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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Measure for a Loner, by Jim Harmon
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Measure for a Loner, by James Judson Harmon
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Measure for a Loner
+
+Author: James Judson Harmon
+
+Release Date: September 14, 2007 [EBook #22596]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEASURE FOR A LONER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="cpoem">You can measure everything these days&mdash;heat,
+light, gravity, reflexes, force-fields, star-drives.
+And now I know there even is a ...</div>
+
+
+<h1>MEASURE FOR A LONER</h1>
+
+<h2>By JIM HARMON</h2>
+
+
+<p class="cap">SO, GENERAL, I came in to
+tell you I've found the loneliest
+man in the world for the
+Space Force.</p>
+
+<p>How am I supposed to rate his
+loneliness for you? In Megasorrows
+or Kilofears? I suspect I
+know quite a library on the subject,
+but you know more about
+stripes and bars. Don't try to
+stop me this time, General.</p>
+
+<p>Now that you mention it, I'm
+not drunk. I had to have something
+to back me up so I stopped
+off at the dispensary and stole
+a needle.</p>
+
+<p>I want you to get off my back
+with that kind of talk. I've got
+enough there&mdash;it bends me over
+like I had bad kidneys. It isn't
+any of King Kong's little brothers.
+They over rate the stuff. It
+isn't the way you've been riding
+me either. Never mind what I'm
+carrying. Whatever it is&mdash;and
+believe me, it <i>is</i>&mdash;I have to get
+rid of it.</p>
+
+<p>Let me tell it, for God's sake.</p>
+
+<p>Then for Security's sake? I
+thought you would let me tell it,
+General.</p>
+
+<p>I've been coming in here and
+giving you pieces of it for
+months but now I want to let
+you be drenched in the whole
+thing. You're going to take it
+all.</p>
+
+<p>There were the two of them,
+the two lonely men, and I found
+them for you.</p>
+
+<p>You remember the way I
+found them for you.</p>
+
+<p>The intercom on my blond
+desk made an electronic noise at
+me and the words I had been arranging
+in my mind for the
+morning letters splattered into
+alphabet soup like a printer
+dropping a prepared slug of
+type.</p>
+
+<p>I made the proper motion to
+still the sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I grunted.</p>
+
+<p>My secretary cleared her
+throat on my time.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Thorn," she said, "there's
+a Mr. Madison here to see you.
+He lays claim to be from the
+Star Project."</p>
+
+<p>He could come in and file his
+claim, I told the girl.</p>
+
+<p>I rummaged in the wastebasket
+and uncrumpled the morning's
+facsimile newspaper. It
+was full of material about the
+Star Project.</p>
+
+<p>We were building Man's first
+interstellar spaceship.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>A surprising number of people
+considered it important. Flipping
+from the rear to page one,
+Wild Bill Star in the comics who
+had been blasting all the way to
+forty-first sub-space universe for
+decades was harking back to the
+good old days of Man's first star
+flight (which he had made himself
+through the magic of time
+travel), the editor was calling
+the man to make the jaunt the
+Lindbergh of Space, and the
+staff photographer displayed a
+still of a Space Force pilot in
+pressure suit up front with his
+face blotted out by an air-brushed
+interrogation mark.</p>
+
+<p>Who was going to be the
+Lindbergh of Space?</p>
+
+<p>We had used up the Columbus
+of Space, the Magellan of Space,
+the Van Reck of Space. Now it
+was time for the Lone Eagle,
+one man who would wait out the
+light years to Alpha Centauri.</p>
+
+<p>I remembered the first Lindbergh.</p>
+
+<p>I rode a bus fifty miles to see
+him at an Air Force Day celebration
+when I was a dewy-eared
+kid. It's funny how kids still
+worship heroes who did everything
+before they were even born.
+Uncle Max had told me about
+standing outside the hospital with
+a bunch of boys his own age the
+evening Babe Ruth died of cancer.
+Lindbergh seemed like an
+old man to me when I finally saw
+him, but still active. Nobody had
+forgotten him. When his speech
+was over I cheered him with the
+rest just as if I knew what he
+had been talking about.</p>
+
+<p>But I probably knew more
+about what he meant then as a
+boy than I did feeling the reality
+of the newspaper in my
+hands. Grown-up, I could only
+smile at myself for wanting to
+go to the stars myself.</p>
+
+<p>Madison rapped on my office
+door and breezed in efficiently.</p>
+
+<p>I've always thought Madison
+was a rather irritating man.
+Likable but irritating. He's too
+good looking in an unassuming
+masculine way to dress so neatly&mdash;it
+makes him look like a mannequin.
+That polite way of his
+of using small words slowly and
+distinctly proves that he loves
+his fellow man&mdash;even if his fellow
+always does have less brains
+or authority than Madison himself.
+That belief would be forgivable
+in him if it wasn't so
+often true.</p>
+
+<p>Madison folded himself into
+the canary yellow client's chair
+at my direction, and took a
+leather-bound pocket secretary
+from inside his almost-too-snug
+jacket.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Thorn," he said expansively,
+"we need you to help us
+locate an atavism."</p>
+
+<p>I flicked professional smile
+No. Three at him lightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a historical psychologist,"
+I told him. "That sounds in my
+line. Which of your ancestors are
+you interested in having me
+analyze?"</p>
+
+<p>"I used the word 'atavism' to
+mean a reversion to the primitive."</p>
+
+<p>I made a pencil mark on my
+desk pad. I could make notes as
+well as he could read them.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I see," I murmured.
+"We don't use the term that way.
+Perhaps you don't understand
+my work. It's been an honest
+way to make a living for a few
+generations but it's so specialized
+it might sound foolish to
+someone outside the psychological
+industry. I psychoanalyze historical
+figures for history books
+(of course), and scholars, interested
+descendants, what all, and
+that's <i>all</i> I do."</p>
+
+<p>"All you <i>have</i> done," Madison
+admitted, "but your government
+is certain that you can do this
+new work for them&mdash;in fact, that
+you are one of the few men prepared
+to locate this esoteric&mdash;that
+is, this odd aberration
+since I understand you often
+have to deal with it in analyzing
+the past. Doctor, we want you
+to find us a lonely man."</p>
+
+<p>I laid my chrome yellow pencil
+down carefully beside the
+cream-colored pad.</p>
+
+<p>"History is full of loneliness&mdash;most
+of the so-called great
+men were rather neurotic&mdash;but I
+thought, Madison, that introspection
+was pretty much of a
+thing of the, well, past."</p>
+
+<p>The government representative
+inhaled deeply and steepled
+his manicured fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"Our system of childhood psycho-conditioning
+succeeds in
+burying loneliness in the subconscious
+so completely that even
+the records can't reveal if it was
+ever present."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I cleared my throat in order to
+stall, to think.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not acquainted with <i>contemporary</i>
+psychology, Madison.
