THE GODS THEMSELVES
Copyright © 1972 by Isaac Asimov.
e-book ver. 1.0
DEDICATION
To Mankind And the hope that the war against folly may someday be won, after all
NOTE
The story starts with section 6. This is not a mistake. I have my own subtle reasoning.
So just read and, I hope, enjoy.
1
Against stupidity
.
.
.
6
"No good!" said Lamont, sharply. "I didn't get anywhere." He had a brooding look about him that went with his deep-set eyes and the slight asymmetry of his long chin.
There was a brooding look about him at the best of times, and this was not the best of times. His second formal interview with Hallam had been a greater fiasco than the first.
"Don't be dramatic," said Myron Bronowski, placidly. "You didn't expect to. You told me that." He was tossing peanuts into the air and catching them in his plump-lipped mouth
as they came down. He never missed. He was not very tall, not very thin. "That doesn't make it pleasant. But you're right, it doesn't matter. There are other things I can
do and intend to do and, besides that, I depend on you. If you could only find out-" "Don't finish, Pete. I've heard it all before. All I have to do is decipher the thinking
of a non-human intelligence." "A better-than-human intelligence. Those creatures from the para-Universe are trying to make themselves understood." "That may be," sighed Bronowski,
"but they're trying to do it through my intelligence, which is better than human I sometimes think, but not much. Sometimes, in the dark of the night, I lie awake and wonder
if different intelligences can communicate at all; or, if I've had a particularly bad day, whether the phrase 'different intelligences' has meaning at all." "It does,"
said Lamont savagely, his hands clearly balling into fists within his lab coat pockets. "It means Hallam and me. It means that fool-hero, Dr. Frederick Hallam and me.
We're different intelligences because when I talk to him he doesn't understand. His idiot face gets redder and his eyes bulge and his ears block. I'd say his mind stops
functioning, but I lack the proof of any other state from which it might stop." Bronowski murmured, "What a way to speak of the Father of the Electron Pump." "That's it.
Reputed Father of the Electron Pump. A bastard birth, if ever there was one. His contribution was least in substance. I know." "I know, too. You've told me often,"
and Bronowski tossed another peanut into the air. He didn't miss.
1
It had happened thirty years before, Frederick Hallam was a radiochemist, with the print on his
doctoral dissertation still wet and with no sign whatever of being a world-shaker. What began the shaking of the world was the fact that a dusty reagent bottle
marked "Tungsten Metal" stood on his desk. It wasn't his; he had never used it. It was a legacy from some dim day when some past inhabitant of the office had wanted
tungsten for some long-forgotten reason. It wasn't even really tungsten any more. It consisted of small pellets of what was now heavily layered with oxide -gray and
dusty. No use to anyone. And one day Hallam entered the laboratory (well, it was October 3, 2070, to be exact), got to work, stopped shortly before 10 A.M., stared
transfixed at the bottle, and lifted it. It was as dusty as ever, the label as faded, but he called out, "God damn it; who the hell has been tampering with this?"
That, at least, was the account of Denison, who overheard the remark and who told it to Lamont a generation later. The official tale of the discovery, as reported
in the books, leaves out the phraseology. One gets the impression of a keen-eyed chemist, aware of change and instantly drawing deep-seated deductions. Not so.
Hallam had no use for the tungsten; it was of no earthly value to him and any tampering with it could be of no possible importance to him. However, he hated any
interference with his desk (as so many do) and he suspected others of possessing keen desires to engage in such interference out of sheer malice. No one at the time
admitted to knowing anything about the matter. Benjamin Allan Denison, who overheard the initial remark, had an office immediately across the corridor and both
doors were open. He looked up and met Hallam's accusatory eye. He didn't particularly like Hallam (no one particularly did) and he had slept badly the night before.
He was, as it happened and as he later recalled, rather pleased to have someone on whom to vent his spleen, and Hallam made the perfect candidate. When Hallam held
the bottle up to his face, Denison pulled back with clear distaste. "Why the devil should I be interested in your tungsten?" he demanded. "Why should anyone?
If you'll look at the bottle, you'll see that the thing hasn't been opened for twenty years; and if you hadn't put your own grubby paws on it, you would have
seen no one had touched it"
Hallam flushed a slow, angry red. He said, tightly, "Listen, Denison, someone has changed the contents. That's not the tungsten."
Denison allowed himself a small, but distinct sniff. "How would *you* know?"
Of such things, petty annoyance and aimless thrusts, is history made.
It would have been an unfortunate remark in any case. Denison's scholastic record, as fresh as Hallam's, was far more impressive and he was the
bright-young-man of the department. Hallam knew this and, what was worse, Denison knew it too, and made no secret of it Denison's "How would *you* know?"
with the clear and unmistakable emphasis on the "you," was ample motivation for all that followed. Without it, Hallam would never have become the greatest
and most revered scientist in history, to use the exact phrase Denison later used in his interview with Lament. Officially, Hallam had come in on that
fateful morning, noticed the dusty gray pellets gone-not even the dust on the inside surface remaining-and clear iron-gray metal in their place. Naturally,
he investigated- But place the official version to, one side. It was Denison. Had he confined himself to a simple negative, or a shrug, the chances are
that Hallam would have asked others, then eventually weariest of the unexplained event, put the bottle to one side, and let subsequent tragedy, whether
subtle or drastic (depending on how long the ultimate discovery was delayed), guide the future. In any event, it would not have been Hallam who rode the whirlwind
to the heights. With the "How would *you* know?" cutting him down, however, Hallam could only retort wildly, "I'll show you that I know." And after that, nothing
could prevent him from going to extremes. The analysis of the metal in the old container became his number-one priority, and his prime goal was to wipe the
haughtiness from Denison's thin-nosed face and the perpetual trace of a sneer from his pale lips. Denison never forgot that moment for it was his own remark
that drove Hallam to the Nobel Price and himself to oblivion. He had no way of knowing (or if he knew he would not then have cared) that there was an
overwhelming stubbornness in Hallam, the mediocrity's frightened need to safeguard his pride, that would carry the day at that time more than all Denison's
native brilliance would have. Hallam moved at once and directly. He carried his metal to the mass spectrography department. As a radiation chemist it was
a natural move. He knew the technicians there, he had worked with them, and he was forceful. He was forceful to such an effect, indeed, that the job was placed
ahead of projects of much greater pith and moment. The mass spectrographer said eventually, "Well, it isn't tungsten." Hallam's broad and humorless face wrinkled
into a harsh smile. "All right. Well tell that to Bright-boy Denison. I want a report and-" "But wait awhile, Dr. Hallam. I'm telling you it's not tungsten,
but that doesn't mean I know what it is." "What do you mean you don't know what it is." "I mean the results are ridiculous." The technician thought a while.
"Impossible, actually. The charge-mass ratio is all wrong." "All wrong in what way?" "Too high. It just can't be." "Well, then," said Hallam and, regardless
of the motive that was driving him, his next remark set him on the road to the Nobel Prize and, it might even be argued, a deserved one, "get the frequency
of its characteristic x-radiation and figure out the charge. Don't just sit around and talk about something being impossible." It was a troubled technician
who came into Hallam's office a few days later. Hallam ignored the trouble on the other's face-he was never sensitive-and said, "Did you find-" He then cast
a troubled look of his own at Denison, sitting at the desk in his own lab and shut the door. "Did you find the nuclear charge?" "Yes, but it's wrong."
"All right, Tracy. Do it over." "I did it over a dozen times. It's wrong." "If you made the measurement, that's it; Don't argue with the facts."
Tracy rubbed his ear and said, "I've got to, Doc. If I take the measurements seriously, then what you've given me is plutonium-186." "Plutonium-186?
Plutonium-186?" "The charge is +94. The mass is 186." "But that's impossible. There's no such isotope. There can't be." "That's what I'm saying to you.
But those are the measurements." "But a situation like that leaves the nucleus over fifty neutrons short. You can't have plutonium-186. You couldn't
squeeze ninety-four protons into one nucleus with only ninety-two neutrons and expect it to hang together for even a trillion-trillionth of a second."
"That's what I'm telling you, Doc," said Tracy, patiently. And then Hallam stopped to think. It was tungsten he was missing and one of its isotopes,
tungsten-186, was stable. Tungsten-186 had 74 protons and 112 neutrons in its nucleus. Could something have turned twenty neutrons into twenty protons?
Surely that was impossible. "Are there any signs of radioactivity?" asked Hallam, groping somehow for a road out of the maze. "I thought of that," said
the technician. "It's stable. Absolutely stable." "Then it can't be plutonium-186." "I keep telling you, Doc." Hallam said, hopelessly, "Well, give me
the stuff." Alone once more, he sat and looked at the bottle in stupefaction. The most nearly stable isotope of plutonium was plutonium-240, where
146 neutrons were needed to make the 94 protons stick together with some semblance of partial stability. What could he do now? It was beyond him and he was.
sorry he had started. After all, he had real work begging to be done, and this thing-this mystery-had nothing to do with him. Tracy had made some stupid
mistake or the mass spectrometer was out of whack, or- Well, what of it? Forget the whole thing! Except that Hallam couldn't do that. Sooner or later,
Denison would be bound to stop by and, with that irritating half-smile of his, ask after the tungsten. Then what could Hallam say? Could he say,
"It isn't tungsten, just as I told you" Surely Denison would ask, "Oh, and what is it, then?" and nothing imaginable could have made Hallam expose himself
to the kind of derision that would follow any claim that it was plutonium-186. He had to find out what it was, and he had to do it himself.
Clearly, he couldn't trust anyone. So about two weeks later he entered Tracy's laboratory in what can fairly be described as a first-class fury.
"Hey, didn't you tell me that stuff was non-radioactive?" "What stuff?" said Tracy automatically, before he remembered. "That stuff you called plutonium-186,"
said Hallam. "Oh. Well it was stable." "About as stable as your mental state. If you call this non-radioactive, you belong in a plumber's shop."
Tracy frowned. "Okay, Doc. Pass it over and let's try." And then he said, "Beats me! It is radioactive. Not much, but it is. I don't see how I
could have missed that." "And how far can I trust your crap about plutonium-186?" The matter had Hallam by the throat now. The mystery had become
so exasperating as to be a personal affront Whoever had switched bottles, or switched contents, must either have switched again or have devised a metal
for the specific purpose of making a fool of him. In either case, he was ready to pull the world apart to solve the matter if he had to-and if he could.
He had his stubbornness, and an intensity that could not easily be brushed aside, and he went straight to G. C. Kantrowitsch, who was then in the
final year of his own rather remarkable career. Kantrowitsch's aid was difficult to enlist but, once enlisted, it quickly caught fire. Two days later,
in fact, he was storming into Hallam's office in a blaze of excitement. "Have you been handling this thing with your hands?" "Not much," said Hallam.
"Well, don't If you've got any mere, don't. It's emitting positrons." "Oh?" "The most energetic positrons I've ever seen. . . . And your figures
on its radioactivity are too low." "Too low?" "Distinctly. And what bothers me is that every measurement I take is just a trifle higher than the one before."
6 (continued)
Bronowski came across an apple in the capacious pocket of his jacket and bit into it. "Okay, you've seen Hallam and been kicked out as expected. What
next?" "I haven't quite decided. But whatever it is, it's going to dump him on his fat behind. I saw him once before, you know; years ago, when I
first came here; when I thought he was a great man. A great man- He's the greatest villain in the history of science. He's rewritten the history of the
Pump, you know, rewritten it here-" Lamont tapped his temple. "He believes his own fantasy and fights for it with a diseased fury. He's a pygmy with only
one talent, the ability to convince others he's a giant." Lamont looked up at Bronowski's wide and placid face, wreathed now in amusement, and forced a laugh.
"Oh, well, that doesn't do any good, and I've told it all to you before anyway." "Many times," agreed Bronowski. "But it just gravels me to have the whole world-"
2
Peter Lament had been two years old when Hallam had picked up his altered tungsten for the first time. When he was twenty-five, he joined Pump Station One
with the print on his own doctoral dissertation still fresh and accepted a simultaneous appointment on the Physics faculty of the university. It was a remarkably
satisfactory achievement for the young man. Pump Station One was lacking in the glisten of the later stations but it was the granddaddy of them all, of the entire
chain that girdled the planet now even though the entire technology was only a couple of decades old. No major technological advance had ever caught hold so rapidly
and so entirely and why not? It meant free energy without limit and without problems. It was the Santa Claus and the Aladdin's lamp of the whole world. Lament had
taken the job in order to deal with problems of the highest theoretical abstraction and yet he found himself interested in the amazing story of the development of
the Electron Pump. It had never been written up in its entirety by someone who truly understood the theoretical principles (in so far as they could be understood)
and who had some ability in translating the complexities for the general public. To be sure, Hallam himself had written a number of articles for the popular media,
but these did not represent a connected, reasoned history -something Lament yearned to supply. He used Hallam's articles to begin with, other reminiscences in published
form--the official documents so to speak-carrying them through to Hallam's world-shaking remark, the Great Insight, as it was often called (invariably with capital
letters). Afterward, of course, when Lament had experienced his disillusionment, he began digging deeper, and the question arose in his mind as to whether Hallam's
great remark had really been Hallam's. It had been advanced at the seminar which marked the true beginning of the Electron Pump and yet, as it turned out, it was
extraordinarily difficult to get the details of that seminar and quite impossible to get the voice recordings. Eventually, Lamont began to suspect that the dimness
of the footprints left on the sands of time by that seminar was not entirely accidental. Putting several items ingeniously together, it began to seem that there was
a reasonable chance that John F. X. McFarland had said something very nearly like the crucial statement Hallam had made-and had done so before Hallam.
He went to see McFarland, who was featured not at all in the official accounts, and who was now doing upper-atmosphere research, with particular reference to
the Solar wind. It was not a top-echelon job, but it had its perquisites, and it had more than a little to do with Pump effects. McFarland had clearly avoided
suffering the fate of oblivion that had overtaken Denison. He was polite enough to Lament and willing to. talk on any subject except the events of that seminar.
That he simply didn't remember. Lamont insisted, quoted the evidence he had gathered. McFarland took out a pipe, filled it, inspected its contents thoroughly,
and said, with a queer intentness. "I don't choose to remember, because it doesn't matter; it really doesn't. Suppose I laid claim to having said something.
No
one
would
believe
it.
I
would
look
like
an
idiot
and
a
megalomaniac
one."
"And
Hallam
would
see
to
it
that
you
were
retired?"
"I'm
not
saying
that,
but
I
don't
see
that
it
would
do
me
any
good.
What's
the
difference,
anyway?"
"A
matter
of
historical
truth!"
said
Lamont
"Oh,
bull.
The
historical
truth
is
that
Hallam
never
let
go.
He
drove
everyone
into
investigating,
whether
they
wanted
to
or
not.
Without
him,
that
tungsten
would
eventually
have
exploded
with
I
don't
know
how
many
casualties.
There
might
never
have
been
another
sample,
and
we
might
never
have
had
the
Pump.
Hallam
deserves
the
credit
for
it,
even
if
he
doesn't
deserve
the
credit,
and
if
that
doesn't
make
sense,
I
can't
help
it,
because
history
doesn't
make
sense."
Lament
wasn't
satisfied
with
that,
but
he
had
to
make
it
do,
for
McFarland
would
simply
say
no
more.
Historical
truth!
One
piece
of
historical
truth
that
seemed
beyond
question
was
that
it
was
the
radioactivity
that
pulled
"Hallam's
tungsten"
(this
is
what
it
was
called
as
a
matter
of
historical
custom)
into
the
big
time.
It
didn't
matter
whether
it
was
or
was
not
tungsten;
whether
it
had
or
had
not
been
tampered
with;
even
whether
it
was
or
was
not
an
impossible
isotope.
Everything
was
swallowed
up
in
the
amazement
of
something,
anything,
which
showed
a
constantly
increasing
intensity
of
radioactivity
under
circumstances
that
ruled
out
the
existence
of
any
type
of
radioactive
breakdown,
in
any
number
of
steps,
then
known.
After
a
while,
Kantrowitsch
muttered,
"We'd
better
spread
it
out.
If
we
keep
it
in
sizable
lumps
it
will
vaporize
or
explode
or
both
and
contaminate
half
the
city."
So
it
was
powdered
and
scattered,
and
mixed
with
ordinary
tungsten
at
first
and
then,
when
the
tungsten
grew
radioactive
in
its
turn,
it
was
mixed
with
graphite,
which
had
a
lower
cross-section
to
the
radiation.
Less
than
two
months
after
Hallam
had
noticed
the
change
in
the
bottle's
contents,
Kantrowitsch,
in
a
communication
to
the
editor
of
Nuclear
Reviews,
with
Hallam's
name
appended
as
co-author,
announced
the
existence
of
plutonium-186.
Tracy's
original
determination
was
thus
vindicated
but
his
name
was
not
mentioned,
either
then
or
later.
With
that
Hallam's
tungsten
began
to
take
on
an
epic
scale
and
Denison
began
to
note
the
changes
that
ended
by
making
him
a
non-person.
The
existence
of
plutonium-186
was
bad
enough.
To
have
been
stable
at
the
start
and
to
display
a
curiously
increasing
radioactivity
was
much
worse.
A
seminar
to
handle
the
problem
was
organized.
Kantrowitsch
was
in
the
chair,
which
was
an
interesting
historical
note,
for
it
was
the
last
time
in
the
history
of
the
Electron
Pump
that
a
major
meeting
was
held
in
connection
with
it
that
was
chaired
by
anyone
but
Hallam.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
Kantrowitsch
died
five
months
later
and
the
only
personality
with
sufficient
prestige
to
keep
Hallam
in
the
shade
was
removed.
The
meeting
was
extraordinarily
fruitless
until
Hallam
announced
his
Great
Insight,
but
in
the
version
as
reconstructed
by
Lamont,
the
real
turning
point
came
during
the
luncheon
break.
At
that
time,
McFarland,
who
is
not
credited
with
any
remarks
in
the
official
records,
although
he
was
listed
as
an
attendee,
said
"You
know,
what
we
need
is
a
little
bit
of
fantasy
here.
Suppose-"
He
was
speaking
to
Diderick
van
Klemens,
and
Van
Klemens
reported
it
sketchily
in
a
kind
of
personal
shorthand
in
his
own
notes.
Long
before
Lamont
had
succeeded
in
tracking
that
down,
Van
Klemens
was
dead,
and
though
his
notes
convinced
Lamont
himself,
he
had
to
admit
they
would
not
make
a
convincing
story
without
further
corroboration.
What's
more,
there
was
no
way
of
proving
that
Hallam
had
overheard
the
remark.
Lamont
would
have
been
willing
to
bet
a
fortune
that
Hallam
was
within
earshot,
but
that
willingness
was
not
satisfactory
proof
either.
And
then,
suppose
Lamont
could
prove
it.
It
might
hurt
Hallam's
egregious
pride,
but
it
couldn't
really
shake
his
position.
It
would
be
argued
that
to
McFarland,
the
remark
was
only
fantasy.
It
was
Hallam
who
accepted
it
as
something
more.
It
was
Hallam
who
was
willing
to
stand
up
in
front
of
the
group
and
say
it
officially
and
risk
the
derision
that
might
be
his.
McFarland
would
surely
never
have
dreamed
of
placing
himself
on
official
record
with
his
"little
bit
of
fantasy."
Lamont
might
have
counter-argued
that
McFarland
was
a
well-known
nuclear
physicist
with
a
reputation
to
lose,
while
Hallam
was
a
young
radiochemist
who
could
say
anything
he
pleased
in
nuclear
physics
and,
as
an
outsider,
get
away
with
it.
In
any
case,
this
is
what
Hallam
said,
according
to
the
official
transcript:
"Gentlemen,
we
are
getting
nowhere.
I
am
therefore
going
to
make
a
suggestion,
not
because
it
necessarily
makes
sense,
but
because
it
represents
less
nonsense
than
anything
else
I've
heard.
.
.
.
We
are
faced
with
a
substance,
plutonium-186,
that
cannot
exist
at
all,
let
alone
as
an
even
momentarily
stable
substance,
if
the
natural
laws
of
the
Universe
have
any
validity
at
all.
It
follows,
then,
that
since
it
does
indubitably
exist
and
did
exist
as
a
stable
substance
to
begin
with,
it
must
have
existed,
at
least
to
begin
with,
in
a
place
or
at
a
time
or
under
circumstances
where
the
natural
laws
of
the
Universe
were
other
than
they
are.
To
put
it
bluntly,
the
substance
we
are
studying
did
not
originate
in
our
Universe
at
all,
but
in
another-an
alternate
Universe-a
parallel
Universe.
Call
it
what
you
want.
"Once
here-and
I
don't
pretend
to
know
how
it
got
across-it
was
stable
still
and
I
suggest
that
this
was
because
it
carried
the
laws
of
its
own
Universe
with
it.
The
fact
that
it
slowly
became
radioactive
and?
then
ever
more
radioactive
may
mean
that
the
laws
of
our
own
Universe
slowly
soaked
into
its
substance,
if
you
know
what
I
mean.
"I
point
out
that
at
the
same
time
that
the
plutonium-186
appeared,
a
sample
of
tungsten,
made
up
of
several
stable
isotopes,
including
tungsten-186,
disappeared.
It
may
have
slipped
over
into
the
parallel
Universe.
After
all,
it
is
logical
to
suppose
that
it
is
simpler
for
an
exchange
of
mass
to
take
place
than
for
a
one-way
transfer
to
do
so.
In
the
parallel
Universe,
tungsten-186
may
be
as
anomalous
as
plutonium-186
is
here.
It
may
begin
as
a
stable
substance
and
slowly
become
increasingly
radioactive.
It
may
serve
as
an
energy
source
there
just
as
plutonium-186
would
here."
The
audience
must
have
been
listening
with
considerable
astonishment
for
there
is
no
record
of
interruption,
at
least
until
the
sentence
last
recorded
above,
at
which
time
Hallam
seemed
to
have
paused
to
catch
his
breath
and
perhaps
to
wonder
at
his
own
temerity.
Someone
from
the
audience
(presumably
Antoine-Jerome
Lapin,
though
the
record
is
not
clear)
asked
if
Professor
Hallam
were
suggesting
that
an
intelligent
agent
in
the
para-Universe
had
deliberately
made
the
exchange
in
order
to
obtain
an
energy
source.
The
expression
"para-Universe,"
inspired
apparently
as
an
abbreviation
of
"parallel-Universe,"
thus
entered
the
language.
This
question
contained
the
first
recorded
use
of
the
expression.
There
was
a
pause
and
then
Hallam,
more
daring
than
ever,
said-and
this
was
the
nub
of
the
Great
Insight-
"Yes,
I
think
so,
and
I
think
that
the
energy
source
cannot
be
made
practical
unless
Universe
and
para-Universe
work
together,
each
at
one
half
of
a
pump,
pushing
energy
from
them
to
us
and
from
us
to
them,
taking
advantage
of
the
difference
in
the
natural
laws
of
the
two
Universes."
Hallam
had
adopted
the
word
"para-Universe"
and
made
it
his
own
at
this
point.
Furthermore,
he
became
the
first
to
use
the
word
"pump"
(since
invariably
capitalized)
in
connection
with
the
matter.
There
is
a
tendency
in
the
official
account
to
give
the
impression
that
Hallam's
suggestion
caught
fire
at
once,
but
it
did
not.
Those
who
were
willing
to
discuss
it
at
all
would
commit
themselves
no
farther
than
to
say
it
was
an
amusing
speculation.
Kantrowitsch,
in
particular,
did
not
say
a
word.
This
was
crucial
to
Hallam's
career.
Hallam
could
scarcely
carry
through
the
theoretical
and
practical
implications
of
his
own
suggestion
all
by
himself,
A
team
was
required
and
it
was
built
up.
But
none
of
the
team,
until
it
was
too
late,
would
associate
himself
openly
with
the
suggestion.
By
the
time
success
was
unmistakable,
the
public
had
grown
to
think
of
it
as
Hallam's
and
Hallam's
alone.
It
was
Hallam,
to
all
the
world,
and
Hallam
alone,
who
had
first
discovered
the
substance,
who
had
conceived
and
transmitted
the
Great
Insight;
and
it
was
therefore
Hallam
who
was
the
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump.
Thus,
in
various
laboratories,
pellets
of
tungsten
metal
were
laid
out
temptingly.
In
one
out
of
ten
the
transfer
was
made
and
new
supplies
of
plutonium-186
were
produced.
Other
elements
were
offered
as
bait
and
refused.
.
.
.
But
wherever
the
plutonium-186
appeared
and
whoever
it
was
that
brought
the
supply
to
the
central
research
organization
working
on
the
problem,
to
the
public
it
was
an
additional
quantity
of
"Hallam's-tungsten."
It
was
Hallam
again
who
presented
some
aspects
of
the
theory
to
the
public
most
successfully.
To
his
own
surprise
(as
he
later
said)
he
found
himself
to
be
a
facile
writer,
and
he
enjoyed
popularizing.
Besides
success
has
its
own
inertia,
and
the
public
would
accept
information
on
the
project
from
no
one
but
Hallam.
In
a
since
famous
article
in
the
North
American
Sunday
Tele-Times
Weekly,
he
wrote,
"We
cannot
say
in
how
many
different
ways
the
laws
of
the
para-Universe
differ
from
our
own,
but
we
can
guess
with
some
assurance
that
the
strong
nuclear
interaction,
which
is
the
strongest
known
force
in
our
Universe,
is
even
stronger
in
the
para-Universe;
perhaps
a
hundred
times
stronger.
This
means
that
protons
are
more
easily
held
together
against
their
own
electrostatic
attraction
and
that
a
nucleus
requires
fewer
neutrons
to
produce
stability.
"Plutonium-186,
stable
in
their
Universe,
contains
far
too
many
protons,
or
too
few
neutrons,
to
be
stable
in
ours
with
its
less
effective
nuclear
interaction.
The
plutonium-186,
once
in
our
Universe,
begins
to
radiate
positrons,
releasing
energy
as
it
does
so,
and
with
each
positron
emitted,
a
proton
within
a
nucleus
is
converted
to
a
neutron.
Eventually,
twenty
protons
per
nucleus
have
been
converted
to
neutrons
and
plutonium-186
has
become
tungsten-186,
which
is
stable
by
the
laws
of
our
own
Universe.
In
the
process,
twenty
positrons
per
nucleus
have
been
eliminated.
These
meet,
combine
with,
and
annihilate
twenty
electrons,
releasing
further
energy,
so
that
for
every
plutonium-186
nucleus
sent
to
us,
our
Universe
ends
up
with
twenty
fewer
electrons.
"Meanwhile,
the
tungsten-186
that
enters
the
para-Universe
is
unstable
there
for
the
opposite
reason.
By
the
laws
of
the
para-Universe
it
has
too
many
neutrons,
or
too
few
protons.
The
tungsten-186
nuclei
begin
to
emit
electrons,
releasing
energy
steadily
while
doing
so,
and
with
each
emitted
electron
a
neutron
changes
to
a
proton
until,
in
the
end,
it
is
plutonium-186
again.
With
each
tungsten-186
nucleus
sent
into
the
para-Universe,
twenty
more
electrons
are
added
to
it.
"The
plutonium/tungsten
can
make
its
cycle
endlessly
back
and
forth
between
Universe
and
para-Universe,
yielding
energy
first
in
one
and
then
in
another,
with
the
net
effect
being
a
transfer
of
twenty
electrons
from
our
Universe
to
their
per
each
nucleus
cycled.
Both
sides
can
gain
energy
from
what
is,
in
effect,
an
Inter-Universe
Electron
Pump."
The
conversion
of
this
notion
into
reality
and
the
actual
establishment
of
the
Electron
Pump
as
an
effective
energy
source
proceeded
with
amazing
speed,
and
every
stage
of
its
success
enhanced
Hallam's
prestige.
3
Lament
had
no
reason
to
doubt
the
basis
of
that
prestige
and
it
was
with
a
certain
hero-worshipfulness
(the
memory
of
which
embarrassed
him
later
and
which
he
strove-with
some
success-to
eliminate
from
his
mind)
that
he
first
applied
for
a
chance
to
interview
Hallam
at
some
length
in
connection
with
the
history
he
was
planning.
Hallam
seemed
amenable.
In
thirty
years,
his
position
in
public
esteem
had
become
so
lofty
one
might
wonder
why
his
nose
did
not
bleed.
Physically,
he
had
aged
impressively,
if
not
gracefully.
There
was
a
ponderousness
to
his
body
that
gave
him
the
appearance
of
circumstantial
weightiness
and
if
his
face
were
gross
in
its
features
he
seemed
able
to
give
them
the
air
of
a
kind
of
intellectual
repose.
He
still
reddened
quickly
and
the
easily
bruised
nature
of
his
self-esteem
was
a
byword.
Hallam
had
undergone
some
quick
briefing
before
Lamont's
entrance.
He
said,
"You
are
Dr.
Peter
Lamont
and
you've
done
good
work,
I'm
told,
on
para-theory.
I
recall
your
paper.
On
para-fusion,
wasn't
it?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Well,
refresh
my
memory.
Tell
me
about
it.
Informally,
of
course,
as
though
you
were
talking
to
a
layman.
After
all,"
and
he
chuckled
here,
"in
a
way,
I
am
a
layman.
I'm
just
a
radiochemist,
you
know;
and
no
great
theoretician,
unless
you
want
to
count
a
few
concepts
now
and
then."
Lament
accepted
this,
at
the
time,
as
a
straightforward
statement,
and,
indeed,
the
speech
may
not
have
been
as
obscenely
condescending
as
he
later
insisted
on
remembering
it
to
have
been.
It
was
typical,
though,
as
Lament
later
found
out,
or
at
least
maintained,
of
Hallam's
method
of
grasping
the
essentials
of
the
work
done
by
others.
He
could
talk
briskly
about
the
subject
thereafter
without
being
overparticular,
or
particular
at
all,
in
assigning
credit.
But
the
younger
Lament
of
the
time
was
rather
flattered,
and
he
began
at
once
with
that
voluble
eagerness
one
experiences
in
explaining
one's
own
discoveries.
"I
can't
say
I
did
much,
Dr.
Hallam.
Deducing
the
laws
of
nature
of
the
para-Universe-the
para-laws-is
a
tricky
business.
We
have
so
little
to
go
on.
I
started
from
what
little
we
know
and
assumed
no
new
departures
that
we
had
no
evidence
for.
With
a
stronger
nuclear
interaction,
it
seems
obvious
that
the
fusion
of
small
nuclei
would
take
place
more
readily."
"Para-fusion,"
said
Hallam.
"Yes,
sir.
The
trick
was
simply
to
work
out
what
the
details
might
be.
The
mathematics
involved
was
somewhat
subtle
but
once
a
few
transformations
were
made,
the
difficulties
tended
to
melt
away.
It
turns
out,
for
instance,
that
lithium
hydride
can
be
made
to
undergo
catastrophic
fusion
at
temperatures
four
orders
of
magnitude
lower
there
than
here.
It
takes
fission-bomb
temperatures
to
explode
lithium
hydride
here,
but
a
mere
dyamite
charge,
so
to
speak,
would
turn
the
trick
in
the
para-Universe.
Just
possibly
lithium
hydride
in
the
para-Universe
could
be
ignited
with
a
match,
but
that's
not
very
likely.
We've
offered
them
lithium
hydride,
you
know,
since
fusion
power
might
be
natural
for
them,
but
they
won't
touch
it"
"Yes,
I
know
that."
"It
would
clearly
be
too
risky
for
them;
like
using
nitroglycerine
in
ton-lots
in
rocket
engines-only
worse."
"Very
good.
And
you
are
also
writing
a
history
of
the
Pump."
"An
informal
one,
sir.
When
the
manuscript
is
ready
I
will
ask
you
to
read
it,
if
I
may,
so
that
I
might
have
the
benefit
of
your
intimate
knowledge
of
events.
In
fact,
I
would
like
to
take
advantage
of
some
of
that
knowledge
right
now
if
you
have
a
little
time."
"I
can
make
some.
What
is
it
you
want
to
know?"
Hal-lam
was
smiling.
It
was
the
last
time
he
ever
smiled
in
Lament's
presence.
"The
development
of
an
effective
and
practical
Pump,
Professor
Hallam,
took
place
with
extraordinary
speed,"
began
Lamont
"Once
the
Pump
Project-"
"The
Inter-Universe
Electron
Pump
Project,"
corrected
Hallam,
still
smiling.
"Yes,
of
course,"
said
Lamont,
clearing
his
throat.
"I
was
merely
using
the
popular
name.
Once
the
project
started,
the
engineering
details
were
developed
with
great
rapidity
and
with
little
waste
motion."
"That
is
true,"
said
Hallam,
with
a
touch
of
complacence.
"People
have
tried
to
tell
me
that
the
credit
was
mine
for
vigorous
and
imaginative
direction,
but
I
wouldn't
care
to
have
you
overstress
that
in
your
book.
The
fact
is
that
we
had
an
enormous
fund
of
talent
in
the
project,
and
I
wouldn't
want
the
brilliance
of
individual
members
to
be
dimmed
by
any
exaggeration
of
my
role."
Lamont
shook
his
head
with
a
little
annoyance.
He
found
the
remark
irrelevant.
He
said,
"I
don't
mean
that
at
all.
I
mean
the
intelligence
at
the
other
end-the
para-men,
to
use
the
popular
phrase.
They
started
it.
We
discovered
them
after
the
first
transfer
of
plutonium
for
tungsten;
but
they
discovered
us
first
in
order
to
make
the
transfer,
working
on
pure
theory
without
the
benefit
of
the
hint
they
.
gave
us.
And
there's
the
iron-foil
they
sent
across-"
Hallam's
smile
had
now
disappeared,
and
permanently.
He
was
frowning
and
he
said
loudly,
"The
symbols
were
never
understood.
Nothing
about
them-"
"The
geometric
figures
were
understood,
sir.
I've
looked
into
it
and
it's
quite
clear
that
they
were
directing
the
geometry
of
the
Pump.
It
seems
to
me
that-"
Hallam's
chair
shoved
back
with
an
angry
scrape.
He
said,
"Let's
not
have
any
of
that,
young
man.
We
did
the
work,
not
they."
"Yes-but
isn't
it
true
that
they-"
"That
they
what?"
Lamont
became
aware
now
of
the
storm
of
emotion
he
had
raised,
but
he
couldn't
understand
its
cause.
Uncertainly,
he
said,
"That
they
are
more
intelligent
than
we-
that
they
did
the
real
work.
Is
there
any
doubt
of
that,
sir?"
Hallam,
red-faced,
had
heaved
himself
to
his
feet
"There
is
every
doubt,"
he
shouted."!
will
not
have
mysticism
here.
There
is
too
much
of
that.
See
here,
young
man,"
he
advanced
on
the
still
seated
and
thoroughly
astonished
Lamont
and
shook
a
thick
finger
at
him,
"if
your
history
is
going
to
take
the
attitude
that
we
were
puppets
in
the
hands
of
the
para-men,
it
will
not
be
published
from
this
institution;
or
at
all,
if
I
have
my
way.
I
will
not
have
mankind
and
its
intelligence
downgraded
and
I
won't
have
para-men
cast
in
the
role
of
gods."
Lamont
could
only
leave,
a
puzzled
man,
utterly
upset
at
having
created
harsh
feeling
where
he
had
wanted
only
to
have
good
will.
And
then
he
found
that
his
historical
sources
were
suddenly
drying
up.
Those
who
had
been
loquacious
enough
a
week
earlier
now
remembered
nothing
and
had
no
time
for
further
interviews.
Lamont
was
irritated
at
first
and
then
a
slow
anger
began
to
build
within
him.
He
looked
at
what
he
had
from
a
new
viewpoint,
and
now
he
began
to
squeeze
and
insist
where
earlier
he
had
merely
asked.
When
he
met
Hallam
at
department
functions,
Hallam
frowned
and
looked
through
him
and
Lamont
began
to
look
scornful
in
his
turn.
The
net
result
was
that
Lamont
found
his
prime
career
as
para-theoretician
beginning
to
abort
and
turned
more
firmly
than
ever
toward
his
secondary
career
as
science-historian.
6 (continued)
"That damned fool," muttered Lament, reminiscently. "You had to be there, Mike, to see him go into panic at any suggestion that it was the other side that was the moving force.
I look back on it and I wonder-how was it possible to meet him, however casually, and not know he would react that way. Just be grateful you never had to work with him." "I
am," said Bronowski, indifferently, "though there are times you're no angel." "Don't complain. With your sort of work you have no problems." "Also no interest. Who cares about
my sort of work except myself and five others in the world. Maybe six others -if you remember." Lamont remembered. "Oh, well," he said. 4 Bronowski's placid exterior never fooled
anyone who grew to know him even moderately well. He was sharp and he worried a problem till he had the solution or till he had it in such tatters that he knew no solution was
possible. Consider the Etruscan inscriptions on which he had built his reputation. The language had been a living one till the first century A.D., but the cultural imperialism
of the Romans had left nothing behind and it had vanished almost completely. What inscriptions survived the carnage of Roman hostility and-worse-indifference were written in Greek
letters so that they could be pronounced, but nothing more. Etruscan seemed to have no relationship to any of the surrounding languages; it seemed very archaic; it seemed not even
to be Indo-European. Bronowski therefore passed on to another language that seemed to have no relationship to any of the surrounding languages; that seemed very archaic; that
seemed not even to be Indo-European-but which was very much alive and which was spoken in a region not so very far from where once the Etruscans had lived. What of the Basque
language? Bronowski wondered. And he used Basque as his guide. Others had tried this before him and given up. Bronowski did not. It was hard work, for Basque, an extraordinarily
difficult language in itself, was only the loosest of helps. Bronowski found more and more reason, as he went on, to suspect some cultural connection between the inhabitants of
early northern Italy and early northern Spain. He could even make out a strong case for a broad swatch of pre-Celts filling western Europe with a language of which Etruscan and
Basque were dimly-related survivors. In two thousand years, however, Basque had evolved and had become more than a little contaminated with Spanish. To try, first, to reason
out its structure in Roman times and then relate it to Etruscan was an intellectual feat of surpassing difficulty and Bronowski utterly astonished the world's philologists when
he triumphed. The Etruscan translations themselves were marvels of dullness and had no significance whatever; routine funerary inscriptions for the most part. The fact of the
translation, however, was stunning and, as it turned out, it proved of the greatest importance to Lamont. -Not at first. To be perfectly truthful about it, the translations had
been a fact for nearly five years before Lamont had as much as heard that there were such people, once, as the Etruscans. But then Bronowski came to the university to give one
of the annual Fellowship Lectures and Lament, who usually shirked the duty of attending which fell on the faculty members, did not shirk this one. It was not because he recognized
its importance or felt any interest in it whatever. It was because he was dating a graduate student in the Department of Romance Languages and it was either that or a music festival
he particularly wanted to avoid hearing. The social connection was a feeble one, scarcely satisfactory from Lament's point of view and only temporary, but it did get him to the talk.
He rather enjoyed it, as it happened. The dim Etruscan civilization entered his consciousness for the first time as a matter of distant interest, and the problem of solving an
undeciphered language struck him as fascinating. When young, he had enjoyed solving cryptograms, but had put them away with other childish things in favor of the much grander
cryptograms posed by nature, so that he ended in para-theory. Yet Bronowski's talk took him back to the youthful joys of making slow sense of what seemed a random collection of
symbols, and combined it with sufficient difficulty to add great honor to the task. Bronowski was a cryptogram-mist on the grandest scale, and it was the description of the steady
encroachment of reason upon the unknown that Lament enjoyed. All would yet have gone for nothing-the triple coincidence of Bronowski's appearance at campus, Lament's youthful
cryptogrammic enthusiasm, the social pressure of an attractive young lady-were it not for the fact that it was the next day that Lamont saw Hallam and placed himself firmly and,
as he eventually found, permanently, in the doghouse. Within an hour of the conclusion of that interview, Lamont determined to see Bronowski. The issue at hand was the very one
that had seemed so obvious to himself and that had so offended Hallam. Because it brought down censure on him, Lamont felt bound to strike back-and in connection with the point of
censure specifically. The para-men were more intelligent than man. Lamont had believed it before in a casual sort of way as something more obvious than vital. Now it had become
vital. It must be proved and the fact of it forced down the throat of Hal-lam; sideways, if possible, and with all the sharp corners exposed. Already Lamont found himself so far
removed from his so-recent hero worship that he relished the prospect. Bronowski was still on campus and Lamont tracked him down and insisted on seeing him. Bronowski was blandly
courteous, when finally cornered. Lamont acknowledged the courtesies brusquely, introduced himself with clear impatience, and said, "Dr. Bronowski, I'm delighted to have caught
you before you left I hope that I will persuade you to stay here even longer." Bronowski said, "That may not be hard. I have been offered a position on the university faculty."
"And you will accept the position?" "I am considering it. I think I may." "You must. You will, when you hear what I have to say. Dr. Bronowski, what is there for you to do now
that you've solved the Etruscan inscriptions?" "That is not my only task, young man." (He was five years older than Lamont.) "I'm an archaeologist, and there is more to Etruscan
culture than its inscriptions and more to pre-classical Italic culture than the Etruscans." "But surely nothing as exciting for you, and as challenging, as the Etruscan inscriptions?"
"I grant you that." "So you would welcome something even more exciting, even more challenging, and something a trillion times as significant as those inscriptions." "What have you
in mind, Dr.-Lamont?" "We have inscriptions that are not part of a dead culture, or part of anything on Earth, or part of anything in the Universe. We have something called para-symbols."
"I've heard of them. For that matter, I've seen them." "Surely, then, you have the urge to tackle the problem, Dr. Bronowski? You have had the desire to work out what they say?"
"No desire at all, Dr. Lament, because there's no problem." Lament stared at him suspiciously, "You mean you can read them?" Bronowski shook his head. "You mistake me. I
mean I can't possibly read them, nor can anyone else. There's no base. In the case of Earthly languages, however dead, there is always the chance of finding a living language,
or a dead language already deciphered, that bears some relationship to it, however faint. Failing that, there is at least the fact that any Earthly language was written by
human beings with human ways of thought. That makes a starting point, however feeble. None of this is the case with the para-symbols, so that they constitute a problem that
clearly has no solution. An insolubility is not a problem." Lamont had kept himself from interrupting only with difficulty, and now he burst out, "You are wrong, Dr. Bronowski.
I don't want to seem to be teaching you your profession but you don't know some of the facts that my own profession has uncovered. We are dealing with para-men, concerning whom
we know almost nothing. We don't know what they are like, how they think, what kind of world they live on; almost nothing, however basic and fundamental. So far, you are right."
"But it's only almost nothing that you know, is that it?" Bronowski did not seem impressed. He took out a package of dried figs from his pocket opened them and began to eat. He
offered it to Lamont, who shook his head. Lamont said, "Right. We do know one thing of crucial importance. They are more intelligent than we are. Item one: They can make
the exchange across the inter-Universe gap, while we can play only a passive role." He interrupted himself here to ask, "Do you know anything about the Inter-Universe Electron Pump?"
"A little," said Bronowski. "Enough to follow you, Doctor, if you don't get technical." Lamont hastened on. "Item two: They sent us instructions as to how to set up our part
of the Pump. We couldn't understand it but we could make out the diagrams just sufficiently well to give us the necessary hints. Item Three: They can somehow sense us. At
least they can become aware of our leaving tungsten for them to pick up, for instance. They know where it is and can act upon it We can do nothing comparable. There are other points
but this is enough to show the para-men to be clearly more intelligent than we are." Bronowski said, "I imagine, though, that you are in the minority here. Surely your colleagues
don't accept this." "They don't. But what makes you come to that conclusion?" "Because you're clearly wrong, it seems to me." "My facts are correct And since they are, how can
I be wrong?" "You are merely proving the technology of the para-men is more advanced than ours. What has that to do with intelligence? See here"-Bronowski rose to take off his jacket
and then sat down in a half-reclining position, the soft rotundity of his body seeming to relax and crease in great comfort as though physical ease helped him think- "about two and a
half
centuries
ago,
the
American
naval
commander
Matthew
Perry
led
a
flotilla
into
Tokyo
harbor.
The
Japanese,
till
then
isolated,
found
themselves
faced
with
a
technology
considerably
beyond
their
own
and
decided
it
was
unwise
to
risk
resistance.
An
entire
warlike
nation
of
millions
was
helpless
in
the
face
of
a
few
ships
from
across
the
sea.
Did
that
prove
that
Americans
were
more
intelligent
than
the
Japanese
were,
or
merely
that
Western
culture
had
taken
a
different
turning?
Clearly
the
latter,
for
within
half
a
century,
the
Japanese
had
successfully
imitated
Western
technology
and
within
another
half
a
century
were
a
major
industrial
power
despite
the
fact
that
they
were
disastrously
beaten
in
one
of
the
wars
of
the
time."
Lamont
listened
gravely,
and
said,
"We
thought
that,
too,
Dr.
Bronowski,
though
I
didn't
know
about
the
Japanese-I
wish
I
had
the
time
to
read
history.
Yet
the
analogy
is.
wrong.
It's
more
than
technical
superiority;
it's
a
matter
of
difference
in
degree
of
intelligence."
"How
can
you
tell,
aside
from
guessing?"
"Because
of
the
mere
fact
that
they
sent
us
directions.
They
were
eager
for
us
to
set
up
our
part
of
the
Pump;
they
had
to
have
us
do
it.
They
could
not
physically
cross
over;
even
their
thin
foils
of
iron
on
which
their
messages
were
incised
(the
substance
most
nearly
stable
in
either
world)
slowly
grew
too
radioactive
to
keep
in
one
piece,
though,
of
course,
not
before
we
had
made
permanent
copies
on
our
own
materials."
He
paused
for
breath,
feeling
himself
to
be
too
excited,
too
eager.
He
mustn't
oversell
his
case.
Bronowski
regarded
him
curiously.
"All
right,
they
sent
us
messages.
What
are
you
trying
to
deduce
from
that?"
"That
they
expected
us
to
understand.
Could
they
be
such
fools
as
to
send
us
rather
intricate
messages,
in
some
cases
quite
lengthy,
if
they
knew
we
would
not
understand?
...
If
it
hadn't
been
for
their
diagrams,
we
would
have
ended
nowhere.
Now
if
they
had
expected
us
to
understand,
it
could
only
be
because
they
felt
that
any
creatures
like
ourselves
with
a
technology
roughly
as
advanced
as
their
own
(and
they
must
have
been
able
to
estimate
that
somehow-another
point
in
favor
of
my
belief)
must
also
be
roughly
as
intelligent
as
themselves
and
would
experience
little
difficulty
in
working
out
something
from
the
symbols."
"That
might
also
be
just
their
naivete,"
said
Bronowski,
unimpressed.
"You
mean
they
think
there
is
only
one
language,
spoken
and
written,
and
that
another
intelligence
in
another
Universe
speaks
and
writes
as
they
do?
Come
on!"
Bronowski
said,
"Even
if
I
were
to
grant
your
point,
what
do
you
want
me
to
do?
I've
looked
at
the
para-symbols;
I
suppose
every
archaeologist
and
philologist
on
Earth
has.
I
don't
see
what
I
can
do;
neither,
I'm
sure,
does
anyone
else.
In
over
twenty
years,
no
progress
has
been
made."
Lament
said,
intensely,
"What's
true
is
that
in
twenty
years,
there
has
been
no
desire
for
progress.
The
Pump
Authority
does
not
want
to
solve
the
symbols."
"Why
shouldn't
they
want
to?"
"Because
of
the
annoying
possibility
that
communication
with
the
para-men
mil
show
them
to
be
distinctly
more
intelligent.
Because
that
would
show
human
beings
to
be
the
puppet-partners
in
connection
with
the
Pump
to
the
hurt
of
their
ego.
And,
specifically,"
(and
Lament
strove
to
keep
venom
out
of
his
voice)
"because
Hallam
would
lose
the
credit
for
being
the
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump."
"Suppose
they
did
want
to
make
progress.
What
could
be
done?
The
will
is
not
the
deed,
you
know."
"They
could
get
the
para-men
to
cooperate.
They
could
send
messages
to
the
para-Universe.
This
has
never
been
done,
but
it
could
be.
A
message
on
metal
foil
might
be
placed
under
a
pellet
of
tungsten."
"Oh?
Are
they
still
looking
for
new
samples
of
tungsten,
even
with
Pumps
in
operation?"
"No,
but
they'll
notice
the
tungsten
and
they'll
assume
we're
trying
to
use
it
to
attract
their
attention.
We
might
even
place
the
message
on
tungsten
foil
itself.
If
they
take
the
message
and
make
any
sense
of
it
at
all,
even
the
slightest,
they'll
send
back
one
of
their
own,
incorporating
their
findings.
They
might
set
up
an
equivalence
table,
of
their
words
and
ours,
or
they
might
use
a
mixture
of
their
words
and
ours.
It
will
be
a
kind
of
alternate
push,
first
on
their
side,
then
on
ours,
then
on
theirs,
and
so
on."
"With
their
side,"
said
Bronowski,
"doing
most
of
the
work."
"Yes."
Bronowski
shook
his
head.
"No
fun
in
that,
is
there?
It
doesn't
appeal
to
me."
Lament
looked
at
him
with
flaring
anger.
"Why
not?
Don't
you
think
there'll
be
enough
credit
in
it
for
you?
Not
enough
fame?
What
are
you,
a
connoisseur
of
fame?
What
kind
of
fame
did
you
get
out
of
the
Etruscan
inscriptions,
damn
it.
You
beat
out
five
others
in
the
world.
Maybe
six.
With
them
you're
a
household
word
and
a
success
and
they
hate
you.
What
else?
You
go
about
lecturing
on
the
subject
before
audiences
amounting
to
a
few
dozen
and
they
forget
your
name
the
day
after.
Is
that
what
you're
really
after?"
"Don't
be
dramatic."
"All
right.
I
won't
be.
I'll
get
someone
else.
It
may
take
longer
but,
as
you
say,
the
para-men
will
do
most
of
the
work
anyway.
If
necessary,
I'll
do
it
myself."
"Have
you
been
assigned
this
project?"
"No,
I
haven't.
What
of
it?
Or
is
that
another
reason
you
don't
want
to
get
involved.
Disciplinary
problems?
There
is
no
law
against
attempting
translation
and
I
can
always
place
tungsten
on
my
desk.
I
will
not
choose
to
report
any
messages
I
get
in
place
of
the
tungsten
and
to
that
extent
I
will
be
breaking
the
research-code.
Once
the
translation
is
made,
who
will
complain?
Would
you
work
with
me
if
I
guaranteed
your
safety
and
kept
your
part
in
it
secret?
You
would
lose
your
fame
but
you
may
value
your
security
more.
Oh,
well,"
Lament
shrugged,
"If
I
do
it
myself,
there's
the
advantage
of
not
having
to
worry
about
someone
else's
security."
He
rose
to
go.
Both
men
were
angry
and
bore
themselves
with
that
stiff-legged
courtesy
one
assumes
when
addressing
someone
who
is
hostile,
but
still
mannerly.
"I
presume,"
said
Lament,
"you
will
at
least
treat
this
conversation
as
confidential."
Bronowski
was
on
his
feet,
too.
"Of
that
you
may
be
assured,"
he
said
coldly,
and
the
two
shook
hands
briefly.
Lamont
did
not
expect
to
hear
from
Bronowski
again.
He
then
began
the
process
of
talking
himself
into
believing
it
would
be
better
to
handle
the
translation
effort
on
his
own.,
Two
days
later,
however,
Bronowski
was
at
Lament's
laboratory.
He
said,
rather
brusquely,
"I'm
leaving
the
city
now,
but
I'll
be
back
in
September.
I'm
taking
the
position
here
and,
if
you're
still
interested,
I'll
see
what
I
can
do
about
the
translation
problem
you
mentioned."
Lamont
had
barely
time
for
a
surprised
expression
of
thanks
when
Bronowski
stalked
off,
apparently
angrier
at
having
given
in,
than
at
having
resisted.
They
became
friends
in
time;
and,
in
time,
Lamont
learned
what
had
brought
Bronowski
around.
The
day
after
their
discussion,
Bronowski
had
had
lunch
at
the
Faculty
Club
with
a
group
of
the
higher
officials
of
the
university,
including,
of
course,
the
president.
Bronowski
had
announced
that
he
would
accept
the
position
and
send
in
a
formal
letter
to
that
effect
in
due
time
and
all
had
expressed
gratification.
The
president
had
said,
"It
will
be
quite
a
feather
in
our
cap
to
have
the
renowned
translator
of
the
Itascan
Inscriptions
at
the
university.
We
are
honored."
The
malapropism
had
gone
uncorrected,
of
course,
and
Bronowski's
smile,
though
strained,
did
not
actually
waver.
Afterward,
the
head
of
the
Department
of
Ancient
History
explained
the
president
to
be
more
of
a
Minnesotan
than
a
classical
scholar
and
since
Lake
Itasca
was
the
point
of
origin
of
the
mighty
Mississippi,
the
slip
of
the
tongue
was
a
natural
one.
But,
in
combination
with
Lament's
sneer
at
the
extent
of
his
fame,
Bronowski
found
the
expression
rankling.
When
Lamont
finally
heard
the
story,
he
was
amused.
"Don't
go
on,"
he
said.
"I've been down that road, too. You said to yourself, 'By God, I'll do something even that knot-head will have to get straight.'" "A little like that,"
said Bronowski.
5
A year's work, however, had netted them very little. Messages had finally come across; messages had come back. Nothing. "Just guess!" Lamont had said feverishly to
Bronowski. "Any wild guess at all. Try it out on them." "It's exactly what I'm doing, Pete. What are you so jumpy about? I spent twelve years on the Etruscan Inscriptions.
Do you expect this job to take less time?" "Good God, Mike. We can't take twelve years." "Why not? Look, Pete, it hasn't escaped me that there's been a change in your attitude.
You've been impossible this last month or so. I thought we had it clear at the start that this work can't go quickly, and that we've got to be patient. I thought you
understood that I had my regular duties at the university, too. Look, I've been asking you this several times, now. Let me ask again. Why are you in such a hurry now?"
"Because I'm in a hurry," said Lament abruptly. "Because I want to get on with it." "Congratulations," said Bronowski, dryly, "so do L Listen, you're not expecting an
early death, are you? Your doctor hasn't told you you're hiding a fatal cancer?" "No, no," groaned Lamont. "Well, then?" "Never mind," said Lamont, and he walked away hurriedly.
When he had first tried to get Bronowski to join forces with him, Lament's grievance had concerned only Hallam's mean-minded obstinacy concerning the suggestion that the para-men were
the more intelligent. It was in that respect and that respect only that Lamont was striving for a breakthrough. He intended nothing beyond that-at first. But in
the course of the following months, he had been subjected to endless exasperation. His requests for equipment, for technical assistance, for computer time were delayed; his request for
travel funds snubbed; his views at interdepartmental meetings invariably overlooked. The breaking point came when Henry Garrison, junior to himself in point of service and
definitely so in point of ability, received an advisory appointment, rich in prestige, that, by all rights, should have gone to Lamont. It was then that Lament's resentment built
up to the point where merely proving himself right was no longer sufficient. He yearned to smash Hallam, destroy him utterly. The feeling was reinforced every day, almost every
hour, by the unmistakable attitude of everyone else at the Pump Station. Lamont's abrasive personality didn't collect sympathy, but some existed nevertheless. Garrison himself was embarrassed.
He
was
a
quiet-spoken,
amiable
young
man
who
clearly
wanted
no
trouble
and
who
now
stood
in
the
doorway
of
Lamont's
lab
with
an
expression
that
had
more
than
a
small
component
of
apprehension
in
it.
He
said,
"Hey,
Pete,
can
I
have
a
few
words
with
you?"
"As
many
as
you
like,"
said
Lament,
frowning
and
avoiding
a
direct
eye-to-eye
glance.
Garrison
came
in
and
sat
down.
"Pete,"
he
said,
"I
can't
turn
down
the
appointment
but
I
want
you
to
know
I
didn't
push
for
it.
It
came
as
a
surprise."
"Who's
asking
you
to
turn
it
down?
I
don't
give
a
damn."
"Pete.
It's
Hallam.
If
I
turned
it
down,
it
would
go
to
someone
else,
not
you.
What
have
you
done
to
the
old
man?"
Lamont
rounded
on
the
other.
"What
do
you
think
of
Hallam?
What
kind
of
man
is
he,
in
your
opinion?"
Garrison
was
caught
by
surprise.
He
pursed
his
lips
and
rubbed
his
nose.
"Well-"
he
said,
and
let
the
sound
fade
off.
"Great
man?
Brilliant
scientist?
Inspiring
leader?"
"Well-"
"Let
me
tell
you.
The
man's
a
phony!
He's
a
fraud!
He's
got
this
reputation
and
this
position
of
his
and
he's
sitting
on
it
in
a
panic.
He
knows
that
I
see
through
him
and
that's
what
he
has
against
me."
Garrison
gave
out
a
small,
uneasy
laugh,
"You
haven't
gone
up
to
him
and
said-"
"No,
I
haven't
said
anything
directly
to
him,"
said
Lamont,
morosely.
"Some
day
I
will.
But
he
can
tell.
He
knows
I'm
one
person
he
isn't
fooling
even
if
I
don't
say
anything."
"But,
Pete,
where's
the
point
in
letting
him
blow
it?
I
don't
say
I
think
he's
the
world's
greatest,
either,
but
where's
the
sense
in
broadcasting
it?
Butter
him
up
a
little.
He's
got
your
career
in
his
hands."
"Has
he?
I've
got
his
reputation
in
mine.
I'm
going
to
show
him
up.
I'm
going
to
strip
him."
"How?"
"My
business!"
muttered
Lamont,
who
at
the
moment
had
not
the
slightest
idea
as
to
how.
"But
that's
ridiculous,"
said
Garrison.
"You
can't
win.
Hell
just
destroy
you.
Even
if
he
isn't
an
Einstein
or
an
Oppenheimer
really,
he's
more
than
either
to
the
world
in
general.
He
is
the
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump
to
Earth's
two-billion
population
and
nothing
you
can
possibly
do
will
affect
them
as
long
as
the
Electron
Pump
is
the
key
to
human
paradise.
While
that's
true,
Hallam
can't
be
touched
and
you're
crazy
if
you
think
he
can.
What
the
hell,
Pete,
tell
him
he's
great
and
eat
crow.
Don't
be
another
Denison!"
"I
tell
you
what,
Henry,"
said
Lament,
in
sudden
fury.
"Why
not
mind
your
own
business?"
Garrison
rose
suddenly
and
left
without
a
word.
Lamont
had
made
another
enemy;
or,
at
least,
lost
another
friend.
The
price,
however,
was
right,
he
finally
decided,
for
one
remark
of
Garrison
had
set
the
ball
rolling
in
another
direction.
Garrison
had
said,
in
essence,
"...
as
long
as
the
Electron
Pump
is
the
key
to
human
paradise
.
.
.
Hallam
can't
be
touched."
With
that
clanging
in
his
mind,
Lamont
for
the
first
time
turned
his
attention
away
from
Hallam
and
placed
it
on
the
Electron
Pump.
Was
the
Electron
Pump
the
key
to
human
paradise?
Or
was
there,
by
Heaven,
a
catch?
Everything
in
history
had
had
a
catch.
What
was
the
catch
to
the
Electron
Pump?
Lamont
knew
enough
of
the
history
of
para-theory
to
know
that
the
matter
of
"a
catch"
had
not
gone
unexplored.
When
it
was
first
announced
that
the
basic
over-all
change
in
the
Electron
Pump
was
the
Pumping
of
electrons
from
the
Universe
to
the
para-Universe,
there
had
not
been
wanting
those
who
said
immediately,
"But
what
will
happen
when
all
the
electrons
have
been
Pumped?"
This
was
easily
answered.
At
the
largest
reasonable
rate
of
Pumping,
the
electron
supply
would
last
for
at
least
a
trillion
trillion
years-and
the
entire
Universe,
together,
presumably,
with
the
para-Universe,
wouldn't
last
a
tiny
fraction
of
that
time.
The
next
objection
was
more
sophisticated.
There
was
no
possibility
of
Pumping
all
the
electrons
across.
As
the
electrons
were
Pumped,
the
para-Universe
would
gain
a
net
negative
charge,
and
the
Universe
a
net
positive
charge.
With
each
year,
as
this
difference
in
charge
grew,
it
would
become
more
difficult
to
Pump
further
electrons
against
the
force
of
the
opposed
charge-difference.
It
was,
of
course
neutral
atoms
that
were
actually
Pumped
but
the
distortion
of
the
orbital
electrons
in
the
process
created
an
effective
charge
which
increased
immensely
with
the
radioactive
changes
that
followed.
If
the
charge-concentration
remained
at
the
points
of
Pumping,
the
effect
on
the
orbit-distorted
atoms
being
Pumped
would
stop
the
entire
process
almost
at
once,
but
of
course,
there
was
diffusion
to
take
into
account.
The
charge-concentration
diffused
outward
over
the
Earth,
and
the
effect
on
the
Pumping
process
had
been
calculated
with
that
in
mind.
The
increased
positive
charge
of
the
Earth
generally
forced
the
positively
charged
Solar
wind
to
avoid
the
planet
at
a
greater
distance,
and
the
magnetosphere
was
enlarged.
Thanks
to
the
work
of
McFarland
(the
real
originator
of
the
Great
Insight
according
to
Lament)
it
could
be
shown
that
a
definite
equilibrium
point
was
reached
as
the
Solar
wind
swept
away
more
and
more
of
the
accumulating
positive
particles
that
were
repelled
from
Earth's
surface
and
driven
higher
into
the
exosphere.
With
each
increase
in
Pumping
intensity;
with
each
additional
Pumping
Station
constructed,
the
net
positive
charge
on
Earth
increased
slightly,
and
the
magnetosphere
expanded
by
a
few
miles.
The
change,
however,
was
minor,
and
the
positive
charge
was,
in
the
end,
swept
away
by
the
Solar
wind
and
spread
through
the
outer
reaches
of
the
Solar
system.
Even
so-even
allowing
for
the
most
rapid
possible
diffusion
of
the
charge-the
time
would
come
when
the
local
charge-difference
between
Universe
and
para-Universe
at
the
points
of
Pumping
would
grow
large
enough
to
end
the
process,
and
that
would
be
a
small
fraction
of
the
time
it
would
take
really
to
use
up
all
the
electrons;
roughly,
a
trillion-trillionth
of
the
time.
But
that
still
meant
that
Pumping
would
remain
possible
for
a
trillion
years.
Only
a
single
trillion
years,
but
that
was
enough;
it
would
suffice.
A
trillion
years
was
far
longer
than
man
would
last,
or
the
Solar
system
either.
And
if
man
somehow
did
last
that
long
(or
some
creature
that
was
man's
successor
and
supplanter)
then
no
doubt
something
would
be
devised
to
correct
the
situation.
A
great
deal
could
be
done
in
a
trillion
years.
Lamont
had
to
agree
to
that.
But
then
he
thought
of
something
else,
another
line
of
thought
that
he
well
remembered
Hallam
himself
had
dealt
with
in
one
of
the
articles
he
had
written
for
popular
consumption.
With
some
distaste,
he
dug
out
the
article.
It
was
important
to
see
what
Hallam
had
said
before
he
carried
the
matter
further.
The
article
said,
in
part,
"Because
of
the
ever-present
gravitational
force,
we
have
come
to
associate
the
phrase
'downhill'
with
the
kind
of
inevitable
change
we
can
use
to
produce
energy
of
the
sort
we
can
change
into
useful
work.
It
is
the
water
running
downhill
that,
in
past
centuries,
turned
wheels
which
in
turn
powered
machinery
such
as
pumps
and
generators.
But
what
happens
when
all
the
water
has
run
downhill?
"There
can
then
be
no
further
work
possible
till
the
water
has
been
returned
uphill-and
that
takes
work.
In
fact,
it
takes
more
work
to
force
the
water
uphill
than
we
can
collect
by
then
allowing
it
to
flow
downhill.
We
work
at
an
energy-loss.
Fortunately,
the
Sun
does
the
work
for
us.
It
evaporates
the
oceans
so
that
water
vapor
climbs
high
in
the
atmosphere,
forms
clouds,
and
eventually
falls
again
as
rain
or
snow.
This
soaks
the
ground
at
all
levels,
fills
the
springs
and
streams,
and
keeps
the
water
forever
running
downhill.
"But
not
quite
forever.
The
Sun
can
raise
the
water
vapor,
but
only
because,
in
a
nuclear
sense,
it
is
running
downhill,
too.
It
is
running
downhill
at
a
rate
immensely
greater
than
any
Earthly
river
can
manage,
and
when
all
of
it
has
run
downhill
there
wilt
be
nothing
we
know
of
to
pull
it
uphill
again,
"All
sources
of
energy
in
our
Universe
run
down.
We
can't
help
that.
Everything
is
downhill
in
just
one
direction,
and
we
can
force
a
temporary
uphill,
backward,
only
by
taking
advantage
of
some
greater
downhill
in
the
vicinity.
If
we
want
useful
energy
forever,
we
need
a
road
that
is
downhill
both
ways.
That
is
a
paradox
in
our
Universe;
it
stands
to
reason
that
whatever
is
downhill
one
way
is
uphill
going
back.
"But
need
we
confine
ourselves
to
our
Universe
alone?
Think
of
the
para-Universe.
It
has
roads,
too,
that
are
downhill
in
one
direction
and
uphill
in
the
other.
Those
roads,
however,
don't
fit
in
with
our
roads.
It
is
possible
to
take
a
road
from
the
para-Universe
to
our
Universe
that
is
downhill,
but
which,
when
we
follow
it
back
from
the
Universe
to
the
para-Universe,
is
downhill
again-because
the
Universes
have
different
laws
of
behavior.
"The
Electron
Pump
takes
advantage
of
a
road
that
is
downhill
both
ways.
The
Electron
Pump-"
Lament
looked
back
at
the
title
of
the
piece
again.
It
was
"The
Road
that
is
Downhill
Both
Ways."
He
began
thinking.
The
concept
was,
of
course,
a
familiar
one
to
him,
as
was
its
thermodynamic
consequences.
But
why
not
examine
the
assumptions?
That
had
to
be
the
weak
point
in
any
theory.
What
if
the
assumptions,
assumed
to
be
right
by
definition,
were
wrong?
What
would
be
the
consequences
if
one
started
with
other
assumptions?
Contradictory
ones?
He
started
blindly
but
within
a
month
he
had
that
feeling
that
every
scientist
recognizes-the
endless
click-click
as
unexpected
pieces
fall
into
place,
as
annoying
anomalies
become
anomalous
no
more-
It
was
the
feel
of
Truth.
It
was
from
that
moment
on
that
he
began
to
put
additional
pressure
on
Bronowski.
And
one
day
he
said,
"I'm
going
to
see
Hallam
again."
Bronowski's
eyebrows
lifted.
"What
for?"
"To
have
him
turn
me
down."
"Yes,
that's
about
your
speed,
Pete.
You're
unhappy
if
your
troubles
die
down
a
bit."
"You
don't
understand.
It's
important
to
have
him
refuse
to
listen
to
me.
I
can't
have
it
said
afterward
that
I
by-passed
him;
that
he
was
ignorant
of
it."
"Of
what?
Of
the
translation
of
the
para-symbols?
There
isn't
any
yet.
Don't
jump
the
gun,
Pete."
"No,
no,
not
that,"
and
he
would
say
no
more.
Hallam
did
not
make
it
easy
for
Lament;
it
was
some
weeks
before
he
could
find
time
to
see
the
younger
man.
Nor
did
Lament
intend
to
make
it
easy
for
Hallam.
He
stalked
in
with
every
invisible
bristle
on
edge
and
sharply
pointed.
Hallam
waited
for
him
frozen-faced,
with
sullen
eyes.
Hallam
said
abruptly,
"What's
this
crisis
you're
talking
about?"
"Something's
turned
up,
sir,"
said
Lament,
tonelessly,
"inspired
by
one
of
your
articles."
"Oh?"
Then,
quickly,
"Which
one?"
"
'The
Road
that
is
Downhill
Both
Ways,'
The
one
you
programmed
for
Teenage
Life,
sir."
"And
what
about
it?"
"I
believe
the
Electron
Pump
is
not
downhill
both
ways,
if
I
may
use
your
metaphor,
which
is
not,
as
it
happens,
a
completely
accurate
way
of
describing
the
Second
Law
of
Thermodynamics."
Hallam
frowned.
"What
have
you
got
in
mind?"
"I
can
explain
it
best,
sir,
by
setting
up
the
Field
Equations
for
the
two
Universes,
sir,
and
demonstrating
an
interaction
that
till
now
has
not
been
considered-unfortunately
so,
in
my
opinion."
