"What?"
"Our side got a draw in that game."
"Then the beam can"t be on him. Are you sure . . ."
"It is! Look, here, the same indication we got last time. It"s been on him the better part of an hour now, and getting stronger."
The Commander stared in disbelief; but he knew and trusted his Second"s ability. And the panel indications were convincing. He said: "Then someone-or something-with no functioning mind is learning how to play a game, over there. Ha, ha," he added, as if trying to remember how to laugh.
The berserker won another game. Another draw. Another win for the enemy. Then three drawn games in a row.
Once the Second Officer heard Del"s voice ask coolly: "Do you want to give up now?" On the next move he lost another game. But the following game ended in another draw. Del was plainly taking more time than his opponent to move, but not enough to make the enemy impatient.
"It"s trying different modulations on the mind beam," said the Second. "And it"s got the power turned way up."
"Yeah," said the Commander. Several times he had almost tried to radio Del, to say something that might seep the man"s spirits up-and also to relieve his own feverish inactivity, and to try to find out what could possibly be going on. But he could not take the chance. Any interference might upset the miracle.
He could not believe the inexplicable success could last, even when the checker match turned gradually into an endless succession of drawn games between two perfect players. Hours ago the Commander had said good-bye to life and hope, and he still waited for the fatal moment.
And he waited.
"-not perish from the earth!" said Del Murray, and Newton"s eager hands flew to loose his right arm from its shackle.
A game, unfinished on the little board before him, had been abandoned seconds earlier. The mind beam had been turned off at the same time, when Gizmo had burst into normal s.p.a.ce right in position and only five minutes late; and the berserker had been forced to turn all its energies to meet the immediate all-out attack of Gizmo and Foxglove.
Del saw his computers, recovering from the effect of the beam, lock his aiming screen onto the berserker"s scarred and bulging midsection, as he shot his right arm forward, scattering pieces from the game board.
"Checkmate!" he roared out hoa.r.s.ely, and brought his fist down on the big red b.u.t.ton.
"I"m glad it didn"t want to play chess," Del said later, talking to the Commander in Foxglove"s cabin. "I could never have rigged that up."
The ports were cleared now, and the men could look out at the cloud of expanding gas, still faintly luminous, that had been a berserker; metal fire-purged of the legacy of ancient evil.
But the Commander was watching Del. "You got Newt to play by following diagrams, I see that. But how could he learn the game?"
Del grinned. "He couldn"t, but his toys could. Now wait before you slug me." He called the aiyan to him and took a small box from the animal"s hand. The box rattled faintly as he held it up. On the cover was pasted a diagram of one possible position in the simplified checker game, with a different-colored arrow indicating each possible move of Del"s pieces.
"It took a couple of hundred of these boxes," said Del. "This one was in the group that Newt examined for the fourth move. When he found a box with a diagram matching the position on the board, he picked the box up, pulled out one of these beads from inside, without looking-that was the hardest part to teach him in a hurry, by the way," said Del, demonstrating. "Ah, this one"s blue. That means, make the move indicated on the cover by a blue arrow. Now the orange arrow leads to a poor position, see?" Del shook all the beads out of the box into his hand. "No orange beads left; there were six of each color when we started. But every time Newton drew a bead, he had orders to leave it out of the box until the game was over. Then, if the scoreboard indicated a loss for our side, he went back and threw away all the beads he had used. All the bad moves were gradually eliminated. In a few hours, Newt and his boxes learned to play the game perfectly."
"Well," said the Commander. He thought for a moment, then reached down to scratch Newton behind the ears. "I never would have come up with that idea."
"I should have thought of it sooner. The basic idea"s a couple of centuries old. And computers are supposed to be my business."
"This could be a big thing," said the Commander. "I mean your basic idea might be useful to any task force that has to face a berserker"s mind beam."
"Yeah." Del grew reflective. "Also . . ."
"What?"
"I was thinking of a guy I met once. Named Blankenship. I wonder if I could rig something up. . . ."
SOLAR PLEXUS.
by James Blish.
