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The World of Null-A n-1 Page 7
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His belief that he was in control of the situation was meaningless in the face of what had happened to the videophone.
Somewhere out there the forces that had put him here were waiting. For what?
VIII
Gosseyn climbed slowly up the stairs. At the top he stopped to collect his thoughts. His plan for an easy departure had failed. He visualized the potentialities. He would get some information and then leave on foot as quickly as possible.
The decision braced him. He turned to go into the bedroom, but paused as the voice of Prescott came.
“What I don’t understand is what happened to the video.”
His wife sounded thoughtful. “It can only be one of two things. An interference screen has been set up between here and”—Gosseyn did not catch the name—“or else there’s a fault in the machine itself.”
“But isn’t there supposed to be automatic warning long before anything is worn out, whereupon a repairman comes along and fixes it up?”
Gosseyn waited for the woman’s reply to that. It was hard for him to believe they knew nothing about it.
“That’s the way it’s always been,” said Amelia Prescott. “It seems very strange.”
Gosseyn forced himself to wait for further comment. When none was made, he tiptoed hurriedly down the stairs, then came up again, noisily this time. The delay strained his patience, and, since he wasn’t sure that the pretense would serve a useful purpose, he made up for lost time the moment he entered the room.
“Where,” he asked, “do you keep your maps of Venus?”
Prescott did not reply, but his wife shrugged and said, “They’re in a cupboard in the laboratory.” She described the location of the cupboard.
Gosseyn remembered having looked into it. He hurried down into the basement and dug out three maps. Upstairs again, he spread them out on the floor and knelt beside them. He had seen maps of Venus before, but it was different being there. Besides, these were more detailed. Gosseyn looked up.
“Will you show me where you are on one of these things?”
The woman said, “We’re on the one marked ‘Three,’ on that central mountain range. I once put a little mark showing our approximate location. It’s probably still there.”
Gosseyn found it about four hundred miles north of the city of New Chicago.
“Oh, there’s ample fruit,” she said in answer to his next query. “Purple berries an inch in diameter by the billion, a large yellow fruit, a bananalike juicy fruit, reddish in color. I could name a dozen others, but those are available the year round. They’ll see you through any trip that you can possibly make.”
Gosseyn studied the woman’s face thoughtfully. Finally, he reached over and touched the lie detector. It said, “That’s the way it is.”
He turned back to Amelia Prescott. “You’re convinced I’ll be captured?” he asked. Briefly, he was intent. “Is that it?”
“Of course you’ll be captured.” She was calm. “We have no police system on Venus, and no ordinary crimes. But the cases requiring detective work that come up are always solved with extraordinary speed. You’ll be interested in meeting a null-A detective, but you’ll be shocked by the swiftness which you are captured.”
Gosseyn, whose main purpose was to contact Venusian authorities, was silent. He felt torn. His impulse now was to leave immediately. The sooner the concealing vastness of the mighty forest closed around him, the safer he would be. But Amelia Prescott’s complete misunderstanding of the situation drew her character into sharper focus.
She was innocent. She was not a member of the gang. That seemed clear now.
Conversely, her husband’s silence was abnormal. Thinking about it, Gosseyn felt himself change color. Until this moment he had taken it for granted that he was not recognized. Prescott had not been one of those present at the palace of the Machine on earth. But suppose the man had been shown photographs.
It changed things. He had decided earlier to give no explanations. But if Prescott knew him, then silence might make the man suspect that he himself was known.
On the other hand, it would be folly to identify himself as Gilbert Gosseyn if he didn’t have to. He stood up. And then once more he hesitated. Abruptly he knew he couldn’t depart without telling the woman. If anything happened to him, then she at least would know.
Through her the whole of Venus might be warned of the hideous danger that threatened. Telling her would be risky for her too, but Gosseyn had a plan for that. He would leave the decision about her husband up to her.
Gosseyn sat down on the edge of the bed. Now that he had made up his mind, he felt cool and unshakable. His nerves were steady as lead, that stable element. Ostensibly, then, he addressed himself to both the man and the woman. Actually, only the woman interested him. After a little more than a minute, Prescott rolled over and studied his face. Gosseyn pretended not to notice.
Twenty minutes later he let his voice lapse into silence. In the bright light that glared in through the wall window, he saw that Prescott’s eyes were fixed on him.
“I suppose,” the man said, “you realize your story has a basic flaw.”
The man seemed to have forgotten his long silence, and Gosseyn accepted casually his entry into the conversation.
“My story,” he said, “is true according to my memory. And any lie detector will bear out every word of it. That is, unless—” He paused, smiled bleakly.
“Yes?” Prescott urged. “Unless what?”
“Unless all the memory I now have is of the same category as my earlier belief that I had been married to Patricia Hardie, but that she had died, leaving me grief-stricken.” He broke off sharply. “What is this flaw you have detected?”
The answer was thalamically prompt. “Your identification of your present self with the Gosseyn who was killed. Your complete memory of that death, the way the bullets and the energy struck you and hurt you. Think about that. And then think of the underlying credo of null-A, that no two objects of the universe can be identical.”
