Cry From a Far Planet
***
The problem of separating the friends from the enemies was a major one in
the conquest of space as many a dead spacer could have testified. A tough job
when you could see an alien and judge appearances; far tougher when they were
only whispers on the wind.
***
A smile of friendship is a baring of the teeth. So is a snarl of menace.
It can be fatal to mistake the latter for the former.
Harm an alien being only under circumstances of self-defense.
TRUST NO ALIEN BEING UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES.
…from Exploration Ship’s Handbook.
He listened in the silence of the
Exploration ship’s control room. He heard nothing but that was what bothered
him; an ominous quiet when there should have been a multitude of sounds from
the nearby village for the view-screen’s audio-pickups to transmit. And it was
more than six hours past the time when the native, Throon, should have come to
sit with him outside the ship as they resumed the laborious attempt to learn each
other’s language.
The view-screen was black in the
light of the control room, even though it was high noon outside. The dull red
sun was always invisible through the world’s thick atmosphere and to human eyes
full day was no more than a red-tinged darkness.
He switched on the ship’s outside
floodlights and the view-screen came to bright white life, showing the empty
glades reaching away between groves of purple alien trees. He noticed,
absently, that the trees seemed to have changed a little in color since his
arrival.
The village was hidden from view
by the outer trees but there should have been some activity in the broad area
visible to him. There was none, not even along the distant segment of what
should have been a busy road. The natives were up to something and he knew,
from hard experience on other alien worlds, that it would be nothing good. It
would be another misunderstanding of some kind and he didn’t know enough of
their incomprehensible language to ask them what it was—
***
Suddenly, as it always came, he
felt someone or something standing close behind him and peering over his
shoulder. He dropped his hand to the blaster he had taken to wearing at all
times and whirled.
Nothing was behind him. There
never was. The control room was empty, with no hiding place for anything, and
the door was closed, locked by the remote-control button beside him. There was
nothing.
The sensation of being watched
faded, as though the watcher had withdrawn to a greater distance. It was
perhaps the hundredth time within six days that he had felt the sensation. And
when he slept at night something came to nuzzle at his mind; faceless,
formless, and utterly alien. For the past three nights he had not let the
blaster get beyond quick reach of his hand, even when in bed.
But whatever it was, it could not
be on the ship. He had searched the ship twice, a methodical
compartment-by-compartment search that had found nothing. It had to be the work
of the natives from outside the ship. Except...
Why, if the natives were
telepathic, did the one called Throon go through the weary pretense of trying
to learn a mutually understandable form of communication?
There was one other explanation,
which he could not accept: that he was following in the footsteps of Will
Garret of Ship Nine who had deliberately gone into a white sun two months after
the death of his twin brother.
He looked at the chair beside his
own, Johnny’s chair, which would forever be empty, and his thoughts went back
down the old, bitter paths. The Exploration Board had been wrong when they
thought the close bond between identical twins would make them the ideal
two-man crews for the lonely, lifetime journeys of the Exploration Ships.
Identical twins were too close; when one of them died, the other died in part
with him.
They had crossed a thousand
light-years of space together, he and Johnny, when they came to the bleak
planet that he would name Johnny’s World. He should never have let Johnny go
alone up the slope of the honey-combed mountain—but Johnny had wanted to take
the routine record photographs of the black, tiger-like beasts which they had
called cave cats and the things had seemed harmless and shy, despite their
ferocious appearance.
“I’m taking them a sack of food
that I think they might like,” Johnny had said. “I want to try to get some good
close-up shots of them.”
Ten minutes later he heard the
distant snarl of Johnny’s blaster. He ran up the mountainside, knowing already
that he was too late. He found two of the cave cats lying where Johnny had
killed them. Then he found Johnny, at the foot of a high cliff. He was dead,
his neck broken by the fall. Scattered all around him from the torn sack was
the food he had wanted to give to the cats.
He buried Johnny the next day,
while a cold wind moaned under a lead-gray sky. He built a monument for him; a
little mound of frosty stones that only the wild animals would ever see—
***
A chime rang, high and clear, and
the memories were shattered. The orange light above the hyperspace communicator
was flashing; the signal that meant the Exploration Board was calling him from
Earth.
He flipped the switch and said, “Paul
Jameson, Exploration Ship One.”
The familiar voice of Brender
spoke:
“It’s been some time since your
preliminary report. Is everything all right?”
“In a way,” he answered. “I was
going to give you the detailed report tomorrow.”
“Give me a brief sketch of it
now.”