+This comes as news to me. You
+mean people aren't really well-adjusted
+today, that they have
+just been conditioned to <i>act</i> as if
+they were?"</p>
+
+<p>He nodded. "Yes, that's it.
+It's ironic. Now we need a lonely
+man and we can't find him."</p>
+
+<p>"To pilot the interstellar
+spaceship?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the <i>Evening Star</i>, yes,"
+Madison agreed.</p>
+
+<p>I picked up my pencil and held
+it between my two index fingers.
+I couldn't think of a damned
+thing to say.</p>
+
+<p>"The whole problem," Madison
+was saying, "goes back to the
+early days of space travel. Men
+were confined in a small area
+facing infinite space for measureless
+periods in freefall. Men
+cracked&mdash;and ships, they cracked
+up. But as space travel advanced
+ships got larger, carried
+more people, more ties and reminders
+of human civilization.
+Pilots became more <i>normal</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I made myself look up at the
+earnest young man.</p>
+
+<p>"But now," I said, "now you
+want me to find you an abnormal
+pilot who is used to being
+alone, who can stand it, maybe
+even like it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Right."</p>
+
+<p>I constructed a genuine smile
+for him for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"Madison, do you really think
+<i>I</i> can find your man when evidently
+all the government agencies
+have failed?"</p>
+
+<p>The government representative
+pocketed his notebook deftly
+and then spread his hands
+clumsily for an instant.</p>
+
+<p>"At least, Doctor," he said,
+"you may <i>know</i> it if you do find
+him."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It was a lonely job to find a
+lonely man, General, and maybe
+it was a crooked job to walk a
+crooked mile to find a crooked
+man.</p>
+
+<p>I had to do it alone. No one
+else had enough experience in
+primitive psychology to recognize
+the phenomenon of loneliness,
+even as Madison had said.</p>
+
+<p>The working conditions suited
+me. I had to think by myself but
+I had a comfortable staff to carry
+out my ideas. I liked my new office
+and the executive apartment
+the government supplied me. I
+had authority and respect and I
+had security. The government
+assured me they would find further
+use for my services after I
+found them their man. I knew
+this was to keep me from dragging
+my tracks. But nevertheless
+I got right down to work.</p>
+
+<p>I found Gordon Meyverik exactly
+five weeks from the day
+Madison first visited me in my
+old office.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, I planned the
+whole thing, Dr. Thorn," Gordon
+said crisply.</p>
+
+<p>I knew what he meant although
+I hadn't guessed it before.
+He could tell it to me
+himself, I decided.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't seem much to brag
+about," I said. "Anybody who
+can make up a grocery list
+should be able to figure out how
+to isolate himself on Seal Island."</p>
+
+<p>He sat forward, a lean Viking
+with a hot Latin glance, very
+confident of himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I reckoned on you locating
+me, on you hustling me back to
+pilot the <i>Evening Star</i>. That's
+why I holed in there."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't accept your story," I
+lied cheerfully. "Nobody is going
+to maroon himself on an
+island for three years because of
+a wild possibility like that."</p>
+
+<p>Meyverik smiled and his sureness
+swelled out until it almost
+jabbed me in the stomach.</p>
+
+<p>"I took a broad gamble," he
+said, "but it hit the wire, didn't
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>I didn't reply, but he had his
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>Instead I scanned the report
+Madison had given me from Intelligence
+concerning the man's
+unorthodox behavior.</p>
+
+<p>Meyverik had quit his post-graduate
+studies and passed by
+the secured job that had been
+waiting for him eighteen months
+in a genial government office to
+barricade himself in an old shelter
+on Seal Island. It was hard
+to know what to make of it. He
+had brought impressive stores of
+food with him, books, sound and
+vision tapes but not telephone or
+television. For the next three
+years he had had no contact with
+humanity at all.</p>
+
+<p>And he said he had planned it
+all.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," he drawled. "I knew
+the government was looking for
+somebody to steer the interstellar
+ship that's been gossip for
+decades. That job," he said distinctly,
+"is one I would give a
+lot to settle into."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him across my unlittered
+brand new desk and
+accepted his irritating blond
+masculinity, disliked him, admired
+him, and continued to examine
+him to decide on my <i>final</i>
+evaluation.</p>
+
+<p>"You've given three years already,"
+I said, examining the
+sheets of the report with which
+I was thoroughly familiar.</p>
+
+<p>He twitched. He didn't like
+that, not spending three years.
+It was spendthrift, even if a
+good buy. He was planning on
+winding up somewhere important
+and to do it he had to invest
+his years properly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are trying to make me
+believe you deliberately extrapolated
+the government's need for
+a man who could stand being
+alone for long periods, and then
+tried to phoney up references for
+the work by staying on that island?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like that word
+'phoney'," Meyverik growled.</p>
+
+<p>"No? You name your word for
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Meyverik unhinged to his full
+height.</p>
+
+<p>"It was <i>proof</i>," he said. "A
+test."</p>
+
+<p>"A man can't test himself."</p>
+
+<p>"A lot you know," the big
+blond snorted.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>know</i>," I told him drily. "A
+man who isn't a hopeless maniac
+depressive can't consciously create
+a test for himself that he
+knows he will fail. You proved
+you could stay alone on an island,
+buster. You didn't prove
+you could stay alone in a spaceship
+out in the middle of infinity
+for three years. Why didn't
+you rent a conventional rocket
+and try looking at some of our
+local space? It all looks much the
+same."</p>
+
+<p>Meyverik sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know why I didn't do
+that," he whispered.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Probably for the first time
+since he had got clever enough
+to beat up his big brother Meyverik
+was doubting himself, just
+a little, for just a time.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether it was
+good or bad for him&mdash;contemporary
+psychology isn't in my line&mdash;but
+I knew I couldn't trust a
+cocky kid.</p>
+
+<p>But I had to find out if he
+could still hit the target uncocked.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Stan Johnson was our second
+lonely man, remember, General?</p>
+
+<p>He was stubborn.</p>
+
+<p>I questioned him for a half
+hour the first day, two hours the
+second and on the third I turned
+him over to Madison.</p>
+
+<p>Then as I was having my
+lunch I suddenly thought of
+something and made steps back
+to my office.</p>
+
+<p>I got there just in time to
+grab Madison's bony wrist.</p>
+
+<p>The thing in his fist was silver
+and sharp, a hypodermic needle.