Gosseyn was silent. Through the window, trees taller than the tallest skyscrapers towered toward a blue haze of sky, and a swift river flowed through an evergreen world. Strange and tremendous setting for a conversation about the structural nature of things organic and inorganic, things molecular, atomic, electronic, neural, and physico-chemical, things as they were. He felt a deep wonder. Because he didn’t seem to fit into that universe. A score of times since his awakening, he had thought of the very objection that Prescott was now making.
He was a man who claimed not merely similarity of structure but identification with a dead man. In effect, he was maintaining that because he had the memory and general physical appearance of Gilbert Gosseyn I, he was Gilbert Gosseyn I.
Any student of philosophy, even in the olden days, knew that two apparently identical chairs were different in ten thousand times ten thousand ways, none of them necessarily visible to the naked eye. In the human brain, the number of possible paths that a single nerve impulse could take was of the nature of ten to the twenty-seven-thousandth power. The intricate patterns set up by a lifetime of individual experience could not ever be duplicated. It explained beyond all argument why never in the history of Earth had one animal, one snowflake, one stone, one atom ever been exactly the same as another.
Unquestionably, the doctor had discovered a basic flaw in his story. But it was a flaw that, in itself, required weighty explanations. It was a flaw that could not be dismissed by a refusal to face it squarely.
Prescott was watching him narrowly. “I suppose,” he said, “you realize that there is a lie detector in the room.”
Gosseyn stared at him as a hypnotized bird might gaze at a snake. There was silence, except for a queer drumming sound at the back of Gosseyn’s mind. He began to feel dizzy. His vision blurred. He sat cold and tense.
“It would be interesting,” Prescott went on inexorably, “To find out if there really was another body.”
“Y
es,” said Gosseyn at last, blankly. “Yes, it would be interesting.”
Now that the words had been used, the picture presented to him this way, he didn’t believe his story himself. He felt reluctant to put it to the test. Yet long before Prescott had mentioned the detector, he had known there could be no evading its use. He went over to it. He put his hands on the metal contacts and waited while the sensitive energy-conducting lights played over his face.
“You’ve heard what we’ve been saying,” he said. “What is your verdict?”
“It is impossible for me to prove or disprove your story. My judgments are based on memory flow. You have the memory of Gilbert Gosseyn I. That includes a memory of having been killed so realistically that I hesitate to say it couldn’t have been death. There is still no clue as to your real identity.”
For better or worse it was a moment for decision. Gosseyn bent down and untied the woman’s feet though not her hands. He helped her stand up.
“My plan,” he said, “is to take you with me for about a mile, then let you come back and release your husband.”
He had another reason for taking her along. He intended to tell her what the situation was and what he had heard about her husband (though not that Patricia had said it), and so he would leave the problem of what to do with Prescott up to her.
He told her during the final quarter of a mile before untying her hands. When he had finished, she was silent for so long that he added finally, “Your husband may decide to prevent you from passing on the facts I’ve given you. On the other hand, his belief in null-A may be stronger than his loyalty to his government. You’ll have to make up your mind about that from your own knowledge of him.”
The woman sighed. But all she said was, “I understand.”
“This hospital,” said Gosseyn, “how does it work?” It was a point he wanted to clear up.
“It’s all volunteer, of course,” she said. “We’re on Hospital Exchange. When somebody gets hurt or wants hospitalization, the robot exchange calls the nearest suitable unit. Then we accept or refuse the patient. Lately, I have been turning them down because—” She stopped. She looked at Gosseyn earnestly. “Thank you for everything. Thank you very much.” She hesitated. “I intend to trust him,” she said, “but I’ll let you have a good start first.”
“Good luck!” said Gosseyn.
He watched her as she started on the return journey. Woman the nurturer, he thought, woman the healer, the teacher, the understanding spirit, the lover. Woman! Not merely an imitation of man. In everything that he had seen her do and heard her say, she was a woman’s woman in the fullest null-A sense—under terrific pressure now and accordingly low in energy, but even that could not conceal the warm-hearted human being underneath.
He came out of his reverie, and, turning on his heel, continued on his way toward the forest. The grass was soft beneath his feet, and there was still a sort of path, as if others less earnestly bent had walked this way, lightly, airily, and left an imprint of happy strolls through the dusk of warm and fragrant evenings.
The fragrance was lingeringly there, sweetly, deliriously there. The scent of growing greens was a thick perfume headily intermixed with the fresh feel of the afternoon rain. Gosseyn had the exhilarating conviction of an adventure begun in paradise. For a while there was the hissing swish of the river, near by now. But that faded as he entered the shadows under the titan trees.
Shadows. It was like coming into a cave from bright day. It was like a corridor that kept twisting, changing, curving, now opening up into great antechambers, now narrowing down to a pathless tangle of tall, spreading shrubbery, but always with a roof overhead to hide the sky. He realized it would be hard to sustain his sense of direction among the trees. But he had a compass, which should keep him on his general course. He could hope for no more than that.
He was still walking along in the apparently interminable forest when he noticed that the shadows around him were darkening. There was no question finally but that night was falling. He was just beginning to wonder if he would have to sleep under the trees when he emerged from behind a huge bole into a large, open meadow.
He found a grassy nook and he was settling himself when a plane winged silently over the edge of a near-by hill. It came down fifty feet away from him, and rolled to a stop. A light flashed on in its nose. It swung around with an easy gliding movement, and caught Gosseyn in a blaze of sunlike brilliance. Out of the brightness a voice came.
“Gilbert Gosseyn, I am not an enemy, but I cannot make any explanation until you are in the plane. To insure that you will get in without argument or delay, I call your attention to the half-dozen guns that are pointing at you. There is no escape.”
Gosseyn saw the guns, snouted barrel ends that poked out of the fuselage, and followed his movements. So long as they were there, it didn’t matter whether he believed or disbelieved that it was not an enemy. Without a word he went around to the side of the plane and climbed into the open door that was there. He had barely time to slip into the nearest seat. The door slammed. All the lights blinked out. The machine raced forward and became airborne. It climbed steeply into the night sky.
IX
Gosseyn watched the dark ground below become formless. Swiftly the world of giant trees and the mountain land were at one with the night. A uniform black enveloped the hurtling machine. Anywhere from three to five minutes ticked by, and then slowly the plane leveled off. The lights flashed on, and the voice of the roboplane said, “During the next ten minutes you may ask any questions you please. After that I must give you landing instructions.”
It took a moment to adjust to that. Any questions. Gosseyn found his voice. The first question was easy enough.
“Who are you?”
“An agent of the Games Machine.”
Gosseyn sighed with relief. Then: “Is the Machine speaking through you to me?”
“Only indirectly. The Machine can receive messages from Venus, but cannot itself broadcast on interplanetary wave lengths.”
“You’re on your own?”
“I have my instructions.”
Gosseyn took a deep breath. “Who am I?”
He waited, every muscle tensed, and then sagged back in his seat as the roboplane answered, “I’m sorry, but you are wasting time. I have no information about your past, only about your present situation.”
“Does the Machine know?” he persisted.
“If it does, it did not confide in me.”
Gosseyn felt desperate. “But I’ve got to know something. What about my feeling that I was killed?”
“Your body,” said the roboplane in its level voice, “was badly damaged and burned when you were killed. But I have no idea how you still happen to be alive.” It broke off. “Mr. Gosseyn, I strongly urge you to ask your questions on the Venusian situation. Or perhaps you would like me to give you a rapid summary of the conditions that prevail here on the eve of the invasion of Venus.”
“But damn it—” Gosseyn said furiously. He caught himself, conscious of the time he was wasting. “Yes,” he said wearily. “Yes, that sounds like a good idea.”
The voice began:
“To understand the political situation here, you must reach out with your mind to the furthest limits of your ideas of ultimate democracy. There is no president of Venus, no council, no ruling group. Everything is voluntary; every man lives to himself alone, and yet conjoins with others to see that the necessary work is done. But people can choose their own work. You might say, suppose everybody decided to enter the same profession. That doesn’t happen. The population is composed of responsible citizens who make a careful study of the entire work-to-be-done situation before they choose their jobs.
“For instance, when a detective dies or retires or changes his occupation, he advertises his intention, or, in the case of death, his position is advertised. If he is still alive, people who would like to become detectives come to discuss their qualifications with him and with each other.
Whether he is alive or dead, his successor is finally chosen as a result of a vote among the applicants.”
In spite of himself, Gosseyn had a private thought at that point. It had nothing to do with the picture he was being given of life on Venus, the hopeful, fascinating picture of a super-civilization. It was personal to the roboplane, a concrete awareness that the machine was giving him as objective an account as he had ever heard.
The roboplane’s voice kept on:
“You must now visualize a condition where more than half the applicants for all detective and judicial positions are agents of the gang. By a careful system of murders, they have managed to eliminate the more dangerous of the normal membership, and at present have virtual control of all key detective and judicial positions, as well as quantity control of both organizations. This was all done under the direction of Prescott, which is why he is suspect and—”
That was where Gosseyn interrupted. “Just a minute,” he said. “One minute, please.” He stood up, only vaguely aware that he did so. “Are you trying to tell me—”
“I’m telling you,” said the roboplane, “that you cannot escape capture. You can see now why I had to put up interference against your use of the Prescott videophone. Since Thorson’s arrival these false detectives have used their authority to tap the videophones of every dangerous person. This includes, so far as Thorson is concerned, his own subordinates. That is why you can expect no help from Gang. He has to show harshness, energy, and ruthlessness, or be removed from his command.
“But I must be brief. Your existence and the mystery of your mind potential has caused a great war machine to mark time, while its leaders frantically try to find out who is behind you. In all earnestness, therefore, I say, do not think you are being lightly asked to do what I now propose as your only logical action:
“You must let yourself fall into their hands. You must do this in the hope that they are so vitally interested in your special mental and physical make-up that they will allow you to live for several days at least, while they investigate your nervous system in detail, and with more care than last time.