With
that,
Lament
moved
directly
to
the
thixo-board
and
quickly
fingered
the
equations,
talking
rapidly
as
he
did
so.
Lamont
knew
that
Hallam
would
be
humiliated
and
irritated
by
such
a
procedure
since
he
would
not
follow
the
mathematics.
Lamont
counted
on
that.
Hallam
growled,
"See
here,
young
man,
I
have
no
time
now
to
engage
in
a
full
discussion
of
any
aspect
of
para-theory.
You
send
me
a
complete
report
and,
for
now,
if
you
have
some
brief
statement
as
to
what
you're
getting
at,
you
may
make
it."
Lamont
walked
away
from
the
thixo-board,
with
an
unmistakable
expression
of
contempt
on
his
face.
He
said,
.
"All
right.
The
Second
Law
of
Thermodynamics
describes
a
process
that
inevitably
chops
off
extremes.
Water
doesn't
run
downhill;
what
really
happens
is
that
extremes
of
gravitational
potential
are
equalized.
Water
will
just
as
easily
bubble
uphill
if
trapped
underground.
You
can
get
work
out
of
the
juxtaposition
of
two
different
temperature
levels,
but
the
end
result
is
that
the
temperature
is
equalized
at
an
intermediate
level;
the
hot
body
cools
down
and
the
cold
body
warms
up.
Both
cooling
and
warming
are
equal
aspects
of
the
Second
Law
and,
under,
the
proper
circumstances,
equally
spontaneous."
.
"Don't
teach
me
elementary
thermodynamics,
young
man.
What
is
it
you
want?
I
have
very
little
time."
Lamont
said,
with
no
change
of
expression,
no
sense
of
being
hurried.
"Work
is
obtained
out
of
the
Electron
Pump
by
an
equalization
of
extremes.
In
this
case,
the
extremes
are
the
physical
laws
of
the
two
Universes,
The
conditions
that
make
those
laws
possible,
whatever
those
conditions
may
be,
are
being
bled
from
one
Universe
into
the
other
and
the
end
result
of
the
entire
process
will
be
two
Universes
in
which
the
laws
of
nature
will
be
identical
-and
intermediate
as
compared
with
the
situation
now.
Since
this
will
produce
uncertain
but
undoubtedly
large
changes
in
this
Universe,
it
would
seem
that
serious
consideration
must
be
given
to
stopping
the
Pumps
and,
shutting
down
the
whole
operation
permanently."
It
was
at
this
point
that
Lamont
expected
Hallam
to
explode,
cutting
off
any
chance
of
further
explanation.
Hallam
did
not
fail
that
expectation.
He
sprang
out
of
his
chair,
which
fell
over.
He
kicked
the
chair
away
and
took
the
two
steps
that
separated
him
from
Lamont.
Warily,
Lamont
pushed
his
own
chair
hastily
backward
and
stood
up.
"You
idiot,"
shouted
Hallam,
almost
stammering
in
his
anger.
"Don't
you
suppose
everyone
at
the
station
understands
about
the
equalization
of
natural
law.
Are
you
wasting
my
time
telling
me
something
I
knew
when
you
were
learning
to
read?
Get
out
of
here,
and
any
time
you
want
to
offer
me
your
resignation,
consider
it
accepted."
Lament
left,
having
obtained
exactly
what
he
wanted,
and
yet
he
felt
himself
to
be
furious
over
Hallam's
treatment
of
him.
6 (concluded)
"Anyway,"
said
Lamont,
"it
clears
the
ground.
I've
tried
to
tell
him.
He
wouldn't
listen.
So
I
take
the
next
step."
"And
what
is
that?"
said
Bronowski.
"I'm
going
to
see
Senator
Burt."
"You
mean
the
head
of
the
Committee
on
Technology
and
the
Environment?"
"The
same.
You've
heard
of
him,
then."
"Who
hasn't.
But
where's
the
point,
Pete.
What
have
you
got
that
would
interest
him?
It's
not
the
translation.
Pete,
I'm
asking
you
once
again.
What
have
you
got
on
your
mind?"
"I
can't
explain.
You
don't
know
para-theory."
"Does
Senator
Burt?"
"More
than
you,
I
think."
Bronowski
pointed
his
finger.
"Pete,
let's
not
kid
around.
Maybe
I
know
things
you
don't.
We
can't
work
together
if
we
work
against
each
other.
Either
I'm
a
member
of
this
little
two-man
corporation
or
I'm
not.
You
tell
me
what's
on
your
mind,
and
I'll
tell
you
something
in
exchange.
Otherwise,
let's
stop
this
altogether."
Lamont
shrugged.
"All
right.
If
you
want
it,
I'll
give
it
to
you.
Now
that
I've
got
it
past
Hallam,
maybe
it's
just
as
well.
The
point
is
that
the
Electron
Pump
is
transferring
natural
law.
In
the
para-Universe,
the
strong
interaction
is
a
hundred
times
stronger
than
it
is
here,
which
means
that
nuclear
fission
is
much
more
likely
here
than
there,
and
nuclear
fusion
is
much
more
likely
there
than
here.
If
the
Electron
Pump
keeps
on
long
enough,
there
will
be
a
final
equilibrium
in
which
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
will
be
equally
strong
in
both
Universes,
and
be
at
a
figure
about
ten
times
what
it
is
here
now
and
one-tenth
what
it
is
there
now."
"Didn't
anyone
know
this?"
"Oh,
sure,
everyone
knew
it.
It
was
obvious
almost
from
the
start.
Even
Hallam
can
see
it.
That's
what
got
the
bastard
so
excited.
I
started
telling
him
this
in
detail
as
though
I
didn't
think
he
had
ever
heard
it
before
and
he
blew
up."
"But
what's
the
point
then?
Is
there
danger
in
the
interaction
becoming
intermediate?"
"Of
course.
What
do
you
think?"
"I
don't
think
anything.
When
will
it
become
intermediate?"
"At
the
present
rate,
1030
years
or
so."
"How
long
is
that?"
"Long
enough
for
a
trillion
trillion
Universes
like
this
one
to
be
born,
live,
grow
old,
and
die,
one
after
the
other."
"Oh
blazes,
Pete.
What
odds
does
it
make
then?"
"Because
to
reach
that
figure,"
said
Lamont,
slowly
and
carefully,
"which
is
the
official
one,
certain
assumptions
were
made
which
I
think
were
wrong.
And
if
certain
other
assumptions
are
made,
which
I
think
are
right,
we're
in
trouble
now"
"What
kind
of
trouble?"
"Suppose
the
Earth
turned
into
a
whiff
of
gas
in
a
period
of
about
five
minutes.
Would
you
consider
that
trouble?"
"Because
of
the
Pumping?"
"Because
of
the
Pumping!"
"And
how
about
the
world
of
the
para-men?
Would
they
be
in
danger,
too?"
"I'm
sure
of
it.
A
different
danger,
but
danger."
Bronowski
stood
up
and
began
pacing.
He
wore
his
brown
hair
thick
and
long
in
what
had
once
been
called
a
Buster
Brown.
Now
he
was
clutching
at
it
He
said,
"If
the
para-men
are
more
intelligent
than
we
are,
would
they
be
running
the
Pump?
Surely
they
would
know
it
was
dangerous,
before
we
did."
"I've
thought
of
that,"
said
Lamont
"What
I
guess
is
that
they've
started
Pumping
for
the
first
time
and
they,
like
us,
got
the
process
started
for
the
apparent
good
it
would
bring
and
worried
about
consequences
later."
"But
you
say
you
know
the
consequences
now.
Would
they
be
slower
than
you
were?"
"It
depends
on
if
and
when
they
look
for
those
consequences.
The
Pump
is
too
attractive
to
try
to
spoil,
I
Wouldn't
have
looked
myself
if
I
hadn't-
But
what's
on
your
mind,
Mike?"
Bronowski
stopped
his
pacing,
looked
full
at
Lamont,
and
said,
"I
think
we've
got
something."
Lamont
looked
at
him
wildly,
then
leaped
forward
to
seize
the
other's
sleeve.
"With
the
para-symbols?
Tell
me,
Mike!"
"It
was
while
you
were
with
Hallam.
While
you
were
actually
with
Hallam.
I
haven't
known
exactly
what
to
do
about
it,
because
I
wasn't
sure
what
was
going
on.
And
now-"
"And
now?"
"I'm
still
not
sure.
One
of
their
foils
came
through,
with
four
symbols
.
.
."
"Oh?"
"...
in
the
Latin
alphabet
And
it
can
be
pronounced."
"What?"
"Here
it
is."
Bronowski
produced
the
foil
with
the
air
of
a
conjurer.
Incised
on
it,
quite
different
from
the
delicate
and
intricate
spirals
and
differential
glistenings
of
the
para-symbols,
were
four
broad,
childlike
letters:
F-E-E-R.
"What
do
you
suppose
that
means?"
asked
Lament,
blankly.
"So
far
all
I've
been
able
to
think
of
is
that
it's
F-E-A-R
misspelled."
"Is
that
why
you
were
cross-examining
me?
You
thought
someone
on
the
other
side
was
experiencing
fear?"
"And
I
thought
it
might
have
some
connection
with
your
own
obviously
increasing
excitement
over
the
last
month.
Frankly,
Pete,
I
didn't
like
being
kept
in
the
dark,"
"Okay.
Now
let's
not
jump
to
conclusions.
You're
the
one
with
experience
with
fragmentary
messages.
Wouldn't
you
say
that
the
para-men
were
beginning
to
experience
fear
concerning
the
Electron
Pump?"
"Not
necessarily
at
all,"
said
Bronowski.
"I
don't
know
how
much
they
can
sense
of
this
Universe.
If
they
can
sense
the
tungsten
we
lay
out
for
them;
if
they
can
sense
our
presence;
perhaps
they
are
sensing
our
state
of
mind.
Perhaps
they
are
trying
to
reassure
us;
telling
us
there
is
no
reason
to
fear."
"Then
why
don't
they
say
N-O
F-E-E-R."
"Because
they
don't
know
our
language
that
well
yet"
"Hmm.
Then
I
can't
take
it
to
Burt."
"I
wouldn't.
It's
ambiguous.
In
fact,
I
wouldn't
go
to
Burt
till
we
get
something
more
from
the
other
side.
Who
knows
what
they're
trying
to
say."
"No,
I
can't
wait,
Mike.
I
know
I'm
right,
and
we
have
no
time."
"All
right,
but
if
you
see
Burt
you'll
be
burning
your
bridges.
Your
colleagues
will
never
forgive
you.
Have
you
thought
of
talking
to
the
physicists
here?
You
can't
put
pressure
on
Hallam
on
your
own,
but
a
whole
group
of
you-"
Lamont
shook
his
head
vigorously,
"Not
at
all.
The
men
at
this
station
survive
by
virtue
of
their
jellyfish
quality.
There
isn't
one
who
would
stand
against
him.
Trying
to
rally
the
others
to
put
pressure
on
Hallam
would
be
like
asking
strands
of
cooked
spaghetti
to
come
to
attention."
Bronowski's
soft
face
looked
unwontedly
grim.
"You
may
be
right."
"I
know
I'm
right,"
said
Lamont,
just
as
grimly.
7
It
had
taken
time
to
pin
the
senator
down;
time
that
Lamont
had
resented
losing;
the
more
so
since
nothing
further
in
Latin
letters
had
come
from
the
para-men.
No
message
of
any
kind,
though
Bronowski
had
sent
across
half
a
dozen,
each
with
a
carefully
selected
combinations
of
para-symbols
and
each
incorporating
both
F-E-E-R
and
F-E-A-R.
Lamont
wasn't
sure
of
the
significance
of
the
half-dozen
variations
but
Bronowski
had
seemed
hopeful.
Yet
nothing
had
happened
and
now
Lamont
was
at
last
in
to
see
Burt.
The
senator
was
thin-faced,
sharp-eyed,
and
elderly.
He
had
been
the
head
of
the
Committee
on
Technology
and
the
Environment
for
a
generation.
He
took
his
job
seriously
and
had
proved
that
a
dozen
times.
He
fiddled,
now,
with
the
old-fashioned
necktie
that
he
affected
(and
that
had
become
his
trademark)
and
said,
"I
can
only
give
you
half
an
hour,
son."
He
looked
at
his
wristwatch.
Lamont
was
not
worried.
He
expected
to
interest
Senator
Burt
enough
to
make
him
forget
about
time
limits.
Nor
did
he
attempt
to
begin
at
the
beginning;
his
intentions
here
were
quite
different
from
those
in
connection
with
Hallam.
He
said,
"I
won't
bother
with
the
mathematics,
Senator,
but
I
will
assume
you
realize
that
through
Pumping,
the
natural
laws
of
the
two
Universes
are
being
mixed."
"Stirred
together,"
said
the
senator,
calmly,
"with
equilibrium
coming
in
about
1030
years.
Is
that
the
figure?"
His
eyebrows
in
repose
arched
up
and
then
down,
giving
his
lined
face
a
permanent
air
of
surprise.
"It
is,"
said
Lamont,
"but
it
is
arrived
at
by
assuming
that
the
alien
laws
seeping
into
our
Universe
and
theirs
spread
outward
from
the
point
of
entry
at
the
speed
of
light.
That
is
just
an
assumption
and
I
believe
it
to
be
wrong."
"Why?"
"The
only
measured
rate
of
mixing
is
within
the
plutonium-186
sent
into
this
Universe.
That
rate
of
mixing
is
extremely
slow
at
first,
presumably
because
matter
is
dense,
and
increases
with
time.
If
the
plutonium
is
mixed
with
less
dense
matter,
the
rate
of
mixing
increases
more
rapidly.
From
a
few
measurements
of
this
sort
it
has
been
calculated
that
the
permeation
rate
would
increase
to
the
speed
of
light
in
a
vacuum.
It
would
take
some
time
for
the
alien
laws
to
work
their
way
into
the
atmosphere,
far
less
time
to
work
their
way
to
the
top
of
the
atmosphere
and
then
off
through
space
in
every
direction
at
300,000
kilometers
per
second,
thinning
into
harmlessness
in
no
time."
Lamont
paused
a
moment
to
consider
how
best
to
go
on,
and
the
senator
picked
it
up
at
once.
"However-"
he
urged,
with
the
manner
of
a
man
not
willing
to
waste
time.
"It's
a
convenient
assumption
that
seems
to
make
sense
and
seems
to
make
no
trouble,
but
what
if
it
is
not
matter
that
offers
resistance
to
the
permeation
of
the
alien
laws,
but
the
basic
fabric
of
the
Universe
itself."
"What
is
the
basic
fabric?"
"I
can't
put
it
in
words.
There
is
a
mathematical
expression
which
I
think
represents
it,
but
I
can't
put
it
into
words.
The
basic
fabric
of
the
Universe
is
that
which
dictates
the
laws
of
nature.
It
is
the
basic
fabric
of
our
Universe
that
makes
it
necessary
for
energy
to
be
conserved.
It
is
the
basic
fabric
of
the
para-Universe,
with
a
weave,
so
to
speak,
somewhat
different
from
ours,
that
makes
their
nuclear
interaction
a
hundred
times
stronger
than
ours."
"And
so?"
"If
it
is
the
basic
fabric
that
is
being
penetrated,
sir,
then
the
presence
of
matter,
dense
or
not,
can
have
only
a
secondary
influence.
The
rate
of
penetration
is
greater
in
a
vacuum
than
in
dense
mass,
but
not
very
much
greater.
The
rate
of
penetration
in
outer
space
may
be
great
in
Earthly
terms
but
it
is
only
a
small
fraction
of
the
speed
of
light."
"Which
means?"
"That
the
alien
fabric
is
not
dissipating
as
quickly
as
we
think,
but
is
piling
up,
so
to
speak,
within
the
Solar
system
to
a
much
greater
concentration
than
we
have
been
assuming."
"I
see,"
said
the
senator,
nodding
his
head.
"And
how
long
then
will
it
be
before
the
space
within
the
Solar
system
is
brought
to
equilibrium?
Less
than,
1080
years,
I
imagine."
"Far
less,
sir.
Less
than
1010
years,
I
think.
Perhaps
fifty
billion
years,
give
or
take
a
couple
of
billion."
"Not
much
in
comparison,
but
enough,
eh?
No
immediate
cause
for
alarm,
eh?"
"But
I'm
afraid
that
is
immediate
cause
for
alarm,
sir.
Damage
will
be
done
long
before
equilibrium
is
reached.
Because
of
the
Pumping,
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
is
growing
steadily
stronger
in
our
Universe
at
every
moment."
"Enough
stronger
to
measure?"
"Perhaps
not,
sir."
"Not
even
after
twenty
years
of
Pumping?"
"Perhaps
not,
sir."
"Then
why
worry?"
"Because,
sir,
upon
the
strength
of
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
rests
the
rate
at
which
hydrogen
fuses
to
helium
in
the
core
of
the
Sun.
If
the
interaction
strengthens
even
unnoticeably,
the
rate
of
hydrogen
fusion
in
the
Sun
will
increase
markedly.
The
Sun
maintains
the
balance
between
radiation
and
gravitation
with
great
delicacy
and
to
upset
that
balance
in
favor
of
radiation,
as
we
are
now
doing-"
"Yes?"
"-will
cause
an
enormous
explosion.
Under
our
laws
of
nature,
it
is
impossible
for
a
star
as
small
as
the
Sun
to
become
a
supernova.
Under
the
altered
laws,
it
may
not
be.
I
doubt
that
we
would
have
warning.
The
Sun
would
build
up
to
a
vast
explosion
and
in
eight
minutes
after
that
you
and
I
will
be
dead
and
the
Earth
will
quickly
vaporize
into
an
expanding
puff
of
vapor."
"And
nothing
can
be
done?"
"If
it
is
too
late
to
avoid
upsetting
the
equilibrium,
nothing.
If
it
is
not
yet
too
late,
then
we
must
stop
Pumping."
The
senator
cleared
his
throat.
"Before
I
agreed
to
see
you,
young
man,
I
inquired
as
to
your
background
since
you
were
not
personally
known
to
me.
Among
those
I
queried
was
Dr.
Hallam.
You
know
him,
I
suppose?"
"Yes,
sir."
A
corner
of
Lament's
mouth
twitched
but
his
voice
held
even.
"I
know
him
well."
"He
tells
me,"
said
the
senator,
glancing
at
a
paper
on
his
desk,
"that
you
are
a
troublemaking
idiot
of
doubtful
sanity
and
he
demands
that
I
refuse
to
see
you."
Lament
said
in
a
voice
he
strove
to
keep
calm.
"Are
those
his
words,
sir?"
"His
exact
words."
"Then
why
have
you
agreed
to
see
me,
sir?"
"Ordinarily,
if
I
received
something
like
this
from
Hal-lam,
I
wouldn't
have
seen
you.
My
time
is
valuable
and
heaven
knows
I
see
more
troublemaking
idiots
of
doubtful
sanity
than
bears
thinking
of,
even
among
those
who
come
to
me
with
the
highest
recommendations.
In
this
one
case,
though,
I
didn't
like
Hallam's
'demand.'
You
don't
make
demands
of
a
senator
and
Hallam
had
better
learn
that."
"Then
you
will
help
me,
sir?"
"Help
you
do
what?"
"Why-arrange
to
have
the
Pumping
halted."
"That?
Not
at
all.
Quite
impossible."
"Why
not?"
demanded
Lament.
"You
are
the
head
of
the
Committee
on
Technology
and
the
Environment
and
it
is
precisely
your
task
to
stop
the
Pumping,
or
any
technological
procedure
that
threatens
irreversible
harm
to
the
environment.
There
can
be
no
greater,
no
more
irreversible
harm
than
threatened
by
Pumping."
"Certainly.
Certainly.
If
you
are
right.
But
it
seems
that
what
your
story
amounts
to
is
that
your
assumptions
are
different
from
the
accepted
ones.
Who's
to
say
which
set
of
assumptions
is
right?"
"Sir,
the
structure
I
have
built
explains
several
things
that
are
left
doubtful
in
the
accepted
view."
"Well,
then,
your
colleagues
ought
to
accept
your
modification
and
in
that
case
you
would
scarcely
have
to
come
to
me,
I
imagine."
"Sir,
my
colleagues
will
not
believe.
Their
self-interest
stands
in
the
way."
"As
your
self-interest
stands
in
the
way
of
your
believing
you
might
be
wrong.
.
.
.
Young
man,
my
powers,
on
paper,
are
enormous,
but
I
can
only
succeed
when
the
public
is
willing
to
let
me.
Let
me
give
you
a
lesson
in
practical
politics."
He
looked
at
his
wristwatch,
leaned
back
and
smiled.
His
offer
was
not
characteristic
of
him,
but
an
editorial
in
the
Terrestrial
Post
that
morning
had
referred
to
him
as
"a
consummate
politician,
the
most
skilled
in
the
International
Congress"
and
the
glow
that
that
had
roused
within
him
still
lingered.
"It
is
a
mistake,"
he
said,
"to
suppose
that
the
public
wants
the
environment
protected
or
their
lives
saved
and
that
they
will
be
grateful
to
any
idealist
who
will
fight
for
such
ends.
What
the
public
wants
is
their
own
individual
comfort.
We
know
that
well
enough
from
our
experience
in
the
environmental
crisis
of
the
twentieth
century.
Once
it
was
well
known
that
cigarettes
increased
the
incidence
of
lung
cancer,
the
obvious
remedy
was
to
stop
smoking,
but
the
desired
remedy
was
a
cigarette
that
did
not
encourage
cancer.
When
it
became
clear
that
the
internal-combustion
engine
was
polluting
the
atmosphere
dangerously,
the
obvious
remedy
was
to
abandon
such
engines,
and
the
desired
remedy
was
to
develop
non-polluting
engines.
"Now
then,
young
man,
don't
ask
me
to
stop
the
Pumping.
The
economy
and
comfort
of
the
entire
planet
depend
on
it.
Tell
me,
instead,
how
to
keep
the
Pumping
from
exploding
the
Sun."
Lamont
said,
"There
is
no
way,
Senator.
We
are
dealing
with
something
here
that
is
so
basic,
we
can't
play
with
it
We
must
stop
it."
"Ah,
and
you
can
suggest
only
that
we
go
back
to
matters
as
they
were
before
Pumping."
"We
must"
"In
that
case,
you
will
need
hard
and
fast
proof
that
you
are
right."
"The
best
proof,"
said
Lament,
stiffly,
"is
to
have
the
Sun
explode.
I
suppose
you
don't
want
me
to
go
that
far."
"Not
necessary,
perhaps.
Why
can't
you
get
Hallam
to
back
you
up?"
"Because
he
is
a
small
man
who
finds
himself
the
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump.
How
can
he
admit
his
child
will
destroy
the
Earth?"
"I
see
what
you
mean,
but
he
is
still
the
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump
to
the
whole
world,
and
only
his
word
would
carry
sufficient
weight
in
this
respect."
Lament
shook
his
head.
"He
would
never
give
in.
He
would
rather
see
the
Sun
explode."
The
senator
said,
"Then
force
his
hand.
You
have
a
theory
but
a
theory
by
itself
is
meaningless.
Surely
there
must
be
some
way
of
checking
it.
The-rate
of
radioactive
breakdown
of,
say,
uranium
depends
on
the
interactions
within
the
nucleus.
Has
that
rate
been
changing
in
a
fashion
predicted
by
your
theory
but
not
the
standard
one?"
Again,
Lament
shook
his
head.
"Ordinary
radioactivity
depends
on
the
weak
nuclear
interaction,
and
unfortunately,
experiments
of
that
sort
will
yield
only
borderline
evidence.
By
the
time
it
showed
sufficiently
to
be
unmistakable,
it
would
be
too
late."
"What
else,
then?"
"There
are
pion
interactions
of
a
specific
sort
that
might
yield
unmistakable
data
now.
Better
still
there
are
quark-quark
combinations
that
have
produced
puzzling
results
recently
that
I
am
sure
I
can
explain-"
"Well,
there
you
are."
"Yes,
but
in
order
to
obtain
that
data.
I
must
make
use
of
a
large
proton
synchrotron
on
the
Moon,
sir,
and
no
time
on
that
will
be
available
for
years-I've
checked-unless
someone
pulls
the
strings."
"Meaning
me?"
"Meaning
you,
Senator."
"Not
as
long
as
Dr.
Hallam
says
this
about
you,
son."
And
Senator
Hurt's
gnarled
finger
tapped
the
piece
of
paper
in
front
of
him.
"I
can't
get
out
on
that
limb."
"But
the
existence
of
the
world-"
"Prove
it."
"Override
Hallam
and
I'll
prove
it."
"Prove
it
and
I'll
override
Hallam."
Lamont
drew
a
deep
breath,
"Senator!
Suppose
there's
just
a
trifling
chance
I'm
right.
Isn't
even
that
trifling
chance
worth
fighting
for?
It
means
everything;
all
mankind,
the
entire
planet-"
"You
want
me
to
fight
the
good
fight?
I'd
like
to.
There's
a
certain
drama
in
going
down
in
a
good
cause.
Any,
decent
politician
is
masochistic
enough
to
dream
now
and
then
of
going
down
in
flames
while
the
angels
sing.
But,
-Dr.
Lamont,
to
do
that
one
has
to
have
a
fighting
chance.
One
has
to
have
something
to
fight
for
that
may-
just
may-win
out.
If
I
back
you,
I'll
accomplish
nothing
with
your
word
alone
against
the
infinite
desirability
of
Pumping,
Shall
I
demand
every
man
give
up
the
personal
comfort
and
affluence
he
has
learned
to
get
used
to,
thanks
to
the
Pump,
just
because
one
man
cries
'Doom'
while
all
the
other
scientists
stand
against
him,
and
the
revered
Hallam
calls
him
an
idiot?
No,
sir,
I
will
not
go
down
in
flames
for
nothing."
Lamont
said,
"Then
just
help
me
find
my
proof.
You
needn't
appear
in
the
open
if
you
fear-"
"I'm
not
afraid,"
said
Burt,
abruptly.
"I'm
being
practical.
Dr.
Lamont,
your
half-hour
is
rather
more
than
gone."
Lamont
stared
for
a
moment
in
frustration
but
Burt's
expression
was
a
clearly
intransigent
one
now.
Lamont
left.
Senator
Burt
did
not
see
his
next
visitor
immediately.
Minutes
passed
while
he
stared
uneasily
at
the
closed
door
and
fiddled
with
his
tie.
Could
the
man
have
been
right?
Could
he
have
had
the
smallest
chance
of
being
right?
He
had
to
admit
it
would
be
a
pleasure
to
trip
Hallam
and
push
his
face
into
the
mud
and
sit
on
him
till
he
choked-but
it
would
not
happen.
Hallam
was
untouchable.
He
had
had
only
one
set-to
with
Hallam
nearly
ten
years
ago.
He
had
been
right,
dead
right,
and
Hallam
had
been
egregiously
wrong,
and
events
had
since
proved
it
to
be
so.
And
yet,
at
the
time,
Burt
had
been
humiliated
and
he
had
almost
lost
reelection
as
a
result.
Burt
shook
his
head
in
admonition
to
himself.
He
might
risk
reelection
in
a
good
cause,
but
he
could
not
risk
humiliation
again.
He
signaled
for
the
next
visitor
and
his
face
was
calm
and
bland
as
he
rose
to
greet
him.
8
If
by
this
time,
Lamont
had
still
felt
he
had
something
to
lose,
professionally,
he
might
have
hesitated.
Joshua
Chen
was
universally
unpopular
and
anyone
who
dealt
with
him
was
in
bad
odor
at
once
with
almost
every
corner
of
the
Establishment.
Chen
was
a
one-man
revolutionary
whose
single
voice
could
somehow
always
be
heard
because
he
brought
to
his
causes
an
intensity
that
was
utterly
overpowering,
and
because
he
had
built
an
organization
that
was
more
tightly
knit
than
any
ordinary
political
team
in
the
world
(as
more
than
one
politician
was
ready
to
swear).
He
had
been
one
of
the
important
factors
accounting
for
the
speed
with
which
the
Pump
had
taken
over
the
planet's
energy
needs.
The
Pump's
virtues
were
clear
and
obvious,
as
clear
as
non-pollution
and
as
obvious
as
for-free,
yet
there
might
have
been
a
longer
rear-guard
fight
by
those
who
wanted
nuclear
energy,
not
because
it
was
better
but
because
it
had
been
the
friend
of
their
childhood.
Yet
when
Chen
beat
his
drums,
the
world
listened
just
a
little
harder.
Now
he
sat
there,
his
broad
cheekbones
and
round
face
bearing
evidence
of
the
approximately
three-quarter
admixture
of
Chinese
ancestry.
He
said,
"Let
me
get
this
straight.
You're
speaking
only
for
yourself?"
"Yes,"
said
Lamont
tightly.
"Hallam
doesn't
back
me.
In
fact,
Hallam
says
I'm
mad.
Do
you
have
to
have
Hallam's
approval
before
you
can
move?"
"I
need
no
one's
approval,"
said
Chen
with
predictable
arrogance,
then
he
lapsed
back
into
thoughtful
consideration..
"You
say
the
para-men
are
farther
advanced
in
technology
than
we
are?"
Lamont
had
gone
that
far
in
the
direction
of
compromise.
He
had
avoided
saying
they
were
more
intelligent.
"Farther
advanced
in
technology"
was
less
offensive,
but
just
as
true.
"That
is
clear,"
said
Lamont,
"if
only
because
they
can
send
material
across
the
gap
between
the
Universes
and
we
can't."
"Then
why
did
they
start
the
Pump
if
it
is
dangerous?
Why
are
they
continuing
it?"
Lamont
was
learning
to
compromise
in
more
than
one
direction.
He
might
have
said
that
Chen
was
not
the
first
to
ask
this,
but
it
would
have
sounded
condescending,
perhaps
impatient,
and
he
chose
not
to
do
so.
Lamont
said,
"They
were
anxious
to
get
started
with
something
that
was
so
apparently
desirable
as
a
source
of
energy,
just
as
we
were.
I
have
reason
to
think
they're
as
disturbed
about
it
now
as
I
am."
"That's
still
your
word.
You
have
no
definite
evidence
about
their
state
of
mind."
"None
that
I
can
present
at
this
moment."
"Then
it's
not
enough."
"Can
we
afford
to
risk-"
"It's
not
enough,
Professor.
There's
no
evidence.
I
haven't
built
my
reputation
by
shooting
down
-targets
at
random.
My
missiles
have
sped
true
to
the
mark
every
time
because
I
knew
what
I
was
doing."
"But
when
I
get
the
evidence-"
"Then
I'll
back
you.
If
the
evidence
satisfies
me,
I
assure
you
neither
Hallam
nor
the
Congress
will
be
able
to
resist
the
tide.
So
get
the
evidence
and
come
see
me
again."
"But
by
then
it
will
be
too
late,"
Chen
shrugged.
"Perhaps.
Much
more
likely,
you
will
find
that
you
were
wrong
and
no
evidence
is
to
be
had."
"I'm
not
wrong."
Lamont
took
a
deep
breath,
and
said
in
a
confidential
tone,
"Mr.
Chen.
There
are
very
likely
trillions
upon
trillions
of
inhabited
planets
in
the
Universe,
and
among
them
there
may
be
billions
with
intelligent
life
and
highly
developed
technologies.
The
same
is
probably
true
of
the
para-Universe.
It
must
be
that
in
the
history
of
the
two
Universes
there
have
been
many
pairs
of
worlds
that
came
into
contact
and
began
Pumping.
There
may
be
dozens
or
even
hundreds
of
Pumps
scattered
across
junction
points
of
the
two
Universes."
"Pure
speculation.
But
if
so?"
"Then
it
may
be
that
in
dozens
or
hundreds
of
cases,
the
mixture
of
natural
law
advanced
locally
to
an
extent
sufficient
to
explode
a
planet's
Sun.
The
effect
might
have
spread
outward.
The
energy
of
a
supernova
added
to
the
changing
natural
law
may
have
set
off
explosions
among
neighboring
stars,
which
in
turn
set
off
others.
In
time
perhaps
an
entire
core
of
a
galaxy
or
of
a
galactic
arm
will
explode."
"But
that
is
only
imagination,
of
course."
"Is
it?
There
are
hundreds
of
quasars
in
the
Universe;
tiny
bodies
the
size
of
several
Solar
systems
but
shining
with
the
light
of
a
hundred
full-size
ordinary
galaxies."
"You're
telling
me
that
the
quasars
are
what
are
left
of
Pumping
planets."
"I'm
suggesting
that.
In
the
century
and
a
half
since
they
were
discovered,
astronomers
have
still
failed
to
account
for
their
sources
of
energy.
Nothing
in
this
Universe
will
account
for
it;
nothing.
Doesn't
it
follow
then-"
"What
about
the
para-Universe?
Is
it
full
of
quasars,
too?"
"I
wouldn't
think
so.
Conditions
are
different
there.
Para-theory
makes
it
seem
quite
definite
that
fusion
takes
place
much
more
easily
over
there,
so
the
stars
must
be
considerably
smaller
than
ours
on
the
average.
It
would
take
a
much
smaller
supply
of
easily-fusing
hydrogen
to
produce
the
energy
our
Sun
does.
A
supply
as
large
as
that
of
our
Sun
would
explode
spontaneously.
If
our
laws
permeate
the
para-Universe,
hydrogen
becomes
a
little
more
difficult
to
fuse;
the
para-stars
begin
to
cool
down."
"Well,
that's
not
so
bad,"
said
Chen.
"They
can
use
Pumping
to
supply
themselves
with
the
necessary
energy.
By
your
speculations,
they're
in
fine
shape."
"Not
really,"
said
Lament.
Until
now,
he
hadn't
thought
the
para-situation
through.
"Once
our
end
explodes,
the
Pumping
stops.
They
can't
keep
it
up
without
us,
and
that
means
they'll
face
a
cooling
star
without
Pump-energy.
They
might
be
worse
off
than
we;
we'd
go
out
in
a
painless
flash
while
their
agony
would
be
long-drawn-out."
"You
have
a
good
imagination,
Professor,"
said
Chen,
"but
I'm
not
buying
it.
I
don't
see
any
chance
of
giving
up
Pumping
on
nothing
more
than
your
imagination.
Do
you
know
what
the
Pump
means
to
mankind?
It's
not
just
the
free,
clean,
and
copious
energy.
Look
beyond
that.
What
it
means
is
that
mankind
no
longer
has
to
work
for
a
living.
It
means
that
for
the
first
time
in
history,
mankind
can
turn
its
collective
brains
to
the
more
important
problem
of
developing
its
true
potential.
"For
instance,
not
all
the
medical
advances
of
two
and
a
half
centuries
have
succeeded
in
advancing
man's
full
life-span
much
past
a
hundred
years.
We've
been
told
by
gerontologists
over
and
over
that
there
is
nothing,
in
theory,
to
stand
in
the
way
of
human
immortality,
but
so
far
not
enough
attention
has
been
concentrated
on
this."
Lament
said
angrily,
"Immortality!
You're
talking
pipe
dreams."
"Perhaps
you're
a
judge
of
pipe
dreams,
Professor,"
said
Chen,
"but
I
intend
to
see
,that
research
into
immortality
begins.
It
won't
begin
it
Pumping
ends.
Then
we
are
back
to
expensive
energy,
scarce
energy,
dirty
energy.
Earth's
two
billions
will
have
to
go
back
to
work
for
a
living
and
the
pipe
dream
of
immortality
will
remain
a
pipe
dream."
"It
will
anyway.
No
one
is
going
to
be
immortal.
No
one
is
even
going
to
live
out
a
normal
lifetime."
"Ah,
but
that
is
your
theory,
only."
Lament
weighed
the
possibilities
and
decided
to
gamble.
"Mr.
Chen,
a
while
ago
I
said
I
was
not
willing
to
explain
my
knowledge
of
the
state
of
mind
of
the
para-men.
Well,
let
me
try.
We
have
been
receiving
messages."
"Yes,
but
can
you
interpret
them?"
"We
received
an
English
word."
Chen
frowned
slightly.
He
suddenly
put
his
hands
in
his
pockets,
stretched
his
short
legs
before
him,
and
leaned
back
in
his
chair.
"And
what
was
the
English
word?"
"Fear!"
Lament
did
not
feel
it
necessary
to
mention
the
misspelling.
"Fear,"
repeated
Chen;
"and
what
do
you
think
it
means?"
"Isn't
it
clear
that
they're
afraid
of
the
Pumping
phenomenon?"
"Not
at
all.
If
they
were
afraid,
they
would
stop
it.
I
think
they're
afraid,
all
right,
but
they're
afraid
that
our
side
will
stop
it.
You've
gotten
across
your
intention
to
them
and
if
we
stop
it,
as
you
want
us
to
do,
they've
got
to
stop
also.
You
said
yourself
they
can't
continue
without
us;
it's
a
two-ended
proposition.
I
don't
blame
them
for
being
afraid."
Lament
sat
silent.
"I
see,"
said
Chen,
"that
you
haven't
thought
of
that.
Well,
then,
we'll
push
for
immortality.
I
think
that
will
be
the
more
popular
cause."
"Oh,
popular
causes,"
said
Lamont
slowly.
"I
didn't
understand
what
you
found
important.
How
old
are
you,
Mr.
Chen?"
For
a
moment,
Chen
bunked
rapidly,
then
he
turned
away.
He
left
the
room,
walking
rapidly,
with
his
hands
clenched.
Lamont
looked
up
his
biography
later.
Chen
was
sixty
and
his
father
had
died
at
sixty-two.
But
it
didn't
matter.
9
"You
don't
look
as
though
you
had
any
luck
at
all,"
said
Bronowski.
Lamont
was
sitting
in
his
laboratory,
staring
at
the
toes
of
his
shoes
and
noting
idly
that
they
seemed
unusually
scuffed.
He
shook
his
head.
"No."
"Even
the
great
Chen
failed
you?"
"He
would
do
nothing.
He
wants
evidence,
too.
They
all
want
evidence,
but
anything
you
offer
them
is
rejected.
What
they
really
want
is
their
damned
Pump,
or
their
reputation,
or
their
place
in
history.
Chen
wants
immortality."
"What
do
you
want,
Pete?"
asked
Bronowski,
softly.
"Mankind's
safety,"
said
Lamont.
He
looked
at
the
other's
quizzical
eyes.
"You
don't
believe
me?"
"Oh,
I
believe
you.
But
what
do
you
really
want?"
"Well,
then,
by
God,"
and
Lamont
brought
his
hand
down
flat
on
the
desk
before
him
in
a
loud
slap.
"I
want
to
be
right,
and
that
I
have,
for
I
am
right."
"You
are
sure?"
"I
am
sure!
And
there's
nothing
I
am
worried
about,
because
I
intend
to
win.
You
know
when
I
left
Chen,
I
came
near
to
despising
myself."
"You?"
"Yes,
I.
Why
not?
I
kept
thinking:
At
every
turn
Hallam
stops
me.
As
long
as
Hallam
refutes
me
everyone
has
an
excuse
not
to
believe
me.
While
Hallam
stands
like
a
rock
against
me,
I
must
fail.
Why,
then,
didn't
I
work
through
him;
why
didn't
I
butter
him
up,
indeed;
why
didn't
I
maneuver
him
into
supporting
me
instead
of
needling
him
into
fighting
me?"
"Do
you
think
you
could
have?"
"No,
never.
But
in
my
despair,
I
thought-well,
all
sorts
of
things.
That
I
might
go
to
the
Moon,
perhaps.
Of
course,
when
I
first
turned
him
against
me
there
was
as
yet
no
question
of
Earth's
doom,
but
I
took
care
to
make
it
worse
when
that
question
arose.
But,
as
you
imply,
nothing
could
have
turned
him
against
the
Pump."
"But
you
don't
seem
to
despise
yourself
now."
"No.
Because
my
conversation
with
Chen
brought
a
dividend.
It
showed
me
I
was
wasting
time."
"So
it
would
seem."
"Yes,
but
needlessly.
It
is
not
here
on
Earth
that
the
solution
lies.
I
told
Chen
that
our
Sun
might
blow
up
but
that
the
para-Sun
would
not,
yet
that
would
not
save
the
para-men,
for
when
our
Sun
blew
up
and
our
end
of
the
Pump
halted,
so
would
theirs.
They
cannot
continue
without
us,
do
you
see?"
"Yes,
of
course
I
see."
"They
why
don't
we
think
in
the
reverse.
We
can't
continue
without
them.
In
which
case,
who
cares
whether
we
stop
the
Pump
or
not.
Let's
get
the
para-men
to
stop."
"Ah,
but
will
they?"
"They
said
F-E-E-R.
And
it
means
they're
afraid.
Chen
said
they
feared
us;
they
feared
we
would
stop
the
Pump;
but
I
don't
believe
that
for
a
moment.
They're
afraid.
I
sat
silent
when
Chen
made
his
suggestion.
He
thought
he
had
me.
He
was
quite
wrong.
I
was
only
thinking
at
that
moment
that
we
had
to
get
the
para-men
to
stop.
And
we've
got
to.
Mike,
I
abandon
everything,
except
you.
You're
the
hope
of
the
world.
Get
through
to
them
somehow."
Bronowski
laughed,
and
there
was
almost
a
childlike
glee
in
it.
"Pete,"
he
said,
"you're
a
genius."
"Aha.
You've
noticed."
"No,
I
mean
it.
You
guess
what
I
want
to
say
before
I
can
say
it.
I've
been
sending
message
after
message,
using
their
symbols
in
a
way
that
I
guessed
might
signify
the
Pump
and
using
our
word
as
well.
And
I
did
my
best
to
gather
what
information
I've
scrabbled
together
over
many
months
to
use
their
symbols
in
a
way
signifying
disapproval,
and
using
an
English
word
again.
I
had
no
idea
whether
I
was
getting
through
or
was
a
mile
off
base
and
from
the
fact
that
I
never
got
an
answer,
I
had
little
hope."
"You
didn't
tell
me
that's
what
you
were
trying
to
do."
"Well,
this
part
of
the
problem
is
my
baby.
You
take
your
sweet
time
explaining
para-theory
to
me."
"So
what
happened?"
'
"So
yesterday,
I
sent
off
exactly
two
words,
our
language.
I
scrawled:
P-U-M-P
B-A-D."
"And?"
"And
this
morning
I
picked
up
a
return
message
at
last
and
it
was
simple
enough,
and
straightforward,
too.
It
went
Y-E-S
P-U-M-P
B-A-D
B-A-D
B-A-D.
Here
look
at
it."
Lament's
hand
trembled
as
it
held
the
foil.
"There's
no
mistaking
that,
is
there?
That's
confirmation,
isn't
it?"
"It
seems
so
to
me.
Who
will
you
take
this
to?"
"To
no
one,"
said
Lament
decisively.
"I
argue
no
more.
They
will
tell
me
I
faked
the
message
and
there's
no
point
in
sitting
still
for
that.
Let
the
para-men
stop
the
Pump
and
it
will
stop
on
our
side
too
and
nothing
we
can
do
unilaterally
will
start
it
up
again.
The
entire
Station
will
then
be
on
fire
to
prove
that
I
was
right
and
the
Pump
is
dangerous."
"How
do
you
figure
that?"
"Because
that
would
be
the
only
way
they
could
keep
themselves
from
being
torn
apart
by
a
mob
demanding
the
Pump
and
infuriated
at
not
getting
it.
...
Don't
you
think
so?"
"Well,
maybe.
But
one
thing
bothers
me."
"What's
that?"
"If
the
para-men
are
so
convinced
that
the
Pump
is
dangerous,
why
haven't
they
stopped
it
already?
I
took
occasion
to
check
awhile
ago
and
the
Pump
is
working
swimmingly."
Lament
frowned.
"Perhaps
they
don't
want
a
unilateral
stoppage.
They
consider
us
their
partners
and
they
want
a
mutual
agreement
to
stop.
Don't
you
suppose
that
might
be
so?"
"It
might.
But
it
might
also
be
that
communication
is
less
than
perfect;
that
they
don't
quite
understand
the
significance
of
the
words
B-A-D.
From
what
I
said
to
them
via
their
symbols,
which
I
might
well
have
twisted
utterly,
they
may
think
that
B-A-D
means
what
we
consider
G-O-O-D."
"Oh,
no."
"Well,
that's
your
hope,
but
there's
no
pay-off
on
hopes."
"Mike,
just
keep
on
sending
messages.
Use
as
many
of
the
words
they
use
as
possible
and
keep
ringing
the
changes.
You're
the
expert
and
it's
in
your
hands.
Eventually,
they'll
know
enough
words
to
say
something
clear
and
unmistakable
and
then
we'll
explain
that
we're
willing
to
have
the
Pump
stopped."
"We
lack
the
authority
to
make
any
such
statement."
"Yes,
but
they
won't
know,
and
in
the
end
we'll
be
mankind's
heroes."
"Even
if
they
execute
us
first?"
"Even
so.
...
It's
in
your
hands,
Mike,
and
I'm
sure
it
won't
take
much
longer."
10
And yet It did. Two weeks passed without another message and the strain grew worse. Bronowski showed it. The momentary lightness of heart had dissipated, and he entered
Lament's laboratory in glum silence. They stared at each other and finally Bronowski said, "It's all over the place that you've received your show-cause." Lament had clearly
not shaved that morning. His laboratory had a forlorn look about it, a not-quite-definable, packing-up look. He shrugged. "So what? It doesn't bother me. What does bother
me is that Physical Reviews rejected my paper." "You said you were expecting that." "Yes, but I thought they might give me reasons. They might point out what they thought
were fallacies, errors, unwarranted assumptions. Something I could argue about." "And they didn't?" "Not a word. Their referees did not consider the paper suitable for
publication. Quote, unquote. They just won't touch it. ... It's really disheartening, the universal stupidity. I think that I wouldn't grieve at mankind's suicide
through sheer evilness of heart, or through mere recklessness. There's something so damned undignified at going to destruction through sheer thickheaded stupidity. What's the
use of being men if that's how you have to die." "Stupidity," muttered Bronowski. "What else do you call it? And they want me to show-cause why I ought not to be fired
for the great crime of being right." "Everyone seems to know that you consulted Chen." "Yes!" Lamont put his fingers to the bridge of his nose and wearily rubbed his eyes.
"I apparently got him annoyed enough to go to Hallam with tales, and now the accusation is that I have been trying to sabotage the Pump project by unwarranted and
unsupported fright tactics in an unprofessional manner and that this makes me unsuitable for employment on the Station." "They can prove that easily, Pete." "I suppose
they can. It doesn't matter." "What are you going to do." "Nothing," said Lamont indignantly. "Let them do their worst. I'll rely on red tape. Every step of this
thing will take weeks, months, and meanwhile you keep working. We'll hear from the para-men yet." Bronowski looked miserable. "Pete, suppose we don't. Maybe it's time you think
about
this
again."
Lamont
looked
up
sharply.
"What
are
you
talking
about?"
"Tell
them
you're
wrong.
Do
penance.
Beat
your
breast.
Give
up."
"Never!
By
God,
Mike,
we're
playing
a
game
in
which
the
stakes
are
all
the
world
and
every
living
creature
on
it."
"Yes,
but
what's
that
to
you?
You're
not
married.
You
have
no
children.
I
know
your
father
is
dead.
You
never
mention
your
mother
or
any
siblings,
I
doubt
if
there
is
any
human
being
on
earth
to
whom
you
are
emotionally
attached
as
an
individual.
So
go
your
way
and
the
hell
with
it
all."
"And
you?"
"Ill
do
the
same.
I'm
divorced
and
I
have
no
children.
I
have
a
young
lady
with
whom
I'm
close
and
that
relationship
will
continue
while
it
can.
Live!
Enjoy!"
"And
tomorrow!"
"Will
take
care
of
itself.
Death
when
it
comes
will
be
quick."
"I
can't
live
with
that
philosophy.
.
.
.
Mike.
Mike!
What
is
all
this?
Are
you
trying
to
tell
me
that
we're
not
going
to
get
through?
Are
you
giving
up
on
the
para-men?"
Bronowski
looked
away.
He
said,
"Pete,
I
did
get
an
answer.
Last
night.
I
thought
I'd
wait
for
today
and
think
about
it,
but
why
think?
...
Here
it
is."
Lament's
eyes
were
staring
questions.
He
took
the
foil
and
looked
at
it.
There
was
no
punctuation:
PUMP
NOT
STOP
NOT
STOP
WE
NOT
STOP
PUMP
WE
NOT
HEAR
DANGER
NOT
HEAR
NOT
HEAR
YOU
STOP
PLEASE
STOP
YOU
STOP
SO
WE
STOP
PLEASE
YOU
STOP
DANGER
DANGER
DANGER
STOP
STOP
YOU
STOP
PUMP
"By
God,"
muttered
Bronowski,
"they
sound
desperate."
Lamont
was
still
staring.
He
said
nothing.
Bronowski
said,
"I
gather
that
somewhere
on
the
other
side
is
someone
like
you-a
para-Lamont.
And
he
can't
get
his
para-Hallams
to
stop,
either.
And
while
we're
begging
them
to
save
us,
he's
begging
us
to
save
them."
Lamont
said,
"But
if
we
show
this-"
"They'll
say
you're
lying;
that
it's
a
hoax
you've
concocted
to
save
your
psychotically-conceived
nightmare."
"They
can
say
that
of
me,
maybe;
but
they
can't
say
it
of
you.
You'll
back
me,
Mike.
You'll
testify
that
you
received
this
and
how."
Bronowski
reddened.
"What
good
would
that
do?
They'll
say
that
somewhere
in
the
para-Universe
there
is
a
nut
like
yourself
and
that
two
crackpots
got
together.
They'll
say
that
the
message
proves
that
the
constituted
authorities
in
the
para-Universe
are
convinced
there's
no
danger."
"Mike,
fight
this
through
with
me."
"There's
no
use,
Pete.
You
said
yourself,
stupidity!
Those
para-man
may
be
more
advanced
than
ourselves,
even
more
intelligent,
as
you
insist,
but
it's
plain
to
see
that
they're
just
as
stupid
as
we
are
and
that
ends
it
Schiller
pointed
that
out
and
I
believe
him."
"Who?"
"Schiller*.
A
German
dramatist
of
three
centuries
ago.
In
a
play
about
Joan
of
Arc,
he
said,
'Against
stupidity,
the
gods
themselves
contend
in
vain'
I'm
no
god
and
I'll
contend
no
longer.
Let
it
go,
Pete,
and
go
your
way.
Maybe
the
world
will
last
our
time
and,
if
not,
there's
nothing
that
can
be
done
anyway.
I'm
sorry,
Pete.
You
fought
the
good
fight,
but
you
lost,
and
I'm
through."
He
was
gone
and
Lamont
was
alone.
He
sat
in
his
chair,
fingers
aimlessly
drumming,
drumming.
Somewhere
in
the
Sun,
protons
were
clinging
together
with
just
a
trifling
additional
avidity
and
with
each
moment
that
avidity
grew
and
at
some
moment
the
delicate
balance
would
break
down
.
.
.
"And no one on Earth will live to know I was right," cried out Lamont, and blinked and blinked to keep back the tears.
2 . . . the gods themselves . . .
1a
Dua did not have much trouble leaving the others. She always expected trouble, but somehow it never came. Never real trouble. But then why should it? Odeen
objected in his lofty way. "Stay put," he would say. "You know you annoy Tritt." He never spoke of his own annoyance; Rationals didn't grow annoyed over trifles.
Still, he hovered over Tritt almost as persistently as Tritt hovered over the children. But then Odeen always let her have her way if she were persistent enough,
and would even intercede with Tritt.
Sometimes he even admitted he was proud of her ability, of her independence. ... He wasn't a bad left-ling, she thought with absent-minded affection. Tritt was harder to
handle and he had a sour way of looking at her when she was-well, when she was as she wished to be. But then right-lings were like that. He was a right-ling to her, but
a Parental to the children and the latter took precedence always. . . . Which was good because she could always count on one child or the other taking him away
just as things grew uncomfortable. Still, Dua didn't mind Tritt very much. Except for melting, she tended to ignore him. Odeen was another thing. He had been exciting
at first; just his presence had made her outlines shimmer and fade. And the fact that he was a Rational made him all the more exciting somehow. She didn't understand
her reaction to that; it was part of her queerness. She had grown used to her queerness-almost. Dua sighed. When she was a child, when she still thought of herself
as an individual, a single being, and not as part of a triad, she was much more aware of that queerness. She was much more made aware of it by the others. As little
a thing as the surface at evening- She had loved the surface at evening. The other Emotionals had called it cold and gloomy and had quivered and coalesced when she
described it for them. They were ready enough to emerge in the warmth of midday and stretch and feed, but that was exactly what made the midday dull. She didn't like
to be around the twittering lot of them. She had to eat, of course, but she liked it much better in the evening when there was very little food, but everything was
dim, deep red, and she was alone. Of course, she described it as colder and more wistful than it was when she talked to the others in order to watch them grow hard-edged
as they imagined the chill-or as hard-edged as young Emotionals could. After a while, they would whisper and laugh at her-and leave her alone. The small sun was
at the horizon now, with the secret ruddiness that she alone was there to see. She spread herself out laterally and thickened dorso-ventrally, absorbing the traces
of thin warmth. She munched at it idly, savoring the slightly sour, substanceless taste of the long wave lengths. (She had never met another Emotional who would
admit to liking it. But she could never explain that she associated it with freedom; freedom from the others, when she could be alone.) Even now the loneliness,
the chill, and the deep, deep red, brought back those old days before the triad; and even more, quite sharply, her own Parental, who would come lumbering after her,
forever fearful that she would hurt herself. He had been carefully devoted to her, as Parentals always were; to their little-mids more than to the other two,
as always. It had annoyed her and she would dream of the day when he would leave her. Parentals always did eventually; and how she had missed him, when one
day, he finally did. He had come to tell her, just as carefully as he could, despite the difficulty Parentals had in putting their feelings into words. She
had run from him that day; not in malice; not because she suspected what he had to tell her; but only out of joy. She had managed to find a special place
at midday and had gorged herself in unexpected isolation and had been filled with a queer, itching sensation that demanded motion and activity. She had
slithered over the rocks and had let her edges overlap theirs. It was something she knew to be a grossly improper action for anyone but a baby and yet
it was something at once exciting and soothing. And her Parental caught her at last and had stood before her, silent for a long time, making his eyes small
and dense as though to stop every bit of light reflected from her; to see as much as he could of her; and for as long as possible. At first, she just stared
back with the confused thought that he had seen her rub through the rocks and was ashamed of her. But she caught no shame-aura and finally she said, very
subdued, "What is it, Daddy?" "Why, Dua, it's the time. I've been expecting it. Surely you have." "What time?" Now that it was here, Dua stubbornly would
not let herself know. If she refused to know, there would be nothing to know. (She never quite got out of that habit. Odeen said all Emotionals were
like that, in the lofty voice he used sometimes when he was particularly overcome with the importance of being a Rational.) Her Parental had said,
"I must pass on. I will not be with you any more." Then he just stood and looked at her, and she couldn't say anything. He said, "You will tell
the others." "Why?" Dua turned away rebelliously, her outlines vague and growing vaguer, trying to dissipate. She wanted to dissipate altogether and
of course she couldn't. After a while, it hurt and cramped and she hardened again. Her Parental didn't even bother to scold her and tell her that
it would be shameful if anyone saw her stretched out so. She said, "They won't care," and immediately felt sorrowful that her Parental would be hurt at that.
He still called them "little-left" and "little-right," but little-left was all involved with his studies and little-right kept talking about forming a
triad. Dua was the only one of the three who still felt- Well, she was the youngest. Emotionals always were and with them it was different. Her Parental
only said, "You will tell them anyway." And they stood looking at each other. She didn't want to tell them. They weren't close any more. It-had
been different when they were all little. They could hardly tell themselves apart in those days; left-brother from right-brother from mid-sister.
They were all wispy and would tangle with each other and roll through each other and hide in the walls. No one ever minded that when they were little;
none of the grown-ups. But then the brothers grew thick and sober and drew away. And when she complained to her Parental, he would only say gently, "You
are too old to thin, Dua." She tried not to listen, but left-brother kept drawing away and would say, "Don't snuggle; I have no time for you." And
right-brother began to stay quite hard all the time and became glum and silent. She didn't understand it quite then and Daddy had not been able
to make it clear. He would say every once in a while as though it were a lesson he had once learned-"Lefts are Rationals, Dua. Rights are Parentals.
They grow up their own way." She didn't like their way. They were no longer children and she still was, so she flocked with the other Emotionals.
They all had the same complaints about their brothers. They all talked of coming triads. They all spread in the Sun and fed. They all grew more
and more the same and every day the same things were said. And she grew to detest them and went off by herself whenever she could, so that they left
and called her "Left-Em." (It had been a long time now since she had heard that call, but she never thought of that phrase without remembering perfectly
the thin ragged voices that kept it up after her with a kind of half-wit persistence because they knew it hurt.) But her Parental retained his interest
in her even when it must have seemed to him that everyone else laughed at her. He tried, in his clumsy way, to shield her from the others.
He followed her to the surface sometimes, even, though he hated it himself, in order to make sure she was safe. She came upon him once, talking to a
Hard One. It was hard for a Parental to talk to a Hard One; even though she was quite young, she knew that much. Hard Ones talked only to Rationals.
She was quite frightened and she wisped away but not before she had heard her Parental say, "I take good care of her, Hard-sir." Could the Hard One
have inquired about her? About her queerness, perhaps. But her Parental had not been apologetic. Even to the Hard One, he had spoken of his concern
for her. Dua felt an obscure pride. But now he was leaving and suddenly all the independence that Dua had been looking forward to lost its fine shape
and hardened into the pointed crag of loneliness. She said, "But why must you pass on?" "I must, little mid-dear." He must. She knew that. Everyone,
sooner or later, must. The day would come when she would have to sigh and say, "I must." "But what makes you know when you have to pass one?
If you can choose your time, why don't you choose a different time and stay longer?" He said, "Your left-father has decided. The triad must do as
he says." "Why must you do what he says?" She hardly ever saw her left-father or her mid-mother. They didn't count any more. Only her right-father,
her Parental, her daddy, who stood there squat and flat-surfaced. He wasn't all smooth-curved like a Rational or shuddery uneven like an Emotional,
and she could always tell what he was going to say. Almost always. She was sure he would say, "I can't explain to a little Emotional." He said it.
Dua said in a burst of woe, "I'll miss you. I know you think I pay you no attention, and that I don't like you for always telling me not to do things.
But I would rather not like you for telling me not to do things, than not have you around to tell me not to do things." And Daddy just stood there.
There was no way he could handle an outburst like that except to come closer and pinch out a hand. It cost him a visible effort, but he held it out
trembling and its outlines were ever so slightly soft. Dua said, "Oh, Daddy," and let her own hand flow about it so that his looked misty and shimmery
through her substance; but she was careful not to touch it for that would have embarrassed him so. Then he withdrew it and left her hand enclosing nothing
and he said, "Remember the Hard Ones, Dua. They will help you. I-I will go now." He went and she never saw him again. Now she sat there, remembering
in the sunset, and rebelliously aware that pretty soon Tritt would grow petulant over her absence and nag Odeen. And then Odeen might lecture her
on her duties. She didn't care. 1b Odeen was moderately aware that Dua was off on the surface. Without really thinking about it, he could judge her
direction and even something of her distance. If he had stopped to think of it, he might have felt displeasure, for this inter-awareness sense had been
steadily deadening for a long time now and, without really being certain why, he had a sense of gathering fulfillment about it. It was the way things
were supposed to be; the sign of the continuing development of the body with age. Tritt's inter-awareness sense did not decrease, but it shifted more
and more toward the children. That was clearly the line of useful development, but then the role of the Parental was a simple one, in a manner of speaking,
however important. The Rational was far more complex and Odeen took a bleak satisfaction in that thought. Of course, it was Dua who was the real
puzzle. She was so unlike all the other Emotionals. That puzzled and frustrated Tritt and reduced him to even more pronounced inarticulacy. It puzzled
and frustrated Odeen at times, too, but he was also aware of Dua's infinite capacity to induce satisfaction with life and it did not seem likely that one
was independent of the other. The occasional exasperation she produced was a small price to pay for the intense happiness. And maybe Dua's odd way
of life was part of what ought to be, too. The Hard Ones seemed interested in her and ordinarily they paid attention only to Rationals. He felt pride
in
that;
so
much
the
better
for
the
triad
that
even
the
Emotional
was
worth
attention.
Things
were
as
they
were
supposed
to
be.
That
was
bedrock,
and
it
was
what
he
wanted
most
to
feel,
right
down
to
the
end.
Someday
he
would
even
know
when
it
was
time
to
pass
on
and
then
he
would
want
to.
The
Hard
Ones
assured
him
of
that,
as
they
assured
all
Rationals,
but
they
also
told
him
that
it
was
his
own
inner
consciousness
that
would
mark
the
time
unmistakably,
and
not
any
advice
from
outside.
"When
you
tell
yourself,"
Losten
had
told
him-in
the
clear,
careful
way
in
which
a
Hard
One
always
talked
to
a
Soft
One,
as
though
the
Hard
One
were
laboring
to
make
himself
understood,
"that
you
know
why
you
must
pass
on,
then
you
will
pass
on,
and
your
triad
will
pass
on
with
you."
And
Odeen
had
said,
"I
cannot
say
I
wish
to
pass
on
now,
Hard-sir.
There
is
so
much
to
learn."
"Of
course,
left-dear.
You
feel
this
because
you
are
not
yet
ready."
Odeen
thought:
How
could
I
ever
feel
ready
when
I
would
never
feel
there
wasn't
much
to
learn?
But
he
didn't
say
so.
He
was
quite
certain
the
time
would
come
and
he
would
then
understand.
He
looked
down
at
himself,
almost
forgetting
and
thrusting
out
an
eye
to
do
so-there
were
always
some
childish
impulses
in
even
the
most
adult
of
the
most
Rational.
He
didn't
have
to,
of
course.
He
would
sense
quite
well
with
his
eye
solidly
in
place,
and
he
found
himself
satisfactorily
solid;
nice,
sharp
outline,
smooth
and
Curved
into
gracefully
conjoined
ovoids.
His
body
lacked
the
strangely
attractive
shimmer
of
Dua,
and
the
comforting
stockiness
of
Tritt.
He
loved
them
both,
but
he
would
not
change
his
own
body
for
either.
And,
of
course,
his
own
mind.
He
would
never
say
so,
of
course,
for
he
would
not
want
to
hurt
their
feelings,
but
he
never
ceased
being
thankful
that
he
did
not
have
Tritt's
limited
understanding
or
(even
more)
Dua's
erratic
one.
He
supposed
they
didn't
mind
for
they
knew
nothing
else.
He
grew
distantly
aware
of
Dua
again,
and
deliberately
dulled
the
sense.
At
the
moment,
he
felt
no
need
for
her.
It
was
not
that
he
wanted
her
less,
but
merely
that
he
had
increasing
drives
elsewhere.
It
was
part
of
the
growing
maturity
of
a
Rational
to
find
more
and
more
satisfaction
in
the
exercise
of
a
mind
that
could
only
be
practiced
alone,
and
with
the
Hard
Ones.
He
grew
constantly
more
accustomed
to
the
Hard
Ones;
constantly
more
attached
to
them.
He
felt
that
was
right
and
proper,
too,
for
he
was
a
Rational
and
in
a
way
the
Hard
Ones
were
super-Rationals.
(He
had
once
said
that
to
Losten,
the
friendliest
of
the
Hard
Ones
and,
it
seemed
to
Odeen
in
some
vague
way
the
youngest.
Losten
had
radiated
amusement
but
had
said
nothing.
And
that
meant
he
had
not
denied
it,
however.)
Odeen's
earliest
memories
were
filled
with
Hard
Ones.
His
Parental
more
and
more
concentrated
his
attention
on
the
last
child,
the
baby-Emotional.
That
was
only
natural.
Tritt
would
do
it,
too,
when
the
last
child
came,
if
it
ever
did.
(Odeen
had
picked
up
that
last
qualification
from
Tritt,
who
used
it
constantly
as
a
reproach
to
Dua.)
But
so
much
the
better.
With
his
Parental
busy
so
much
of
the
time,
Odeen
could
begin
his
education
that
much
the
earlier.
He
was
losing
his
baby
ways
and
he
had
learned
a
great
deal
even
before
he
met
Tritt.
That
meeting,
though,
was
surely
something
he
would
never
forget.
It
might
as
well
have
been
yesterday
as
more
than
half
a
lifetime
ago.
He
had
seen
Parentals
of
his
own
generation,
of
course;
young
ones
who,
long
before
they
incubated
the
children
that
made
true
Parentals
of
them,
showed
few
signs
of
the
stolidity
to
come.
As
a
child
he
had
played
with
his
own
right-brother
and
was
scarcely
aware
of
any
intellectual
difference
between
them
(though,
looking
back
on
those
days,
he
recognized
that
it
was
there,
even
then).
He
knew
also,
vaguely,
the
role
of
a
Parental
in
a
triad.
Even
as
a
child,
he
had
whispered
tales
of
melting.
When
Tritt
first
appeared,
when
Odeen
saw
him
first,
everything
changed.
For
the
first
time
in
his
life,
Odeen
felt
an
inner
warmth
and
began
to
think
that
there
was
something
he
wanted
that
was
utterly
divorced
from
thought.
Even
now,
he
could
remember
the
sense
of
embarrassment
that
had
accompanied
this.
Tritt
was
not
embarrassed,
of
course.
Parentals
were
never
embarrassed
about
the
activities
of
the
triad,
and
Emotionals
were
almost
never
embarrassed.
Only
Rationals
had
that
problem.
"Too
much
thinking,"
a
Hard
One
had
said
when
Odeen
had
discussed
the
problem
with
him
and
that
left
Odeen
dissatisfied.
In
what
way
could
thinking
be
"too
much"?
Tritt
was
young
when
they
first
met,
of
course.
He
was
still
so
childish
as
to
be
uncertain
in
his
blockishness
so
that
his
reaction
to
the
meeting
was
embarrassingly
clear.
He
grew
almost
translucent
along
his
edges.
Odeen
said,
hesitantly,
"I
haven't
seen
you
before,
have
I,
right-fellow?"
Tritt
said,
"I
have
never
been
here.
I
have
been
brought
here."
They
both
knew
exactly
what
had
happened
to
them.
The
meeting
had
been
arranged
because
someone
(some
Parental,
Odeen
had
thought
at
the
time,
but
later
he
knew
it
was
some
Hard
One)
thought
they
would
suit
each
other,
and
the
thought
was
correct.
There
was
no
intellectual
rapport
between
the
two,
of
course.
How
could
there
be
when
Odeen
wanted
to
learn
with
an
intensity
that
superseded
anything
but
the
existence
of
the
triad
itself,
and
Tritt
lacked
the
very
concept
of
learning?
What
Tritt
had
to
know,
he
knew
beyond
either
learning
or
unlearning.
Odeen,
out
of
the
excitement
of
finding
out
about
the
world
and
its
Sun;
about
the
history
and
mechanism
of
life;
about
all
the
abouts
in
the
Universe;
sometimes
(in
those
early
days
together)
found
'himself
spilling
over
to
Tritt.
Tritt
listened
placidly,
clearly
understanding
nothing,
but
content
to
be
listening;
while
Odeen,
transmitting
nothing,
was
as
clearly
content
to
be
lecturing.
It
was
Tritt
who
made
the
first
move,
driven
by
his
special
needs.
Odeen
was
chattering
about
what
he
had
learned
that
day
after
the
brief
midday
meal.
(Their
thicker
substance
absorbed
food
so
rapidly,
they
were
satisfied
with
a
simple
walk
in
the
Sun,
while
Emotionals
basked
for
hours
at
a
time,
curling
and
thinning
as
though
deliberately
to
lengthen
the
task.)
Odeen,
who
always
ignored
the
Emotionals,
was
quite
happy
to
be
talking.
Tritt,
who
stared
wordlessly
at
them,
day
after
day,
was
now
visibly
restless.
Abruptly,
he
came
close
to
Odeen,
formed
an
appendage
so
hastily
as
to
clash
most
disagreeably
on
the
other's
form-sense.
He
placed
in
upon
a
portion
of
Odeen's
upper
ovoid
where
a
slight
shimmer
was
allowing
a
welcome
draft
of
warm
air
as
dessert.
Tritt's
appendage
thinned
with
a
visible
effort
and
sank
into
the
superfices
of
Odeen's
skin
before
the
latter
darted
away,
horribly
embarrassed.