+Johnson's forearm was tanned
+below the torn pastel sleeve. Two
+sad-faced young men were holding
+him politely by the shoulders
+in the canvas chair. Johnson met
+my glance expressionlessly.</p>
+
+<p>I tugged on Madison's arm
+sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"What's in that damned
+sticker?"</p>
+
+<p>"Polypenthium." Madison's
+face was as blank as Johnson's&mdash;only
+his body seemed at once
+tired and taut.</p>
+
+<p>"What's it for?" I rasped.</p>
+
+<p>"You're the psychologist," he
+said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>I met his eyes and held on but
+it was impossible to stare him
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about physical
+methods, I told you. I've been
+dealing with people in books,
+films, tapes all my life, not living
+men up till now, can't you absorb
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Apparently I've had more
+experience with these things
+than you then, Doctor. Shall I
+proceed?"</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not," I cried
+omnisciently. "I know enough to
+understand we can't get the results
+the government wants by
+drugs. You going to put that
+away?"</p>
+
+<p>Madison nodded once.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," he said.</p>
+
+<p>I unshackled my fingers and
+he put the shiny needle away in
+its case, in his suitcoat pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"You understand, Thorn," he
+said, "that the general won't like
+this."</p>
+
+<p>I turned around and looked at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he order you to drug
+Johnson?"</p>
+
+<p>The government agent shook
+his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't think so." I was beginning
+to understand government
+operations. "He only wanted
+it done. Get out."</p>
+
+<p>Madison and his assistants
+marched out in orthodox Euclidian
+triangle formation.</p>
+
+<p>The doors hissed shut.</p>
+
+<p>"You know what?" The words
+jerked out from Johnson. "I
+think the bunch of you are
+crazy. <i>Crazy.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I decided to treat him like a
+client. Maybe that was the way
+contemporary psychologists handled
+their men.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I sat on the edge of the desk
+jauntily, confidently, and tried to
+let the domino mask up a father
+image.</p>
+
+<p>"You may as well get it
+straight, Stan. The government
+needs you and it's pointless for
+you to say that need is unconstitutional
+or anything. Bring it
+up and it won't be long. When
+survival is outside the rules, the
+rules change."</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of Johnson were
+strikingly like Meyverik's, dark
+and unsettled. Only this boy,
+younger, smaller than the Nordic,
+had an appropriate skin
+tone, stained by the tropical sun
+somewhere in his ancestral past.
+He dropped his gaze, expelled his
+breath mightily and pounded one
+angular knee with a half-closed
+fist.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not complaining about
+conscription without representation,
+Doctor, but I can't make
+any sense out of these fool questions
+you keep firing at me. What
+in blazes are you trying to get
+at? What kind of reason are you
+after for my staying by myself?
+I just do it because I <i>like</i> it that
+way."</p>
+
+<p>With a galvanic jolt, I realized
+he was telling the painfully simple
+truth. I groaned at the realization.</p>
+
+<p>Meyverik had convinced all of
+us that in our well-adjusted or
+at any rate well-conditioned
+world somebody had to have
+some purposeful <i>reason</i> in loneliness,
+solitude, so on that one
+instance our thinking had already
+been patterned, discarding
+all the other evidence of generations
+that the lonely man was
+only a personality type, like
+Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>I felt I had achieved at least
+the quantum state of a fool.</p>
+
+<p>Johnson silently studied the
+half-cupped hands laying in his
+lap.</p>
+
+<p>"The hunting lodge in the
+Andes seemed as good a place as
+any to live after mother and
+father were killed. You might
+think it was lonesome at night
+in the mountains, but it isn't at
+all. You aren't alone when you
+can watch the burning worlds
+shadow the bow of God...."</p>
+
+<p>I cleared my throat. The poor
+kid sounded like he would begin
+spouting something akin to
+poetry next.</p>
+
+<p>"So I believe you," I told him.
+"That doesn't finish it. We have
+to convince <i>them</i>. I don't like
+this, but the simplest way
+would be to volunteer for their
+hibitor injection. I've found out
+Madison and his crowd don't believe
+men awake, only assorted
+dopes."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson deflated his area of
+the room with his breath intake.</p>
+
+<p>"Okay," he said at last. "I
+guess so."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>When Johnson gave us what
+we needed to clear the problem,
+it didn't take me long to finish
+processing the rest of the handful
+of possible loners we had
+located. Unlike Johnson, all the
+rest had <i>reasons</i> for their self-imposed
+loneliness. Unlike Meyverik
+none of their reasons were
+associated with the interstellar
+flight. They instead involved literary
+research, swindles, isolated
+paranoid insanity and other
+things in which the government
+had no interest.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly I found my job was
+done and that we had located
+only the two of them.</p>
+
+<p>Madison read my final report
+braced on the edge of my desk,
+his hand comradely on my shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Good job, Doc," he vouched
+replacing the papers on my blotter
+with a final rustle. "Now I've
+got news for you. The government
+wants you to <i>test</i> these
+boys for us now that you've
+found 'em for us."</p>
+
+<p>I closed my jaw. "That's completely
+out of line&mdash;<i>my</i> line. I
+know you need a contemporary
+man for that job."</p>
+
+<p>Madison punched me on the
+bicep, fast enough to hurt.</p>
+
+<p>"Doc, after this project you
+know more about contemp' stuff
+than any professor who got his
+degree studying the textbooks
+<i>you</i> wrote."</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible to dislike
+Madison except for practiced periods&mdash;that
+was probably one
+reason he had his job.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I growled. "Get
+your dirty pants off my clean
+desk and I'll get out the bottle.
+We'll&mdash;celebrate, huh?"</p>
+
+<p>But you know how I felt, General?
+You remember how I tried
+to get out of it. I felt like I had
+led in the lambs and now I had
+to help shear them. As a part-time
+historian I can tell you
+there's a word for that&mdash;Judas
+goat. Give or take a word.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"It isn't the real thing, Doc,"
+Madison spelled out for me,
+wearing a lemon twist of smile.</p>
+
+<p>I looked at the twin banks of
+gauge-facings and circuit housings
+in which centered TV
+screens picturing either Meyverik
+or Johnson. Red and sea-green
+lights chased each other
+around the control boards, died,
+were born again. On the screens
+the three color negatives mixed
+to purple, shifted through a series
+of wrong combinations and
+settled to normal as the stereo-oscillation
+echoed, convexed insanely,
+and deepened to hold.
+Video reception is lousy from
+five hundred thousand miles out.</p>
+
+<p>I was too eye-heavy to be surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell me this is <i>The
+Strange Flight of Richard Clayton</i>
+all over again?"</p>
+
+<p>Madison clapped me on the
+shoulder and breathed mint at
+me, eyes on twittering round
+faces.</p>
+
+<p>"Who wrote that? Poe? No,
+no mock-up to fake space conditions
+for them but calculate the
+cost of the <i>real</i> interstellar ship.
+We couldn't trust either of them
+with it yet. You didn't really
+think we could afford <i>two</i> ships.
+Why do you think we haven't
+told one man about his opposite
+in a second ship? No safety margin
+allowable in our appropriation,
+Doc. Or so they tell me.
+There's enough fuel and food to
+take Johnson and Meyverik a
+long way but not the distance."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his lean head almost
+wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Damn it, Madison, do you
+mean I've been beating my lobes
+out for weeks for <i>nothing</i>? I
+tested them. I checked them out.
+Either was capable of making
+the flight successfully&mdash;for their
+own different reasons."</p>
+
+<p>Madison took his hand off my
+shoulder and made a fist of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not questioning your decision!
