Stopover Planet
Robert E. Gilbert
Imagination Stories of Science
and Fantasy, August 1953
Early morning deliveries were part of the Honeychile Bakery Service. But
on this particular morning the service was reversed!
At 2:34 a.m., Patrolman Louis
Whedbee left the Zip Cab station. With arch supports squeaking and night stick
swinging, Whedbee walked east to the call box at the corner of Sullivan and
Cherokee. The traffic signal suspended above the intersection blinked a
cautionary amber. Not a car moved on the silent streets.
Whedbee reached for the box. Then
he swore softly and stepped off the curb. “Pardon me,” he said, for he believed
that a policeman should be courteous at all times, even when arresting a school
zone speedster. This, however, was not a speedster. It seemed to be a huge man
standing on top of a truck and cutting down the stop light. “What’s going on here?”
Whedbee asked.
HONEYCHILE BAKERY was advertised
on the side of the truck. Instinctively, Whedbee jammed his whistle in his
mouth when he realized that the man on the truck wore something like a suit of
long underwear made of improbable black fur sprinkled with tiny red spots.
“What are you doing to the stop
light?” Whedbee demanded.
The amber light quit blinking
without the expected electrical display.
Sinuous as beheaded snakes, the
wires and cables supporting the traffic signal fell into the street. The
unusual man pocketed his cutting tool—a long thin tube—and lowered the stop
light to the truck. He looked at Whedbee. The corner street lamp reacted upon
his eyes like a flashlight thrown on a tomcat in an alley. The eyes gleamed
green.
Whedbee’s whistle arced to the
end of the chain and clanked against his metal buttons. A block away on Center
Street, a heavy truck roared through the business section. The bell of a switch
engine tolled near the freight depot, and a small dog barked suddenly at the
obscured sky.
“I am promoting you to captain.
You will replace Hanks, whom I am demoting,” the figure on the truck announced.
“Chief Grindstaff?” Whedbee
wondered.
The chief of police glared down
at the patrolman. He hooked a bright metal globe to the stop light, lifted it
in one hand, and jumped, landing lightly on the pavement. “Put this in the
mobile unit,” he said. “The truck, I evil.”
“Huh? Sure, chief,” Whedbee said.
He tucked his night stick under his arm and prepared to accept a heavy load.
Tensed muscles almost felled him when the signal proved to weigh not more than
one pound.
Chief Grindstaff opened the doors
in the rear of the truck, releasing a faint odor of stale bread. The truck was
empty. Whedbee deposited the almost weightless burden. The chief looked him in
the eye. “I am promoting you to captain,” he repeated. “You will replace Hanks,
whom I am demoting.”
“Thanks, chief!” Whedbee exalted.
“You know Hanks didn’t treat me fair that time I—”
“Yes, I know all about that,” the
chief interposed. “Go bring the postage box and place it in the truck.”
“The which? Oh, you mean the
mailbox!” Whedbee walked across the street to the square green box with the
rounded metal top. Another of the globes had been attached to the mailbox, and
the legs had been burned loose from the concrete sidewalk. Confidently, Whedbee
lifted the light object, carried it to the truck, and deposited it inside.
“Bleachers there,” said Chief
Grindstaff.
“What you say, chief?”
“Stands there. No, stand there.”
Patrolman Whedbee stood by the
back of the truck. Chief Grindstaff placed a device like an atomizer under
Whedbee’s nose and released the spray.
***
Miss Betsy Tapp awoke after not
more than one hour of fitful sleep. The door to the garage apartment shook
under the tattoo of a heavy fist. Miss Tapp’s heart thudded somewhere inside
her thirty-eight-inch bosom. She lay rigid in darkness penetrated only by the
glimmer of a distant street light.
The knocking ceased. Boards
creaked on the platform outside the door. A face appeared at the window, a face
in complete shadow except for two eyes that glowed with greenish light.
Miss Tapp, unaware of the
disarray of her nightgown, sat upright. The alarm clock on the floor by the bed
clacked in the stillness. The tap in the kitchen cubicle dripped. Timbers,
contracting in the cool of early morning, popped faintly.
“I need to marry you,” the face
said. “I was wrong tonight. Forgive me.”
“Fred?” Miss Tapp gasped in
sudden joy.
“Open the portal,” Fred said.
Wrenching metal curlers from her
permanently waved hair, Miss Tapp bounded to the door. She released the catch
and threw herself at the figure on the landing. Fred purred, “I want to marry
you. I was wrong tonight. Forgive me.”
“Oh, Fred,” Miss Tapp sighed. “I
knew you’d come back! You just had too much to drink! I forgive you, Fred! We’ll—”
“Yes. Bring your rayon crepe with
tall tucking.”
“What, Fred?”