James Blish is a slender, quietly vehement man who qualifies as an authority on the poems of Ezra Pound, the operas of Richard Strauss, a number of sciences, and both the art and the science of writing science fiction. Formerly science editor for a large pharmaceutical company, he is now employed as an account executive for a public relations firm, in charge of promoting an a.s.sortment of controversial causes, and manages in his spare time to write first-rate science fiction and take part in amateur theatricals. He lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., with his wife, artist Judith Ann Lawrence, and an a.s.sortment of cats.
The story here is one of his earliest, first published in 1941, but substantially revised when it was reprinted eleven years later. It concerns an aspect of the man-machine relationship now frequently discussed: the cyborg, or "cybernetic organism"-that is, the man as ma-chine, human brain joined to nonhuman equipment.
Brant Kittinger did not hear the alarm begin to ring. Indeed, it was only after a soft blow had jarred his free-floating observatory that he looked up in sudden awareness from the interferometer. Then the sound of the warning bell reached his consciousness.
Brant was an astronomer, not a s.p.a.ceman, but he knew that the h.e.l.l could mean nothing but the arrival of another ship in the vicinity. There would be no point in ringing a bell for a meteor-the thing could be through and past you during the first cycle of the clapper. Only an approaching ship would be likely to trip the detector, and it would have to be close.
A second dull jolt told him how close it was. The rasp of metal which followed, as the other ship slid along the side of his own, drove the fog of tensors completely from his brain. He dropped his pencil and straightened up.
His first thought was that his year in the orbit around the new trans-Plutonian planet was up, and that the Inst.i.tute"s tug had arrived to tow him home, telescope and all. A glance at the clock rea.s.sured him at first, then puzzled him still further. He still had the better part of four months.
No commercial vessel, of course, could have wandered this far from the inner planets; and the UN"s police cruisers didn"t travel far outside the commercial lanes. Besides, it would have been impossible for anyone to find Brant"s...o...b..tal observatory by accident.
He settled his gla.s.ses more firmly on his nose, clambered awkwardly backwards out of the prime focus chamber and down the wall net to the control desk on the observation floor. A quick glance over the boards revealed that there was a magnetic field of some strength nearby, one that didn"t belong to the invisible gas giant revolving half a million miles away.
The strange ship was locked to him magnetically; it was an old ship, then, for that method of grappling had been discarded years ago as too hard on delicate instruments. And the strength of the field meant a big ship.
Too big. The only ship of that period that could mount generators that size, as far as Brant could remember, was the Cybernetics Foundation"s Astrid. Brant could remember well the Foundation"s regretful announcement that Murray Bennett had destroyed both himself and the Astrid rather than turn the ship in to some UN inspection team. It had happened only eight years ago. Some scandal or other ...
Well, who then?
He turned the radio on. Nothing came out of it. It was a simple transistor set tuned to the Inst.i.tute"s frequency, and since the ship outside plainly did not belong to the Inst.i.tute, he had expected nothing else. Of course he had a photophone also, but it had been designed for communications over a reasonable distance, not for cheek-to-cheek whispers.
As an afterthought, he turned off the persistent alarm bell. At once another sound came through: a delicate, rhythmic tapping on the hull of the observatory. Someone wanted to get in.
He could think of no reason to refuse entrance, except for a vague and utterly unreasonable wonder as to whether or not the stranger was a friend. He had no enemies, and the notion that some outlaw might have happened upon him out here was ridiculous. Nevertheless, there was something about the anonymous, voiceless ship just outside which made him uneasy.
The gentle tapping stopped, and then began again, with an even, mechanical insistence. For a moment Brant wondered whether or not he should try to tear free with the observatory"s few maneuvering rockets-but even should he win so uneven a struggle, he would throw the observatory out of the orbit where the Inst.i.tute expected to find it, and he was not astronaut enough to get it back there again.
Tap, tap. Tap, tap.
"All right," he said irritably. He pushed the b.u.t.ton which set the airlock to cycling. The tapping stopped. He left the outer door open more than long enough for anyone to enter and push the b.u.t.ton in the lock which reversed the process; but nothing happened.
After what seemed to be a long wait, he pushed his b.u.t.ton again. The outer door closed, the pumps filled the chamber with air, the inner door swung open. No ghost drifted out of it; there was n.o.body in the lock at all.