+Will you ram that
+through your obscene skull,
+Thorn!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who is?" I whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Not me. Not I, not I."</p>
+
+<p>"The general," I announced.</p>
+
+<p>"Just not me." Was he actually
+trembling? But it wasn't
+concern about what I thought of
+him. Somebody closer, maybe.
+Things were building up for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He jammed his nose almost up
+against the glass dial surfaces,
+swaying gently in his cups, staring
+slightly cross-eyed at the
+arrowed numbers.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll continue your tests
+from here," Madison said. "Tell
+them they are going to die."</p>
+
+<p>My face was at once cool and
+damp.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a tough examination,"
+I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"A lie," Madison told me.
+"The boys at Psychicentre worked
+out the problems."</p>
+
+<p>"You told me you wanted me!"
+I screamed at him furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Control your passionate,
+dainty voice. You worked well
+with those two. The experts
+could work through you better."</p>
+
+<p>"Right through me, like a
+razor blade through margarine,"
+I said. "It's not fair."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it's science. Psychology
+as a science, not an art. Don't
+damn me&mdash;I'm not the inventor,"
+Madison continued.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm one of them," I murmured,
+"but I'd just as rather you
+didn't blame me either."</p>
+
+<p>Madison punched the button
+for me with a palsied, manicured
+thumb.</p>
+
+<p>"Guess what, Meyverik?" I
+said viciously. "You're going to
+die."</p>
+
+<p>"What the blazes are you babbling
+about?" the blond doll
+snapped at me from the box of
+the video screen.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I scanned the typed, stiff-backed
+Idiot Prompters Madison
+shoved into my fist. "It's&mdash;true.
+You can't get out alive."</p>
+
+<p>"What's happened?" His face
+perfectly blank.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing out of the ordinary,"
+I said. "They have just informed
+me it was planned this way. It
+wasn't possible to build a round-trip
+rocket yet. You need a lot
+of fuel to make course adjustments
+for the curvature of space,
+so forth. The radio will send
+back your reports on the Alpha
+Centaurian planets. Undoubtedly
+by all rules of probability they
+won't support life without a
+mass of equipment. They suckered
+me too, Meyverik, I swear.
+You turning back?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said almost immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were after the
+rewards, trained to get them.
+You won't be able to enjoy them
+posthumously."</p>
+
+<p>The video blanked. He had
+turned off his camera.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess I thought so," Meyverik's
+voice said. "But I kind
+of like it out here&mdash;alone. I like
+people but back there there's no
+one to <i>touch</i>. They smother you
+but you can't reach them. I can't
+do anything better back there
+than I can do here."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Madison got a bottle and he
+and I got sloppily drunk, leaning
+on each other, singing innocently
+obscene songs of our youth. The
+technicians, good government
+men, were openly disgusted with
+us.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours after we had contacted
+Meyverik, I left Madison
+snoring on the desk and lurched
+to the control board, bunching
+my soiled shirt at the throat
+with my hand.</p>
+
+<p>I called Johnson.</p>
+
+<p>"Going to die, Johnson. Tricked
+you. Can't get back, Johnson.
+Not ever. No fuel. Ha, you can't
+ever go home again, Johnson.
+Like that, you damned runny-nosed
+little poet?"</p>
+
+<p>His dark face worked weakly.</p>
+
+<p>Ha, he sure as thunderation
+<i>didn't</i> like it.</p>
+
+<p>He asked for the bloody details
+and I fed them to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Turning back, aren't you?" I
+jeered.</p>
+
+<p>"I just wanted a place and a
+time for thinking," he said
+across the Solar System. "But
+I'll die and I don't know if you
+can dream in death."</p>
+
+<p>"Just what I thought," I
+sneered.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not turning back," he
+said slowly. "People need me.
+I've got a job to do. Haven't I?
+Haven't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>No</i>," I screamed at him.
+"You're just using that as an
+excuse to kill yourself. Don't try
+to tell me you're not weak! Don't
+you try to make me think you're
+strong! Hear me, Johnson, hear
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>But he couldn't hear me.</p>
+
+<p>One of the government technicians
+had broken the contact before
+that last spurt.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"This is good," Madison said,
+pawing fuzzily at his pocket.
+"Really&mdash;<i>good</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I studied the three or four
+watchdials wobbling up and
+down my elongated wrist. They
+seemed to say it was almost sunrise.</p>
+
+<p>I leered at Madison. "Yeah,
+yeah, what is it? Huh, huh?"</p>
+
+<p>He shoved a crumpled card
+into my lax fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," he said, "now tell
+them&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, yeah."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell them the whole thing is
+useless."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>My stomach retched drily,
+grinding the sober pills to dust
+between its ulcerating walls.</p>
+
+<p>"Meyverik," I said to the
+empty video tube, "they made a
+mistake. They underestimated
+curvature. You can't reach Alpha
+Centauri. You can't correct
+enough. Free space is all you'll
+hit. Ever. You may as well come
+home."</p>
+
+<p>The soft voice came out of nowhere,
+from nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to come back. I
+like it here. This is what I've
+always been trying to get and
+I never knew it."</p>
+
+<p>Madison grabbed my arm with
+pronged fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up, Doc. That's just the
+way the government wants him
+to be."</p>
+
+<p>"Johnson," I said to the creased
+face in the screen, "they made
+a mistake. They underestimated
+curvature. You can't reach Alpha
+Centauri. You can't correct
+enough. Free space is all you'll
+hit. Ever. You may as well come&mdash;back."</p>
+
+<p>Johnson sighed, a whisper of
+breath across the miles.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll keep going. No one has
+ever been so far out before. I
+can report valuable things."</p>
+
+<p>I stood there. The textbooks
+report it takes muscular effort
+to frown, more so than to smile.
+But my face seemed to flow into
+the lines of pain so hard it
+ached without any effort of my
+will. And I knew it would <i>hurt</i>
+to smile.</p>
+
+<p>"They passed the final test,"
+Madison said at my side. "Tell
+them it was a test."</p>
+
+<p>I would do it for him. I didn't
+need to do it for myself.</p>
+
+<p>I motioned the technician to
+open both channels.</p>
+
+<p>"The ship you are in," I said,
+with no need to tell them of each
+other, "is not the real <i>Evening
+Star</i>. It will <i>not</i> take you to the
+stars. This has been only a <i>test</i>
+to credit your fitness to pilot the
+real interstellar craft of the Star
+Project. You must return to the
+Lunar Satellite. This is a direct
+order."</p>
+
+<p>The two screens remained
+blank. Only the windless silence
+of space echoed over Johnson's
+channel, but the tapes later
+proved that I actually did hear
+a whispered laugh from Meyverik.</p>
+
+<p>I faced Madison.</p>
+
+<p>"They won't come back. They
+could have passed any test except
+the fact that what we put
+them through was only a test.