“Bring your garb, your clothing.
Hurry.”
Miss Tapp skillfully fought a
blush. “Oh, Fred! I’m sorry. I’ll be dressed in a minute!”
Fred slowly stated, “I want to
marry you. I was wrong tonight. Forgive me.”
He walked into the apartment and
rapidly gathered and rolled together the dress and undergarments scattered on
and about the chair.
He stuffed the spike-heeled shoes
into pockets of his black fur suit and lifted Miss Tapp in his arms.
“We’re eloping!” Miss Tapp sighed
as Fred carried her down the outside stairs. A Honeychile Bakery truck, with rear doors open, waited in the driveway.
Fred tossed the roll of clothing and the slippers into the truck, and swiftly
sprayed Miss Tapp.
***
An unearthly glow permeated the
bedroom and cast the black shadows of heavy furniture against the faded papered
walls. Within the glow, two dots of green flickered. The Reverend Enos
Shackelford dropped on creaking knees and bowed his grizzled head.
A voice said, “Well done, good
and faithful servant. Arise and follow me.”
“Lord,” said Reverend
Shackelford, “I have served thee faithfully all the days of my life. Remember
me when thou comest into thy kingdom.
Remember also--”
“Yes. Well done, good and
faithful servant. Arise and follow me.”
Shackelford stood on tottering
old legs. His nightshirt hung below his knees. Horrified shock blanched his
lined face. “Blasphemer!” he cried. “False prophet! Get thee behind me, Satan!”
The glow danced and faded. A
towering black shape pointed a bent rod. The rod hissed. The Reverend
Shackelford staggered against a small table, dragging it with him to the floor.
He lay still with one gnarled old hand on a large golden-edged book that had
fallen from the table.
***
“You’re fired,” the man in the
dream said over and over.
Calvin C. Kear rolled off the
half-bed, struck the floor, and awoke.
“First time I’ve fallen out of
bed in years,” he groaned. His shaking hand fumbled with the switch and
succeeded in turning on the lamp.
Mrs. Calvin C. Kear sprawled on
her back in the other bed and snored.
“You and your
fifteen-thousand-dollar house,” Kear muttered. He combed his thinning hair with
his fingers. “You and your sterling silver. You and your chosen pattern. Your
service for eight. How far do you think fifty-four dollars a week will go with
12-gauge shells three and a quarter a box?”
Green eyes glittered beside the
frilly dressing table. The man standing there said, “I’m not igniting you. I’m
giving you a bonus for your fine work. Enough currency to pay the loan on this
house. You’ll be making two hundred per week. This fall, I’ll take you hunting
at my place in the country.”
“Boss?” Kear mumbled. “I mean,
Mr. Darmond?”
“Put on your clothing,” the boss
said. “I’ll show you your new office. You may have a secretary, also. I’m not
firing you. I’m giving you a bonus.”
Kear sat gasping on the floor. “That’s
great, boss!” he exclaimed. “I thought I did an extra special job on the
plastics mill design. It’ll mean a lot to the company. We—”
“Yes. Dress quickly.”
Kear threw off his pajamas and
started stuffing arms and legs into his clothes. Mrs. Kear opened her eyes and
squeaked like a dying rabbit.
The bent rod in the boss’s hand
hissed, and Mrs. Kear stopped squeaking.
With tie flapping, shirt
unbuttoned, shoes unlaced, Kear followed the boss through the living room and
down the flagstone walk to the street. The boss opened the doors of the Honeychile Bakery truck and said, “In here.”
***
Mrs. Jane Huprich dropped her
mop. Her varicose legs trotted across the wet lobby of the Jordon Building, and
her flabby fat arms reached for the tall man with bright eyes who stood near
the elevators. “It’s me, Mom,” the man cried.
“Matt!” Mrs. Huprich cried. “Matt,
baby!”
“I got a full pardon, Mom,” Matt
said, stroking her tangled white hair. “Right from the ruling state official.
You won’t have to scrub floors anymore! I’m going straight, Mom. I’m a good
mechanic now. They learned me a lot in the enclosure. Come on. I got a used
truck outside, I bought cheap.”
Mrs. Huprich and son walked
through the oddly twisted doors of the Jordon Building and into the gray
twilight that awaited dawn. The Honeychile
Bakery truck waited too.
***
Gary Abston peddled his bicycle
against the flow of cars carrying day-shift workers through the half-light. He
whirled into Walnut Street, twisted a fresh copy of the Morning Herald into a fiendishly clever knot, and hurled it in the
general direction of a front porch that flashed past on his right. Never
slowing, Gary threw the next paper entirely across the street. He chuckled as
it cleared a picket fence.
