The Celestial Hammerlock
Galaxy Science Fiction October
1951
This bigtime space promoter could get the Horsehead Nebula in a flying
mare but pinning a planetoid is tougher!
SPACEGRAM
From: Jed Michaels,
Ryttuk, Eros
To: H. E. Horrocks,
Interplanetary Amusement Corp.,
Cosmopolis, Earth
I QUIT, YOU BALLOON BRAIN.
JED
***
ROCKET MAIL (Second Class)
Dear Michaels:
Your last message indicates you wish
to leave the employment of the Interplanetary Amusement Corp. Under our
employee policy, this is allowable, effective upon completion of your current
assignment. Under precedent set as long ago as 2347 A. D. the company will even
pay the cost of your message of resignation.
However, the words ‘you balloon
brain’ do not seem a necessary part of that message and will be deducted from
your salary.
Furthermore, I have a few words
of my own to say. You march straight into my office, Michaels, just as soon as
you get back from Eros. Eros? WHAT IN HELL ARE YOU DOING ON EROS?
Horrocks
***
ROCKET MAIL (First Class)
Mr. H. E. Horrocks
Dear Balloon Brain:
If you paid a little more
attention to your office and less to that golf course on Venus, you’d know what
I am doing on Eros. I got here two days ago via Mars with a herd of six
wrestlers, in accordance with your own written memorandum. We were to appear at
an Auruchs club smoker.
Upon arrival, I found that no
preparations had been made for us and nobody knows anything about an Auruchs
club.
The people here are nuts. They
talk in six syllable words and their idea of a good time is to sniff flowers
and do five dimensional calculus. They have less use for wrestlers than I have
for you.
Michaels
***
ROCKET MAIL (Second Class)
Michaels, you nitwit:
That wasn’t Eros, you idiot! You were supposed to go to Erie—Erie, Pa., right here on Earth!
If you remembered even your sixth
grade Solar System history, you would know that the planetoid Eros was settled
in 2141 by a group of longhairs headed by Prof. M. R. Snock, a philosopher with
a dozen university degrees.
He wanted to show that war, crime
and all forms of violence would disappear if people thought only beautiful
thoughts.
The planetoid is lousy rich with
erydnium ore and the people keep in luxury selling it to space freighters. They
spend their time being gentle and thinking beautiful. There hasn’t even been a
spitball thrown there in eight generations.
A fine place for you to show up mahouting six wrestlers with no foreheads.
You’re lucky they haven’t thrown you in jail.
Horrocks
***
ROCKET MAIL (Postage Due)
Mr. H. E. Horrocks
Dear Jellyhead:
What do you mean lucky? We are in
jail.
Right after we got here, the boys
decided they had been cramped in that local spaceship and needed a workout to
limber up. As soon as they got started, they were surrounded by a bunch of
scrawny males, all sniffing hollyhocks.
Their spokesman, a bald bird with
rosebuds in his whiskers, touched me with a gold-headed cane and said that
apparently we were not yet attuned to the high mental plane of the planetoid,
and would we mind going into protective custody while they worked over our egos
and cured our kineticism.
I said suppose we wouldn’t. He
looked shocked and waved his flower and said that then, although it had never
happened before, he supposed he would have to call the space patrol and have us
thrown into the hoosegow on Ganymede.
I translated that into basic
wrestler for the boys and we agreed we’d better go along. We’d heard about the
jail those tough space patrol babies operate on Ganymede.
The flower lovers took us to an
old erydnium pit and asked us to please go down. Now they’re perfuming us every
hour and feeding us flower bulbs to make us gentle.
We could climb out of this
rat-hole whenever we wanted, but that would be climbing straight into a striped
spacesuit. I think about you all the time. And if you think they’re beautiful thoughts,
you’re as crazy as I’ve always suspected.
Michaels
P.S. The boys asked that I
enclose this note from them:
Dear Mr. Horox:
We do not like it here Mr. Horox.
The Grub is no good. You come get us. Please Mr. Horox. Come soon.
Gorilla Man Thorpe
Choker Jonas
R. Z. Zbich, light-heavyweight
champion of the Moon, Mercury and the inner rings of Saturn
Gorgeous Gordon
Barefoot Charles Anya
X, the Faceless Wonder
***
ROCKET MAIL (First Class)
Mr. Jed Michaels
Mr. Michaels:
Don’t think you can sit around
doing nothing and collect pay from the Interplanetary Amusement Corp. You’re
suspended until you get out of there.