Tap, tap. Tap, tap.
Absently he polished his gla.s.ses on his sleeve. If they didn"t want to come into the observatory, they must want him to come out of it. That was possible: although the telescope had a Coude focus which allowed him to work in the ship"s air most of the time, it was occasionally necessary for him to exhaust the dome, and for that purpose he had a s.p.a.ce suit. But be had never been outside the hull in it, and the thought alarmed him. Brant was n.o.body"s s.p.a.ceman.
Be d.a.m.ned to them. He clapped his gla.s.ses back into place and took one more look into the empty airlock. It was still empty with the outer door now moving open very slowly... .
A s.p.a.ceman would have known that he was already dead, but Brant"s reactions were not quite as fast. His first move was to try to jam the inner door shut by sheer muscle-power, but it would not stir. Then he simply clung to the nearest stanchion, waiting for the air to rush out of the observatory, and his life after it.
The outer door of the airlock continued to open, placidly, and still there was no rush of air-only a kind of faint, unticketable inwash of odor, as if Brant"s air were mixing with someone else"s. When both doors of the lock finally stood wide apart from each other, Brant found himself looking down the inside of a flexible, airtight tube, such as he had once seen used for the transfer of a small freight-load from a ship to one of Earth"s several s.p.a.ce stations. It connected the airlock of the observatory with that of the other ship. At the other end of it, lights gleamed yellowly, with the unmistakable, dismal sheen of incandescent overheads.
That was an old ship, all right.
Tap. Tap.
"Go to h.e.l.l," he said aloud. There was no answer.
Tap. Tap.
"Go to h.e.l.l," he said. He walked out into the tube, which flexed sinuously as his body pressed aside the static air. In the airlock of the stranger, he paused and looked back. He was not much surprised to see the outer door of his own airlock swinging smugly shut against him. Then the airlock of the stranger began to cycle; he skipped on into the ship barely in time.
There was a bare metal corridor ahead of him. While he watched, the first light bulb over his head blinked out. Then the second. Then the third. As the fourth one went out, the first came on again, so that now there was a slow ribbon of darkness moving away from him down the corridor. Clearly, he was being asked to follow the line of darkening bulbs down the corridor.
He had no choice, now that he had come this far. He followed the blinking lights.
The trail led directly to the control room of the ship. There was n.o.body there, either.
The whole place was oppressively silent. He could hear the soft hum of generators-a louder noise than he ever heard on board the observatory-but no ship should be this quiet. There should be m.u.f.fled human voices; the chittering of communications systems, the impacts of soles on metal. Someone had to operate a proper ship-not only its airlocks, but its motors-and its brains. The observatory was only a barge, and needed no crew but Brant, but a real ship had to be manned.
He scanned the bare metal compartment, noting the apparent age of the equipment. Most of it was manual, but there were no hands to man it.
A ghost ship for true.
"All right," he said. His voice sounded flat and loud to him. "Come on out. You wanted me here-why are you hiding?"
Immediately there was a noise in the close, still air, a thin, electrical sigh. Then a quiet voice said, "You"re Brant Kittinger."
"Certainly," Brant said, swiveling fruitlessly toward the apparent source of the voice. "You know who I am. You couldn"t have found me by accident. Will you come out? I"ve no time to play games."
"I"m not playing games," the voice said calmly. "And I can"t come out, since I"m not hiding from you. I can"t see you; I needed to hear your voice before I could be sure of you."
"Why?"
"Because I can"t see inside the ship. I could find your observation boat well enough, but until I heard you speak I couldn"t be sure that you were the one aboard it. Now I know."
"All right," Brant said suspiciously. "I still don"t see why you"re hiding. Where are you?"
"Right here," said the voice. "All around you."
Brant looked all around himself. His scalp began to creep.
"What kind of nonsense is that?" he said.
"You aren"t seeing what you"re looking at, Brant. You"re looking directly at me, no matter where you look. I am the ship."
"Oh," Brant said softly. "So that"s it. You"re one of Murray Bennett"s computer-driven ships. Are you the Astrid, after all?"
"This is the Astrid," the voice said. "But you miss my point. I am Murray Bennett, also."
