."
"Happy?" He almost shouted at her, suddenly. "I don"t understand what you"re talking about."
"I"m sorry." There was a ghost of a sigh from her. "We"ll show you how to talk to the dolphins, Mal, if men need to. As well as some other things perhaps." Her face lifted to him under the star-marked sky, still a little light in the west. "You see, you were right about something more than dolphins, Mal. Your idea that the ability to communicate with another intelligent race, an alien race, was a test that had to be pa.s.sed before the superior species of a planet could be contacted by the intelligent races of the galaxy that was right, too."
He stared at her. She was so close to him, he could feel the living warmth of her body, although they were not touching. He saw her, he felt her, standing before him; and he felt all the strange deep upwelling of emotion that she had released in him the moment he first saw her. The deep emotion he felt for her still.
Suddenly understanding came to him.
"You mean you"re not from Earth " His voice was hoa.r.s.e and uncertain. It wavered to a stop. "But you"re human!" he cried desperately.
She looked back at him a moment before answering. In the dimness he could not tell for sure, but he thought he saw the glisten of tears in her eyes.
"Yes," she said, at last, slowly. "In the way you mean that you can say I"m human."
A great and almost terrible joy burst suddenly in him. It was the joy of a man who, in the moment when he thinks he has lost everything, finds something of infinitely greater value.
"But how?" he said, excitedly, a little breathlessly. He pointed up at the stars. "If you come from some place up there? How can you be human?"
She looked down, away from his face. "I"m sorry," she said. "I can"t tell you."
"Can"t tell me? Oh," he said with a little laugh, "you mean I wouldn"t understand."
"No " Her voice was almost inaudible, "I mean I"m not allowed to tell you."
"Not allowed " He felt an unreasoning chill about his heart. "But Jane " He broke off fumbling for words. "I don"t know quite how to say this, but it"s important to me to know. From the first moment I saw you there, I . . . I mean, maybe you don"t feel anything like this, you don"t know what I"m talking about "
"Yes," she whispered. "I do."
"Then " He stared at her. "You could at least say something that would set my mind at rest. I mean . . .
it"s only a matter of time now. We"re going to be getting together, your people and I, aren"t we?"
She looked up at him out of darkness.
"No," She said, "we aren"t, Mal. Ever. And that"s why I can"t tell you anything."
"We aren"t?" he cried. "We aren"t? But you came and saw us communicate Why aren"t we?"
She looked up at him for the last time, then, and told him. He, having heard what she had to say, stood still; still as a stone, for there was nothing left to do. And she, turning slowly and finally away from him, went off to the edge of the pool and down the steps into the shallow water, where the dolphins came rushing to meet her, their foamy tearing of the surface making a wake as white as snow.
Then the three of them moved, as if by magic, across the surface of the pool and out the entrance of it to the ocean. And so they continued to move off until they were lost to sight in darkness and the starlit, glinting surface of the waves.
It came to Mal then, as he stood there, that the dolphins must have been waiting for her all this time. All the wild dolphins, who had come to the station after the first two captives, were set free to leave or stay as they wanted. The dolphins had known, perhaps for centuries, that it was to them alone on Earth that the long-awaited visitors from the stars would finally come.
*["The Forsaken Merman," by Matthew Arnold, 1849.]
CONTENTS.
This is one of Gordy"s most-requested stories, featuring one of his most engaging and enduring characters, Cully When (seeNone But Manand others). You could file it under Pure Fun but it does serve to remind us that the distinction between a pirate and a privateer is more than letters of marque. It is essentially motivation, not the verdict of history, that decides who is a Hero and who a . . .
HILIFTER.
It was locked from the outside.
Not only that, but the mechanical latch handle that would override the b.u.t.ton lock on the tiny tourist cabin aboard theStar of the North was hidden by the very bed on which Cully When sat cross-legged, like some sinewy mountain man out of Cully"s own pioneering ancestry. Cully grinned at the image in the mirror which went with the washstand now hidden by the bed beneath him. He would not have risked such an expression as that grin if there had been anyone around to see him. The grin, he knew, gave too much of him away to viewers. It was the hard, unconquerable humor of a man dealing for high stakes.
Here, in the privacy of this locked cabin, it was also a tribute to the skill of the steward who had imprisoned him. A dour and cautious individual with a long Scottish face, and no doubt the greater part of his back wages reinvested in the very s.p.a.ceship line he worked for. Or had Cully done something to give himself away? No. Cully shook his head. If that had been the case, the steward would have done more than just lock the cabin. It occurred to Cully that his face, at last, might be becoming known.
"I"m sorry, sir," the steward had said, as he opened the cabin"s sliding door and saw the unmade bed.
"Off-watch steward"s missed making it up." He clucked reprovingly. "I"ll fix it for you, sir."