Odeen
had
done
such
things
as
a
,baby,
of
course,
but
never
since
his
adolescence.
"Don't
do
that,
Tritt,"
he
said
sharply.
Tritt's
appendage
remained
out,
groping
a
little.
"I
want
to."
Odeen
held
himself
as
compactly
as
he
could,
striving
to
harden
the
surface
to
bar
entry.
"I
don't
want
to."
"Why
not?"
said
Tritt,
urgently.
"There's
nothing
wrong."
Odeen
said
the
first
thing
that
came
into
his
mind.
"It
hurt."
(It
didn't
really.
Not
physically.
But
the
Hard
Ones
always
avoided
the
touch
of
the
Soft
Ones.
A
careless
interpenetration
hurt
them,
but
they
were
constructed
differently
from
Soft
Ones,
completely
differently.)
Tritt
was
not
fooled
by
that.
His
instinct
could
not
possibly
mislead
him
in
this
respect.
He
said,
"It
didn't
hurt."
"Well,
it
isn't
right
this
way.
We
need
an
Emotional."
And
Tritt
could
only
say,
stubbornly,
"I
want
to,
anyway."
It
was
bound
to
continue
happening,
and
Odeen
was
bound
to
give
in.
He
always
did;
it
was
something
that
was
sure
to
happen
even
to
the
most
self-conscious
Rational.
As
the
old
saying
had
it:
Everyone
either
admitted
doing
it
or
lied
about
it.
Tritt
was
at
him
at
each
meeting
after
that;
if
not
with
an
appendage,
then
rim
to
rim.
And
finally
Odeen,
seduced
by
the
pleasure
of
it,
began
to
help
and
tried
to
shine.
He
was
better
at
that
than
Tritt
was.
Poor
Tritt,
infinitely
more
eager,
huffed
and
strained,
and
could
achieve
only
the
barest
shimmer
here
and
there,
patchily
and
raggedly.
Odeen,
however,
could
run
translucent
all
over
his
surface,
and
fought
down
his
embarrassment
in
order
to
let
himself
flow
against
Tritt.
There
was
skin-deep
penetration
and
Odeen
could
feel
the
pulsing
of
Tritt's
hard
surface
under
the
skin.
There
was
enjoyment,
riddled
with
guilt.
Tritt,
as
often
as
not,
was
tired
and
vaguely
angry
when
it
was
all
over.
Odeen
said,
"Now,
Tritt,
I've
told
you
we
need
an
Emotional
to
do
this
properly.
You
can't
be
angry
at
something
that
just
is"
And
Tritt
said,
"Let's
get
an
Emotional."
Let's
get
an
Emotional!
Tritt's
simple
drives
never
led
him
to
anything
but
direct
action.
Odeen
was
not
sure
he
could
explain
the
complexities
of
life
to
the
other.
"It's
not
that
easy,
right-ling,"
he
began
gently.
Tritt
said
abruptly.
"The
Hard
Ones
can
do
it
You're
friendly
with
them.
Ask
them."
Odeen
was
horrified.
"I
can't
ask.
The
time,"
he
continued,
unconsciously
falling
into
his
lecturing
voice,
"is
not
yet
come,
or
I
would
certainly
know
it.
Until
such
time-"
Tritt
was
not
listening.
He
said,
"I'll
ask."
"No,"
said
Odeen,
horrified.
"You
stay
out
of
it
I
tell
you
it's
not
time.
I
have
an
education
to
worry
about.
It's
very
easy
to
be
a
Parental
and
not
to
have
to
know
anything
but-"
He
was
sorry
the
instant
he
had
said
it
and
it
was
a
lie
anyway.
He
just
didn't
want
to
do
anything
at
all
that
might
offend
the
Hard
Ones
and
impede
his
useful
relationship
with
them.
Tritt,
however,
showed
no
signs
of
minding
and
it
occurred
to
Odeen
that
the
other
saw
no
point
or
merit
in
knowing
anything
he
did
not
already
know
and
would
not
consider
the
statement
of
the
fact
an
insult.
The
problem
of
the
Emotional
kept
coming
up,
though.
Occasionally,
they
tried
interpenetration.
In
fact,
the
impulse
grew
stronger
with
time.
It
was
never
truly
satisfying
though
it
had
its
pleasure
and
each
time
Tritt
would
demand
an
Emotional.
Each
time,
Odeen
threw
himself
deeper
into
his
studies,
almost
as
a
defense
against
the
problem.
Yet
at
times,
he
was
almost
tempted
to
speak
to
Losten
about
it.
Losten
was
the
Hard
One
he
knew
best;
the
one
who
took
the
greatest
personal
interest
in
him.
There
was
a
deadly
sameness
about
the
Hard
Ones,
because
they
did
not
change;
they
never
changed;
their
form
was
fixed.
Where
there
eyes
were
they
always
were,
and
always
in
the
same
place
for
all
of
them.
Their
skin
was
not
exactly
hard,
but
it
was
always
opaque,
never
shimmered,
never
vague,
never
penetrable
by
another
skin
of
its
own
type.
They
were
not
larger
in
size,
particularly,
than
the
Soft
Ones,
but
they
were
heavier.
Their
substance
was
much
denser
and
they
had
to
be
careful
about
the
yielding
tissues
of
the
Soft
Ones.
Once
when
he
had
been
little,
really
little
and
his
body
had
flowed
almost
as
freely
as
his
sister's,
he
had
been
approached
by
a
Hard
One.
He
had
never
known
which
one
it
was,
but
he
learned
in
later
life
that
they
were
all
of
them
curious
about
baby-Rationals.
Odeen
had
reached
up
for
the
Hard
One,
out
of
nothing
but
curiosity.
The
Hard
One
had
sprung
backward
and
later
Odeen's
Parental
had
scolded
him
for
offering
to
touch
a
Hard
One.
The
scolding
had
been
harsh
enough
for
Odeen
never
to
forget.
When
he
was
older
he
learned
that
the
close-packed
atoms
of
the.
Hard
One's
tissues
felt
pain
on
the
forcible
penetration
of
others.
Odeen
wondered
if
the
Soft
One
felt
pain,
too.
Another
young
Rational
once
told
him
that
he
had
stumbled
against
a
Hard
One
and
the
Hard
One
had
doubled
up
but
that
he
himself
had
felt
nothing
-but
Odeen
wasn't
sure
this
was
not
just
a
melodramatic
boast.
There
were
other
things
he
could
not
do.
He
liked
rubbing
against
the
walls
of
the
cavern.
There
was
a
pleasant,
warm
feeling
when
he
allowed
himself
to
penetrate
rock.
Babies
always
did
it,
but
it
got
harder
to
do
as
he
grew
older.
Still,
he
could
do
it
skin-deep
and
he
liked
it,
but
his
Parental
found
him
doing
it
and
scolded
him.
He
objected
that
his
sister
did
it
all
the
time;
he
had
seen
her.
"That's
different,"
said
the
Parental.
"She's
an
Emotional."
At
another
time,
when
Odeen
was
absorbing
a
recording-he
was
older
then-he
had
idly
formed
a
couple
of
projections
and
made
the
tips
so
thin,
he
could
pass
one
through
the
other.
He
began
to
do
it
regularly
when
he
listened.
There
was
a
pleasant
tickling
sensation
that
made
it
easier
to
listen
and
made
him
nicely
sleepy
afterward.
And
his
Parental
caught
him
at
that,
too,
and
what
he
had
said
still
made
Odeen
uncomfortable
in
remembering
it
No
one
really
told
him
about
melting
in
those
days.
They
fed
him
knowledge
and
educated
him
about
everything
except
what
the
triad
was
all
about.
Tritt
had
never
been
told,
either,
but
he
was
a
Parental
so
he
knew
without
being
told.
Of
course,
when
Dua
came
at
last,
all
was
clear,
even
though
she
seemed
to
know
less
about
it
even
than
Odeen.
But
she
didn't
come
to
them
because
of
anything
Odeen
did.
It was Tritt who broached the matter; Tritt, who ordinarily feared the Hard Ones and avoided them mutely; Tritt, who lacked Odeen's self-assurance, in all but this respect;
Tritt, who on this one subject was driven; Tritt- Tritt-Tritt- Odeen signed. Tritt was invading his thoughts, because Tritt was coming. He could feel him, harsh, demanding, always
demanding. Odeen had so little time to himself these days, just when he felt that he needed to think more than ever, to straighten out all the thoughts- "Yes, Tritt," he said.
1c
Tritt was conscious of his blockiness. He didn't think it ugly. He didn't think about it at all. If he did, he would consider it beautiful. His body was designed for a purpose
and designed well. He said, "Odeen, where is Dua?" "Outside somewhere," mumbled Odeen, almost as though he didn't care. It annoyed Tritt to have the triad made so little of.
Dua was so difficult and Odeen didn't care. "Why do you let her go?" "How can I stop her, Tritt? And what harm does it do?" "You know the harm. We have two babies. We
need a third. It is so hard to make a little-mid these days. Dua must be well fed for it to be made. Now she is wandering about at Sunset again. How can she feed properly
at Sunset?" "She's just not a great feeder." "And we just don't have a little-mid. Odeen," Tritt's voice was caressing, "how can I love you properly without Dua?" "Now, then,"
mumbled Odeen, and Tritt felt himself once more puzzled by the other's clear embarrassment at the simplest statement of fact, Tritt said, "Remember, I was the one who first
got Dua." Did Odeen remember that? Did Odeen ever think of the triad and what it meant? Sometimes Tritt felt so frustrated he could-he could- Actually, he didn't know what to do,
but he knew he felt frustrated. As in those old days when he wanted an Emotional and Odeen would do nothing. Tritt knew he didn't have the trick of talking in big, elaborate sentences.
But if Parentals didn't talk, they thought. They thought about important things. Odeen always talked about atoms and energy. Who cared about atoms and energy? Tritt thought about
the triad and the babies. Odeen had once told him that the numbers of Soft Ones were gradually growing fewer. Didn't he care? Didn't the Hard Ones care? Did anyone care but
the Parentals? Only two forms of life on all the world, the Soft Ones and the Hard Ones. And food shining down on them. Odeen had once told him the Sun was cooling off. There was
less food, he said, so there were less people. Tritt didn't believe it. The Sun felt no cooler than it had when he was a baby. It was just that people weren't worrying about the
triads any more. Too many absorbed Rationals; too many silly Emotionals. What the Soft Ones must do was concentrate on the important things of life. Tritt did. He tended to
the business of the triad. The baby-left came, then the baby-right. They were growing and flourishing. They had to have a baby-mid, though. That was the hardest to get started and
without a baby-mid there would be no new triad. What made Dua as she was? She had always been difficult, but she was growing worse. Tritt felt an obscure anger against Odeen.
Odeen always talked with all those hard words. And Dua listened. Odeen would talk to Dua endlessly till they were almost two Rationals. That was bad for the triad. Odeen should
know better. It was always Tritt who had to care. It was always Tritt who had to do what had to be done. Odeen was the friend of the Hard Ones and yet he said nothing. They needed
an Emotional and yet Odeen would say nothing. Odeen talked to them of energy and not of the needs of the triad. It had been Tritt who had turned the .scale. Tritt remembered that proudly.
He had seen Odeen talking to a Hard One and he had approached. Without a shake in his voice, he had interrupted and said, "We need an Emotional." The Hard One turned to look at him.
Tritt had never been so close to a Hard One. He was all of a piece. Every part of him had to turn when one part did. He had some projections that could move by themselves, but they
never changed in shape. They never flowed and were irregular and unlovely. They didn't like to be touched. The Hard One said, "Is this so, Odeen?" He did not talk to Tritt.
Odeen flattened. He flattened close to the ground; more flattened than Tritt had ever seen. He said, "My right-ling is over-zealous. My right-ling is-is-" He stuttered and puffed
and could not speak. Tritt could speak. He said, "We cannot melt without one." Tritt knew that Odeen was embarrassed into speech-lessness but he didn't care. It was time.
"Well, left-dear," said the Hard One to Odeen, "do you feel the same way about it?" Hard Ones spoke as the Soft Ones did, but more harshly and with fewer overtones. They were
hard to listen to. Tritt found them hard, anyway, though Odeen seemed used to it "Yes," said Odeen, finally. The Hard One turned at last to Tritt. "Remind me, young-right.
How long have you and Odeen been together?" "Long enough," said Tritt, "to deserve an Emotional." He kept his shape firmly at angles. He did not allow himself to be frightened.
This was too important. He said, "And my name is Tritt." The Hard One seemed amused. "Yes, the choice was good. You and Odeen go well together, but it makes the choice of
an Emotional difficult. We have almost made up our minds. Or at least I have long since made up my mind, but the others must be convinced. Be patient, Tritt." "I am tired of
patience." "I know, but be patient, anyway." He was amused again. When he was quite gone, Odeen uplifted himself and thinned out angrily. He said, "How could you do that, Tritt?
Do you know who he was?" "He was a Hard One." "He was Losten. He is my special teacher. I don't want him angry with me." "Why should he be angry? I was polite." "Well, never
mind." Odeen was settling into normal shape. That meant he wasn't angry any more. (That relieved Tritt though he tried not to show it.) "It's very embarrassing to have my dumb-right
come up and speak out to my Hard One." "Why didn't you do it, then?" "There's such a thing as the right time." "But never's the right time to you." But then they rubbed surfaces and
stopped arguing and it wasn't long after that that Dua came. It was Losten that brought her. Tritt didn't know that; he didn't look at the Hard One. Only at Dua. But Odeen told
him afterward that it was Losten that brought her. "You see?" said Tritt. "It was I who talked to him. That is why he brought her." "No," said Odeen. "It was time. He would
have brought her even if neither of us had talked to him." Tritt didn't believe him. He was quite sure that it was entirely because of himself that Dua was with them. Surely,
there was never anyone like Dua in the world. Tritt had seen many Emotionals. They were all attractive. He would have accepted any one of them for proper melting. Once he
saw Dua, he realized that none of the others would have suited. Only Dua. Only Dua. And Dua knew exactly what to do. Exactly. No one had ever shown her how, she told them
afterward. No one had ever talked to her about it. Even other Emotionals hadn't, for she avoided them. Yet when all three were together, each knew what to do. Dua thinned. She
thinned more than Tritt had ever seen a person thin. She thinned more than Tritt would ever have thought possible. She became a kind of colored smoke that filled the room
and dazzled him. He moved without knowing he was moving. He immersed himself in the air that was Dua. There was no sensation of penetration, none at all. Tritt felt no resistance,
no friction. There was just a floating inward and a rapid palpitation. He felt himself beginning to thin in sympathy, and without the tremendous effort that had always accompanied it.
With Dua filling him, he could thin without effort into a thick smoke of his own. Thinning became like flowing, one enormous smooth flow. Dimly, he could see Odeen approaching from
the other side, from Dua's left. And he, too, was thinning. Then, like all the shocks of contact in all the world, he reached Odeen. But it wasn't a shock at all. Tritt felt without
feeling, knew without knowing. He slid into Odeen and Odeen slid into him. He couldn't tell whether he was surrounding Odeen or being surrounded by him or both or neither.
It was only-pleasure. The senses dimmed with the intensity of that pleasure and at the point where he thought he could stand no more, the senses failed altogether. Eventually,
they separated and stared at each other. They had melted for days. Of course, melting always took time. The better it was the longer it took, though when it was over all
that time seemed as though it had been an instant and they did not remember it. In later life, it rarely took longer than that first time. Odeen said, "That was wonderful."
Tritt only gazed at Dua, who had made it possible. She was coalescing, swirling, moving tremulously. She seemed most affected of the three. "We'll do it again," she said,
hurriedly, "but later, later. Let me go now." She had run off. They did not stop her. They were too overcome to stop her. But that was always the way afterward. She
was always gone after a melting. No matter how successful it was, she would go. There seemed something in her that needed to be alone. It bothered Tritt. In point
after point, she was different from other Emotionals. She shouldn't be. Odeen felt differently. He would say on many occasions, "Why don't you leave her alone,
Tritt? She's not like the others and that means she's better than the others. Melting wouldn't be as good if she were like the others. Do you want the benefits
without paying the price?" Tritt did not understand that clearly. He knew only that she ought to do what ought to be done. He said, "I want her to do what is right."
"I know, Tritt, I know. But leave her alone, anyway." Odeen often scolded Dua himself for her queer ways but was always unwilling to let Tritt do so. "You lack tact,
Tritt," he would say. Tritt didn't know what tact was exactly. And now- It had been so long since the first melting and still the baby-Emotional was not born. How much longer?
It was already much too long. And Dua, if anything, stayed by herself more and more as time went on. Tritt said. "She doesn't eat enough." "When it's time-" began Odeen. "You
always talk about it's being time or it's not being time. You never found it time to get Dua in the first place. Now you never find it time to have a baby-Emotional.
Dua should-" But Odeen turned away. He said, "She's out there, Tritt. If you want to go out and get her, as though you were her Parental instead of her right-ling, do so.
But I say, leave her alone." Tritt backed away. He had a great deal to say, but he didn't know how to say it.
2a
Dua
was
aware
of
the
left-right
agitation
concerning
her
in
a
dim
and
faraway
manner
and
her
rebelliousness
grew.
If
one
or
the
other,
or
both,
came
to
get
her,
it
would
end
in
a
melting
and
she
raged
against
the
thought.
It
was
all
Tritt
knew,
except
for
the
children;
all
Tritt
wanted,
except
for
the
third
and
last
child;
and
it
was
all
involved
with
the
children
and
the
still
missing
child.
And
when
Tritt
wanted
a
melting,
he
got
it.
Tritt
dominated
the
triad
when
he
grew
stubborn.
He
would
hold
on
to
some
simple
idea
and
never
let
go
and
in
the
end
Odeen
and
Dua
would
have
to
give
in.
Yet
now
she
wouldn't
give
in;
she
wouldn't-
She
didn't
feel
disloyal
at
the
thought,
either.
She
never
expected
to
feel
for
either
Odeen
or
Tritt
the
sheer
intensity
of
longing
they
felt
for
each
other.
She
could
melt
alone;
they
could
melt
only
through
her
mediation
(so
why
didn't
that
make
her
the
more
regarded).
She
felt
intense
pleasure
at
the
three-way
melting;
of
course
she
did,
it
would
be
stupid
to
deny
it;
but
it
was
a
pleasure
akin
to
that
which
she
felt
when
she
passed
through
a
rock
wall,
as
she
sometimes
secretly
did.
To
Tritt
and
Odeen,
the
pleasure
was
like
nothing
else
they
had
ever
experienced
or
could
ever
experience.
No,
wait.
Odeen
had
the
pleasure
of
learning,
of
what
he
called
intellectual
development.
Dua
felt
some
of
that
at
times,
enough
to
know
what
it
might
mean;
and
though
it
was
different
from
melting,
it
might
serve
as
a
substitute,
at
least
to
the
point
where
Odeen
could
do
without
melting
sometimes.
But
not
so,
Tritt.
For
him
there
was
only
melting
and
the
children.
Only.
And
when
his
small
mind
bent
entirely
upon
that,
Odeen
would
give
in,
and
then
Dua
would
have
to.
Once
she
had
rebelled.
"But
what
happens
when
we
melt?
It's
hours,
days
sometimes,
before
we
come
out
of
it.
What
happens
all
that
time?"
Tritt
had
looked
outraged
at
that.
"It's
always
that
way.
It's
got
to
be."
"I
don't
like
anything
that's
got
to
be.
I
want
to
know
why."
Odeen
had
looked
embarrassed.
He
spent
half
his
life
being
embarrassed.
He
said,
"Now,
Dua,
it
does
have
to
be.
On
account
of-children,"
He
seemed
to
pulse,
as
he
said
the
word.
"Well,
don't
pulse,"
said
Dua,
sharply.
"We're
grown
now
and
we've
melted
I
don't
know
how
many
times
and
we
all
know
it's
so
we
can
have
children.
You
might
as
well
say
so.
Why
does
it
take
so
long,
that's
all?"
"Because
it's
a
complicated
process,"
said
Odeen,
still
pulsing.
"Because
it
takes
energy.
Dua,
it
takes
a
long
time
to
get
a
child
started
and
even
when
we
take
a
long
time,
it
doesn't
always
get
started.
And
it's
getting
worse.,..
Not
just
with
us,"
he
added
hastily.
"Worse?"
said
Tritt
anxiously,
but
Odeen
would
say
no
more.
They
had
a
child
eventually,
a
baby-Rational,
a
left-let,
that
flitted
and
thinned
so
that
all
three
were
in
raptures
and
even
Odeen
would
hold
it
and
let
it
change
shape
in
his
hands
for
as
long
as
Tritt
would
allow
him
to.
For
it
was
Tritt,
of
course,
who
had
actually
incubated
it
through
the
long
pre-forming;
Tritt
who
had
separated
from
it
when
it
assumed
independent
existence;
and
Tritt
who
cared
for
it
at
all
times.
After
that,
Tritt
was
often
not
with
them
and
Dua
was
oddly
pleased.
Tritt's
obsession
annoyed
her,
but
Odeen's
-oddly-pleased
her.
She
became
increasingly
aware
of
his-importance.
There
was
something
to
being
a
Rational
that
made
it
possible
to
answer
questions,
and
somehow
Dua
had
questions
for
him
constantly.
He
was
readier
to
answer
when
Tritt
was
not
present.
"Why
does
it
take
so
long,
Odeen?
I
don't
like
to
melt
and
then
not
know
what's
happening
for
days
at
a
time."
"We're
perfectly
safe,
Dua,"
said
Odeen,
earnestly.
"Come,
nothing
has
ever
happened
to
us,
has
it?
You've
never
heard
of
anything
ever
happening
to
any
other
triad,
have
you?
Besides,
you
shouldn't
ask
questions."
"Because
I'm
an
Emotional?
Because
other
Emotionals
don't
ask
questions?-I
can't
stand
other
Emotionals,
if
you
want
to
know,
and
I
do
want
to
ask
questions."
She
was
perfectly
aware
that
Odeen
was
looking
at
her
as
though
he
had
never
seen
anyone
as
attractive
and
that
if
Tritt
had
been
present,
melting
would
have
taken
place
at
once.
She
even
let
herself
thin
out;
not
much,
but
perceptibly,
in
deliberate
coquettishness.
Odeen
said,
"But
you
might
not
understand
the
implications,
Dua.
It
takes
a
great
deal
of
energy
to
initiate
a
new
spark
of
life."
"You've
often
mentioned
energy.
What
is
it?
Exactly."
"Why,
what
we
eat."
"Well,
then,
why
don't
you
say
food."
"Because
food
and
energy
aren't
quite
the
same
thing.
Our
food
comes
from
the
Sun
and
that's
a
kind
of
energy,
but
there
are
other
kinds
of
energy
that
are
not
food.
When
we
eat,
we've
got
to
spread
out
and
absorb
the
light.
It's
hardest
for
Emotionals
because
they're
much
more
transparent;
that
is,
the
light
tends
to
pass
through
instead
of
being
absorbed-"
It
was
wonderful
to
have
it
explained,
Dua
thought.
What
she
was
told,
she
really
knew;
but
she
didn't
know
the
proper
words;,
the
long
science-words
that
Odeen
knew.
And
it
made
sharper
and
more
meaningful
everything
that
happened.
Occasionally
now,
in
adult
life,
when
she
no
longer
feared
that
childish
teasing;
when
she
shared
in
the
prestige
of
being
part
of
the
Odeen-triad;
she
tried
to
swarm
with
other
Emotionals
and
to
withstand
the
chatter
and
the
crowding.
After
all,
she
did
occasionally
feel
like
a
more
substantial
meal
than
she
usually
got
and
it
did
make
for
better
melting.
There
was
a
joy-sometimes
she
almost
caught
the
pleasure
the
others
got
out
of
it-in
slithering
and
maneuvering
for
exposure
to
Sunlight;
in
the
luxurious
contraction
and
condensation
to
absorb
the
warmth
through
greater
thickness
with
greater
efficiency.
Yet
for
Dua
a
little
of
that
went
quite
a
way
and
the
others
never
seemed
to
have
enough.
There
was
a
kind
of
gluttonous
wiggle
about
them
that
Dua
could
not
duplicate
and
that,
at
length,
she
could
not
endure.
That
was
why
Rationals
and
Parentals
were
so
rarely
on
the
surface.
Their
thickness
made
it
possible
for
them
to
eat
quickly
and
leave.
Emotionals
writhed
in
the
Sun
for
hours,
for
though
they
ate
more
slowly,
they
actually
needed
more
energy
than
the
others-at
least
for
melting.
The
Emotional
supplied
the
energy,
Odeen
had
explained
(pulsing
so
that
his
signals
were
barely
understood),
the
Rational
the
seed,
the
Parental
the
incubator.
Once
Dua
understood
that,
a
certain
amusement
began
to
blend
with
her
disapproval
when
she
watched
the
other
Emotionals
virtually
slurp
up
the
ruddy
Sunlight.
Since
they
never
asked
questions,
she
was
sure
they
didn't
know
why
they
did
it
and
couldn't
understand
that
there
was
an
obscene
side
to
their
quivering
condensations,
or
to
the
way
in
which
they
went
tittering
down
below
eventually-on
their
way
to
a
good
melt,
of
course,
with
lots
of
energy
to
spare.
She
could
also
stand
Tritt's
annoyance
when
she
would
come
down
without
that
swirling
opacity
that
meant
a
good
gorging.
Yet
why
should
they
complain?
The
thinness
she
retained
meant
a
defter
melting.
Not
as
sloppy
and
glutinous
as
the
other
triads
managed,
perhaps,
but
it
was
the
ethereality
that
counted,
she
felt
sure.
And
the
little-left
and
little-right
came
eventually,
didn't
they?
Of
course,
it
was
the
baby-Emotional,
the
little-mid,
that
was
the
crux.
That
took
more
energy
than
the
other
two
and
Dua
never
had
enough.
Even
Odeen
was
beginning
to
mention
it.
"You're
not
getting
enough
Sunlight,
Dua."
"Yes
I
am,"
said
Dua,
hastily.
"Genia's
triad,"
said
Odeen,
"has
just
initiated
an
Emotional."
Dua
didn't
like
Genia.
She
never
had.
She
was
emptyheaded
even
by
Emotional
standards.
Dua said, loftily, "I suppose she's boasting about it. She has no delicacy. I suppose she's saying, 'I shouldn't mention it, my dear, but you'll never guess what my
left-ling and right-ling have gone and went and done-' " She imitated Genia's tremulous signaling with deadly accuracy and Odeen was amused. But then he said, "Genia
may be a dunder, but she has initiated an Emotional, and Tritt is upset about it. We've been at it for much longer than they have-" Dua turned away. "I get all the
Sun I can stand. I do it till I'm too full to move. I don't know what you want of me." Odeen said, "Don't be angry. I promised Tritt I would talk to you. He thinks
you listen to me-" "Oh, Tritt just thinks it's odd that you explain science to me. He doesn't understand- Do you want a mid-ling like the others?" "No," said Odeen,
seriously. "You're not like the others, and I'm glad of it. And if you're interested in Rational-talk, then let me explain something. The Sun doesn't supply the food
it used to in ancient times. The light-energy is less; and it takes longer exposures. The birth rate has been dropping for ages and the world's population is only
a fraction of what it once was." "I can't help it," said Dua, rebelliously. "The Hard Ones may be able to. Their numbers have been decreasing, too-" "Do they pass on?"
Dua was suddenly interested. She always thought they were immortal somehow; that they weren't born; that they didn't die. Who had ever seen a baby Hard One, for
instance? They didn't have babies. They didn't melt. They didn't eat. Odeen said, thoughtfully, "I imagine they pass on. They never talk about themselves to
me. I'm not even sure how they eat, but of course they must. And be born. There's a new one, for instance; I haven't seen him yet- But never mind that. The point
is that they've been developing an artificial food-" "I know," said Dua. "I've tasted it." "You have? I didn't know that!" "A bunch of the Emotionals talked about it
They said a Hard One was asking for volunteers to taste it and the sillies were all afraid. They said it would probably turn them permanently hard and they would
never be able to melt again." "That's foolish," said Odeen, vehemently. "I know. So I volunteered. That shut them up. They are so hard to endure, Odeen." "How was
it?" "Horrible," said Dua, vehemently. "Harsh and bitter. Of course I didn't tell the other Emotionals that." Odeen said, "I tasted it. It wasn't that bad."
"Rationals and Parentals don't care what food tastes like." But Odeen said, "It's still only experimental. They're working hard on improvements, the Hard Ones
are. Especially Estwald-that's the one I mentioned before, the new one I haven't seen-he's working on it. Losten speaks of him now and then as though he's something
special; a very great scientist." "How is it you've never seen him?" "I'm just a Soft One. You don't suppose they show me and tell me everything, do you? Someday I'll
see him, I suppose. He's developed a new energy-source which may save us all yet-" "I don't want artificial food," said Dua, and she had left Odeen abruptly. That
had been not so long ago, and Odeen had not mentioned this Estwald again, but she knew he would, and she brooded about it up here in the Sunset. She had seen
that artificial food that once; a glowing sphere of light, like a tiny Sun, in a special cavern set up by the Hard Ones. She could taste its bitterness yet. Would
they improve it? Would they make it taste better? Even delicious? And would she have to eat it then and fill herself with it till the full sensation gave her
an almost uncontrollable desire to melt? She feared that self-generating desire. It was different when the desire came through the hectic combined stimulation
of left-ling and right-ling. It was the self-generation that meant she would be ripe to bring about the initiation of a little-mid. And-and she didn't want to!
It was a long time before she would admit the truth to herself. She didn't ^want to initiate an Emotional! It was after the three children were all born that
the time would inevitably come to pass on, and she didn't want to. She remembered the day her Parental had left her forever, and it was never going to be like that
for her. Of that she was fiercely determined The other Emotionals didn't care because they were too empty to think about it, but she was different. She was queer
Dua, the Left-Em; that was what they had called her; and she would be different. As long as she didn't have that third child, she would not pass on; she would continue
to live, So she wasn't going to have that third child. Never. Never! But how was she going to stave it off? And how would she keep Odeen from finding out?
What if Odeen found out? 2b Odeen waited for Tritt to do something. He was reasonably sure that Tritt would not actually go up to the surface after Dua.
It would mean leaving the children and that was always hard for Tritt to do. Tritt waited, without speaking for a while, and when he left, it was in the direction
of the children's alcove. Odeen was almost glad when Tritt left. Not quite, of course, for Tritt had been angry and withdrawn so that interpersonal contact
had weakened and the barrier of displeasure had arisen. Odeen could not help but be melancholy at that. It was like the slowing of the life-pulse. He sometimes
wondered if Tritt felt it, too.... No, that was unfair. Tritt had the special relationship with the children. And as for Dua, who could tell what Dua felt?
Who could tell what any Emotional felt? They were so different they made left and right seem alike in everything but mind. But even allowing for the erratic
way of Emotionals, who could tell what Dua-especially Dua-felt? That was why Odeen managed to be almost glad when Tritt left, for Dua was the question. The
delay in initiating the third child was indeed becoming too long and Dua was growing less amenable to persuasion, not more. There was a growing restlessness in
Odeen himself, that he could not quite identify, and it was something he would have to discuss with Losten. He made his way down to the Hard-caverns, hastening his
movements into a continuous flow that was not nearly as undignified as the oddly exciting mixture of wavering and rushing that marked the Emotional curve-along,
or as amusing as the stolid weight-shift of the Parental- (He had the keen thought-image of Tritt clumping in pursuit of the baby-Rational, who, of course, was
almost as slippery, at his age, as an Emotional, and of Dua having to block the baby and bring him back, and of Tritt cluckingly undecided whether to shake the small
life-object or enfold him with his substance. From the start, Tritt could thin himself more effectively for the babies than for Odeen and when Odeen rallied him about that,
Tritt answered gravely, for of course he had no humor about such things, "Ah,-but the children need it more.") Odeen was selfishly pleased with his own flow and thought
it graceful and impressive. He had mentioned that once to Losten, to whom as his Hard-teacher, he confessed everything, and Losten had said, "But don't you think
an Emotional or a Parental feels the same about his own flow-pattern? If each of you think differently and act differently, ought you not to be pleased differently?
A triad doesn't preclude individuality, you know." Odeen wasn't sure he understood about individuality. Did that mean being alone? A Hard One was alone, of course.
There were no triads among them. How did they stand it? Odeen had still been quite young when the matter had come up. His relationship with the Hard Ones had
only been beginning, and it suddenly struck him that he wasn't sure that there were no triads among them. That fact was common legend among the Soft Ones, but
how correct was the legend? Odeen thought about that and decided one must ask and not accept matters on faith. Odeen had said, "Are you a left or a right, sir?"
(In later times, Odeen pulsed at the memory of that question. How incredibly naive to have asked it, and it was very little comfort that every Rational asked
the question of a Hard One in some fashion, sooner or later-usually sooner.) Losten answered quite calmly, "Neither, little-left. There are no lefts or rights
among the Hard Ones," "Or mid-1- Emotionals?" "Or mid-lings?" And the Hard One changed the shape of his permanent sensory region in a fashion that Odeen eventually
associated with amusement or pleasure. "No. No mid-lings either. Just Hard Ones of one kind." Odeen had to ask. It came out involuntarily, quite against
his desire. "But how do you stand it?" "It is different with us, little-left. We are used to it." Could Odeen be used to such a thing? There was the Parental
triad that had filled his life so far and the sure knowledge that he would at some not-too-distant time form a triad of his own. What was life without that?
He
thought
about
it
hard
now
and
then.
He
though
about
everything
hard,
as
it
came
up.
Sometimes
he
managed
to
catch
a
glimpse
of
what
it
might
mean.
That
Hard
Ones
had
only
themselves;
neither
left-brother,
nor
right-brother,
nor
mid-sister,
nor
melting,
nor
children,
nor
Parentals.
They
had
only
the
mind,
only
the
inquiry
into
the
Universe.
Perhaps
that
was
enough
for
them.
As
Odeen
grew
older,
he
caught
bits
of
understanding
as
to
the
joys
of
inquiry.
They
were
almost
enough-almost
enough-and
then
he
would
think
of
Tritt
and
of
Dua
and
decide
that
even
all
the
Universe
beside
was
not
quite
enough.
Unless-
It
was
odd,
but
every
once
in
a
while
it
seemed
that
there
might
come
a
time,
a
situation,
a
condition,
when-
Then
he
would
lose
the
momentary
glimpse,
or,
rather,
glimpse
of
a
glimpse,
and
miss
it
all.
Yet
in
time
it
would
return
and
lately
he
thought
it
grew
stronger
and
would
remain
almost
long
enough
to
be
caught.
But
none
of
that
was
what
should
involve
him
now.
He
had
to
see
about
Dua.
He
made
his
way
along
the
well-known
route,
along
which
he
had
first
been
taken
by
his
Parental
(as
Tritt
would
soon
take
their
own
young
Rational,
their
own
baby-left.)
And,
of
course,
he
was
instantly
lost
in
memory
again.
It
had
been
frightening,
then.
There
had
been
other
young
Rationals,
all
pulsing
and
shimmering
and
changing
shape,
despite
the
Parental
signals
on
every
side
to
stay
firm
and
smooth
and
not
disgrace
the
triad.
One
small
left,
a
playmate
of
Odeen,
had,
in
fact,
flattened
thin,
baby-fashion,
and
would
not
unflatten,
despite
all
the
efforts
of
his
horribly
embarrassed
Parental.
(He
had
since
become
a
perfectly
normal
student.
.
..
Though
no
Odeen,
as
Odeen
himself
could
not
help
realizing
with
considerable
complacency.)
They
met
a
number
of
Hard
Ones
on
that
first
day
of
school.
They
stopped
at
each,
in
order
that
the
young-Rational
vibration
pattern
might
be
recorded
in
several
specialized
ways
and
for
a
decision
to
be
reached
as
to
whether
to
accept
them
for
instruction
then,
or
to
wait
another
interval;
and
if
then,
for
what
kind
of
instruction.
Odeen,
in
a
desperate
effort,
had
drawn
himself
smooth
as
a
Hard
One
approached,
and
held
himself
unwavering.
The
Hard
One
said
(and
the
first
sound
of
the
odd
tones
of
his
voice
almost
undid
Odeen's
determination
to
be
grown-up),
"This
is
quite
a
firm-held
Rational.
How
do
you
represent
yourself,
left?"
It
was
the
first
time
Odeen
had
ever
been
called
"left"
instead
of
in
the
form
of
some
diminutive,
and
he
felt
firmer
than
ever
as
he
managed
to
say,
"Odeen,
Hard-sir,"
using
the
polite
address
his
Parental
had
carefully
taught
him.
Dimly,
Odeen
remembered
being
taken
through
the
Hard-caverns,
with
their
equipment,
their
machinery,
their
libraries,
their
meaningless,
crowding
sights
and
sounds.
More
than-
the
actual
sense
perceptions,
he
remembered
his
inner
feeling
of
despair.
What
would
they
do
with
him?
His
Parental
had
told
him
that
he
would
learn,
but
he
didn't
know
what
was
really
meant
by
"learn"
and
when
he
asked
his
Parental,
it
turned
out
that
the
older
one
didn't
know
either.
It
took
him
a
while
to
find
out
and
the
experience
was
pleasurable,
so
pleasurable,
and
yet
net
without
its
worrisome
aspects.
The
Hard
One
who
had
first
called
him
"left"
was
his
first
teacher.
The
Hard
One
taught
him
to
interpret
the
wave
recordings
so
that
after
a
while
what
seemed
an
incomprehensible
code
became
words;
words
just
as
clear
as
those
he
could
form
with
his
own
vibrations.
But
then
that
first
one
didn't
appear
any
more
and
an-,
other
Hard
One
took
over.
It
was
a
time
before
Odeen
noticed.
It
was
difficult
in
those
early
days
to
tell
one
Hard
One
from
another,
to
differentiate
among
their
voices.
But
then
he
grew
certain.
Little
by
little,
he
grew
certain
and
he
trembled
at
the
change.
He
didn't
understand
its
significance.
He
gathered
courage
and
finally
asked,
"Where
is
my
teacher,
Hard-sir?"
"Gamaldan?
...
He
will
no
longer
be
with
you,
left."
Odeen
was
speechless
for
a
moment.
Then
he
said,
"But
Hard
Ones
don't
pass
on-"
He
did
not
quite
finish
the
phrase.
It
choked
off.
The
new
Hard
One
was
passive,
said
nothing,
volunteered
nothing.
It
was
always
to
be
like
that,
Odeen
found
out.
They
never
talked
about
themselves.
On
every
other
subject
they
discoursed
freely.
Concerning
themselves-nothing.
From
dozens
of
pieces
of
evidence,
Odeen
could
not
help
but
decide
that
Hard
Ones
passed
on;
that
they
were
not
immortal
(something
so
many
Soft
Ones
took
for
granted).
Yet
no
Hard
One
ever
said
as
much.
Odeen
and
the
other
student-Rationals
sometimes
discussed
it,
hesitantly,
uneasily.
Each
brought
in
some
small
item
that
pointed
inexorably
to
mortality
of
the
Hard
Ones
and
wondered
and
did
not
like
to
conclude
the
obvious,
so
they
let
it
go.
The
Hard
Ones
did
not
seem
to
mind
that
hints
of
mortality
existed.
They
did
nothing
to
mask
it.
But
they
never
mentioned
it,
either.
And
if
the
question
was
asked
directly
(sometimes
it
was,
inevitably)
they
never
answered;
neither
denying
nor
affirming.
And
if
they
passed
on,
they
had
to
be
born'
also,
yet
they
said
nothing
of
that
and
Odeen
never
saw
a
young
Hard
One.
Odeen
believed
the
Hard
Ones
got
their
energy
from
rocks
instead
of
from
the
Sun-at
least
that
they
incorporated
a
powdered
black
rock
into
their
bodies.
Some
of
the
other
students
thought
so,
too.
Others,
rather
vehemently,
refused
to
accept
that.
Nor
could
they
come
to
a
conclusion
for
no
one
ever
saw
them
feeding
in
any
way
and
the
Hard
Ones
never
spoke
of
that
either.
In
the
end,
Odeen
took
their
reticence
for
granted-as
part
of
themselves.
Perhaps,
he
thought,
it
was
their
individuality,
the
fact
that
they
formed
no
triads.
It
built
a
shell
about
them.
And
then,
too,
Odeen
learned
things
of
such
grave
import
that
questions
concerning
the
private
life
of
the
Hard
Ones
turned
to
trivia
in
any
case.
He
learned,
for
instance,
that
the
whole
world
was
shriveling-dwindling-
It
was
Losten,
the
new
teacher,
who
told
him
that.
Odeen
had
asked
about
the
unoccupied
caverns
that
stretched
so
endlessly
Into
the
bowels
of
the
world
and
Losten
had
seemed
pleased.
"Are
you
afraid
to
ask
about
that,
Odeen?"
(He
was
Odeen
now;
not
some
general
reference
to
his
left-hood.
It
was
always
a
source
of
pride
to
hear
a
Hard
One
address
him
by
personal
name.
Many
did
so.
Odeen
was
a
prodigy
of
understanding
and
the
use
of
his
name
seemed
a
recognition
of
the
fact.
More
than
once
Losten
had
expressed
satisfaction
at
having
him
as
a
pupil.)
Odeen was indeed afraid and, after some hesitation, said so. It was always easier to confess shortcomings to the Hard Ones than to fellow-Rationals; much easier than to
confess them to Tritt, unthinkable to confess them to Tritt. . . . Those were the days before Dua. "Then why do you ask?" Odeen hesitated again. Then he said
slowly. "I'm afraid of the unoccupied caverns because when I was young I was told they had all sorts of monstrous things in them. But I know nothing of that directly;
I only know what I have been told by other young ones who couldn't have known directly either, I want to find out the truth about them and the wanting has grown until
there is more of curiosity in me than fear." Losten looked pleased. "Good! The curiosity is useful, the fear useless. Your inner development is excellent, Odeen,
and remember it is only your inner development that counts in the important things. Our help to you is marginal. Since you want to know, it is easy to tell you
that the unoccupied caverns are truly unoccupied. They are empty. There is nothing in them but the unimportant things left behind in times past."
"Left behind by whom, Hard-sir?" Odeen felt uneasily compelled to use the honorific whenever he was too obviously in the presence of knowledge he lacked that the other had.
"By those who occupied them in times past. There was a time thousands of cycles ago when there were many thousands of Hard Ones and millions of Soft Ones. There
are fewer of us now than there were in the past, Odeen. Nowadays there are not quite three hundred Hard Ones and fewer than ten thousand Soft Ones." "Why?"
said Odeen, shocked. .(Only three_ hundred Hard Ones left. This was surely an open admission that Hard Ones passed on, but this was not the time to think of that.)
"Because energy is diminishing. The Sun is cooling. It .becomes harder in every cycle to give birth and to live." (Well, then, did not that mean the Hard Ones gave birth, too?
And did it mean that the Hard Ones depended on the Sun for food, too, and not on rocks? Odeen filed the thought away and dismissed it for now.) "Will this continue?"
Odeen asked. "The Sun must dwindle to an end, Odeen, and someday give no food." "Does that mean that all of us, the Hard Ones and the Soft Ones, too, will pass on?"
"What else can it mean?" "We can't all pass on. If we need energy and the Sun is coming to an end, we must find other sources. Other stars." "But," Odeen, all the stars are coming
to an end. The Universe is coming to an end." "If the stars come to an end, is there no food elsewhere? No other source of energy?" "No, all the energy-sources in all the Universe
are coming to an end." Odeen considered that rebelliously, then said, "Then other Universes. We can't give up just because the Universe does." He was palpitating as he said it.
He had expanded with quite unforgivable discourtesy until he had swelled translucently into a size distinctly larger than the Hard One. But Losten merely expressed extreme
pleasure. He said, "Wonderful, my left-dear. The others must hear of this." Odeen had collapsed to normal size in mingled embarrassment and pleasure at hearing himself addressed
as "left-dear," a phrase he had never heard anyone use to him-except Tritt, of course. It had not been very long after that that Loston himself had brought them Dua.
Odeen had wondered, idly, if there had been any connection, but after a while wonder burned itself out. Tritt had repeated so often that it was his own approach to Losten
that had brought them Dua, that Odeen gave up thinking about it. It was too confusing. But now he was coming to Losten again. A long time had passed since those earlier
days when he first learned that the Universe was coming to an end and that (as it turned out) the Hard Ones were resolutely laboring to live on anyway. He himself had become
adept in many fields and Losten confessed that in physics there was little he could any longer teach Odeen that a Soft One could profitably learn. And there were other young Rationals to
take in hand, so he did not see Losten as frequently as he once did. Odeen found Losten with two half-grown Rationals in the Radiation Chamber. Losten saw him at once through the
glass and came out, closing the door carefully behind him. "My left-dear," he said, holding out his limbs in a gesture of friendship (so that Odeen, as so often in the past, experienced
a perverse desire to touch, but controlled it). "How are you?" "I did not mean to interrupt, Losten-sir." "Interrupt? Those two will get along perfectly well by themselves for
a time. They are probably glad to see me go, for I am sure I weary them with over-much talk." "Nonsense," said Odeen. "You always fascinated me and I'm sure you fascinate them."
"Well, well. It is good of you to say so. I see you frequently in the library, and I hear from others that you do well in your advanced courses, and that makes me miss my best
student. How is Tritt? Is he as Parentally stubborn in his ways as ever?" "More stubborn every day. He gives strength to the triad." "And Dua?" "Dua? I have come- She is very
unusual, you know." Losten nodded, "Yes, I know that." His expression was one that Odeen had grown to associate with melancholy. Odeen waited a moment, then decided to tackle
the matter directly. He said, "Losten-sir, was she brought to us, to Tritt and myself, just because she was unusual?" Losten said, "Would you be surprised? You are
very unusual yourself, Odeen, and you have told me on a number of occasions that Tritt is." "Yes," said Odeen, with conviction. "He is." "Then oughtn't your triad include
an unusual Emotional?" "There are many ways of being unusual," said Odeen, thoughtfully. "In some ways, Dua's odd ways displease Tritt and worry me. May I consult
you?" "Always." "She is not fond of-of melting." Losten listened gravely; to all appearances unembarrassed. Odeen went on. "She is fond of melting when we melt, that
is, but it is not always easy to persuade her to do so." Losten said, "How does Tritt feel about melting? I mean, aside from the immediate pleasure of the act? What
does it mean to him besides pleasure?" "The children, of course," said Odeen. "I like them and Dua likes them, too, but Tritt is the Parental. Do you understand that?"
(It suddenly seemed to Odeen that Losten couldn't possibly understand all the subtleties of the triad.) "I try to understand," said Losten. "It seems to me, then, that Tritt gets
more out of melting than melting alone. And how about yourself? What do you get out of it besides the pleasure?" Odeen considered. "I think you know that A kind
of mental stimulation." "Yes, I know that, but I want to make sure you know. I want to make sure you haven't forgotten. You have told me often that when you
come out of a period of melting, with its odd loss of time-during which I admit I sometimes didn't see you for rather long periods-that suddenly you found yourself
understanding many things that had seemed obscure before." "It was as though my mind remained active in the interval," said Odeen. "It was as though there was time
which, even though I was unaware of its passing and unconscious of my existence, was necessary to me; during which I could think more deeply and intensely, without the distraction of
the less intellectual side of life." "Yes," agreed Losten, "and you'd come back with a quantum-jump in understanding. It is a common thing among you Rationals, though I must admit
no one improved in such great jumps as you did. I honestly think no Rational in history did so." "Really?" said Odeen, trying not to seem unduly elated. "On the other hand,
I may be wrong"-and Losten seemed slightly amused at the other's sudden loss of shimmer-"but never mind that. The point is that you, like Tritt, get something out of the
melt beside the melt itself." "Yes. Most certainly." "And what does Dua get out of the melt besides the melt?" There was a long pause. "I don't know," said Odeen. "Have
you never asked her?" "Never." "But then," said Losten, "if all she gets out of a melt is the melt, and if you and Tritt get out of it the melt plus something else, why
should she be as eager for it as you two are?" "Other Emotionals don't seem to require-" began Odeen, defensively. "Other Emotionals aren't like Dua. You've told me that often enough
and, I think, with satisfaction." Odeen felt ashamed. "I had thought it might be something else." "What might that be?" "It's hard to explain. We know each other in the triad;
we sense each other; in some ways, all three of us are part of a single individual. A misty individual that comes and goes. Mostly it's unconscious. If we think about it
with too great a concentration, we lose it, so we can never get real detail. We-" Odeen stopped rather hopelessly. "It's hard to explain the triad to someone-"
"Nevertheless, I am trying to understand. You think you have caught a portion of Dua's inner mind; something she has tried to keep secret, is that it?" "I'm not
sure. It is the vaguest impression, sensed with a corner of my mind just now and then." "Well?" "I sometimes think Dua doesn't want to have a baby-Emotional." Losten
looked at him gravely. "You only have two children so far, I think. A little-left and a little-right." "Yes, only two. The Emotional is difficult to initiate, you know."
"I know." "And Dua will not trouble to absorb the necessary energy. Or even try to. She has any number of reasons but I can't believe any of them. It seems to me
that for some reason she just doesn't want an Emotional. For myself-if Dua really didn't want one for a while-well, I would let her have her way. But Tritt is a Parental,
and he wants one; he must have one; and somehow I can't disappoint Tritt, not even for Dua." "If Dua had some rational cause for not wanting to initiate an Emotional, would
that make a difference with you?" "With me, certainly, but not with Tritt. He doesn't understand such things." "But would you labor to keep him patient?" "Yes, I would,
for as long as I could." Losten said, "Has it occurred to you that hardly any Soft Ones"-here he hesitated as though searching for a word and then he used the customary Soft-One
phrase- "ever pass on before the children are born-all three, with the baby-Emotional last." "Yes, I know." Odeen wondered how Losten could possibly think him ignorant of so elementary
a bit of knowledge. "Then the birth of a baby-Emotional is equivalent to the coming of time to pass on." "Usually, not till the Emotional is old enough-" "But the time for
passing on will be coming. Might it not be that Dua does not want to pass on?" "How can that be, Losten? When the time comes to pass on, it is as when the time comes
to melt. How can you not want to?" (Hard Ones didn't melt; perhaps they didn't understand.) "Suppose Dua simply wants never to pass on? What would you then say?" "Why, that we
must pass on eventually. If Dua merely wants to delay the last baby, I might humor her and even persuade Tritt to, perhaps. If she wants never to have it- that simply
cannot be allowed." "Why so?" Odeen paused to think it out. "I can't say, Losten-sir, but I know we must pass on. I know it more and feel it more with each cycle, and
sometimes I almost think I understand why." "You are a philosopher, I sometimes think, Odeen," said Losten dryly. "Let's consider. By the time the third baby comes and grows, Tritt
will have had all his children and can look forward to passing on after a fulfilled life. You yourself will have had the satisfaction of much learning and you, too, can pass
on after a fulfilled life. But Dua?" "I don't know" said Odeen, wretchedly. "Other Emotionals cling together all lifelong and seem to get some pleasure out of chattering with
each other. Dua, however, will not do that." "Well, she is unusual. Is there nothing she likes?" "She likes to listen to me talk about my work," mumbled Odeen. Losten said,
"Well, don't be ashamed of that, Odeen. Every Rational talks about his work to his right and his mid. You all pretend you don't, but you all do." Odeen said, "But Dua listens,
Losten-sir." "I'm quite sure she does. Not like other Emotionals. And does it ever seem to you that she understands rather better after a melt?" "Yes, I have noticed that at
times. I didn't particularly pay any attention, though-" "Because you are sure Emotionals can't really understand these things. But there seems to be considerable of
the Rational in Dua." (Odeen looked up at Losten with sudden consternation. Once Dua had told him of her childhood unhappiness; only once; of the shrill calls of the
other Emotionals; of the filthy name they had called her-Left-Em. Had Losten heard of that, somehow? . . . But he was only looking calmly at Odeen.) Odeen said, "I
have sometimes thought that, too." Then he burst out, "I am proud of her for that," "Nothing wrong with that," said Losten. "Why not tell her so? And if she likes to
pamper the Rationalness in herself, why not let her? Teach her what you know more intensively. Answer her questions. Will it disgrace your triad to do that?" "I don't
care if it does.... And why should it, anyway? Tritt will think it a waste of time, but I'll handle him." "Explain to him that if Dua gets more out of life and a truer
sense of fulfillment, she might not have the fear of passing on that she now has and might be more ready to have a baby-Emotional." It was as though an enormous feeling of impending disaster
had been lifted from Odeen. He said, hurriedly, "You're right. I feel you're right. Losten-sir, you understand so much. With you leading the Hard Ones, how can we fail to
continue succeeding in the other-Universe project?" "With me?" Losten was amused. "You forget it is Estwald who is guiding us now. He is the real hero of the project. It would
be nowhere without him." "Oh, yes," said Odeen, momentarily discomfited. He had never yet seen Estwald. In fact, he had not yet met a Soft One who had actually met him though
some reported having seen him in the distance now and then. Estwald was a new Hard One; new, at least, in the sense that when Odeen had been young, he had never heard him
mentioned. Didn't that mean that Estwald was a young Hard One, had been a child Hard One when Odeen had been a child Soft One? But never mind that. Right now, Odeen wanted
to get back home. He couldn't touch Losten in gratitude, but he could thank him again and then hasten away joyfully. There was a selfish component to his joy. It was not
just the distant prospect of the baby-Emotional and the thought of Tritt's pleasure. It was not even the thought of Dua's fulfillment. What counted with him at this very
moment was the immediate gleeful prospect ahead. He was going to be able to teach. No other Rational could feel the pleasure of so doing, he was sure, for no other Rational could
possibly have an Emotional like Dua as part of the triad. It would be wonderful, if only Tritt could be made to understand the necessity. He would have to talk to Tritt,
somehow persuade him to be patient. 2c Tritt had never felt less patient. He did not pretend to understand why Dua acted the way she did. He did not want to try.. He-"did
not care. He never knew why Emotionals did what they did. And Dua didn't even act like the other Emotionals. She never thought about the important thing. She would look
at the Sun. But then she would thin out so that the light and food would just pass through her. Then she would say it was beautiful. That was not the important thing. The important
thing was to eat. What was beautiful about eating? What was beautiful? She always wanted to melt differently. Once she said, "Let's talk first. We never talk about
it. We never think about it." Odeen would always say, "Let her have her way about it, Tritt. It makes it better." Odeen was always patient. He always thought things would be better
when they waited. Or else he would want to think it out. Tritt wasn't sure he knew what Odeen meant by "think it out." It seemed to him it just meant that Odeen did nothing. Like
getting Dua in the first place. Odeen would still be thinking it out. Tritt went right up and asked. That was the way to be. Now Odeen wouldn't do anything about
Dua. What about the baby-Emotional, which was what mattered? Well, Tritt would do something about it, if Odeen didn't. In fact, he was doing something. He was edging down
the long corridor even as all this was going through his mind. He was hardly aware he had come this far. Was this "thinking it out"? Well, he would not let himself be frightened.
He would not back away. Stolidly, he looked about him. This was the way to the Hard-caverns. He knew he would be going that way with his little-left before very long. He had
been shown the way by Odeen once. He did not know what he would do when he got there this time. Still, he felt no fright at all. He wanted a baby-Emotional. It was his right to
have a baby-Emotional. Nothing was more important than that. The Hard Ones would see he got one. Hadn't they brought them Dua when he had asked? But who would he ask?
Could it be any Hard One? Dimly, he had made up his mind not any Hard One. There was the name of one he would ask for. Then he would talk to him about it. He remembered the
name. He even remembered when he had first heard the name. It was the time when the little-left had grown old enough to begin changing shape voluntarily. (What a great day!
"Come, Odeen, quickly! Annis is all oval and hard. All by himself, too. Dua, look!" And they had rushed in. Annis was the only child then. They had had to wait so
long for the second. So they rushed in and he was just plastered in the corner. He was curling at himself and flowing over his resting place like wet clay. Odeen had
left because he was busy. But said, "Oh, he'll do it again, Tritt" They had watched for hours and he didn't.) Tritt was hurt that Odeen hadn't waited. He would have scolded
but Odeen looked so weary. There were definite wrinkles in his ovoid. And he made no effort to smooth them out. Tritt said anxiously, "Is anything wrong, Odeen?" "A hard day and
I'm not sure I'm going to get differential equations before the next melting." (Tritt didn't remember the exact hard words. It was something like that Odeen always used hard words.) -
"Do you want to melt now?" "Oh, no. I just saw Dua heading topside and you know how she is if we try to interrupt that. There's no rush, really. There's a new Hard One, too." "A
new Hard One?" said Tritt, with distinct lack of interest. Odeen found sharp interest in associating with Hard Ones, but Tritt wished the interest didn't exist Odeen was more intent on
what he called his education than any other Rational in the area. That was unfair. Odeen was too wrapped up in that. Dua was too wrapped up in roaming the surface alone. No one
was
properly
interested
in
the
triad
but
Tritt.
"He's
called
Estwald,"
said
Odeen.
"Estwald?"
Tritt
did
feel
a
twinge
of
interest.
Perhaps
it
was
because
he
was
anxiously
sensing
Odeen's
feelings.
"I've
never
seen
him,
but
they
ail
talk
about
him."
Odeen's
eyes
had
flattened
out
as
they
usually
did
when
he
turned
introspective.
"He's
responsible
for
that
new
thing
they've
got."
"What
new
thing?"
"The
Positron
Pu-
You
wouldn't
understand,
Tritt
It's
a
new
thing
they
have.
It's
going
to
revolutionize
the
whole
world."
"What's
revolutionize?"
"Make
everything
different."
Tritt
was
at
once
alarmed.
"They
mustn't
make
everything
different."
"They'll
make
everything
better.
Different
isn't
always
worse.
Anyway,
Estwald
is
responsible.
He's
very
bright.
I
get
the
feeling."
"Then
why
don't
you
like
him?"
"I
didn't
say
I
didn't
like
him."
"You
feel
as
though
you
don't
like
him."
"Oh,
nothing
of
the
sort,
Tritt.
It's
just
that
somehow-
somehow-"
Odeen
laughed.
"I'm
jealous.
Hard
Ones
are
so
intelligent
that
a
Soft
One
is
nothing
in
comparison,
but
I
got
used
to
that,
because
Losten
was
always
telling
me
how
bright
I
was-for
a
Soft
One,
I
suppose.
But
now
this
Estwald
comes
along,
and
even
Losten
seems
lost
in
admiration,
and
I'm
really
nothing."
Tritt
bellied
out
his
foreplane
to
have
it
just
make
contact
with
Odeen,
who
looked
up
and
smiled.
"But
that's
just
stupidity
on
my
part.
Who
cares
how
smart
a
Hard
One
is?
Not
one
of
them
has
a
Tritt."
After
that
they
both
went
looking
for
Dua
after
all.
For
a
wonder,
she
had
finished
wandering
about
and
was
just
heading
down
again.
It
was
a
very
good
melting
though
the
time
lapse
was
only
a
day
or
so.
Tritt
worried
about
meltings
then.
With
Annis
so
small,
even
a
short
absence
was
risky,
though
there
were
always
other
Parentals
who
could
take
over.
After
that,
Odeen
mentioned
Estwald
now
and
then.
He
always
called
him
"the
New
One"
even
after
considerable
time
had
passed.
He
still
had
never
seen
him.
"1
think
I
avoid
him,"
he
said
one
time,
when
Dua
was
with
them,
"because
he
knows
so
much
about
the
new
device.
I
don't
want
to
find
out
too
soon.
It's
too
much
fun
to
learn."
"The
Positron
Pump?"
Dua
had
asked,
-That
was
another
funny
thing
about
Dua.
Tritt
thought.
It
annoyed
him.
She
could
say
the
hard
words
almost
as
well
as
Odeen
could.
An
Emotional
shouldn't
be
like
that.
So
Tritt
made
up
his
mind
to
ask
Estwald
because
Odeen
had
said
he
was
smart.
Besides,
Odeen
had
never
seen
him.
Estwald
couldn't
say,
"I've
talked
to
Odeen
about
it,
Tritt,
and
you
mustn't
worry."
Everyone
thought
that
if
you
talked
to
the
Rational,
you
were
talking
to
the
triad.
Nobody
paid
attention
to
the
Parentals.
But
they
would
have
to
this
time.
He
was
in
the
Hard-caverns
and
everything
seemed
different.
There
was
nothing
there
that
looked
like
anything
Tritt
could
understand.
It
was
all
wrong
and
frightening.
Still,
he
was
too
anxious
to
see
Estwald
to
let
himself
really
be
frightened.
He
said
to
himself,
"I
want
my
little-mid."
That
made
him
feel
firm
enough
to
walk
forward.
He
saw
a
Hard
One
finally.
There
was
just
this
one;
doing
something;
bending
over
something;
doing
something.
Odeen
once
told
him
that
Hard
Ones
were
always
working
at
their-whatever
it
was.
Tritt
didn't
remember
and
didn't
care.
He
moved
smoothly
up
and
stopped.
"Hard-sir,"
he
said.
The
Hard
One
looked
up
at
him
and
the
air
vibrated
about
him,
the
Odeen
said
it
did
when
two
Hard
Ones
talked
to
each
other
sometimes.
Then
the
Hard
One
seemed
really
to
see
Tritt
and
said,
"Why,
it's
a
right.
What
is
your
business
here?
Do
you
have
your
little-left
with
you?
Is
today
the
start
of
a
semester?"
Tritt
ignored
it
all.
He
said,
"Where
can
I
find
Estwald,
sir?!"
"Find
whom?"
"Estwald."
The
Hard
One
was
silent
for
a
long
moment.
Then
he
said,
"What
is
your
business
with
Estwald,
right?"
Tritt
felt
stubborn.
"It
is
important
I
speak
to
him.
Are
you
Estwald,
Hard-sir?"
"No,
I
am
not....
What
is
your
name,
right?"
"Tritt,
Hard-sir."
"I
see.
You're
the
right
of
Odeen's
triad,
aren't
you?"
"Yes."
The
Hard
One's
voice
seemed
to
soften.
"I'm
afraid
you
can't
see
Estwald
at
the
moment.
He's
not
here.
If
anyone
else
can
help
you?"
Tritt
didn't
know
what
to
say.
He
simply
stood
there.
The
Hard
One
said,
"You
go
home
now.
Talk
to
Odeen.
He'll
help
you.
Yes?
Go
home,
right."
The
Hard
One
turned
away.
He
seemed
very
concerned
in
matters
other
than
Tritt,
and
Tritt
still
stood
there,
uncertain.
Then
he
moved
into
another
section
quietly,
flowing
noiselessly.
The
Hard
One
did
not
look
up.
Tritt
was
not
certain
at
first
why
he
had
moved
in
that
particular
direction.
At
first,
he
felt
only
that
it
was
good
to
do
so.
Then
it
was
clear.
There
was
a
thin
warmth
of
food
about
him
and
he
was
nibbling
at
it.
He
had
not
been
conscious
of
hunger,
yet
now
he
was
eating
and
enjoying.
The
Sun
was
nowhere.
Instinctively,
he
looked
up,
but
of
course
he
was
in
a
cavern.
Yet
the
food
was
better
than
he
had
ever
found
it
to
be
on
the
surface.
He
looked
about,
wondering.
He
wondered,
most
of
all,
that
he
should
be
wondering.
He
had
sometimes
been
impatient
with
Odeen
because
Odeen
wondered
about
so
many
things
that
didn't
matter.
Now
he
himself-Tritt!-was
wondering.
But
what
he
was
wondering
about
did
matter.
Suddenly,
he
saw
that
it
did
matter.
With
an
almost
blinding
flash
he
realized
that
he
wouldn't
wonder
unless
something
inside
him
told
it
did
matter.
He
acted
quickly,
marveling
at
his
own
bravery.
After
a
while,
he
retraced
his
steps.
He
moved
past
the
Hard
One
again,
the
one
to
whom
he
had
earlier
spoken.
He
said,
"I
am
going
home,
Hard-sir."
The
Hard
One
merely
said
something
incoherent.
He
was
still
doing
something,
bending
over
something,
doing
silly
things
and
not
seeing
the
important
thing.
If
Hard
Ones
were
so
great
and
powerful
and
smart,
Tritt
thought,
how
could
they
be
so
stupid?
3a
Dua
found
herself
drifting
toward
the
Hard-caverns.
Partly
it
was
because
it
was
something
to
do
now
that
the
Sun
had
set,
something
to
keep
her
from
returning
home
for
an
additional
period
of
time,
something
to
delay
having
to
listen
to
the
importunities
of
Tritt
and
the
half-embarrassed,
half-resigned
suggestions
of
Odeen.
Partly,
too,
it
was
the
attraction
they
held
for
her
in
themselves.
She
had
felt
that
for
a
long
time,
ever
since
she
was
little
in
fact,
and
had
given
up
trying
to
pretend
it
wasn't
so.
Emotionals
weren't
supposed
to
feel
such
attractions.
Sometimes
little
Emotionals
did-Dua
was
old
enough
and
experienced
enough
to
know
that-but
this
quickly
faded
or
they
were
quickly
discouraged
if
it
didn't
fade
quickly
enough.
When
she
herself
had
been
a
child,
though,
she
had
continued
stubbornly
curious
about
the
world,
and
the
Sun,
and
the
caverns,
and-anything
at
all--till
her
Parental
would
say,
"You're
a
queer
one,
Dua,
dear.
You're
a
funny
little
midling.
What
will
become
of
you?"
She
hadn't
the
vaguest
notion
at
first
of
what
was
so
queer
and
so
funny
about
wanting
to
know.
She
found,
quickly
enough,
that
her
Parental
could
not
answer
her
questions.
She
once
tried
her
left-father,
but
he
showed
none
of
her
Parental's
soft
puzzlement.
He
snapped,
"Why
do
you
ask,
Dua?"
and
his
look
seemed
harshly
inquiring.
She
ran
away,
frightened,
and
did
not
ask
him
again.
But
then
one
day
another
Emotional
of
her
own
age
had
shrieked
"Left-Em"
at
her
after
she
had
said-she
no
longer
remembered-it
had
been
something
that
had
seemed
natural
to
her
at
the
time.
Dua
had
been
abashed
without
knowing
why
and
had
asked
her
considerably
older
left-brother,
what
a
Left-Em
was.
He
had
withdrawn,
embarrassed-clearly
embarrassed-mumbling,
"I
don't
know,"
when
it
was
obvious
he
did.
After
some
thought,
she
went
to
her
Parental
and
said,
"Am
I
a
Left-Em,
Daddy?"
And
he
had
said,
"Who
called
you
that,
Dua?
You
must
not
repeat
such
words."
She
flowed
herself
about
his
near
corner,
thought
about
it
awhile,
and
said,
"Is
it
bad?"
He
said,
"You'll
grow
out
of
it,"
and
let
himself
bulge
a
bit
to
make
her
swing
outward
and
vibrate
in
the
game
she
had
always
loved.
She
somehow
didn't
love
it
now,
for
it
was
quite
clear
that
he
hadn't
answered
her,
really.
She
moved
away
thoughtfully.
He
had
said,
"You'll
grow
out
of
it,"
so
she
was
in
it
now,
but
in
what?
Even
then,
she
had
had
few
real
Mends
among
the
other
Emotionals.
They
liked
to
whisper
and
giggle
together,
but
she
preferred
flowing
over
the
crumbled
rocks
and
enjoying
the
sensation
of
their
roughness.
There
were,
however,
some
raids
who
were
more
friendly
than
others
and
whom
she
found
less
provoking.
There
was
Doral,
who
was
as
silly
as
the
rest,
really,
but
who
would
sometimes
chatter
amusingly.
(Doral
had
grown
up
to
join
a
triad
with
Dua's
right-brother
and
a
young
left
from
another
cavern
complex,
a
left
whom
Dua
did
not
particularly
like.
Doral
had
then
gone
on
to
initiate
a
baby-left,
a
baby-right,
in
rapid
succession,
and
a
baby-mid
not
too
long
after
that.
She
had
also
grown
so
dense
that
the
triad
looked
as
though
it
had
two
Parentals
and
Dua
wondered
if
they
could
still
melt.
.
.
.
Just
the
same
Tritt
was
always
telling
her,
pointedly,
what
a
good
triad
Doral
helped
make
up.)
She
and
Doral
had
sat
alone
one
day
and
Dua
had
whispered,
"Doral,
do
you
know
what
a
Left-Em
is?"
And
Doral
had
tittered
and
compressed
herself,
as
though
to
avoid
being
seen,
and
had
said,
"It's
an
Emotional
that
acts
like
a
Rational;
you
know,
like
a
left.
Get
it!