Brant"s jaw dropped open. "Where are you?" he said after a time.
"Here," the voice said impatiently. "I am the Astrid. I am also Murray Bennett. Bennett is dead, so he can"t very well come into the cabin and shake your hand. I am now Murray Bennett; I remember you very well, Brant. I need your help, so I sought you out. I"m not as much Murray Bennett as I"d like to be."
Brant sat down in the empty pilot"s seat.
"You"re a computer," he said shakily. "Isn"t that so?"
"It is and it isn"t. No computer can duplicate the performance of a human brain. I tried to introduce real human neural mechanisms into computers, specifically to fly ships, and was outlawed for my trouble. I don"t think I was treated fairly. It took enormous surgical skill to make the hundreds and hundreds of nerve-to-circuit connections that were needed-and before I was half through, the UN decided that what I was doing was human vivisection. They outlawed me, and the Foundation said I"d have to destroy myself; what could I do after that?
"I did destroy myself. I transferred most of my own nervous system into the computers of the Astrid, working at the end through drugged a.s.sistants under telepathic control, and finally relying upon the computers to seal the last connections. No such surgery ever existed before, but I brought it into existence. It worked. Now I"m the Astrid-and still Murray Bennett too, though Bennett is dead."
Brant locked his hands together carefully on the edge of the dead control board. "What good did that do you?" he said.
"It proved my point. I was trying to build an almost living s.p.a.ceship. I had to build part of myself into it to do it-since they made me an outlaw to stop my using any other human being as a source of parts. But here is the Astrid, Brant, as almost alive as I could ask. I"m as immune to a dead s.p.a.ceship-a UN cruiser, for instance-as you would be to an infuriated wheelbarrow. My reflexes are human-fast. I feel things directly, not through instruments. I fly myself: I am what I sought-the ship that almost thinks for itself."
"You keep saying "almost," " Brant said.
"That"s why I came to you," the voice said. "I don"t have enough of Murray Bennett here to know what I should do next. You knew me well. Was I out to try to use human brains more and more, and computer-mechanisms less and less? It seems to me that I was. I can pick up the brains easily enough, just as I picked you up. The solar system is full of people isolated on little research boats who could be plucked off them and incorporated into efficient machines like the Astrid. But I don"t know. I seem to have lost my creativity. I have a base where I have some other ships with beautiful computers in them, and with a few people to use as research animals I could make even better ships of them than the Astrid is. But is that what I want to do? Is that what I set out to do? I no longer know, Brant. Advise me."
The machine with the human nerves would have been touching had it not been so much like Bennett had been. The combination of the two was flatly horrible.
"You"ve made a bad job of yourself, Murray," he said. "You"ve let me inside your brain without taking any real thought of the danger. What"s to prevent me from stationing myself at your old manual controls and flying you to the nearest UN post?"
"You can"t fly a ship."
"How do you know?"
"By simple computation. And there are other reasons. What"s to prevent me from making you cut your own throat? The answer"s the same. You"re in control of your body; I"m in control of mine. My body is the Astrid. The controls are useless, unless I actuate them. The nerves through which I do so are sheathed in excellent steel. The only way in which you could destroy my control would be to break something necessary to the running of the ship. That, in a sense, would kill me, as destroying your heart or your lungs would kill you. But that would be pointless, for then you could no more navigate the ship than I. And if you made repairs, I would be-well, resurrected."
The voice fell silent a moment. Then it added, matter-of-factly, "Of course, I can protect myself."
Brant made no reply. His eyes were narrowed to the squint he more usually directed at a problem in Milne transformations.
"I never sleep," the voice went on, "but much of my navigating and piloting is done by an autopilot without requiring my conscious attention. It is the same old Nelson autopilot which was originally on board the Astrid, though, so it has to be monitored. If you touch the controls while the autopilot is running, it switches itself off and I resume direction myself."
Brant was surprised and instinctively repelled by the steady flow of information. It was a forcible reminder of how much of the computer there was in the intelligence that called itself Murray Bennett. It was answering a question with the almost mindless wealth of detail of a public-library selector-and there was no "Enough" b.u.t.ton for Brant to push.