“Except for their short brown
fur, the natives are humanoid in appearance. But there are basic differences.
Their body temperature is cool, like their climate. Their vision range is from
just within the visible red on into the infrared. They’ll shade their eyes from
the light of anything as hot as boiling water but they’ll look square into the
ship’s floodlights and never see them.”
“And their knowledge of science?”
Brender asked.
“They have a good understanding
of it, but along lines entirely different from what our own were at their stage
of development. For example: they power their machines with chemicals but there
is no steam, heat, or exhaust.”
“That’s what we want to find—worlds
where branches of research unknown to our science are being explored. How about
their language?”
“No progress with it yet.” He
told Brender of the silence in the village and added, “Even if Throon should
show up I could not ask him what was wrong. I’ve learned a few words but they
have so many different definitions that I can’t use them.”
“I know,” Brender said. “Variable
and unrelated definitions, undetectable shades of inflection—and sometimes a
language that has no discernibly separate words. The Singer brothers of Ship
Eight ran into the latter. We’ve given them up as lost.”
“The Singers—dead?” he exclaimed.
“Good God—it’s been only a month since the Ramon brothers were killed.”
“The circumstances were similar,”
Brender said. “They always are. There is no way the Exploration men can tell
the natives that they mean them no harm and the suspicion of the natives grows
into dangerous hostility. The Singers reported the natives on that world to be
both suspicious and possessing powerful weapons. The Singers were proceeding
warily, their own weapons always at hand. But, somehow, the natives caught them
off-guard—their last report was four months ago.”
There was a silence, then Brender
added, “Their ship was the ninth—and we had only fifteen.”
He did not reply to the
implications of Brender’s statement. It was obvious to them all what the end of
the Plan would be. What it had to be.
***
It had been only three years
since the fifteen heavily armed Exploration ships set out to lead the way for
Terran expansion across the galaxy; to answer a cry from far planets, and to
find all the worlds that held intelligent life. That was the ultimate goal of
the Plan: to accumulate and correlate all the diverse knowledge of all the
intelligent life-forms in the galaxy. Among the achievements resulting from
that tremendous mass of data would be a ship’s drive faster even than hyperspace;
the Third Level Drive which would bring all the galaxies of the universe within
reach.
And now nine ships were gone out
of fifteen and nineteen men out of thirty...
“The communication barrier,”
Brender said. “The damned communication barrier has been the cause behind the
loss of every ship. And there is nothing we can do about it. We’re stymied by
it...”
The conversation was terminated
shortly afterward and he moved about the room restlessly, wishing it was time
to lift ship again. With Johnny not there the dark world was like a smothering
tomb. He would like to leave it behind and drive again into the star clouds of
the galaxy; drive on and on into them—
A ghostly echo touched his mind;
restless, poignantly yearning. He swung to face the locked door, knowing there
could be nothing behind it. The first real fear came to him as he did so. The
thing was lonely—the thing that watched him was as lonely as he was...
What else could any of it be but
the product of a mind in the first stage of insanity?
***
The natives came ten minutes
later.
The view-screen showed their
chemically-powered vehicle emerge from the trees and roll swiftly across the
glade. Four natives were in it while a fifth one lay on the floor, apparently
badly injured.
The vehicle stopped a short
distance in front of the airlock and he recognized the native on the floor. It
was Throon, the one with whom he had been exchanging language lessons.
They were waiting for him when he
emerged from the ship, pistol-like weapons in their belts and grim accusation
in their manner.
Throon was muttering
unintelligibly, unconscious. His skin, where not covered by the brown fur, was
abnormal in appearance. He was dying.
The leader of the four indicated
Throon and said in a quick, brittle voice: “Ko
reegar feen no-dran!”
Only one word was familiar: Ko,
which meant ‘you’ and ‘yesterday’ and a great many other things. The question
was utterly meaningless to him.
He dropped his hand a little
nearer his blaster as the leader spoke again; a quick succession of unknown
words that ended with a harshly demanding ‘kreson!’
Kreson meant ‘now,’ or ‘very
quickly.’ All the other words were unfamiliar to him. They waited, the grim
menace about them increasing when he did not answer. He tried in vain to find
some way of explaining to them he was not responsible for Throon’s sickness and
could not cure it.
Then he saw the spray of leaves
that had caught on the corner of the vehicle when it came through the farther
trees.
They were of a deep purple color.
All the trees around the ship were almost gray by contrast.
Which meant that he was
responsible for Throon’s condition.
The cold white light of the ship’s
floodlights, under which he and Throon had sat for day after day, contained
radiations that went through the violet and far into the ultraviolet. To the
animal and vegetable life of the dark world such radiations were invisibly
short and deadly.
Throon was dying of
hard-radiation sickness.
It was something he should have
foreseen and avoided—and that would not have happened had he accepted old
Throon’s pantomimed invitation, in the beginning, to go with him into the
village to work at the language study. There he would have used a harmless
battery lamp for illumination...but there was no certainty that the natives
were not planning to lay a trap for him in the village and he had refused to
go.
It did not matter—there was a
complex radiation-neutralizer and cell-reconstructor in the ship which would
return Throon to full, normal health a few hours after he was placed in its
chamber.
He turned to the leader of the
four natives and motioned from Throon to the airlock.
“Go—there,” he said
in the native language.
“Bron!” the leader answered. The word meant ‘No’ and there was a determination
in the way he said it that showed he would not move from it.
At the end of five minutes his
attempts to persuade them to take Throon into the ship had increased their
suspicion of his motives to the point of critical danger. If only he could tell
them why he wanted Throon taken into
the ship...but he could not and would have to take Throon by first disposing of
the four without injuring them. This he could do by procuring one of the
paralyzing needle-guns from the ship.
He took a step toward the ship
and spoke the words that to the best of his knowledge meant: “I come back.”
“Feswin ilt k’la.”
Their reply was to snatch at
their weapons in desperate haste, even as the leader uttered a hoarse word of
command. He brought up the blaster with the quick motion that long training had
perfected and their weapons were only half drawn when his warning came:
“Bron!”
***
They froze, but did not release
their weapons. He walked backward to the airlock, his blaster covering them,
the tensely waiting manner in which they watched his progress telling him that
the slightest relaxation of his vigilance would mean his death. He did not let
the muzzle of the blaster waver until he was inside the airlock and the outer
door had slid shut.
He was sure that the natives
would be gone when he returned. And he was sure of another thing: That whatever
he had said to them, it was not what he had thought he was saying.
He saw that the glade was empty
when he opened the airlock again. At the same time a bomb-like missile struck
the ship just above the airlock and exploded with a savage crash. He jabbed the
Close button and the door clicked
shut barely in advance of three more missiles which hammered at its impervious
armor.
So that, he thought wearily, is
that.
He laid the useless needle-gun
aside. The stage was past when he could hope to use it. He could save Throon
only by killing some of the others—or he could lift ship and leave Throon to
die. Either action would make the natives hate and fear Terrans; a hatred and
fear that would be there to greet all future Terran ships.
That was not the way a race gave
birth to peaceful galactic empire, was not the purpose behind the Plan. But
always, wherever the Exploration men went, they encountered the deadly barrier;
the intangible, unassailable communication barrier. With the weapons an
Exploration man carried in his ship he had the power to destroy a world—but not
the power to ask the simple questions that would prevent fatal misunderstandings.
And before another three years
had passed the last Exploration man would die, the last Exploration ship would
be lost.
He felt the full force of
hopelessness for the first time. When Johnny had been alive it had been
different; Johnny, who had laughed whenever the outlook was the darkest and
said, “We’ll find a way, Paul—”
The thought broke as suddenly,
unexpectedly, he felt that Johnny was very near. With the feeling came the soft
enclosure of a dream-like peace in which Johnny’s death was vague and faraway;
only something that had happened in another dream. He knew, without wondering
why, that Johnny was in the control room.
A part of his mind tried to
reject the thought as an illusion. He did not listen—he did not want to listen.
He ran to the ship’s elevator, stumbling like one not fully awake. Johnny was
waiting for him in the control room—alive—alive—
***
He spoke as he stepped into the
control room:
“Johnny—”
Something moved at the control
board, black and alien, standing tall as a man on short hind legs. Yellow eyes
blazed in a feline face.
It was a cave cat, like the ones
that had killed Johnny.
Realization was a wrenching shock
and a terrible disillusionment. Johnny was not waiting for him—not alive—
He brought up the blaster, the
dream-like state gone. The paw of the cave cat flashed out and struck the ship’s
master light switch with a movement faster than his own. The room was
instantly, totally, dark.
He fired and pale blue fire
lanced across the room, to reveal that the cave cat was gone. He fired again,
quickly and immediately in front of him. The pale beam revealed only the ripped
metal floor.
“I am not where you think.”
The words spoke clearly in his
mind but there was no directional source. He held his breath, listening for the
whisper of padded feet as the cave cat flashed in for the kill, and made a
swift analysis of the situation.
The cave cat was telepathic and
highly intelligent and had been on the ship all the time. It and the others had
wanted the ship and had killed Johnny to reduce opposition to the minimum. He,
himself, had been permitted to live until the cave cat learned from his mind
how to operate the almost-automatic controls. Now, he had served his purpose—
“You are wrong.”
Again there was no way he could
determine the direction from which the thought came. He listened again, and
wondered why it had not waylaid him at the door.
The thought came:
“I had to let you see me or you would not have believed I existed. It was
only here that I could extinguish all lights and have time to speak before you
killed me. I let you think your brother was here...” There was a little pause. “I am sorry. I am sorry. I should have used
some other method of luring you here.”
He swung the blaster toward what
seemed to be a faint sound near the astrogator unit across the room.
“We did not intend to kill your brother.”
He did not believe it and did not
reply.
“When we made first telepathic contact with him, he jerked up his blaster
and fired. In his mind was the conviction that we had pretended to be harmless
animals so that we could catch him off-guard and kill him. One of us leaped at
him as he fired the second time, to knock the blaster from his hand. We needed
only a few minutes in which to explain—but he would not trust us that long.
There was a misjudgment of distance and he was knocked off the cliff.”
Again he did not reply.
“We did not intend to kill your brother,” the thought came. “But you do
not believe me.”
***
He spoke for the first time. “No,
I don’t believe you. You are physically like cats and cats don’t misjudge
distances. Now, you want something from me before you try to kill me, too. What
is it?”
“I will have to tell you of my race for you to understand. We call ourselves
the Varn, in so far as it can be translated into a spoken word, and we are a
very old race. In the beginning we did not live in caves but there came a long
period of time, for thousands of years, when the climate on our world was so
violent that we were forced to live in the caves. It was completely dark there
but our sense of smell became very acute, together with sufficient sensitivity
to temperature changes that we could detect objects in our immediate vicinity.
There were subterranean plants in the caves and food was no problem.”
***
“We had always been slightly telepathic and it was during our long stay in
the caves that our intelligence and telepathic powers became fully developed.
We had only our minds—physical science is not created in dark caves with clumsy
paws.
“The time finally came when we could leave the caves but it was of little
help to us. There were no resources on our world but earth and stone and the
thin grass of the plains. We wondered about the universe and we knew the stars
were distant suns because one of our own suns became a star each winter. We
studied as best we could but we could see the stars only as the little wild
animals saw them. There was so much we wanted to learn and by then we were past
our zenith and already dying out. But our environment was a prison from which
we could never escape.
“When your ship arrived we thought we might soon be free. We wanted to ask
you to take some of us with you and arrange for others of your race to stop by
on our world. But you dismissed us as animals, useful only for making warm fur
coats, because we lived in caves and had no science, no artifacts—nothing. You
had the power to destroy us and we did not know what your reaction would be
when you learned we were intelligent and telepathic. A telepathic race must
have a high code of ethics and never intrude unwanted—but would you have
believed that?”
He did not answer.
“The death of your brother changed everything. You were going to leave so
soon that there would be no time to learn more about you. I hid on the ship so
I could study you and wait until I could prove to you that you needed me. Now,
I can—Throon is dying and I can give you the proper words of explanation that
will cause the others to bring him into the ship.”
“Your real purpose—what is it?”
he asked.
“To show you that men need the Varn. You want to explore the galaxy, and
learn. So do the Varn. You have the ships and we have the telepathic ability
that will end the communication problem. Your race and mine can succeed only if
we go together.”
He searched for the true, and
hidden, purpose behind the Varn proposal and saw what it would have to be.
“The long-range goal—you failed
to mention that...your ultimate aim.”
“I know what you are thinking. How can I prove you wrong—now?”
There was no way for the Varn to
prove him wrong, nor for him to prove the treachery behind the Varn proposal.
The proof would come only with time, when the Terran-Varn co-operation had
transformed Terrans into a slave race.
The Varn spoke again. “You refuse to believe I am sincere?”
“I would be a naive fool to
believe you.”
“It will be too late to save Throon unless we act very quickly. I have told
you why I am here. There is nothing more I can do to convince you but be the
first to show trust. When I switch on the lights it will be within your power
to kill me.”
***
The Varn was gambling its life in
a game in which he would be gambling the Plan and his race. It was a game he
would end at the first sound of movement from the astrogator unit across the
room...
“I have been here beside you all the time.”
A furry paw brushed his face,
claws flicked gently but grimly reminding along his throat.
He whirled and fired. He was too
late—the Varn had already leaped silently away and the beam found only the bare
floor. Then the lights came on, glaringly bright after the darkness, and he saw
the Varn.
It was standing by the control
board, its huge yellow eyes watching him. He brought the blaster into line with
it, his finger on the firing stud. It waited, not moving or shrinking from what
was coming. The translucent golden eyes looked at him and beyond him, as though
they saw something not in the room. He wondered if it was in contact with its
own kind on Johnny’s World and was telling them it had made the gamble for high
stakes, and had lost.
It was not afraid—not asking for
mercy...
The killing of it was suddenly an
act without savor. It was something he would do in the immediate future but
first he would let it live long enough to save Throon.
He motioned with the blaster and
said, “Lead the way to the airlock.”
“And afterward—you will kill me?”
“Lead the way,” he repeated
harshly.
It said no more but went
obediently past him and trotted down the corridor like a great, black dog.
***
He stood in the open airlock, the
Varn against the farther wall where he had ordered it to stand. Throon was in
the radiation chamber and he had held his first intelligible conversation with
the natives that day.
The Varn was facing into the
red-black gloom outside the lighted airlock, where the departing natives could
be heard crossing the glade.
“Their thoughts no longer hold fear and suspicion,” it said. “The misunderstanding
is ended.”
He raised the muzzle of the
blaster in his hand. The black head lifted and the golden eyes looked up at
him.
“I made you no promise,” he said.
“I could demand none.”
“I can’t stop to take you back to
your own world and I can’t leave you alive on this one—with what you’ve learned
from my mind you would have the natives build the Varn a disintegrator-equipped
space fleet equal to our own ships.”
“We want only to go with you.”
He told it what he wanted it to
know before he killed it, wondering why he should care:
“I would like to believe you are
sincere—and you know why I don’t dare to. Trusting a telepathic race would be
too dangerous. The Varn would know everything we knew and only the Varn would
be able to communicate with each new alien race. We would have to believe what
the Varn told us—we would have to trust the Varn to see for us and speak for us
and not deceive us as we went across the galaxy. And then, in the end, Terrans
would no longer be needed except as a subject race. They would be enslaved.
“We would have laid the
groundwork for an empire—the Varn Empire.”
There was a silence, in which his
words hung like something cold and invisible between them.
Then the Varn asked, very
quietly:
“Why is the Plan failing?”
“You already know,” he said. “Because
of the barrier—the communication barrier that causes aliens to misunderstand
the intentions of Exploration men and fear them.”
“There is no communication barrier between you and I—yet you fear me and
are going to kill me.”
“I have to kill you. You
represent a danger to my race.”
“Isn’t that the same reason why aliens kill Exploration men?”
He did not answer and its thought
came, quickly, “How does an Exploration
man appear to the natives of alien worlds?”
How did he appear?
He had landed on their world in a
ship that could smash it into oblivion; he stepped out of his ship carrying
weapons that could level a city; he represented irresistible power for
destruction and he trusted no one and nothing.
And in return he hoped to find
welcome and friendship and co-operation...
“There,” the Varn
said. “…is your true barrier—your own
distrust and suspicion. You, yourselves, create it on each new world. Now you
are going to erect it between my race and yours by killing me and advising the
Exploration Board to quarantine my world and never let another ship land there.”
Again there was a silence as he
thought of what the Varn had said and of what it had said earlier: “We are a very old race....” There was wisdom
in the Varn’s analysis of the cause of the Plan’s failure and with the Varn to
vanquish the communication stalemate, the new approach could be tried. They
could go a long way together, men and Varn, a long, long way...
Or they could create the Varn
Empire...and how could he know which it would be?
How could anyone know—except the
telepathic Varn?
The muzzle of the blaster had
dropped and he brought it back up. He forced the dangerous indecision aside,
knowing he would have to kill the Varn at once or he might weaken again, and
said harshly to it:
“The risk is too great. I want to
believe you—but all your talk of trust and good intentions is only talk and my
race would be the only one that had to trust.”
He touched the firing stud as the
last thought of the Varn came:
“Let me speak once more.”
He waited, the firing stud cold
and metallic under his finger.
“You are wrong. We have already
set the example of faith in you by asking to go with you. I told you we did not
intend to hurt your brother and I told you we saw the stars only as the little
wild animals saw them. The years in the dark caves—you do not understand—”
The eyes of the Varn looked into
his and beyond him; beautiful, expressionless, like polished gold.
“The Varn are blind.”
End
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