Left-Emotional-Left-Em!
Get
it!"
Of
course
Dua
"got"
the
phrase.
It
was
obvious
once
explained.
She
would
have
seen
it
for
herself
at
once
if
she
had
been
able
to
bring
herself
to
imagine
such
a
state
of
affairs.
Dua
said,
"How
do
you
know?"
"The
older
girls
told
me."
Doral's
substance
swirled
and
Dua
found
the
motion
unpleasant.
"It's
dirty,"
Doral
said.
"Why?"
asked
Dua.
"Because
it's
dirty.
Emotionals
shouldn't
act
like
Rationals."
Dua
had
never
thought
about
the
possibility,
but
now
she
did.
She
said,
"Why
shouldn't
they?"
"Because!
You
want
to
know
something
else
that's
dirty?"
Dua
couldn't
help
being
intrigued.
"What?"
Doral
didn't
say
anything,
but
a
portion
of
herself
expanded
suddenly
and
brushed
against
the
unsuspecting
Dua
before
the
latter
could
concavize.
Dua
didn't
like
it
She
shrank
away
and
said,
"Don't
do
that."
"You
know
what
else
is
dirty?
You
can
go
into
a
rock."
"No,
you
can't,"
said
Dua.
It
had
been
a
silly
thing
to
say
for
Dua
had
often
moved
through
the
outer
surface
of
the
rock
and
liked
it.
But
now
in
the
context
of
Doral's
snickering,
she
felt
revolted
and
denied
-the
whole
thing,
even
to
herself.
"Yes,
you
can.
It's
called
rock-rubbing.
Emotionals
can
do
it
easy.
Lefts
and
rights
can
only
do
it
as
babies.
When
they
grow
up,
they
do
it
with
each
other."
"I
don't
believe
you.
You're
making
it
up."
"They
do,
I
tell
you.
Do
you
know
Dimit?"
"No."
"Sure
you
do.
She's
the
girl
with
the
thick
corner
from
Cavern
c."
"Is
she
the
one
who
flows
funny?"
"Yes.
On
account
of
the
thick
corner.
That's
the
one.
She
got
into
a
rock
all
the
way
once-except
for
the
thick
corner.
She
let
her
left-brother
watch
her
do
it
and
he
told
their
Parental
and
what
she
got
for
that.
She
never
did
it
Dua
left
then,
quite
upset.
She
didn't
talk
to
Doral
again
for
a
long
time,
and
never
really
grew
friendly
again,
and
yet
her
curiosity
had
been
aroused.
Her
curiosity?
Why
not
say
her
Left-Emmishness?
One
day
when
she
was
quite
sure
her
Parental
wasn't
in
the
vicinity,
she
let
herself
melt
into
a
rock,
slowly,
just
a
little.
It
had
been
the
first
time
she
had
tried
it
since
she
was
quite
young,
and
she
didn't
think
she
had
ever
dared
go
so
deep.
There
was
a
warmness
about
the
sensation,
but
when
she
emerged
she
felt
as
though
everyone
could
tell,
as
though
the
rock
had
left
a
stain
on
her.
She
tried
it
again
now
and
then,
more
boldly,
and
let
herself
enjoy
it
more.
She
never
sank
in
really
deeply,
of
course.
Eventually,
she
was
caught
by
her
Parental,
who
clucked
away
in
displeasure,
and
she
was
more
careful
after
that.
She
was
older
now
and
knew
for
certain
fact
that
despite
Doral's
snickering,
it
wasn't
in
the
least
uncommon.
Practically
every
Emotional
did
it
now
and
then
and
some
quite
openly
admitted
it.
It
happened
less
frequently
as
they
grew
older
and
Dua
didn't
think
that
any
Emotional
she
knew
ever
did
it
after
joining
a
triad
and
beginning
the
proper
meltings.
It
was1
one
of
her
secrets
(she
never
told
anybody)
that
she
had
kept
it
up,
and
that
once
or
twice
she
had
tried
it
even
after
triad-formation.
(Those
few
times
she
had
thought:
What
if
Tritt
found
out?
...
Somehow
that
seemed
to
present
formidable
consequences
and
rather
spoiled
the
fun.)
Confusedly,
she
found
excuses
for
this-to
herself-in
her
ordeal
with
the
others.
The
cry
of
"Left-Em"
began
to
follow
her
everywhere
in
a
kind
of
public
humiliation.
There
was
one
period
in
her
life
when
she
had
been
driven
into
an
almost
hermit-like
isolation
to
escape.
If
she
had
begun
with
a
liking
for
aloneness,
that
had
confirmed
it.
And
being
alone,
she
found
consolation
in
the
rocks.
Rock-rubbing,
whether
it
was
dirty
or
not,
was
a
solitary
act,
and
they
were
forcing
her
to
be
solitary.
At
least,
so
she
told
herself.
She
had
tried
to
strike
back
once.
She
had
cried
out,
"You're
a
bunch
of
Right-Ems,
a
bunch
of
dirty
Right-Ems,"
at
the
taunting
raids.
They
had
only
laughed
and
Dua
had
run
away
in
confusion
and
frustration.
They
were.
Almost
every
Emotional,
when
she
was
getting
on
to
the
age
of
triad-formation,
became
interested
in
babies,
fluttering
about
them
in
Parental
imitation
which
Dua
had
found
repulsive.
She
herself
had
never
felt
such
interest.
Babies
were
only
babies;
they
were
for
right-brothers
to
worry
about.
The
name-calling
died
as
Dua
grew
older.
It
helped
that
she
retained
a
girlishly
rarefied
structure
and
could
flow
with
a
smoky
curl
no
other
could
duplicate.
And
when,
increasingly,
lefts
and
rights
showed
interest
in
her,
the
other
Emotionals
found
it
difficult
to
sneer.
And
yet-and
yet-now
that
no
one
ever
dared
speak
disrespectfully
to
Dua
(for
it
was
well
known
through
all
the
caverns
that
Odeen
was
the
most
prominent
Rational
of
the
generation
and
Dua
was
his
mid-ling),
she
herself
knew
that
she
was
a
Left-Em
past
all
redemption.
She
didn't
think
it
dirty-not
really-but
occasionally
she
caught
herself
wishing
she
were
a
Rational
and
then
she
was
abashed.
She
wondered
if
other
Emotionals
did-
ever-or
just
once
in
a
while-and
if
that
was
why-partly-she
didn't
want
a
baby-Emotional-because
she
wasn't
a
real
Emotional
herself-and
didn't
fill
her
triad-role
properly-
Odeen
hadn't
minded
her
being
a
Left-Em.
He
never
called
her
that-but
he
liked
her
interest
in
his
life-he
liked
her
questions
and
he
would
explain
and
he
liked
the
way
she
could
understand.
He
even
defended
her
when
Tritt
grew
jealous-well,
not
jealous,
really-but
filled
with
a
feeling
that
it
was
all
unfit
in
his
stubborn
and
limited
outlook
on
the
world.
Odeen
had
taken
her
to
the
Hard-caverns
occasionally,
eager
to
posture
before
Dua,
and
openly
pleased
at
the
fact
that
Dua
was
impressed.
And
she
-was
impressed,
not
so
much
with
the
clear
fact
of
his
knowledge
and
intelligence,
but
with
the
fact
that
he
did
not
resent
sharing
it.
(She
remembered
her
left-father's
harsh
response
that
one
time
she
had
questioned
him.)
She
never
loved
Odeen
so
much
as
when
he
let
her
share
his
life-and
yet
even
that
was
part
of
her
Left-Emmishness.
Perhaps
(this
had
occurred
to
her
over
and
over),
by
being
Left-Emmish,
she
moved
closer
to
Odeen
and
farther
from
Tritt,
and
this
was
another
reason
Tritt's
importunities
repelled
her.
Odeen
had
never
hinted
at
anything
like
that,
but
perhaps
Tritt
felt
it
vaguely
and
was
unable
to
grasp
it
completely
but
did
so
well
enough
to
be
unhappy
over
it
without
being
able
to
explain
why.
The
first
time
she
was
in
a
Hard-cavern
she
had
heard
two
Hard
Ones
talking
together.
She
didn't
know
they
were
talking
of
course.
There
was
air
vibration,
very
rapid,
very
changing,
that
made
an
unpleasant
buzz
deep
inside
her.
She
had
to
rarefy
and
let
it
through.
Odeen
had
said,
"They're
talking."
Then,
hastily,
anticipating
the
objection.
"Their
kind
of
talk.
They
understand
each
other."
Dua
had
managed
to
grasp
the
concept.
It
was
all
the
more
delightful
to
understand
quickly
because
that
pleased
Odeen
so.
(He
once
said,
"None
of
the
other
Rationals
I've
ever
met
have
anything
but
an
empty-head
for
an
Emotional.
I'm
lucky."
She
had
said,
"But
the
other
Rationals
seem
to
like
empty-heads.
Why
are
you
different
from
them,
Odeen?"
Odeen
did
not
deny
that
the
other
Rationals
liked
empty-heads.
He
just
said,
"I've
never
figured
it
out
and
I
don't
think
it's
important
that
I
do.
I'm
pleased
with
you
and
I'm
pleased
that
I'm
pleased.")
She
said,
"Can
you
understand
Hard-One
talk?"
"Not
really,"
said
Odeen.
"I
can't
sense
the
changes
fast
enough.
Sometimes
I
can
get
a
feel
for
what
they're
saying,
even
without
understanding,
especially
after
we've
melted.
Just
sometimes,
though.
Getting
feels
like
that
is
really
an
Emotional
trick,
except
even
if
an
Emotional
does
it,
she
can
never
make
real
sense
out
of
what
she's
feeling.
You
might,
though."
Dua
demurred.
"I'd
be
afraid
to.
They
might
not
like
it."
"Oh,
go
on.
I'm
curious.
See
if
you
can
tell
what
they're
talking
about."
"Shall
I?
Really?"
"Go
ahead.
If
they
catch
you
and
are
annoyed,
I'll
say
I
made
you
do
it."
"Promise?"
"I
promise."
Feeling
rather
fluttery,
Dua
let
herself
reach
out
to
the
Hard
Ones,
and
adopted
the
total
passivity
that
allowed
the
influx
of
feelings.
She
said,
"Excitement!
They're
excited.
Someone
new."
Odeen
said,
"Maybe
that's
Estwald."
It
was
the
first
time
Dua
had
heard
the
name.
She
said,
"That's
funny."
"What's
funny?"
"I
have
the
feeling
of
a
big
sun.
A
really
big
sun."
Odeen
looked
thoughtful.
"They
might
be
talking
about
that."
"But
how
can
that
be?"
It
was
just
at
that
time
that
the
Hard
Ones
spied
them.
They
approached
in
a
friendly
manner
and
greeted
them
in
Soft-One
fashion
of
speech.
Dua
was
horribly
embarrassed
and
wondered
if
they
knew
she
had
been
sensing
them.
If
they
did,
though,
they
said
nothing.
(Odeen
told
her
afterward
that
it
was
quite
rare
to
come
upon
Hard
Ones
talking
among
themselves
in
their
own
fashion.
They
always
deferred
to
the
Soft
Ones
and
seemed
always
to
suspend
their
own
work
when
Soft
Ones
were
there.
"They
like
us
so
much,"
said
Odeen.
"They
are
very
kind.")
Once
in
awhile
he
would
take
her
down
to
the
Hard-caverns-usually
when
Tritt
was
entirely
wrapped
up
in
the
children.
Nor
did
Odeen
go
out
of
his
way
to
tell
Tritt
that
he
had
taken
Dua
down.
It
was
sure
to
evoke
some
response
to
the
effect
that
Odeen's
coddling
simply
encouraged
Dua's
reluctance
to
sun
herself
and
just
made
the
melting
that
much
more
ineffective.
...
It
was
hard
to
talk
to
Tritt
for
more
than
five
minutes
without
melting
coming
into
the
conversation.
She
had
even
come
down
alone
once
or
twice.
It
had
always
frightened
her
a
little
to
do
so,
though
the
Hard
Ones
she
met
were
always
friendly,
always
"very
kind,"
as
Odeen
said.
But
they
did
not
seem
to
take
her
seriously.
They
were
pleased,
but
somehow
amused-she
could
feel
that
definitely-when
she
asked
questions.
And
when
they
answered
it
was
in
a
simple
way
that
carried
no
information.
"Just
a
machine,
Dua,"
they
would
say.
"Odeen
might
be
able
to
tell
you."
She
wondered
if
she
had
met
Estwald.
She
never
quite
dared
ask
the
names
of
the
Hard
Ones
she
met
(except
Losten,
to
whom
Odeen
had
introduced
her,
and
of
whom
she
heard
a
great
deal).
Sometimes
it
seemed
to
her
that
this
Hard
One
or
that
might
be
he.
Odeen
talked
about
him
with
great
awe
and
with
some
resentment.
She
gathered
that
he
was
too
engaged
in
work
of
the
deepest
importance
to
be
in
the
caverns
accessible
to
the
Soft
Ones.
She
pieced
together
what
Odeen
told
her
and,
little
by
little,
discovered
that
the
world
needed
food
badly.
Odeen
hardly
ever
called
it
"food."
He
said
"energy"
instead,
and
said
it
was
the
Hard-One
word
for
it.
The
Sun
was
fading
and
dying
but
Estwald
had
discovered
how
to
find
energy
far
away,
far
beyond
the
Sun,
far
beyond
the
seven
stars
that
shone
in
the
dark,
night-sky.
(Odeen
said
the
seven
stars
were
seven
suns
that
were
very
distant,
and
that
there
were
many
other
stars
that
were
even
more
distant
and
were
too
dim
to
be
seen.
Tritt
had
heard
him
say
that
and
had
asked
of
what
use
it
was
for
stars
to
exist
if
they
couldn't
be
seen
and
he
didn't
believe
a
word
of
it.
Odeen
had
said,
"Now,
Tritt,"
in
a
patient
way.
Dua
had
been
about
to
say
something
very
like
that
which
Tritt
had
said,
but
changed
her
mind
after
that.)
It
looked,
now,
as,
though
there
would
be
plenty
of
energy
forever;
plenty
of
food-at
least
as
soon
as
Estwald
and
the
other
Hard
Ones
learned
to
make
the
new
energy
taste
right.
It
had
only
been
a
few
days
ago
when
she
had
said
to
Odeen,
"Do
you
remember,
long
ago,
when
you
took
me
to
the
Hard-caverns
and
I
sensed
the
Hard
Ones
and
said
I
caught
the
feeling
of
a
big
sun?"
Odeen
looked
puzzled
for
a
moment.
"I'm
not
sure.
But
go
ahead,
Dua.
What
about
it?"
"I've
been
thinking.
Is
the
big
Sun
the
source
of
the
new
energy?"
Odeen
had
said,
happily,
"That's
good,
Dua.
It's
not
quite
right,
but
that's
such
good
intuition
for
an
Emotional."
And
now
Dua
had
been
moving
slowly,
rather
moodily,
during
all
this
time
of
reveries.
Without
particularly
noting
the
passage
of
either
time
or
space
she
found
herself
in
the
Hard-caverns
and
was
just
beginning
to
wonder
if
she
had
really
delayed
all
she
safely
could
and
whether
she
might
not
turn
home
now
and
face
the
inevitable
annoyance
of
Tritt
when-almost
as
though
the
thought
of
Tritt
had
brought
it
about-she
sensed
Tritt
The
sensation
was
so
strong
that
there
was
only
one
confused
moment
in
which
she
had
thought
that
somehow
she
was
picking
up
his
feelings
far
away
in
the
home
cavern.
No!
He
was
here,
down
in
the
Hard-caverns
with
her.
But
what
could
he
be
doing
here?
Was
he
pursuing
her?
Was
he
going
to
quarrel
with
her
here?
Was
he
foolishly
going
to
appeal
to
the
Hard
Ones?
Dua
didn't
think
she
could
endure
that-
And
then
the
feeling
of
cold
horror
left
her
and
was
replaced
by
astonishment.
Tritt
was
not
thinking
of
her
at
all.
He
had
to
be
unaware
of
her
presence.
All
she
could
sense
about
him
was
an
overwhelming
feeling
of
some
sort
of
determination,
mixed
with
fear
and
apprehension
at
something
he
would
do.
Dua
might
have
penetrated
farther
and
found
out
something,
at
least,
about
what
it
was
he
had
done,
and
why,
but
nothing
was
further
from
her
thoughts.
Since
Tritt
didn't
know
she
was
in
the
vicinity,
she
wanted
to
make
sure
of
only
one
thing-that
he
continued
not
to
know.
She
did,
then,
almost
in
pure
reflex,
something
that
a
moment
before
she
would
have
sworn
she
would
never
dream
of
doing
under
any
circumstances.
Perhaps
it
was
(she
later
thought)
because
of
her
idle
reminiscences
of
that
little-girl
talk
with
Doral,
or
her
memories
of
her
own
experiments
with
rock-rubbing.
(There
was
a
complicated
adult
word
for
it
but
she
found
that
word
infinitely
more
embarrassing
than
the
one
all
the
children
had
used.)
In
any
case,
without
quite
knowing
what
she
was
doing
or,
for
a
short
while
afterward,
what
she
had
done,
she
simply
flowed
hastily
into
the
nearest
wall.
Into
it!
Every
bit
of
her!
The
horror
of
what
she
had
done
was
mitigated
by
the
perfect
manner
in
which
it
accomplished
its
purpose.
Tritt
passed
by
within
almost
touching
distance
and
remained
completely
unaware
that
at
one
point
he
might
have
reached
out
and
touched
his
mid-ling.
By
that
time,
Dua
had
no
room
to
wonder
what
Tritt
might
be
doing
in
the
Hard-caverns
if
he
had
not
come
in
pursuit
of
her.
She
forgot
Tritt
completely.
What
filled
her
instead
was1
pure
astonishment
at
her
position.
Even
in
childhood
she
had
never
melted
completely
into
rock
or
met
anyone
who
admitted
she
had
(though
there
were
invariably
tales
of
someone
else
who
had).
Certainly
no
adult
Emotional
ever
had
or
could.
Dua.
was
unusually
rarefied
even
for
an
Emotional
(Odeen
was
fond
of
telling
her
that)
and
her
avoidance
of
food
accentuated
this
(as
Tritt
often
said).
What
she
had
just
done
indicated
the
extent
of
her
rarefaction
more
than
any
amount
of
right-ling
scolding
and
for
a
moment
she
was
ashamed
and
sorry
for
Tritt.
And
then
she
was
swept
by
a
deeper
shame.
What
if
she
were
caught?
She,
an
adult-
If
a
Hard
One
passed
and
lingered-
She
could
not
possibly
bring
herself
to
emerge
if
anyone
were
watching
but
how
long
could
she
stay
within
and
what
if
they
discovered
her
in
the
rock?
And
even
as
she
thought
that,
she
sensed
the
Hard
Ones
and
then-somehow-realized
they
were
far
away.
She
paused,
strove
to
calm
herself
The
rock,
permeating
and
surrounding
her,
lent
a
land
of
grayness
to
her
perception
but
didn't
dim
it.
Instead,
she
sensed
more
sharply.
She
could
still
sense
Tritt
in
his
steady
motion
downward
as
sharply
as
though
he
were
by
her
side,
and
she
could
sense
the
Hard
Ones
though
they
were
a
cavern
complex
away.
She
saw
the
Hard
Ones,
every
single
one
of
them,
each
in
his
place,
and
could
sense
their
vibratory
speech
to
the
fullest
detail,
and
even
catch
bits
of
what
they
were
saying.
She
was
sensing
as
she
never
had
before
and
never
dreamed
she
could.
So,
though
she
could
now
leave
the
rock,
secure
in
the
knowledge
she
was
both
alone
and
unobserved,
she
did
not;
partly
out
of
amazement,
partly
out
of
the
curious
exultation
she
felt
at
understanding
and
her
desire
to
experience
it
further.
Her
sensitivity
was
such
that
she
even
knew
why
he
was
sensitive.
Odeen
had
frequently
remarked
how
well
he
understood
something
after
a
period
of
melting,
even
though
he
had
not
understood
it
at
all
before.
There
was
something
about
the
melted
state
that
increased
sensitivity
incredibly;
more
was
absorbed;
more
was
used.
It
was
because
of
the
greater
atomic
density
during
melting,
Odeen
had
said.
Even
though
Dua
was'
not
sure
what
"greater
atomic
density"
meant,
it
came
with
melting
and
wasn't
this
present
situation
rather
like
melting?
Hadn't
Dua
melted
with
rock?
When
the
triad
melted,
all
the
sensitivity
went
to
Odeen's
benefit.
The
Rational
absorbed
it,
gained
understanding,
and
retained
that
understanding
after
separation.
But
now
Dua
was
the
only
consciousness
in
the
melt.
It
was
herself
and
the
rock.
There
was
"greater
atomic
density"
(surely?)
with
only
herself
to
benefit.
(Was
this
why
rock-rubbing
was
considered
a
perversion?
Was
this
why
Emotionals
were
warned
off?
Or
was
it
just
Dua
because
she
was
so
rarefied?
Or
because
she
was
a
Left-Em?)
And
then
Dua
stopped
all
speculation
and
just
sensed-in
fascination.
She
was
"only
mechanically
aware
of
Tritt
returning,
moving
past
her,
passing
in
the
direction
back
from
which
he
had
come.
She
was
only
mechanically
aware-scarcely
feeling
the
vaguest
surprise-that
Odeen,
too,
was
coming
up
from
the
Hard-caverns.
It
was
the
Hard
Ones
she
was
sensing,
only
they,
trying
to
make
more
out
of
her
perceptions,
trying
to
make
the
most
out
of
them.
It
was
a
long
time
before
she
detached
and
flowed
out
of
the
rock.
And
when
that
time
came,
she
was
not
concerned
overmuch
as
to
whether
she
would
be
observed.
She
was
confident
enough
of
her
sensing
ability
to
know
she
wouldn't
be.
And
she
returned
home
deep
in
thought.
3b
Odeen
had
returned
home
to
find
Tritt
waiting
for
him,
but
Dua
still
hadn't
returned.
Tritt
did
not
seem
disturbed
at
that.
Or
at
least
he
seemed
disturbed,
but
not
at
that.
His
emotions
were
strong
enough
so
that
Odeen
could
sense
them
clearly,
but
he
let
them
go
without
proving.
It
was
Dua's
absence
that
made
Odeen
restless;
to
the
extent
that
he
found
himself
annoyed
at
Tritt's
presence
simply
because
Tritt
was
not
Dua.
In
this
he
surprised
himself.
He
could
not
deny
to
himself
that
it
was
Tritt
who,
of
the
two,
was
the
dearer
to
him.
Ideally,
all
members
of
the
triad
were
one,
and
any
member
should
treat
the
other
two
exactly
on
a
par-both
with
each
other
and
with
him
(her)
self.
Yet
Odeen
had
never
met
a
triad
in
which
this
was
so;
least
of
all
among
those
who
loudly
proclaimed
their
triad
to
be
ideal
in
this
respect
One
of
the
three
was
always
a
little
left
out,
and
generally
knew
it,
too.
It
was
rarely
the
Emotional,
though.
They
supported
each
other
cross-triad
to
an
extent
that
Rationals
and
Parentals
never
did.
The
Rational
had
his
teacher,
the
proverb
went,
and
the
Parental
his
children-but
the
Emotional
had
all
the
other
Emotionals.
Emotionals
compared
notes
and
if
one
claimed
neglect,
or
could
be
made
to
claim
it,
she
was
sent
back
with
a
thin
patter
of
instructions
to
stand
firm,
to
demand!
And
because
melting
depended
so
much
on
the
Emotional
and
her
attitude,
she
was
usually
pampered
by
both
left
and
right.
But
Dua
was
so
non-Emotional
,an
Emotional!
She
didn't
seem
to
care
that
Odeen
and
Tritt
were
so
close,
and
she
had
no
close
friendships
among
the
Emotionals
to
make
her
care.
Of
course
that
was
it;
she
was
so
non-Emotional
an
Emotional.
Odeen
loved
having
her
so
interested
in
his
work;
loved
having
her
so
concerned
and
so
amazingly
ready
of
comprehension;
but
that
was
an
intellectual
love,
lie
deeper
feeling
went
to
steady,
stupid
Tritt,
who
knew
his
place
so
well
and
who
could
offer
so
little
other
than
exactly
what
counted-the
security
of
assured
routine.
But
now
Odeen
felt
petulant.
He
said,
"Have
you
heard
from
Dua,
Tritt?"
And
Tritt
did
not
answer
directly.
He
said,
"I
am
busy.
I
will
see
you
later.
I
have
been
doing
things."
"Where
are
the
children?
Have
you
been
gone,
too?
There
is
a
been-gone
feel
to
you."
A
note
of
annoyance
made
itself
plain
in
Tritt's
voice.
''The
children
are
well-trained.
They
know
enough
to
place
themselves
in
community-care.
Really,
Odeen,
they
are
not
babies."
But
he
did
not
deny
the
"been-gone"
aura
that
he
faintly
exuded.
"I'm
sorry.
I'm
just
anxious
to
see
Dua."
"You
should
feel
so
more
often,"
Tritt
said.
"You
always
tell
me
to
leave
her
alone.
You
look
for
her."
And
he
went
on
into
the
deeper
recesses
of
the
home
cavern.
Odeen
looked
after
his
right-ling
with
some
surprise.
At
almost
any
other
occasion
he
would
have
followed
in
an
attempt
to
probe
the
unusual
uneasiness
that
was
making
itself
quite
evident
through
the
ingrained
stolidity
of
a
Parental.
What
had
Tritt
done?
-But
he
was
waiting
for
Dua,
and
growing
more
anxious
by
the
moment,
and
he
let
Tritt
go.
Anxiety
keened
Odeen's
sensitivity.
There
was
almost
a
perverse
pride
among
Rationals
in
their
relative
poverty
of
perception.
Such
perception
wasn't
a
thing
of
the
mind;
it
was
most
characteristic
of
Emotionals.
Odeen
was
a
Rational
of
Rationals,
proud
of
reasoning
rather
than
feeling,
yet
now
he
flung
out
the
imperfect
net
of
his
emotional
perception
as
far
as
he
could;
and
wished,
for
just
a
moment,
that
he
were
an
Emotional
so
that
he
could
send
it
out
farther
and
better.
Yet
it
eventually
served
his
purpose.
He
could
detect
Dua's
approach,
finally,
at
an
unusual
distance-for
him
-and
he
hastened
out
to
meet
her.
And
because
he
made
her
out
at
such
a
distance,
he
was
more
aware
of
her
rarefaction
than
he
ordinarily
was.
She
was
a
delicate
mist,
no
more.
-Tritt
was
right,
Odeen
thought
with
sudden,
sharp
concern.
Dua
must
be
made
to
eat
and
to
melt.
Her
interest
in
life
must
be
increased.
He
was
so
intent
on
the
necessity
of
this
that
when
she
flung
herself
flowingly
toward
him
and
virtually
engulfed
him,
in
utter
disregard
of
the
fact
that
they
were
not
in
private
and
might
be
observed,
and
said,
"Odeen,
I
must
know-I
must
know
so
much-"
he
accepted
it
as
the
completion
of
his
own
thought
and
did
not
even
consider
it
strange.
Carefully,
he
slipped
away,
trying
to
adopt
a
more
seemly
union
without
making
it
seem
he
was
repulsing
her.
"Come,"
he
said,
"I've
been
waiting
for
you.
Tell
me
what
you
want
to
know.
I
will
explain
all
I
can."
They
were
moving
quickly
homeward
now,
with
Odeen
adapting
himself
eagerly
to
the
characteristic
waver
of
the
Emotional
flow.
Dua
said,
"Tell
me
about
the
other
Universe.
Why
are
they
different?
How
are
they
different?
Tell
me
all
about
it"
It
did
not
occur
to
Dua
she
was
asking
too
much.
It
did
occur
to
Odeen.
He
felt
rich
with
an
astonishing
quantity
of
knowledge
and
was
on
the
point
of
asking,
How
do
you
come
to
know
enough
about
the
other
Universe
to
grow
so
curious
about
it?
He
repressed
the
question.
Dua
was
coming
from
the
direction
of
the
Hard-caverns.
Perhaps
Losten
had
been
talking
to
her,
suspecting
that
despite
everything
Odeen
would
be
too
proud
of
his
status
to
help
his
mid-ling.
Not
so,
thought
Odeen
gravely.
And
he
would
not
ask.
He
would
just
explain.
Tritt
bustled
about
them
when
they
returned
home.
"If
you
two
are
going
to
talk,
go
into
Dua's
chamber.
I
will
be
busy
out
here.
I
must
see
to
it
that
the
children
are
cleaned
and
exercised.
No
time
for
melting
now.
No
melting."
Neither
Odeen
nor
Dua
had
any
thought
of
melting,
but
there
was
no
thought
in
either
mind
of
disobeying
the
command.
The
Parental's
home
was
his
castle.
The
Rational
had
his
Hard-caverns
below
and
the
Emotional
her
meeting
places
above.
The
Parental
had
only
his
home.
Odeen
therefore
said,
"Yes,
Tritt
Well
be
out
of
your
way."
And
Dua
extended
a
briefly
loving
part
of
herself
and
said,
"It's
good
to
see
you,
right-dear."
(Odeen
wondered
if
her
gesture
was
part
relief
over
the
fact
that
there
would
be
no
pressure
to
melt.
Tritt
did
tend
to
overdo
that
a
bit;
even
more
than
Parentals
generally.)
In
her
chamber,
Dua
stared
at
her
private
feeding-place.
Ordinarily,
she
ignored
it.
It
had
been
Odeen's
idea,
He
knew
that
such
things
did
exist
and,
as
he
explained
to
Tritt,
if
Dua
did
not
like
to
swarm
with
the
other
Emotionals,
it
was
perfectly
possible
to
lead
Solar
energy
down
into
the
cavern
so
that
Dua
might
feed
there.
Tritt
had
been
horrified.
It
wasn't
done.
The
others'
would
laugh.
The
triad
would
be
disgraced.
Why
didn't
Dua
behave
as
she
should?
"Yes,
Tritt,"
Odeen
had
said,
"but
she
doesn't
behave
as
she
should,
so
why
not
accommodate
her?
Is
it
so
terrible?
She
will
eat
privately,
gain
substance,
make
us
happier,
become
happier
herself,
and
maybe
learn
to
swarm
in
the
end."
Tritt
allowed
it,
and
even
Dua
allowed
it-after
some
argument-but
insisted
that
it
be
a
simple
design.
So
there
was
nothing
but
the
two
rods
that
served
as
electrodes,
powered
by
Solar
energy,
and
with
room
for
Dua
in
between.
Dua
rarely
used
it,
but
this
time
she
stared
at
it
and
said,
"Tritt
has
decorated
it
...
Unless
you
did,
Odeen."
"I?
Of
course
not"
A
pattern
of
colored-clay
designs
was
at
the
base
of
each
electrode.
"I
suppose
it's
his
way
of
saying
he
wishes
I
would
use
it,"
Dua
said,
"and
I
am
hungry.
Besides,
if
I'm
eating,
Tritt
wouldn't
dream
of
interrupting
us,
would
he?"
"No"
said
Odeen,
gravely.
"Tritt
would
stop
the
world
it
he
thought
its
motion
might
disturb
you
while
you
were
eating."
Dua
said,
"Well-I
am
hungry."
Odeen
caught
a
trace
of
guilt
in
her.
Guilt
over
Tritt?
Over
being
hungry?
Why
should
Dua
feel
guilty
about
being
hungry?
Or
had
she
done
something
that
had
consumed
energy
and
was
she
feeling-
He
wrenched
his
mind
away
from
that
impatiently.
There
were
times
when
a
Rational
could
be
too
Rational,
and
chase
down
the
tracks
of
every
thought
to
the
detriment
of
what
was
important.
Right
now,
it
was
important
to
talk
to
Dua.
She
seated
herself
between
the
electrodes
and
when
she
compressed
herself
to
do
so,
her
small
size
was
only
too
painfully
evident.
Odeen
was
hungry
himself;
he
could
tell
because
the
electrodes
seemed
brighter
than
they
ordinarily
did;
and
he
could
taste
the
food
even
at
that
distance
and
the
savor
was
delicious.
When
one
was
hungry,
one
always
tasted
food
more
keenly
than
otherwise
and
at
a
greater
distance.
.,.
But
he
would
eat
later.
Dua
said,
"Don't
just
sit
silently,
left-dear.
Tell
me.
I
want
to
know."
She
had
adopted
(unconsciously?)
the
ovoid
character
of
a
Rational,
as
though
to
make
it
clearer
that
she
wanted
to
be
accepted
as
one.
Odeen
said,
"I
can't
explain
it
all.
All
the
science
I
mean,
because
you
haven't
had
the
background,
I
will
try
to
make
it
simple
and
you
just
listen.
Later,
you
tell
me
what
you
didn't
understand
and
I'll
try
to
explain
further.
You
understand,
first,
that
everything
is
made
up
of
tiny
particles
called
atoms
and
that
these
are
made
up
of
still
tinier
subatomic
particles."
"Yes,
yes,"
said
Dua.
"That's
why
we
can
melt."
"Exactly.
Because
actually
we
are
mostly
empty
space.
All
the
particles
are
far
apart
and
your
particles
and
mine
and
Tritt's
can
all
melt
together
because
each
set
fits
into
the
empty
spaces
around
the
other
set.
The
reason
matter
doesn't
fly
apart
altogether
is
that
the
tiny
particles
do
manage
to
cling
together
across
the
space
that
separates
them.
There
are
attractive
forces
holding
them
together,
the
strongest
being
one
we
call
the
nuclear-force.
It
holds
the
chief
subatomic
particles
very
tightly
together
in
bunches
that
are
spread
widely
apart
and
that
are
held
together
by
weaker
forces.
Do
you
understand
that?"
"Only
a
little
bit,"
said
Dua.
"Well
never
mind,
we
can
go
back
later...
.
Matter
can
exist
in
different
states.
It
can
be
especially
spread
out,
as
in
Emotionals;
as
in
you,
Dua,
It
can
be
a
little
less
spread
out,
as
in
Rationals
and
in
Parentals.
Or
still
less
so,
as
in
rock.
It
can
be
very
compressed
or
thick,
as
in
the
Hard
Ones.
That's
why
they're
hard.
They
are
filled
with
particles."
"You
mean
there's
no
empty
space
in
them."
"No,
that's
not
quite
what
I
mean,"
said
Odeen,
puzzled
as
to
how
to
make
matter
clearer.
"They
still
have
a
great
deal
of
empty
space,
but
not
as
much
as
we
do.
Particles
need
a
certain
amount
of
empty
space
and
if
all
they
have
is
that
much,
then
other
particles
can't
squeeze
in.
If
particles
are
forced
in,
there
is
pain.
That's
why
the
Hard
Ones
don't
like
to
be
touched
1?y
us.
We
Soft
Ones
have
more
space
between
the
particles
than
are
actually
needed,
so
other
particles
can
fit
in."
Dua
didn't
look
at
all
certain
about
that.
Odeen
hastened
onward.
"In
the
other
Universe,
the
rules
are
different.
The
nuclear-force
isn't
as
strong
as
in
ours.
That
means
the
particles
need
more
room."
"Why?"
Odeen
shook
his
head,
"Because-because-the
particles
spread
out
their
wave-forms
more.
I
can't
explain
better
than
that.
With
a
weaker
nuclear-force,
the
particles
need
more
room
and
two
pieces
of
matter
can't
melt
together
as
easily
as
they
can
in
our
Universe."
"Can
we
see
the
other
Universe?"
"Oh,
no.
That
isn't
possible.
We
can
deduce
its
nature
from
its
basic
laws.
The
Hard
Ones
can
do
a
great
many
things,
though.
We
can
send
material
across,
and
get
material
from
them.
We
can
study
their
material,
you
see.
And
we
can
set
up
the
Positron
Pump.
You
know
about
that,
don't
you?"
"Well,
you've
told
me
we
get
energy
out
of
it.
I
didn't
know
there
was
a
different
Universe
involved.
.
.
.
What
is'
the
other
Universe
like?
Do
they
have
stars
and
worlds
the
way
we
do?"
"That's
an
excellent
question,
Dua."
Odeen
was
enjoying
his
role
as
teacher
more
intensely
than
usual
now
that
he
had
official
encouragement
to
speak.
(Earlier
he
always
had
the
feeling
that
there
was
a
kind
of
sneaking
perversion
in
trying
to
explain
things
to
an
Emotional.)
He
said,
"We
can't
see
the
other
Universe,
but
we
can
calculate
what
it
must
be
like
from
its
laws.
You
see,
what
makes
the
stars,
shine
is
the
gradual
combination
of
simple
particle-combinations
into
more
complicated
ones.
We
call
it
nuclear
fusion."
"Do
they
have
that
in
the
other
Universe?"
"Yes,
but
because
the
nuclear-force
is
weaker,
fusion
is
much
slower.
This
means
that
the
stars
must
be
much,
much
bigger
in
the
other
Universe
otherwise
not
enough
fusion
would
take
place
to
make
them
shine.
Stars
of
the
other
Universe
that
were
no
bigger
than
our
Sun
would
be
cold
and
dead.
On
the
other
hand,
if
stars
in
our
Universe
were
bigger
than
they
are,
the
amount
of
fusion
would
be
so
great
it
would
blow
them
up.
That
means
that
in
our
Universe
there
must
be
thousands
of
times
as
many
small
stars
as
there
are
larger
stars
in
theirs-"
"We
only
have
seven-"
began
Dua.
Then
she
said,
"I
forgot."
Odeen
smiled
indulgently.
It
was
so
easy
to
forget
the
uncounted
stars
that
could
not
be
seen
except
by
special
instruments.
"That's
all
right.
You
don't
mind
my
boring
you
with
all
this."
"You're
not
boring
me,"
said
Dua.
"I
love
it.
It
even
makes
food
taste
so
good."
And
she
wavered
between
the
electrodes
with
a
kind
of
luxurious
tremor.
Odeen,
who
had
never
before
heard
Dua
say
anything
complimentary
about
food,
was
greatly
heartened.
He
said,
"Of
course,
our
Universe
doesn't
last
as
long
as
theirs.
Fusion
goes
so
fast
that
all
the
particles
are
combined
after
a
million
lifetimes."
"But
there
are
so
many
other
stars."
"Ah,
but
you
see
they're
all
going
at
once.
The
whole
Universe
is
dying
down.
In
the
other
Universe,
with
so
many
fewer
and
larger
stars,
the
fusion
goes
so
slowly
that
the
stars
last
thousands
and
millions
of
times
as
long
as
ours.
It's
hard
to
compare
because
it
may
be
that
time
goes
at
different
rates
in
the
two
Universes."
He
added,
with
some
reluctance,
"I
don't
understand
that
part
myself.
That's
part
of
the
Estwald
Theory
and
I
haven't
got
to
that
very
much
so
far."
"Did
Estwald
work
out
all
of
this?"
"A
great
deal
of
it."
Dua
said,
"It's
wonderful
that
we're
getting
the
food
from
the
other
Universe
then.
I
mean,
it
doesn't
matter
if
our
Sun
dies
out,
then.
We
can
get
all
the
food
we
want
from
the
other
Universe."
"That's
right."
,
"But
does
nothing
bad
happen?
I
have
the-the
feeling
that
something
bad
happens."
"Well,"
said
Odeen.
"We
transfer
matter
back
and
forth
to
make
the
Positron
Pump
and
that
means
the
Universes
mix
together
a
little.
Our
nuclear-force
gets
a
tiny
bit
weaker,
so
fusion
in
our
Sun
slows
up
a
little
and
the
Sun
cools
down
a
little
faster....
But
just
a
little,
and
we
don't
need
it
any
more
anyway."
"That's
not
the
something-bad
feeling
I
have.
If
the
nuclear-force
gets
a
tiny
bit
weaker,
then
the
atoms
take
up
more
room-is
that
right?-and
then
what
happens
to
melting?"
"That
gets
a
tiny
bit
harder
but
it
would
take
many
millions
of
lifetimes
before
it
would
get
noticeably
harder
to
melt.
Even
if
someday
melting
became
impossible
and
Soft
Ones
died
out,
that
would
happen
long,
long
after
we
would
all
have
died
out
for
lack
of
food
if
we
weren't
using
the
other
Universe."
"That's
still
not
the
something-bad-feeling-"
Dua's
words
were
beginning
to
slur.
She
wriggled
between
her
electrodes
and
to
Odeen's
gratified
eyes
she
seemed
noticeably
larger
and
compacter.
It
was
as
though
his
words,
as
well
as
the
food,
were
nourishing
her.
Losten
was
right!
Education
made
her
more
nearly
satisfied
with
life;
Odeen
could
sense
a
kind
of
sensual
joy
in
Dua
that
he
had
scarcely
ever
felt
before.
She
said,
"It
is
so
kind
of
you
to
explain,
Odeen.
You
are
a
good
left-ling."
"Do
you
want
me
to
go
on?"
asked
Odeen,
flattered
and
more
pleased
than
he
could
easily
say.
"Is there anything else you want to ask?" "A great deal, Odeen, but-but not now. Not now, Odeen. Oh, Odeen, do you know what I want to do?" Odeen guessed at once,
but was too cautious to say it openly. Dua's moments of erotic advance were too few to treat with anything but care. He hoped desperately that Tritt had not involved himself
with the children to the point where they could not take advantage of this. But Tritt was in the chamber already. Had he been outside the door, waiting? He did not care.
There was no time to think. Dua had flowed out from between the electrodes and Odeen's senses were filled with her beauty. She was between them, now, and through her
Tritt shimmered, with his outlines flaming in incredible color. It had never been like this. Never. Odeen held himself back desperately, letting his own substance
flow through Dua and into Tritt an atom at a time; holding away from the overpowering penetrance of Dua with every bit of strength; not giving himself up to the ecstasy,
but letting it be wrenched from him; hanging on to his consciousness to the last possible moment; and then blanking out in one final transport so intense as to feel like
an explosion echoing and reverberating endlessly within him. Never in the lifetime of the triad had the period of melt-unconsciousness lasted so long. 3c Tritt was
pleased. The melting had been so satisfactory. All previous occasions seemed skimpy and hollow in comparison. He was utterly delighted with what had happened. Yet
he kept quiet. He felt it better not to speak. Odeen and Dua were happy, too. Tritt could tell. Even the children seemed to be glowing. But Tritt was happiest
of all-naturally. He listened to Odeen and Dua talk. He understood none of it, but that didn't matter. He didn't mind that they seemed so pleased with each other.
He had his own pleasure and was content to listen. Dua said, on one occasion. "And do they really try to communicate with us?" (Tritt never got it quite clear who "they"
might be. He gathered that "communicate" was a fancy word for "talk." So why didn't they say "talk"? Sometimes he wondered if he should interrupt. But if he asked
questions, Odeen would only say, "Now, Tritt," and Dua would swirl impatiently.) "Oh, yes," said Odeen. "The Hard Ones are quite sure of that. They have markings on
the material that is sent us sometimes and they say that it is perfectly possible to communicate by such markings. Long ago, in fact, they used markings in reverse,
when it was necessary to explain to the other-beings how to set up their part of the Positron Pump." "I wonder what the other-beings look like. What do they look like,
do you suppose?" "From the laws we can work out the nature of the stars! because that is simple. But how can we work out the nature of the beings? We can never know."
"Couldn't they communicate what they look like?" "If we understood what they communicated, perhaps we could make out something. But we don't understand." Dua seemed aggrieved.
"Don't the Hard Ones understand?" "I don't know. If they do, they haven't told me so. Losten once told me it didn't matter what they were like, as long as the Positron Pump
worked and was enlarged." "Maybe he just didn't want you bothering him." Odeen said, huffily. "I don't bother him." "Oh, you know what I mean. He just didn't want to
get into those details." By that time Tritt could no longer listen. They went on arguing for quite awhile over whether the Hard Ones should let Dua look at the markings
or not Dua said that she could sense what they said, perhaps. It made Tritt a little angry. After all, Dua was only a Soft One and not even a Rational. He began to
wonder if Odeen was right to tell her all he did. It gave Dua funny ideas- Dua could see it made Odeen angry, too. First he laughed. Then he said that an Emotional couldn't handle
such complicated things. Then he refused to talk at all. Dua had to be very pleasant to him for a while till he came around. On one occasion it was Dua who was angry-absolutely furious.
It began quietly. In fact, it was on one of the occasions when the two children were with them. Odeen was letting them play with him. He didn't even mind when little-right Torun pulled at
him. In fact, he let himself go in most undignified fashion. He didn't seem to mind that he was all out of shape. It was a sure sign he was pleased. Tritt remained in a corner,
resting, and was so satisfied with what was happening. Dua laughed at Odeen's misshapenness. She let her own substance touch Odeen's knobbishness flirtatiously. She knew very well, Tritt
knew, that the leftish surface was sensitive when out of ovoid. Dua said, "I've been thinking, Odeen ... If the other Universe gets its laws into ours just a bit through the Positron Pump,
doesn't our Universe get its laws into theirs the same little bit?" Odeen howled at Dua's touch and tried to avoid her without upsetting the little ones. He gasped, "I can't answer
unless you stop, you mid-ling wretch." She stopped, and he said, "That's a very good thought, Dua. You're an amazing creature. It's true, of course. The mixture goes both ways....
Tritt take out the little ones, will you?" But they scurried off by themselves. They were not such little ones. They were quite grown. Annis would soon be starting his education
and Torun was quite Parentally-blockish already. Tritt stayed and thought Dua looked very beautiful when Odeen talked to her in this way. Dua said, "If the other laws slow down
our Sun and cool them down; don't our laws speed up their suns and heat them up?" "Exactly right, Dua. A Rational couldn't do better." "How hot do their suns get?" "Oh, not much;
just slightly hotter, very slightly Dua said, "But that's where I keep getting the something-bad feeling." "Oh, well, the trouble is that their suns are so huge. H our
little suns get a little cooler, it doesn't matter. Even if they turned off altogether, it wouldn't matter as long as we have the Positron Pump. With great, huge stars,
though, getting even a little hotter is troublesome. There is so much material in one of those stars that turning up the nuclear fusion even a little way will make it explode."
"Explode! But then what happens to the people?" "What people?" "The people in the other Universe." For a moment, Odeen looked blank, then he said, "I don't know." "Well, what
would happen if our own Sun exploded?" "It couldn't explode." (Tritt wondered what all the excitement was about How could a Sun explode? Dua seemed angrier and Odeen looked confused.)
Dua said, "But if it did? Would it get very hot?" "I suppose so." 'Wouldn't it kill us all?" Odeen hesitated and then said in clear annoyance, "What difference does it make,
Dua? Our Sun isn't exploding, and don't ask silly questions." "You told me to ask questions, Odeen, and it does make a difference, because the Positron Pump works both ways.
We need their end as much as ours." Odeen stared at her. "I never told you that" "I feel it." Odeen said, "You feel a great many things. Dua-" But Dua was shouting now.
She was quite beside herself. Tritt had never seen her like that She said, "Don't change the subject, Odeen. And don't withdraw and try to make me out a complete fool-just
another Emotional. You said I was almost like a Rational and I'm enough like one to see that the Positron Pump won't work without the other-beings. If the people in
the other Universe are destroyed, the Positron Pump will stop and our Sun will be colder than ever and well all starve. Don't you think that's important?" Odeen was shouting
too, now. "That shows what you know. We need their help because the energy supply is in low concentration and we have to switch matter. If the Sun in the other Universe
explodes, there'll be an enormous flood of energy; a huge flood that will last for a million lifetimes. There will be so much energy, we could tap it directly without
any matter-shift either way; so we don't need them, and it doesn't matter what happens-" They were almost touching now. Tritt was horrified. He had better say something,
make them get apart, talk to them. He couldn't think of anything to say. Then it turned out he didn't have to. There was a Hard One just outside the cavern. No,
three of them. They had been trying to talk and hadn't made themselves heard. Tritt shrieked, "Odeen. Dua." Then he remained quiet, trembling. He had a frightened notion
of what the Hard Ones had come to talk about. He decided to leave. But a Hard One put out one of his permanent, opaque appendages and said, "Don't go." It
sounded harsh, unfriendly. Tritt was more frightened than ever. 4a Dua was filled with anger; so filled she could scarcely sense the Hard Ones. She seemed stifled
under the components of the anger, each one filling her to the brim, separately. There was a sense of wrongness that Odeen should try to lie to her. A sense of wrongness
that a whole world of people should die. A sense of wrongness that it was so easy for her to learn and that she had never been allowed to. Since that first time in the rock,
she had gone twice more to the Hard-caverns. Twice more, unnoticed, she had buried herself in rock, and each time she sensed and knew, and each time when Odeen would explain
matters to her, she knew in advance what it was he would explain. Why couldn't they teach her, then, as they had taught Odeen? Why only the Rationals? Did she possess
the capacity to learn only because she was a Left-Em, a perverted mid-ling? Then let them teach her, perversion and all It was wrong to leave her ignorant. Finally, the words
of the Hard One were breaking through to her. Losten was there, but it was not he speaking. It was a strange Hard One, in front, who spoke. She did not know him, but
she
knew
few
of
them.
The
Hard
One
said,
"Which
of
you
have
been
in
the
lower
caverns
recently:
the
Hard
caverns?"
Dua
was
defiant.
They
found
out
about
her
rock-rubbing
and
she
didn't
care.
Let
them
tell
everybody.
She
would
do
so
herself.
She
said,
"I
have.
Many
times."
"Alone?"
said
the
Hard
One
calmly.
"Alone.
Many
times,"
snapped
Dua.
It
was
only
three
times,
but
she
didn't
care.
Odeen
muttered,
"I
have,
of
course,
been
to
the
lower
caverns
on
occasion."
The
Hard
One
seemed
to
ignore
that.
He
turned
to
Tritt
instead
and
said
sharply.
"And
you,
right?"
Tritt
quavered,
"Yes,
Hard-sir."
"Alone?"
"Yes,
Hard-sir."
"How
often?"
"Once."
Dua
was
annoyed.
Poor
Tritt
was
in
such
a
panic
over
nothing.
It
was
she
herself
who
had
done
it
and
she
was
ready
for
a
confrontation.
"Leave
him
alone,"
she
said.
"I'm
the
one
you
want."
The
Hard
One
turned
slowly
toward
her.
"For
what?"
he
said.
"For
whatever
it
is."
And
faced
with
it
directly,
she
couldn't
bring
herself
to
describe
what
she
had
done
after
all.
Not
in
front
of
Odeen;
"Well,
we'll
get
to
you.
First,
the
right.
.
.
.
Your
name
is
Tritt,
isn't
it?
Why
did
you
go
to
the
lower
caverns
alone?"
"To
speak
to
Hard-One-Estwald,
Hard-sir."
At
which
again
Dua
interrupted,
eagerly,
"Are
you
Estwald?"
The
Hard
One
said
briefly,
"No."
Odeen
looked
annoyed,
as
though
it
embarrassed
him
that
Dua
didn't
recognize
the
Hard
One.
Dua
didn't
care.
The
Hard
One
said
to
Tritt,
"What
did
you
take
from
the
lower
caverns?"
Tritt
was
silent.
The
Hard
One
said,
without
emotion,
"We
know
you
took
something.
We
want
to
know
if
you
know
what
it
was.
It
could
be
very
dangerous."
Tritt
was
still
silent,
and
Losten
interposed,
saying
more
kindly,
"Please
tell
us,
Tritt.
We
know
now
it
was
you
and
we
don't
want
to
have
to
be
harsh."
Tritt
mumbled.
"I
took
a
food-ball."
"Ah."
It
was
the
first
Hard
One
speaking.
"What
did
you
do
with
it?"
And
Tritt
burst
out.
"It
was
for
Dua.
She
wouldn't
eat
It
was
for
Dua."
Dua
jumped
and
coalesced
in
astonishment.
The
Hard
One
turned
on
her
at
once.
"You
did
not
know
about
it?"
"No!"
"Nor
you?"-
to
Odeen.
Odeen,
so
motionless
as
to
seem
frozen,
said,
"No,
Hard-sir."
For
a
moment
the
air
was
full
of
unpleasant
vibration
as
the
Hard
Ones
spoke
to
each
other,
ignoring
the
triad.
Whether
her
sessions
at
rock-rubbing
had
made
her
more
sensitive,
or
whether
it
was
her
recent
storm
of
emotions,
Dua
couldn't
tell,
and
wouldn't
have
dreamed
of
trying
to
analyze;
she
simply
knew
she
was
catching
whiffs
--not
of
words-but
of
understanding-
They
had
detected
the
loss
some
time
ago.
They
had
been
searching
quietly.
They
had
turned
to
the
Soft
Ones
as
possible
culprits
with
reluctance.
They
had
investigated
and
then
turned
to
Odeen's
triad
with
even
greater
reluctance.
(Why?
Dua
missed
that.)
They
did
not
see
how
Odeen
could
have
had
the
foolishness
to
take
it,
or
Dua
the
inclination.
They
did
not
think
of
Tritt
at
all.
Then
the
Hard
One
who
had
so
far
not
said
a
word
to
the
Soft
Ones
recalled
seeing
Tritt
in
the
Hard-caverns.
(Of
course,
thought
Dua.
It
was
the
day
she
had
first
entered
the
rock.
She
had
sensed
him
then.
She
had
forgotten.)
It
had
seemed
unlikely
in
the
extreme,
but
finally,
with
all
else
impossible
and
with
the
time
lapse
having
grown
intolerably
dangerous,
they
came.
They
would
have
liked
to
consult
Estwald,
but
by
the
time
the
possibility
of
Tritt
arose,
he
was
unavailable.
All
this
Dua
sensed
in
a
gasp
and
now
she
turned
toward
Tritt,
with
a
feeling
of
mingled
wonder
and
outrage.
Losten
was
anxiously
vibrating
that
no
harm
had
been
done,
that
Dua
looked
well,
that
it
was
a
useful
experiment
actually.
The
Hard
One
to
whom
Tritt
had
spoken
was
agreeing;
the
other
still
exuded
concern.
Dua
was
not
paying
attention
to
them
only.
She
was
looking
at
Tritt.
The
first
Hard
One
said,
"Where
is
the
food-ball
now,
Tritt?"
Tritt
showed
them.
It
was
hidden
effectively
and
the
connections
were
clumsy
but
serviceable.
The
Hard
One
said,
"Did
you
do
this
yourself,
Tritt?"
"Yes,
Hard-sir."
"How
did
you
know
how?"
"I
looked
at
how
it
was
done
in
the
Hard-caverns.
I
did
it
exactly
the
way
I
saw
it
done
there."
"Didn't
you
know
you
might
have
harmed
your
mid-mate?"
"I
didn't.
I
wouldn't.
I-"
Tritt
seemed
unable
to
speak
for
a
moment.
Then
he
said,
"It
was
not
to
hurt
her.
It
was
to
feed
her.
I
let
it
pour
into
her
feeder
and
I
decorated
her
feeder.
I
wanted
her
to
try
it
and
she
did.
She
ate!
For
the
first
time
in
a
long
while
she
ate
well.
We
melted."
He
paused,
then
said
in
a
huge,
tumultuous
cry.
"She
had
enough
energy
at
last
to
initiate
a
baby-Emotional.
She
took
Odeen's
seed
and
passed
it
to
me.
I
have
it
growing
inside
me.
A
baby-Emotional
is
growing
inside
me."
Dua
could
not
speak.
She
stumbled
back
and
then
rushed
for
the
door
in
so
pell-mell
a
fashion
that
the
Hard
Ones
could
not
get
out
of
the
way
in
time.
She
struck
the
appendage
of
the
one
in
front,
passing
deep
into
it,
and
then
pulled
free
with
a
harsh
sound.
The
Hard
One's
appendage
fell
limp
and
his
expression
seemed
contorted
with
pain.
Odeen
tried
to
dodge
around
him
to
follow
Dua,
but
the
Hard
One
said,
with
apparent
difficulty.
"Let
her
go
for
now.
There
is
enough
harm
done.
We
will
take
care."
4b
Odeen
found
himself
living
through
a
nightmare.
Dua
was
gone.
The
Hard
Ones
were
gone.
Only
Tritt
was
still
there;
silent
How
could
it
have
happened,
Odeen
thought
in
tortured
fashion.
How
could
Tritt
have
found
his
way
alone
to
the
Hard-caverns?
How
could
he
have
taken
a
storage
battery
charged
at
the
Positron
Pump
and
designed
to
yield
radiation
in
much
more
concentrated
form
than
Sunlight
and
dared-
Odeen
would
not
have
had
the
courage
to
chance
it.
How
could
Tritt;
stumbling,
ignorant
Tritt?
Or
was
he
unusual,
too?
Odeen,
the
clever
Rational;
Dua,
the
curious
Emotional;
and
Tritt,
the
daring
Parental?
He
said,
"How
could
you
do
it,
Tritt?"
Tritt
retorted
hotly.
"What
did
I
do?
I
fed
her.
I
fed
her
better
than
she
had
ever
been
fed
before.
Now
we
have
a
baby-Emotional
initiated
at
last.
Haven't
we
waited
long
enough?
We
would
have
waited
forever,
if
we
had
waited
for
Dua."
"But
don't
you
understand,
Tritt?
You
might
have
hurt
her.
It
wasn't
ordinary
Sunlight.
It
was
an
experimental
radiational
source
that
could
have
been
too
concentrated
to
be
safe."
"I
don't
understand
what
you're
saying,
Odeen.
How
could
it
do
harm?
I
tasted
the
kind
of
food
the
Hard
Ones
made
before.
It
tasted
bad.
You've
tasted
it,
too.
It
tasted
just
awful
and
it
never
hurt
us.
It
tasted
so
bad,
Dua
wouldn't
touch
it.
Then
I
came
on
the
food-ball.
It
tasted
good.
I
ate
some
and
it
was
delicious.
How
can
anything
delicious
hurt.
You
see,
Dua
ate
it.
She
liked
it.
And
it
started
the
baby-Emotional.
How
can
I
have
done
wrong?"
Odeen
despaired
of
explaining.
He
said,
"Dua
is
going
to
be
very
angry."
"She'll
get
over
it"
"I
wonder.
Tritt,
she's
not
like
ordinary
Emotionals.
That's
what
makes
her
so
hard
to
live
with,
but
so
wonderful
when
we
can
live
with
her.
She
may
never
want
to
melt
with
us
again."
Tritt's
outline
was
sturdily
plane-surfaced.
Then
he
said,
"Well,
what
of
it?"
"What
of
it?
You
ask.
Do
you
want
to
give
up
melting?"
"No,
but
if
she
won't
she
won't.
I
have
my
third
baby
and
I
don't
care
any
more.
I
know
all
about
the
Soft
Ones
in
the
old
days.
They
used
to
have
two
triad-births
sometimes.
But
I
don't
care.
One
is
plenty."
"But,
Tritt,
babies
aren't
all
there
is
to
melting."
"What
else?
I
heard
you
say
once
you
learned
faster
after
you
melted.
Then
learn
slower.
I
don't
care.
I
have
my
third
baby."
Odeen
turned
away,
trembling,
and
flowed
jerkily
out
of
the
chamber.
What
was
the
use
of
scolding
Tritt?
Tritt
wouldn't
understand.
He
wasn't
sure
he
understood
himself.
Once
the
third
baby
was
born,
and
grown
a
little,
surely
there
would
come
a
time
to
pass
on.
It
would
be
he,
Odeen,
who
would
have
to
give
the
signal,
who
would
have
to
say
when,
and
it
would
have
to
be
done
without
fear.
Anything
else
would
be
disgrace,
or
worse,
and
yet
he
could
not
face
it
without
melting,
even
now
that
all
three
children
would
have
been
formed.
Melting,
somehow,
would
eliminate
the
fear....
Maybe
it
was
because
melting
was
like
passing
on.
There
was
a
period
of
time
when
you
were
not
conscious,
yet
it
did
not
hurt.
It
was
like
not
existing
and
yet
it
was
desirable.
With
enough
melting,
he
could
gain
the
courage
to
pass
on
without
fear
and
without-
Oh,
Sun
and
all
the
stars,
it
wasn't
"passing
on."
Why
use
that
phrase
so
solemnly?
He
knew
the
other
word
that
was
never
used
except
by
children
who
wanted
to
shock
their
elders
somehow.
It
was
dying.
He
had
to
get
ready
to
die
without
fear,
and
to
have
Dua
and
Tritt
die
with
him.
And
he
didn't
know
how....
Not
without
melting...
4c
Tritt
remained
alone
in
the
room,
frightened,
frightened,
but
sturdily
resolved
to
remain
unmoved.
He
had
his
third
baby.
He
could
feel
it
within.
That
was
what
counted.
That
was
all
that
counted.
Yet
why,
then,
deep
inside,
did
he
have
a
stubborn
faint
feeling
that
it
wasn't
all
that
counted?
5a
Dua
was
ashamed
almost
beyond
endurance.
It
took
a
long
time
for
her
to
battle
down
that
shame;
battle
it
down
enough
to
give
herself
room
to
think.
She
had
hastened-
hastened-moving
blindly
out
and
away
from
the
horror
of
the
home-cavern;
scarcely
caring
that
she
did
not
know
where
she
was
going
or
even
where
she
was,
It
was
night,
when
no
decent
Soft
One
would
be
on
the
surface,
not
even
the
most
frivolous
Emotional.
And
it
would
be
a
considerable
time
before
the
Sun
rose.
Dua
was
glad.
The
Sun
was
food
and
at
the
moment,
she
hated
food
and
what
had
been
done
to
her.
It
was
cold,
too,
but
Dua
was
only
distantly
aware
of
it
Why
should
she
care
about
cold,
she
thought,
when
she
had
been
fattened
in
order
that
she
might
do
her
duty-
fattened,
mind
and
body.
After
that,
cold
and
starvation
were
almost
her
friends.
She
saw
through
Tritt.
Poor
thing;
he
was
so
easy
to
see
through;
his
actions
were
pure
instinct
and
he
was
to
be
praised
that
he
had
followed
them
so
bravely.
He
had
come
back
so
daringly
from
the
Hard-caverns
with
the
food-ball
(and
she-she
herself
had
sensed
him
and
would
have
known
what
was
happening
if
Tritt
hadn't
been
so
paralyzed
at
what
he
was
doing
that
he
had
dared
not
think
of
it,
and
if
she
had
not
been
so
paralyzed
at
what
she
was
doing
and
at
the
new
depth
of
sensation
it
brought
her
that
she
would
not
take
care
to
sense
what
most
she
needed
to).
Tritt
brought
it
back
undetected
and
had
arranged
the
pitiful
booby
trap,
decorating
her
feeder
to
entice
her.
And
she
had
come
back,
flushed
with
awareness
of
her
rock-probing
thinness,
filled
with
the
shame
of
it
and
with
pity
for
Tritt.
With
all
that
shame
and
pity,
she
ate,
and
helped
initiate
birth.
Since
then
she
had
eaten
but
sparingly
as
was
her
custom
and
never
at
the
feeder,
but
then
there
had
been
no
impulse
to.
Tritt
had
not
driven
her.
He
had
looked
contented
(of
course)
so
there
was
nothing
to
reactivate
the
shame.
And
Tritt
left
the
food-ball
in
place.
He
didn't
dare
risk
taking
it
back;
he
had
what
he
wanted;
it
was
best
and
easiest
to
leave
it
there
and
think
of
it
no
more.
-Till
he
was
caught.
But
clever
Odeen
must
have
seen
through
Tritt's
plan,
must
have
spied
the
new
connections
to
the
electrodes,
must
have
understood
Tritt's
purpose.
Undoubtedly,
he
said
nothing
to
Tritt;
that
would
have
embarrassed
and
frightened
the
poor
right-ling
and
Odeen
always
watched
over
Tritt
with
loving
care.
Of
course,
Odeen
didn't
have
to
say
anything.
He
needed
only
to
fill
in
the
gaps
in
Tritt's
clumsy
plan
and
make
it
work.
Dua
was
under
no
illusions
now.
She
would
have
detected
the
taste
of
the
food-ball;
noticed
its
extraordinary
tang;
caught
the
way
in
which
it
began
to
fill
her
while
giving
her
no
sensations
of
fullness-had
it
not
been
that
Odeen
had
occupied
her
with
talk.
It
had
been
a
conspiracy
between
the
two
of
them,
whether
Tritt
was
consciously
part
of
it
or
not.
How
could
she
have
believed
that
Odeen
was
suddenly
a
careful,
painstaking
teacher?
How
could
she
have
failed
to
see
the
ulterior
motive?
Their
concern
for
her
was
their
concern
for
the
completion
of
the
new
triad,
and
that
in
itself
was
an
indication
of
how
little
they
thought
of
her.
Well-
She
paused
long
enough
to
feel
her
own
weariness
and
she
worked
herself
into
a
crevice
in
the
rock
that
would
shield
her
from
the
thin,
cold
wind.
Two
of
the
seven
stars
were
in
her
field
of
vision
and
she
watched
them
absently,
occupying
her
outer
senses
in
trivia
so
that
she
might
concentrate
the
more
in
internal
thought.
She
was
disillusioned.
"Betrayed,"
she
muttered
to
herself.
"Betrayed!"
Could
they
see
no
further
than
themselves?
That
Tritt
would
be
willing
to
see
all
destroyed
if
he
were
but
secure
in
his
babies
was
to
be
taken
for
granted.
But
he
was
a
creature
of
instinct.
What
of
Odeen?
Odeen
reasoned,
and
did
that
mean
that
for
the
purpose
of
exercising
his
reason,
he
would
sacrifice
all
else?
Was
everything
produced
by
reason
its
own
excuse
for
being-
at
any
cost?
Because
Estwald
had
devised
the
Positron
Pump,
did
it
have
to
be
used
in
order
that
the
whole
world,
Hard
and
Soft
alike,
be
placed
at
its
mercy,
and
at
the
mercy
of
the
people
of
the
other
Universe?
What
if
the
other
people
stopped
and
if
the
world
was
left
without
a
Positron
Pump
and
with
a
dangerously
cooled
Sun?
No,
they
wouldn't
stop,
those
other
people;
for
they
had
been
persuaded
to
start
and
they
would
be
persuaded
to
keep
going
until
they
were
destroyed-and
then
they
would
be
needed
no
longer
by
the
Rationals,
Hard
or
Soft
-just
as
she,
Dua,
would
have
to
pass
on
(be
destroyed)
now
that
she
was
needed
no
longer.
She
and
the
other
people,
both
being
betrayed.
Almost
without
being
aware
of
it,
she
was
cushioning
deeper
and
deeper
into
the
rock.
She
buried
herself,
out
of
sight
of
the
stars,
out
of
touch
with
the
wind,
unaware
of
the
world.
She
was
pure
thought.
It
was
Estwald
whom
she
hated.
He
was
the
personification
of
all
that
was
selfish
and
hard.
He
had
devised
the
Positron
Pump
and
would
destroy
a
whole
world
of
perhaps
tens
of
thousands
without
conscience.
He
was
so
withdrawn
that
he
never
made
his
appearance
and
so
powerful
that
even
the
other
Hard
Ones
seemed
afraid
of
him.
Well,
then,
she
would
fight
him.
She
would
stop
him.
The
people
of
the
other
Universe
had
helped
set
up
the
Positron
Pump
through
communications
of
some
sort.
Odeen
had
mentioned
those.
Where
would
such
communications
be
kept?
What
would
they
be
like?
How
could
they
be
used
for
further
communication?
It
was
remarkable
how
clearly
she
could
think.
Remarkable.
There
was
fierce
enjoyment
in
this,
that
she
would
use
reason
to
overcome
the
cruel
reasoners.
They
wouldn't
be
able
to
stop
her,
for
she
could
go
where
no
Hard
One
could
go,
where
no
Rational
or
Parental
could-and
where
no
other
Emotional
would.
She
might
be
caught
eventually,
but
at
the
moment
she
didn't
care.
She
was
going
to
fight
to
have
her
way-at
any
price-at
any
price-though
to
do
it
meant
she
would
have
to
go
through
rock,
live
in
rock,
skirt
the
Hard-caverns,
steal
food
from
their
stored
energy
batteries
when
she
had
to,
flock
with
the
other
Emotionals
and
feed
on
Sunlight
when
she
could.
But
in
the
end
she
would
teach
them
all
a
lesson
and
after
that
they
could
do
as
they
wished.
She
would
even
be
ready
to
pass
on
then-but
only
then-
5b
Odeen
was
present
when
the
new
baby-Emotional
was
born,
perfect
in
every
way,
but
he
had
not
been
able
to
feel
enthusiasm
over
it.
Even
Tritt,
who
cared
for
it
perfectly,
as
a
Parental
must,
seemed
subdued
in
his
ecstasies.