Horrocks
***
SPACEGRAM (Collect)
Mr. H. E. Horrocks,
Cosmopolis, Earth
MY RESIGNATION IS A MISTAKE. I
WITHDRAW IT. YOU ARE BEST OF ALL POSSIBLE BOSSES. IMPROBABLE AS IT
SEEMS, I LOVE YOU.
JED
***
SPACEGRAM
Mr. Jed Michaels,
Ryttuk, Eros
ONLY ONE POSSIBLE CAUSE FOR YOUR
LAST SPACEGRAM. HAS SHE A SISTER?
HANK
***
ROCKET MAIL (Second Class)
Mr. H. E. Horrocks
My dear employer and pal:
Eros is a wonderful asteroid!
Toward the end of the second day
in the pit, the wrestlers limbered up. Zbich and the Gorilla Man worked out on
headlocks, Gorgeous Gordon did calisthenics, and Barefoot Charley, Choker Jonas
and the Faceless Wonder got themselves into a grunting free-for-all.
After that got under way, I heard
a squeal and a girl came bounding down the pit side. She was young and
dark-haired and pretty. She might have been as intellectual as the president of
Harvard above the shoulders, but what a framework she had to hold up that
brain!
She went over to Gorgeous Gordon
and she said, “Ooh!” With all the flower lovers around here, it was probably
the first man with muscles she had ever seen.
The big ham swelled up. He flexed
his arms and stuck out his chest.
“OOH!” said the girl, and went
bounding back up the side of the pit.
I stopped the exercise and the
wrestlers sat and mused blankly at each other.
In a few minutes, our little
visitor was back again. With her were about a dozen pals, differing in details,
but resembling her in the important points.
The leader was a tall,
brown-haired, gray-eyed girl, with a face where intellect fought a losing
battle with a dimple. The others helped her down the pit side as if she were
something fragile and precious, like maybe a new bottle of perfume.
Then our pal went back to
Gorgeous Gordon. “More ooh!” said the girl guide.
You know how wrestlers are. They’ll
slap each other silly to get the cheers of four kids on a street corner, or
commit mayhem for a purse big enough to buy a ham hock. In five seconds, we had
going one of the finest wrestling matches in the history of good, clean
sportsmanship. And over the cracking of wrestler’s bones rose the shrieks of
the girls, showing that their throats were in the right place, even if their
brains weren’t.
The gray-eyed girl sat with me on
a flange of un-mined ore. She was Aliana, a direct descendant of the leader of
the Eros pioneers. As such, she was princess of the planetoid, although she
left most of the governing to a council of elders, apparently as outstanding an
array of mossbacks as ever smelled a gardenia or just plain smelled.
“I sometimes think, Mr. Michaels,”
Aliana told me. “That we of Eros have laid too much stress upon the cerebral. I
wonder if our lives would not be fuller if we also included some of the more
vigorous activities, such as the one in which those men are now engaged.”
“If it’s a vacation for your mind
that you want, Princess,” I agreed. “Those boys are your meat.”
Just then the Gorilla Man got a
leg split on Barefoot Charley and began to braid his toes.
“How stimulating,” breathed
Aliana. “What is proper for the onlooker to remark in such a situation?”
“A satisfactory outcry, Princess,”
I explained, “is, ‘Break it off!’“
“Break it off!” encouraged
Aliana.
I had to wind it up, finally,
before the wrestlers reduced themselves to blubber, thereby forcing the
Interplanetary Amusement Corp. to go out and lasso itself another herd.
The girls went giggling up the
side of the pit. At the top, Aliana waved at me. The others blew kisses, not
caring much where they landed, as long as the receiver had muscles.
Next morning, a young man came
into the pit. He announced that, upon Princes Aliana’s orders, we were to have
the freedom of Eros, so that contact with the planetoid culture could win us
from our uncouth ways.
He was too young to be wholly
gentled by the flowers and the council of elders. So the Choker showed him a
wristlock. And when the Choker tossed him on his ear in the erydnium ore, he
said words that were not beautiful. Maybe there’s something to the people of
this asteroid. Anyway, everything is great now. We wander wherever we please,
as long as we return to the pit to sleep. When nobody is looking, we sneak into
the royal palace courtyard and put on a wrestling show for the girls.