+For their own reasons, they will
+keep going. As far as they can."</p>
+
+<p>Madison took out his notebook
+and seemed to look for vital information.
+Except that he never
+cracked the cover.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, we can't get them
+back if they won't come," he
+said. "If cybernetic remotes
+functioned operationally at this
+distance we wouldn't have to
+send men at all."</p>
+
+<p>He replaced the pocket secretary
+and looked at me edgewise,
+speculatively.</p>
+
+<p>I touched his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's find another bottle," I
+said.</p>
+
+<p>He stepped back.</p>
+
+<p>"You found them. You tested
+them. You killed them."</p>
+
+<p>And the government man
+walked away and left me standing
+with a murderer.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>You see it now, don't you,
+General?</p>
+
+<p>What I'm carrying around on
+my back is guilt. Not guilt complex,
+not guilt fixation, just
+plain old Abel-Cain <i>guilt</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In this nice, well-ordered age
+I'm a killer and everybody
+knows it.</p>
+
+<p>You see our mistake, General.</p>
+
+<p>We sent men with variable
+amounts of loneliness. These
+amounts could alter. But now
+we have a golden opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Evening Star</i> is waiting
+and I have found for you a man
+with the true measure of loneliness.
+It is impossible for this
+man to become any more or any
+less lonely. It isn't the Ultimate
+Possible Loneliness, understand
+that, General.</p>
+
+<p>It's just that by himself or
+with others he is always in a
+crowd of three, no more, no
+less.</p>
+
+<p>The interstellar ship is waiting.</p>
+
+<p>So tell me, General, have you
+ever seen a lonelier man than
+me, your humble servitor, Dr.
+Thorn? No, I mean it. Have
+you?</p>
+
+
+<p class="theend">THE END</p>
+
+
+<div class="trans1"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b><br />
+This etext was produced from <i>Amazing Science Fiction Stories</i> March
+1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
+typographical errors have been corrected without note.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Measure for a Loner, by James Judson Harmon
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Measure for a Loner, by James Judson Harmon
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Measure for a Loner
+
+Author: James Judson Harmon
+
+Release Date: September 14, 2007 [EBook #22596]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEASURE FOR A LONER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _You can measure everything these days--heat, light,
+ gravity, reflexes, force-fields, star-drives. And
+ now I know there even is a ..._
+
+
+ MEASURE FOR A LONER
+
+ By JIM HARMON
+
+
+So, General, I came in to tell you I've found the loneliest man in the
+world for the Space Force.
+
+How am I supposed to rate his loneliness for you? In Megasorrows or
+Kilofears? I suspect I know quite a library on the subject, but you know
+more about stripes and bars. Don't try to stop me this time, General.
+
+Now that you mention it, I'm not drunk. I had to have something to back
+me up so I stopped off at the dispensary and stole a needle.
+
+I want you to get off my back with that kind of talk. I've got enough
+there--it bends me over like I had bad kidneys. It isn't any of King
+Kong's little brothers. They over rate the stuff. It isn't the way
+you've been riding me either. Never mind what I'm carrying. Whatever it
+is--and believe me, it _is_--I have to get rid of it.
+
+Let me tell it, for God's sake.
+
+Then for Security's sake? I thought you would let me tell it, General.
+
+I've been coming in here and giving you pieces of it for months but now
+I want to let you be drenched in the whole thing. You're going to take
+it all.
+
+There were the two of them, the two lonely men, and I found them for
+you.
+
+You remember the way I found them for you.
+
+The intercom on my blond desk made an electronic noise at me and the
+words I had been arranging in my mind for the morning letters splattered
+into alphabet soup like a printer dropping a prepared slug of type.
+
+I made the proper motion to still the sound.
+
+"Yes," I grunted.
+
+My secretary cleared her throat on my time.
+
+"Dr. Thorn," she said, "there's a Mr. Madison here to see you. He lays
+claim to be from the Star Project."
+
+He could come in and file his claim, I told the girl.
+
+I rummaged in the wastebasket and uncrumpled the morning's facsimile
+newspaper. It was full of material about the Star Project.
+
+We were building Man's first interstellar spaceship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A surprising number of people considered it important. Flipping from the
+rear to page one, Wild Bill Star in the comics who had been blasting all
+the way to forty-first sub-space universe for decades was harking back
+to the good old days of Man's first star flight (which he had made
+himself through the magic of time travel), the editor was calling the
+man to make the jaunt the Lindbergh of Space, and the staff photographer
+displayed a still of a Space Force pilot in pressure suit up front with
+his face blotted out by an air-brushed interrogation mark.
+
+Who was going to be the Lindbergh of Space?
+
+We had used up the Columbus of Space, the Magellan of Space, the Van
+Reck of Space. Now it was time for the Lone Eagle, one man who would
+wait out the light years to Alpha Centauri.
+
+I remembered the first Lindbergh.
+
+I rode a bus fifty miles to see him at an Air Force Day celebration when
+I was a dewy-eared kid. It's funny how kids still worship heroes who did
+everything before they were even born. Uncle Max had told me about
+standing outside the hospital with a bunch of boys his own age the
+evening Babe Ruth died of cancer. Lindbergh seemed like an old man to me
+when I finally saw him, but still active. Nobody had forgotten him. When
+his speech was over I cheered him with the rest just as if I knew what
+he had been talking about.
+
+But I probably knew more about what he meant then as a boy than I did
+feeling the reality of the newspaper in my hands. Grown-up, I could only
+smile at myself for wanting to go to the stars myself.
+
+Madison rapped on my office door and breezed in efficiently.
+
+I've always thought Madison was a rather irritating man. Likable but
+irritating. He's too good looking in an unassuming masculine way to
+dress so neatly--it makes him look like a mannequin. That polite way of
+his of using small words slowly and distinctly proves that he loves his
+fellow man--even if his fellow always does have less brains or authority
+than Madison himself. That belief would be forgivable in him if it
+wasn't so often true.
+
+Madison folded himself into the canary yellow client's chair at my
+direction, and took a leather-bound pocket secretary from inside his
+almost-too-snug jacket.
+
+"Dr. Thorn," he said expansively, "we need you to help us locate an
+atavism."
+
+I flicked professional smile No. Three at him lightly.
+
+"I'm a historical psychologist," I told him. "That sounds in my line.
+Which of your ancestors are you interested in having me analyze?"
+
+"I used the word 'atavism' to mean a reversion to the primitive."
+
+I made a pencil mark on my desk pad. I could make notes as well as he
+could read them.
+
+"Yes, I see," I murmured. "We don't use the term that way. Perhaps you
+don't understand my work. It's been an honest way to make a living for a
+few generations but it's so specialized it might sound foolish to
+someone outside the psychological industry. I psychoanalyze historical
+figures for history books (of course), and scholars, interested
+descendants, what all, and that's _all_ I do."