A
long
time
had
passed
and
it
was
as
though
Dua
had
vanished.
She
had
not
passed
on.
A
Soft
One
could
not
pass
on
except
when
the
whole
triad
did;
but
she
was
not
with
them,
either.
It
was
as
though
she
had
passed
on,
without
passing
on.
Odeen
had
seen
her
once,
only
once,
not
very
long
after
her
wild
fight
on
the
news
that
she
had
initiated
the
new
baby.
He
had
passed
a
cluster
of
Emotionals,
sunning
themselves,
when
he
was
moving
over
the
surface
on
some
foolish
notion
that
he
might
find
her.
They
had
tittered
at
the
rare
sight
of
a
Rational
moving
in
the
vicinity
of
an
Emotional
cluster
and
had
thinned
in
mass-provocation,
with
no
thought
among
the
foolish
lot
of
them
but
to
advertise
the
fact
that
they
were
Emotionals.
Odeen
felt
only
contempt
for
them
and
there
was
no
answering
stir
along
his
own
smooth
curves
at
all.
He
thought
of
Dua
instead
and
of
how
different
she
was
from
all
of
them.
Dua
never
thinned
for
any
reason
other
than
her
own
inner
needs.
She
had
never
tried
to
attract
anyone
and
was
the
more
attractive
for
that.
If
she
could
have
brought
herself
to
join
the
flock
of
empty-heads
she
would
be
easily
recognized
(he
felt
sure)
by
the
fact
that
she
alone
would
not
thin,
but
would
probably
thicken,
precisely
because
the
others
thinned.
And
as
he
thought
that,
Odeen
scanned
the
sunning
Emotionals
and
noted
that
one
indeed
had
not.
He
stopped
and
then
hastened
toward
her,
oblivious
to
the
Emotionals
in
his
way,
oblivious
to
their
wild
screeching
as
they
flicked
smokily
out
of
his
path
and
chattered
desperately
in
their
attempts
to
avoid
coalescing
one
with
the
other-at
least
not
in
the
open,
and
with
a
Rational
watching.
It
was
Dua.
She
did
not
try
to
leave.
She
kept
her
ground
and
said
nothing.
"Dua,"
he
said,
humbly,
"aren't
you
coming
home?"
"I
have
no
home,
Odeen,"
she
said.
Not
angrily,
not
in
hate-and
all
the
more
dreadfully
for
that
reason.
^"How
can
you
blame
Tritt
for
what
he
did,
Dua?
You
know
the
poor
fellow
can't
reason."
"But
you
can,
Odeen.
And
you
occupied
my
mind
while
he
arranged
to
feed
my
body,
didn't
you?
Your
reason
told
you
that
I
was
much
more
likely
to
be
trapped
by
you
than
by
him."
"Dua,
no!"
"No,
what?
Didn't
you
make
a
big
show
of
teaching
me,
of
educating
me?"
"I
did,
but
it
wasn't
a
show,
it
was
real.
And
it
was
not
because
of
what
Tritt
had
done.
I
didn't
know
what
Tritt
had
done."
"I
can't
believe
that"
She
flowed
away
without
haste.
He
followed
after.
They
were
alone
now,
the
Sun
shining
redly
down
upon
them.
She
turned
to
him.
"Let
me
ask
you
one
question,
Odeen?
Why
did
you
want
to
teach
me?"
Odeen
said,
"Because
I
-wanted
to.
Because
I
enjoy
teaching
and
because
I
would
rather
teach
than
do
anything
else-but
learn."
"And
melt,
of
course.
.
.
.
Never
mind,"
she
added
to
ward
him
off.
"Don't
explain
that
you
are
talking
of
reason
and
not
of
instinct
If
you
really
mean
what
you
say
about
enjoying
teaching;
if
I
can
really
ever
believe
what
you
say;
then
perhaps
you
can
understand
something
I'm
going
to
tell
you.
"I've
been
learning
a
great
deal
since
I
left
you,
Odeen.
Never
mind
how.
I
have.
There's
no
Emotional
left
in
me
at
all,
except
physiologically.
Inside,
where
it
counts,
I'm
all
Rational,
except
that
I
hope
I
have
more
feeling
for
others
than
Rationals
have.
And
one
thing
I've
learned
is
what
we
really
are,
Odeen;
you
and
I
and
Tritt
and
all
the
other
triads
on
this
planet;
what
we
really
are
and
always
were."
"What
is
that?"
asked
Odeen.
He
was
prepared
to
listen
for
as
long
as
might
be
necessary,
and
as
quietly,
if
only
she
would
come
back
with
him
when
she
had
said
her
say.
He
would
perform
any
penance,
do
anything
that
might
be
required.
Only
she
must
come
back-and
something
dim
and
dark
inside
him
knew
that
she
had
to
come
back
voluntarily.
"What
we
are?
Why,
nothing,
really,
Odeen,"
she
said
lightly,
almost
laughing,
"Isn't
that
strange?
The
Hard
Ones
are
the
only
living
species
on
the
face
of
the
world.
Haven't
they
taught
you
that?
There
is
only
one
species
because
you
and
I,
the
Soft
Ones,
are
not
really
alive.
We're
machines,
Odeen.
We
must
be
because
only
the
Hard
Ones
are
alive.
Haven't
they
taught
you
that,
Odeen?"
"But,
Dua,
that's
nonsense,"
said
Odeen,
nonplused.
Dua's
voice
grew
harsher.
"Machines,
Odeen!
Made
by
the
Hard
Ones!
Destroyed
by
the
Hard
Ones!
They
are
alive,
the
Hard
Ones.
Only
they.
They
don't
talk
about
it
much.
They
don't
have
to.
They
all
know
it.
But
I've
learned
to
think,
Odeen,
and
I've
worked
it
out
from
the
small
clues
I've
had.
They
live
tremendously
long
lives,
but
die
eventually.
They
no
longer
give
birth;
the
Sun
yields
too
little
energy
for
that.
And
since
they
die
very
infrequently,
but
don't
give
birth
at
all,
their
numbers
are
very
slowly
declining.
And
there
are
no
young
ones
to
provide
new
blood
and
new
thoughts,
so
the
old,
long-lived
Hard
Ones
get
terribly
bored.
So
what
do
you
suppose
they
do,
Odeen?"
"What?"
There
was
a
kind
of
fascination
about
this.
A
repulsive
fascination.
"They
manufacture
mechanical
children,
whom
they
can
teach.
You
said
it
yourself,
Odeen.
You
would
rather
teach
than
do
anything
else
but
learn-and
melt,
of
course.
The
Rationals
are
made
in
the
mental
image
of
the
Hard
Ones,
and
the
Hard
Ones
don't
melt,
and
learning
is
terribly
complex
for
them
since
they
already
know
so
much.
What
is
left
for
them
but
the
fun
of
teaching.
Rationals
were
created
for
no
purpose
but
to
be
taught.
Emotionals
and
Parentals
were
created
because
they
were
necessary
for
the
self-perpetuating
machinery
that
made
new
Rationals.
And
new
Rationals
were
needed
constantly
because
the
old
ones
were
used
up,
were
taught
all
they
could
be
taught.
And
when
old
Rationals
had
absorbed
what
they
could,
they
were
destroyed
and
were
taught,
in
advance,
to
call
the
destruction
process
"passing
on"
to
spare
their
feelings.
And
of
course,
Emotionals
and
Parentals
passed
on
with
them.
As
long
as
they
had
helped
form
a
new
triad
there
was
no
further
use
for
them."
"But
that's
all
wrong,
Dua,"
Odeen
managed
to
say.
He
had
no
arguments
to
pose
against
her
nightmare
scheme,
but
he
knew
with
a
certainty
past
argument
that
she
was
wrong.
(Or
did
a
little
pang
of
doubt
deep
inside
suggest
that
the
certainty
might
have
been
implanted
in
him,
to
begin
with?-No,
surely
no,
for
then
would
not
Dua
be
certain
with
an
implanted
certainty,
too,
that
this
was
wrong?-Or
was
she
an
imperfect
Emotional
without
the
proper
implantations
and
without-
Oh,
what
was
he
thinking.
He
was
as
crazy
as
she
was.)
Dua
said,
"You
look
upset,
Odeen.
Are
you
sure
I'm
all
wrong?
Of
course,
now
they
have
the
Positron
Pump
and
they
now
have
all
the
energy
they
need,
or
will
have.
Soon
they
will
be
giving
birth
again.
Maybe
they
are
doing
so
already.
And
they
won't
need
any
Soft-One
machines
at
all,
and
we
will
all
be
destroyed;
I
beg
pardon,
we
will
all
pass
on."
"No,
Dua,"
said
Odeen,
strenuously,
as
much
to
himself
as
to
her.
"I
don't
know
how
you
got
those
notions,
but
the
Hard
Ones
aren't
like
that.
We
are
not
destroyed."
"Don't
lie
to
yourself,
Odeen.
They
are
like
that.
They
are
prepared
to
destroy
a
whole
world
of
other-beings
for
their
benefit;
a
whole
Universe
if
they
have
to.
Would
they
stop
at
destroying
a
few
Soft
Ones
for
their
comfort?-•
But
they
made
one
mistake.
Somehow
the
machinery
went
wrong
and
a
Rational
mind
got
into
an
Emotional
body.
I'm
a
Left-Em,
do
you
know
that?
They
called
me
that
when
I
was
a
child,
and
they
were
right.
I
can
reason
like
a
Rational
and
I
can
feel
like
an
Emotional.
And
I
will
fight
the
Hard
Ones
with
that
combination."
Odeen
felt
wild.
Dua
must
surely
be
mad,
yet
he
dared
not
say
so.
He
had
to
cajole
her
somehow
and
bring
her
back.
He
said
with
strenuous
sincerity,
"Dua,
we're
not
destroyed
when
we
pass
on."
"No?
What
does
happen
then?"
"I-I
don't
know.
I
think
we
enter
another
world,
a
better
and
happier
world,
and
become
like-like-well,
much
better
than
we
are."
Dua
laughed.
"Where
did
you
hear
that?
Did
the
Hard
Ones
tell
you
that?"
"No,
Dua.
I'm
sure
that
this
must
be
so
out
of
my
own
thoughts.
I've
been
thinking
a
great
deal
about
it
since
you
left"
Dua
said,
"Then
think
less
and
you'll
be
less
foolish.
Poor
Odeen!
Good-by."
She
flowed
away
once
more,
thinly.
There
was
an
air
of
weariness
about
her.
Odeen
called
out,
"But
wait,
Dua.
Surely
you
want
to
see
your
new
baby-mid."
She
did
not
answer.
He
cried
out.
"When
will
you
come
home?"
She
did
not
answer.
And
he
followed
no
more,
but
looked
after
her
in
deepest
misery
as
she
dwindled.
He
did
not
tell
Tritt
he
had
seen
Dua.
What
was
the
use?
Nor
did
he
see
her
again.
He
began
haunting
the
favored
sunning-sites
of
the
Emotionals
in
the
region;
doing
so
even
though
occasional
Parentals
emerged
to
watch
him
in
stupid
suspicion
(Tritt
was
a
mental
giant
compared
to
most
Parentals).
The
lack
of
her
hurt
more
with
each
passing
day.
And
with
each
passing
day,
he
realized
that
there
was
a
gathering
fright
inside
himself
over
her
absence.
He
didn't
know
why.
He
came
back
to
home-cavern
one
day
to
find
Losten
waiting
for
him.
Losten
was
standing
there,
grave
and
polite
while
Tritt
was
showing
him
the
new
baby
and
striving
to
keep
the
handful
of
mist
from
touching
the
Hard
One.
Losten
said,
"It
is
indeed
a
beauty,
Tritt.
Derala
is
its
name?"
"Derola,"
corrected
Tritt.
"I
don't
know
when
Odeen
will
be
back.
He
wanders
about
a
lot-"
"Here
I
am,
Losten,"
said
Odeen,
hastily.
"Tritt,
take
the
baby
away;
there's
a
good
fellow."
Tritt
did
so,
and
Losten
turned
to
Odeen
with
quite
obvious
relief,
saying,
"You
must
be
very
happy
to
have
completed
the
triad."
Odeen
tried
to
answer
with
some
polite
inconsequence,
but
could
maintain
only
a
miserable
silence.
He
had
recently
been
developing
a
kind
of
comradeship,
a
vague
sense
of
equality
with
the
Hard
Ones,
that
enabled
them
to
talk
together
on
a
level.
Somehow
Dua's
madness
had
spoiled
it.
Odeen
knew
she
was
wrong
and
yet
he
approached
Losten
once
more
as
stiffly
as
in
the
long-gone
days
when
he
thought
of
himself
as
a
far
inferior
creature
to
them,
as
a-machine?
Losten
said,
"Have
you
seen
Dua?"
This
was
a
real
question,
and
not
politeness.
Odeen
could
tell
easily.
"Only
once,
H-"
(He
almost
said
"Hard-sir"
as
though
he
were
a
child
again,
or
a
Parental.)
"Only
once,
Losten.
She
won't
come
home."
"She
must
come
home,"
said
Losten,
softly.
"I
don't
know
how
to
arrange
that."
Losten
regarded
him
somberly.
"Do
you
know
what
she
is
doing?"
Odeen
dared
not
look
at
the
other.
Had
he
discovered
Dua's
wild
theories?
What
would
be
done
about
that?
He
made
a
negative
sign
without
speaking.
Losten
said,
"She
is
a
most
unusual
Emotional,
Odeen.
You
know
that,
don't
you?"
"Yes,"
sighed
Odeen.
"So
are
you
in
your
way,
and
Tritt
in
his.
I
doubt
that
any
Parental
in
the
world
would
have
had
either
the
courage
or
the
initiative
to
steal
an
energy-battery
or
the
perverse
ingenuity
to
put
it
to
use
as
he
did.
The
three
of
you
make
up
the
most
unusual
triad
of
which
we
have
any
record."
"Thank
you."
"But
there
are
uncomfortable
aspects
to
the
triad,
too;
things
we
didn't
count
on.
We
wanted
you
to
teach
Dua
as
the
mildest
and
best
possible
way
in
which
to
cajole
her
into
performing
her
function
voluntarily.
We
did
not
count
on
Tritt's
quixotic
action
at
just
that
moment.
Nor,
to
tell
you
the
truth,
did
we
count
on
her
wild
reaction
to
the
fact
that
the
world
in
the
other
Universe
must
be
destroyed."
"I
ought
to
have
been
careful
how
I
answered
her
questions,"
said
Odeen
miserably.
"It
wouldn't
have
helped.
She
was
finding
out
for
herself.
We
didn't
count
on
that
either.
Odeen,
I
am
sorry,
but
I
must
tell
you
this-Dua
has
become
a
deadly
danger;
she
is
trying
to
stop
the
Positron
Pump."
."But
how
can
she?
She
can't
reach
it,
and
even
if
she
could,
she
lacks
the
knowledge
to
do
anything
about
it."
"Oh,
but
she
can
reach
it."
Losten
hesitated,
then
said,
"She
remains
infused
in
the
rock
of
the
world
where
she
is
safe
from
us."
It
took
awhile
for
Odeen
to
grasp
the
clear
meaning
of
the
words.
He
said,
"No
grown
Emotional
would-
Dua
would
never-n
"She
would.
She
does.
Don't
waste
time
arguing
the
point.
.
.
.
She
can
penetrate
anywhere
in
the
caverns.
Nothing
is
hidden
from
her.
She
has
studied
those
communications
we
have
received
from
the
other
Universe.
We
don't
know
that
of
certain
knowledge,
but
there
is
no
other
way
of
explaining
what
is
happening."
"Oh,
oh,
oh."
Odeen
rocked
back
and
forth,
his
surface
opaque
with
shame
and
grief.
"Does
Estwald
know
of
all
this?"
Losten
said,
grimly,
"Not
yet;
though
he
must
know
someday."
"But
what
will
she
do
with
those
communications?"
"She
is
using
them
to
work
out
a
method
for
sending
some
of
her
own
in
the
other
direction."
"But
she
cannot
know
how
to
translate
or
transmit."
"She
is
learning
both.
She
knows
more
about
those
communications
than
Estwald
himself.
She
is
a
frightening
phenomenon,
an
Emotional
who
can
reason
and
who
is
out
of
control."
Odeen
shivered.
Out
of
control?
How
machine-like
a
reference!
He
said,
"It
can't
be
that
bad."
"It
can.
She
has
communicated
already
and
I
fear
she
is
advising
the
other
creatures
to
stop
their
half
of
the
Positron
Pump.
If
they
do
that
before
their
Sun
explodes,
we
will
be
helpless
at
this
end."
"But
then-"
"She
must
be
stopped,
Odeen."
"B-But,
how?
Are
you
going
to
blast-"
His
voice
failed.
Dimly,
he
knew
that
the
Hard
One
had
devices
for
digging
caverns
out
of
the
world's
rock;
devices
scarcely
used
since
the
world's
population
had
begun
declining
ages
ago.
Would
they
locate
Dua
in
the
rock
and
blast
it
and
her?
"No,"
said
Losten,
forcefully.
"We
cannot
harm
Dua."
"Estwald
might-"
"Estwald
cannot
harm
her,
either."
"Then
what's
to
be
done?"
"It's
you,
Odeen.
Only
you.
We're
helpless,
so
we
must
depend
on
you."
"On
me?
But
what
can
I
do?"
"Think
about
it,"
said
Losten,
urgently.
"Think
about
it."
"Think
about
what?"
"I
can't
say
more
than
that,"
said
Losten,
in
apparent
agony.
"Think!
There
is
so
little
time."
He
turned
and
left,
moving
rapidly
for
a
Hard
One,
moving
as
though
he
did
not
trust
himself
to
stay
and
perhaps
say
too
much.
And
Odeen
could
'only
look
after
him,
dismayed,
confused-lost.
5c
There
was
a
great
deal
for
Tritt
to
do.
Babies
required
much
care,
but
even
two
young-lefts
and
two
young-rights
together
did
not
make
up
the
sum
of
a
single
baby-mid-
particularly
not
a
mid
as
perfect
as
Derola.
She
had
to
be
exercised
and
soothed,
protected
from
percolating
into
whatever
she
touched,
cajoled
into
condensing
and
resting.
It
was
a
long
time
before
he
saw
Odeen
again
and,
actually,
he
didn't
care.
Derola
took
up
all
his
time.
But
then
he
came
across
Odeen
in
the
corner
of
his
own
alcove,
iridescent
with
thought.
Tritt
remembered,
suddenly.
He
said,
"Was
Losten
angry
about
Dua?"
Odeen
came
to
himself
with
a
start.
"Losten?-Yes,
he
was
angry.
Dua
is
doing
great
harm."
"She
should
come
home,
shouldn't
she?"
Odeen
was
staring
at
Tritt.
"Tritt,"
he
said,
"we're
going
to
have
,to
persuade
Dua
to
come
home.
We
must
find
her
first.
You
can
do
it.
With
a
new
baby,
your
Parental
sensitivity
is
very
high.
You
can
use
it
to
find
Dua."
"No,"
said
Tritt,
shocked.
"It's
used
for
Derola.
It
would
be
wrong
to
use
it
for
Dua.
Besides,
if
she
wants
to
stay
away
so
long
when
a
baby-mid
is
longing
for
her-
and
she
was
once
a
baby-mid
herself-maybe
we
might
just
learn
to
do
without
her."
"But,
Tritt,
don't
you
ever
want
to
melt
again?"
"Well,
the
triad
is
now
complete."
"That's
not
all
there
is
to
melting."
Tritt
said,
"But
where
do
we
have
to
go
to
find
her?
Little
Derola
needs
me.
She's
a
tiny
baby.
I
don't
want
to
leave
her."
"The
Hard
Ones
will
arrange
to
have
Derola
taken
care
of.
You
and
I
will
go
to
the
Hard-caverns
and
find
Dua."
Tritt
thought
about
that.
He
didn't
care
about
Dua.
He
didn't
even
care
about
Odeen,
somehow.
There
was
only
Derola.
He
said,
"Someday.
Someday,
when
Derola
is
older.
Not
till
then."
"Tritt,"
said
Odeen,
urgently,
"we
must
find
Dua.
Otherwise-otherwise
the
babies
will
be
taken
away
from
us."
"By
whom?"
said
Tritt.
"By
the
Hard
Ones."
Tritt
was
silent.
There
was
nothing
he
could
say.
He
had
never
heard
of
such
a
thing.
He
could
not
conceive
of
such
a
thing.
Odeen
said,
"Tritt,
we
must
pass
on.
I
know
why,
now.
I've
been
thinking
about
it
ever
since
Losten-
But
never
mind
that.
Dua
and
you
must
pass
on,
too.
Now
that
I
know
why,
you
will
feel
you
must
and
I
hope-I
think-
Dua
will
feel
she
must,
too.
And
we
must
pass
on
soon,
for
Dua
is
destroying
the
world."
Tritt
was
backing
away.
"Don't
look
at
me
like
that,
Odeen....
You're
making
me....
You're
making
me."
"I'm
not
making
you,
Tritt,"
said
Odeen,
sadly.
"It's
just
that
I
know
now
and
so
you
must.
.
.
.
But
we
must
find
Dua."
"No,
no."
Tritt
was
in
agony,
trying
to
resist.
There
was
something
terribly
new
about
Odeen,
and
existence
was
approaching
an
end
inexorably.
There
would
be
no
Tritt
and
no
baby-mid.
Where
every
other
Parental
had
his
baby-mid
for
a
long
time,
Tritt
would
have
lost
his
almost
at
once.
It
wasn't
fair.
Oh,
it
wasn't
fair.
Tritt
panted.
"It's
Dua's
fault.
Let
her
pass
on
first."
Odeen
said,
with
deadening
calm,
"There's
no
other
way
but
for
all
of
us-"
And
Tritt
knew
that
was
so-that
was
so-that
was
so-
6a
Dua
felt
thin
and
cold,
wispy.
Her
attempts
to
rest
in
the
open
and
absorb
Sunlight
had
ended
after
Odeen
had
found
her
that
time.
Her
feeding
at
the
Hard
Ones'
batteries
was
erratic.
She
dared
not
remain
too
long
outside
the
safety
of
rock,
so
she
ate
in
quick
gulps,
and
she
never
got
enough.
She
was
conscious
of
hunger,
continuously,
all
the
more
so
since
it
seemed
to
tire
her
to
remain
in
the
rock.
It
was
as
though
she
were
being
punished
for
all
that
long
time
in
which
she
haunted
the
Sunset
and
ate
so
skimpily.
If
it
were
not
for
the
work
she
was
doing,
she
could
not
bear
the
weariness
and
hunger.
Sometimes
she
hoped
that
the
Hard
Ones
would
destroy
her-but
only
after
she
was
finished.
The
Hard
Ones
were
helpless
as
long
as
she
was
in
the
rock.
Sometimes
she
sensed
them
outside
the
rock
in
the
open.
They
were
afraid.
Sometimes
she
thought
the
fear
was
for
her,
but
that
couldn't
be.
How
could
they
be
afraid
for
her;
afraid
that
she
would
pass
on
out
of
sheer
lack
of
food,
out
of
sheer
exhaustion.
It
must
be
that
they,
were
afraid
of
her;
afraid
of
a
machine
that
did
not
work
as
they
had
designed
it
to
work;
appalled
at
so
great
a
prodigy;
struck
helpless
with
the
terror
of
it
Carefully,
she
avoided
them.
She
always
knew
where
they
were,
so
they
could
not
catch
her
nor
stop
her.
They
could
not
watch
all
places
always.
She
thought
she
could
even
blank
what
little
perception
they
had.
She
swirled
out
of
the
rock
and
studied
the
recorded
duplicates
of
the
communications
they
had
received
from
the
other
Universe.
They
did
not
know
that
was
what
she
was
after.
If
they
hid
them,
she
would
find
them
in
whatever
new
place.
If
they
destroyed
them,
it
didn't
matter.
Dua
could
remember
them.
She
did
not
understand
them,
at
first,
but
with
her
stay
in
the
rocks,
her
senses
grew
steadily
sharper,
and
she
seemed
to
understand
without
understanding.
Without
knowing
what
the
symbols
meant,
they
inspired
feelings
within
her.
She
picked
out
markings
and
placed
them
where
they
would
be
sent
to
the
other
Universe.
The
markings
were
F-E-E-R.
What
that
could
possibly
mean
she
had
no
idea,
but
its
shape
inspired
her
with
a
feeling
of
fear
and
she
did
her
best
to
impress
that
feeling
of
fear
upon
the
markings.
Perhaps
the
other
creatures,
studying
the
markings,
would
also
feel
fear.
When
the
answers
came,
Dua
could
sense
excitement
in
them.
She
did
not
always
get
the
answers
that
were
sent
Sometimes
the
Hard
Ones
found
them
first.
Surely,
they
must
know
what
she
was
doing.
Still,
they
couldn't
read
the
messages,
couldn't
even
sense
the
emotions
that
went
along
with
them.
So
she
didn't
care.
She
would
not
be
stopped,
till
she
was
done-whatever
the
Hard
Ones
found
out.
She
waited
for
a
message
that
would
carry
the
feeling
she
wanted.
It
came:
P-U-M-P
B-A-D.
It
carried
the
fear
and
hatred
she
wanted.
She
sent
it
back
in
extended
form-more
fear-more
hatred-
Now
the
other
people
would
understand.
Now
they
would
stop
the
Pump.
The
Hard
Ones
would
have
to
find
some
other
way,
some
other
source
of
energy;
they
must
not
obtain
it
through
the
death
of
all
those
thousands
of
other
Universe
creatures.
She
was
resting
too
much,
declining
into
a
kind
of
stupor,
within
the
rock.
Desperately
she
craved
food
and
waited
so
that
she
could
crawl
out.
Even
more
desperately
than
she
wanted
the
food
in
the
storage
battery,
she
wanted
the
storage
battery
to
be
dead.
She
wanted
to
suck
the
last
bit
of
food
out
of
it
and
know
that
no
more
would
come
and
that
her
task
was
done.
She
emerged
at
last
and
remained
recklessly
long,
sucking
in
the
contents
of
one
of
the
batteries.
She
wanted
to
withdraw
its
last,
empty
it,
see
that
no
more
was
entering
-but
it
was
an
endless
source-endless-endless.
She
stirred
and
drew
away
from
the
battery
in
disgust
The
Positron
Pumps
were
still
going
then.
Had
her
messages
not
persuaded
the
other
Universe
creatures
to
stop
the
Pumps?
Had
they
not
received
them?
Had
they
not
sensed
their
meaning?
She
had
to
try
again.
She
had
to
make
it
plain
beyond
plain.
She
would
include
every
combination
of
signals
that
to
her
seemed
to
carry
the
feeling
of
danger;
every
combination
that
would
get
across
the
plea
to
stop.
Desperately
she
began
to
fuse
the
symbols
into
metal;
drawing
without
reserve
on
the
energy
she
had
just
sucked
out
of
the
battery;
drawing
on
it
till
it
was
all
gone
and
she
was
more
weary
than
ever:
PUMP
NOT
STOP
NOT
STOP
WE
NOT
STOP
PUMP
WE
NOT
HEAR
DANGER
NOT
HEAR
NOT
HEAR
YOU
STOP
PLEASE
STOP
YOU
STOP
SO
WE
STOP
PLEASE
YOU
STOP
DANGER
DANGER
DANGER
DANGER
STOP
STOP
YOU
STOP
PUMP.
It
was
all
she
could.
There
was
nothing
left
in
her
but
a
racking
pain.
She
placed
the
message
where
it
could
be
transferred
and
she
did
not
wait
for
the
Hard
Ones
to
send
the
message
unwittingly.
Through
an
agonizing
haze,
she
manipulated
the
controls
as
she
had
seen
them
do,
finding
the
energy
for
it
somehow.
The
message
disappeared
and
so
did
the
cavern
in
a
purple
shimmer
of
vertigo.
She
was-passing
on-out
of
sheer-exhaustion.
Odeen-Tri-
6b
Odeen
came.
He
had
been
flowing
faster
than
ever
he
had
flowed
before.
He
had
been
following
Tritt's
sharp
new-baby
sense
perception,
but
now
he
was
close
enough
for
his
own
blunter
senses
to
detect
her
nearness.
He
could
on
his
own
account
feel
the
flickering
and
fading
consciousness
of
Dua,
and
he
raced
forward
while
Tritt
did
his
best
to
clump
along,
gasping
and
calling,
"Faster-faster-"
Odeen
found
her
in
a
state
of
collapse,
scarcely
alive,
smaller
than
he
had
ever
seen
an
adult
Emotional.
"Tritt,"
he
said,
"bring
the
battery
here.
No-no-
don't
try
to
carry
her.
She's
too
thin
to
carry.
Hurry.
If
she
sinks
into
the
floor-"
The
Hard
Ones
began
to
gather.
They
were
late,
of
course,
with
their
inability
to
sense
other
life-forms
at
a
distance.
If
it
had
depended
only
on
them,
it
would
have
been
too
late
to
save
her.
She
would
not
have
passed
on;
she
would
truly
have
been
destroyed-and-and
more
than
she
knew
would
have
been
destroyed
with
her.
Now,
as
she
was
slowly
gathering
life
out
of
the
energy
supply,
the
Hard
Ones
stood
silently
near
them.
Odeen
rose;
a
new
Odeen
who
knew
what
was
happening
exactly.
Imperiously,
he
ordered
them
away
with
an
angry
gesture-and
they
left.
Silently.
Without
objection.
Dua
stirred.
Tritt
said,
"Is
she
all
right,
Odeen?"
"Quiet,
Tritt,"
said
Odeen.
"Dua?"
"Odeen?"
She
stirred,
spoke
in
a
whisper.
"I
thought
I
had
passed
on."
"Not
yet,
Dua.
Not
yet.
But
first
you
must
eat
and
rest."
"Is
Tritt
here,
too?"
"Here
I
am,
Dua,"
said
Tritt.
"Don't
try
to
bring
me
back,"
said
Dua.
"It's
over,
I've
done
what
I
wanted
to
do.
The
Positron
Pump
will-will
stop
soon,
I'm
sure.
The
Hard
Ones
will
continue
to
need
Soft
Ones
and
they
will
take
care
of
you
two,
or
at
least
the
children."
Odeen
didn't
say
anything.
He
kept
Tritt
from
saying
anything,
either.
He
let
the
radiation
pour
slowly
into
Dua,
very
slowly.
He
stopped
at
times
to
let
her
rest
a
bit,
then
he
started
again.
She
began
to
mutter,
"Enough.
Enough."
Her
substance
was
writhing
more
strongly.
Still
he
fed
her.
Finally,
he
spoke.
He
said,
"Dua,
you
were
wrong.
We
are
not
machines.
I
know
exactly
what
we
are,.
I
would
have
come
to
you
sooner,
if
I
had
found
out
earlier,
but
I
didn't
know
till
Losten
begged
me
to
think.
And
I
did;
very
hard;
and
even
so
it
is
almost
premature."
Dua
moaned
and
Odeen
stopped
for
a
while.
He
said,
"Listen,
Dua.
There
is
a
single
species
of
life.
The
Hard
Ones
are
the
only
living
things
in
the
world.
You
gathered
that,
and
so
far
you
were
right.
But
that
doesn't
mean
the
Soft
Ones
aren't
alive;
it
merely
means
we
are
part
of
the
same
single
species.
The
Soft
Ones
are
the
immature
forms
of
the
Hard
Ones.
We
are
first
children
as
Soft
Ones,
then
adults
as
Soft
Ones,
then
Hard
Ones.
Do
you
understand?"
Tritt
said,
in
soft
confusion,
"What?
What?"
Odeen
said,
"Not
now,
Tritt.
Not
now.
You'll
understand,
too,
but
this
is
for
Dua."
He
kept
watching
Dua,
who
was
gaining
opalescence.
He
said,
"Listen,
Dua,
whenever
we
melt,
whenever
the
triad
melts,
we
become
a
Hard
One.
The
Hard
One
is
three-in-one,
which
is
why
he
is
hard.
During
the
time
of
unconsciousness
in
melting
we
are
a
Hard
One.
But
it
is
only
temporary,
and
we
can
never
remember
the
period
afterward.
We
can
never
stay
a
Hard
One
long;
we
must
come
back.
But
all
through
our
life
we
keep
developing,
with
certain
key
stages
marking
it
off.
Each
baby
born
marks
a
key
stage.
With
the
birth
of
the
third,
the
Emotional,
there
comes
the
possibility
of
the
final
stage,
where
the
Rational's
mind
by
itself,
without
the
other
two,
can
remember
those
flashes
of
Hard
One
existence.
Then,
and
only
then,
he
can
guide
a
perfect
melt
that
will
form
the
Hard
One
forever,
so
that
the
triad
can
live
a
new
and
unified
life
of
learning
and
intellect.
I
told
you
that
passing
on
was
like
being
born
again.
I
was
groping
then
for
something
I
did
not
quite
understand,
but
now
I
know."
Dua
was
looking
at
him,
trying
to
smile.
She
said,
"How
can
you
pretend
to
believe
that,
Odeen?
If
that
were
so,
wouldn't
the
Hard
Ones
have
told
you
long
ago;
told
all
of
us?"
"They
couldn't,
Dua.
There
was
a
time,
long
ages
ago,
when
melting
was
just
a
putting
together
of
the
atoms
of
bodies.
But
evolution
slowly
developed
minds.
Listen
to
me,
Dua;
melting
is
a
putting
together
of
the
minds,
too,
and
that's
much
harder,
much
more
delicate.
To
put
it
together
properly
and
permanently,
just
so,
the
Rational
must
reach
a
certain
pitch
in
development.
That
pitch
is
reached
when
he
finds
out,
for
himself,
what
it's
all
about:
when
his
mind
is
finally
keen
enough
to
remember
what
has
happened
in
all
those
temporary
unions
during
melting.
If
the
Rational
were
told,
that
development
would
be
aborted
and
the
time
of
the
perfect
melt
could
not
be
determined.
The
Hard
One
would
form
imperfectly.
When
Losten
pleaded
with
me
to
think,
he
was
taking
a
great
chance.
Even
that
may
have
been-
I
hope
not-
"For
it's
especially
true
in
our
case,
Dua.
For
many
generations,
the
Hard
Ones
have
been
combining
triads
with
great
care
to
form
particularly
advanced
Hard
Ones
and
our
triad
was
the
best
they'd
ever
obtained.
Especially
you,
Dua.
Especially
you.
Losten
was
once
the
triad
whose
baby-mid
you
were.
Part
of
him
was
your
Parental.
He
knew
you.
He
brought
you
to
Tritt
and
me."
Dua
sat
up.
Her
voice
was
almost
normal.
"Odeen!
Are
you
making
all
this
up
to
soothe
me?"
Tritt
broke
in.
"No,
Dua.
I
feel
it,
too.
I
feel
it,
too.
I
don't
know
what
exactly,
but
I
feel
it."
"He
does,
Dua,"
said
Odeen.
"You
will,
too.
Aren't
you
beginning
to
recall
being
a
Hard
One
during
our
melt?
Don't
you
want
to
melt
now?
One
last
time?
One
last
time?"
He
lifted
her.
There
was
a
feverishness
about
her,
and
though
she
struggled
a
bit,
she
was
thinning.
"If
what
you
say
is
true,
Odeen,"
she
gasped.
"If
we
are
to
be
a
Hard
One;
then
it
seems
to
me
you
are
saying
we'll
be
an
important
one.
Is
that
so?"
"The
most
important.
The
best
who
was
ever
formed.
I
mean
that
.
.
.
Tritt,
over
there.
It's
not
good-by,
Tritt.
We'll
be
together,
as
we
always
wanted
to
be.
Dua,
too.
You,
too,
Dua."
Dua
said,
"Then
we
can
make
Estwald
understand
the
Pump
can't
continue.
We'll
force-"
The
melting
was
beginning.
One
by
one,
the
Hard
Ones
were
entering
again
at
the
crucial
moment.
Odeen
saw
them
imperfectly,
for
he
was
beginning
to
melt
into
Dua.
It
was
not
like
the
other
times;
no
sharp
ecstasy;
just
a
smooth,
cool,
utterly
peaceful
movement.
He
could
feel
himself
become
partly
Dua,
and
all
the
world
seemed
pouring
into
his/her
sharpening
senses.
The
Positron
Pumps
were
still
going-he/she
could
tell-why
were
they
still
going?
He
was
Tritt,
too,
and
a
keen
sharp
sense
of
bitter
loss
filled
his/her/his
mind.
Oh,
my
babies-
And
he
cried
out,
one
last
cry
under
the
consciousness
of
Odeen,
except
that
somehow
it
was
the
cry
of
Dua.
"No,
we
can't
stop
Estwald.
We
are
Estwald.
We-"
The
cry
that
was
Dua's
and
yet
not
Dua's
stopped
and
there
was
no
longer
any
Dua;
nor
would
there
ever
be
Dua
again.
Nor
Odeen.
Nor
Tritt.
7abc
Estwald
stepped
forth
and
said
sadly
to
the
waiting
Hard
Ones,
by
way
of
vibrating
air
waves,
"I
am
permanently
with
you
now,
and
there
is
much
to
do-"
3
.
.
.
contend
in
vain?
1
Selene
Lindstrom
smiled
brightly
and
walked
with
the
light
springy
touch
that
was
startling
when
first
seen
by
the
tourists,
but
was
soon
recognized
as
having
a
grace
of
its
own.
"It's
time
for
lunch,"
she
said,
cheerfully.
"All
home-grown,
ladies
and
gentlemen.
You
may
not
be
used
to
the
taste,
but
it's
all
nourishing..
.
.
Right
here,
sir.
You
won't
mind
sitting
with
the
ladies,
I
know.
.
.
.
One
moment.
There
will
be
seats
for
all....
Sorry,
there
will
be
a
choice
on
the
beverage,
but
not
on
the
main
course.
That
will
be
veal.
..,
No,
no.
Artificial
flavor
and
texture,
but
it's
really
quite
good."
Then
she
sat
down
herself,
with
a
slight
sigh
and
an
even
slighter
wavering
of
her
pleasant
expression.
One
of
the
group
sat
down
across
from
her,
"Do
you
mind?"
he
asked.
She
looked
at
him,
quickly,
penetrating.
She
had
the
faculty
of
making
quick
judgments,
of
course,
and
he
did
not
seem
troublesome.
She
said,
"Not
at
all.
But
aren't
you
with
someone
in
this
group?"
He
shook
his
head.
"No.
I'm
alone.
Even
if
that
were
not
the
case,
Earthies
are
no
great
thrill
to
me."
She
looked
at
him
again.
He
was
fiftyish
and
there
was'
a
weary
look
about
him
which
only
his
bright,
inquisitive
eyes
seemed
to
belie.
He
had
the
unmistakable
look
of
the
Earthman,
laden
down
with
gravity.
She
said,
"
'Earthie'
is
a
Moon-expression,
and
not
a
very
nice
one."
"I'm
from
Earth,"
he
said,
"so
I
can
use
it
without
offense,
I
hope.
Unless
you
object."
Selene
shrugged
as
though
to
say:
Please
yourself.
She
had
the
faintly
oriental
look
about
the
eyes
so
many
of
the
Moon-girls
had,
but
her
hair
was
the
color
of
honey
and
her
nose
was
prominent.
She
was
undeniably
attractive
without
being
in
any
way
classically
beautiful.
The
Earthman
was
staring
at
the
nameplate
she
wore
on
the
blouse
covering
the
upper
slope
of
her
high,
not-too-large
left
breast.
She
decided
it
was
really
the
name-plate
he
was
looking
at,
not
the
breast,
though
the
blouse
was
semi-transparent
when
it
caught
the
light
at
a
particular
angle
and
there
was
no
garment
beneath
it.
He
said,
"Are
there
many
Selenes
here?"
"Oh,
yes.
Hundreds,
I
think.
Also
Cynthias,
Dianas,
and
Artemises.
Selene
is
a
little
tiresome.
Half
the
Selenes
I
know
are
called
'Silly'
and
the
other
half
'Lena.'
"
"Which
are
you?"
"Neither.
I
am
Selene,
all
three
syllables.
SELL-uh-nee,"
she
said,
coming
down
heavily
on
the
first
syllable,
"to
those
who
use
my
first
name
at
all."
There
was
a
small
smile
on
the
Earthman's
face
that
sat
there
as
though
he
weren't
quite
used
to
it.
He
said,
"And
what
if
anyone
asks
you
if
you
sell
any,
Selene?"
"They
never
ask
me
that
again!"
she
said,
firmly.
"But
do
they
ask
you?"
"There
are
fools
always."
A
waitress
had
reached
their
table
and
had
placed
the
dishes
before
them
with
quick,
smooth
motions.
The
Earthman
was
visibly
impressed.
He
said
to
the
waitress,
"You
make
them
seem
to
float
down."
The
waitress
smiled
and
moved
on.
Selene
said,
"Don't
you
try
to
do
the
same.
She's
used
to
the
gravity
and
can
handle
it."
"And
if
I
try,
I'll
drop
everything?
Is
that
it?"
"You'll
make
a
gorgeous
mess,"
she
said,
"Well,
I
won't
try."
"There's
a
good
chance
someone
will
before
long,
and
the
plate
will
flow
down
to
the
floor
and
they'll
grab
for
it
and
miss,
and
ten
to
one
knock
themselves
out
of
their
chair.
I'd
warn
them,
but
it
never
helps
and
they're
just
all
the
more
embarrassed.
Everyone
else
will
laugh-the
tourists,
that
is,
because
the
rest
of
us
have
seen
it
too
often
to
find
it
funny
and
because
it's
just
a
cleanup
job."
The
Earthman
was
lifting
his
fork
carefully.
"I
see
what
you
mean.
Even
the
simplest
motions
seem
queer."
"Actually,
you
get
used
to
it
quickly
enough.
At
least
to
little
things
like
eating.
Walking
is
harder.
I
never
saw
an
Earthman
run
efficiently
out
here.
Not
really
efficiently."
For
a
while
they
ate
in
silence.
Then
he
said,
"What
does
the
L.
stand
for?"
He
was
looking
at
her
nameplate
again.
It
said,
"Selene
Lindstrom
L."
"It
just
means
Luna,"
she
said,
rather
indifferently,
"to
distinguish
me
from
the
immigrants.
I
was
born
here."
"Really?"
'That's
nothing
to
be
surprised
about.
We've
had
a
working
society
here
for
over
half
a
century.
Don't
you
think
babies
are
born
here?
We
have
people
here
who
were
born
here
and
are
grandparents."
"How
old
are
you?"
"Thirty-two,"
she
said.
He
looked
startled,
then
mumbled,
"Of
course."
Selene
raised
her
eyebrows.
"You
mean
you
understand?
Most
Earthmen
have
to
have
it
explained."
The
Earthman
said,
"I
know
enough
to
know
that
most
of
the
visible
signs
of
aging
are
the
result
of
the
inexorable
victory
of
gravity
over
tissue-the
sagging
of
cheek
and
the
drooping
of
breast.
With
the
Moon's
gravity
one-sixth
that
of
Earth,
it
isn't
really
hard
to
understand
that
people
will
stay
young-looking."
Selene
said,
"Only
young-looking.
It
doesn't
mean
we
have
immortality
here.
The
life-span
is
about
that
of
Earth,
but
most
of
us
are
more
comfortable
in
old
age."
"That's
not
to
be
dismissed.
...
Of
course,
there
are
penalties,
I
suppose."
He
had
just
taken
his
first
sip
of
his
coffee.
"You
have
to
drink
this-"
He
paused
for
a
word
and
must
have
discarded
it,
for
he
used
none.
"We
could
import
food
and
beverages
from
Earth,"
she
said,
amused,
"but
only
enough
to
feed
a
fraction
of
us
a
fraction
of
the
time.
There'd
be
no
point
to
that
when
we
can
use
the
space
for
more
vital
items.
Besides,
we're
used
to
this
crud.
...
Or
were
you
going
to
use
a
still
stronger
word?"
"Not
for
the
coffee,"
he
said.
"I
was
going
to
save
that
for
the
food.
But
crud
will
do.
.
.
.
Tell
me,'
Miss
Lindstrom.
I
didn't
see
any
mention
on
the
tour
itinerary
of
the
proton
synchrotron."
"The
proton
synchrotron?"
She
was
finishing
her
coffee
and
her
eyes
were
beginning
to
slide
round
the
room,
as
though
estimating
the
moment
for
getting
them
all
to
their
feet
again.
"That's
Terrestrial
property
and
it's
not
open
to
tourists."
"You
mean
that
it's
off-limits
to
Lunarites."
"Oh,
no.
Nothing
of
the
sort.
Most
of
its
staff
are
Lunarites.
It's
just
that
it's
the
Terrestrial
government
that
sets
the
rules.
No
tourists."
"I'd
love
to
see
it,"
he
said.
She
said,
"I'm
sure
you
would.
.
.
.
You've
brought
me
luck;
not
one
item
of
food,
not
one
blessed
man
or
woman
has
hit
the
floor."
She
got
to
her
feet
and
said,
"Ladies
and
gentlemen,
we'll
be
leaving
in
about
ten
minutes.
Please
leave
the
plates
where
they
are.
There
are
rest
rooms
for
those
who
wish
to
use
them
and
then
we
will
visit
the
food-processing
plants
where
meals
such
as
you
have
just
eaten
are
made
possible."
2
Selene's
quarters
were
small,
of
course,
and
compact;
but
they
were
intricate.
The
windows
were
panoramic;
star
scenes
that
changed
slowly
and
very
randomly,
never
having
any
relationship
to
any
real
constellation.
Each
of
the
three
windows
could
be
made
to
undergo
telescopic
magnification,
when
Selene
so
desired.
Barren
Neville
hated
that
part
of
it.
He
would
tend
to
turn
it
off
rather
savagely
and
say,
"How
can
you
stand
it?
You're
the
only
one
I
know
who
has
the
bad
taste
to
do
such
a
thing.
It's
not
as
though
these
nebulae
and
star
clusters
exist,
even."
And
Selene
would
shrug,
coolly,
and
say,
"What's
existence?
How
do
you
know
the
ones
out
there
exist?
Besides
it
gives
me
a
sensation
of
freedom
and
motion.
May
I
have
that
in
my
own
quarters
if
I
choose?"
Then
Neville
would
mumble
something
and
make
a
halfhearted
attempt
to
restore
the
controls
to
where
he
had
found
them
and
Selene
would
say,
"Let
it
go!"
The
furniture
was
in
smooth
curves,
and
the
walls
were
abstractly
decorated
in
low-key,
unobtrusive
colors.
Nowhere
was
there
any
representation
of
anything
that
might
be
considered
a
living
thing.
"Living
things
are
Earth,"
Selene
would
say,
"not
the
Moon."
Now,
when
she
entered,
she
found,
as
so
often,
Neville
there;
Barron
Neville,
resting
on
the
flimsy
couch
with
one
sandal
on.
The
other
lay
beside
him
where
it
had
dropped,
and
there
Was
a
line
of
red
marks
on
his
abdomen,
just
over
his
umbilicus,
where
he
had
been
meditatively
scratching.
She
said,
"Get
us
some
coffee,
won't
you,
Barron?"
and
slipped
out
of
her
own
clothes
in
a
long,
graceful
wiggle
accompanied
by
a
sigh
of
relief,
letting
them
drop
to
the
ground
and
then
kicking
them
into
the
corner
with
one
toe.
"What
a
relief
to
get
out
of
them,"
she
said.
"It's
the
worst
part
of
the
job,
having
to
dress
like
an
Earthie."
Neville
was
in
the
kitchen
corner.
He
paid
no
attention;
he
had
heard
it
before.
He
said,
"What's
wrong
with
your
water
supply?
It's
way
down."
"Is
it?"
she
asked.
"Well,
I've
been
overusing,
I
suppose.
Just
be
patient."
"Any
trouble,
today?"
Selene
shrugged.
"No.
Very
run
of
the
mill.
Just
the
usual
bit
about
watching
them
teetering
along
and
pretending
they
don't
hate
the
food,
and
knowing
they're
wondering
if
they'll
be
asked
to
take
off
their
clothes,
I
shouldn't
be
surprised....
Disgusting
possibility."
"Are
you
taking
up
prudery?"
He
brought
the
two
small
cups
of
coffee
to
the
table.
"In
this
case
prudery
is
required.
They're
wrinkled,
sagging,
paunchy,
and
full
of
germs.
I
don't
care
what
the
quarantine
regulations
are
like;
they're
full
of
germs.
.
.
.
What's
new
on
your
side?"
Barron
shook
his
head.
He
was
heavily-built
for
a
Lunarite,
and
there
was
an
almost-sullen
narrowing
of
his
eyes
that
had
become
a
built-in
feature.
Except
for
that
his
features
were
even,
and
remarkably
handsome,
Selene
thought.
He
said,
"Nothing
startling.
We're
still
waiting
out
the
change
in
Commissioner.
We'll
have
to
see
what
this
Gott-stein
is
like."
"Can
he
make
difficulties?"
"None
more
than
are
being
made.
After
all,
what
can
they
do?
They
can't
infiltrate.
You
can't
disguise
an
Earthie
as
a
Lunarite."
But
he
looked
uneasy
just
the
same.
Selene
sipped
at
her
coffee
and
looked
at
him
shrewdly.
"Some
Lunarites
might
be
Earthies
inside."
"Yes,
and
I'd
like
to
know
which.
Sometimes
I
don't
think
I
can
trust-
Oh,
well.
I'm
wasting
incredible
amounts
of
time
with
my
synchrotron
project
and
getting
nowhere.
I'm
having
no
luck
with
priorities."
"They
probably
don't
trust
you,
and
I
don't
blame
them.
If
only
you
didn't
slink
around
so
conspiratorially."
"I
do
no
such
thing.
It
would
give
me
great
pleasure
to
walk
out
of
the
synchrotron
room
and
never
return,
but
then
they
-would
become
suspicious.
...
If
you've
been
raising
hell
with
your
water
supply,
Selene,
I
suppose
we
can't
have
a
second
cup."
"No,
we
can't.
But
if
it
conies
to
that,
you've
been
helping
me
waste
water.
You've
had
two
showers
here
in
the
last
week."
"I'll
give
you
a
water
credit.
I
didn't
know
you
were
counting."
"I'm
not
counting-my
water
level
is."
She
finished
her
own
cup
of
coffee
and
stared
at
its
emptiness
thoughtfully.
She
said,
"They
always
make
faces
over
it.
The
tourists
do.
And
I
can
never
figure
out
why,
either.
It
tastes
fine
to
me.
Did
you
ever
taste
Earth-coffee,
Barron?"
"No,"
he
said,
briefly.
"I
did.
Once.
Some
tourist
had
smuggled
in
packets'
of
what
he
called
instant
coffee.
He
offered
me
some
in
exchange
for
you-know-what.
Seemed
to
think
it
was
an
even
trade."
"And
you
had
some?"
"I
was
curious.
It
was
bitter
and
metallic.
I
hated
it.
Then
I
told
him
that
miscegenation
was
against
Lunarite
custom
and
he
turned
rather
bitter
and
metallic
himself."
"You
never
told
me
this.
He
didn't
try
anything,
did
he?"
"It's
not
particularly
your
business,
is
it?
And,
no,
he
didn't
try
anything.
If
he
had
tried,
at
the
wrong
gravity
for
him,
I'd
have
bounced
him
from
here
to
corridor
1."
Then
she
went
on.
"Oh,
yes.
I
picked
up
another
Earthie
today.
Insisted
on
sitting
with
me."
"And
what
did
he
offer
you
in
exchange
for
the
screwing
you
so
delicately
call
you-know-what?"
"Just
sat
there."
"And
stared
at
your
breasts?"
"They're
there
to
be
stared
at,
but
actually
he
didn't
He
stared
at
my
nameplate.
.
.
.
Besides,
what's
it
to
you
what
he
fantasied?
Fantasies
are
free
and
I
don't
have
to
fulfill
them.
What
do
you
think
I'm
fantasying?
Bed
with
an
Earthman?
With
all
the
action
you
would
expect
of
someone
trying
to
handle
a
gravitational
field
he
isn't
used
to?
I
wouldn't
say
it
hasn't
been
done,
but
not
by
me,
and
not
that
I've
ever
heard
any
good
of
it.
Is
that
settled?
Can
I
get
back
to
the
Earthie?
Who's
nearly
fifty?
And
who
obviously
wasn't
terrifically
handsome
even
when
he
was
twenty?
..
.
Interesting
appearance,
though;
I'll
grant
him
that."
"All
right.
I
can
do
without
a
thumbnail
sketch.
What
about
him?"
"He
asked
about
the
proton
synchrotron!"
Neville
rose
to
his
feet,
swaying
a
little
as
was
almost
inevitable
after
quick
movement
at
low
gravity.
"What
did
he
ask
about
the
synchrotron?"
"Nothing.
Why
are
you
so
excited?
You
asked
me
to
tell
you
anything
that
was
out
of
the
way
with
any
tourist
at
any
time
and
this
seemed
out
of
the
way.
No
one
ever
asked
me
about
the
synchrotron
before."
"All
right"
He
paused
a
little,
then
in
a
normal
voice,
said,
"Why
was
he
interested
in
the
synchrotron?"
Selene
said,
"I
haven't
the
faintest
idea.
He
just
asked
if
he
could
see
it.
It
could
be
that
he's
a
tourist
with
an
interest
in
science.
For
all
I
know,
it
was
just
a
ploy
to
get
me
interested
in
him."
"And
I
suppose
you
are.
What's
his
name?"
"I
don't
know.
I
didn't
ask
him."
"Why
not?"
"Because
I'm
not
interested
in
him.
Which
way
do
you
want
it
to
be?
Besides,
his
asking
shows
he's
a
tourist.
If
he
were
a
physicist,
he
wouldn't
have
to
ask.
He's
be
there."
"My
dear
Selene,"
said
Neville.
"Let
me
spell
it
out.
Under
the
present
circumstances,
anyone
who
asks
to
see
the
proton
synchrotron
is
a
peculiar
fellow
we
want
to
know
about.
And
why
should
he
ask
you?"
He
walked
hastily
to
the
other
end
of
the
room
and
back
as
though
wearing
off
a
little
energy.
Then
he
said,
"You're
the
expert
at
that
nonsense.
Do
you
find
him
of
interest?"
"Sexually?"
"You
know
what
I
mean.
Don't
play
games,
Selene."
Selene
said
with
clear
reluctance.
"He's
interesting,
even
disturbing.
But
I
don't
know
why.
He
said
nothing.
He
did
nothing."
"Interesting
and
disturbing,
is
he?
Then
you
will
see
him
again."
"And
do
what?"
"How
do
I
know?
That's
your
bit.
Find
out
his
name.
Find
out
anything
else
you
can.
You've
got
some
brains,
so
use
them
on
a
little
practical
nosiness
for
a
change."
"Oh,
well,"
she
said,
"orders
from
on
high.
All
right."
3
There
was
no
way
of
telling
the
Commissioner's
quarters,
by
size
alone,
from
those
of
any
Lunarite.
There
was
no
space
on
the
Moon,
not
even
for
Terrestrial
officials;
no
luxurious
waste,
even
as
a
symbol
of
the
home
planet.
Nor,
for
that
matter,
was
there
any
way
of
changing
the
overwhelming
fact
about
the
Moon-that
it
was
underground
at
low
gravity-even
for
the
greatest
Earthman
who
ever
lived.
"Man
is
still
the
creature
of
his
environment,"
sighed
Luiz
Montez.
"I've
been
two
years
on
the
Moon
and
there
have
been
times
when
I
have
been
tempted
to
stay
on
but-
I'm
getting
on
in
years.
I've
just
passed
my
fortieth
and
if
I
intend
ever
to
go
back
to
Earth,
it
had
better
be
now.
Any
older
and
I
won't
be
able
to
readjust
to
full-gravity."
Konrad
Gottstein
was
only
thirty-four
and
looked,
if
anything,
younger.
He
had
a
wide,
round,
large-featured
face,
the
kind
of
face
one
didn't
see
among
the
Lunarites,
the
kind
of
face
that
was
something
they
would
draw
as
part
of
an
Earthie
caricature.
He
was
not
heavily-built-it
did
not
pay
to
send
heavily-built
Earthmen
to
the
Moon-
and
his
head
seemed
too
large
for
his
body.
He
said
(and
he
spoke
Planetary
Standard
with
a
perceptibly
different
accent
from
that
of
Montez),
"You
sound
apologetic,"
"I
am.
I
am,"
said
Montez.
Where
Gottstein's
face
was
intrinsically
good-natured
in
appearance,
the
long
thin
lines
of
Montez'
face
were
almost
comically
tragic.
"I
am
apologetic
in
both
senses.
I
am
embarrassed
to
be
leaving
the
Moon,
since
it
is
an
attractive
world
filled
with
excitement.
And
I
am
embarrassed
about
the
embarrassment;
ashamed
that
I
should
be
reluctant
to
take
up
Earth's
burden-gravity
and
all."
"Yes,
I
imagine
taking
back
the
other
five-sixths
will
be
hard,"
said
Gottstein.
"I've
been
on
the
Moon
only
a
few
days
and
already
I
feel
that
one-sixth
g
is
perfectly
fine."
"You
won't
feel
that
when
the
constipation
starts
and
you
start
living
on
mineral
oil,"
said
Montez
with
a
sigh,
"but
that
will
pass.
.
.
.
And
don't
think
you
can
imitate
the
light
gazelle
just
because
you
feel
light.
There's
an
art
to
it."
"So
I
understand."
"So
you
think
you
understand,
Gottstein.
You
haven't
seen
the
kangaroo
walk,
have
you?"
"On
television."
"That
doesn't
really
give
you
the
feel
of
it.
You
have
to
try
it.
It's
the
proper
mode
for
crossing
level
lunar
surface
at
high
speed.
The
feet
move
together
backward
and
launch
you
on
what
would
be
a
simple
broad
jump
on
Earth.
While
you're
in
mid-air,
they
come
forward;
begin
moving
back
just
before
they
hit
the
ground
again;
keep
you
launched;
and
so
on.
The
motion
seems
slow
by
Earth
standards
with
only
a
low
gravity
whipping
you
on,
but
each
leap
is
in
excess
of
twenty
feet
and
the
amount
of
muscular
effort
required
to
keep
you
in
the
air-if
there
were
air-is
minimal.
The
sensation
is
like
flying-"
"Have
you
tried
it?
Can
you
do
it?"
"I've
tried
it,
but
no
Earthman
can
really
do
it.
I've
kept
it
up
for
as
many
as
five
leaps
in
a
row,
enough
to
get
the
sensation;
just
enough
to
want
to
do
more,
but
then
there
is
the
inevitable
miscalculation,
a
loss
of
synchronization,
and
you
tumble
and
slide
for
a
quarter
of
a
mile.
The
Lunarites
are
polite
and
never
laugh
at
you.
Of
course,
it's
easy
for
them.
They
start
as
children
and
pick
it
up
at
once
without
trouble."
"It's
their
world,"
said
Gottstein,
chuckling.
"Think
how
they'd
be
on
Earth."
"They
wouldn't
be
on
Earth.
They
can't.
I
suppose
that's
an
advantage
on
our
side.
We
can
be
either
on
Moon
or
on
Earth,
They
can
live
only
on
the
Moon.
We
tend
to
forget
that
because
we
confuse
the
Lunarites
with
Immies."
"With
what?"
"That's
what
they
call
the
Earth-immigrants;
those
who
live
on
the
Moon
more
or
less
permanently
but
were
born
and
raised
on
the
Earth.
The
immigrants
can,
of
course,
return
to
the
Earth,
but
the
real
Lunarites
have
neither
the
bones
nor
the
muscles
to
withstand
the
Earth's
gravity.
There
were
some
tragedies
in
that
respect
in
the
Moon's
early
history."
"Oh?"
"Oh,
yes.
People
who
returned
with
their
Moon-born
children.
We
tend
to
forget.
We've
had
our
own
Crisis
and
a-few
dying
children
don't
seem
important
in
the
light
of
the
huge
casualties
of
the
late
Twentieth
and
all
that
followed.
Here
on
the
Moon,
though,
every
dead
Lunarite
who
succumbed
to
the
gravity
of
Earth
is
remembered....
It
helps
them
feel
a
world
apart,
I
think."
Gottstein
said,
"I
thought
I
had
been
thoroughly
briefed
on
Earth,
but
it
seems
I
will
still
have
a
lot
to
learn."
"Impossible
to
learn
everything
about
the
Moon
from
a
post
on
Earth,
so
I
have
left
you
a
full
report
as
my
predecessor
did
for
me.
You'll
find
the
Moon
fascinating
and,
in
some
ways,
excruciating.
I
doubt
that
you've
eaten
Lunar
rations
on
Earth
and
if
you're
going
by
description
only,
you
will
not
be
prepared
for
the
reality.
.
.
.
But
you'll
have
to
learn
to
like
it.
It's
bad
policy
to
ship
Earth-items
here.
We've
got
to
eat
and
drink
the
local
products."
"You've
been
doing
it
for
two
years.
I
guess
I'll
survive,"
"I've
not
been
doing
it
steadily.
There
are
periodic
furloughs
to
Earth.
Those
are
obligatory,
whether
you
want
them
or
not.
They've
told
you
that,
I'm
sure."
"Yes,"
said
Gottstein.
"Despite
any
exercises
you
do
here,
you
will
have
to
subject
yourself
to
full
gravity
now
and
then
just
to
remind
your
bones
and
muscles
what
it's
like.
And
when
you're
on
Earth,
you'll
eat.
And
occasionally,
some
food
is
smuggled
Gottstein
said,
"My
luggage
was
carefully
inspected,
of
course,
but
it
turned
out
there
was
a
can
of
corned
beef
in
my
coat
pocket.
I
had
overlooked
it.
So
did
they."
Montez
smiled
slowly
and
said,
hesitantly,
"I
suspect
you
are
now
going
to
offer
to
share
it."
"No,"
said
Gottstein,
judiciously,
wrinkling
his
large
button
nose.
"I
was
going
to
say
with
all
the
tragic
nobility
I
could
muster,
'Here,
Montez,
have
it
all!
Thy
need
is
greater
than
mine.'"
He
stumbled
a
bit
in
trying
to
say
this,
since
he
rarely
used
second
person
singular
in
Planetary
Standard.
Montez
smiled
more
broadly,
and
then
let
it
vanish.
He
shook
his
head.
"No.
In
a
week,
I'll
have
all
the
Earth-food
I
can
eat.
You
won't.
Your
mouthfuls
will
be
few
in
the
next
few
years
and
you
will
spend
too
much
time
regretting
your
present
generosity.
You
keep
it
all.
...
I
insist.
I
would
but
be
earning
your
hatred
ex
post
facto."
He
seemed
serious,
his
hand
on
the
other's
shoulder,
his
eyes
looking
straight
into
Gottstein's.
"Besides,"
he
said,
"there
is
something
I
want
to
talk
to
you
about
that
I've
been
putting
off
because
I
don't
know
how
to
approach
it
and
this
food
would
be
an
excuse
for
further
sidetracking."
Gottstein
put
away
the
Earth-can
at
once.
There
was
no
way
in
which
his
face
could
match
the
other's
seriousness,
but
his
voice
was
grave
and
steady,
"Is
there
something
you
could
not
put
into
your
dispatches,
Montez?"
"There
was
something
I
tried
to
put
in,
Gottstein,
but
between
my
not
knowing
how
to
phrase
it
and
Earth's
reluctance
to
grasp
my
meaning,
we
ended
up
not
communicating.
You
may
do
better.
I
hope
you
do.
One
of
the
reasons
I
have
not
asked
to
have
my
tour
of
duty
extended
is
that
I
can
no
longer
take
the
responsibility
of
my
failure
to
communicate."
"You
make
it
sound
serious."
"I
wish
I
could
make
it
sound
serious.
Frankly,
it
sounds
silly.
There
are
only
some
ten
thousand
people
in
the
Lunar
colony.
Rather
less
than
half
are
native
Lunarites.
They're
hampered
by
an
insufficiency
of
resources,
an
insufficiency
of
space,
a
harsh
world,
and
yet-and
yet-"
"And
yet?"
said
Gottstein,
encouragingly.
"There
is
something
going
on
here-I
don't
know
exactly
what-which
may
be
dangerous."
"How
can
it
be
dangerous?
What
can
they
do?
Make
war
against
the
Earth?"
Gottstein's
face
trembled
on
the
brink
of
a
smile-crease.
"No,
no.
It's
more
subtle
than
that."
Montez
passed
his
hand
over
his
face,
rubbing
his
eyes
petulantly.
"Let
me
be
frank
with
you.
Earth
has
lost
its
nerve."
"What
does
that
mean?"
"Well,
what
would
you
call
it?
Just
about
the
time
the
Lunar
colony
was
being
established,
Earth
went
through
the
Great
Crisis.
I
don't
have
to
tell
you
about
that."'
"No,
you
don't,"
said
Gottstein,
with
distaste.
"The
population
is
two
billion
now
from
its
six
billion
peak."
"Earth
is
much
better
for
that,
isn't
it?"
"Oh,
undoubtedly,
though
I
wish
there
had
been
a
better
way
of
achieving
the
drop.
.
.
.
But
it's
left
behind
a
permanent
distrust
of
technology;
a
vast
inertia;
a
lack
of
desire
to
risk
change
because
of
the
possible
side-effects.
Great
and
possibly
dangerous
efforts
have
been
abandoned
because
the
danger
was
feared
more
than
greatness
was
desired."
"I
take
it
you
refer
to
the
program
on
genetic
engineering."
"That's
the
most
spectacular
case
of
course,
but
not
the
only
one,"
said
Montez,
bitterly.
"Frankly,
I
can't
get
excited
over
the
abandonment
of
genetic
engineering.
It
was
a
tissue
of
failures."
"We
lost
our
chance
at
intuitionism."
"There
has
never
been
any
evidence
that
intuitionism
is
desirable,
and
considerable
indications
of
its
undesirability.
.
.
.
Besides
what
about
the
Lunar
colony
itself?
This
certainly
is
no
indication
of
stagnation
on
Earth."
"It
is,"
said
Montez,
vigorously.
"The
Lunar
colony
is
a
hangover,
a
last
remnant
of
the
period
before
the
Crisis;
something
that
was
carried
through
as
a
last
sad
forward
thrust
of
mankind
before
the
great
retreat."
"That's
too
dramatic,
Montez,"
"I
don't
think
so.
The
Earth
has
retreated.
Mankind
has
retreated,
everywhere
but
on
the
Moon.
The
Lunar
colony
is
man's
frontier
not
just
physically,
but
psychologically,
too.
Here
is
a
world
that
doesn't
have
a
web
of
life
to
disrupt;
that
doesn't
have
a
complex
environment
in
delicate
balance
to
upset.
Everything
on
the
Moon
that
is
of
any
use
to
man
is
man-made.
The
Moon
is
a
world
constructed
by
man
from
the
start
and
out
of
basics.
There
is
no
past."
"Well?"
"On
Earth,
we
are
unmanned
by
our
longing
for
a
pastoral
past
that
never
really
existed;
and
that,
if
it
had
existed,
could
never
exist
again.
In
some
respects,
much
of
the
ecology
was
disrupted
in
the
Crisis
and
we
are
making
do
with
the
remnants
so
that
we
are
frightened,
always
frightened.
.
.
.
On
the
Moon,
there
is
no
past
to
long
for
or
dream
about.
There
is
no
direction
but
forward."
Montez
seemed
to
be
catching
fire
with
his
own
words.
He
said,
"Gottstein,
I
have
watched
it
for
two
years;
you
will
watch
it
for
at
least
that
much
longer.
There
is
a
fire
here
on
the
Moon;
a
restless
burning.
They
expand
in
every
direction.
They
expand
physically.
Every
month,
new
corridors
are
bored,
new
living
quarters
established,
a
new
population
potential
made
room
for.
They
expand
as
far
as
resources
are
concerned.
They
find
new
construction
materials,
new
water
sources,
new
lodes
of
specialized
minerals.
They
expand
their
sun-power
battery-banks,
enlarge
their
electronics
factories.
...
I
suppose
you
know
that
these
ten
thousand
people
here
on
the
Moon
are
now
the
major
source
for
Earth's
supply
of
mini-electronic
devices
and
fine
biochemicals."
"I
know
they're
an
important
source."
"Earth
lies
to
itself
for
comfort's
sake.
The
Moon
is
the
major
source.
At
the
present
rate,
it
may
become
the
sole
source
in
the
near
future.
.
.
.
It's
growing
intellectually,
too.
Gottstein,
I
imagine
there
isn't
a
bright
science-oriented
youngster
on
Earth
who
doesn't
vaguely-or
perhaps
not
so
vaguely-dream
of
going,
to
the
Moon
one
day.