And the nights! Ah, the nights!
Don’t turn entirely green with
envy, Hankus. At least leave your nose the familiar red.
Jed
***
SPACEGRAM
To: Jed Michaels, Ryttuk, Eros
FINE WORK. RETURN IMMEDIATELY.
WILL MEET YOU AT MARS. MAYBE YOU CAN PERSUADE SOME OF THE GIRLS TO
ACCOMPANY YOU THAT FAR. AM SENDING THE WRESTLERS TO SATURN.
HANK
***
ROCKET MAIL (First Class)
To: H. E. Horrocks,
Cosmopolis, Earth
Dear Hank:
Go to Mars, the man says. I can’t
go anywhere. The elders caught us giving a rassle when Aliana was away and we’re
in again.
These flower roots taste
terrible.
Jed
***
SPACEGRAM
To: Jed Michaels,
Ryttuk, Eros
YOU BLUNDERING BABOON, YOU’RE
FIRED.
HORROCKS
***
ROCKET MAIL
(Free, Royal Frank)
Royal Palace, Eros
To: H. E. Horrocks,
Cosmopolis, Earth
Dear melon brain:
I gather from your last message
that you wish to discharge me. I accept the offer, fat boy. In fact, under
royal Eros precedent, which I made up three minutes ago, we will even pay for
your message. However, the words “you blundering baboon” do not seem a
necessary part of that message, and their cost will be taken out of the first
bit of business that the royal house of Eros decides to honor your puny little corporation
with.
If any.
Times are changed, Hankus. I’m a
big shot now.
***
A few hours after we got back in
the pit, Aliana came back and sneaked down to see us. She said she thought it
was about time to end this council of elders’ nonsense and she asked our help.
I told her plan to the wrestlers
in words of one syllable or less. They all agreed except the Faceless Wonder.
“I don’t see why I should have
nothing to do with no book,” he said. It seems he had had a book once and
chewed up the first three chapters before he found put it wasn’t something to
eat. I signaled to the boys. Zbich clamped a headlock on him. The Choker got a
hammerlock. The Gorilla Man took him in a scissors. Gorgeous Gordon got a
toehold and Barefoot Charley stood by to jump on his stomach.
“Do you understand now?” I asked
politely.
“Sure, Jed, sure,” said the
Faceless Wonder. “Why didn’t ya explain it to me in the first place?”
So the next morning, we yelled
for books. And for the following days, whenever anybody was around, we were
busy sniffing flowers and reading. Between times, I tried to explain to the
wrestlers why there weren’t more pictures in the books.
A week later, we sprang the trap.
I told the stable-hand who brought us our fodder that I had taken in so much
culture that I was breathing beauty. Zbich, gagging a little, asked for a
second helping of flower roots. Gorgeous Gordon requested a needle and thread;
he said he had fallen behind in his needlepoint.
A report of the conversation got
to the council of elders and it brought them to the lip of the pit, looking
like something the glue factory had refused to accept. Aliana was with them.
I bowed from the waist and made a
speech. I thanked the elders for showing me the error of my ways. I said that,
after staying in the lovely erydnium pit, I was enraptured with flowers, crazy
about culture and practically engaged in five dimension calculus. I asked that
I and the boys could have the priceless boon of walking freely around Eros, swapping
beautiful thoughts with the local yokels.
The elders went into a deep state
of flutter. Most of them were for accepting our proposition out of hand—which
was bad. Our old pal with the beard saved us.
“But I saw these men romping,” he
shrilled. He lowered his voice to a high alto. “Positively romping!”
“Perhaps these men could prove
their sincerity,” Aliana said, winking at me. “Perhaps one of them would
consent to illustrate what he has learned here by giving a public talk on some
scientific subject.”
“I should be glad,” I answered. “To
hack off a lecture for the good folk of Eros. Suppose I give it on anatomy.”
And so it was decided.
Exactly as we had planned.
There was an amphitheater which
the inhabitants of Eros had been using for ballets, string quartets and
lectures by such of the longhairs as got stuffed so full of long words that
they couldn’t keep them to themselves. I had ring-posts and ropes set up on the
platform, saying I needed them to illustrate my talk. I got into the ring with
Gorgeous Gordon and Zbich, who were dressed in trunks and bathrobes.