+
+"All you _have_ done," Madison admitted, "but your government is certain
+that you can do this new work for them--in fact, that you are one of the
+few men prepared to locate this esoteric--that is, this odd aberration
+since I understand you often have to deal with it in analyzing the past.
+Doctor, we want you to find us a lonely man."
+
+I laid my chrome yellow pencil down carefully beside the cream-colored
+pad.
+
+"History is full of loneliness--most of the so-called great men were
+rather neurotic--but I thought, Madison, that introspection was pretty
+much of a thing of the, well, past."
+
+The government representative inhaled deeply and steepled his manicured
+fingers.
+
+"Our system of childhood psycho-conditioning succeeds in burying
+loneliness in the subconscious so completely that even the records can't
+reveal if it was ever present."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I cleared my throat in order to stall, to think.
+
+"I'm not acquainted with _contemporary_ psychology, Madison. This comes
+as news to me. You mean people aren't really well-adjusted today, that
+they have just been conditioned to _act_ as if they were?"
+
+He nodded. "Yes, that's it. It's ironic. Now we need a lonely man and we
+can't find him."
+
+"To pilot the interstellar spaceship?"
+
+"For the _Evening Star_, yes," Madison agreed.
+
+I picked up my pencil and held it between my two index fingers. I
+couldn't think of a damned thing to say.
+
+"The whole problem," Madison was saying, "goes back to the early days of
+space travel. Men were confined in a small area facing infinite space
+for measureless periods in freefall. Men cracked--and ships, they
+cracked up. But as space travel advanced ships got larger, carried more
+people, more ties and reminders of human civilization. Pilots became
+more _normal_."
+
+I made myself look up at the earnest young man.
+
+"But now," I said, "now you want me to find you an abnormal pilot who is
+used to being alone, who can stand it, maybe even like it?"
+
+"Right."
+
+I constructed a genuine smile for him for the first time.
+
+"Madison, do you really think _I_ can find your man when evidently all
+the government agencies have failed?"
+
+The government representative pocketed his notebook deftly and then
+spread his hands clumsily for an instant.
+
+"At least, Doctor," he said, "you may _know_ it if you do find him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a lonely job to find a lonely man, General, and maybe it was a
+crooked job to walk a crooked mile to find a crooked man.
+
+I had to do it alone. No one else had enough experience in primitive
+psychology to recognize the phenomenon of loneliness, even as Madison
+had said.
+
+The working conditions suited me. I had to think by myself but I had a
+comfortable staff to carry out my ideas. I liked my new office and the
+executive apartment the government supplied me. I had authority and
+respect and I had security. The government assured me they would find
+further use for my services after I found them their man. I knew this
+was to keep me from dragging my tracks. But nevertheless I got right
+down to work.
+
+I found Gordon Meyverik exactly five weeks from the day Madison first
+visited me in my old office.
+
+"Of course, I planned the whole thing, Dr. Thorn," Gordon said crisply.
+
+I knew what he meant although I hadn't guessed it before. He could tell
+it to me himself, I decided.
+
+"Doesn't seem much to brag about," I said. "Anybody who can make up a
+grocery list should be able to figure out how to isolate himself on Seal
+Island."
+
+He sat forward, a lean Viking with a hot Latin glance, very confident of
+himself.
+
+"I reckoned on you locating me, on you hustling me back to pilot the
+_Evening Star_. That's why I holed in there."
+
+"I can't accept your story," I lied cheerfully. "Nobody is going to
+maroon himself on an island for three years because of a wild
+possibility like that."
+
+Meyverik smiled and his sureness swelled out until it almost jabbed me
+in the stomach.
+
+"I took a broad gamble," he said, "but it hit the wire, didn't it?"
+
+I didn't reply, but he had his answer.
+
+Instead I scanned the report Madison had given me from Intelligence
+concerning the man's unorthodox behavior.
+
+Meyverik had quit his post-graduate studies and passed by the secured
+job that had been waiting for him eighteen months in a genial government
+office to barricade himself in an old shelter on Seal Island. It was
+hard to know what to make of it. He had brought impressive stores of
+food with him, books, sound and vision tapes but not telephone or
+television. For the next three years he had had no contact with humanity
+at all.
+
+And he said he had planned it all.
+
+"Sure," he drawled. "I knew the government was looking for somebody to
+steer the interstellar ship that's been gossip for decades. That job,"
+he said distinctly, "is one I would give a lot to settle into."
+
+I looked at him across my unlittered brand new desk and accepted his
+irritating blond masculinity, disliked him, admired him, and continued
+to examine him to decide on my _final_ evaluation.
+
+"You've given three years already," I said, examining the sheets of the
+report with which I was thoroughly familiar.
+
+He twitched. He didn't like that, not spending three years. It was
+spendthrift, even if a good buy. He was planning on winding up somewhere
+important and to do it he had to invest his years properly.
+
+"You are trying to make me believe you deliberately extrapolated the
+government's need for a man who could stand being alone for long
+periods, and then tried to phoney up references for the work by staying
+on that island?"
+
+"I don't like that word 'phoney'," Meyverik growled.
+
+"No? You name your word for it."
+
+Meyverik unhinged to his full height.
+
+"It was _proof_," he said. "A test."
+
+"A man can't test himself."
+
+"A lot you know," the big blond snorted.
+
+"I _know_," I told him drily. "A man who isn't a hopeless maniac
+depressive can't consciously create a test for himself that he knows he
+will fail. You proved you could stay alone on an island, buster. You
+didn't prove you could stay alone in a spaceship out in the middle of
+infinity for three years. Why didn't you rent a conventional rocket and
+try looking at some of our local space? It all looks much the same."
+
+Meyverik sat down.
+
+"I don't know why I didn't do that," he whispered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Probably for the first time since he had got clever enough to beat up
+his big brother Meyverik was doubting himself, just a little, for just a
+time.
+
+I don't know whether it was good or bad for him--contemporary psychology
+isn't in my line--but I knew I couldn't trust a cocky kid.
+
+But I had to find out if he could still hit the target uncocked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Stan Johnson was our second lonely man, remember, General?
+
+He was stubborn.
+
+I questioned him for a half hour the first day, two hours the second and
+on the third I turned him over to Madison.
+
+Then as I was having my lunch I suddenly thought of something and made
+steps back to my office.
+
+I got there just in time to grab Madison's bony wrist.
+
+The thing in his fist was silver and sharp, a hypodermic needle.
+Johnson's forearm was tanned below the torn pastel sleeve. Two sad-faced
+young men were holding him politely by the shoulders in the canvas
+chair. Johnson met my glance expressionlessly.
+
+I tugged on Madison's arm sharply.
+
+"What's in that damned sticker?"
+
+"Polypenthium." Madison's face was as blank as Johnson's--only his body
+seemed at once tired and taut.
+
+"What's it for?" I rasped.
+
+"You're the psychologist," he said sharply.
+
+I met his eyes and held on but it was impossible to stare him down.
+
+"I don't know about physical methods, I told you. I've been dealing with
+people in books, films, tapes all my life, not living men up till now,
+can't you absorb that?"
+
+"Apparently I've had more experience with these things than you then,
+Doctor. Shall I proceed?"
+
+"You shall not," I cried omnisciently. "I know enough to understand we
+can't get the results the government wants by drugs. You going to put
+that away?"
+
+Madison nodded once.
+
+"All right," he said.
+
+I unshackled my fingers and he put the shiny needle away in its case, in
+his suitcoat pocket.
+
+"You understand, Thorn," he said, "that the general won't like this."
+
+I turned around and looked at him.
+
+"Did he order you to drug Johnson?"
+
+The government agent shook his head.
+
+"I didn't think so." I was beginning to understand government
+operations. "He only wanted it done. Get out."
+
+Madison and his assistants marched out in orthodox Euclidian triangle
+formation.
+
+The doors hissed shut.
+
+"You know what?" The words jerked out from Johnson. "I think the bunch
+of you are crazy. _Crazy._"
+
+I decided to treat him like a client. Maybe that was the way
+contemporary psychologists handled their men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I sat on the edge of the desk jauntily, confidently, and tried to let
+the domino mask up a father image.
+
+"You may as well get it straight, Stan. The government needs you and
+it's pointless for you to say that need is unconstitutional or anything.
+Bring it up and it won't be long. When survival is outside the rules,
+the rules change."
+
+The eyes of Johnson were strikingly like Meyverik's, dark and unsettled.
+Only this boy, younger, smaller than the Nordic, had an appropriate skin
+tone, stained by the tropical sun somewhere in his ancestral past. He
+dropped his gaze, expelled his breath mightily and pounded one angular
+knee with a half-closed fist.
+
+"I'm not complaining about conscription without representation, Doctor,
+but I can't make any sense out of these fool questions you keep firing
+at me. What in blazes are you trying to get at? What kind of reason are
+you after for my staying by myself? I just do it because I _like_ it
+that way."
+
+With a galvanic jolt, I realized he was telling the painfully simple
+truth. I groaned at the realization.
+
+Meyverik had convinced all of us that in our well-adjusted or at any
+rate well-conditioned world somebody had to have some purposeful
+_reason_ in loneliness, solitude, so on that one instance our thinking
+had already been patterned, discarding all the other evidence of
+generations that the lonely man was only a personality type, like
+Johnson.
+
+I felt I had achieved at least the quantum state of a fool.
+
+Johnson silently studied the half-cupped hands laying in his lap.
+
+"The hunting lodge in the Andes seemed as good a place as any to live
+after mother and father were killed. You might think it was lonesome at
+night in the mountains, but it isn't at all. You aren't alone when you
+can watch the burning worlds shadow the bow of God...."
+
+I cleared my throat. The poor kid sounded like he would begin spouting
+something akin to poetry next.
+
+"So I believe you," I told him. "That doesn't finish it. We have to
+convince _them_. I don't like this, but the simplest way would be to
+volunteer for their hibitor injection. I've found out Madison and his
+crowd don't believe men awake, only assorted dopes."
+
+Johnson deflated his area of the room with his breath intake.
+
+"Okay," he said at last. "I guess so."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Johnson gave us what we needed to clear the problem, it didn't take
+me long to finish processing the rest of the handful of possible loners
+we had located. Unlike Johnson, all the rest had _reasons_ for their
+self-imposed loneliness. Unlike Meyverik none of their reasons were
+associated with the interstellar flight. They instead involved literary
+research, swindles, isolated paranoid insanity and other things in
+which the government had no interest.
+
+Suddenly I found my job was done and that we had located only the two of
+them.
+
+Madison read my final report braced on the edge of my desk, his hand
+comradely on my shoulder.
+
+"Good job, Doc," he vouched replacing the papers on my blotter with a
+final rustle. "Now I've got news for you. The government wants you to
+_test_ these boys for us now that you've found 'em for us."
+
+I closed my jaw. "That's completely out of line--_my_ line. I know you
+need a contemporary man for that job."
+
+Madison punched me on the bicep, fast enough to hurt.
+
+"Doc, after this project you know more about contemp' stuff than any
+professor who got his degree studying the textbooks _you_ wrote."
+
+It was impossible to dislike Madison except for practiced periods--that
+was probably one reason he had his job.
+
+"All right," I growled. "Get your dirty pants off my clean desk and I'll
+get out the bottle. We'll--celebrate, huh?"
+
+But you know how I felt, General? You remember how I tried to get out of
+it. I felt like I had led in the lambs and now I had to help shear them.
+As a part-time historian I can tell you there's a word for that--Judas
+goat. Give or take a word.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It isn't the real thing, Doc," Madison spelled out for me, wearing a
+lemon twist of smile.
+
+I looked at the twin banks of gauge-facings and circuit housings in
+which centered TV screens picturing either Meyverik or Johnson. Red and
+sea-green lights chased each other around the control boards, died, were
+born again. On the screens the three color negatives mixed to purple,
+shifted through a series of wrong combinations and settled to normal as
+the stereo-oscillation echoed, convexed insanely, and deepened to hold.
+Video reception is lousy from five hundred thousand miles out.
+
+I was too eye-heavy to be surprised.
+
+"Don't tell me this is _The Strange Flight of Richard Clayton_ all over
+again?"
+
+Madison clapped me on the shoulder and breathed mint at me, eyes on
+twittering round faces.
+
+"Who wrote that? Poe? No, no mock-up to fake space conditions for them
+but calculate the cost of the _real_ interstellar ship. We couldn't
+trust either of them with it yet. You didn't really think we could
+afford _two_ ships. Why do you think we haven't told one man about his
+opposite in a second ship? No safety margin allowable in our
+appropriation, Doc. Or so they tell me. There's enough fuel and food to
+take Johnson and Meyverik a long way but not the distance."
+
+He shook his lean head almost wistfully.
+
+"Damn it, Madison, do you mean I've been beating my lobes out for weeks
+for _nothing_? I tested them. I checked them out. Either was capable of
+making the flight successfully--for their own different reasons."
+
+Madison took his hand off my shoulder and made a fist of it.
+
+"I'm not questioning your decision! Will you ram that through your
+obscene skull, Thorn!"
+
+"Who is?" I whispered.
+
+"Not me. Not I, not I."
+
+"The general," I announced.
+
+"Just not me." Was he actually trembling? But it wasn't concern about
+what I thought of him. Somebody closer, maybe. Things were building up
+for him.
+
+He jammed his nose almost up against the glass dial surfaces, swaying
+gently in his cups, staring slightly cross-eyed at the arrowed numbers.
+
+"You'll continue your tests from here," Madison said. "Tell them they
+are going to die."
+
+My face was at once cool and damp.
+
+"That's a tough examination," I gasped.
+
+"A lie," Madison told me. "The boys at Psychicentre worked out the
+problems."
+
+"You told me you wanted me!" I screamed at him furiously.
+
+"Control your passionate, dainty voice. You worked well with those two.
+The experts could work through you better."
+
+"Right through me, like a razor blade through margarine," I said. "It's
+not fair."
+
+"No, it's science. Psychology as a science, not an art. Don't damn
+me--I'm not the inventor," Madison continued.
+
+"I'm one of them," I murmured, "but I'd just as rather you didn't blame
+me either."
+
+Madison punched the button for me with a palsied, manicured thumb.
+
+"Guess what, Meyverik?" I said viciously. "You're going to die."
+
+"What the blazes are you babbling about?" the blond doll snapped at me
+from the box of the video screen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I scanned the typed, stiff-backed Idiot Prompters Madison shoved into my
+fist. "It's--true. You can't get out alive."
+
+"What's happened?" His face perfectly blank.
+
+"Nothing out of the ordinary," I said. "They have just informed me it
+was planned this way. It wasn't possible to build a round-trip rocket
+yet. You need a lot of fuel to make course adjustments for the curvature
+of space, so forth. The radio will send back your reports on the Alpha
+Centaurian planets. Undoubtedly by all rules of probability they won't
+support life without a mass of equipment. They suckered me too,
+Meyverik, I swear. You turning back?"
+
+"No," he said almost immediately.
+
+"I thought you were after the rewards, trained to get them. You won't be
+able to enjoy them posthumously."
+
+The video blanked. He had turned off his camera.
+
+"I guess I thought so," Meyverik's voice said. "But I kind of like it
+out here--alone. I like people but back there there's no one to _touch_.
+They smother you but you can't reach them. I can't do anything better
+back there than I can do here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Madison got a bottle and he and I got sloppily drunk, leaning on each
+other, singing innocently obscene songs of our youth. The technicians,
+good government men, were openly disgusted with us.
+
+Two hours after we had contacted Meyverik, I left Madison snoring on the
+desk and lurched to the control board, bunching my soiled shirt at the
+throat with my hand.
+
+I called Johnson.
+
+"Going to die, Johnson. Tricked you. Can't get back, Johnson. Not ever.
+No fuel. Ha, you can't ever go home again, Johnson. Like that, you
+damned runny-nosed little poet?"
+
+His dark face worked weakly.
+
+Ha, he sure as thunderation _didn't_ like it.
+
+He asked for the bloody details and I fed them to him.
+
+"Turning back, aren't you?" I jeered.
+
+"I just wanted a place and a time for thinking," he said across the
+Solar System. "But I'll die and I don't know if you can dream in death."
+
+"Just what I thought," I sneered.
+
+"I'm not turning back," he said slowly. "People need me. I've got a job
+to do. Haven't I? Haven't I?"
+
+"_No_," I screamed at him. "You're just using that as an excuse to kill
+yourself. Don't try to tell me you're not weak! Don't you try to make me
+think you're strong! Hear me, Johnson, hear me?"
+
+But he couldn't hear me.
+
+One of the government technicians had broken the contact before that
+last spurt.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This is good," Madison said, pawing fuzzily at his pocket.
+"Really--_good_."
+
+I studied the three or four watchdials wobbling up and down my elongated
+wrist. They seemed to say it was almost sunrise.
+
+I leered at Madison. "Yeah, yeah, what is it? Huh, huh?"
+
+He shoved a crumpled card into my lax fingers.
+
+"Now," he said, "now tell them--"
+
+"Yeah, yeah."
+
+"Tell them the whole thing is useless."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My stomach retched drily, grinding the sober pills to dust between its
+ulcerating walls.
+
+"Meyverik," I said to the empty video tube, "they made a mistake. They
+underestimated curvature. You can't reach Alpha Centauri. You can't
+correct enough. Free space is all you'll hit. Ever. You may as well come
+home."
+
+The soft voice came out of nowhere, from nothing.
+
+"I don't want to come back. I like it here. This is what I've always
+been trying to get and I never knew it."
+
+Madison grabbed my arm with pronged fingers.
+
+"Shut up, Doc. That's just the way the government wants him to be."
+
+"Johnson," I said to the creased face in the screen, "they made a
+mistake. They underestimated curvature. You can't reach Alpha Centauri.
+You can't correct enough. Free space is all you'll hit. Ever. You may as
+well come--back."
+
+Johnson sighed, a whisper of breath across the miles.
+
+"I'll keep going. No one has ever been so far out before. I can report
+valuable things."
+
+I stood there. The textbooks report it takes muscular effort to frown,
+more so than to smile. But my face seemed to flow into the lines of pain
+so hard it ached without any effort of my will. And I knew it would
+_hurt_ to smile.
+
+"They passed the final test," Madison said at my side. "Tell them it was
+a test."
+
+I would do it for him. I didn't need to do it for myself.
+
+I motioned the technician to open both channels.
+
+"The ship you are in," I said, with no need to tell them of each other,
+"is not the real _Evening Star_. It will _not_ take you to the stars.
+This has been only a _test_ to credit your fitness to pilot the real
+interstellar craft of the Star Project. You must return to the Lunar
+Satellite. This is a direct order."
+
+The two screens remained blank. Only the windless silence of space
+echoed over Johnson's channel, but the tapes later proved that I
+actually did hear a whispered laugh from Meyverik.
+
+I faced Madison.
+
+"They won't come back. They could have passed any test except the fact
+that what we put them through was only a test. For their own reasons,
+they will keep going. As far as they can."
+
+Madison took out his notebook and seemed to look for vital information.
+Except that he never cracked the cover.
+
+"Of course, we can't get them back if they won't come," he said. "If
+cybernetic remotes functioned operationally at this distance we wouldn't
+have to send men at all."
+
+He replaced the pocket secretary and looked at me edgewise,
+speculatively.
+
+I touched his arm.
+
+"Let's find another bottle," I said.
+
+He stepped back.
+
+"You found them. You tested them. You killed them."
+
+And the government man walked away and left me standing with a murderer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You see it now, don't you, General?
+
+What I'm carrying around on my back is guilt. Not guilt complex, not
+guilt fixation, just plain old Abel-Cain _guilt_.
+
+In this nice, well-ordered age I'm a killer and everybody knows it.
+
+You see our mistake, General.
+
+We sent men with variable amounts of loneliness. These amounts could
+alter. But now we have a golden opportunity.
+
+The _Evening Star_ is waiting and I have found for you a man with the
+true measure of loneliness. It is impossible for this man to become any
+more or any less lonely. It isn't the Ultimate Possible Loneliness,
+understand that, General.
+
+It's just that by himself or with others he is always in a crowd of
+three, no more, no less.
+
+The interstellar ship is waiting.
+
+So tell me, General, have you ever seen a lonelier man than me, your
+humble servitor, Dr. Thorn? No, I mean it. Have you?
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+This etext was produced from _Amazing Science Fiction Stories_ March
+1959. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
+typographical errors have been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Measure for a Loner, by James Judson Harmon
+
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