With
Earth
in
retreat
from
technology,
the
Moon
is
where
the
action
is."
"You're
referring
to
the
proton
synchrotron,
I
suppose?"
"That's
one
example.
When
was
the
last
new
synchrotron
built
on
Earth?
But
it's
just
the
biggest
and
most
dramatic
item;
not
the
only
or
even
the
most
important.
If
you
want
to
know
the
most
important
scientific
device
on
the
Moon-"
''Something
so
secret
I
haven't
been
told?"
"No,
something
so
obvious
that
no
one
seems
to
notice.
It's
the
ten
thousand
brains
here.
The
ten
thousand
best
human
brains
there
are.
The
only
close-knit
group
of
ten
thousand
human
brains
that
are,
in
principle
and
by
emotion,
science-oriented."
Gottstein
moved
restlessly
and
tried
to
shift
his
chair's
position.
It
was
bolted
to
the
floor
and
wouldn't
move,
but
in
the
attempt
to
do
so,
Gottstein
found
himself
skittering
out
of
the
chair.
Montez
reached
out
an
arm
to
steady
him.
Gottstein
flushed.
"Sorry."
"You'll
get
used
to
the
gravity."
Gottstein
said,
"But
aren't
you
making
it
out
a
lot
worse
than
it
is?
Earth
isn't
a
know-nothing
planet
altogether.
We
did
develop
the
Electron
Pump.
That's
a
purely
Terrestrial
accomplishment.
No
Lunarite
had
anything
to
do
with
it."
Montez
shook
his
head
and
muttered
a
few
words
in
his
native
Spanish.
They
didn't
sound
like
placid
words.
He
said,
"Have
you
ever
met
Frederick
Hallam?"
Gottstein
smiled.
"Yes,
as
a
matter
of
fact
I
have.
The
Father
of
the
Electron
Pump.
I
believe
he
has
the
phrase
tattooed
on
his
chest."
"The
mere
fact
that
you
smile
and
make
that
remark
proves
my
point,
really.
Ask
yourself:
Could
a
man
like
Hallam
really
have
fathered
the
Electron
Pump?
For
the
unthinking
multitude,
the
story
will
do,
but
the
fact
is-and
you
must
know
it
if
you
stop
to
think
about
it-
there
is
no
father
to
the
Electron
Pump.
The
para-people,
&e
people
in
the
para-Universe,
whoever
they
are
and
whatever
that
is,
invented
it.
Hallam
was
their
accidental
instrument.
All
of
Earth
is
their
accidental
instrument."
"We
were
clever
enough
to
take
advantage
of
their
initiative."
"Yes,
as
cows
are
clever
enough
to
eat
the
hay
we
provide
for
them.
The
Pump
is
no
sign
that
man
is
forward-looking.
Quite
the
reverse."
"If
the
Pump
is
a
backward
step,
then
I
say
good
for
backwardness.
I
wouldn't
want
to
do
without
it."
"Who
would?
But
the
point
is
it
fits
Earth's
present
mood
perfectly.
Infinite
energy
at
virtually
zero
cost,
except
for
maintenance,
and
with
zero
pollution
besides.
But
there
are
no
Electron
Pumps
on
the
Moon."
Gottstein
said,
"I
imagine
there's
no
need
for
them.
The
Solar
batteries
supply
what
the
Lunarites
require.
Infinite
energy
at
virtually
zero
cost,
except
for
maintenance,
and
with
zero
pollution
besides....
Isn't
that
the
litany?"
"Yes,
indeed,
but
the
Solar
batteries
are
entirely
man-made.
That's
the
point
I'm
making.
An
Electron
Pump
was
projected
for
the
Moon;
installation
was
attempted."
"And?"
"And
it
didn't
work.
The
para-people
didn't
accept
the
tungsten.
Nothing
happened."
"I
didn't
know
that.
Why
not?"
Montez
lifted
his
shoulders
and
eyebrows
expressively.
"How
is
one
to
know?
We
might
assume,
for
instance,
that
the
para-people
live
on
a
world
without
a
satellite;
that
they
have
no
conception
of
separate
worlds
in
close
proximity,
each
populated;
that,
having
found
one,
they
did
not
seek
another.
Who
knows?-The
point
is,
that
the
para-people
didn't
bite
and
we
ourselves,
without
them,
could
do
nothing."
"We
ourselves,"
repeated
Gottstein,
thoughtfully.
"By
that,
you
mean
the
Earthmen?"
"Yes."
"And
the
Lunarites?"
"They
were
not
involved."
"Were
they
interested?"
"I
don't
know.
That's
where
my
uncertainty-and
fear-chiefly
rests.
The
Lunarites-the
native
Lunarites,
particularly-do
not
feel
like
Earthmen.
I
don't
know
what
their
plans
are
or
what
they
intend.
I
can't
find
out."
Gottstein
looked
thoughtful.
"But
what
can
they
do?
Do
you
have
any
reason
to
suppose
they
intend
to
do
us
harm;
or
that
they
can
do
Earth
harm
even
if
they
intend
it?"
"I
can't
answer
that
question.
They
are
an
attractive
and
intelligent
people.
It
seems
to
me
they
lack
real
hatred
or
real
rage
or
even
real
fear.
But
perhaps
that
is
what
only
seems
to
me.
What
bothers
me
most
is
that
I
don't
know."
"The
scientific
equipment
on
the
Moon
is
run
by
Earth,
I
believe."
"That
is
correct.
The
proton
synchrotron
is.
The
radio
telescope
on
the
trans-terrestrial
side
is.
The
three-hundred-inch
optical
telescope
is.
...
The
large
equipment,
that
is,
all
of
which
has
been
in
existence
for
fifty
years."
"And
what's
been
done
since?"
"Very
little
by
Earthmen."
"What
about
the
Lunarites?"
"I'm
not
sure.
Their
scientists
work
in
the
large
installations,
but
I
once
tried
to
check
time
cards.
There
are
gaps."
"Gaps?"
"They
spend
considerable
time
away
from
the
large
installations.
It
is
as
though
they
had
laboratories
of
their
own."
"Well,
if
they
produce
mini-electronic
devices
and
fine
bio-chemicals,
isn't
that
to
be
expected?"
"Yes,
but-
Gottstein,
I
don't
know.
I
fear
my
ignorance."
There
was
a
moderately
long
pause.
Gottstein
said,
"Montez,
I
take
it
you
are
telling
me
all
this
so
that
I
will
be
careful;
so
that
I
will
try
to
find
out
what
the
Lunarites
are
doing?"
"I
suppose
that's
about
it,"
said
Montez,
unhappily.
"But
you
don't
even
know
that
they're
doing
anything
at
all."
"I
feel
that
they
are."
Gottstein
said,
"It's
odd,
then.
I
should
be
trying
to
talk
you
out
of
all
this
fearful
mysticism
of
yours-but
it's
odd-"
"What
is?"
"The
same
vessel
that
brought
me
to
the
Moon
brought
someone
else
to
the
Moon.
I
mean,
a
large
party
came,
but
one
face
in
particular
triggered
something.
I
didn't
talk
to
him-had
no
occasion
to-and
I
dismissed
the
matter.
But
now
our
talk
is
pushing
a
button,
and
he
suddenly
comes
back
to
mind-"
"Yes?"
"I
was
on
a
committee
once
that
dealt
with
Electron
Pump
matters.
A
question
of
safety."
He
smiled
briefly.
"Earth's
lost
nerve,
you
might
say.
We
worry
about
safety
everywhere-and
a
good
thing,
damn
it,
lost
nerve
or
not.
The
details
escape
me
but
in
connection
with
that
hearing,
I
saw
that
face
that
now
I
saw
on
the
vessel.
I'm
convinced
of
it."
"Does
that
have
significance,
do
you
think?"
"I'm
not
sure.
I
associate
that
face
with
something
disturbing.
If
I
keep
on
thinking,
it
may
come
back
to
me.
In
any
case,
I
had
better
get
a
list
of
the
passengers
and
see
if
any
name
means
something
to
me.
Too
bad,
Montez,
but
I
think
you're
getting
me
started."
"Not
bad
at
all,"
said
Montez.
"I'm
glad
of
it.
As
for
this
man;
it
may
be
he
is
only
a
tourist
of
no
consequence
and
will
be
gone
in
two
weeks,
but
I
am
glad
to
have
you
thinking
about
the
matter-"
Gottstein
did
not
seem
to
be
listening.
"He
is
a
physicist,
or
a
scientist
of
some
sort,"
he
muttered.
"I'm
certain
of
it
and
I
associate
him
with
danger-"
4
"Hello," said Selene, cheerfully. The Earthman turned around. Recognition took almost no time at all. "Selene! Am I right? Selene!" "Right! Correctly pronounced. Are you enjoying yourself?"
The Earthman said gravely, "Very much. It makes me realize how unique our century is. It was not so long ago I was on Earth, feeling tired of my world, tired of myself. Then I thought: Well,
if I were living a hundred years ago, the only way I could leave the world would be to die, but now-I can go to the Moon." He smiled without real gaiety. Selene said, "Are you happier now
that you are on the Moon?" "A little." He looked about. "Don't you have a crowd of tourists to take care of?" "Not today," she said, cheerfully. "It's my day off. Who knows, I may take two
or three. It's a dull job." "What a shame, then, that you bump into a tourist on your day off." "I didn't bump into you. I came looking for you. And a hard job that was, too. You shouldn't
wander off by yourself." The Earthman looked at her with interest. "Why should you look for me? Are you fond of Earthmen?" "No," she said, with easy frankness. "I'm sick of them. I dislike
them on principle and being constantly associated with them in my job makes it worse." "Yet you come looking for me and there isn't a way on Earth-on the Moon, I mean-that I can convince myself
I am young and handsome." "Even if you were, it wouldn't help. Earthmen don't interest me, as everyone but Barren knows." "Then why do you come looking for me?" "Because there are other
ways of being interested and because Barton is interested." "And who is Barron? Your boyfriend?" Selene laughed. "Barron Neville. He's a lot more than a boy and a lot more than a
friend. We have sex when we feel like it." "Well, that's what I meant. Do you have children?" "One boy. He's ten. He spends most of his time in the boys' compound. To spare you
the next question, he's not Barron's. I may have a child by Barron If we're still together when I'm assigned another child-if I'm assigned another child.... I am pretty sure I
will be." "You're quite frank." "About things I don't consider secret? Of course. . . . Now what would you like to do?" They had been walking along a corridor of milk-white rock,
into the glazed surface of which were Inset dusky bits of "Moon-gems" that lay about for the taking in most sections of the Lunar surface. She wore sandals which scarcely seemed to touch
the ground; he wore thick-soled boots which leadenly helped weigh him down to keep his steps from becoming torture. The corridor was one-way. Occasionally, a small electric cart would overtake them
and move nearly silently past. The Earthman said, "Now what would I like to do? That is a broad-beamed invitation. Would you like to set boundary conditions so that my answers will not innocently
offend you?" "Are you a physicist?" The Earthman hesitated. "Why do you ask?" "Just to hear what you would say. I know you're a physicist." "How?" "No one says 'set boundary conditions' unless they
are.
Especially
if
the
first
thing
they
want
to
see
on
the
Moon
is
the
proton
synchrotron."
"Is
that
why
you've
come
looking
for
me?
Because
I
seem
to
be
a
physicist?"
"That's
why
Barron
sent
me
looking
for
you.
Because
he's
a
physicist.
I
came
because
I
thought
you
were
rather
unusual
for
an
Earthman."
"In
what
way?"
"Nothing
terribly
complimentary-if
it's
compliments
you're
fishing
for.
It's
just
that
you
seem
not
to
like
Earth-men."
"How
can
you
tell
that?"
"I
watched
you
look
at
the
others
in
the
party.
Besides,
I
can
always
tell
somehow.
It's
the
Earthies
who
don't
like
Earthies
who
tend
to
stay
on
the
Moon.
Which
brings
me
back
to
the
question....
What
would
you
like
to
do?
And
I'll
set
the
boundary
conditions.
I
mean
as
far
as
sightseeing
is
concerned."
The
Earthman
looked
at
her
sharply.
"That's
peculiar,
Selene.
You
have
a
day
off.
Your
job
is
sufficiently
uninteresting
or
distasteful
so
that
you
are
glad
to
have
the
day
off
and
would
be
willing
to
make
it
two
or
three.
Yet
your
way
of
spending
it
is
to
volunteer
to
resume
your
job
for
me
particularly....
Just
because
of
a
little
interest."
"Barron's
interest.
He's
busy
now
and
there's
no
harm
in
entertaining
you
until
he's
ready.
.
.
.
Besides,
it's
different.
Can't
you
see
it's
different?
On
my
job
I'm
riding
herd
on
a
couple
of
dozen
Earthies-
Don't
you
mind
my
using
the
term?"
"I
use
it
myself."
"Because
you're
an
Earthman.
Some
Earth-people
consider
it
a
term
of
derision
and
resent
it
when
a
Lunarite
uses
it."
"You
mean
when
a
Lunie
uses
it?"
Selene
flushed.
She
said,
"Yes.
That's
about
it."
"Well,
then,
let's
neither
of
us
cry
out
at
words.
Go
ahead,
you
were
telling
me
about
your
job."
"On
my
job,
there
are
these
Earthies
whom
I
have
to
keep
from
killing
themselves
and
whom
I
have
to
take
here
and
there
and
give
little
speeches
to
and
make
sure
they
eat
and
drink
and
walk
by
the
book.
They
see
their
little
pet
sights
and
do
their
little
pet
things,
and
I
have
to
be
terribly
polite
and
motherly."
"Awful,"
said
the
Earthman.
"But
you
and
I
can
do
as
we
please,
I
hope,
and
you
are
willing
to
take
your
chances
and
I
don't
have
to
watch
what
I
say."
"I
told
you
that
you're
perfectly
welcome
to
call
me
Earthie."
"All
right,
then.
I'll
have
a
busman's
holiday.
What
would
you
like
to
do?"
"That's
an
easy
one
to
answer.
I
want
to
see
the
proton
synchrotron."
"Not
that
Maybe
Barren
can
arrange
it
after
you
see
him."
"Well,
if
I
can't
see
the
synchrotron,
I
don't
know
what
else
there
is
to
see.
I
know
the
radio
telescope
is
on
the
other
side
and
I
don't
suppose
there's
any
novelty
in
it,
anyway.
...
You
tell
me.
What
doesn't
the
average
tourist
get
to
see?"
"A
number
of
things.
There
are
the
algae
rooms-not
the
antiseptic
processing
plants,
which
you've
seen-but
the
farms
themselves.
However,
.the
smell
is
pretty
strong
there
and
I
don't
suppose
an
Earthie-Earthman-would
find
it
particularly
appetizing.
Earth-men
have
trouble
with
the
food
as
it
is."
"Does
that
surprise
you?
Have
you
ever
tasted
Earth-food?"
"Not
really.
I
probably
wouldn't
like
it,
though.
It
all
depends
on
what
you're
used
to."
"I
suppose
so,"
said
the
Earthman,
sighing.
"If
you
ate
a
real
steak,
you'd
probably
gag
at
the
fat
and
fiber."
"We
could
go
to
the
outskirts
where
the
new
corridors
are
being
driven
into
bedrock,
but
you'll
have
to
wear
special
protective
garments.
There
are
the
factories-"
"You
make
the
choice,
Selene."
"I
will,
if
you
will
tell
me
something
honestly."
"I
can't
promise
without
hearing
the
question."
"I
said
that
Earthies
that
didn't
like
Earthies
tended
to
stay
on
the
Moon.
You
didn't
correct
me.
Do
you
intend
to
stay
on
the
Moon?"
The
Earthman
stared
at
the
toes
of
his
clumsy
boots.
He
said,
"Selene,
I
had
trouble
getting
a
visa
to
the
Moon.
They
said
I
might
be
too
old
for
the
trip
and
that
if
I
stayed
any
length
of
time
I
might
find
it
impossible
to
return
to
Earth.
So
I
told
them
I
planned
to
stay
on
the
Moon
permanently."
"You
weren't
lying?
"I
wasn't
sure
at
the
time.
But
I
think
I'll
stay
here
now."
"I
should
have
thought
that
they
would
have
been
less
willing
than
ever
to
let
you
go
under
those
conditions."
"Why?"
"Generally,
the
Earth
authorities
don't
like
to
send
physicists
to
the
Moon
on
a
permanent
basis."
The
Earthman's
lips
twitched.
"In
that
respect,
I
had
no
trouble."
"Well,
then,
if
you're
going
to
be
one
of
us,
I
think
you
ought
to
visit
the
gymnasium.
Earthies
often
want
to
but
we
don't
encourage
them
as
a
general
rule-though
it's
not
forbidden
outright
Immigrants
are
a
different
thing."
"Why?"
"Well,
for
one
thing,
we
exercise
in
the
nude
or
near-nude.
Why
not?"
She
sounded
aggrieved,
as
though
weary
of
repeating
a
defensive
position.
"The
temperature
is
controlled;
the
environment
is
clean.
It's
just
that
where
people
from
Earth
are
expected
to
be,
nudity
becomes
unsettling.
Some
Earthies
are
shocked;
some
are
titillated;
and
some
are
both.
Well,
we're
not
going
to
dress
in
the
gymnasium
for
their
sake,
and
we're
not
going
to
cope
with
them,
either;
so
we
keep
them
out"
"But
immigrants?"
"They
have
to
get
used
to
it.
In
the
end,
they'll
be
discarding
clothes,
too.
And
they'll
need
the
gymnasium
even
more
than
the
native
Lunarites
do."
'Til
be
honest
with
you,
Selene.
If
I
encounter
female
nudity,
I'll
find
it
titillating,
too.
I'm
not
quite
so
old
that
I
won't"
"Well,
titillate,
then,"
she
said,
indifferently,
"but
to
yourself.
Agreed?"
"Do
we
have
to
get
undressed
too?"
He
looked
at
her
with
amused
interest.
"As
spectators?
No.
We
could,
but
we
don't
have
to.
You
would
feel
uncomfortable
if
you
did
this
early
in
the
game
and
you
wouldn't
be
a
particularly
inspiring
sight
to
the
rest
of
us-"
"You
are
frank!"
"Do
you
think
it
would
be?
Be
honest
And
as
for
myself,
I
have
no
wish
to
put
you
under
a
special
strain
in
your
private
titillation.
So
we
might
both
just
as
well
stay
clothed."
"Will
there
be
any
objection?
I
mean
to
my
being
there
as
an
Earthie
of
uninspirational
appearance?"
"Not
if
I'm
with
you."
"Very
well,
then,
Selene.
Is
it
far
away?"
"We
are
there.
Just
through
here."
"Ah,
then,
you
were
planning
to
come
here
all
the
time."
"I thought it might be interesting." "Why?" Selene smiled suddenly. "I just thought." The Earthman shook his head. "I'm beginning to think you never just think. Let me guess. If I'm
to stay on the Moon, I will need to exercise now and then in order to keep muscles, bones, and all my organs, perhaps, in condition." "Quite true. So do all of us, immigrants from
Earth in particular. The day will come when the gymnasium will be a daily grind for you." They stepped through a door and the Earthman stared in astonishment. "This is the first place I've seen
that looks like Earth." "In what way?" "Why it's big. I didn't imagine you would have such big rooms on the Moon. Desks, office machinery, women at the desks-" "Bare-breasted women," said Selene, gravely.
"That part isn't Earthlike, I admit." "We've got a hold-chute, too, and an elevator for Earthies. There are many levels. . . . But wait." She approached a woman at one of the nearer desks,
talking in a rapid, low voice while the Earthman stared at everything with amiable curiosity. Selene returned. "No trouble. And it turns out we're going to have a melee. A rather
good one; I know the teams." "This place is very impressive. Really." "If you still mean its size, it's not nearly big enough. We have three gymnasiums. This is the largest." "I'm somehow
pleased that in the Spartan surroundings of the Moon, you can afford to waste so much room on frivolity." "Frivolity!" Selene sounded offended. "Why do you think this is frivolity?" "Melees?
Some sort of game?" "You might call it a game. On Earth you can do such things for sports; ten men doing, ten thousand watching. It's not so on the Moon; what's frivolous for you is necessary
for us, ... This way; we'll take the elevator, which means a little waiting perhaps." "Didn't mean to get you angry." "I'm not really angry but you must be reasonable. You Earthmen have
been adapted to Earth-gravity for all the three hundred million years since life crawled onto dry land. Even if you don't exercise, you get by. We've had no time at all to adapt to Moon-gravity."
"You look different enough." "If you're born and reared under Moon-gravity, your bones and muscles are, naturally, slimmer and less massive than an Earthie's would be, but that's superficial.
There isn't a bodily function we possess, however subtle- digestion, rates of hormonal secretions-that isn't maladjusted to gravity and that doesn't require a deliberate regimen of exercise.
If we can arrange exercise in the form of fun and games that does not make it frivolity. . . . Here's the elevator." The Earthman hung back in momentary alarm, but Selene, said, with residual impatience,
as though still seething over the necessity of defense. "I suppose you're going to tell me it looks like a wickerwork basket. Every Earthman who uses it says so. With Moon-gravity, it doesn't have
to be any more substantial." The elevator moved downward slowly. They were the only ones on board. The Earthman said, "I suspect this isn't much used." Selene smiled again. "You're right.
The hold-chute is much more popular, and much more fun." "What is it?" "Exactly what the name implies. . . . Here we are. We only had to drop two levels. . . . It's just a vertical
tube you can drop through, with handholds. We don't encourage Earthies to use it." "Too risky?" "Not in itself. You can climb down as though it were a ladder. However, there are always
youngsters swinging down at considerable speed and Earthies don't know how to keep out of the way. Collisions are always discomforting. But you'll get to use it in time.... In fact, what
you'll see now is a kind of large hold-chute designed for recklessness." ^ She led him to a circular railing around which a number of individuals were leaning and talking. All were more
or less in the nude. Sandals were common and usually a hip-purse was slung over one shoulder. Some wore briefs. One was scooping a greenish-mash out of a container and was eating it. The
Earthman wrinkled his nose slightly as he passed that one. He said, "The dental problem must be severe on the Moon." "It isn't good," Selene agreed. "If we ever get the chance, we'll select for
an edentate jaw." "Toothlessness?" "Maybe not entirely. We might keep the incisors and canines for cosmetic reasons and for occasionally useful tasks. They're easily cleaned, too. But why should we
want useless molars? It's just a hangover from an Earthie past." "Are you making any progress in that direction?" "No," she said, stiffly. "Genetic engineering is illegal. Earth insists."
She was leaning over the railing. "They call this the Moon's playground," she said. The Earthman looked down. It was a large cylindrical opening with pink smooth walls to which metal bars
were attached in what seemed a random configuration. Here and there, a bar stretched across a portion of the cylinder, sometimes across its entire width. It was perhaps four or five hundred
feet deep and about fifty feet across. No one seemed to be paying particular attention either to the playground or to the Earthman. Some had looked at him indifferently as he passed, seeming
to weigh his clothed state, his facial appearance, and then had turned away. Some made a casual hand gesture to Selene's direction before turning away, but all turned away. The no-interest signal,
however subdued, could not have been more blatant. The Earthman turned to the cylindrical opening. There were slim figures at the bottom, foreshortened because they were seen from above. Some
wore wisps of clothing in red, some in blue. Two teams, he decided. Clearly the wisps served protective functions, since all wore gloves and sandals, protective bands about knees and elbows.
Some wore brief bands about the hips, some about the chests. "Oh," he muttered. "Men and women." Selene said, "Right! The sexes compete equally but the idea is to prevent the uncontrolled
swinging of parts that might hamper the guided fall. There's a sexual difference there which also involves vulnerability to pain. It's not modesty." The Earthman said, "I think I've read
of this." "You may have," said Selene, indifferently. "Not much seems to get out. Not that we have any objection, but the Terrestrial government prefers to keep news of the Moon to a minimum."
"Why, Selene?" "You're an Earthman. You tell me.... Our theory here on the Moon is that we embarrass the Earth. Or at least the Earth government." On either side of the cylinder now, two
individuals were rising rapidly and the patter of light drumbeats was heard in the background. At first, the climbers seemed to be going up a ladder, rung by rung, but their speed increased
and by the time they were halfway up, they were striking each hold as they passed, making an ostentatious slapping noise. "Couldn't do that on Earth as gracefully," said the Earthman, admiringly.
"Or at all," he amended. "It's not just low-gravity," said Selene. "Try it, if you think so. This takes endless hours of practice." The climbers reached the railing and swung up to a headstand.
They performed a simultaneous somersault and began to fall. "They can move quickly when they want to," said the Earthman. "Umm," said Selene, through the patter of applause. "I suspect that
when
Earthmen-I
mean
the
real
Earthmen,
the
ones
who
have
never
even
visited
the
Moon-think
of
moving
around
the
Moon,
they
think
of
the
surface
and
of
spacesuits.
That's
often
slow,
of
course.
The
mass,
with
the
spacesuit
added,
is
huge,
which
means
high
inertia
and
a
small
gravity
to
overcome
it."
"Quite
right,"
said
the
Earthman.
"I've
seen
the
classic
motion
pictures
of
the
early
astronauts
that
all
school
children
see
and
the
movements
are
like
those
underwater,
The
picture
gets
imprinted,
even
when
we
know
better."
"You'd
be
surprised
how
fast
we
can
move
on
the
surface
these
days,
spacesuit
and
all,"
said
Selene.
"And
here,
underground,
without
spacesuits,
we
can
move
as
quickly
as
on
Earth.
The
slower
whip
of
gravity
is
made
up
for
by
the
proper
use
of
muscles."
"But
you
can
move
slowly,
too."
The
Earthman
was
watching
the
acrobats.
They
had
gone
up
with
speed
and
were
going
down
with
deliberate
slowness.
They-were
floating,
slapping
the
handholds
to
delay
the
drop
rather
than,
as
before,
to
accelerate
the
rise.
They
reached
the
ground
and
two
others
replaced
them.
And
then
two
more.
And
then
two
more.
From
each
team
alternately,
pairs
competed
in
virtuosity.
Each
pair
went
up
in
unison;
each
pair
rose
and
fell
in
a
more
complicated
pattern.
One
pair
kicked
off
simultaneously
to
cross
the
tube
in
a
low
parabola,
convex
upward,
each
reaching
the
handhold
the
other
had
abandoned,
and
somehow
skimming
past
each
other
in
mid-air
without
touching.
That
evoked
louder
applause.
The
Earthman
said,
"I
suspect
I
lack
the
experience
to
appreciate
the
finer
points
of
skill.
Are
these
all
native
Lunarites?"
"They
have
to
be,"
said
Selene.
"The
gymnasium
is
open
to
all
Lunar
citizens
and
some
immigrants
are
fairly
good,
considering.
For
this
kind
of
virtuosity,
however,
you
must
depend
on
babies
that
are
conceived
and
born
here.
They
have
the
proper
physical
adaptation,
at
least
more
than
native
Earthmen
have,
and
they
get
the
proper
childhood
training.
Most
of
these
performers
are
under
eighteen."
"I
imagine
it's
dangerous,
even
at
Moon-gravity
levels."
"Broken
bones
aren't
very
uncommon.
I
don't
think
there's
been
an
actual
death,
but
there's
been
at
least
one
case
of
broken
spine
and
paralysis.
That
was
a
terrible
accident;
I
was
actually
watching-
Oh,
wait
now;
we're
going
to
have
the
ad
libs
now."
"The
what?"
"Till
now,
we've
had
set
pieces.
The
climbs
were
according
to
a
fixed
pattern."
The
percussion
beat
seemed
softer
as
one
climber
rose
and
suddenly
launched
into
mid-air.
He
caught
a
transverse
bar
one-handed,
circling
it
once
vertically,
and
let
go-
The
Earthman
watched
closely.
He
said,
"Amazing.
He
gets
around
those
bars
exactly
like
a
gibbon."
"A
what?"
asked
Selene.
"A
gibbon.
A
kind
of
ape;
in
fact,
the
only
ape
still
existing
in
the
wild.
They-"
He
looked
at
Selene's
expression
and
said,
"I
don't
mean
it
as
an
insult,
Selene;
they
are
graceful
creatures."
Selene
said,
frowning,
"I've
seen
pictures
of
apes."
"You
probably
haven't
seen
gibbons,
in
motion.
...
I
dare
say
that
Earthies
might
call
Lunarites
'gibbons*
and
mean
it
insultingly,
about
on
the
level
of
what
you
mean
by
'Earthie.'
But
I
don't
mean
it
so."
He
leaned
both
elbows
on
the
railing
and
watched
the
movements.
It
was
like
dancing
in
the
air.
He
said,
"How
do
you
treat
Earth-immigrants
here
on
the
Moon,
Selene?
J
mean
immigrants
who
mean
to
stay
here
life-long.
Since
they
lack
true
Lunarite
abilities-"
"That
makes
no
difference.
Immies
are
citizens.
There's
no
discrimination;
no
legal
discrimination."
"What
does
that
mean?
No
legal
discrimination?"
"Well,
you
said
it
yourself.
There
are
some
things
they
can't
do.
There
are
differences.
Their
medical
problems
are
different
and
they've
usually
had
a
worse
medical
history.
If
they
come
in
middle
age,
they
look-old."
The
Earthman
looked
away,
embarrassed.
"Can
they
intermarry?
I
mean,
immigrants
and
Lunarites."
"Certainly.
That
is,
they
can
interbreed."
"Yes,
that's
what
I
meant."
"Of
course.
No
reason
why
an
immigrant
can't
have
some
worthwhile
genes.
Heavens,
my
father
was
an
immie,
though
I'm
second-generation
Lunarite
on
my
mother's
side."
"I
suppose
your
father
must
have
come
when
he
was1
quite-Oh,
good
Lord-"
He
froze
at
the
railing,
then
drew
a
shuddering
sigh.
"I
thought
he
was
going
to
miss
that
bar."
"Not
a
chance,"
said
Selene.
"That's
Marco
Fore.
He
likes
to
do
that,
reach
out
at
the
last
moment.
Actually,
it's
bad
form
to
do
that
and
a
real
champion
doesn't.
Still-
My
father
was
twenty-two
when
he
arrived."
"I
suppose
that's
the
way.
Still
young
enough
to
be
adaptable;
no
emotional
complications
back
on
Earth.
From
the
standpoint
of
the
Earthie
male,
I
imagine
it
must
be
rather
nice
to
have
a
sexual
attachment
with
a-"
"Sexual
attachment!"
Selene's
amusement
seemed
to
cover
a
very
real
sense
of
shock.
"You
don't
suppose
my
father
had
sex
with
my
mother.
If
my
mother
heard
you
say
that,
she'd
set
you
right
in
a
hurry."
"But-"
"Artificial
insemination
was
what
it
was
for
goodness
sake.
Sex
with
an
Earthman?"
The
Earthman
looked
solemn.
"I
thought
you
said
there
was
no
discrimination."
"That's
not
discrimination.
That's
a
matter
of
physical
fact.
An
Earthman
can't
handle
the
gravity
field
properly.
However
practiced
he
might
be,
under
the
stress
of
passion,
he
might
revert.
I
wouldn't
risk
it.
The
clumsy
fool
might
snap
his
arm
or
leg-or
worse,
mine.
Gene
mixtures
are
one
thing;
sex
is
quite
another."
"I'm
sorry.
.
.
.
Isn't
artificial
insemination
against
the
law?"
She
was
watching
the
gymnastics
with
absorption.
"That's
Marco
Fore
again.
When
he
isn't
trying
to
be
uselessly
spectacular,
he
really
is
good;
and
his
sister
is
almost
as
good.
When
they
work
together
it's
really
a
poem
of
motion.
Look
at
them
now.
They'll
come
together
and
circle
the
same
bar
as
though
they
have
a
single
body
stretched
across.
He's
a
little
too
flamboyant
at
times,
but
you
can't
fault
his
muscular
control.
.
.
.
Yes,
artificial
insemination
is
against
Earth's
law,
but
it's
allowed
where
medical
reasons
are
involved,
and,
of
course,
that's
often
the
case,
or
said
to
be."
AU
the
acrobats
had
now
climbed
to
the
top
and
were
in
a
great
circle
just
below
the
railing;
all
the
reds
on
one
side,
the
blues
on
the
other.
All
arms
on
the
side
of
the
interior
were
raised
and
the
applause
was
loud.
Quite
a
crowd
had
now
gathered
at
the
rail.
"You
ought
to
have
some
seating
arrangement,"
said
the
Earthman.
"Not
at
all.
This
isn't
a
show.
This
is
exercise.
We
don't
encourage
any
more
spectators
than
can
stand
comfortably
about
the
railing.
We're
supposed
to
be
down
there,
not
up
here."
"You
mean
you
can
do
that
sort
of
thing,
Selene?"
"After
a
fashion,
of
course.
Any
Lunarite
can.
I'm
not
as
good
as
they
are.
I
haven't
joined
any
teams-
There's
going
to
be
the
melee
now,
the
free-for-all.
This
is
the
really
dangerous
part.
All
ten
are
going
to
be
in
the
air
and
each
side
is
going
to
try
to
send
members
of
the
other
side
into
a
fall."
"A
real
fall."
"As
real
as
possible."
"Are
there
injuries
occasionally?"
"Occasionally.
In
theory,
this
sort
of
thing
is
frowned
upon.
That
is
considered
frivolous,
and
we
don't
have
so
large
a
population
that
we
can
afford
to
incapacitate
anyone
without
real
cause.
Still,
the
melee
is
popular
and
we
can't
raise
the
votes
to
outlaw
it."
"Which
side
do
you
vote
on,
Selene?"
Selene
blushed.
"Oh,
never
mind.
You
watch
this!"
The
percussion
rhythm
had
suddenly
grown
thunderous
and
each
of
the
individuals
in
the
huge
well
darted
outward
like
an
arrow.
There
was
wild
confusion
in
mid-air
"but
when
they
parted
again,
each
ended
firmly
on
a
bar-grip.
There
was
the
tension
of
waiting.
One
launched;
another
followed;
and
the
air
was
filled
with
flashing
bodies
again.
Over
and
over
it
happened.
Selene
said,
"The
scoring
is
intricate.
There
is
a
point
for
every
launch;
a
point
for
every
touch;
two
points
for
every
miss
inflicted;
ten
points
for
a
grounding;
various
penalties
for
various
kinds
of
fouling."
"Who
keeps
the
score?"
"There
are
umpires
watching
who
make
the
preliminary
decisions
and
there
are
television
tapes
in
case
of
appeals.
Very
often
even
the
tapes
can't
decide."
There
was
a
sudden
excited
cry
when
a
girl
in
blue
moved
past
a
boy
in
red
and
slapped
his
flank
resoundingly.
The
boy
who
received
the
blow
had
writhed
away,
but
not
successfully,
and
grabbing
at
a
wall
bar
with
improper
balance
struck
that
wall
ungracefully
with
his
knee.
"Where
were
his
eyes?"
demanded
Selene
indignantly.
"He
didn't
see
her
coming."
The
action
grew
hotter
and
the
Earthman
tired
of
trying
to
make
sense
of
the
knotted
flights.
Occasionally,
a
leaper
touched
a
bar
and
did
not
retain
his
hold.
Those
were
the
times
when
every
spectator
leaned
over
the
railing
as
though
ready
to
launch
himself
into
space
in
sympathy.
At
one
time,
Marco
Fore
was
struck
in
the
wrist
and
someone
cried
"Foul!"
Fore
missed
his
handhold
and
fell.
To
the
Earthman's
eyes,
the
fall,
under
Moon-gravity,
was
slow,
and
Fore's
lithe
body
twisted
and
turned,
reaching
for
bar
after
bar,
without
quite
making
it.
The
others
waited,
as
though
all
maneuvering
was
suspended
during
a
fall.
Fore
was
moving
quite
rapidly
now,
though
twice
he
had
slowed
himself
without
quite
being
able
to
maintain
a
handhold.
He
was
nearly
to
the
ground
when
a
sudden
spidery
lunge
caught
a
transverse
bar
with
the
right
leg
and
he
hung
suspended
and
swinging,
head
downward,
about
ten
feet
above
the
ground.
Arms
outspread,
he
paused
while
the
applause
rang
out
and
then
he
had
twisted
upright
and
jumped
into
a
rapid
climb.
The
Earthman
said,
"Was
he
fouled?"
"If
Jean
Wong
actually
grabbed
Marco's
wrist
instead
of
pushing
it,
it
was
a
foul.
The
umpire
has
ruled
a
fair
block,
however,
and
I
don't
think
Marco
will
appeal.
He
fell
a
lot
farther
than
he
had
to.
He
likes
these
last-minute
saves
and
someday
he'll
miscalculate
and
hurt
himself....
Oh,
oh."
The
Earthman
looked
up
in
sudden
inquiry,
but
Selene's
eyes
weren't
upon
him.
She
said,
"That's
someone
from
the
Commissioner's
office
and
he
must
be
looking
for
you."
"Why-"
"I
don't
see
why
he
should
come
here
to
find
anyone
else.
You're
the
unusual
one."
"But
there's
no
reason-"
began
the
Earthman.
Yet
the
messenger,
who
had
the
build
of
an
Earthman
himself
or
an
Earth-immigrant,
and
who
seemed
uneasy
to
be
the
center
of
the
stares
of
a
couple
of
dozen
slight,
nude
figures
who
seemed
to
tinge
their
scorn
with
indifference,
came
directly
toward
him.
"Sir,"
he
began.
"Commissioner
Gottstein
requests
that
you
accompany
me-"
5
Barren
Neville's
quarters
were
somehow
harsher
than
Selene's.
His
books
were
on
bold
display,
his
computer-outlet
was
unmasked
in
one
comer,
and
his
large
desk
was
in
disarray.
His
windows
were
blank.
Selene
entered,
folded
her
arms,
and
said,
"If
you
live
like
a
slob,
Barren,
how
do
you
expect
to
have
your
thoughts
neat?"
"I'll
manage,"
said
Barron,
grumpily.
"How
is
it
you
haven't
brought
the
Earthman
with
you?"
"The
Commissioner
got
to
him
first.
The
new
Commissioner."
"Gottstera?"
"That's
right.
Why
weren't
you
ready
sooner?"
"Because
it
took
time
to
find
out.
I
won't
work
blind."
Selene
said,
"Well,
then,
we'll
just
have
to
wait."
Neville
bit
at
a
thumbnail
and
then
inspected
the
result
severely.
"I
don't
know
whether
I
ought
to
like
the
situation
or
not....
What
did
you
think
of
him?"
"I
liked
him,"
said
Selene,
definitely.
"He
was
rather
pleasant,
considering
he
was
an
Earthie.
He
let
me
guide
him.
He
was
interested.
He
made
no
judgments.
He
didn't
patronize.
.
.
.
And
I
didn't
go
out
of
my
way
to
avoid
insulting
him,
either,"
"Did
he
ask
any
further
about
the
synchrotron?"
"No,
but
then
he
didn't
have
to."
"Why
not?"
"I
told
him
you
wanted
to
see
him,
and
I
said
you
were
a
physicist.
So
I
imagine
he'll
ask
you
whatever
he
wants
to
ask
you
when
he
sees
you."
"Didn't
he
think
it
strange
that
he
should
be
talking
to
a
female
tourist
guide
who
just
happens
to
know
a
physicist?"
"Why
strange?
I
said
you
were
my
sex-partner.
There's
no
accounting
for
sex
attraction
and
a
physicist
may
well
condescend
to
a
lowly
tourist
guide."
"Shut
up,
Selene."
"Oh-
Look,
Barren,
it
seems
to
me
that
if
he
were
spinning
some
sort
of
fancy
web,
if
he
approached
me
because
he
planned
to
get
to
you
through
me,
he
would
have
shown
some
trace
of
anxiety.
The
more
complicated
and
silly
any
plot,
the
more
rickety
it
is
and
the
more
anxious
the
plotter.
I
deliberately
acted
casual.
I
talked
about
everything
but
the
synchrotron.
I
took
him
to
a
gymnastics
show."
"And?"
"And
he
was
interested.
Relaxed
and
interested.
Whatever
he
has
on
his
mind,
it
isn't
involuted."
"You're
sure
of
that?
Yet
the
Commissioner
got
to
him
before
I
did.
You
consider
that
good?"
"Why
should
I
consider
it
bad?
An
open
invitation
to
a
meeting
of
some
sort
delivered
in
front
of
a
couple
of
dozen
Lunarites
isn't
particularly
involuted,
either."
Neville
leaned
back
with
his
hands
clasped
at
the
nape
of
his
neck.
"Selene,
please
don't
insist
on
making
judgments,
when
I
don't
ask
you
to.
It's
irritating.
The
man
is
not
a
physicist
in
the
first
place.
Did
he
tell
you
he
was?"
Selene
paused
to
think.
"I
called
him
a
physicist.
He
didn't
deny
it
but
I
don't
recall
that
he
actually
said
he
was.
And
yet-and
yet,
I'm
sure
he
is."
"It's
a
lie
of
omission,
Selene.
He
may
be
a
physicist
in
his
own
mind,
but
the
fact
is
that
he
isn't
trained
as
a
physicist
and
he
doesn't
work
as
one.
He
has
had
scientific
training;
I'll
grant
him
that;
but
he
has
no
scientific
job
of
any
kind.
He
couldn't
get
one.
There
isn't
a
lab
on
Earth
that
would
give
him
working
room.
He
happens
to
be
on
Fred
Hallam's
crud-list
and
he's
been
top
man
there
for
a
long
time."
"Are
you
sure?"
"Believe
me,
I
checked.
Didn't
you
just
criticize
me
for
taking
so
long.
.
.
.
And
it
sounds
so
good
that
it's
too
good."
"Why
too
good?
I
don't
see
what
you're
getting
at."
"Doesn't
it
seem
to
you
we
ought
to
trust
him?
After
all,
he's
got
a
grievance
against
Earth."
"You
can
certainly
argue
that
way,
if
your
facts
are
right."
"Oh,
my
facts
are
right,
at
least
in
the
sense
that
they're
what
turns
up,
if
you
dig
for
them.
But
maybe
we're
supposed
to
argue
that
way."
"Barren,
that's
disgusting.
How
can
you
weave-these
conspiracy
theories
into
everything?
Ben
didn't
sound-"
"Ben?"
said
Neville,
sardonically.
"Ben!"
repeated
Selene,
firmly.
"Ben
didn't
sound
like
a
man
with
a
grievance
or
like
a
man
trying
to
make
me
think
he
sounded
like
a
man
with
a
grievance."
"No,
but
he
managed
to
make
you
think
he
was
someone
to
be
liked.
You
did
say
you
liked
him,
didn't
you?
With
emphasis?
Maybe
that's
exactly
what
he
was
trying
to
do."
"I'm
not
that
easy
to
fool
and
you
know
it."
"Well,
I'll
just
have
to
wait
till
I
see
him."
"The
hell
with
you,
Barron.
I've
associated
with
thousands
of
Earthies
of
all
kinds.
It's
my
job.
And
you
have
no
reason
whatsoever
to
speak
sarcastically
about
my
judgment.
You
know
you
have
every
reason
to
trust
it."
"All right. Well see. Don't get angry. It's just that we'll have to wait now.. .. And as long as we do," he rose lithely to his feet, "guess what I'm thinking?" "I don't have to."
Selene rose as smoothly, and with an almost invisible motion of her feet slid sideways, well away from him. "But think it by yourself. I'm not in the mood." "Are you annoyed because
I've impugned your judgment?" "I'm annoyed because- Oh, hell, why don't you keep your room in better condition?" And she left. 6 "I would like," said Gottstein, "to offer you some Earth-side
luxury, Doctor, but, as a matter of principle, I have been allowed to bring none. The good people of the Moon resent the artificial barriers imposed by special treatment for men from
Earth. It seems better to soothe their sensibilities by assuming the Lunarite pose as far as possible though I'm afraid my gait will give me away. Their confounded gravity is impossible."
The Earthman said "I find this so also. I congratulate you on your new post-n "Not yet quite mine, sir." "Still, my congratulations. Yet I can't help wondering why you have asked to see me."
"We were shipmates. We arrived not so long ago on the same vessel." The Earthman waited politely. Gottstein said, "And my acquaintance with you is a longer one than that. We met-briefly-some
years ago." The Earthman said quietly, "I'm afraid I don't recall-" "I'm not surprised at that. There is no reason for you to remember. I was, for a time, on the staff of Senator Burt, who
headed-still heads, in fact-the Committee on Technology and the Environment. It was at a time when he was rattier anxious to get the goods on Hallam-Frederick Hallam." The Earthman seemed,
quite suddenly, to sit a little straighter. "Did you know Hallam?" "You're the second person to ask me that since my coming to the Moon. Yes, I did. Not intimately. I've known others
who've met him. Oddly enough, their opinion usually coincided with mine. For a person who is apparently idolized by the planet, Hallam inspired little personal liking on the part of those
who knew him." "Little? None at all, I think," said the Earthman. Gottstein ignored the interruption. "It was my job, at the time-or at least, my assignment from the senator-to investigate
the Electron Pump and see if its establishment and growth were accompanied by undue waste and personal profit-taking. It was a legitimate concern for what was essentially a watch-dog committee,
but the senator was, between us, hoping to find something of damage to Hallam. He was anxious to decrease the strangle-hold that man was gaining on the scientific establishment. There, he failed."
"That much would be obvious. Hallam is stronger than ever right now." "There was no graft to speak of; certainly none that could be traced to Hallam. The man is rigidly honest" "In that sense,
I am sure. Power has its own market value not necessarily measured in credit-bills." "But what interested me at the time, though it was something I could not then follow up, was that I did
come across someone whose complaint was not against Hallam's power, but against the Electron Pump itself. I was present at the interview, but I did not conduct it You were the complainant,
were you not?" The Earthman said, cautiously, "I remember the incident to which you refer, but I still don't remember you." "I wondered then how anyone could possibly object to the Electron
Pump on scientific grounds. You impressed me sufficiently so that when I saw you on the ship, something stirred; and then, eventually, it came back. I have not referred to the passenger list
but let me check my memory. Aren't you Dr. Benjamin Andrew Denison?" The Earthman sighed. "Benjamin Allan Denison. Yes. But why does this come up now? The truth is, Commissioner, I don't
want to drag up matters of the past. I'm here on the Moon and rather anxious to start again; from the start, if necessary. Damn it, I considered changing my name." "That wouldn't have helped.
It was your face I recognized. I have no objection to your new life, Dr. Denison. I would not in any way interfere. But I would like to pry a little for reasons that do not directly
involve you. I don't remember, quite, your objection to the Electron Pump. Could you tell me?" Denison's head bent. The silence lengthened itself and the Commissioner-Appointee did not
interrupt He even stifled a small clearing of the throat. Denison said, "Truly, it was nothing. It was a guess I made; a fear about the alteration in the intensity of the strong nuclear
field. Nothing!" "Nothing?" Gottstein did clear his throat now. "Please don't mind if I strive to understand this. I told you that you interested me at the time. I was unable to follow
it up then and I doubt that I could dig the information out of the records now. The whole thing is classified-the senator did very poorly at the time and he isn't interested in publicity
over it. Still, some details come back. You were once a colleague of Hallam's; you were not a physicist." "That's right. I was a radiochemist. So was he." "Stop me if I remember incorrectly,
but your early record was a very good one, right?" "There were objective criteria in my favor. I had no illusions about myself. I was a brilliant worker." "Amazing how it comes back.
Hallam, on the other hand, was not." "Not particularly." "And yet afterward things did not go well with you. In fact, when we interviewed you-I think you volunteered to see us-you were
working for a toy manufacturer-" "Cosmetics," said Denison, in a strangled voice. "Male cosmetics. That didn't help gain me a respectful hearing." "No, it wouldn't. I'm sorry. You
were a salesman." "Sales manager. I was still brilliant, I rose to vice-president before breaking off and coming to the Moon." "Did Hallam have something to do with that? I mean with
you leaving science?" "Commissioner," said Denison. "Please! It really doesn't matter any longer. I was there when Hallam first discovered the tungsten conversion and when the chain of
events began that led to the Electron Pump. Exactly what would have happened if I had not been there, I can't say. Hallam and I might both have been dead of radiation poisoning a month
later or of a nuclear explosion six weeks later. I don't know. But I was there and, partly because of me, Hallam is what he is now; and because of my part in it, I am what I am now. The
hell with the details. Does that satisfy you? Because it will have to." "I think it satisfies me. You had a personal grudge against Hallam, then?" "I certainly had no affection for him, in
those days. I have no affection for him now, for that matter." "Would you say, then, that your objection to the Electron Pump was inspired by your anxiety to destroy Hallam." Denison said,
"I object to this cross-examination." "Please? Nothing of what I ask is intended to be used against you. This is for my own benefit because I am concerned about the Pump and about a number
of things." "Well, then, I suppose you might work out some emotional involvement. Because I disliked Hallam I was ready to believe that his popularity and greatness had a false foundation.
I thought about the Electron Pump, hoping to find a flaw." "And you therefore found one?" "No," said Denison forcefully, bringing his fist down on the arm of the chair and moving perceptibly
upward from his seat in reaction. "Not 'therefore.' I found a flaw but it was an honest one. Or so it seemed to me. I certainly didn't invent a flaw merely to puncture Hallam." "No question
of inventing, Doctor," said Gottstein soothingly. "I don't dream of making such an implication. Yet we all know that in trying to determine something on the boundary line of the known, it
is necessary to make assumptions. The assumptions can be made over a gray area of uncertainty and one can shade them in one direction or another with perfect honesty, but in accord with-uh-the
emotions of the moment. You made your assumptions, perhaps, on the anti-Hallam edge of the possible." "This is a profitless discussion, sir. At the time, I thought I had a valid point. However,
I am not a physicist. I am-was-a radiochemist" "Hallam was a radiochemist, too, but he is now the most famous physicist in the world." "He's still a radiochemist A quarter-century out of
date." "Not so, you. You worked hard to become a physicist" Denison smoldered. "You really investigated me." "I told you; you impressed me. Amazing how it comes back. But now I'll pass
on to something a little different Do you know a physicist named Peter Lamont?" Reluctantly-"I've met him." "Would you say he was brilliant, too?" "I don't know him well enough to say and
I hate to overuse the word." "Would you say he knew what he was talking about?" "Barring information to the contrary, I would say, yes." Carefully, the Commissioner leaned back in his seat.
It had a spindly look about it and by Earth standards it would not have supported his weight. He said, "Would you care to say how you came to know Lamont? Was it by reputation only?
Did you meet?" Denison said, "We had some direct conversations. He was planning to write a history of the Electron Pump; how it started; a full account of all the legendary crap that's
grown up around it. I was flattered that Lamont came to me; that he seemed to have found out something about me. Damn it, Commissioner, I was flattered that he knew I was alive. But
I couldn't really say much. What would have been the use? I would have gained nothing but some sneers and I am tired of it; tired of brooding; tired of self-pity." "Do you know anything
about what Lamont has been doing in the last few years?" "What is it you're thinking of, Commissioner?" asked Denison, cautiously. "About a year ago, maybe a little more, Lamont spoke to Burt.
I am not on the senator's staff any longer, but we see each other occasionally. He talked to me about it. He was concerned. He thought Lamont might have made a valid point against the
Electron Pump and yet could see no practical way of taking up the matter. I, too, was concerned-" "Concern everywhere," said Denison, sardonically. "But now, I wonder. If Lamont talked to you
and-" "Stop! Stop right there, Commissioner. I think I see you sidling toward a point and I don't want you to move any further. If you expect me to tell you that Lamont stole my idea,
that once again I am being treated badly, you are wrong. Let me tell you as forcefully as I can; I had no valid theory. It was purely a guess. It worried me; I presented it; I was
not believed; I was discouraged. Since I had no way of demonstrating its value, I gave up. I did not mention it in my discussion with Lamont; we never went past the early days of the Pump.
What he came up with later, however much it may have resembled my guess, was arrived at independently. It seems to be much more solid and to be based on rigid mathematical analysis. I lay claim
to no priority; to none" "You seem to know about Lament's theory." "It made the rounds in recent months. The fellow can't publish and no one takes him seriously, but it was passed along
the grapevine. It even reached me." "I see, Doctor. But I take it seriously. To me the warning was second time round, you understand. The report of the first warning-from you-had never
reached the senator. It had nothing to do with financial irregularities, which were what was then on his mind. The actual head of " the investigating panel-not myself-considered it-you
will forgive me-crackpot. I did not. When the matter came up again, I grew disturbed. It was my intention to meet with Lamont, but a number of physicists whom I consulted-" "Including Hallam?"
"No, I did not see Hallam. A number of those I consulted advised me that Lament's work was utterly without foundation. Even so, I was considering seeing him when I was asked to take up
this position, and here I am, and here you are. So you see why I had to see you. In your opinion is there merit in the theories advanced by yourself and by Dr. Lament?" "You mean is continued
use of the Electron Pump going to blow up the Sun, or maybe the entire arm of the Galaxy?" "Yes, that's exactly what I mean." "How can I tell you? All I have is my own guess, which is just
a guess. As for Lament's theory, I have not studied it in detail; it-has not been published. If I saw it, the mathematics might be beyond me. . . . Besides, what's the difference?
Lamont won't convince anyone. Hallam has ruined him as earlier he ruined me, and the public generally would find it against their short-term interest to believe him even if he went over
Hallam's head, so to speak. They don't want to give up the Pump, and it's a lot easier to refuse to accept Lament's theory than to try to do something about it." "But you're still concerned
about it, aren't you?" "In the sense that I think we might indeed destroy ourselves and that I wouldn't like to see that happen, of course." "So you've come to the Moon, now, to do something
that Hallam, your old enemy, would prevent your doing on Earth." Denison said, slowly, "You, too, like to make guesses." "Do I?" said Gottstein, indifferently. "Perhaps I am brilliant, too.
Is my guess correct?" "It may be. I haven't given up hope of returning to science. If anything I do were to lift the specter of doom from mankind, either by showing that it does not exist
or that it does exist and must be removed, I would be pleased." "I see. Dr. Denison, to discuss another point at the moment, my predecessor, the retiring Commissioner, Mr. Montez, tells me
that the growing edge of science is here on the Moon. He seems to think a disproportionate quantity of the brains and initiative of mankind is here." "He may be right," said Denison. "I
don't know." "He may be right," agreed Gottstein, thoughtfully, "If so, doesn't it strike you that this may be inconvenient for your purpose. Whatever you do, men may say and think it was
accomplished through the Lunar scientific structure. You personally might gain little in the way of recognition, however valuable the results you present. . . . Which, of course,
would be unjust." "I am tired of the rat-race of credit, Commissioner Gottstein. I want some interest in life, more interest than I can find as vice-president in charge of Ultra-sonic
Depilatories. I'll find it in a return to science. If I accomplish something in my own eyes, I will be satisfied." "Let us say that that would be insufficient for me. What credit you
earn, you should receive; and it should be quite possible for me, as Commissioner, to present the facts to the Terrestrial community in such a way a$ to preserve for you what is yours.
Surely you are human enough to want what is your own." "You are kind. And in return?" "You are cynical. But justly so. In return I want your help. The retiring Commissioner,
Mr. Montez, is not certain as to the lines of scientific research being undertaken on the Moon. Communications between the peoples of Earth and Moon are not perfect, and coordination of
the
efforts
on
both
worlds
is
clearly
for
the
benefit
of
all.
It
is
understandable
that
there's
distrust,
I
suppose,
but
if
you
can
do
anything
to
break
down
that
distrust,
it
will
be
as
valuable
to
us
as
your
scientific
findings
might
be."
"Surely,
Commissioner,
you
can't
feel
that
I'm
the
ideal
man
to
bear
witness
to
the
Lunarites
as
to
how
fair-meaning
and
well-disposed
the
Earth's
scientific
establishment
is."
"You
mustn't
confuse
one
vengeful
scientist
with
the
men
of
the
Earth
as
a
whole,
Dr.
Denison.
Let's
put
it
this
way.
I
would
appreciate
being
kept
aware
of
your
scientific
findings
so
that
I
could
help
you
retain
your
fair
share
of
credit;
and
in
order
to
understand
your
findings
properly-I
am
not
a
professional
scientist
myself,
remember
-it
would
be
helpful
if
you
were
to
explain
them
in
the
light
of
the
present
state
of
science
on
the
Moon.
Is
it
agreed?"
Denison
said,
"You
ask
a
hard
thing.
Preliminary
results,
prematurely
disclosed,
whether
through
carelessness
or
over-enthusiasm,
can
do
tremendous
harm
to
a
reputation.
I
would
hate
to
talk
about
anything
to
anyone
until
I
was
sure
of
my
ground.
My
earlier
experience
with
the
committee
on
which
you
served
would
certainly
encourage
me
to
be
cautious."
"I
quite
understand,"
said
Gottstein,
heartily.
"I
would
leave
it
to
you
to
decide
when
I
might
usefully
be
informed.
.
.
.
But
I
have
kept
you
late
and
you
probably
want
to
sleep."
Which
was
a
dismissal.
Denison
left,
and
Gottstein
looked
after
him
thoughtfully.
7
Denison
opened
the
door
by
hand.
There
was
a
contact
that
would
have
opened
it
automatically,
but
in
the
blur
of
waking,
he
could
not
find
it.
The
dark-haired
man,
with
a
face
that
was
somehow
scowling
in
repose,
said,
"I'm
sorry...
.
Am
I
early?"
Denison
repeated
the
last
word
to
give
him
time
to
absorb
matters.
"Early?
...
No.
I...
I'm
late,
I
think."
"I
called.
We
made
an
appointment-"
And
now
Denison
had
it.
"Yes.
You're
Dr.
Neville."
"That's
right.
May
I
come
in?"
He
stepped
in
as
he
asked.
Denison's
room
was
small,
and
held
a
rumpled
bed
that
took
up
most
of
the
available
space.
The
ventilator
was
sighing
softly.
Neville
said
with
meaningless
courtesy,
"Slept
well,
I
hope?"
Denison
looked
down
at
his
pajamas
and
passed
his
hand
over
his
rumpled
hair.
"No,"
he
said
abruptly.
"I
had
an
abominable
night.
May
I
be
excused
long
enough
to
make
myself
more
presentable?"
"Of
course.
Would
you
like
to
have
me
prepare
breakfast
meanwhile?
You
may
be
unacquainted
with
the
equipment."
"It
would
be
a
favor,"
said
Denison.
He
emerged
some
twenty
minutes
later,
washed
and
shaved,
wearing
trousers
and
an
undershirt.
He
said,
"I
trust
I
didn't
break
the
shower.
It
went
off
and
I
couldn't
turn
it
on
again."
"The
water's
rationed.
You
only
get
so
much.
This
is
the
Moon,
Doctor.
I've
taken
the
liberty
of
preparing
scrambled
eggs
and
hot
soup
for
the
two
of
us."
"Scrambled-"
"We
call
it
that.
Earthmen
wouldn't,
I
suppose."
Denison
said,
"Oh!"
He
sat
down
with
something
less
than
enthusiasm
and
tasted
the
pasty
yellow
mixture
that
clearly
was
what
the
other
meant
by
scrambled
eggs.
He
tried
not
to
make
a
face
at
the
first
taste
and
then
manfully
swallowed
it
and
dug
in
for
a
second
forkful.
"You'll
get
used
to
it
with
time,"
said
Neville,
"and
it's
highly
nourishing.
I
might
warn
you
that
the
high-protein
content
and
the
low
gravity
will
cut
your
need
for
food."
"Just
as
well,"
said
Denison,
clearing
his
throat.
Neville
said,
"Selene
tells
me
that
you
intend
to
stay
on
the
Moon."
Denison
said,
"That
was
my
intention."
He
rubbed
his
eyes.
"I've
had
a
terrible
night,
though.
It
tests
my
resolution."
"How
many
times
did
you
fall
out
of
bed?"
"Twice.
...
I
take
it
that
the
situation
is
a
common
one."
"For
men
of
Earth,
an
invariable
one.
Awake,
you
can
make
yourself
walk
with
due
regard
for
the
Moon's
gravity.
Asleep,
you
toss
as
you
would
on
Earth.
But
at
least
falling
is
not
painful
at
low
gravity."
"The
second
time,
I
slept
on
the
floor
awhile
before
waking.
Didn't
remember
falling.
What
the
hell
do
you
do
about
it?"
"You
mustn't
neglect
your
periodic
checks
on
heartbeat,
blood
pressure,
and
so
on,
just
to
make
sure
the
gravity
change
isn't
introducing
too
much
of
a
strain."
I've
been
amply
warned
of
that,"
said
Denison
with
distaste.
"la
fact,
I
have
fixed
appointments
for
the
next
month.
And
pills."
"Well,"
said
Neville,
as
if
dismissing
a
triviality,
"within
a
week
you'll
probably
have
no
trouble
at
all.
...
And
you'll
need
proper
clothing.
Those
trousers
will
never
do
and
that
flimsy
upper
garment
serves
no
purpose."
"I
presume
there's
some
place
I
can
buy
clothes."
"Of
course.
If
you
can
get
her
when
she's
off
duty,
Selene
will
be
glad
to
help,
I'm
sure.
She
assures
me
you're
a
decent
sort,
Doctor."
"I'm
delighted
she
thinks
so."
Denison,
having
swallowed
a
spoonful
of
the
soup,
looked
at
it
as
though
he
were
wondering
what
to
do
with
the
rest.
Grimly,
he
continued
the
task
of
downing
it.
"She
judged
you
to
be
a
physicist,
but
of
course
she's
wrong."
"I
was
trained
as
a
radiochemist."
"You
haven't
worked
at
that
either
for
a
long
time,
Doctor.
We
may
be
out
of
it
up
here,
but
we're
not
that
far
out
of
it.
You're
one
of
Hallam's
victims."
"Are
there
so
many
you
speak
of
them
as
a
group?"
"Why
not?
The
whole
Moon
is
one
of
Hallam's
victims."
"The
Moon?"
"In
a
manner
of
speaking."
"I
don't
understand."
"We
have
no
Electron
Pump
Stations
on
the
Moon.
None
have
been
established
because
there
has
been
no
cooperation
from
the
para-Universe.
No
samples
of
tungsten
have
been
accepted."
"Surely,
Dr.
Neville,
you
don't
intend
to
imply
that
this
is
Hallam's
doing."
"In
a
negative
way,
yes.
Why
must
it
be
only
the
para-Universe
which
can
initiate
a
Pump
Station.
Why
not
ourselves?"
"As
far
as
I
know,
we
lack
the
knowledge
to
take
the
initiative."
"And
we
will
continue
to
lack
the
knowledge
if
research
into
the
matter
is
forbidden."
"Is
it
forbidden?"
Denison
asked,
with
a
faint
note
of
surprise.
"In
effect.
If
none
of
the
work
necessary
to
expand
knowledge
in
that
direction
finds
adequate
priorities
at
the
proton
synchrotron
or
at
any
of
the
other
large
equipment
-all
controlled
by
Earth
and
all
under
the
influence
of
Hallam-then
the
research
is
effectively
forbidden."
Denison
rubbed
his
eyes.
"I
suspect
I
will
have
to
sleep
again
before
long.
...
I
beg
your
pardon.
I
did
not
mean
to
imply
you
were
boring
me.
But
tell
me,
is
the
Electron
Pump
so
important
to
the
Moon?
Surely
the
Solar
batteries
are
effective
and
sufficient."
"They
tie
us
to
the
Sun,
Doctor.
They
tie
us
to
the
surface."
"Well-
But
why
does
Hallam
take
this
adverse
interest
in
the
matter,
do
you
suppose,
Dr.
Neville?"
"You
know
better
than
I,
if
you
know
him
personally,
as
I
do
not.
He
prefers
not
to
make
it
clear
to
the
public
generally
that
the
entire
Electron
Pump
establishment
is
the
product
of
the
para-men,
with
ourselves
merely
servants
of
the
masters.
And
if,
on
the
Moon,
we
advance
to
the
point
where
we
ourselves
know
what
we
are
doing,
then
the
birth
of
the
true
Electron
Pump
technology
will
date
from
our
moment,
not
from
his."
Denison
said,
"Why
do
you
tell
me
all
this?"
"To
avoid
wasting
my
time.
Ordinarily,
we
welcome
physicists
from
Earth.
We
feel
cut
off
here
on
the
Moon,
victims
of
deliberate
Terrestrial
policy
against
us,
and
a
physicist-visitor
can
be
helpful,
even
if
only
to
give
us
a
feeling
of
lesser
isolation.
A
physicist-immigrant
is
even
more
helpful
and
we
like
to
explain
the
situation
to
him
and
encourage
him
to
work
with
us.
I
am
sorry
that
you
are
not,
after
all,
a
physicist."
Denison
said,
impatiently,
"But
I
never
said
I
was."
"And
yet
you
asked
to
see
the
synchrotron.
Why?"
"Is
that
really
what's
bothering
you?
My
dear
sir,
let
me
try
to
explain.
My
scientific
career
was
ruined
half
a
lifetime
ago.
I,
have
decided
to
see
some
sort
of
rehabilitation,
some
sort
of
renewed
meaning,
to
my
life
as
far
away
from
Hallam
as
I
could
get-which
means
here
on
the
Moon.
I
was
trained
as
a
radiochemist,
but
that
has
not
permanently
paralyzed
me
as
far
as
any
other
field
of
endeavor
is
concerned.
Para-physics
is
the
great
field
of
today
and
I
have
done
my
best
to
self-educate
myself
there,
feeling
that
this
will
offer
me
my
best
hope
for
rehabilitation."
Neville
nodded.
"I
see,"
he
said
with
clear
dubiousness.
"By
the
way,
since
you
mentioned
the
Electron
Pump-
Have
you
heard
anything
about
the
theories
of
Peter
Lamont?"
Neville
eyed
the
other
narrowly.
"No.
I
don't
think
I
know
the
man."
"Yes,
he
is
not
yet
famous.
And
probably
never
will
be;
chiefly
for
the
same
reason
I'll
never
be.
He
crossed
Hal-lam,
.
.
.
His
name
came
up
recently
and
I've
been
giving
him
some
thought
It
was
one
way
of
occupying
the
sleepless
portion
of
last
night."
And
he
yawned.
Neville
said,
impatiently,
"Yes,
Doctor?
What
of
this
man?
What
is
his
name?"
"Peter
Lamont.
He
has
some
interesting
thoughts
on
para-theory.
He
believes
that
with
continued
use
of
the
Pump,
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
will
grow
basically
more
intense
in
the
space
of
the
Solar
system
and
that
the
Sun
will
slowly
heat
up
and,
at
some
crucial
point,
undergo
a
phase-change
that
will
produce
an
explosion."
"Nonsense!
Do
you
know
the
amount
of
change
produced,
on
a
cosmic
scale,
of
any
use
of
the
Pump
on
a
human
scale?
Even
granted
that
you
are
only
self-educated
in
physics,
you
ought
have
no
difficulty
in
seeing
that
the
Pump
can't
possibly
make
any
appreciable
change
in
general
Universal
conditions
during
the
lifetime
of
the
Solar
system."
"Do
you
think
so?"
"Of
course.
Don't
you?"
said
Neville.
"I'm
not
sure.
Lament's
grinding
a
personal
axe.
I've
met
him
briefly
and
he
impressed
me
as
an
intense
and
very
emotional
fellow.
Considering
what
Hallam
has
done
to
him,
he
is
probably
driven
by
overwhelming
anger."
Neville
frowned.
He
said,
"Are
you
sure
he
is
on
the
outs
with
Hallam?"
"I'm
an
expert
on
the
subject"
"It
doesn't
occur
to
you
that
the
initiation
of
that
kind
of
doubt-that
the
Pump
is
dangerous-might
be
used
as
but
another
device
to
keep
the
Moon
from
developing
Stations
of
its
own?"
"At
the
cost
of
creating
universal
alarm
and
despondency?
Of
course
not.
That
would
be
cracking
walnuts
with
nuclear
explosions.
No,
I'm
sure
Lament
is
sincere.
In
fact,
in
my
own
bumbling
way,
I
had
similar
notions
once."
"Because
you,
too,
are
driven
by
hate
for
Hallam."
"I'm
not
Lamont.
I
imagine
I
don't
react
the
same
way
he
does.
In
fact,
I
had
some
dim
hope
I
would
be
able
to
investigate
the
matter
on
the
Moon,
without
Hallam's
interference
and
without
Lament's
emotionalism."
"Here
on
the
Moon?"
"Here
on
the
Moon.
I
thought
perhaps
I
might
get
the
use
of
the
synchrotron."
"And
that
was
your
interest
in
it?"
Denison
nodded.
