When Davenport had gone, Spaulding looked at Poe. "Got any explanation for that one?"
"No," Lenny admitted. "All I can do is check with Rafe. He won"t be awake for a few hours yet. I"ll check on it and give you an answer in the morning."
Early next morning, Colonel Spaulding walked through his outer office. He stopped at the desk where the pretty brunette WAC sergeant was typing industriously, leaned across the desk, and gave her his best leer. "How about a date tonight, music lover?" he asked, ""_Das Rheingold_" is playing tonight. A night at the opera would do you good."
"I"m sorry, sir," she said primly, "you know enlisted women aren"t allowed to date officers."
"Make out an application for OCS. I"ll sign it."
She smiled at him. "But then I wouldn"t have any excuse for turning you down. And then what would my husband say?"
"I"ll bribe him. I"ll send _him_ to OCS."
"He"s not eligible. Officers are automatically disqualified."
Colonel Spaulding sighed. "A guy can"t win against compet.i.tion like that.
Anything new this morning?"
"Mr. Poe is waiting in your office. Other than that, there"s just the routine things."
He went on into his office. Lenny Poe was seated behind the colonel"s desk, leaning back in the swivel chair, his feet on the top of the desk.
He was sound asleep.
The colonel walked over to the desk, took his cigar from his mouth, and said: "_Good_ morrrning, Colonel Spaulding!"
Lenny snapped awake. "I"m not Colonel Spaulding," he said.
"Then why are you sitting in Colonel Spaulding"s chair?"
"I figured if I was asleep n.o.body"d know the difference." Lenny got up and walked over to one of the other chairs. "These don"t lean back comfortably. I can"t sleep in "em."
"You can sleep later. How was your session with Rafe?"
Lenny glowered glumly. "I wish you and Rafe hadn"t talked me into this job. It"s a strain on the brain. I don"t know how he expects anyone to understand all that garbage."
"All what garbage?"
Lenny waved a hand aimlessly. "All this scientific guff. I"m an artist, not a scientist. If Rafe can get me a clear picture of something, I can copy it, but when he tries to explain something scientific, he might as well be thinking in Russian or Old Upper Middle High Martian or something."
"I know," said Colonel Spaulding, looking almost as glum as Lenny. "Did you get anything at all that would help Dr. Davenport figure out what those drawings mean?"
"Rafe says that the translations are all wrong," Lenny said, "but I can"t get a clear picture of just what _is_ wrong."
Colonel Spaulding thought for a while in silence. Telepathy--at least in so far as the Poe brothers practiced it--certainly had its limitations.
Lenny couldn"t communicate mentally with anyone except his brother Rafe.
Rafe could pick up the thoughts of almost anyone if he happened to be close by, but couldn"t communicate over a long distance with anyone but Lenny.
The main trouble lay in the fact that it was apparently impossible to transmit a concept directly from Brain A to Brain B unless the basic building blocks of the concept were already present in Brain B. Raphael Poe, for instance, had spent a long time studying Russian, reading Dostoevski, Tolstoy, and Turgenev in the original tongue, familiarizing himself with modern Russian thought through the courtesy of _Izvestia_, _Pravda_, and _Krokodil_, and, finally, spending time in the United Nations building and near the Russian emba.s.sy in order to be sure that he could understand the mental processes involved.
Now, science has a language of its own. Or, rather, a multiplicity of languages, each derived partly from the native language of the various scientific groups and partly of borrowings from other languages. In the physical sciences especially, the language of mathematics is a further addition.
More than that, the practice of the scientific method automatically induces a thought pattern that is different from the type of thought pattern that occurs in the mind of a person who is not scientifically oriented.
Lenny"s mind was a long way from being scientifically oriented. Worse, he was a bigot. He not only didn"t know why the light in his room went on when he flipped the switch, he didn"t _want_ to know. To him, science was just so much flummery, and he didn"t want his brain cluttered up with it.
Facts mean nothing to a bigot. He has already made up his mind, and he doesn"t intend to have his solid convictions disturbed by anything so unimportant as a contradictory fact. Lenny was of the opinion that all mathematics was arcane gobbledygook, and his precise knowledge of the mathematical odds in poker and dice games didn"t abate that opinion one whit. Obviously, a mind like that is utterly incapable of understanding a projected thought of scientific content; such a thought bounces off the impregnable mind shield that the bigot has set up around his little area of bigotry.
Colonel Spaulding had been aware of these circ.u.mstances since the inception of the Operation Mapcase. Even though he, himself, had never experienced telepathy more than half a dozen times in his life, he had made a study of the subject and was pretty well aware of its limitations.
The colonel might have dismissed--as most men do--his own fleeting experiences as "coincidence" or "imagination" if it had not been for the things he had seen and felt in Africa during World War II. He had only been a captain then, on detached duty with British Intelligence, under crusty old Colonel Sir Cecil Haversham, who didn"t believe a word of "all that mystic nonsense." Colonel Haversham had made the mistake of alienating one of the most powerful of the local witch doctors.
The British Government had hushed it all up afterwards, of course, but Spaulding still shuddered when he thought of the broken-spirited, shrunken caricature of his old self that Colonel Haversham had become after he told the witch doctor where to get off.
Spaulding had known that there were weaknesses in the telepathic communication linkage that was the mainspring of Operation Mapcase, but he had thought that they could be overcome by the strengths of the system.
Lenny had no blockage whatever against receiving visual patterns and designs. He could reproduce an electronic wiring diagram perfectly because, to him, it was not a grouping of scientific symbols, but a design of lines, angles, and curves.
At first, it is true, he had had a tendency to change them here and there, to make the design balance better, to make it more aesthetically satisfying to his artistic eye, but that tendency had been easily overcome, and Colonel Spaulding was quite certain that that wasn"t what was wrong now.
Still--
"Lenny," he said carefully, "are you sure you didn"t jigger up those drawings to make "em look prettier?"
Lenny Poe gave the colonel a look of disgust. "Positive. Rafe checked "em over every inch of the way as I was drawing them, and he rechecked again last night--or this morning--on those photostats Davenport gave us. That"s when he said there was something wrong with the translations.
"But he couldn"t make it clear just what was wrong, eh?"
Lenny shrugged. "How anybody could make any sense out of that gobbledegook is beyond me."
The colonel blew out a cloud of cigar smoke and looked thoughtfully at the ceiling. As long as the diagrams were just designs on paper, Lenny Poe could pick them up fine. Which meant that everything was jim-dandy as long as the wiring diagrams were labeled in the Cyrillic alphabet. The labels were just more squiggles to be copied as a part of the design.
But if the labels were in English, Lenny"s mind would try to "make sense"
out of them, and since scientific concepts did _not_ "make sense" to him, the labels came out as pure nonsense. In one of his drawings, a lead wire had been labeled "simply ground to powder," and if the original drawing hadn"t been handy to check with, it might have taken quite a bit of thought to realize that what was meant was "to power supply ground."
Another time, a GE 2N 188A transistor had come out labeled GEZNISSA. There were others--much worse.
Russian characters, on the other hand, didn"t have to make any sense to Lenny, so his mind didn"t try to force them into a preconceived mold.
Lenny unzipped the leather portfolio he had brought with him--a specially-made carrier that looked somewhat like an oversized brief case.
"Maybe these"ll help," he said.
"We managed to get two good sketches of the gadget--at least, as much of it as that Russian lady scientist has put together so far. I kind of like the rather abstract effect you get from all those wires snaking in and around, with that green gla.s.s tube in the center. Pretty, isn"t it?"
[Ill.u.s.tration]