The Mathematicians
Arthur Feldman
Amazing Stories Oct.-Nov. 1953
We gave this story to a very competent, and very pretty gal artist. We
said, “Read this carefully, dream on it, and come up with an illustration.” A
week later, she returned with the finished drawing. “The hero,” she said. We
did a double take. “Hey! That’s not the hero.” She looked us straight in the
eye. “Can you prove it?” She had us. We couldn’t, and she left hurriedly to go
home and cook dinner for her family. And what were they having? Frog legs—what
else?
They were in the garden. “Now,
Zoe,” said Zenia Hawkins to her nine-year-old daughter. “Quit fluttering
around, and papa will tell you a story.”
Zoe settled down in the hammock. “A
true story, papa?”
“It all happened exactly like I’m
going to tell you,” said Drake Hawkins, pinching Zoe’s rosy cheek. “Now: two
thousand and eleven years ago in 1985, figuring by the earthly calendar of that
time, a tribe of beings from the Dog-star Sirius invaded the Earth.”
“And what did these beings look
like, father?”
“Like humans in many, many
respects. They each had two arms, two legs and all the other organs that humans
are endowed with.”
“Wasn’t there any difference at
all between the Star-beings and the humans, papa?”
“There was. The newcomers, each
and all, had a pair of wings covered with green feathers growing from their
shoulders, and long, purple tails.”
“How many of these beings were
there, father?”
“Exactly three million and
forty-one male adults and three female adults. These creatures first appeared
on Earth on the island of Sardinia. In five weeks’ time they were the masters
of the entire globe.”
“Didn’t the Earth-lings fight
back, papa?”
“The humans warred against the
invaders, using bullets, ordinary bombs, super-atom bombs and gases.”
“What were those things like,
father?”
“Oh, they’ve passed out of
existence long ago. ‘Ammunition’ they were called. The humans fought each other
with such things.”
“And not with ideas, like we do
now, father?”
“No, with guns, just like I told
you. But the invaders were immune to the ammunition.”
“What does ‘immune’ mean?”
“Proof against harm. Then the
humans tried germs and bacteria against the star-beings.”
“What were those things?”
“Tiny, tiny bugs that the humans
tried to inject into the bodies of the invaders to make them sicken and die.
But the bugs had no effect at all on the star-beings.”
“Go on, papa. These beings
over-ran all Earth. Go on from there.”
“You must know, these newcomers
were vastly more intelligent than the Earth-lings. In fact, the invaders were
the greatest mathematicians in the System.”
“What’s the System? And what does
mathematician mean?”
“The Milky Way. A mathematician
is one who is good at figuring, weighing, measuring, clever with numbers.”
“Then, father, the invaders
killed off all the Earth-lings?”
“Not all. They killed many, but
many others were enslaved. Just as the humans had used horses and cattle, the
newcomers so used the humans. They made workers out of some, others they
slaughtered for food.”
“Papa, what sort of language did
these Star-beings talk?”
“A very simple language, but the
humans were never able to master it. So, the invaders, being so much smarter,
mastered all the languages of the globe.”
“What did the Earth-lings call
the invaders, father?”
“‘An-vils’. Half angels, half
devils.”
“Then, papa, everything was
peaceful on Earth after the An-vils enslaved the humans?”
***
“For a little while. Then, some
of the most daring of the humans, led by a man named Knowall, escaped into the
interior of Greenland. This Knowall was a psychiatrist, the foremost on Earth.”
“What’s a psychiatrist?”
“A dealer in ideas.”
“Then, he was very rich?”
“He’d been the richest human on
Earth. After some profound thought, Knowall figured a way to rid the earth of
the An-vils.”
“How, papa?”
“He perfected a method, called
the Knowall-Hughes, Ilinski technique, of imbuing these An-vils with human
emotions.”
“What does ‘imbuing’ mean?”
“He filled them full of and made
them aware of.”
Zenia interrupted, “Aren’t you
talking a bit above the child’s understanding, Drake?”
“No, mama,” said Zoe. “I
understand what papa explained. Now, don’t interrupt.”
“So, Knowall,” continued Drake. “Filled
the An-vils with human feelings such as Love, Hate, Ambition, Jealousy, Malice,
Envy, Despair, Hope, Fear, Shame and so on. Very soon the An-vils were acting
like humans, and in ten days, terrible civil wars wiped out the An-vils’
population by two-thirds.”
“Then, papa, the An-vils finally
killed off each other?”
“Almost, until among them a being
named Zalibar, full of saintliness and persuasion, preached the brotherhood of
all An-vils. The invaders, quickly converted, quit their quarrels, and the
Earth-lings were even more enslaved.”
“Oh, papa, weren’t Knowall and
his followers in Greenland awfully sad the way things had turned out?”
“For a while. Then Knowall came
up with the final pay-off.”
“Is that slang, papa? Pay-off?”
“Yes. The coup-de-grace. The ace
in the hole that he’d saved, if all else failed.”
“I understand, papa. The idea
that would out-trump anything the other side had to offer. What was it, father?
What did they have?”
“Knowall imbued the An-vils with
nostalgia.”
“What is nostalgia?”
“Home sickness.”
“Oh, papa, wasn’t Knowall smart?
That meant, the An-vils were all filled with the desire to fly back to the star
from where they had started.”
“Exactly. So, one day, all the
An-vils, an immense army, flapping their great green wings, assembled in the
Black Hills of North America, and, at a given signal, they all rose up from
Earth and all the humans chanted, ‘Glory, glory, the day of our deliverance!’“
“So then, father, all the An-vils
flew away from Earth?”
“Not all. There were two child
An-vils, one male and one female, aged two years, who had been born on Earth,
and they started off with all the other An-vils and flew up into the sky. But
when they reached the upper limits of the strato-sphere, they hesitated, turned
tail and fluttered back to Earth where they had been born. Their names were
Zizzo and Zizza.”
“And what happened to Zizzo and
Zizza, papa?”
“Well, like all the An-vils, they
were great mathematicians. So, they multiplied.”
“Oh, papa,” laughed Zoe, flapping
her wings excitedly. “That was a very nice story!”
End
I’m not quite sure whether the ‘An-vils’ took over the
Earth or merely interbred with humans.
Sooner or later, it was bound to happen,
right? Think of your neighbours…
If
that guy wouldn’t fuck a moth, I don’t know who would.
Seriously.
…and some of you guys really ought to stop
multiplying.
There’s too many moth-fucking dummies in the world now.
The above image is from the collection of the author.
It’s also the marketing image for Birdmen of Kor, a short story
available from any number of fine retailers. The story got a couple of crappy
reviews, because people quite naturally disapprove of gang-rape. Even though
it’s a different species, a different ecology and a different culture, which is
as driven by evolutionary biology as anything else. They also might have been
troll reviews, but quite frankly, I can’t be bothered to check.
The original image is copyrighted by the original
artist. Our Canstock license means
we can reproduce it something like a half a million times for commercial
purposes, without even giving attribution, at which point we would have to
purchase an enhanced license.
We paid about five bucks for it, although the prices
have since gone up.
Thank you for reading.
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