Neville
said,
"You
really
think
you
will
get
the
use
of
the
synchrotron?
Do
you
know
how
far
back
the
requisitions
have
piled
up?"
"I
thought
perhaps
I
might
get
the
cooperation
of
some
of
the
Lunar
scientists."
Neville
laughed
and
shook
his
head.
"We
have
almost
as
little
chance
as
you.
.
.
.
However,
I'll
tell
you
what
we
can
do.
We
have
established
laboratories
of
our
own.
We
can
give
you
space;
we
might
even
have
some
minor
instrumentation
for
you.
How
useful
our
facilities
would
be
to
you,
I
can't
say,
but
you
might
be
able
to
do
something."
"Do
you
suppose
I
would
have
any
means
there
of
making
observations
useful
to
para-theory?"
"It
would
depend
partly
on
your
ingenuity,
I
suppose.
Do
you
expect
to
prove
the
theories
of
this
man,
Lamont?"
"Or
disprove
them.
Perhaps."
"You'll
disprove
them,
if
anything
at
all.
I
have
no
fears
about
that."
Denison
said,
"It's
quite
clear,
isn't
it,
that
I'm
not
a
physicist
by
training?
Why
do
you
so
readily
offer
me
working-space?"
"Because
you're
from
Earth.
I
told
you
that
we
value
that,
and
perhaps
your
self-education
as
a
physicist
will
be
of
additional
value.
Selene
vouches
for
you,
something
I
attach
more
importance
to
than
I
should,
perhaps.
And
we
are
fellow-sufferers
at
the
hands
of
Hallam.
If
you
wish
to
rehabilitate
yourself,
we
will
help
you."
"But
pardon
me
if
I
am
cynical.
What
do
you
expect
to
get
out
of
it?"
"Your
help.
There
is
a
certain
amount
of
misunderstanding
between
the
scientists
of
the
Earth
and
the
Moon.
You
are
a
man
of
Earth
who
has
come
voluntarily
to
the
Moon
and
you
could
act
as
a
bridge
between
us
to
the
benefit
of
both.
You
have
already
had
contact
with
the
new
Commissioner
and
it
may
be
possible
that,
as
you
rehabilitate
yourself,
you
will
rehabilitate
us
as
well."
"You
mean
that
if
what
I
do
weakens
Hallam's
influence,
that
will
benefit
Lunar
science
as
well."
"Whatever
you
do
is
sure
to
be
useful.
.
.
.
But
perhaps
I
ought
to
leave
you
to
catch
up
with
your
sleep.
Call
on
me
during
the
next
couple
of
days
and
I
will
see
about
placing
you
in
a
laboratory.
And"-he
looked
about-
"getting
you
somewhat
more
comfortable
quarters
as
well."
They
shook
hands
and
Neville
left.
8
Gottstein
said,
"I
suppose
that,
however
annoying
this
position
of
yours
may
have
been,
you
are
getting
ready
to
leave
it
today
with
a
small
pang."
Montez
shrugged
eloquently.
"A
very
large
pang,
when
I
think
of
the
return
to
full
gravity.
The
difficulty
of
breathing-the
aching
feet-the
perspiration.
I'll
be
a
bath
of
perspiration
constantly."
"It
will
be
my
turn
someday,"
"Take
my
advice.
Never
stay
here
longer
than
two
months
at
a
time.
I
don't
care
what
the
doctors
tell
you
or
what
kind
of
isometric
exercises
they
put
you
through-
get
back
to
Earth
every
sixty
days
and
stay
at
least
a
week.
You've
got
to
keep
the
feel
of
it."
"I'll
bear
that
in
mind.
..
.
Oh,
I've
been
in
touch
with
my
friend."
"Which
friend
is
that?"
"The
man
who
was
on
the
vessel
with
me
when
I
came
in.
I
thought
I
remembered
him
and
I
did.
A
man
named
Denison;
a
radiochemist.
What
I
remembered
of
him
was
accurate
enough."
"Ah?"
"I
remembered
a
certain
interesting
irrationality
of
his,
and
tried
to
probe
it.
He
resisted
in
quite
a
shrewd
fashion.
He
sounded
rational;
so
rational,
in
fact,
that
I
grew
suspicious.
There's
a
kind
of
attractive
rationality
developed
by
certain
types
of
crackpots;
a
kind
of
defense
mechanism."
"Oh,
Lord,"
said
Montez,
clearly
harassed.
"I'm
not
sure
I
follow
you.
If
you
don't
mind,
I'm
going
to
sit
down
for
a
moment.
Between
trying
to
determine
whether
everything
is
properly
packed
and
thinking
about
Earth's
gravity,
I'm
out
of
breath....
What
kind
of
irrationality?"
"He
tried
to
tell
us
once
that
there
was
danger
in
the
use
of
the
Electron
Pumps.
He
thought
it
would
blow
up
the
Universe."
"Indeed?
And
will
it?"
"I
hope
not.
At
the
time
it
was
dismissed
rather
brusquely.
When
scientists
work
on
a
subject
at
the
limit
of
understanding,
they
grow
edgy,
you
know.
I
knew
a
psychiatrist
once
who
called
it
the
'Who
knows?'
phenomenon.
If
nothing
you
do
will
give
you
the
knowledge
you
need,
you
end
by
saying,
'Who
knows
what
will
happen?'
and
imagination
tells
you."
"Yes,
but
if
physicists
go
around
saying
such
things,
even
a
few
of
them-"
"But
they
don't.
Not
officially.
There's
such
a
thing
as
scientific
responsibility
and
the
journals
are
careful
not
to
print
nonsense.
...
Or
what
they
consider
nonsense.
Actually,
you
know,
the
subject's
come
up
again.
A
physicist
named
Lament
spoke
to
Senator
Hurt,
to
that
self-appointed
environmental
messiah,
Chen,
and
to
a
few
others.
He
also
insists
on
the
possibility
of
cosmic
explosion.
No
one
believes
him
but
the
story
spreads
in
a
thin
sort
of
way
and
gets
better
with
the
retelling."
"And
this
man
here
on
the
Moon
believes
it."
Gottstein
smiled
broadly.
"I
suspect
he
does.
Hell,
in
the
middle
of
the
night,
when
I
have
trouble
sleeping-I
keep
falling
out
of
bed,
by
the
way-I
believe
it
myself.
He
probably
hopes
to
test
the
theory
experimentally,
here."
"Well?"
"Well,
let
him.
I
hinted
we
would
help
him."
Montez
shook
his
head.
"That's"
risky.
I
don't
like
the
official
encouragement
of
crackpot
notions."
"You
know,
it's
just
barely
possible
they
may
not
be
entirely
crackpot,
but
that's
not
the
point.
The
point
is
that
if
we
can
get
him
established
here
on
the
Moon,
we
may
find
out,
through
him,
what's
going
on
here.
He's
anxious
for
rehabilitation
and
I
hinted
that
rehabilitation
would
come
through
us
if
he
cooperated.
.
.
.
I'll
see
to
it
that
you
are
discreetly
kept
posted.
As
between
friends,
you
know."
"Thank
you,"
said
Montez.
"And
good-by."
9
Neville
chafed.
"No.
I
don't
like
him."
"Why
not?
Because
he's
an
Earthie?"
Selene
brushed
a
bit
of
fluff
from
her
right
breast,
then
caught
it
and
looked
at
it
critically.
"That's
not
from
my
blouse.
I
tell
you
the
air-recirculation
is
abominable."
"This
Denison
is
worthless.
He
is
not
a
para-physicist.
He's
a
self-educated
man
in
the
field,
he
says,
and
proves
it
by
coming
here
with
ready-made
damn-fool
notions."
"Like
what?"
"He
thinks
that
the
Electron
Pump
is
going
to
explode
the
Universe."
"Did
he
say
that?"
"I
know
he
thinks
that.
.
.
.
Oh,
I
know
the
arguments.
I've
heard
them
often
enough.
But
it's
not
so,
that's
all."
"Maybe,"
said
Selene,
raising
her
eyebrows,
"you
just
don't
want
it
to
be
so."
"Don't
you
start,"
said
Neville.
There
was
a
short
pause.
Selene
said,
"Well,
what
will
you
do
with
him?"
"I'll
give
him
a
place
to
work.
He
may
be
worthless
as
a
scientist,
but
he'll
have
his
uses
just
the
same.
He'll
be
conspicuous
enough;
the
Commissioner
has
been
talking
to
him
already."
"I
know."
"Well,
he
has
a
romantic
history
as
someone
with
a
wrecked
career
trying
to
rehabilitate
himself."
"Really?"
"Really.
I'm
sure
you'll
love
it.
If
you
ask
him
about
it,
he'll
tell
you.
And
that's
good.
If
we
have
a
romantic
Earthman
working
on
the
Moon
on
a
crackpot
project,
he'll
make
a
perfect
object
to
preoccupy
the
Commissioner.
He'll
be
misdirection;
window-dressing.
And
it
may
even
be
that
through
him,
who
knows,
we
might
just
possibly
get
a
better
idea
of
what
goes
on
there
on
Earth.
..
.
You'd
better
continue
to
be
friendly
with
him,
Selene."
10
Selene
laughed,
and
the
sound
was
metallic
in
Denison's
earpiece.
Her
figure
was
lost
in
the
spacesuit
she
wore.
She
said,
"Now
come,
Ben,
there's
no
reason
to
be
afraid.
You're
an
old
hand
by
now-you've
been
here
a
month."
'Twenty-eight
days,"
mumbled
Denison.
He
felt
smothered
in
his
own
suit.
"A
month,"
insisted
Selene.
"It
was
well
past
half-Earth
when
you
came;
it
is
well
past
half-Earth
now."
She
pointed
to
the
brilliant
curve
of
the
Earth
in
the
southern
sky.
"Well,
but
wait.
I'm
not
as
brave
out
here
as
I
am
underground.
What
if
I
fall?"
"What
if
you
do?
The
gravity
is
weak
by
your
standards,
the
slope
is
gentle,
your
suit
is
strong.
If
you
fall,
just
let
yourself
slide
and
roll.
It's
almost
as
much
fun
that
way,
anyhow."
Denison
looked
about
doubtfully.
The
Moon
lay
beautiful
in
the
cold
light
of
the
Earth.
It
was
black
and
white;
a
mild
and
delicate
white
as
compared
with
the
Sunlit
views
he
had
seen
when
he
had
taken
a
trip
a
week
before
to
inspect
the
Solar
batteries
that
stretched
from
horizon
to
horizon
along
the
floor
of
Mare
Imbrium.
And
the
black
was
somehow
softer,
too,
through
lack
of
the
blazing
contrast
of
true
day.
The
stars
were
supernally
bright
and
the
Earth-the
Earth-was
infinitely
inviting
with
its
swirls
of
white
on
blue,
and
its
peeping
glimpse
of
tan.
"Well,"
he
said,
"do
you
mind
if
I
hang
on
to
you?"
"Of
course
not.
And
we
won't
go
all
the
way
up.
It
will
be
the
beginner's
slope
for
you.
Just
try
to
keep
in
time
with
me.
I'll
move
slowly."
Her
steps
were
long,
slow,
and
swinging,
and
he
tried
to
keep
in
synchronization.
The
up-sloping
ground
beneath
them
was
dusty
and,
with
each
step
he
kicked
up
a
fine
powder
that
settled
quickly
in
the
airlessness.
He
matched
her
stride
for
stride,
but
with
an
effort
"Good,"
said
Selene,
her
arm
locked
in
his,
steadying
him.
"You're
very
good
for
an
Earthie-no,
I
ought
to
say
Immie-"
"Thank
you."
"That's
not
much
better,
I
suppose.
Immie
for
Immigrant
is
as
insulting
as
Earthie
for
Earthman.
Shall
I
just
say
you're
simply
very
good
for
a
man
your
age."
"No!
That's
much
worse."
Denison
was
gasping
a
little
and
he
could
feel
his
forehead
moistening.
Selene
said,
"Each
time
you
reach
the
point
where
you're
about
to
put
your
foot
down,
give
a
little
push
with
your
other
foot.
That
will
lengthen
your
stride
and
make
it
all
the
easier.
No,
no-watch
me."
Denison
paused
thankfully
and
watched
Selene,
somehow
slim
and
graceful
despite
the
grotesquerie
of
the
suit
once
she
moved,
take
off
into
low,
loping
leaps.
She
returned
and
knelt
at
his
feet.
"Now
you
take
a
slow
step,
Ben,
and
I'll
hit
your
foot
when
I
want
it
to
shove."
They
tried
several
times,
and
Denison
said,
"That's
worse
than
running
on
Earth.
I
better
rest.".
"All
right.
It's
just
that
your
muscles
aren't
used
to
the
proper
coordination.
It's
yourself
you're
fighting,
you
know,
not
gravity.
.
.
.
Well,
sit
down
and
catch
your
breath.
I
won't
take
you
up
much
farther."
Denison
said,
"Will
I
do
any
damage
to
the
pack
if
I
lie
down
on
my
back?"
"No; of course not, but it's not a good idea. Not on the bare ground. It's only at 120 degrees absolute; 150 degrees below zero, if you prefer, and the smaller the area of contact the better.
I'd sit down." "All right." Gingerly, Denison sat down with a grunt. Deliberately, he faced northward, away from the Earth. "Look at those stars!" Selene sat facing him, at right angles'.
He could see her face now and then, dimly through the faceplate, when the Earthlight caught it at the proper angle. She said, "Don't you see the stars on Earth?" "Not like this. Even when
there are no clouds, the air on Earth absorbs some of the light. Temperature differences in the atmosphere make them twinkle, and city lights, even distant city lights, wash them out"
"Sounds
disgusting."
"Do
you
like
it
out
here,
Selene?
On
the
surface?"
"I'm
not
crazy
about
it
really,
but
I
don't
mind
it
too
much,
now
and
then.
It's
part
of
my
job
to
bring
tourists
out
here,
of
course."
"And
now
you
have
to
do
it
for
me."
"Can't
I
convince
you
it's
not
the
same
thing
at
all,
Ben?
We've
got
a
set
route
for
the
tourists.
It's
very
tame,
very
uninteresting.
You
don't
think
we'd
take
them
out
here
to
the
slide,
do
you?
This
is
for
Lunarites-and
Immies.
Mostly
Immies,
actually."
"It
can't
be
very
popular.
There's
no
one
here
but
ourselves."
"Oh,
well.
There
are
particular
days
for
this
sort
of
thing.
You
should
see
this
place
on
race
days.
You
wouldn't
like
it
then,
though."
"I'm
not
sure
I
like
it
now.
Is
gliding
a
sport
for
Immies,
particularly?"
"Rather.
Lunarites
don't
like
the
surface
generally."
"How
about
Dr.
Neville?"
"You
mean,
how
he
feels
about
the
surface?"
"Yes."
"Frankly,
I
don't
think
he's
ever
been
up
here.
He's
a
real
city
boy.
Why
do
you
ask?"
"Well,
when
I
asked
permission
to
go
along
on
the
routine
servicing
of
the
Solar
batteries,
he
was
perfectly
willing
to
have
me
go,
but
he
wouldn't
go
himself.
I
rather
asked
him
to,
I
think,
so
I
could
have
someone
answer
my
questions,
if
there
were
any,
and
his
refusal
was
rather
strong."
"I
hope
there
was
someone
else
to
answer
your
questions."
"Oh,
yes.
He
was
an
Immie,
too,
come
to
think
of
it.
Maybe
that
explains
Dr.
Neville's
attitude
toward
the
Electron
Pump."
"What
do
you
mean?"
"Well-"
Denison
leaned
back
and
kicked
his
legs
up
alternately,
watching
them
rise
and
fall
slowly
with
a
certain
lazy
pleasure.
"Hey,
that's
not
bad.
Look,
Selene-
What
I
mean
is
that
Neville
is
so
intent
on
developing
a
Pump
Station
on
the
Moon
when
the
Solar
batteries
are
so
adequate
for
the
job.
We
couldn't
use
Solar
batteries
on
the
Earth,
where
the
Sun
is
never
as
unfailing,
as
prolonged,
as
bright,
as
radiant
in
all
wave
lengths.
There's
not
a
single
planetary
body
in
the
Solar
system,
no
body
of
any
size,
that
is
more
suitable
for
the
use
of
the
batteries
than
the
Moon
is.
Even
Mercury
is
too
hot.-But
the
use
does
tie
you
to
the
surface,
and
if
you
don't
like
the
surface-"
Selene
rose
to
her
feet
suddenly,
and
said,
"All
right,
Ben,
you've
rested
enough.
Up!
Up!"
He
struggled
to
his
feet
and
said,
"A
Pump
Station,
however,
would
mean
that
no
Lunarite
would
ever
have
to
come
out
on
the
surface,
if
he
didn't
want
to."
"Uphill
we
go,
Ben.
Well
go
to
that
ridge
up
ahead.
See
it,
where
the
Earthlight
cuts
off
in
a
horizontal
line?"
They
made
their
way
up
the
final
stretch
silently.
Denison
was
aware
of
the
smoother
area
to
their
side;
a
wide
swathe
of
slope
from
which
most
of
the
dust
had
been
brushed.
"That's
too
smooth
for
a
beginner
to
work
up,"
Selene
said,
answering
his
thoughts.
"Don't
get
too
ambitious
or
you'll
want
me
to
teach
you
the
kangaroo-hop
next."
She
made
a
kangaroo-hop
as
she
spoke,
turned
about
face
almost
before
landing,
and
said,
"Right
here.
Sit
down
and
I'll
adjust-"
Denison
did,
facing
downhill.
He
looked
down
the
slope
uncertainly.
"Can
you
really
glide
on
it?"
"Of
course.
The
gravity
is
weaker
on
the
Moon
than
on
the
Earth,
so
you
press
against
the
ground
much
less
strongly,
and
that
means
there
is
much
less
friction.
Everything
is
more
slippery
on
the
Moon
than
on
the
Earth.
That's
why
the
floors
in
our
corridors
and
apartments
seemed
unfinished
to
you.
Would
you
like
to
hear
me
give
my
little
lecture
on
the
subject?
The
one
I
give
the
tourists?"
"No,
Selene."
"Besides,
we're
going
to
use
gliders,
of
course."
She
had
a
small
cartridge
in
her
hand.
Clamps
and
a
pair
of
thin
tubes
were
attached
to
it.
"What
is
that?"
asked
Ben.
"Just
a
small
liquid-gas
reservoir.
It
will
emit
a
jet
of
vapor
just
under
your
boots.
The
thin
gas
layer
between
boots
and
ground
will
reduce
friction
to
virtually
zero.
You'll
move
as
though
you
were
in
clear
space."
Denison
said
uneasily.
"I
disapprove.
Surely,
it's
wasteful
to
use
gas
in
this
fashion
on
the
Moon."
"Oh,
now.
What
gas
do
you
think
we
use
in
these
gliders?
Carbon
dioxide?
Oxygen?
This
is
waste
gas
to
begin
with.
It's
argon.
It
comes
out
of
the
Moon's
soil
in
ton-lots,
formed
by
the
billions
of
years
of
breakdown
of
po-tassium-40.
.
.
.
That's
part
of
my
lecture,
too,
Ben.
.
.
.
The
argon
has
only
a
few
specialized
uses
on
the
Moon.
We
could
use
it
for
gliding
for
a
million
years
without
exhausting
the
supply.
...
All
right.
Your
gliders
are
on,
Now
wait
till
I
put
mine
on."
"How
do
they
work?"
"It's
quite
automatic.
You
just
start
sliding
and
that
will
trip
the
contact
and
start
the
vapor.
You've
only
got
a
few
minutes
supply;
but
that's
all
you'll
need."
She
stood
up
and
helped
him
to
his
feet.
"Face
downhill.
...
Come
on,
Ben,
this
is
a
gentle
slope.
Look
at
it.
It
looks
perfectly
level."
"No,
it
doesn't,"
said
Denison,
sulkily.
"It
looks
like
a
cliff
to
me."
"Nonsense.
Now
listen
to
me
and
remember
what
I
told
you.
Keep
your
feet
about
six
inches
apart
and
one
just
a
few
inches
ahead
of
the
other.
It
doesn't
matter
which
one
is
ahead.
Keep
your
knees
bent.
Don't
lean
into
the
wind
because
there
isn't
any.
Don't
try
to
look
up
or
back,
but
you
can
look
from
side
to
side
if
you
have
to.
Most
of
all,
when
you
finally
hit
level,
don't
try
to
stop
too
soon;
you'll
be
going
faster
than
you
think.
Just
let
the
glider
expire
and
then
friction
will
bring
you
to
a
slow
halt."
"I'll
never
remember
all
that."
"Yes,
you
will.
And
I'll
be
right
at
your
side
to
help.
And
if
you
do
fall
and
I
don't
catch
you,
don't
try
to
do
anything.
Just
relax
and
let
yourself
tumble
or
slide.
There
are
no
boulders
anywhere
that
you
can
collide
with."
Denison
swallowed
and
looked
ahead.
The
southward
slide
was
gleaming
in
Earthlight.
Minute
unevenness
caught
more
than
their
share
of
light,
leaving
tiny
uphill
patches
in
darkness
so
that
there
was
a
vague
mottling
of
the
surface.
The
bulging
half-circle
of
Earth
rode
the
black
sky
almost
directly
ahead.
"Ready?"
said
Selene.
Her
gauntleted
hand
was
between
his
shoulders.
"Ready,"
said
Denison
faintly.
"Then
off
you
go,"
she
said.
She
pushed
and
Denison
felt
himself
begin
to
move.
He
moved
quite
slowly
at
first.
He
turned
toward
her,
wobbling,
and
she
said,
"Don't
worry.
I'm
right
at
your
side."
He
could
feel
the
ground
beneath
his
feet-and
then
he
couldn't.
The
glider
had
been
activated.
For
a
moment
he
felt
as
though
he
were
standing
still.
There
was
no
push
of
air
against
his
body,
no
feel
of
anything
sliding
past
his
feet.
But
when
he
turned
toward
Selene
again,
he
noticed
that
the
lights
and
shadows
to
one
side
were
moving
backward
at
a
slowly
increasing
speed.
"Keep
your
eyes
on
the
Earth,"
Selene's
voice
said
in
his
ear,
"till
you
build
up
speed.
The
faster
you
go,
the
more
stable
you'll
be.
Keep
your
knees
bent
.
.
.
You're
doing
very
well,
Ben."
"For
an
Immie,"
gasped
Denison.
"How
does
it
feel?"
"Like
flying,"
he
said.
The
pattern
of
light
and
dark
on
either
side
was
moving
backward
in
a
blur.
He
looked
briefly
to
one
side,
then
the
other,
trying
to
convert
the
sensation
of
a
backward
flight
of
the
surroundings
into
one
of
a
forward
flight
of
his
own.
Then,
as
soon
as
he
succeeded,
he
found
he
had
to
look
forward
hastily
at
the
Earth
to
regain
his
sense
of
balance.
"I
suppose
that's
not
a
good
comparison
to
use
to
you.
You
have
no
experience
of
flying
on
the
Moon."
"Now
I
know,
though.
Flying
must
be
like
gliding-I
know
what
that
is."
She
was
keeping
up
with
him
easily.
Denison
was
going
fast
enough
now
so
that
he
got
the
sensation
of
motion
even
when
he
looked
ahead.
The
Moonscape
ahead
was
opening
before
him
and
flowing
past
on
either
side.
He
said,
"How
fast
do
you
get
to
go
in
a
glide?"
"A
good
Moon-race,"
said
Selene,
"has
been
clocked
at
speeds
in
excess
of
a
hundred
miles
an
hour-on
steeper
slopes
than
this
one,
of
course.
You'll
probably
reach
a
top
of
thirty-five."
"It
feels
a
lot
faster
than
that
somehow."
"Well,
it
isn't.
We're
leveling
off
now,
Ben,
and
you
haven't
fallen.
Now
just
hang
on;
the
glider
will
die
off
and
you'll
feel
friction.
Don't
do
anything
to
help
it.
Just
keep
going."
Selene
had
barely
completed
her
remarks
when
Denison
felt
the
beginning
of
pressure
under
his
boots.
There
was
at
once
an
overwhelming
sensation
of
speed
and
he
clenched
his
fists
hard
to
keep
from
throwing
his
arms
up
in
an
almost
reflex
gesture
against
the
collision
that
wasn't
going
to
happen.
He
knew
that
if
he
threw
up
his
arms,
he
would
go
over
backward.
He
narrowed
his
eyes,
held
his
breath
till
he
thought
his
lungs
would
explode,
and
then
Selene
said,
"Perfect,
Ben,
perfect.
I've
never
known
an
Immie
to
go
through
his
first
slide
without
a
fall,
so
if
you
do
fall,
there'll
be
nothing
wrong.
No
disgrace."
"I
don't
intend
to
fall,"
whispered
Denison.
He
caught
a
large,
ragged
breath,
and
opened
his
eyes
wide.
The
Earth
was
as
serene
as
ever,
as
uncaring.
He
was
moving
more
slowly
now-more
slowly-more
slowly-
"Am
I
standing
still
now,
Selene?"
he
asked.
"I'm
not
sure."
"You're
standing
still.
Now
don't
move.
You've
got
to
rest
before
we
make
the
trip
back
to
town.
.
..
Damn
it,
I
left
it
somewhere
around
here
when
we
came
up."
Denison
watched
her
with
disbelief.
She
had
climbed
up
with
him,
had
glided
down
with
him.
Yet
he
was
half-dead
with
weariness
and
tension,
and
she
was
in
the
air
with
long
kangaroo-leaps.
She
seemed
a
hundred
yards
away
when
she
said,
"Here
it
is!"
and
her
voice
was
as
loud
in
his
ears
as
when
she
was
next
to
him.
She
was
back
in
a
moment,
with
a
folded,
paunchy
sheet
of
plastic
under
her
arm.
"Remember,"
she
said,
cheerily,
"when
you
asked
what
it
was
on
our
way
up
and
I
said
we'd
be
using
it
before
we
came
down?"
She
unfolded
it
and
spread
it
on
the
dusty
surface
of
the
Moon,
"A
Lunar
Lounge
is
its
full
name,"
she
said,
"but
we
just
call
it
a
lounge.
We
take
the
adjective
for
granted
here
on
this
world."
She
inserted
a
cartridge
and
tripped
a
lever.
It
began
to
fill.
Somehow
Denison
had
expected
a
hissing
noise,
but
of
course
there
was
no
air
to
carry
sound.
"Before
you
question
our
conservation
policies
again,"
said
Selene,
"this
is
argon
also."
It
blossomed
into
a
mattress
on
six,
stubby
legs,
"It
will
hold
you,"
she
said.
"It
makes
very
little
actual
contact
with
the
ground
and
the
vacuum
all
around
will
conserve
its
heat."
"Don't
tell
me
it's
hot,"
said
Denison,
amazed.
"The
argon
is
heated
as
it
pours
in,
but
only
relatively.
It ends up at 270 degrees absolute, almost warm enough to melt ice, and quite warm enough to keep your insulated suit from losing heat faster than you can manufacture it. Go ahead. Lie down."
Denison
did
so,
with
a
sensation
of
enormous
luxury.
"Great!"
he
said
with
a
long
sigh.
"Mamma
Selene
thinks
of
everything,"
she
said.
She
came
from
behind
him
now,
gliding
around
him,
her
feet
placed
heel
to
heel
as
though
she
were
on
skates,
and
then
let
them
fly
out
from
under
her,
as
she
came
down
gracefully
on
hip
and
elbow
on
the
ground
just
beside
him.
Denison
whistled.
"How
did
you
do
that?"
"Lots
of
practice!
And
don't
you
try
it.
You'll
break
your
elbow.
I
warn
you
though.
If
I
get
too
cold,
I'm
going
to
have
to
crowd
you
on
the
lounge."
"Safe
enough,"
he
said,
"with
both
of
us
in
suits."
"Ah,
there
speaks
my
brave
lecher.
.
.
.
How
do
you
feel?"
"All
right,
I
guess.
What
an
experience!"
"What
an
experience?
You
set
a
record
for
non-falls.
Do
you
mind
if
I
tell
the
folks
back
in
town
about
this?"
"No.
Always
like
to
be
appreciated.
.
.
.
You're
not
going
to
expect
me
to
do
this
again,
are
you?"
"Right
now?
Of
course
not
I
wouldn't
myself.
Well
just
rest
awhile,
make
sure
your
heart
action
is
back
to
normal,
and
then
we'll
go
back.
If
you'll
reach
your
legs
in
my
direction,
I'll
take
your
gliders
off.
Next
time,
I'll
show
you
how
to
handle
the
gliders
yourself."
"I'm
not
sure
that
there
will
be
a
next
time."
"Of
course
there'll
be.
Didn't
you
enjoy
it?"
"A
little.
In
between
terror."
"You'll
have
less
terror
next
time,
and
still
less
the
time
after,
and
eventually
you'll
just
experience
the
enjoyment
and
I'll
make
a
racer
out
of
you."
"No,
you
won't.
I'm
too
old."
"Not
on
the
Moon.
You
just
look
old."
Denison
could
feel
the
ultimate
quiet
of
the
Moon
soaking
into
him
as
he
lay
there.
He
was
facing
the
Earth
this
time.
Its
steady
presence
in
the
sky
had,
more
than
anything
else,
given
him
the
sensation
of
stability
during
his
recent
glide
and
he
felt
grateful
to
it.
He
said,
"Do
you
often
come
out
here,
Selene?
I
mean,
by
yourself,
or
just
one
or
two
others?
You
know,
when
it
isn't
fiesta
time?"
"Practically
never.
Unless
there
are
people
around,
this
is
too
much
for
me.
That
I'm
doing
it
now,
actually,
surprises
me."
"Uh-huh,"
said
Denison,
noncommittally.
"You're
not
surprised?"
"Should
I
be?
My
feeling
is
that
each
person
does
what
he
does
either
because
he
wants
to
or
he
must
and
in
either
case
that's
his
business,
not
mine."
"Thanks,
Ben.
I
mean
it;
it's
good
to
hear.
One
of
the
nice
things
about
you,
Ben,
is
that
for
an
Immie,
you're
willing
to
let
us
be
ourselves.
We're
underground
people,
we
Lunarites,
cave
people,
corridor
people.
And
what's
wrong
with
that?"
"Nothing."
"Not
to
hear
the
Earthies
talk.
And
I'm
a
tourist
guide
and
have
to
listen
to
them.
There
isn't
anything
they
say
that
I
haven't
heard
a
million
times,
but
what
I
hear
most
of
all"-and
she
dropped
into
the
clipped
accents
of
the
typical
Earthie
speaking
Planetary
Standard
"-'But,
dear,
however
can
all
you
people
live
in
caves
all
the
time?
Doesn't
it
give
you
a
terrible
closed-in
feeling?
Don't
you
ever
want
to
see
blue
sky
and
trees
and
ocean
and
feel
wind
and
smell
flowers-'
"Oh,
I
could
go
on
and
on,
Ben.
Then
they
say,
'But
I
suppose
you
don't
know
what
blue
sky
and
sea
and
trees
are
like
so
you
don't
miss
them.'...
As
if
we
don't
receive
Earth-television
and
as
if
we
don't
have
full
access
to
Earth-literature,
both
optical
and
auditory-and
olfactory
sometimes,
too."
Denison
was
amused.
He
said,
"What's
the
official
answer
to
remarks
like
that?"
"Nothing
much.
We
just
say,
'We're
quite
used
to
it,
madam.'
Or
'sir'
if
it's
a
man.
Usually
it's
a
woman.
The
men
are
too
interested
in
studying
our
blouses
and
wondering
when
we
take
them
off,
I
suppose.
You
know
what
I'd
like
to
tell
the
idiots?"
"Please
tell
me.
As
long
as
you
have
to
keep
the
blouse
on,
it
being
inside
the
suit,
at
least
get
that
off
your
chest"
"Funny,
funny
word
play!
...
I'd
like
to
tell
them,
'Look,
madam,
why
the
hell
should
we
be
interested
in
your
damned
world?
We
don't
want
to
be
hanging
on
the
outside
of
any
planet
and
waiting
to
fall
off
or
get
blown
off.
We
don't
want
raw
air
puffing
at
us
and
dirty
water
falling
on
us.
We
don't
want
your
damned
germs
and
your
smelly
grass
and
your
dull
blue
sky
and
your
dull
white
clouds.
We
can
see
Earth
in
our
own
sky
when
we
want
to,
and
we
don't
often
want
to.
The
Moon
is
our
home
and
it's
what
we
make
it;
exactly
what
we
make
it.
We
own
it
and
we
build
our
own
ecology,
and
we
don't
need
you
here
being
sorry
for
us
going
our
own
way.
Go
back
to
your
own
world
and
let
your
gravity
pull
your
breasts
down
to
your
knees.'
That's
what
I'd
say."
Denison
said,
"All
right.
Whenever
you
get
too
close
to
saying
that
to
some
Earthie,
you
come
say
it
to
me
and
you'll
feel
better."
"You
know
what?
Every
once
in
a
while,
some
Immie
suggests
that
we
build
an
Earth-park
on
the
Moon;
some
little
spot
with
Earth-plants
brought
in
as
seeds
or
seedlings;
maybe
some
animals.
A
touch
of
home-that's
the
usual
expression."
"I
take
it
you're
against
that,"
"Of
course,
I'm
against
it.
A
touch
of
whose
home?
The
Moon
is
our
home.
An
Immie
who
wants
a
touch
of
home
had
better
get
back
to
his
home.
Immies
can
be
worse
than
Earthies
sometimes."
'Til
keep
that
in
mind,"
said
Denison.
"Not
you-so
far,"
said
Selene.
There
was
silence
for
a
moment
and
Denison
wondered
if
Selene
were
going
to
suggest
a
return
to
the
caverns.
On
the
one
hand,
it
wouldn't
be
long
before
he
would
feel
a
fairly
strenuous
craving
to
visit
a
rest-room.
On
the
other,
he
had
never
felt
so
relaxed.
He
wondered
how
long
the
oxygen
in
his
pack
would
hold
out
Then
Selene
said,
"Ben,
do
you
mind
if
I
ask
you
a
question?"
"Not
at
all.
If
it's
my
private
life
that
interests
you,
I
am
without
secrets.
I'm
five-foot-nine,
weigh
twenty-eight
pounds
on
the
Moon,
had
one
wife
long
ago,
now
divorced,
one
child,
a
daughter,
grown-up
and
married,
attended
University
of-"
"No,
Ben.
I'm
serious.
Can
I
ask
about
your
work?"
"Of
course
you
can,
Selene.
I
don't
know
how
much
I
can
explain
to
you,
though."
"Well-
You
know
that
Barron
and
L-M
"Yes,
I
know,"
said
Denison,
brusquely.
"We
talk
together.
He
tells
me
things
sometimes.
He
said
you
think
the
Electron
Pump
might
make
the
Universe
explode."
"Our
section
of
the
Universe.
It
might
convert
a
part
of
our
Galactic
arm
into
a
quasar."
"Really?
Do
you
really
think
so?"
Denison
said,
"When
I
came
to
the
Moon,
I
wasn't
sure.
Now
I
am.
I
am
personally
convinced
that
this
will
happen."
"When
do
you
think
it
will
happen?"
"That
I
can't
say
exactly.
Maybe
a
few
years
from
now.
Maybe
a
few
decades."
There
was
a
short
silence
between
them.
Then
Selene
said,
in
a
subdued
voice,
"Barron
doesn't
think
so."
"I
know
he
doesn't.
I'm
not
trying
to
convert
him.
You
don't
beat
refusal
to
believe
in
a
frontal
attack.
That's
Lament's
mistake."
"Who's
Lament?"
"I'm
sorry,
Selene.
I'm
talking
to
myself."
"No,
Ben.
Please
tell
me.
I'm
interested.
Please."
Denison
turned
to
one
side,
facing
her.
"All
right,"
he
said.
"I
have
no
objection
to
telling
you.
Lamont,
a
physicist
back
on
Earth,
tried
in
his
way
to
alert
the
world
to
the
dangers
of
the
Pump.
He
failed.
Earthmen
want
the
Pump;
they
want
the
free
energy;
they
want
it
enough
to
refuse
to
believe
they
can't
have
it."
"But
why
should
they
want
it,
if
it
means
death?"
"All
they
have
to
do
is
refuse
to
believe
it
means
death.
The
easiest
way
to
solve
a
problem
is
to
deny
it
exists.
Your
friend,
Dr.
Neville,
does
the
same
thing.
He
dislikes
the
surface,
so
he
forces
himself
to
believe
that
Solar
batteries
are
no
good-even
though
to
any
impartial
observer
they
would
seem
the
perfect
energy
source
for
the
Moon.
He
wants
the
Pump
so
he
can
stay
underground,
so
he
refuses
to
believe
that
there
can
be
any
danger
from
it."
Selene
said,
"I
don't
think
Barron
would
refuse
to
believe
something
for
which
valid
evidence
existed.
Do
you
really
have
the
evidence?"
"I
think
I
do.
It's
most
amazing
really,
Selene.
The
whole
thing
depends
on
certain
subtle
factors
of
quark-quark
interactions.
Do
you
know
what
that
means?"
"You
don't
have
to
explain.
I've
talked
so
much
to
Barron
about
all
sorts
of
things
that
I
might
be
able
to
follow."
"Well, I thought I would need the Lunar proton synchrotron for the purpose. It's twenty-five miles across, has superconducting magnets, and can dispose of energies of 20,000 Bev and more.
It turns out, though, that you people have something you call a Pionizer, which fits into a moderately sized room and does all the work of the synchrotron. The Moon is to be congratulated
on a most amazing advance." "Thank you," said Selene, complacently. "I mean on behalf of the Moon."
"Well, then, my Pionizer results can show the rate of increase of intensity of strong nuclear interaction; and the increase is what Lament says it is and not what the orthodox
theory would have it be." "And have you shown it to Barron?" "No, I haven't. And if I do, I expect Neville to reject it. He'll say the results are marginal.
He'll say I've made an error. He'll say that I haven't taken all factors into account. He'll say I've used inadequate controls. . . . What he'll really be saying is that
he wants the Electron Pump and won't give it up." "You mean there's no way out." "Of course there is, but not the direct way.
Not Lamont's way." "What's that?" "Lament's solution is to force abandonment of the Pump, but you can't just move backward. You can't push the chicken back into the egg,
wine back into the grape, the boy back into the womb. If you want
the baby to let go of your watch, you don't just try to explain that he ought to do it-you offer him something he would rather have." "And what's that?",
"Ah, that's where I'm not so sure. I do have an idea, a simple idea-perhaps too simple to work-based on the quite obvious fact that the number two is ridiculous and can't exist."
There was a silence that lasted for a minute or so and then Selene, her voice as absorbed as his, said, "Let me guess your meaning." "I don't know that I have any," said Denison.
"Let me guess, anyway. It could make sense to suppose that our own Universe is the only one that can exist or does exist, because it is the only one we live in and directly
experience. Once, however, evidence arises that there is a second Universe as well, the one we call the para-Universe,
then it becomes absolutely ridiculous to suppose that there are two and only two Universes. If a second Universe can exist, then an infinite number can. Between one and
the infinite in cases such as these, there are no sensible numbers. Not only two, but any finite number, is ridiculous and can't exist." Denison said, "That's exactly my
reas-" And silence fell again. Denison heaved himself into a sitting position and looked down on the suit-encased girl. He said, "I think we had better go back to
town." She said, "I was just guessing." He said, "No, you weren't. Whatever it was, it wasn't just guessing."
11
Barron Neville stared at her, quite speechless for a
while. She looked calmly back at him. Her window panorama had been changed again. One of .them now showed the Earth, a little more than half full. Finally, he said,
"Why?" She said, "It was an accident, really, I saw the point and I was too enthusiastic not to speak. I should have told you days ago but I was afraid your reaction
would be exactly what it is." "So he knows. You fool!" She frowned. "What does he know? Only what he would have guessed sooner or later-that I'm not really a tourist
guide-that I'm your Intuitionist. An Intuitionist who knows no mathematics, for heaven's sake. So what if he knows that? What does it matter if I have intuition?
How many times have you told me that my intuition has no value till it is backed by mathematical rigor and experimental observation? How many times have you told
me that the most compelling intuition could be wrong? Well, then, what value will he place on mere Intuitionism?" Neville grew white, but Selene couldn't tell whether
that was out of anger or apprehension. He said, "You're different. Hasn't your intuition always proved right? When you were sure of it?" "Ah, but he doesn't know that,
does he?" "He'll guess it. He'll see Gottstein." "What will he tell Gottstein? He still has1 no idea of what we're really after." "Doesn't he?" "No." She had stood up,
walked away. Now she turned to him and shouted, "No! It's cheap of you to imply that I would betray you and the rest. If you don't accept my integrity then accept my
common sense. There's no point in telling them. What's the use of it to them, or to us, if we're all going to be destroyed?" "Oh, please, Selene!" Neville waved his
hand in disgust "Not that." "No. You listen. He talked to me and described his work. You hide me like a secret weapon. You tell me that I'm more valuable than any
instrument or any ordinary scientist. You play your games of conspiracy, insisting that everyone must continue to think me a tourist guide and nothing more so that
my great talents will always be available to the Lunarites. To you. And what do you accomplish?" "We have you, haven't we? How long do you suppose you would have
remained
free,
if
they-"
"You
keep
saying
things
nice
that
But
who's
been
imprisoned?
Who's
been
stopped?
Where
is
the
"evidence
of
the
great
conspiracy
you
see
all
around
you?
The
Earth-men
keep
you
and
your
team
from
their
large
instruments
much
more
because
you
goad
them
into
it
than
out
of
any
malice
on
their
part.
And
that's
done
us
good,
rather
than
harm,
since
it's
forced
us
to
invent
other
instruments
that
are
more
subtle."
"Based
on
your
theoretical
insight,
Selene."
Selene
smiled.
"I
know.
Ben
was
very
complimentary
about
them."
"You
and
your
Ben."
What
the
hell
do
you
want
with
that
miserable
Earthie?"
"He's
an
Immigrant.
And
what
I
want
is
information.
Do you give me any? You're so damned afraid I'll be caught, you don't dare let me be seen talking to any physicist; only you, and you're my- For that reason only, probably."
"Now, Selene." He tried to manage a soothing tone, but there was far too much impatience to it. "No, I don't care about that really. You've told me I have this one task and
I've tried to concentrate on it and sometimes I think I have it, mathematics or not. I can visualize it; the kind of thing that must be done-and then it slips away. But what's
the use of it, when the Pump will destroy us all anyway. . . . Haven't I told you I distrusted the exchange of field intensities?" Neville said, "I'll ask you again. Are you ready to tell me
that the Pump will destroy us? Never mind might, never mind 'could'; never mind anything but 'will.' " Selene shook her head angrily. "I can't. It's so marginal. I can't say it will.
But isn't a simple 'might' sufficient in such a case?" "Oh, Lord." "Don't turn up your eyes. Don't sneer! You've never tested the matter. I told you how it might be tested."
"You were never this worried about it till you started listening to this Earthie of yours." "He's an Immigrant. Aren't you going to test it?" "No! I told you your suggestions were
impractical.
You're
not
an
experimentalist,
and
what
looks
good
in
your
mind
doesn't
necessarily
work
in
the
real
world
of
instruments,
of
randomness,
and
of
uncertainty."
"The
so-called
real
world
of
your
laboratory."
Her
face
was
flushed
and
angry
and
she
held
her
clenched
fists
at
chin-level.
"You
waste
so
much
time
trying
to
get
a
vacuum
good
enough-There's
a
vacuum
up
there,
up
there
on
the
surface
where
I'm
pointing,
with
temperatures
that,
at
times,
are
halfway
down
toward
absolute
zero.
Why
don't
you
try
experiments
on
the
surface?"
"It
would
have
been
useless."
"How
do
you
know?
You
just
won't
try.
Ben
Denison
tried.
He
took
the
trouble
to
devise
a
system
he
could
use
on
the
surface
and
he
set
it
up
when
he
went
to
inspect
the
Solar
batteries.
He
wanted
you
to
come
and
you
wouldn't.
Do
you
remember?
It
was
a
very
simple
thing,
something
even
I
could
describe
to
you
now
that
it's
been
described
to
me.
He
ran
it
at
day-temperatures
and
again
at
night-temperatures
and
that
was
enough
to
guide
him
to
a
new
line
of
research
with
the
Pionizer."
"How
simple
you
make
it
sound."
"How
simple
it
is.
Once
he
found
out
I
was
an
Intuitionist,
he
talked
to
me
as
you
never
did.
He
explained
his
reasons
for
thinking
that
the
strengthening
of
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
is
indeed
accumulating
catastrophically
in
the
neighborhood
of
Earth.
It
will
only
be
a
few
years
before
the
Sun
explodes
and
sends
the
strengthening,
in
ripples-"
"No,
no,
no,
no"
shouted
Neville.
"I've
seen
his
results
and
I'm
not
impressed."
"You've
seen
them?"
"Yes,
of
course.
Do
you
suppose
I
let
him
work
in
our
laboratories
without
making
sure
I
know
what
he's
doing?
I've
seen
his
results
and
they're
worth
nothing.
He
deals
with
tiny
deviations
that
are
well
within
the
experimental
error.
If
he
wants
to
believe
that
those
deviations
have
significance
and
if
you
want
to
believe
them,
go
ahead.
But
no
amount
of
belief
will
make
them
have
that
significance
if,
in
fact,
they
don't."
"What
do
you
want
to
believe,
Barron?"
"I
want
the
truth."
"But
haven't
you
decided
in
advance
what
the
truth
must
be
by
your
own
gospel?
You
want
the
Pump
Station
of
the
Moon,
don't
you,
so
that
you
need
have
nothing
to
do
with
the
surface;
and
anything
that
might
prevent
that
is
not
the
truth-by
definition."
"I
won't
argue
with
you.
I
want
the
Pump
Station,
and
even
more-I
want
the
other.
One's
no
good
without
the
other.
Are
you
sure
you
haven't-"
"I
haven't."
"Will
you?"
Selene
whirled
on
him
again,
her
feet
tapping
rapidly
on
the
ground
in
such
a
way
as
to
keep
her
bobbing
in
the
air
to
the
tune
of
an
angry
clatter.
"I
won't
tell
him
anything,"
she
said,
"but
I
must
have
more
information.
You
have
no
information
for
me,
but
he
may
have;
or
he
may
get
it
with
the
experiments
you
won't
do.
I've
got
to
talk
to
him
and
find
out
what
he
is
going
to
find
out.
If
you
get
between
him
and
me,
you'll
never
have
what
you
want.
And
you
needn't
fear
his
getting
it
before
I
do.
He's
too
used
to
Earth
thinking;
he
won't
make
that
last
step.
I
will."
"All
right.
And
don't
forget
the
difference
between
Earth
and
Moon,
either.
This
is
your
world;
you
have
no
other.
This
man,
Denison,
this
Ben,
this
Immigrant,
having
come
from
Earth
to
the
Moon,
can,
if
he
chooses,
return
from
Moon
to
Earth.
You
can
never
go
to
the
Earth;
never.
You
are
a
Lunarite
forever."
"A
Moon-maiden,"
said
Selene,
derisively.
"No
maiden,"
said
Neville.
"Though
you
may
have
to
wait
a
long
while
before
I
confirm
the
matter
once
again."
She
seemed
unmoved
at
that.
He
said,
"And
about
this
big
danger
of
explosion.
If
the
risk
involved
in
changing
the
basic
constants
of
a
Universe
is
so
great,
why
haven't
the
para-men,
who
are
so
far
advanced
beyond
us
in
technology,
stopped
Pumping?"
And
he
left.
She
faced
the
closed
door
with
bunched
jaw
muscles.
Then
she
said,
"Because
conditions
are
different
for
them
and
for
us,
you
incredible
jerk."
But
she
was
speaking
to
herself;
he
was
gone.
She
kicked
the
lever
that
let
down
her
bed,
threw
herself
into
it
and
seethed.
How
much
closer
was
she
now
to
the
real
object
for
which
Barren
and
those
others
had
now
been
aiming
for
years?
No
closer.
Energy!
Everyone
searched
for
energy!
The
magic
word!
The
cornucopia!
The
one
key
to
universal
plenty!
...
And
yet
energy
wasn't
all.
If
one
found
energy,
one
could
find
the
other,
too.
If
one
found
the
key
to
energy,
the
key
to
the
other
would
be
obvious.
She
knew
the
key
to
the
other
would
be
obvious
if
she
could
but
grasp
some
subtle
point
that
would
appear
obvious
the
moment
it
was
grasped.
(Good
heavens,
she
had
been
so
infected
by
Barren's
chronic
suspicion
that
even
in
her
thoughts
she
was
calling
it
"the
other.")
No
Earthman
would
get
that
subtle
point
because
no
Earthman
had
reason
to
look
for
it.
Ben
Denison
would
find
it
for
her,
then,
without
finding
it
for
himself.
Except
that-
If
the
Universe
was
to
be
destroyed,
what
did
anything
matter?
12
Denison tried to beat down his self-consciousness. Time and again, he made a groping motion as though to hitch upward the pants he wasn't wearing. He wore only sandals and the barest
of briefs, which were uncomfortably tight And, of course, he carried the blanket Selene, who was similarly accoutered, laughed. "Now, Ben, there's nothing wrong with your bare body,
barring a certain flabbiness. It's perfectly in fashion here. In fact, take off your briefs if they're binding you." "No!" muttered Denison. He shifted the blanket so that it draped over his
abdomen and she snatched it from him. She said, "Now give me that thing. What kind of a Lunarite will you make if you bring your Earth puritanism here? You know that prudery is only the
other side of prurience. The words are even on the same page in the dictionary." "I have to get used to it, Selene." "You might start by looking at me once in awhile, without having your glance slide
off me as though I were coated with oil. You look at other women quite efficiently, I notice." "If I look at you-" "Then you'll seem too interested and you'll be embarrassed. But if you look
hard,
you'll
get
used
to
it,
and
you'll
stop
noticing.
Look,
I'll
stand
still
and
you
stare.
Ill
take
off
my
briefs."
Denison
groaned,
"Selene,
there
are
people
all
around
and
you're
making
intolerable
fun
of
me.
Please
keep
walking
and
let
me
get
used
to
the
situation."
"All
right,
but
I
hope
you
notice
the
people
who
pass
us
don't
look
at
us."
"They
don't
look
at
you.
They
look
at
me
all
right.
They've
probably
never
seen
so
old-looking
and
ill-shaped
a
person."
"They
probably
haven't,"
agreed
Selene,
cheerfully,
"but
they'll
just
have
to
get
used
to
it."
Denison
walked
on
in
misery,
conscious
of
every
gray
hair
on
his
chest
and
of
every
quiver
of
his
paunch.
It
was
only
when
the
passageway
thinned
out
and
the
people
passing
them
were
fewer
in
number
that
he
began
to
feel
a
certain
relief.
He
looked
about
him
curiously
now,
not
as
aware
of
Selene's
conical
breasts
as
he
had
been,
nor
of
her
smooth
thighs.
The
corridor
seemed
endless.
"How
far
have
we
come?"
he
asked.
"Are
you
tired?"
Selene
was
contrite.
"We
could
have
taken
a
scooter.
I
forget
you're
from
Earth."
"I
should
hope
you
do.
Isn't
that
the
ideal
for
an
immigrant?
I'm
not
the
least
bit
tired.
Hardly
the
least
bit
tired
at
any
rate.
What
I
am
is
a
little
cold."
"Purely
your
imagination,
Ben,"
said
Selene,
firmly.
"You
just
think
you
ought
to
feel
cold
because
so
much
of
you
is
bare.
Put
it
out
of
your
head."
"Easy
to
say,"
he
sighed.
"I'm
walking
well,
I
hope."
"Very
well.
I'll
have
you
kangarooing
yet."
"And
participating
in
glider
races
down
the
surface
slopes.
Remember,
I'm
moderately
advanced
in
years.
But
really,
how
far
have
we
come?"
"Two
miles,
I
should
judge."
"Good
Lord!
How
many
miles
of
corridors
are
there
altogether?"
"I'm
afraid
I
don't
know.
The
residential
corridors
make
up
comparatively
little
of
the
total.
There
are
the
mining
corridors,
the
geological
ones,
the
industrial,
the
mycological.
.
.
.
I'm
sure
there
must
be
several
hundred
miles
altogether."
"Do
you
have
maps?"
"Of
course
there
are
maps.
We
can't
work
blind."
"I
mean
you,
personally."
"Well,
no,
not
with
me,
but
I
don't
need
maps
for
this
area;
it's
quite
familiar
to
me.
I
used
to
wander
about
here
as
a
child.
These
are
old
corridors.
Most
of
the
new
corridors-and
we
average
two
or
three
miles
of
new
corridors
a
year,
I
think-are
in
the
north.
I
couldn't
work
my
way
through
them,
without
a
map,
for
untold
sums.
Maybe
not
even
with
a
map."
"Where
are
we
heading?"
"I
promised
you
an
unusual
sight-no,
not
me,
so
don't
say
it-and
you'll
have
it.
It's
the
Moon's
most
unusual
mine
and
it's
completely
off
the
ordinary
tourist
trails."
"Don't
tell
me
you've
got
diamonds
on
the
Moon?"
"Better
than
that."
The
corridor
walls
were
unfinished
here-gray
rock,
dimly
but
adequately
lit
by
patches
of
electroluminescence.
The
temperature
was
comfortable
and
at
a
steady
mildness,
with
ventilation
so
gently
effective
there
was
no
sensation
of
wind.
It
was
hard
to
tell
here
that
a
couple
of
hundred
feet
above
was
a
surface
subjected
to
alternate
frying
and
freezing
as
the
Sun
came
and
went
on
its
grand
biweekly
swing
from
horizon
to
horizon
and
then
underneath
and
back.
"Is
all
this
airtight?"
asked
Denison,
suddenly
uncomfortably
aware
that
he
was
not
far
below
the
bottom
of
an
ocean
of
vacuum
that
extended
upward
through
all
infinity.
"Oh,
yes.
Those
walls
are
impervious.
They're
all
booby-trapped,
too.
If
the
air
pressure
drops
as
much
as
ten
per
cent
in
any
section
of
the
corridors
there
is
such
a
hooting
and
howling
from
sirens
as
you
have
never
heard
and
such
a
flashing
of
arrows
and
blazing
of
signs
directing
you
to
safety
as
you
have
never
seen."
"How
often
does
this
happen?"
"Not
often.
I
don't
think
anyone
has
been
killed
through
air-lack
for
at
least
five
years."
Then,
with
sudden
defensiveness,
"You
have
natural
catastrophes
on
Earth.
A
big
quake
or
a
tidal
wave
can
kill
thousands."
"No
argument,
Selene."
He
threw
up
his
hands.
"I
surrender."
"All
right,"
she
said.
"I
didn't
mean
to
get
excited....
Do
you
hear
that?"
She
stopped,
in
an
attitude
of
listening.
Denison
listened,
too,
and
shook
his
head.
Suddenly,
he
looked
around.
"It's
so
quiet.
Where
is
everybody?
Are
you
sure
we're
not
lost?"
"This
isn't
a
natural
cavern
with
unknown
passageways.
You
have
those
on
Earth,
haven't
you?
I've
seen
photographs."
"Yes,
most
of
them
are
limestone
caves,
formed
by
water.
That
certainly
can't
be
the
case
of
the
Moon,
can
it?"
"So
we
can't
be
lost,"
said
Selene,
smiling.
"If
we're
alone,
put
it
down
to
superstition."
"To
what?"
Denison
looked
startled
and
his
face
creased
in
an
expression
of
disbelief.
"Don't
do
that,"
she
said.
"You
get
all
lined.
That's
right.
Smooth
out.
You
look
much
better
than
you
did
when
you
first
arrived,
you
know.
That's
low
gravity
and
exercise."
"And
trying
to
keep
up
with
nude
young
ladies
who
have
an
uncommon
amount
of
off-time
and
an
uncommon
lack
of
better
things
"to
do
than
to
go
on
busmen's
holidays."
"Now
you're
treating
me
like
a
tourist
guide
again,
and
I'm
not
nude."
"At
that,
even
nudity
is
less
frightening
than
Intuition-ism.
...
But
what's
this
about
superstition?"
"Not
really
superstition,
I
suppose,
but
most
of
the
people
of
the
city
tend
to
stay
away
from
this
part
of
the
corridor-complex."
"But
why?"
"Because
of
what
I'm
going
to
show
you."
They
were
walking
again.
"Hear
it
now?"
She
stopped
and
Denison
listened
anxiously.
He
said,
"You
mean
that
small
tapping
sound?
Tap-tap-
Is
that
what
you
mean?"
She
ran
ahead
in
slow,
loping
strides
with
the
slow-motion
movement
of
the
Lunarite
in
unhurried
flight.
He
followed
her,
attempting
to
ape
the
gait.
"Here-here-"
Denison's
eye
followed
Selene's
eagerly
pointing
finger.
"Good
Lord,"
he
said.
"Where's
it
coming
from?"
There
was
a
drip
of
what
was
clearly
water.
A
slow
dripping,
with
each
drip
striking
a
small
ceramic
trough
that
led
into
the
rock
wall.
"From
the
rocks.
We
do
have
water
on
the
Moon,
you
know.
Most
of
it
we
can
bake
out
of
gypsum;
enough
for
our
purposes,
since
we
conserve
it
pretty
well."
"I
know.
I
know.
I've
never
yet
been
able
to
manage
one
complete
shower.
How
you
people
manage
to
stay
clean
I
don't
know."
"I
told
you.
First,
wet
yourself.
Then
turn
off
the
water
and
smear
just
a
little
detergent
on
you.
You
rub
it-
Oh,
Ben,
I'm
not
going
through
it
yet
again.
And
there's
nothing
on
the
Moon
to
get
you
all
that
dirty
anyway.
.
.
.
But
that's
not
what
we're
talking
about.
In
one
or
two
places
there
are
actually
water
deposits,
usually
as
ice
near
the
surface
in
a
mountain
shadow.
If
we
locate
it,
it
drips
out.
This
one
has
been
dripping
since
the
corridor
was
first
driven
through,
and
that
was
eight
years
ago."
"But
why
the
superstition?"
"Well,
obviously,
water
is
the
great
material
resource
on
which
the
Moon
depends.
We
drink
it,
wash
with
it,
grow
our
food
with
it,
make
our
oxygen
with
it,
keep
everything
going
with
it.
Free
water
can't
help
but
get
a
lot
of
respect.
Once
this
drip
was
discovered,
plans
to
extend
the
tunnels
in
this
direction
were
abandoned
till
it
stopped.
The
corridor
walls
were
even
left
unfinished."
"That
sounds
like
superstition
right
there."
"Well-a
kind
of
awe,
maybe.
It
wasn't
expected
to
last
for
more
than
a
few
months;
such
drips
never
do.
Well,
after
this
one
had
passed
its
first
anniversary,
it
began
to
seem
eternal.
In
fact,
that's
what
it's
called:
'The
Eternal.'
You'll
even
find
it
marked
that
way
on
the
maps.
Naturally
people
have
come
to
attach
importance
to
it;
a
feeling
that
if
it
stops
it
will
mean
some
sort
of
bad
fortune."
Denison
laughed.
Selene
said,
warmly,
"No
one
really
believes
it,
but
everyone
part-believes
it.
You
see,
it's
not
really
eternal
and
it
must
stop
some
time.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
the
rate
of
drip
is
only
about
a
third
of
what
it
was
when
it
was
first
discovered,
so
that
it
is
slowly
drying.
I
imagine
people
feel
that
if
it
happened
to
stop
when
they
were
actually
here,
they
would
share
in
the
bad
fortune.
At
least,
that's
the
rational
way
of
explaining
their
reluctance
to
come
here."
"I
take
it
that
you
don't
believe
this."
"Whether
I
believe
it
or
not
isn't
the
point.
You
see
I'm
quite
certain
that
it
won't
stop
sharply
enough
for
anyone
to
be
able
to
take
the
blame.
It
will
just
drip
slower
and
slower
and
slower
and
no
one
will
ever
be
able
to
pinpoint
the
exact
time
when
it
stopped.
So
why
worry?"
"I
agree
with
you."
"I
do,
however,"
she
said,
making
the
transition
smoothly,
"have
other
worries,
and
I'd
like
to
discuss
them
with
you
while
we're
alone."
She
spread
out
the
blanket
and
sat
on
it,
cross-legged.
"Which
is
why
you
really
brought
me
here?"
He
dropped
to
hip
and
elbow,
facing
her.
She
said,
"See,
you
can
look
at
me
easily
now.
You're
getting
used
to
me.
...
And,
really,
there
were
surely
times
on
Earth
when
near
nudity
wasn't
something
to
be
exclaimed
over."
"Times
and
places,"
agreed
Denison,
"but
not
since
the
passing
of
the
Crisis.
In
my
lifetime-"
"Well,
on
the
Moon,
do
as
the
Lunarites
do
is
a
good
enough
guide
for
behavior."
"Are
you
going
to
tell
me
why
you
really
brought
me
here?
Or
shall
I
suspect
you
of
planning
seduction?"
"I
could
carry
through
seduction
quite
comfortably
at
home,
thank
you.
This
is
different
The
surface
would
have
been
best,
but
getting
ready
to
go
out
on
the
surface
would
have
attracted
a
great
deal
of
attention.
Coming
here
didn't,
and
this
place
is
the
only
spot
in
town
where
we
can
be
reasonably
safe
from
interruption."
She
hesitated.
"Well?"
said
Denison.
"Barren
is
angry.
Very
angry,
in
fact."
"I'm
not
surprised.
I
warned
you
he
would
be
if
you
told
him
that
I
knew
you
were
an
Intuitionist.
Why
did
you
feel
it
so
necessary
to
tell
him?"
"Because
it
is
difficult
to
keep
things
for
long
from
my
-companion.
Probably,
though,
he
doesn't
consider
me
that
any
longer."
"I'm
sorry."
"Oh,
it
was
turning
sour
anyway.
It's
lasted
long
enough.
What
bothers
me
more-much
more-is
that
he
violently
refuses
to
accept
your
interpretation
of
the
Pionizer
experiments
you
ran
after
the
surface
observations."
"I
told
you
the
way
it
would
be."
"He
said
he
had
seen
your
results,"
"He
glanced
at
them
and
grunted."
"It's
rather
disillusioning.
Does
everyone
just
believe
what
he
wants
to?"
"As
long
as
possible.
Sometimes
longer."
"What
about
you?"
"You
mean,
am
I
human?
Certainly.
I
don't
believe
I'm
really
old.
I
believe
I'm
quite
attractive.
I
believe
you
seek
out.
my
company
because
you
think
I'm
charming-even
when
you
insist
on
turning
the
conversation
to
physics."
"No!
I
mean
it!"
"Well,
I
suspect
Neville
told
you
that
the
data
I
had
gathered
were
not
significant
beyond
the
margin
of
error,
which
makes
them
doubtful,
and
that's
true
enough.
.
.
.
And
yet
I
prefer
to
believe
they
have
the
meaning
I
expected
them
to
have
to
begin
with."
"Just
because
you
want
to
believe
that?"
"Not
just
because.
Look
at
it
this
way.
Suppose
there
is
no
harm
in
the
Pump,
but
that
I
insist
on
thinking
there
is
harm.
In
that
case,
I
will
turn
out
to
be
a
fool
and
my
scientific
reputation
will
be
badly
damaged.
But
I
am
a
fool
in
the
eyes
of
the
people
who
count,
and
I
have
no
scientific
reputation."
"Why
is
that,
Ben?
You've
hinted
around
the
tale
several
times.
Can't
you
tell
me
the
whole
story?"
"You'd
be
surprised
how
little
there
is
to
tell.
At
the
age
of
twenty-five
I
was
still
such
a
child
that
I
had
to
amuse
myself
by
insulting
a
fool
for
no
reason
other
than
that
he
was
a
fool.
Since
his
folly
was
not
his
fault,
I
was
the
greater
fool
to
do
it.
My
insult
drove
him
to
heights
he
couldn't
possibly
have
scaled
otherwise-"
"You're
talking
of
Hallam?"
"Yes,
of
course.
And
as
he
rose,
I
fell.
And
eventually,
it
dropped
me
to-the
Moon."
"Is
that
so
bad?"
"No,
I
rather
think
it's
good.
So
let's
say
he
did
me
a
favor,
long-way
round.
.
.
.
And
let's
get
back
to
what
I'm
talking
about.
I've
just
explained
that
if
I
believe
the
Pump
to
be
harmful
and
am
wrong,
I
lose
nothing.
On
the
other
hand,
if
I
believe
the
Pump
to
be
harmless
and
am
wrong,
I
will
be
helping
to
destroy
the
world.
To
be
sure,
I've
lived
most
of
my
life
already
and
I
suppose
I
can
argue
myself
into
believing
that
I
have
no
great
cause
to
love
humanity.
However,
only
a
few
people
have
hurt
me,
and
if
I
hurt
everyone
in
return
that
is
unconscionable
usury.
"Then,
too,
if
you'd
rather
have
a
less
noble
reason,
Selene,
consider
my
daughter.
Just
before
I
left
for
the
Moon,
she
had
'applied
for
permission
to
have
a
child.
She'll
probably
get
it
and
before
long
I'll
be-if
you
don't
mind
my
saying
so-a
grandfather.
Somehow
I'd
like
to
see
my
grandchild
have
a
normal
life
expectancy.
So
I
prefer
to
believe
the
Pump
is
dangerous
and
to
act
on
that
belief."
Selene
said,
intensely,
"But
here's'
my
point.
Is
the
Pump
dangerous
or
is
it
not?
I
mean,
the
truth,
and
not
what
anyone
wants
to
believe."
"I
should
ask
you
that.
You're
the
Intuitionist
What
does
your
intuition
say?"
"But
that's
what
bothers
me,
Ben.
I
can't
make
it
really
certain
either
way.
I
tend
to
feel
the
Pump
is
harmful,
but
maybe
that's
because
I
want
to
believe
that."
"All
right.
Maybe
you
do.
Why?"
Selene
smiled
ruefully
and
shrugged
her
shoulders.
"It
would
be
fun
for
Barron
to
be
wrong.
When
he
thinks
he's
certain,
he's
so
vituperatively
certain."
"I
know.
You
want
to
see
his
face
when
he's
forced
to
back
down.
I'm
well
aware
of
how
intense
such
a
desire
can
be.
For
instance,
if
the
Pump
were
dangerous
and
I
could
prove
it,
I
might
conceivably
be
hailed
as
the
savior
of
humanity,
and
yet
I
swear
that
I'd
be
more
interested
in
the
look
on
Hallam's
face.
I'm
not
proud
of
that
feeling
so
I
suspect
that
what
I'll
do
is
insist
on
an
equal
share
of
the
credit
with
Lamont,
who
deserves
it
after
all,
and
confine
my
pleasure
to
watching
Lament's
face
when
he
watches
Hallam's
face.
The
pettishness
will
then
be
one
place
removed.
..
.
But
I'm
beginning
to
speak
nonsense..
..
Selene?"
"Yes,
Ben?"
"When
did
you
find
out
you
were
an
Intuitionist?"
"I
don't
quite
know."
"You
took
physics
in
college,
I
imagine."
"Oh,
yes.
Some
math,
too,
but
I
was
never
good
at
that
Come
to
think
of
it,
I
wasn't
particularly
good
in
physics,
either.
I
used
to
guess
the
answers
when
I
was
desperate;
you
know,
guess
what
I
was
supposed
to
do
to
get
the
right
answers.
Very
often,
it
worked
and
then
I
would
be
asked
to
explain
why
I
had
done
what
I
did
and
I
couldn't
do
that
very
well.
They
suspected
me
of
cheating
but
could
never
prove
it"
"They
didn't
suspect
Intuitionism?"
"I
don't
think
so.
But
then,
I
didn't
either.
Until-well,
one
of
my
first
sex-mates
was
a
physicist.
In
fact,
he
was
the
father
of
my
child,
assuming
he
really
supplied
the
sperm-sample.
He
had
a
physics
problem
and
he
told
me
about
it
when
we
were
lying
in
bed
afterward,
just
to
have
something
to
talk
about,
I
suppose.
And
I
said,
'You
know
what
it
sounds
like
to
me?'
and
told
him.
He
tried
it
just
for
the
fun
of
it,
he
said,
and
it
worked.
In
fact,
that
was
the
first
step
to
the
Pionizer,
which
you
said
was
much
better
than
the
proton
synchrotron."
"You
mean
that
was
your
idea?"
Denison
put
his
finger
under
the
dripping
water
and
paused
as
he
was
about
to
put
it
in
his
mouth.
"Is
this
water
safe?"