The wit and beauty of Eros was
assembled there, the beauty being represented by the girls, and the wit—such as
it was—by the council of elders. The rest of the seats were filled with other
forms, some of them tolerably easy to look at.
I had picked out the subject of
anatomy in the belief that none of the inhabitants of Eros knew anything about
it.
The men didn’t notice and the
women had nothing at all to look at, anyway.
I went into my act.
“Kind hosts, friends and
unfortunate incidents,” I said. “My topic is the science of anatomy. Now, the
science of anatomy is copacetic to the point of mopery. The cerebellum is
distended and the duodenum goes into a state of e pluribus unum. Incalculably,
thrombosis registers and the ectoplasm becomes elliptic. Or, in the vernacular,
the eight ball in the side pocket.”
The crowd sat stunned. Here and
there, a flower sniffer looked down at his own rack of bones to check my
statement.
“Let me illustrate,” I said. I
drew the bathrobes off the wrestlers.
The boys’ muscles rippled as they
strutted around the ring. From the women spectators came a long, deep sigh.
From that moment, we had half the audience with us—the female half.
“In anatomy,” I said, shaking my
finger to emphasize the point. “The wingback shifts outward for a lateral. In
the words of the great philosopher Hypocritus, the coil should always be kept
clean between the barrel and the tap and all excess collar should be removed
with a spatula.”
Nobody was listening to me; they
were looking at the wrestlers, which, of course, was what I’d figured on. Most
of the men were comparing the grunters’ muscles to their own, and here and
there a few were dropping their flowers onto the floor.
I signaled and in a second the
boys were an omelet of flying legs. The crowd gasped, then leaned forward
intently. The shrieking began when Gordon got a headlock on Zbich. It grew when
Zbich flipped Gorgeous with a flying mare. By the time Gordon got in a
billygoat butt, the amphitheater sounded like feeding time at the zoo.
But there was another sound, too.
Old Whiskers was tottering down the aisle, shrieking, “This is romping! Mere
romping!”
I signaled and the boys stopped.
“We need a third man to
illustrate the next point,” I said. “Perhaps the gentleman in the aisle will
volunteer.”
Two wrestlers grabbed Old
Whiskers and tossed him into the ring. Making fast double talk, I took off his
shirt and he stood there, stripped to the waist, blinking in the sun and
looking like a dehydrated squab.
The crowd noted the contrast
between his scrawniness and the muscles of the wrestlers. A roar of laughter
swept it.
“Perhaps,” I said. “The gentleman
would like to romp.”
Zbich made a grab for him and he
scuttled out of the ring, falling over the lower rope. A woman in the first row
slugged him with a gardenia.
“Sit down, you old fool!” She
turned to the wrestlers. “Break it off!” she shouted.
The match went on.
In my career, including my
medicine show days, I’ve had lots of easy marks, but nothing to compare to the
crowd at Eros’ first wrestling match. When Gorgeous took the first fall with a
body scissors, they went mad; when Zbich evened it up, they went hysterical;
when Zbich took the deciding fall, they were delirious. And at the end of the match
between Choker Jonas and the Faceless Wonder, they were reduced to a jelly. We
had to call off the third match for fear we would have to take them home in
jars.
At the end, we went in a body,
led by the wrestlers, and threw the council of elders into the erydnium pit. We
are keeping them now on a diet of raw meat.
The amphitheater has been
converted into a permanent wrestling arena. We’ve laid out a football and a
baseball field in the lyceum grove, and next week we’ll start turning the
botanical garden into a golf course.
To carry out the full program, we
shall have to buy some equipment and hire some talent. Whether we toss some of
the business to Interplanetary depends, Hankus boy, entirely on what attitude Interplanetary
takes toward you know who.
When you write your crawling
letter, you worm, address me as ‘Your Mightiness.’ I am minister of athletics
on Eros now and the second most important person on the planetoid.
My work takes me close to the
Princess Aliana. Very close.
Come to think of it, I wish there
was a moon on Eros. It’s not essential, but it helps.
So long, peasant.
JED
End
The sexy alien girl image is a free download. You
can get it here.
The other image is public domain.
A quick internet search revealed little about this
author. Either the original author, the original editor, or the transcriber did something funny after the last letter and I had to fix it by throwing in a scene break, right after 'big shot now'. The story reads well enough as it is.
Louis Shalako has books and stories available from Smashwords.
Some are always free.
Thank you for reading.
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