“Bang, bang!” he blurted. His red
shirt, with a picture of a mounted cowboy on the back, ballooned in the early
morning breeze.
“Whoa!” Gary roared. He stopped,
held the bicycle upright with one foot on the pavement. A tall, lanky, slightly
bowlegged man with squinting luminous green eyes stood on the sidewalk. Gary
looked at the man. The newspapers fluttered to the parkway. The bicycle
clattered in the street.
“Howdy, partner!” the tall man
said. “The rustlers are headin’ for the plateau! We’ll take the short gash and
head ‘em off at the canyon!”
“Ramrod Jones?” Gary chirped.
“Here’s the truck I haul
Quizz-kid, the I.Q. Horse, in! Let’s get after the rustlers!” Jones said.
“Gee, I’ve seen all your
pictures, Ramrod,” Gary said. “Silver
City Raiders, Rustlers of Silver City, Silver City Rustlers—”
The great cowboy lifted the
newsboy into the Honeychile truck.
***
Pink and rose clouds drifted
through a brightening sky as the Honeychile
Bakery truck careened along a narrow road badly in need of rock and
grading. From the road, the truck rattled into a rutted track through dewy
woods and skidded swaying to a stop at the side of a long, low, grassy hill.
The tall creature dressed in
black, red-spotted fur stepped from the cab. An opening appeared in the
hillside. Four machines—dull metal eggs balancing on single tractor
treads--rolled silently through the opening. Jointed steel arms darted from
recesses in the eggs. One machine opened the truck doors.
The creature walked up a ramp
inside the hill and entered a shimmering metallic compartment.
“Greetings, Eo. I have returned.”
Eo, who wore a suit of white fur,
hummed, “None too soon, Za. We miscalculated dawn. What success?”
“An excellent group,” Za said. He
stretched and reclined on a transparent slab. “The servants are unloading the
vehicle. I captured a young male, a mature male, an aged male, some sort of
official or guardian male, a mature female, and an aged female.”
“Let’s view them,” Eo said. “You
can rest after we’re away.”
The tall creatures entered a
second compartment furnished with a large table upon which the silent machines
deposited inanimate bodies.
“Extraordinary!” said Eo, staring
at Miss Betsy Tapp. “These things have reached a peak of mammalian development!”
“Her correct garments are in this
bundle,” Za explained. “The servants are bringing the properties now. I secured
a signaling device and a box used in an extremely primitive system of
communication. Also, I brought the quaint muscle-powered vehicle ridden by the
young male. The photographs should be sufficient for other details.”
“Any difficulty?” Eo asked as the
machines dumped Patrolman Whedbee on the table.
“The language was the greatest
obstacle,” Za said. “The same word has many different meanings, or many
different words have the same meaning. Rather crude.”
“Did you use bait, or force?”
“Bait,” Za said. “It’s much
simpler. This is a completely selfish, egocentric breed. Most of them have one
thing in mind which they want solely for themselves. Their sending power is
weak, but that one selfish desire is powerful enough to be received. I merely
dangled it before their minds, and they were hooked.” He tapped the foot of
Calvin C. Kear. “I killed this one’s female companion. She awoke and screamed.
The males and females pair off and live together for years. Strange custom! Breeding
seems to be only one reason for the mutual bondage.”
Za pointed to Mrs. Jane Huprich. “The
old female may be an exception to the selfishness. I couldn’t decide whether
she most wanted to be relieved of cleaning floors by primitive methods, or
wanted her male offspring to be released from some structure where he had been
secured for reasons I couldn’t determine.”
The machines deposited the
Reverend Enos Shackelford and then lined up in a precise row. “This thing is
dead!” Eo buzzed.
Za shook his head. “That was the
only genuine exception. He confused me till I forgot his proper clothing, but
some can be devised from the other samples. He seems to have been a
witch-doctor. His mind was cluttered with myths and superstitions from an
ancient text. I don’t understand him, Eo, and wish I had time to study the
phenomena. He was different from the others. He believed in something and
considered himself lowly and humble. The minds of the others were in constant confusion.
They believed, actually, in nothing. Somehow, he saw me, Eo. I was forced to
kill him.”
“No harm done,” Eo decided. He
faced the machines and said, “Destroy the vehicle, draw in the camouflage net,
prepare for take-off.” The machines rolled from the compartment, and the two
creatures followed.
“Seal it,” Eo said. “I’ll
plasticize them when we’re in space. Fine work, Za. I can see the plaque now: ‘Mounted
by Eo, Collected by Za. Typical Street Corner on Planet Earth, Star Sol.’ The
directors will surely give the group a prominent place in the Galactic Museum
of Natural History!”
“Yes,” Za agreed, glancing back
at the Reverend Enos Shackelford. “This planet was a fortunate stopover.”
End
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