"It's
perfectly
sterile,"
said
Selene,
"and
it
goes
into
the
general
reservoir
for
treatment.
It's
saturated
with
sulfates,
carbonates,
and
a
few
other
items,
however.
You
won't
like
the
taste."
Denison
rubbed
his
finger
on
his
briefs.
"You
invented
the
Pionizer?"
"Not
invented.
I
had
the
original
concept.
It
took
lots
of
development,
mostly
by
Barren."
Denison
shook
his
head.
"You
know,
Selene,
you're
an
amazing
phenomenon.
You
should
be
under
observation
by
the
molecular
biologists."
"Should
I?
That's
not
my
idea
of
a
thrill."
"About
half
a
century
ago,
there
came
the
climax
to
the
big
trend
toward
genetic
engineering-"
"I
know.
It
flopped
and
was
thrown
out
of
court.
It's
illegal
now-that
whole
type
of
study-insofar
as
research
can
be
made
illegal.
I
know
people
who've
done
work
on
it
just
the
same."
"I
dare
say.
On
Intuitionism?"
"No.
I
don't
think
so."
"Ah.
But
that's
my
point.
At
the
height
of
the
push
for
genetic
engineering,
there
was
this
attempt
to
stimulate
Intuitionism.
Almost
all
the
great
scientists
had
intuitive
ability,
of
course,
and
there
was
the
feeling
that
this
was
the
single
great
key
to
creativity.
One
could
argue
that
superior
capacity
for
intuition
was
the
product
of
a
particular
gene
combination
and
there
were
all
sorts
of
speculations
as
to
which
gene
combination
that
was."
"I
suspect
that
there
are
many
possible
types
that
would
satisfy."
"And
I
suspect
that
if
you
are
consulting
your
intuition
here,
you
are
correct
But
there
were
also
those
who
insisted
that
one
gene,
or
one
small
related
group
of
genes,
was
of
particular
importance
to
the
combination
so
that
you
might
speak
of
an
Intuition
Gene.
.
.
,
Then
the
whole
thing
collapsed."
"As
I
said."
"But
before
it
collapsed,"
Denison
went
on,
"there
had
been
attempts
to
alter
genes
to
increase
the
intensity
of
Intuitionism
and
there
were
those
who
insisted
that
some
success
had
been
achieved.
The
altered
genes
entered
the
gene
pool,
I'm
positive,
and
if
you
happened
to
inherit-
Were
any
of
your
grandparents
involved
in
the
program?"
"Not
as
far
as
I
know,"
said
Selene,
"but
I
can't
rule
it
out.
One
of
them
might
have
been,
for
all
I
can
say.
...
If
you
don't
mind,
I'm
not
going
to
investigate
the
matter.
I
don't
want
to
know."
"Perhaps
not.
The
whole
field
grew
fearfully
unpopular
with
the
general
public
and
anyone
who
can
be
considered
the
product
of
genetic
engineering
would
not
exactly
be
greeted
gladly.
.
.
.
Intuitionism,
they
said,
for
instance,
was
inseparable
from
certain
undesirable
characteristics."
"Well,
thank
you."
"They
said.
To
possess
intuition
is
to
inspire
a
certain
envy
and
enmity
in
others.
Even
as
gentle
and
saint-like
an
Intuitionist
as
Michael
Faraday
aroused
the
envy
and
hatred
of
Humphry
Davy.
Who's
to
say
that
it
doesn't
take
a
certain
flaw
in
character
t©
be
capable
of
arousing
envy.
And
in
your
case-"
Selene
said,
"Surely,
I
don't
rouse
your
envy
and
hatred?"
"I
don't
think
so.
What
about
Neville,
though?"
Selene
was
silent.
Denison
said,
"By
the
time
you
got
to
Neville,
you
were
well-known
as
an
Intuitionist,
I
suppose."
"Not
well
known,
I
would
say.
Some
physicists
suspected
it,
I'm
sure.
However,
they
don't
like
to
give
up
credit
here
any
more
than
on
Earth,
and
I
suppose
they
convinced
themselves,
more
or
less,
that
whatever
I
had
said
to
them
was
just
a
meaningless
guess.
But
Barron
knew,
of
course."
"I
see."
Denison
paused.
Selene's
lips
twitched.
"Somehow
I
get
the
feeling
that
you
want
to
say:
'Oh,
that's
why
he
bothers
with
you.'"
"No,
of
course
not,
Selene.
You're
quite
attractive
enough
to
be
desired
for
your
own
sake."
"I
think
so,
too,
but
every
little
bit
helps
and
Barron
was
bound
to
be
interested
in
my
Intuitionism.
Why
shouldn't
he
be?
Only
he
insisted
I
keep
my
job
as
tourist
guide.
He
said
I
was
an
important
natural
resource
of
the
Moon
and
he
didn't
want
Earth
monopolizing
me
the
way
they
monopolized
the
synchrotron."
"An
odd
thought.
But
perhaps
it
was
that
the
fewer
who
knew
of
your
Intuitionism,
the
fewer
would
suspect
your
contribution
to
what
would
otherwise
be
put
to
his
sole
credit."
"Now
you
sound
like
Barron
himself!"
"Do
I?
And
is
it
possible
he
gets
rather
annoyed
with
you
when
your
Intuitionism
is
working
particularly
well."
Selene
shrugged.
"Barron
is
a
suspicious
man.
We
all
have
our
faults."
"Is
it
wise
to
be
alone
with
me,
then?"
Selene
said,
sharply,
"Now
don't
get
hurt
because
I
defend
him.
He
doesn't
really
suspect
the
possibility
of
sexual
misbehavior
between
us.
You're
from
Earth.
In
fact,
I
might
as
well
tell
you
he
encourages
our
companionship.
He
thinks
I
can
learn
from
you."
"And
have
you?"
asked
Denison,
coldly.
"I
have....
Yet
though
that
may
be
his
chief
reason
for
encouraging
our
friendship,
it
isn't
mine."
"What's
yours?"
"As
you
well
know,"
said
Selene,
"and
as
you
want
to
hear
me
say,
I
enjoy
your
company.
Otherwise,
I
could
get
what
I
want
in
considerably
less
time."
"All
right,
Selene.
Friends?"
"Friends!
Absolutely."
"What
have
you
learned
from
me,
then?
May
I
know?"
"That
would
take
awhile
to
explain.
You
know
that
the
reason
we
can't
set
up
a
Pump
Station
anywhere
we
want
to
is
that
we
can't
locate
the
para-Universe,
even
though
they
can
locate
us.
That
might
be
because
they
are
much
more
intelligent
or
much
more
technologically
advanced
than
we
are-"
"Not
necessarily
me
same
thing,"
muttered
Denison.
"I
know.
That's
why
I
put
in
the
'or.'
But
it
might
also
be
that
we
are
neither
particularly
stupid
nor
particularly
backward.
It
might
be
something
as
simple
as
the
fact
that
they
offer
the
harder
target.
If
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
is
stronger
in
the
para-Universe,
they'd
be
bound
to
have
much
smaller
Suns
and,
very
likely,
much
smaller
planets.
Their
individual
world
would
be
harder
to
locate
than
ours
would
be.
"Or
then
again,"
she
went
on,
"suppose
it's
the
electromagnetic
field
they
detect.
The
electromagnetic
field
of
a
planet
is
much
larger
than
the
planet
itself
and
is
much
easier
to
locate.
And
that
would
mean
that
while
they
can
detect
the
Earth,
they
can't
detect
the
Moon,
which
has
no
electromagnetic
field
to
speak
of.
That's
why,
perhaps,
we've
failed
to
set
up
a
Pump
Station
on
the
Moon.
And,
if
their
small
planets
lack
a
significant
electromagnetic
field,
we
can't
locate
them."
Denison
said,
"It's
an
attractive
thought"
"Next,
consider
the
inter-Universal
exchange
in
properties
that
serves
to
weaken
their
strong
nuclear
interaction,
cooling
their
Suns,
while
strengthening
ours,
heating
and
exploding
our
Suns.
What
might
that
imply?
Suppose
they
can
collect
energy
one-way
without
our
help
but
only
at
ruinously
low
efficiencies.
Under
ordinary
circumstances
that
would
therefore
be
utterly
impractical.
They
would
need
us
to
help
direct
concentrated
energy
in
their
direction
by
supplying
tungsten-186
to
them
and
accepting
plutonium-186
in
return.
But
suppose
our
Galactic
arm
implodes
into
a
quasar.
That
would
produce
an
energy
concentration
in
the
neighborhood
of
the
Solar
system
enormously
greater
than
now
exists
and
one
that
might
persist
for
over
a
million
years.
"Once
that
quasar
forms,
even
a
ruinously
low
efficiency
becomes
sufficient.
It
wouldn't
matter
to
them,
therefore,
whether
we
are
destroyed
or
not.
In
fact,
we
might
argue
that
it
would
be
safer
for
them
if
we
did
explode.
Until
we
do,
we
might
end
the
Pump
for
any
of
a
variety
of
reasons
and
they
would
be
helpless
to
start
it
again.
After
the
explosion,
they
are
home
free;
no
one
could
interfere.
.
.
.
And
that's
why
people
who
say,
'If
the
Pump
is
dangerous,
why
don't
those
terribly
clever
para-men
stop
it?'
don't
know
what
they're
talking
about"
"Did
Neville
give
you
that
argument?"
"Yes,
he
did."
"But
the
para-Sun
would
keep
cooling
down,
wouldn't
it?"
"What
does
that
matter?"
said
Selene,
impatiently.
"With
the
Pump,
they
wouldn't
be
dependent
on
their
Sun
for
anything."
Denison
took
a
deep
breath.
"You
can't
possibly
know
this,
Selene,
but
there
was
a
rumor
on
Earth
that
Lament
received
a
message
from
the
para-men
to
the
effect
that
the
Pump
was
dangerous,
but
that
they
couldn't
stop
it.
No
one
took
it
seriously,
of
course,
but
suppose
it's
true.
Suppose
Lamont
did
receive
such
a
message.
Might
it
be
that
some
of
the
para-men
were
humanitarian
enough
to
wish
not-to
destroy
a
world
with
cooperating
intelligences
upon
it,
and
were
prevented
by
the
opposition
of
an
oh-so-practicai
majority?"
Selene
nodded.
"I
suppose
that's
possible....
All
this
I
knew,
or
rather,
intuited,
before
you
came
on
the
scene.
But
then
you
said
that
nothing
between
one
and
the
infinite
made
any
sense.
Remember?"
"Of
course."
"All
right.
The
differences
between
our
Universe
and
the
para-Universe
He
so
obviously
in
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
that
so
far
it's
all
that's
been
studied.
But
there
is
more
than
one
interaction;
there
are
four.
In
addition
to
the
strong
nuclear,
there
is
the
electromagnetic,
the
weak
nuclear,
and
the
gravitational,
with
intensity
ratios
of
130:1:10-10:10-42.
But
if
four,
why
not
an
infinite
number,
with
all
the
others
too
weak
to
be
detectable
or
to
influence
our
Universe
in
any
way,"
Denison
said,
"If
an
interaction
is
too
weak
to
be
detectable
or
to
exert
influence
in
any
way,
then
by
any
operational
definition,
it
doesn't
exist."
"In
this
Universe,"
said
Selene,
with
a
snap.
"Who
knows
what
does
or
does
not
exist
in
the
para-Universe?
With
an
infinite
number
of
possible
interactions,
each
of
which
can
vary
infinitely
in
intensity
compared
to
any
one
of
them
taken
as
standard,
the
number
of
different
possible
Universes
that
can
exist
is
infinite."
"Possibly
the
infinity
of
the
continuum;
aleph-one,
rather
than
aleph-null."
Selene
frowned.
"What
does
that
mean?"
"It's
not
important.
Go
on."
Selene
said,
"Instead,
then,
of
trying
to
work
with
the
one
para-Universe
that
has
impinged
itself
on
us
and
which
may
not
suit
our
needs
at
all,
why
don't
we
instead
try
to
work
out
which
Universe,
out
of
all
the
infinite
possibilities,
best
suits
us,
and
is
most
easily
located.
Let
us
design
a
Universe,
for
after
all
whatever
we
design
must
exist,
and
search
for
it."
Denison
smiled.
"Selene,
I've
thought
of
exactly
the
same
thing.
And
while
there's
no
law
that
states
I
can't
be
completely
wrong,
it's
very
unlikely
that
anyone
as
brilliant
as
myself
can
be
completely
wrong
when
anyone
as
brilliant
as
yourself
comes
to
exactly
the
same
conclusion
independently....
Do
you
know
what?"
"What?"
asked
Selene.
"I'm
beginning
to
like
your
damned
Moon
food.
Or
getting
used
to
it,
anyway.
Let's
go
back
home
and
eat,
and
then
we
can
start
working
out
our
plans.
.
.
.
And
you
know
what
else?"
"What?"
"As
long
as
we'll
be
working
together,
how
about
one
kiss-as
experimentalist
to
intuitionist."
Selene
considered.
She
said,
"We've
both
of
us
kissed
and
been
kissed
a
good
many
times,
I
suppose.
How
about
doing
it
as
man
to
woman?"
"I
think
I
can
manage
that.
But
what
do
I
do
so
as
not
to
be
clumsy
about
it?
What
are
the
Moon-rules
for
kissing?"
"Follow instinct," said Selene, casually. Carefully, Denison placed his arms behind his back and leaned toward Selene. Then, after a while, he placed his arms behind her back.
13
"And then I actually kissed him back," said Selene, thoughtfully. "Oh, did you?" said Barren Neville, harshly. "Well, that's valor beyond the call of duty." "I don't know. It
wasn't that bad. In fact," (and she smiled) "he was rather touching about it. He was afraid he would be clumsy and began by putting his arms behind his back so that he wouldn't crush
me,
I
suppose."
"Spare
me
the
details."
"Why,
what
the
hell
do
you
care?"
she
fired
up,
suddenly.
"You're
Mister
Platonic,
aren't
you?"
"Do
you
want
it
differently?
Now?"
"You
needn't
perform
to
order."
"But
you
had
better.
When
do
you
expect
to
give
us
what
we
need?"
"As
soon
as
I
can,"
she
said,
tonelessly.
"Without
his
knowing?"
"He's
interested
only
in
energy."
"And
in
saving
the
world,"
mocked
Neville.
"And
in
being
a
hero.
And
in
showing
everybody.
And
in
kissing
you."
"He
admits
to
all
that.
What
do
you
admit
to?"
"Impatience,"
said
Neville,
angrily.
"Lots
of
impatience."
14
"I am glad," said Denison, deliberately, "that the daytime is over." He held out his right arm and stared at it, encased in its protective layers. "The Lunar Sun is one thing I can't get used to
and don't want to get used to. Even this suit seems a natural thing to me in comparison." "What's wrong with the Sun?" asked Selene. "Don't tell "me you like it, Selene!" "No, of course not.
I hate it. But then I never see it You're an- You're used to the Sun." "Not the way it is here on the Moon. It shines out of a black sky here. It dazzles the stars away, instead of muffling
them. It is hot, hard, and dangerous. It is an enemy, and while it's in the sky, I can't help but feel that none of our attempts at reducing field intensity will succeed." "That's superstition,
Ben," said Selene, with a distant edge of exasperation. "The Sun has nothing to do with it. We were in the crater shadow anyway and it was just like night. Stars and all." "Not quite,"
said Denison. "Anytime we looked northward, Selene, we could see that stretch of Sunlight glittering; I hated to look northward, yet the direction dragged at my eyes. Every time I looked
at it I could feel the hard ultraviolet springing at my viewplate." "That's imagination. In the first place there's no ultraviolet to speak of in reflected light; in the second, your suit
protects you against radiation." "Not against heat. Not very much." "But it's night now." "Yes," said Denison with satisfaction, "and this I like." He looked about with a continuing wonder.
Earth was in the sky, of course, in its accustomed place; a fat crescent, now, bellying to the southwestward. The constellation Orion was above it, a hunter rising up out of the brilliant
curved chair of Earth. The horizon glittered in the dim crescent-Earth light. "It's beautiful," he said. Then: "Selene, is the Pionizer showing anything?" Selene, who was looking at the skies'
with no comment, stepped toward the maze of equipment that, over the past three alternations of day and night, had been assembled there in the shadow of the crater. "Not yet," she said, "but
that's good news really. The field intensity is holding at just over fifty." "Not low enough," said Denison. Selene said, "It can be lowered further. I'm sure that all the parameters are
suitable." "The magnetic field, too?" "I'm not sure about the magnetic field." "If we strengthen that, the whole thing becomes unstable." "It shouldn't. I know it shouldn't." "Selene, I trust
your intuition against everything but the facts. It does get unstable. We've tried it." "I know, Ben. But not quite with this geometry. It's been holding to fifty-two a phenomenally long
time. Surely, if we begin to hold it there for hours instead of minutes, we ought to be able to strengthen the magnetic field tenfold for a period of minutes instead of seconds. . . .
Let's try." "Not yet," said Denison. Selene hesitated, then stepped back, turning away. She said, "You still don't miss Earth, do you, Ben?" "No. It's rather odd, but I don't. I would
have thought it inevitable that I miss blue sky, green earth, flowing water-all the cliche adjective-noun combinations peculiar to Earth. I miss none of them. I don't even dream about them."
Selene said, "This sort of thing does happen sometime. At least, there are Immies who say they experience no homesickness. They're in the minority, of course, and no one has ever been
able to decide what this minority has in common. Guesses run all the way from serious emotional deficiency, no capacity to feel anything; to serious emotional excess, a fear to admit homesickness
lest it lead to breakdown." "In my case, I think it's plain enough. Life on Earth was not very enjoyable for two decades and more, while here I work at last in a field I have made my own: And
I
have
your
help.
.
.
.
More
than
that,
Selene,
I
have
your
company."
"You
are
kind,"
said
Selene,
gravely,
"to
place
company
and
help
in
the
relationship
you
do.
You
don't
seem
to
need
much
help.
Do
you
pretend
to
seek
it
for
the
sake
of
my
company?"
'
-
Denison
laughed
softly.
Tin
not
sure
which
answer
would
flatter
you
more."
"Try
the
truth."
"The
truth
is
not
so
easy
to
determine
when
I
value
each
so
much."
He
turned
back
to
the
Pionizer.
"The
field
intensity
still
holds,
Selene."
Selene's
faceplate
glinted
in
the
Earthlight.
She
said,
"Barren
says
that
non-homesickness
is
natural
and
the
sign
of
a
healthy
mind.
He
says
that
though
the
human
body
was
adapted
to
Earth's
surface
and
requires
adjustment
to
the
Moon,
the
human
brain
was
not
and
does
not.
The
human
brain
is
so
different,
qualitatively,
from
all
other
brains
that
it
can
be
considered
a
new
phenomenon.
It
has
had
no
time
to
be
really
fixed
to
Earth's
surface
and
can,
without
adjustment,
fit
other
environments.
He
says
that
enclosure
in
the
caverns
of
the
Moon
may
actually
suit
it
best
of
all,
for
that
is
but
a
larger
version
of
its
enclosure
in
the
cavern
of
the
skull."
"Do
you
believe
that?"
asked
Denison,
amused.
"When
Barron
talks,
he
can
make
things
sound
very
plausible."
"I
think
it
can
be
made
equally
plausible
to
claim
that
the
comfort
to
be
found
in
the
caverns
of
the
Moon
is
the
result
of
the
fulfillment
of
the
return-to-the-womb
fantasy.
In
fact,"
he
added,
thoughtfully,
"considering
the
controlled
temperature
and
pressure,
the
nature
and
digestibility
of
the
food,
I
could
make
a
good
case
for
considering
the
Lunar
colony-I
beg
your
pardon,
Selene-the
Lunar
city
a
deliberate
reconstruction
of
the
fetal
environment."
Selene
said,
"I
don't
think
Barren
would
agree
with
you
for
a
minute."
"I'm
sure
he
wouldn't,"
said
Denison.
He
looked
at
the
Earth-crescent,
watching
the
distant
cloud
banks
on
edge.
He
fell
into
silence,
absorbed
in
the
view,
and
even
though
Selene
moved
back
to
the
Pionizer,
he
remained
in
place.
'
He
watched
Earth
in
its
nest
of
stars
and
looked
toward
the
serrated
horizon
where,
every
once
in
a
while,
it
seemed
to
him
he
saw
a
puff
of
smoke
where
a
small
meteorite
might
be
landing.
He
had
pointed
out
a
similar
phenomenon,
with
some
concern,
to
Selene
during
the
previous
Lunar
night.
She
had
been
unconcerned.
She
said,
"The
Earth
does
shift
slightly
in
the
sky
because
of
the
Moon's
libration
and
every
once
in
a
while
a
shaft
of
Earth-light
tops
a
small
rise
and
falls
on
a
bit
of
soil
beyond.
It
comes
into
view
like
a
tiny
puff
of
rising
dust.
It's
common.
We
pay
no
attention."
Denison
had
said,
"But
it
could
be
a
meteorite
sometimes.
Don't
meteorites
ever
strike?"
"Of
course
they
do.
You're
probably
hit
by
several
every
time
you're
out
Your
suit
protects
you."
"I
don't
mean
micro-dust
particles.
I
mean
sizable
meteorites
that
would
really
kick
up
the
dust.
Meteorites
that
could
kill
you."
"Well,
they
fall,
too,
but
they
are
few
and
the
Moon
is
large.
No
one
has
been
hit
yet."
And
as
Denison
watched
the
sky
and
thought
of
that,
he
saw
what,
in
the
midst
of
his
momentary
preoccupation,
he
took
to
be
a
meteorite.
Light
streaking
through
the
sky
could,
however,
be
a
meteorite
only
on
Earth
with
its
atmosphere
and
not
on
the
airless
Moon.
The
light
in
the
sky
was
man-made
and
Denison
had
not
yet
sorted
out
his
impressions
when
it
became,
quite
clearly,
a
small
rocket-vessel
sinking
rapidly
to
a
landing
beside
him.
A
single
suited
figure
emerged,
while
a
pilot
remained
within,
barely
seen
as
a
dark
splotch
against
the
highlights.
Denison
waited.
The
etiquette
of
the
spacesuit
required
the
newcomer
joining
any
group
to
announce
himself
first.
"Commissioner
Gottstein
here,"
the
new
voice
said,
"as
you
can
probably
tell
from
my
wobble."
"Ben
Denison
here,"
said
Denison.
"Yes.
I
thought
as
much."
"Have
you
come
here
looking
for
me?"
"Certainly."
"In
a
space-skipper?
You
might-"
"I
might,"
said
Gottstein,
"have
used
Outlet
P-4,
which
is
less
than
a
thousand
yards
from
here.
Yes,
indeed.
But
I
wasn't
looking
only
for
you."
"Well,
I
won't
ask
for
the
meaning
of
what
you
say."
"There's
no
reason
for
me
to
be
coy.
Surely
you
have
not
expected
me
to
be
uninterested
in
the
fact
that
you
have
been
carrying
on
experiments
on
the
Lunar
surface."
"It's
been
no
secret
and
anyone
might
be
interested."
"Yet
no
one
seems
to
know
the
details
of
the
experiments.
Except,
of
course,
that
in
some
way
you
are
working
on
matters
concerning
the
Electron
Pump."
"It's
a
reasonable
assumption."
"Is
it?
It
seemed
to
me
that
experiments
of
such
a
nature,
to
have
any
value
at
all,
would
require
a
rather
enormous
setup.
This
is
not
of
my
own
knowledge,
you
understand.
I
consulted
those
who
would
know.
And,
it
is
quite
obvious,
you
are
not
working
on
such
a
setup.
It
occurred
to
me,
therefore,
that
you
might
not
be
the
proper
focus
of
my
interest.
While
my
attention
was
drawn
to
you,
others
might
be
undertaking
more
important
tasks."
"Why
should
I
be
used
as
distraction?"
"I
don't
know.
If
I
knew,
I
would
be
less
concerned."
"So
I
have
been
under
observation."
Gottstein
chuckled.
"That,
yes.
Since
you
have
arrived.
But
while
you
have
been
working
here
on
the
surface,
we
have
observed
this
entire
region
for
miles
in
every
direction.
Oddly
enough,
it
would
seem
that
you,
Dr.
Denison,
and
your
companion,
are
the
only
ones
on
the
Lunar
surface
for
any
but
the
most
routine
of
purposes."
"Why
is
that
odd?"
"Because
it
means
that
you
really
think
you're
doing
something
with
your
gimcrack
contraption,
whatever
it
is.
I
can't
believe
that
you
are
incompetent,
so
I
think
it
would
be
worth
listening
to
you
if
you
tell
me
what
you
are
doing."
"I
am
experimenting
in
para-physics,
Commissioner,
precisely
as
rumor
has
it.
To
which
I
can
add
that
so
far
my
experiments
have
been
only
partly
successful."
"Your
companion
is,
I
imagine,
Selene
Lindstrom
L.,
a
tourist
guide."
"Yes."
"An
unusual
choice
as
an
assistant."
"She
is
intelligent,
eager,
interested,
and
extremely
attractive."
"And
willing
to
work
with
an
Earthman?"
"And
quite
willing
to
work
with
an
Immigrant
who
will
be
a
Lunar
citizen
as
soon
as
he
qualifies
for
that
status."
Selene
was
approaching
now.
Her
voice
rang
in
their
ears.
"Good
day,
Commissioner.
I
would
have
liked
not
to
overhear,
and
intrude
on
a
private
conversation,
but,
in
a
spacesuit,
overhearing
is
inevitable
anywhere
within
the
horizon."
Gottstein
turned.
"Hello,
Miss
Lindstrom.
I
did
not
expect
to
talk
in
secrecy.
Are
you
interested
in
para-physics?"
"Oh,
yes."
"You
are
not
disheartened
by
the
failures
of
the
experiment."
"They
are
not
entirely
failures,"
she
said.
"They
are
less
a
failure
than
Dr.
Denison
thinks
at
present."
"What?"
Denison
turned
sharply
on
his
heel,
nearly
overbalancing
himself
and
sending
out
a
spurt
of
dust.
All
three
were
facing
the
Pionizer
now,
and
above
it,
just
about
five
feet
above
it,
light
shone
like
a
fat
star.
,
Selene
said,
"I
raised
the
intensity
of
the
magnetic
field,
and
the
nuclear
field
remained
stable
in
being-then
eased
further
and
further
and-"
"Leaked!"
Denison
said.
"Damn
it.
I
didn't
see
it
happen."
Selene
said,
"I'm
sorry,
Ben.
First
you
were
lost
in
your
own
thoughts,
then
the
Commissioner
arrived,
and
I
couldn't
resist
the
chance
of
trying
on
my
own."
Gottstein
said,
"But
just
what
is
it
that
I
see
there?"
Denison
said,
"Energy
being
spontaneously
given
off
by
matter
leaking
from
another
Universe
into
ours."
And
even
as
he
said
that
the
light
blinked
out
and
many
yards
away,
a
farther,
dimmer
star
came
into
simultaneous
being.
Denison
lunged
toward
the
Pionizer,
but
Selene,
all
Lunar
grace,
propelled
herself
across
the
surface
more
efficiently
and
was
there
first.
She
killed
the
field
structure
and
the
distant
star
went
out.
She
said,
"The
leak-point
isn't
stable,
you
see."
"Not
on
a
small
scale,"
said
Denison,
"but
considering
that
a
shift
of
a
light-year
is
as
theoretically
possible
as
a
shift
of
a
hundred
yards,
one
of
a
hundred
yards
only
is
miraculous
stability."
"Not
miraculous
enough,"
said
Selene,
flatly.
Gottstein
interrupted.
"Let
me
guess
what
you're
talking
about
You
mean
that
the
matter
can
leak
through
here,
or
there,
or
anywhere
in
our
Universe-at
random."
"Not
quite
at
random,
Commissioner,"
said
Denison.
"The
probability
of
leakage
drops
with
distance
from
the
Pionizer,
and
rather
sharply
I
should
say.
The
sharpness
depends
on
a
variety
of
factors
and
I
think
we've
tightened
the
situation
remarkably.
Even
so,
a
flip
of
a
few
hundred
yards
is
quite
probable
and,
as
a
matter
of
fact,
you
saw
it
happen."
"And
it
might
have
shifted
to
somewhere
within
the
city
or
within
our
own
helmets,
perhaps."
Denison
said,
impatiently,
"No,
no.
The
leak,
at
least
by
the
techniques
we
use,
is
heavily
dependent
on
the
density
of
matter
already
present
in
this
Universe.
The
chances
are
virtually
nil
that
the
leak-position
would
shift
from
a
place
of
essential
vacuum
to
one
where
an
atmosphere
even
a
hundredth
as
dense
as
that
within
the
city
or
within
our
helmets
would
exist.
It
would
be
impractical
to
expect
to
arrange
the
leak
anywhere
but
into
a
vacuum
in
the
first
place,
which
is
why
we
had
to
make
the
attempt
up
here
on
the
surface."
"Then
this
is
not
like
the
Electron
Pump?"
"Not
at
all,"
said
Denison.
"In
the
Electron
Pump
there
is
a
two-way
transfer
of
matter,
here
a
one-way
leak.
Nor
are
the
Universes
involved
the
same."
Gottstein
said,
"I
wonder
if
you
would
have
dinner
with
me
this
evening,
Dr.
Denison?"
Denison
hesitated.
"Myself
only?"
Gottstein
attempted
a
bow
in
the
direction
of
Selene
but
could
accomplish
only
a
grotesque
parody
of
it
in
his
spacesuit.
"I
would
be
charmed
to
have
Miss
Lindstrom's
company
on
another
occasion,
but
on
this
one
I
must
speak
with
you
alone,
Dr.
Denison."
"Oh,
go
ahead,"
said
Selene,
crisply,
as
Denison
still
hesitated.
"I
have
a
heavy
schedule
tomorrow
anyway
and
you'll
need
time
to
worry
about
the
leak-point
instability."
Denison
said,
uncertainly,
"Well,
then--Selene,
will
you
let
me
know
when
your
next
free
day
is?"
"I
always
do,
don't
I?
And
we'll
be
in
touch
before
then
anyway....
Why
don't
you
two
go
on?
I'll
take
care
of
the
equipment."
15
Barren
Neville
shifted
from
foot
to
foot
in
the
fashion
made
necessary
by
the
restricted
quarters
and
by
the
Moon's
gravity.
In
a
larger
room
under
a
world's
stronger
pull,
he
would
have
walked
hastily
up
and
back.
Here,
he
tilted
from
side
to
side,
in
a
repetitive
back-and-forth
glide.
"Then
you're
positive
it
works.
Right,
Selene?
You're
positive?"
"I'm
positive,"
said
Selene.
"I've
told
you
five
times
by
actual
count."
Neville
didn't
seem
to
be
listening.
He
said
in
a
low,
rapid
voice,
"It
doesn't
matter
that
Gottstein
was
there,
then?
He
didn't
try
to
stop
the
experiment?"
"No.
Of
course
not."
"There
was
no
indication
that
he
would
try
to
exert
authority-"
"Now,
Barron,
what
kind
of
authority
could
he
exert?
Will
Earth
send
a
police
force?
Besides-oh,
you
know
they
can't
stop
us."
Neville
stopped
moving,
stood
motionless
for
a
while.
"They
don't
know?
They
still
don't
know?"
"Of
course
they
don't.
Ben
was
looking
at
the
stars
and
then
Gottstein
came.
So
I
tried
for
the
field-leak,
got
it,
and
I
had
already
gotten
the
other.
Ben's
setup-"
"Don't
call
it
his
setup.
It
was
your
idea,
wasn't
it?"
Selene
shook
her
head.
"I
made
vague
suggestions.
The
details
were
Ben's."
'
"But
you
can
reproduce
it
now.
For
Luna's
sake,
we
don't
have
to
go
to
the
Earthie
for
it,
do
we?"
"I
think
I
can
reproduce
enough
of
it
now
so
that
our
people
can
fill
it
in."
"All
right,
then.
Let's
get
started."
"Not
yet.
Oh,
damn
it,
Barron,
not
yet"
"Why
not
yet?"
"We
need
the
energy,
too."
"But
we
have
that."
"Not
quite.
The
leak-point
is
unstable;
pretty
badly
unstable."
"But
that
can
be
fixed
up.
You
said
so."
"I
said
I
thought
it
could."
"That's
good
enough
for
me."
"Just
the
same,
it
would
be
better
to
have
Ben
work
out
the
details
and
stabilize
it."
There
was
a
silence
between
them.
Neville's'
thin
face
slowly
twisted
into
something
approaching
hostility.
"You
don't
think
I
can
do
it?
Is
that
it?"
Selene
said,
"Will
you
come
out
on
the
surface
with
me
and
work
on
it?"
There
was
another
silence.
Neville
said,
unsteadily,
"I
don't
appreciate
your
sarcasm.
And
I
don't
want
to
have
to
wait
long."
"I
can't
command
the
laws
of
nature.
But
I
think
it
won't
be
long.
.
.
.
Now
if
you
don't
mind,
I
need
my
sleep.
I've
got
my
tourists
tomorrow."
For
a
moment,
Neville
seemed
on
the
point
of
gesturing
to
his
own
bed-alcove
as
though
offering
hospitality,
but
the
gesture,
if
that
was
what
it
was,
did
not
really
come
to
birth
and
Selene
made
no
sign
of
understanding
or
even
anticipating.
She
nodded
wearily,
and
left.
16
"I
had
hoped,
to
be
frank,"
said
Gottstein,
smiling
over
what
passed
for
dessert-a
sticky,
sweet
concoction-
"that
we
would
have
seen
each
other
more
often."
Denison
said,
"It
is
kind
of
you
to
take
such
an
interest
in
my
work.
If
the
leak-instability
can
be
corrected,
I
think
my
achievement-and
that
of
Miss
Lindstrom-will
have
been
a
most
significant
one."
"You
speak
carefully,
like
a
scientist.
...
I
won't
insult
you
by
offering
the
Lunar
equivalent
of
a
liqueur;
that
is
the
one
approximation
to
Earth's
cuisine
I
have
simply
made
up
my
mind
not
to
tolerate.
Can
you
tell
me,
in
lay
language,
what
makes
the
achievement
significant?"
"I
can
try,"
said
Denison,
cautiously.
"Suppose
we
start
with
the
para-Universe.
It
has
a
more
intense
strong
nuclear
interaction
than
our
Universe
has
so
that
relatively
small
masses
of
protons
in
the
para-Universe
can
undergo
the
fusion
reaction
capable
of
supporting
a
star.
Masses
equivalent
to
our
stars
would
explode
violently
in
the
para-Universe
which
has
many
more,
but
much
smaller,
stars
than
ours
does.
"Suppose,
now,
that
we
had
a
much
less
Intense
strong
nuclear
interaction
than
that
which
prevails
in
our
Universe.
In
that
case,
huge
masses
of
protons
would
have
so
little
tendency
to
fuse
that
a
very
large
mass
of
hydrogen
would
be
needed
to
support
a
star.
Such
an
anti-para-Uni-verse-one
that
was
the
opposite
of
the
para-Universe,
in
other
words-would
consist
of
considerably
fewer
but
of
far
larger
stars
than
our
Universe
does.
In
fact,
if
the
strong
nuclear
interaction
were
made
sufficiently
weak,
a
Universe
would
exist
which
consisted
of
a
single
star
containing
all
the
mass
in
that
Universe.
It
would
be
a
very
dense
star,
but
relatively
non-reactive
and
giving
off
no
more
radiation
than
our
single
Sun
does,
perhaps."
Gottstein
said,
"Am
I
wrong,
or
isn't
that
the
situation
that
prevailed
in
our
own
Universe
before
the
time
of
the
big
bang-one
vast
body
containing
all
the
universal
mass."
"Yes,"
said
Denison,
"as
a
matter
of
fact,
the
anti-para-Universe
I
am
picturing
consists
of
what
some
call
a
cosmic
egg;
or
'cosmeg'
for
short.
A
cosmeg-Universe
is
what
we
need
if
we
are
to
probe
for
one-way
leakage.
The
para-Universe
we
are
now
using
with
its
tiny
stars
is
virtually
empty
space.
You
can
probe
and
probe
and
touch
nothing."
"The
para-men
reached
us,
however."
"Yes,
possibly
by
following
magnetic
fields.
There
is
some
reason
to
think
that
there
are
no
planetary
magnetic
fields
of
significance
in
the
para-Universe,
which
deprives
us
of
the
advantage
they
have.
On
the
other
hand,
if
we
probe
the
cosmeg-Universe,
we
cannot
fail.
The
cosmeg
is,
itself,
the
entire
Universe,
and
wherever
we
probe
we
strike
matter."
"But
how
do
you
probe
for
it?"
Denison
hesitated.
"That
is
the
part
I
find
difficult
to
explain.
Pions
are
the
mediating
particles
of
the
strong
nuclear
interaction.
The
intensity
of
the
interaction
depends
on
the
mass
of
the
pions
and
that
mass
can,
under
certain
specialized
conditions,
be
altered.
The
Lunar
physicists
have
developed
an
instrument
they
call
the
Pionizer,
which
can
be
made
to
do
just
such
a
thing.
Once
the
pion's
mass
is
decreased,
or
increased
for
that
matter,
it
is,
effectively,
part
of
another
Universe;
it
becomes
a
gateway,
a
crossing
point.
If
it
is
decreased
sufficiently,
it
can
be
made
part
of
a
cosmeg-Universe
and
that's
what
we
want."
Gottstein
said,
"And
you
can
suck
in
matter
from
the-
the-cosmeg-Universe?"
"That
part
is
easy.
Once
the
gateway
forms,
the
influx
is
spontaneous.
The
matter
enters
with
its
own
laws
and
is
stable
when
it
arrives.
Gradually
the
laws
.of
our
own
Universe
soak
in,
the
strong
interaction
grows
stronger,
and
the
matter
fuses
and
begins
to
give
off
enormous
energy."
"But
if
it
is
super-dense,
why
doesn't
it
just
expand
in
a
puff
of
smoke?"
"That,
too,
would
yield
energy,
but
that
depends
on
the
electromagnetic
field
and
in
this
particular
case
the
strong
interaction
takes
precedence,
because
we
control
the
electromagnetic
field.
It
would
take
quite
a
time
to
explain
that."
"Well,
then,
the
globe
of
light
that
I
saw
on
the
surface
was
cosmeg
material
fusing?"
"Yes,
Commissioner."
"And
that
energy
can
be
harnessed
for
useful
purposes?"
"Certainly.
And
in
any
quantity.
What
you
saw
was
the
arrival
in
our
Universe
of
micromicrogram
masses
of
cosmeg.
There's
nothing,
in
theory,
to
prevent
our
bringing
it
over
in
ton-lots."
"Well,
then,
this
can
be
used
to
replace
the
Electron
Pump."
Denison
shook
his
head.
"No.
The
use
of
cosmeg
energy
also
alters
the
properties
of
the
Universes
in
question.
The
strong
interaction
gradually
grows
more
intense
in
the
cosmeg-Universe
and
less
intense
in
ours
as
the
laws
of
nature
cross
over.
That
means
that
the
cosmeg
slowly
undergoes
fusion
at
a
greater
rate
and
gradually
warms
up.
Eventually-"
"Eventually,"
sad
Gottstein,
crossing
his
arms
across
his
chest
and
narrowing
his
eyes,
thoughtfully,
"it
explodes
in
a
big
bang."
"That's
my
feeling."
"Do
you
suppose
that's
what
happened
to
our
own
Universe
ten
billion
years
ago?"
"Perhaps.
Cosmogonists
have
wondered
why
the
original
cosmic
egg
exploded
at
some
one
point
in
time
and
not
at
another.
One
solution
was
to
imagine
an
oscillating
Universe
in
which
the
cosmic
egg
was
formed
and
then
at
once
exploded.
The
oscillating
Universe
has
been
eliminated
as
a
possibility
and
the
conclusion
is
that
the
cosmic
egg
had
to
exist
for
some
long
period
of
time
and
then
went
through
a
crisis'
of
instability
which
arose
for
some
unknown
reason."
"But
which
may
have
been
the
result
of
the
tapping
of
its
energy
across
the
Universes."
"Possibly,
but
not
necessarily
by
some
intelligence.
Perhaps
there
are
occasional
spontaneous
leaks."
"And
when
the
big
bang
takes
place,"
said
Gottstein,
"can
we
still
extract
energy
from
the
cosmeg-Universe?"
"I'm
not
sure,
but
surely
that
is
not
an
immediate
worry.
The
leakage
of
our
strong-interaction
field
into
the
cosmeg-Universe
must
very
likely
continue
for
millions
of
years
before
pushing
it
past
the
critical
point.
And
there
must
be
other
cosmeg-Universes;
an
infinite
number,
perhaps.
"What
about
the
change
in
our
own
Universe?"
"The
strong
interaction
weakens.
Slowly,
very
slowly,
our
Sun
cools
off."
"Can
we
use
cosmeg
energy
to
make
up
for
that?"
"That
would
not
be
necessary,
Commissioner,"
said
Denison,
earnestly.
"While
the
strong
interaction
here
in
our
Universe
weakens
as
a
result
of
the
cosmeg
pump,
it
strengthens
through
the
action
of
the
ordinary
Electron
Pump.
If
we
adjust
the
energy
productions
of
the
two
then,
though
the
laws
of
nature
change
in
the
cosmeg-Universe
and
in
the
para-Universe,
they
do
not
change
in
ours.
We
are
a
highway
but
not
the
terminus
in
either
direction.
"Nor
need
we
be
disturbed
on
behalf
of
the
terminuses'.
The
para-men
on
their
side
may
have
adjusted
themselves
to
the
cooling
off
of
their
Sun
which
may
be
pretty
cool
to
begin
with.
As
for
the
cosmeg-Universe,
there
is
no
reason
to
suspect
life
can
exist
there.
Indeed,
it
is
by
inducing
the
conditions
required
for
the
big
bang
that
we
may
be
setting
up
a
new
land
of
Universe
that
will
eventually
grow
hospitable
to
life."
For
a
while,
Gottstein
said
nothing.
His
plump
face,
in
repose,
seemed
emotionless.
He
nodded
to
himself
as
though
following
the
line
of
his
own
thoughts.
Finally,
he
said,
"You
know,
Denison,
I
think
this
is
what
will
set
the
world
on
its
ear.
Any
difficulty
in
persuading
the
scientific
leadership
that
the
Electron
Pump
is
destroying
the
world
should
now
disappear."
Denison
said,
"The
emotional
reluctance
to
accept
that
no
longer
exists.
It
will
be
possible
to
present
the
problem
and
the
solution
at
the
same
time."
"When
would
you
be
willing
to
prepare
a
paper
to
this
effect
if
I
guarantee
speedy
publication?"
"Can
you
guarantee
that?"
"In
a
government-published
pamphlet,
if
no
other
way."
"I
would
prefer
to
try
to
neutralize
the
leak-instability
before
reporting."
"Of
course."
"And
I
think
it
would
be
wise,"
said
Denison,
"to
arrange
to
have
Dr.
Peter
Lament
as
co-author.
He
can
make
the
mathematics
rigorous;
something
I
cannot
do.
Besides,
it
was
through
his
work
that
I
took
the
course
I
have
followed.
One
more
point,
Commissioner-"
"Yes."
"I
would
suggest
that
the
Lunar
physicists
be
involved.
One
of
their
number,
Dr.
Barren
Neville,
might
well
be
a
third
author."
"But
why?
Aren't
you
introducing
unnecessary
complications
now?"
"It
was
their
Pionizer
that
made
everything
possible."
"There
can
be
appropriate
mention
of
that.
.
.
.
But
did
Dr.
Barren
actually
work
on
the
project
with
you?"
"Not
directly."
"Then
why
involve
him?"
Denison
looked
down
and
brushed
his
hand
thoughtfully
over
the
weave
of
his
pants
leg.
He
said,
"It
would
be
the
diplomatic
thing
to
do.
We
would
need
to
set
up
the
cosmeg
pump
on
the
Moon."
"Why
not
on
Earth?"
"In
the
first
place,
we
need
a
vacuum.
This
is
a
one-way
transfer
and
not
a
two-way
as
in
the
case
of
the
Electron
Pump,
and
the
conditions
necessary
to
make
it
practical
are
different
in
the
two
cases.
The
surface
of
the
Moon
has
its
vacuum
ready-made
in
vast
quantities;
while
to
prepare
one
on
Earth
would
involve
an
enormous
effort."
"Yet
it
could
be
done,
couldn't
it?"
"Secondly,"
said
Denison,
"if
we
have
two
vast
energy
sources
from
opposite
directions
with
our
own
Universe
between,
there
would
be
something
like
a
short
circuit
if
the
two
outlets
were
too
close
together.
Separation
by
a
quarter-million
miles
of
vacuum,
with
the
Electron
Pump
operating
only
on
Earth
and
the
cosmeg
pump
operating
only
on
the
Moon,
would
be
ideal-in
fact,
necessary.
And
if
we
are
to
operate
on
the
Moon,
it
would
be
wise,
even
decent,
to
take
the
sensibilities
of
the
Lunar
physicists
into
account.
We
ought
to
give
them
a
share."
Gottstein
smiled.
"Is
this
the
advice
of
Miss
Lindstrom?"
"I'm
sure
it
would
be,
but
the
suggestion
is
reasonable
enough
to
have
occurred
to
me
independently."
Gottstein
rose,
stretched,
and
then
jumped
in
place
two
or
three
times
in
the
eerily
slow
fashion
imposed
by
Lunar
gravity.
He
flexed
his
knees
each
time.
He
sat
down
again
and
said,
"Ever
try
that,
Dr.
Denison?"
Denison
shook
his
head.
"It's
supposed
to
help
the
circulation
in
the
lower
extremities.
I
do
it
whenever
I
feel
my
legs
may
be
going
to
sleep.
I'll
be
heading
back
for
a
short
visit
to
Earth
before
long
and
I'm
trying
to
keep
from
getting
too
used
to
Lunar
gravity....
Shall
we
talk
of
Miss
Lindstrom,
Dr.
Denison?"
Denison
said
in
a
quite
changed
tone,
"What
about
her?"
"She
is
a
tourist
guide."
"Yes.
You
said
so
earlier."
"As
I
also
said,
she
is
an
odd
assistant
for
a
physicist."
"Actually,
I'm
an
amateur
physicist
only,
and
I
suppose
she
is
an
amateur
assistant"
Gottstein
was
no
longer
smiling.
"Don't
play
games,
Doctor.
I
have
taken
the
trouble
to
find
out
what
I
can
about
her.
Her
record
is
quite
revealing,
or
would
have
been
if
it
had
occurred
to
anyone
to
look
at
it
before
this.
I
believe
she
is
an
Intuitionist"
Denison
said,
"Many
of
us
are.
I
have
no
doubt
you
are
an
Intuitionist
yourself,
after
a
fashion.
I
certainly
know
that
I
am,
after
a
fashion."
"There
is
a
difference,
Doctor.
You
are
an
accomplished
scientist
and
I,
I
hope,
am
an
accomplished
administrator.
.
.
.
Yet
while
Miss
Lindstrom
is
enough
of
an
Intuitionist
to
be
useful
to
you
in
advanced
theoretical
physics,
she
is,
in
actual
fact,
a
tourist
guide."
Denison
hesitated.
"She
has
little
formal
training,
Commissioner.
Her
Intuitionism
is
at
an
unusually
high
level
but
it
is
under
little
conscious
control."
"Is
she
the
result
of
the
one-time
genetic
engineering
program?"'
"I
don't
know.
I
wouldn't
be
surprised
if
that
were
so,
however."
"Do
you
trust
her?"
"In
what
way?
She
has
helped
me."
"Do
you
know
that
she
is
the
wife
of
Dr.
Barron
Neville?"
"There
is
an
emotional
connection;
not
a
legal
one,
I
believe."
"None
of
the
connections
are
what
we
would
call
legal
here
on
the
Moon.
The
same
Neville
you
want
to
invite
as
third
author
of
the
paper
you
are
to
write?"
"Yes."
"Is
that
merely
a
coincidence?"
"No.
Neville
was
interested
in
my
arrival
and
I
believe
he
asked
Selene
to
help
me
in
my
work."
"Did
she
tell
you
this?"
"She
said
he
was
interested
in
me.
That
was
natural
enough,
I
suppose."
"Does
it
occur
to
you,
Dr.
Denison,
that
she
may
be
working
in
her
own
interests
and
in
those
of
Dr.
Neville?"
"In
what
way
would
their
interests
differ
from
ours?
She
has
helped
me
without
reservation."
Gottstein
shifted
position
and
moved
his
shoulders
as
though
he
were
going
through
muscle-pulling
exercises.
He
said,
"Dr.
Neville
must
know
that
a
woman
so
close
to
himself
is
an
Intuitionist.
Wouldn't
he
use
her?
Why
would
she
remain
a
tourist
guide,
if
not
to
mask
her
abilities-for
a
purpose."
"I
understand
Dr.
Neville
frequently
reasons
in
this
fashion.
I
find
it
difficult
to
suspect
unnecessary
conspiracies."
"How
do
you
know
they
are
unnecessary....
When
my
space-skipper
was
hovering
over
the
Moon's
surface
just
before
the
ball
of
radiation
formed
over
your
equipment,
I
was
looking
down
at
you.
You
were
not
at
the
Pionizer."
Denison
thought
back.
"No,
I
wasn't
I
was
looking
at
the
stars;
rather
a
tendency
of
mine
on
the
surface."
"What
was
Miss
Lindstrom
doing?"
"I
didn't
see.
She
said
she
strengthened
the
magnetic
field
and
the
leak
finally
broke
through."
"Is
it
customary
for
her
to
manipulate
the
equipment
without
you?"
"No.
But
I
can
understand
the
impulse."
"And
would
there
have
been
some
sort
of
an
ejection?"
"I
don't
understand
you."
"I'm
not
sure
I
understand
myself.
There
was
a
dim
sparkle
in
the
Earthlight,
as
though
something
was
flying
through
the
air.
I
don't
know
what."
"I
don't
either,"
said
Denison.
"You
can't
think
of
anything
that
might
naturally
have
to
do
with
the
experiment
that-"
"No."
'Then
what
was
Miss
Lindstrom
doing?"
"I
still
don't
know."
For
a
moment,
the
silence
was
heavy
between
them.
Then
the
Commissioner
said,
"As
I
see
it
then,
you
will
try
to
correct
the
leak-instability
and
will
be
thinking
about
the
preparation
of
a
paper.
I
will
get
matters
into
motion
at
the
other
end
and
on
my
shortly
forthcoming
visit
to
Earth
will
make
arrangements
to
have
the
paper
published
and
will
alert
the
government."
It
was
a
clear
dismissal.
Denison
rose
and
the
Commissioner
said
easily,
"And
think
about
Dr.
Neville
and
Miss
Lindstrom."
17
It was a heavier star of radiation, a fatter one, a brighter one. Denison could feel its warmth on his faceplate, and backed away.
There was a distinct x-ray component in the radiation and though this shielding should take care of that there was no point in placing it under a strain. "I guess we can't question it," he
muttered. "The leak-point is stable." "I'm sure of it," said Selene, flatly. "Then let's turn it off and go back to the city." They moved slowly and Denison felt oddly dispirited. There
was no uncertainty any more; no excitement. From this point on, there was no chance of failure. The government was interested; more and more, it would be out of his own hands. He said,
"I suppose I can begin the paper now." "I suppose so," said Selene, carefully. "Have you talked to Barren again?" "Yes, I have," "Any difference in his attitude?" "None at all. He
will not participate. Ben-" "Yes?" "I really don't think it's any use talking to him. He will not cooperate in any project with the Earth government" "But you've explained the situation?"
"Completely." "And he still won't." "He's asked to see Gottstein, and the Commissioner agreed to an interview after he returns from his Earth visit Well have to wait till then. Maybe Gottstein
can have some effect on him, but I doubt it." Denison shrugged, a useless maneuver inside his space-suit. "I don't understand him." "I do," said Selene, softly. Denison did not respond directly. He
shoved the Pionizer and its attendant apparatus into its rocky shelter and said, "Ready?" "Ready." They slipped into the surface entrance at Outlet P-4 in silence and
Denison climbed down the entry ladder. Selene dropped past him, braking in quick holds at individual rungs. Denison had learned to do that, but he was dispirited and climbed
down in a kind of rebellious refusal to accept acclimation. They removed their suits in the staging areas, placed them in their lockers. Denison said, "Would you join me for
lunch, Selene?" Selene said uneasily, "You seem upset. Is something wrong?" "Reaction, I think. Lunch?" "Yes, of course." They ate in Selene's quarters. She insisted, saying, "I
want to talk to you and I can't do it properly in. the cafeteria." And when Denison was chewing slowly at something that had a faint resemblance to peanut-flavored veal, she said,
"Ben, you haven't said a word, and you've been like this for a week." "No, I haven't," said Denison, frowning. "Yes, you have." She looked into his eyes with concern. "I'm not
sure how good my intuition is outside physics, but I suppose there's something you don't want to tell me." Denison shrugged. "They're making a fuss about all this back on
Earth. Gottstein has been pulling at strings as tough as cables in advance of his trip back. Dr. Lament is being lionized, and they want me to come back once the paper is written."
"Back to Earth?" "Yes. It seems I'm a hero, too." "You should be." "Complete rehabilitation," said Denison, thoughtfully, "is what they offer. It's clear I can get a position in
any suitable university or government agency on Earth." "Isn't that what you wanted?" "It's what I imagine Lament wants, and would enjoy, and will certainly get. But I don't want
it." Selene said, "What do you want then?" "I want to stay on the Moon." "Why?" "Because it's the cutting edge of humanity and I want to be part of that cutting edge. I want to
work at the establishment of cosmeg pumps and that will be only here on the Moon. I want to work on para-theory with the kind of instruments you can dream up and handle, Selene. ...
I want to be with you, Selene. But will you stay with me?" "I am as interested in para-theory as you are." Denison said, "But won't Neville pull you off the job now?" "Barren pull me
off?" She said, tightly, "Are you trying to insult me, Ben?" "Not at all." "Well, then, do I misunderstand you? Are you suggesting that I'm working with you because Barron ordered
me to?" "Didn't he?" "Yes, he did. But that's not why I'm here. I choose to be here. He may think he can order me about but he can only do so when his orders coincide with
my will, as in your case they did. I resent his thinking he can order me otherwise, and I resent your thinking it, too." "You two are sex-partners." "We have been, yes, but what
has that to do with it? By that argument, I can order him about as easily as he me." "Then you can work with me, Selene?" "Certainly," she said, coldly. "If I choose to." "But
do you choose to?" "As of now, yes." And Denison smiled. "The chance that you might not choose to, or even might not be able to, is, I think, what has really been worrying me
this past week. I dreaded the end of the project if it meant the end of you. I'm sorry, Selene, I don't mean to plague you with a sentimental attachment of an old Earthie-"
"Well, there's nothing old Earthie about your mind, Ben. There are other attachments than sexual. I like being with you." There was a pause and Denison's smile faded, then returned,
perhaps a thought more mechanically. "I'm glad for my mind." Denison looked away, shook his head slightly, then turned back. She watched him carefully, almost anxiously. Denison
said, "Selene, there's more than energy involved in the cross-Universe leaks. I suspect you've been thinking about that." The silence stretched out now, painfully, and finally
Selene said, "Oh, that-" For a while the two stared at each other-Denison embarrassed, Selene almost furtive.
18
Gottstein said, "I haven't got my Moon-legs quite yet, but this isn't anything compared to what it cost me to get my Earth-legs. Denison, you had better not dream of returning.
You'll never make it." "I have no intention of returning, Commissioner," said Denison. "In a way, it's too bad. You could be emperor by acclamation. As for Hallam-" Denison said,
wistfully, "I would have liked to see his face, but that's a small ambition." "Lamont, of course, is receiving the lion's share. He's on the spot." "I don't mind that. He deserves
a good deal.... Do you think Neville will really join us?" "No question. He's on his way at this moment. ... Listen," Gottstein's voice dropped one conspiratorial note in pitch.
"Before he comes, would you like a bar of chocolate?" "What?". "A bar of chocolate. With almonds. One. I have some." Denison's face, from initial confusion, suddenly lit with
comprehension. "Real chocolate?" "Yes." "Certain-" His face hardened. "No, Commissioner." "No?" "No! If I taste real chocolate then, for the few minutes It's in my mouth, I'm
going to miss Earth; I'm going to miss everything about it. I can't afford that. I don't want it. ... Don't even show it to me. Don't let me smell it or see it." The Commissioner
looked discomfited. "You're right." He made an obvious attempt to change the subject. "The excitement on Earth is overwhelming. Of course, we made a considerable effort to
save Hallam's face. He'll continue to hold some position of importance, but he'll have little real say." "He's getting more consideration than he gave others," said Denison,
resignedly. "It's not for his sake. You can't smash a personal image that has been built to a level of such importance; it would reflect on science itself. The good name of
science is more important than Hallam either way." "I disapprove of that in principle," said Denison, warmly. "Science must take what blows it deserves." "A time and place
for- There's Dr. Neville." Gottstein composed his face. Denison shifted his' chair to face the entrance. Barron Neville entered solemnly. Somehow there was less than ever
of the Lunar delicacy about his figure. He greeted the two curtly, sat down, and crossed his legs. He was clearly waiting for Gottstein to speak first. The Commissioner said,
"I am glad to see you, Dr. Neville, Dr. Denison tells me that you refused to append your name to what I am sure will be a classic paper on the cosmeg pump." "No need to do so,"
said Neville. "What happens on Earth is of no interest to me." "You are aware of the cosmeg pump experiments? Of its implications?" "All of them. I know the situation as
well as you two do." "Then I will proceed without preliminaries. I have returned from Earth, Dr. Neville, and it is quite settled as to what will be the course of future
procedure. Large cosmeg pump stations will be set up on three different places on the Lunar surface in such a way that one will always be in the night-shadow. Half the time,
two win be. Those in the night-shadow will be constantly generating energy, most of which will simply radiate into space. The purpose will be not so much to use the energy
for practical purposes, as to counteract the changes in field intensities introduced by the Electron Pump." Denison interrupted. "For some years, we will have to overbalance
the Electron Pump to restore our section of the Universe to the point at which it was before the pump began operation." Neville nodded. "Will Luna City have the use of any
of it?" "If necessary. We feel the Solar batteries will probably supply what you need, but there is no objection to supplementation." "That is land of you," said Neville,
not bothering to mask the sarcasm. "And who will build and run the cosmeg pump stations?" "Lunar workers, we hope," said Gottstein. "Lunar workers, you know," said Neville.
"Earth workers would be too clumsy to work effectively on the Moon." "We recognize that," said Gottstein, "We trust the men of the Moon will cooperate." "And who will decide how
much energy to generate, how much to apply for any local purpose, how much to radiate away? Who decides policy?" Gottstein said, "The government would have to. It's a matter
of planetary decision." Neville said, "You see, then, it will be Moonmen who do the work; Earthmen who run the show." Gottstein said, calmly, "No. All of us work who work best;
all of us administer who can best weigh the total problem." "I hear the words," said Neville, "but it boils down anyway to us working and you deciding. . . . No, Commissioner.
Hie answer is no." "You mean you won't build the cosmeg pump stations?" "Well build them, Commissioner, but they'll be ours. Well decide how much energy to put out and what
use to make of it." "That would scarcely be efficient. You would have to deal constantly with the Earth government since the cosmeg pump energy will have to balance the Electron
Pump energy." "I dare say it will, more or less, but we have other things in mind. You might as well know now. Energy is not the only conserved phenomenon that
becomes limitless once universes are crossed." Denison interrupted. "There are a number of conservation laws. We realize that." "I'm glad you do," said Neville, turning a
hostile glare in his direction. "They include those of linear momentum and angular momentum. As long as any object responds to the gravitational field in which it is immersed,
and to that only, it is in free fall and can retain its mass. In order to move in any other way than free fall, it must accelerate in a non-gravitational way and for that
to happen, part of itself must undergo an opposite change." "As in a rocketship," said Denison, "which must eject mass in one direction in order that the rest might accelerate
in the opposite direction." "I'm sure you understand, Dr. Denison," said Neville, "but I explain for the Commissioner's sake. The loss of mass can be minimized if its velocity
is increased enormously, since momentum is equal to mass multiplied by velocity. Nevertheless, however great the velocity, some mass must be thrown away. If the mass which
must be acceterated is enormous in the first place, then the mass which must be discarded is also enormous. If the Moon, for instance-" "The Moon!" said Gottstein, explosively.
"Yes, the Moon," said Neville, calmly. "If the Moon were to be driven out of its orbit and sent out of the Solar system, the conservation of momentum would make it a colossal
undertaking, and probably a thoroughly impractical one. If, however, momentum could be transferred to the cosmeg in another Universe, the Moon could accelerate at any convenient
rate without loss of mass at all. It would be like poling a barge upstream, to give you a picture I obtained from some Earth-book I once read." "But why? I mean why should you
want to move the Moon?" "I should think that would be obvious. Why do we need the suffocating presence of the Earth? We have the energy we need; we have a comfortable world
through which we have room to expand for the next few centuries, at least Why not go our own way? In any case, we will. I have come to tell you that you cannot stop us and
to urge you to make no attempt to interfere. We shall transfer momentum and we shall pull out. We of the Moon know precisely how to go about building cosmeg pump stations.
We will use what energy we need for ourselves and produce excess in order to neutralize the changes your own power stations are producing." Denison said, sardonically,
"It sounds kind of you to produce excess for our sake, but it isn't for our sake, of course. If our Electron Pumps explode the Sun, that will happen long before you can
move out of even the inner Solar system and you will vaporize wherever you are." "Perhaps," said Neville, "but in any case we will produce an excess, so that won't happen."
"But you can't do that," said Gottstein, excitedly. "You can't move out. If you get out too far, the cosmeg pump will no longer neutralize the Electron Pump, eh, Denison?"
Denison shrugged. "Once they are as far off as Saturn, more or less, there may be trouble, if I may trust a mental calculation I have just made. It will, however, be
many years before they recede to such a distance and by that time, we will surely have constructed space stations in what was once the orbit of the Moon and place cosmeg
pumps on them. Actually, we don't need the Moon. It can leave-except that it won't." Neville smiled briefly. "What makes you think we won't? We can't be stopped. There
is no way Earthmen can impose their will on us." "You won't leave, because there's no sense to doing so. Why drag the entire Moon away? To build up respectable accelerations
will take years where the Moon-mass is concerned. You'll creep. Build starships instead; miles-long ships that are cosmeg-powered and have independent ecologies. With a
cosmeg momentum-drive, you can then do wonders. If it takes twenty years to build the ships, they will nevertheless accelerate at a rate that will enable them to overtake
the Moon's place within a year even if the Moon starts accelerating today. The ships will be able to change course in a tiny fraction of the time the Moon will." "And the
unbalanced cosmeg pumps? What will that do to the Universe?" "The energy required by a ship, or even by a number, will be far less than that required by a planet and will
be distributed throughout large sections of the Universe. It will be millions of years before any significant change takes place. That is well worth the maneuverability you gain.
The Moon will move so slowly it might as well be left in space." Neville said, scornfully, "We're in no hurry to get anywhere-except away from Earth." Denison said, "There are
advantages in having Earth as a neighbor. You have the influx of the Immigrants. You have cultural intercourse. You have a planetary world of two billion people just over
the horizon. Do you want to give all that up?" "Gladly." "Is that true of the people of the Moon generally? Or just of you? There's something intense about you, Neville.
You won't go out on the surface. Other Lunarites do. They don't like it particularly, but they do. The interior of the Moon isn't their womb, as it is in your case.
It isn't their prison, as it is yours. There is a neurotic factor in you that is absent in most Lunarities, or at least considerably weaker. If you take the Moon away from Earth,
you make it into a prison for all. It will become a one-world prison from which no man-and not you only-can emerge, not even to the extent of seeing another inhabited world
in the sky. Perhaps that is what you want." "I want independence; a free world; a world untouched by the outside." "You can build ships, any number. You can move outward
at near-light velocities without difficulty, once you transfer momentum to the cosmeg. You can explore the entire Universe in a single lifetime. Wouldn't you like to get
on such a ship?" "No," said Neville, with clear distaste. "Wouldn't you? Or is it couldn't? Is it that you must take the Moon with you wherever you go Why must all the others
accept your need?" "Because that's the way it's going to be," said Neville. Denison's voice remained level but his cheeks reddened. "Who gave you the right to say that?
There are many citizens of Luna City who may not feel as you do." "That is none of your concern." "That is precisely my concern. I am an Immigrant who will qualify for
citizenship soon. I do not wish to have my choice made for me by someone who cannot emerge on the surface and who wants his personal prison made into a prison for all.
I have left Earth forever, but only to come to the Moon, only to remain a quarter-million miles from the home-planet. I have not contracted to be taken forever away
for an unlimited distance," "Then return to Earth," said Neville, indifferently. "There is still time." "And what of the other citizens of Luna? The other Immigrants?"
"The decision is made." "It is not made.... Selene!" Selene entered, her face solemn, her eyes a little defiant. Neville's legs uncrossed. Both shoes came down flat
upon the ground. Neville said, "How long have you been waiting in the next room, Selene?" "Since before you arrived, Barron," she said. Neville looked from Selene to
Denison and back again. "You two-" he began, finger pointing from one to the other and back. "I don't know what you mean by you two,'" said Selene, "but Ben found out
about the momentum quite a while ago." "It wasn't Selene's fault," said Denison. "The Commissioner spotted something flying at a time when no one could possibly have
known he would be observing. It seemed to me that Selene might be testing something I was not thinking of and transfer of momentum eventually occurred to me. After that-"
"Well, then, you knew," said Neville. "It doesn't matter." "It does, Barron," said Selene. "I talked about it with Ben. I found that I didn't always have to accept
what you said. Perhaps I can't ever go to Earth. Perhaps I don't even want to. But I found I liked it in the sky where I could see it if I wanted to, I didn't want
an empty sky. Then I talked to others of the Group. Not everybody wants to leave. Most people would rather build the ships and let those go who wish to go while allowing
those to remain behind who wish to remain." Neville's breath was coming hard. "You talked about it. Who gave you the right to-" "I took the right, Barron. Besides,
it doesn't matter any more. You'll be outvoted." "Because of-" Neville rose to his feet and took a menacing step toward Denison. The Commissioner said, "Please don't
get emotional, Dr. Neville. You may be of Luna, but I don't think you can man-handle both of us." "All three," said Selene, "and I'm of Luna, too.
I did it, Barron; not they." Then Denison said, "Look, Neville- For all Earth cares, the Moon can go. Earth can build its space stations. It's the citizens of Luna City who
care. Selene cares and I care and the rest You are not being debarred from space, from escape, from freedom. In twenty years at the outside, all who want to go will go, including
you if you can bring yourself to leave the womb. And those who want to stay will stay." Slowly, Neville seated himself again. There was the look of defeat on his face.
19
In Selene's apartment, every window now had a view of the Earth. She said, "The vote did go against him, you know, Ben. Quite heavily." "I doubt that he'll give up, though.
If there's friction with Earth during the building of the stations, public opinion on the Moon may swing back." "There needn't be friction." "No, there needn't. In any case,
there are no happy endings in history, only crisis points that pass. We've passed this one safely, I think, and we'll be sorry about the others as they come and as they can
be foreseen. Once the starships are built, the tension will surely subside considerably." "We'll live to see that, I'm sure." "You will, Selene." "You, too, Ben. Don't overdramatize
your age. You're only forty-eight." "Would you go on one of the starships, Selene?" "No. I'd be too old and I still wouldn't want to lose Earth in the sky. My son might go....
Ben." "Yes, Selene." "I have applied for a second son. The application has been accepted. Would you contribute?" Denison's eyes lifted and looked straight into hers.
She did not look away. He said, "Artificial insemination?" She said, "Of course... . The gene combination should be interesting." Denison's eyes dropped. "I would be
flattered, Selene." Selene said, defensively, "That's just good sense, Ben. It's important to have good gene combinations. There's nothing wrong with some natural genetic
engineering." "None at all." "It doesn't mean that I don't want it for other reasons, too.... Because I like you." Denison nodded and remained silent. Selene said, almost
angrily, "Well, there's more to love than sex." Denison said, "I agree to that At least, I love you even with sex subtracted." And Selene said, "And for that matter,
there's more to sex than acrobatics." Denison said, "I agree to that, too." And Selene said, "And besides- Oh, damn it,
you could try to learn." Denison said softly, "If you would try to teach." Hesitantly, he moved toward her. She did not move away.
He stopped hesitating.
*Schiller: “Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain”
Asimov's inspiration for the title of the book, and its three sections,
was a quotation by Friedrich Schiller: "Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens."