Read No Life of Their Own: And Other Stories Page 13


  He spun dials from memory without resorting to the log. He knew where he was going.

  His finger flipped a toggle and the room melted away—or seemed to melt. There was left the chair within which he sat, part of the desk, part of the machine itself and that was all.

  The chair was on a hillside swept with golden grass and dotted with scraggly, wind-twisted trees, a hillside that straggled down to a lake nestling in the grip of purple mountain spurs. The spurs, darkened in long streaks with the bluish-green of distant pine, climbed in staggering stairs, melting into the blue-tinged snow-capped peaks that reared beyond and above them in jagged saw-toothed outline.

  The wind talked harshly in the crouching trees and ripped the long grass in sudden gusts. The last rays of the sun struck fire from the distant peaks.

  Solitude and grandeur, the long sweep of tumbled land, the cuddled lake, the knifelike shadows on the far-off ranges.

  Webster sat easily in his chair, eyes squinting at the peaks.

  A voice said almost at his shoulder: “May I come in?”

  A soft, sibilant voice, wholly unhuman. But one that Webster knew.

  He nodded his head. “By all means, Juwain.”

  He turned slightly and saw the elaborate crouching pedestal, the furry, soft-eyed figure of the Martian squatting on it. Other alien furniture loomed indistinctly beyond the pedestal, half guessed furniture from that dwelling out on Mars.

  The Martian flipped a furry hand toward the mountain range.

  “You love this,” he said. “You can understand it. And I can understand how you understand it, but to me there is more terror than beauty in it. It is something we could never have on Mars.”

  Webster reached out a hand, but the Martian stopped him.

  “Leave it on,” he said. “I know why you came here. I would not have come at a time like this except I thought perhaps an old friend—”

  “It is kind of you,” said Webster. “I am glad that you have come.”

  “Your father,” said Juwain, “was a great man. I remember how you used to talk to me of him, those years you spent on Mars. You said then you would come back sometime. Why is it you’ve never come?”

  “Why,” said Webster, “I just never—”

  “Do not tell me,” said the Martian. “I already know.”

  “My son,” said Webster, “is going to Mars in a few days. I shall have him call on you.”

  “That would be a pleasure,” said Juwain. “I shall be expecting him.”

  He stirred uneasily on the crouching pedestal. “Perhaps he carries on tradition.”

  “No,” said Webster. “He is studying engineering. He never cared for surgery.”

  “He has a right,” observed the Martian, “to follow the life that he has chosen. Still, one might be permitted to wish.”

  “One could,” Webster agreed. “But that is over and done with. Perhaps he will be a great engineer. Space structure. Talks of ships out to the stars.”

  “Perhaps,” suggested Juwain, “your family has done enough for medical science. You and your father—”

  “And his father,” said Webster, “before him.”

  “Your book,” declared Juwain, “has put Mars in debt to you. It may focus more attention on Martian specialization. My people do not make good doctors. They have no background for it. Queer how the minds of races run. Queer that Mars never thought of medicine—literally never thought of it. Replaced it with a cult of fatalism. While even in your early history, when men still lived in caves—”

  “There are many things,” said Webster, “that you thought of and we didn’t. Things we wonder now how we ever missed. Abilities that you developed and we do not have. Take your own specialty, philosophy. But different than ours. A science, while ours never was more than fumbling. An orderly, logical development of philosophy, workable, practical, applicable, an actual tool.”

  Juwain started to speak, hesitated, then went ahead. “I am near to something, something that may be new and startling. Something that will be a tool for you humans as well as for the Martians. I’ve worked on it for years, starting with certain mental concepts that first were suggested to me with arrival of the Earthmen. I have said nothing, for I could not be sure.”

  “And now,” suggested Webster, “you are sure.”

  “Not quite,” said Juwain. “Not positive. But almost.”

  They sat in silence, watching the mountains and the lake. A bird came and sat in one of the scraggly trees and sang. Dark clouds piled up behind the mountain ranges and the snow-tipped peaks stood out like graven stone. The sun sank in a welter of crimson, hushed finally to the glow of a fire burned low.

  A tap sounded from a door and Webster stirred in his chair, suddenly brought back to the reality of the study, of the chair beneath him.

  Juwain was gone. The old philosopher had come and sat an hour of contemplation with his friend and then had quietly slipped away.

  The rap came again.

  Webster leaned forward, snapped the toggle and the mountains vanished; the room became a room again. Dusk filtered through the high windows and the fire was a rosy flicker in the ashes.

  “Come in,” said Webster.

  Jenkins opened the door. “Dinner is served, sir,” he said.

  “Thank you,” said Webster. He rose slowly from the chair.

  “Your place, sir,” said Jenkins, “is laid at the head of the table.”

  “Ah, yes,” said Webster. “Thank you, Jenkins. Thank you very much, for reminding me.”

  Webster stood on the broad ramp of the space field and watched the shape that dwindled in the sky, dwindled with faint flickering points of red lancing through the wintry sunlight.

  For long minutes after the shape was gone he stood there, hands gripping the railing in front of him, eyes still staring up into the steel-like blue.

  His lips moved and they said: “Good-by, son”; but there was no sound.

  Slowly he came alive to his surroundings. Knew that people moved about the ramp, saw that the landing field seemed to stretch interminably to the far horizon, dotted here and there with hump-backed things that were waiting spaceships. Scooting tractors worked near one hangar, clearing away the last of the snowfall of the night before.

  Webster shivered and thought that it was queer, for the noonday sun was warm. And shivered again.

  Slowly he turned away from the railing and headed for the administration building. And for one brain-wrenching moment he felt a sudden fear—an unreasonable and embarrassing fear of that stretch of concrete that formed the ramp. A fear that left him shaking mentally as he drove his feet toward the waiting door.

  A man walked toward him, briefcase swinging in his hand and Webster, eyeing him, wished fervently that the man would not speak to him.

  The man did not speak, passed him with scarcely a glance and Webster felt relief.

  If he were back home, Webster told himself, he would have finished lunch, would now be ready to lie down for his midday nap. The fire would be blazing on the hearth and the flicker of the flames would be reflected from the andirons. Jenkins would bring him a liqueur and would say a word or two—inconsequential conversation.

  He hurried toward the door, quickening his step, anxious to get away from the bare-cold expanse of the massive ramp.

  Funny how he had felt about Thomas. Natural, of course, that he should have hated to see him go. But entirely unnatural that he should, in those last few minutes, find such horror welling up within him. Horror of the trip through space, horror of the alien land of Mars—although Mars was scarcely alien any longer. For more than a century now Earthmen had known it, had fought it, lived with it; some of them had even grown to love it.

  But it had only been utter will power that had prevented him, in those last few seconds before the ship had taken off, from running out
into the field, shrieking for Thomas to come back, shrieking for him not to go.

  And that, of course, never would have done. It would have been exhibitionism, disgraceful and humiliating—the sort of a thing a Webster could not do.

  After all, he told himself, a trip to Mars was no great adventure, not any longer. There had been a day when it had been, but that day was gone forever. He, himself, in his earlier days had a made a trip to Mars, had stayed there for five long years. That had been—he gasped when he thought of it—that had been almost thirty years ago.

  The babble and hum of the lobby hit him in the face as the robot attendant opened the door for him, and in that babble ran a vein of something that was almost terror. For a moment he hesitated, then stepped inside. The door closed softly behind him.

  He stayed close to the one wall to keep out of people’s way, headed for a chair in one corner. He sat down and huddled back, forcing his body deep into the cushions, watching the milling humanity that seethed out in the room.

  Shrill people, hurrying people, people with strange, unneighborly faces. Strangers—every one of them. Not a face he knew. People going places. Heading out for the planets. Anxious to be off. Worried about last details. Rushing here and there.

  Out of the crowd loomed a familiar face. Webster hunched forward.

  “Jenkins!” he shouted, and then was sorry for the shout, although no one seemed to notice.

  The robot moved toward him, stood before him.

  “Tell Raymond,” said Webster, “that I must return immediately. Tell him to bring the ‘copter in front at once.”

  “I am sorry, sir,” said Jenkins, “but we cannot leave at once. The mechanics found a flaw in the atomics chamber. They are installing a new one. It will take several hours.”

  “Surely,” said Webster, impatiently, “that could wait until some other time.”

  “The mechanic said not, sir,” Jenkins told him. “It might go at any minute. The entire charge of power—”

  “Yes, yes,” agreed Webster, “I suppose so.”

  He fidgeted with his hat. “I just remembered,” he said, “something I must do. Something that must be done at once. I must get home. I can’t wait several hours.”

  He hitched forward to the edge of the chair, eyes staring at the milling crowd.

  Faces—faces—

  “Perhaps you could televise,” suggested Jenkins. “One of the robots might be able to do it. There is a booth—”

  “Wait, Jenkins,” said Webster. He hesitated a moment. “There is nothing to do back home. Nothing at all. But I must get there. I can’t stay here. If I have to, I’ll go crazy. I was frightened out there on the ramp. I’m bewildered and confused here. I have a feeling—a strange, terrible feeling. Jenkins, I—”

  “I understand, sir,” said Jenkins. “Your father had it, too.”

  Webster gasped. “My father?”

  “Yes, sir, that is why he never went anywhere. He was about your age, sir, when he found it out. He tried to make a trip to Europe and he couldn’t. He got halfway there and turned back. He had a name for it.”

  Webster sat in stricken silence.

  “A name for it,” he finally said. “Of course there’s a name for it. My father had it. My grandfather—did he have it, too?”

  “I wouldn’t know that, sir,” said Jenkins. “I wasn’t created until after your grandfather was an elderly man. But he may have. He never went anywhere, either.”

  “You understand, then,” said Webster. “You know how it is. I feel like I’m going to be sick—physically ill. See if you can charter a ‘copter—anything, just so we get home.”

  “Yes, sir,” said Jenkins.

  He started off and Webster called him back.

  “Jenkins, does anyone else know about this? Anyone—”

  “No, sir,” said Jenkins. “Your father never mentioned it and I felt, somehow, that he wouldn’t wish me to.”

  “Thank you, Jenkins,” said Webster.