"No hurry," said Cully. "I just want to hang my clothes; and I can do that later."
"Oh, no, sir," The lean, dour face of the other as primitive in a different way as Cully"s own looked shocked. "Regulations. Pa.s.sengers" gear to be stowed and bunk made up before overdrive."
"Well, I can"t just stand here in the corridor," said Cully. "I want to get rid of the stuff and get a drink."
And indeed the corridor was so narrow, they were like two vehicles on a mountain road. One would have to back up to some wider spot to let the other past.
"Have the sheets in a moment, sir," said the steward. "Just a moment, sir. If you wouldn"t mind sitting up on the bed, sir?"
"All right," said Cully. "But hurry. I want to step up for a drink in the lounge."
He hopped up on to the bed, which filled the little cabin in its down position; and drew his legs up tailor-fashion to clear them out of the corridor.
"Excuse me, sir," said the steward, closed the door, and went off. As soon as he heard the b.u.t.ton lock latch, Cully had realized what the man was up to. But an unsuspecting man would have waited at least several minutes before hammering on the locked door and calling for someone to let him out. Cully had been forced to sit digesting the matter in silence.
At the thought of it now, however, he grinned again. That steward was a regular prize package. Cully must remember to think up something appropriate for him, afterward. At the moment, there were more pressing things to think of.
Cully looked in the mirror again and was relieved at the sight of himself without the betraying grin. The face that looked back at him at the moment was lean and angular. A little peroxide solution on his thick, straight brows had taken the sharp appearance off his high cheekbones and given his pale blue eyes a faintly innocent expression. When he really wanted to fail to impress sharply discerning eyes, he also made it a point to chew gum.
The present situation, he considered now, did not call for that extra touch. If the steward was already even vaguely suspicious of him, he could not wait around for an ideal opportunity. He would have to get busy now, while they were still working the s.p.a.ceship out of the solar system to a safe distance where the overdrive could be engaged without risking a ma.s.s-proximity explosion.
And this, since he was imprisoned so neatly in own s...o...b..x of a cabin, promised to be a problem right from the start.
He looked around the cabin. Unlike the salon cabins on the level overhead, where it was possible to pull down the bed and still have a tiny s.p.a.ce to stand upright in either beside the bed, in the case of single-bed cabins, or between them, in the case of doubles in the tourist cabins once the bed was down, the room was completely divided into two s.p.a.ces the s.p.a.ce above the bed and the s.p.a.ce below. In the s.p.a.ce above, with him, were the light and temperature and ventilation controls, controls to provide him with soft music or the latest adventure tape, food and drink dispensers and a host of other minor comforts.
There were also a phone and a signal b.u.t.ton, both connected with the steward"s office. Thoughtfully he tried both. There was, of course, no answer.
At that moment a red light flashed on the wall opposite him; and a voice came out of the grille that usually provided the soft music.
"We are about to maneuver. This is the Captain"s Section, speaking. We are about to maneuver. Will all lounge pa.s.sengers return to their cabins? Will all pa.s.sengers remain in their cabins, and fasten seat belts.
We are about to maneuver. This is the Captain"s Section "
Cully stopped listening. The steward would have known this announcement was coming. It meant that everybody but crew members would be in their cabins, and crew members would be up top in control level at maneuver posts. And that meant n.o.body was likely to happen along to let Cully out. If Cully could get out of this cabin, however, those abandoned corridors could be a break for him.
However, as he looked about him now, Cully was rapidly revising downward his first cheerful a.s.sumption that he who had gotten out of so many much more intentional prisons would find this a relatively easy task. On the same principle that a pit with unclimbable walls and too deep to jump up from and catch an edge is one of the most perfect traps designable the tourist room held Cully. He was on top of the bed; and he needed to be below it to operate the latch handle.
First question: How impenetrable was the bed itself? Cully dug down through the covers, pried up the mattress, peered through the springs, and saw a blank panel of metal. Well, he had not really expected much in that direction. He put the mattress and covers back and examined what he had to work with above-bed.
There were all the control switches and b.u.t.tons on the wall, but nothing among them promised him any aid. The walls were the same metal paneling as the base of the bed. Cully began to turn out his pockets in the hope of finding something in them that would inspire him. And he did indeed turn out a number of interesting items, including a folded piece of notepaper which he looked at rather soberly before laying it aside, with a boy scout type of knife that just happened to have a set of lock picks among its other tools.
The note would only take up valuable time at the moment, and the lock being out of reach in the door the lock picks were no good either.
