"But if the Rell inside are too large to have developed intelligence, how could this gigantic monster in which they live have done so?"
"We cannot yet say. Remember, the theory that intelligence cannot develop in creatures above a certain size is unproven, even though never before challenged. We"ve watched other races die through failure to adapt to change so apparently it is true of Rell-like creatures on this world. But who can say about organisms on another world or of the unprecedented size of this one? Completely different physical laws may apply."
It was later that afternoon after the Rell had spent much time observing Brown while Brown was busy observing the landscape that the interpretive bank made the triumphant announcement, "We have it! We"ve broken the thought waves down to their meanings and know what he"s thinking. What would you like to know first?"
"Check and see if there are any Rell inside the other thing or on his home world. They might have constructed him."
"Apparently there are none, or at least no intelligent Rell, on his world. We can"t guide his mind but the memory bank recorded all the thoughts we"ve received and some time ago he was thinking of something he termed "vermin". Apparently these are sometimes Rell-like creatures, although far larger. He regards them as a great nuisance, but mindless.
The big thing, by the way, he calls a "ship" and it is utterly lifeless.
We needn"t fear the flame until this creature leaves."
"What about him? What is he like?"
"That"s the most exciting part! He thought of his bodily needs once and we glimpsed a concept dealing with his physical construction. It"s incredible! His body is composed almost entirely of water ... there"s enough water in him alone to prolong the life of the Rell many ages.
Further, the air in his "ship" is heavily impregnated with moisture and he even has reserve supplies of water for his needs."
At this, not only Raeillo/ee13, but all except perhaps the most responsible units felt a shiver of primitive longing and perhaps even greed. Not for millennia had there been such a plent.i.tude of water so close!
"Then can"t we appropriate at least part of it?" asked the speculative bank.
"Unfortunately both the "man", as he calls himself, and his "ship" are sealed so tightly that we could not penetrate either. Worse yet, almost half his time here is already gone. We don"t quite understand his purpose here. His thoughts seem to say he is searching for Rell for some unfathomable reason yet he seems to know nothing of the Rell and cannot even detect us."
It was the next day when the time was almost all gone that the two big discoveries were made. During a routine check, the mesh came across a thought of the man"s return and a visualization of his home world. It was so startling that the interpretive bank was recalled from its effort to try to devise a means through the s.p.a.cesuit and set at the new problem.
A hasty check of the man"s subconscious thoughts revealed the big news.
"Do you know," the interpretive bank announced, "not only does this being"s home world have a moist atmosphere like that in his ship but two thirds of the surface of his world is _liquid water_!"
Even the speculative bank was silent for a full two seconds after this news. Then a hasty impulse was sent to the disciplinary corps and the entire mind called into action. An extreme emergency upon which the fate of the race hinged called for the utmost effort by even the humblest members of the group.
The Rell worked diligently and many blind alleys were explored, but it was not for some time that anyone thought of enquiring of the not-too-bright feeding bank how they were managing to keep the mind operating at considerably more than normal power with no frost within feeding distance.
"We"re taking moisture from the air," was the answer.
"Where is the moisture coming from?" the interpretive bank was asked.
The answer didn"t take long. Rapid measurements supplied it. "Some of it is vaporized frost but that wouldn"t be enough for our needs. The only other possibility is that moisture must be seeping away from either the man or his ship despite his sureness that they were both airtight and our own investigations which confirmed it."
They had maintained a cautious distance from the ship for the most part despite the interpretive bank"s a.s.surance of no immediate danger. But now they swarmed over both it and the s.p.a.cesuit determined to detect the leak.
They found none.
And now the man was returning to his ship.
"This is the last time," the mesh warned. It was now or never.
For a second there was conflict over control of the circuits to the disciplinary corps which carried with it command of the organism during the emergency. The speculative bank customarily a.s.sumed this responsibility, but a slight schism had developed between it and the interpretive bank. The latter"s greater age and skill came into play and victory was quickly won.
From the disciplinary corps came the order, "Stay close to the "man"."
The interpretive bank explained, "He breathes the air so he"ll have to get to it some way."
The defeated speculative bank maintained a sulky silence.
Thus it was that the entire mind of the Rell rode into the interior of the ship through the airlock while cl.u.s.tered around Brown.
The Rell had grasped that the man lived and traveled inside his ship and the necessity for it to be airtight. But so desperate were the two races" needs that the necessity for an airlock and the consequent slight seepage each time it was used had not occurred to even the interpretive bank.
Inside, many Rell, suddenly intoxicated by the heady moisture-laden air, commenced uniting with each other then splitting away, each such union resulting in another unit of Rell, naturally. The interpretive bank again seized control.
"Stop it! Stop it this instant!" it snapped. "Reproduction must be kept to the former minimum for now. That is a firm order."
Reluctantly the process was halted. The interpretive bank explained, "It would not take long for us to use up the entire supply of water if we indulged in uncontrolled reproduction. That might endanger the whole trip."
"What do we do now?" the speculative bank finally asked.
"There is no way of knowing positively whether the man uses this same atmosphere until he returns to his world or not. For our own safety it would seem best, since Rell-like creatures already inhabit him, that we join them. If any place is safe it will be his interior. And there is plenty of moisture within to sustain us. But we must be good parasites,"
the interpretive bank warned. "Remember, no undue reproduction no matter how many quarts of moisture seem to be going to waste inside this "man".
He may need it himself and if he does not survive the ship might not complete its trip."
Brown was just emerging from his s.p.a.ce suit so the Rell chose his closest available body opening and flowed as a group into his mouth and nostrils.
"Ahchoo!" sneezed Brown, violently evicting half the Rell.
They re-entered a bit more cautiously in order not to irritate the sensitive membrane again.
"Dammit," said Brown, "don"t tell me I"ve caught a cold clear out here on Mars. Hope I didn"t pick up any Martian germs."
But he needn"t have worried. By the time he reached Earth he was far less germ-ridden, even if considerably more itchy on the exterior, than when he"d left. The Rell were good at self defense and a surprising number of mindless but voracious creatures in Brown"s interior had been eliminated.
Brown dreaded having to give the news he carried but he needn"t have. He was a conquering hero.
So much fuss was made over the first flight to Mars that Congress promptly voted twice the appropriation for the second ship that the Air Force had requested, despite strong opposition from the Navy and headlines which read:
NO LIFE ON MARS
Actually, as it happened, the headlines were one hundred percent correct, but they neglected to mention, chiefly because the headline writers didn"t know it, that there were now two races of intelligent life on Earth.