  Webster huddled back into his chair again, felt desolate and alone and misplaced. Alone in a humming lobby that pulsed with life—a loneliness that tore at him, that left him limp and weak.

  Homesickness. Downright, shameful homesickness, he told himself. Something that boys are supposed to feel when they first leave home, when they first go out to meet the world.

  There was a fancy word for it—agoraphobia, the morbid dread of being in the midst of open spaces—from the Greek root for the fear—literally, of the market place.

  If he crossed the room to the television booth, he could put in a call, talk with his mother or one of the robots—or better yet, just sit and look at the place until Jenkins came for him.

  He started to rise, then sank back in the chair again. It was no dice. Just talking to someone or looking in on the place wasn’t being there. He couldn’t smell the pines in the wintry air, or hear familiar snow crunch on the walk beneath his feet or reach out a hand and touch one of the massive oaks that grew along the path. He couldn’t feel the heat of the fire or sense the sure, deft touch of belonging, of being one with a tract of ground and the things upon it.

  And yet—perhaps it would help. Not much, maybe, but some. He started to rise from the chair again and froze. The few short steps to the booth held terror, a terrible, overwhelming terror. If he crossed them, he would have to run. Run to escape the watching eyes, the unfamiliar sounds, the agonizing nearness of strange faces.

  Abruptly he sat down.

  A woman’s shrill voice cut across the lobby and he shrank away from it. He felt terrible. He felt like hell. He wished Jenkins would hurry up.

  The first breath of spring came through the window, filled the study with the promise of melting snows, of coming leaves and flowers, of north-bound wedges of waterfowl streaming through the blue, of trout that lurked in pools waiting for the fly.

  Webster lifted his eyes from the sheaf of papers on his desk, sniffed the breeze, felt the cool whisper of it on his cheek. His hand reached out for the brandy glass and found it empty, put it back.

  He bent back above the papers once again, picked up a pencil and crossed out a word.

  Critically, he read the final paragraphs:

  The fact that of the two hundred fifty men who were invited to visit me, presumably on missions of more than ordinary importance, only three were able to come, does not necessarily prove that all but those three are victims of agoraphobia. Some may have had legitimate reasons for being unable to accept my invitation. But it does indicate a growing unwillingness of men living under the mode of Earth existence set up following the break up of the cities to move from familiar places, a deepening instinct to stay among the scenes and possessions which in their mind have become associated with contentment and graciousness of life.

  What the result of such a trend will be, no one can clearly indicate since it applies to only a small portion of Earth’s population. Among the larger families economic pressure forces some of the sons to seek their fortunes either in other parts of the Earth or on one of the other planets. Many others deliberately seek adventure and opportunity in space while still others become associated with professions or trades which make a sedentary existence impossible.

  He flipped the page over, went on to the last one.

  It was a good paper, he knew, but it could not be published, not just yet. Perhaps after he had died. No one, so far as he could determine, had ever so much as realized the trend, had taken as matter of course the fact that men seldom left their homes. Why, after all, should they leave their homes?

  Certain dangers may be recognized in—

  The televisor muttered at his elbow and he reached out to flip the toggle.

  The room faded and he was face to face with a man who sat behind a desk, almost as if he sat on the opposite side of Webster’s desk. A gray-haired man with sad eyes behin
d heavy lenses, eyes that were filled with the sadness and humility of having looked on death and misery, compassionate eyes.

  For a moment Webster stared, memory tugging at him.

  “Could it be—” he asked and the man smiled gravely.

  “I have changed,” he said. “So have you. My name is Clayborne. Remember? The Martian medical commission—”

  “Clayborne! I’d often thought of you. You stayed on Mars.”

  Clayborne nodded. “I’ve read your book, doctor. It is a real contribution. I’ve often thought one should be written, wanted to myself but I didn’t have the time. Just as well I didn’t. You did a better job. Especially on the brain.”

  “The Martian brain,” Webster told him, “always intrigued me. Certain peculiarities. I’m afraid I spent more of those five years taking notes on it than I should have. There was other work to do.”

  “A good thing you did,” said Clayborne. “That’s why I’m calling you now. I have a patient—a brain operation. Only you can handle it.”

  Webster gasped, his hands trembling. “You’ll bring him here?”

  Clayborne shook his head. “He cannot be moved. You know him, I believe. Juwain, the philosopher.”

  “Juwain!” said Webster. “He’s one of my best friends. We talked together just a couple of days ago.”

  “The attack was sudden,” said Clayborne. “He’s been asking for you.”

  Webster was silent and cold—cold with a chill that crept upon him from some unguessed place. Cold that sent perspiration out upon his forehead, that knotted his fists.

  “If you start immediately,” said Clayborne, “you can be here on time. I’ve already arranged with the World Committee to have a ship at your disposal instantly. The utmost speed is necessary.”

  “But,” said Webster, “but … I cannot come.”

  “You can’t come!”

  “It’s impossible,” said Webster. “I doubt in any case that I am needed. Surely, you yourself—”

  “I can’t,” said Clayborne. “No one can but you. No one else has the knowledge. You hold Juwain’s life in your hands. If you come, he lives. If you don’t, he dies.”