There was nothing in what he produced to inspire him, however. Whistling a little mournfully, he began to make the next best use of his pile of property. He unscrewed the nib and cap of his long, gold fountain pen, took out the ink cartridge, and laid the tube remaining aside. He removed his belt, and the buckle from the belt. The buckle, it appeared, clipped on to the fountain pen tube in somewhat the manner of a pistol grip. He reached in his mouth, removed a bridge covering from the second premolar to the second molar, and combined this with a small metal throwaway dispenser of the sort designed to contain antacid tablets. The two together had a remarkable resemblance to the magazine and miniaturized trigger a.s.sembly of a small handgun; and when he attached them to the buckle-fountain-pen-tube combination the resemblance became so marked as to be practically inarguable.
Cully made a few adjustments in this and looked around himself again. For the second time, his eye came to rest on the folded note, and, frowning at himself in the mirror, he did pick it up and unfold it.
Inside it read: "O was the pow"r the Giftie gie us" Love, Lucy. Well, thought Cully, that was about what you could expect from a starry-eyed girl with Scottish ancestors, and romantic notions about present-day conditions on Alderbaran IV and the other new worlds.
". . . But if you have all that land on Asterope IV, why aren"t you back there developing it?" she had asked him.
"The New Worlds are stiffing to death," he had answered. But he saw then she did not believe him. To her, the New Worlds were still the romantic Frontier, as the Old Worlds Confederation newspapers capitalized it. She thought he had given up from lack of vision.
"You should try again . . ." she murmured. He gave up trying to make her understand. And then, when the cruise was over and their shipboard acquaintance that was all it was, really ended on the Miami dock, he had felt her slip something in his pocket so lightly only someone as self-trained as he would have noticed it. Later he had found it to be this note which he had kept now for too long.
He started to throw it away, changed his mind for the sixtieth time and put it back in his pocket. He turned back to the problem of getting out of the cabin. He looked it over, pulled a sheet from the bed, and used its length to measure a few distances.
The bunk was pivoted near the point where the head of it entered the recess in the wall that concealed it in Up position. Up, the bunk was designed to fit with its foot next to the ceiling. Consequently, coming up, the foot would describe an arc About a second and a half later he had discovered that the arc of the foot, ascending, would leave just enough s.p.a.ce in the opposite top angle between wall and ceiling so that if he could just manage to hang there, while releasing the safety latch at the foot of the bed, he might be able to get the bed up past him into the wall recess.
It was something which required the muscle and skill normally called for by so-called "chimney ascents"
in mountain climbing where the climber wedges himself between two opposing walls of rock. A rather wide chimney since the room was a little more than four feet in width. But Cully had had some little experience in that line.
He tried it. A few seconds later, pressed against walls and ceiling, he reached down, managed to get the bed released, and had the satisfaction of seeing it fold up by him. Half a breath later he was free, out in the corridor of the Tourist Section.
The corridor was deserted and silent. All doors were closed. Cully closed his own thoughtfully behind him and went along the corridor to the more open s.p.a.ce in the center of the ship. He looked up a steel ladder to the entrance of the Salon Section, where there would be another ladder to the Crew Section, and from there eventually to his objective the Control level and the Captain"s Section. Had the way up those ladders been open, it would have been simple. But level with the top of the ladder he saw the way to the Salon Section was closed off by a metal cover capable of withstanding fifteen pounds per square inch of pressure.
It had been closed, of course, as the other covers would have been, at the beginning of the maneuver period.
Cully considered it thoughtfully, his fingers caressing the pistol grip of the little handgun he had just put together. He would have preferred, naturally, that the covers be open and the way available to him without the need for fuss or muss. But the steward had effectively ruled out that possibility by reacting as and when he had. Cully turned away from the staircase and frowned, picturing the layout of the ship, as he had committed it to memory five days ago.
There was an emergency hatch leading through the ceiling of the end tourist cabin to the end salon cabin overhead, at both extremes of the corridor. He turned and went down to the end cabin nearest him, and laid his finger quietly on the outside latch handle.
There was no sound from inside. He drew his put-together handgun from his belt and, holding it in his left hand, calmly and without hesitation, opened the door and stepped inside.
He stopped abruptly. The bed in here was, of course, up in the wall, or he could never have entered.
But the cabin"s single occupant was asleep on the right-hand seat of the two seats that an upraised bed left exposed. The occupant was a small girl of about eight years old.
The slim golden barrel of the handgun had swung immediately to aim at the child"s temple. For an automatic second, it hung poised there, Cully"s finger half-pressing the trigger. But the little girl never stirred. In the silence, Cully heard the surge of his own blood in his ears and the faint crackle of the note in his shirt pocket. He lowered the gun and fumbled in the waistband of his pants, coming up with a child-sized anesthetic pellet. He slipped this into his gun above the regular load, aimed the gun, and fired.
The child made a little uneasy movement all at once and then lay still. Cully bent over her for a second, and heard the soft sound of her breathing. He straightened up. The pellet worked not through the blood stream, but immediately through a reaction of the nerves. In fifteen minutes the effect would be worn off, and the girl"s sleep would be natural slumber again.