"I always thought we were going straight in the opposite direction from what we should, I guess. I always wanted to turn around and go back. It won"t make over maybe a month"s difference. And what does a month matter anyway out here--h.e.l.l there never was any time out here until we came along. We make our own time here, and a month don"t matter to me."
Sweat ran down Russell"s face. His voice trembled. "No--that"s wrong.
You"re both wrong." He could see himself going it alone. Going crazy because he was alone. He"d have broken away, gone his own direction, long ago but for that fear.
"How can we tell which of us is right?" Alvar said. "It"s like everything was changing all the time out here. Sometimes I"d swear none of those suns had red rims, and at other times--like the old man said, they"re all pretty and lying and saying nothing, just changing all the time. Jezebel stars, the old man said."
"I know I"m right," Russell pleaded. "My hunches always been right.
My hunch got us out of that prison didn"t it? Listen--I tell you it"s that star to the left--"
"The one to the right," said Johnson.
"We been going away from the right one all the time," said Alvar.
"We got to stay together," said Russell. "n.o.body could spend a year out here ... alone...."
"Ah ... in another month or so we"d be lousy company anyway," Alvar said. "Maybe a guy could get to the point where he"d sleep most of the time ... just wake up enough times to give himself another boost with the old life-gun."
"We got to face it," Johnson said finally. "We three don"t go on together any more."
"That"s it," said Alvar. "There"s three suns that look like they might be right seeing as how we all agree the old man was wrong. But we believe there is one we can live by, because we all seem to agree that the old man might have been right about that. If we stick together, the chance is three to one against us. But if each of us makes for one star, one of us has a chance to live. Maybe not in paradise like the old man said, but a place where we can live. And maybe there"ll be intelligent life, maybe even a ship, and whoever gets the right star can come and help the other two...."
"No ... G.o.d no...." Russell whispered over and over. "None of us can ever make it alone...."
Alvar said, "We each take the star he likes best. I"ll go back the other way. Russ, you take the left. And you, Johnson, go to the right."
Johnson started to laugh. Russell was yelling wildly at them, and above his own yelling he could hear Johnson"s rising laughter. "Every guy"s got a star of his own," Johnson said when he stopped laughing.
"And we got ours. A nice red-rimmed sun for each of us to call his very own."
"Okay," Alvar said. "We cut off the gravity rope, and each to his own sun."
Now Russell wasn"t saying anything.
"And the old man," Alvar said, "can keep right on going toward what he thought was right. And he"ll keep on going. Course he won"t be able to give himself another boost with the life-gun, but he"ll keep going.
Someday he"ll get to that red-rimmed star of his. Out here in s.p.a.ce, once you"re going, you never stop ... and I guess there isn"t any other body to pull him off his course. And what will time matter to old Dunbar? Even less than to us, I guess. He"s dead and he won"t care."
"Ready," Johnson said. "I"ll cut off the gravity rope."
"I"m ready," Alvar said. "To go back toward whatever it was I started from."
"Ready, Russ?"
Russell couldn"t say anything. He stared at the endless void which now he would share with no one. Not even crazy old Dunbar.
"All right," Johnson said. "Good-bye."
Russell felt the release, felt the sudden inexplicable isolation and aloneness even before Alvar and Johnson used their life-guns and shot out of sight, Johnson toward the left and Alvar back toward that other red-rimmed sun behind them.
And old Dunbar shooting right on ahead. And all three of them dwindling and dwindling and blinking out like little lights.
Fading, he could hear their voices. "Each to his own star," Johnson said. "On a bee line."
"On a bee line," Alvar said.
Russell used his own life-gun and in a little while he didn"t hear Alvar or Johnson"s voices, nor could he see them. They were thousands of miles away, and going further all the time.
Russell"s head fell forward against the front of his helmet, and he closed his eyes. "Maybe," he thought, "I shouldn"t have killed the old man. Maybe one sun"s as good as another...."
Then he raised his body and looked out into the year of blackness that waited for him, stretching away to the red-rimmed sun. Even if he were right--he was sure now he"d never make it alone.
The body inside the pressure suit drifted into a low-level orbit around the second planet from the sun of its choice, and drifted there a long time. A strato-cruiser detected it by chance because of the strong concentration of radio-activity that came from it.
They took the body down to one of the small, quiet towns on the edge of one of the many blue lakes where the domed houses were like bright joyful jewels. They got the leathery, well-preserved body from the pressure suit.
"An old man," one of them mused. "A very old man. From one of the lost sectors. I wonder how and why he came so very far from his home?"
"Wrecked a ship out there, probably," one of the others said. "But he managed to get this far. It looks as though a small meteor fragment pierced his body. Here. You see?"
"Yes," another of them said. "But what amazes me is that this old man picked this planet out of all the others. The only one in this entire sector that would sustain life."
"Maybe he was just a very lucky old man. Yes ... a man who attains such an age was usually lucky. Or at least that is what they say about the lost sectors."
"Maybe he knew the way here. Maybe he was here before--sometime."
The other shook his head. "I don"t think so. They say some humans from that far sector did land here--but that"s probably only a myth. And if they did, it was well over a thousand years ago."
Another said. "He has a fine face, this old man. A n.o.ble face. Whoever he is ... wherever he came from, he died bravely and he knew the way, though he never reached this haven of the lost alive."
"Nor is it irony that he reached here dead," said the Lake Chieftain.
He had been listening and he stepped forward and raised his arm. "He was old. It is obvious that he fought bravely, that he had great courage, and that he knew the way. He will be given a burial suitable to his stature, and he will rest here among the brave.
"Let the women dance and the music play for this old man. Let the trumpets speak, and the rockets fly up. And let flowers be strewn over the path above which the women will carry him to rest."