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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Calm Man, by Frank Belknap Long
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Calm Man, by Frank Belknap Long
+
+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: The Calm Man
+
+Author: Frank Belknap Long
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2009 [EBook #28583]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CALM MAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="bk1"><p><i><small>Dip the pen of a Frank Belknap Long into a bottle of ink and the result
+is always bound to be a scintillating piece of brilliant imaginative
+science fiction. And he's done it again in the tortured story of Sally.</small></i></p></div>
+
+<div class="bk2">
+
+<h1>the<br />
+calm<br />
+man</h1>
+
+<h2><small><i>by ... Frank Belknap Long</i></small></h2>
+
+<p class="pr1"><big><b>Sally watched the molten gold glow in the sky. Then knew she
+would not see her son and her husband ever again on Earth.</b></big></p></div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sally Anders</span> had never really
+thought of herself as a wallflower.
+A girl could be shy, couldn't she,
+and still be pretty enough to attract
+and hold men?</p>
+
+<p>Only this morning she had
+drawn an admiring look from the
+milkman and a wolf cry from
+Jimmy on the corner, with his
+newspapers and shiny new bike.
+What if the milkman was crowding
+sixty and wore thick-lensed
+glasses? What if Jimmy was only
+seventeen?</p>
+
+<p>A male was a male, and a
+glance was a glance. Why, if I
+just primp a little more, Sally told
+herself, I'll be irresistible.</p>
+
+<p>Hair ribbons and perfume, a
+mirror tilted at just the right
+angle, an invitation to a party on
+the dresser&mdash;what more did a girl
+need?</p>
+
+<p>"Dinner, Sally!" came echoing
+up from the kitchen. "Do you
+want to be late, child?"</p>
+
+<p>Sally had no intention of being
+late. Tonight she'd see him across
+a crowded room and her heart
+would skip a beat. He'd look at
+her and smile, and come straight
+toward her with his shoulders
+squared.</p>
+
+<p>There was always one night in
+a girl's life that stands above all
+other nights. One night when the
+moon shone bright and clear and
+the clock on the wall went <i>tick
+tock, tick tock, tick tock</i>. One
+night when each tick said, "You're
+beautiful! Really beautiful!"</p>
+
+<p>Giving her hair a final pat Sally
+smiled at herself in the mirror.</p>
+
+<p>In the bathroom the water was
+still running and the perfumed
+bath soap still spread its aromatic
+sweet odor through the room.
+Sally went into the bathroom and
+turned off the tap before going
+downstairs to the kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>"My girl looks radiant tonight!"
+Uncle Ben said, smiling at her
+over his corned beef and cabbage.</p>
+
+<p>Sally blushed and lowered her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ben, you're making her nervous,"
+Sally's mother said, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>Sally looked up and met her
+uncle's stare, her eyes defiant.
+"I'm not bad-looking whatever
+you may think," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, now, Sally," Uncle Ben
+protested. "No sense in getting on
+a high horse. Tonight you may
+find a man who just won't be able
+to resist you."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe I will and maybe I
+won't," Sally said. "You'd be surprised
+if I did, wouldn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>It was Uncle Ben's turn to lower
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell the world you've inherited
+your mother's looks,
+Sally," he said. "But a man has to
+pride himself on something. My
+defects of character are pretty
+bad. But no one has ever accused
+me of dishonesty."</p>
+
+<p>Sally folded her napkin and
+rose stiffly from the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, Uncle," she said.</p>
+
+<p>When Sally arrived at the party
+every foot of floor space was taken
+up by dancing couples and the
+reception room was so crowded
+that, as each new guest was announced,
+a little ripple of displeasure
+went through the men in
+midnight blue and the women in
+Nile green and lavender.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Sally did not
+move, just stood staring at the
+dancing couples, half-hidden by
+one of the potted palms that
+framed the sides of the long room.</p>
+
+<p>Moonlight silvered her hair and
+touched her white throat and arms
+with a caress so gentle that simply
+by closing her eyes she could
+fancy herself already in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>Moonlight from tall windows
+flooding down, turning the dancing
+guests into pirouetting ghosts
+in diaphanous blue and green,
+scarlet and gold.</p>
+
+<p><i>Close your eyes, Sally, close
+them tight! Now open them!
+That's it ... Slowly, slowly ...</i></p>
+
+<p>He came out of nothingness
+into the light and was right beside
+her suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>He was tall, but not too tall.
+His face was tanned mahogany
+brown, and his eyes were clear
+and very bright. And he stood
+there looking at her steadily until
+her mouth opened and a little
+gasp flew out.</p>
+
+<p>He took her into his arms without
+a word and they started to
+dance ...</p>
+
+<p>They were still dancing when
+he asked her to be his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll marry me, of course,"
+he said. "We haven't too much
+time. The years go by so swiftly,
+like great white birds at sea."</p>
+
+<p>They were very close when he
+asked her, but he made no attempt
+to kiss her. They went right on
+dancing and while he waited for
+her answer he talked about the
+moon ...</p>
+
+<p>"When the lights go out and
+the music stops the moon will remain,"
+he said. "It raises tides on
+the Earth, it inflames the minds
+and hearts of men. There are
+cyclic rhythms which would set a
+stone to dreaming and desiring on
+such a night as this."</p>
+
+<p>He stopped dancing abruptly
+and looked at her with calm assurance.</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>will</i> marry me, won't
+you?" he asked. "Allowing for a
+reasonable margin of error I
+seriously doubt if I could be happy
+with any of these other women. I
+was attracted to you the instant
+I saw you."</p>
+
+<p>A girl who has never been
+asked before, who has drawn only
+one lone wolf cry from a newsboy
+could hardly be expected to resist
+such an offer.</p>
+
+<p><i>Don't resist, Sally. He's strong
+and tall and extremely good-looking.
+He knows what he wants and
+makes up his mind quickly. Surely
+a man so resolute must make
+enough money to support a wife.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Sally breathed, snuggling
+close to him. "Oh, yes!"</p>
+
+<p>She paused a moment, then
+said, "You may kiss me now if
+you wish, my darling."</p>
+
+<p>He straightened and frowned a
+little, and looked away quickly.
+"That can wait," he said.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>They were married a week
+later and went to live on an elm-shaded
+street just five blocks from
+where Sally was born. The cottage
+was small, white and attractively
+decorated inside and out.
+But Sally changed the curtains, as
+all women must, and bought
+some new furniture on the installment
+plan.</p>
+
+<p>The neighbors were friendly
+folk who knew her husband as
+Mr. James Rand, an energetic
+young insurance broker who
+would certainly carve a wider
+swath for himself in his chosen
+profession now that he had so
+charming a wife.</p>
+
+<p>Ten months later the first baby
+came.</p>
+
+<p>Lying beneath cool white sheets
+in the hospital Sally looked at
+the other women and felt so deliriously
+happy she wanted to cry.
+It was a beautiful baby and it
+cuddled close to her heart, its
+smallness a miracle in itself.</p>
+
+<p>The other husbands came in
+and sat beside their wives, holding
+on tight to their happiness. There
+were flowers and smiles, whispers
+that explored bright new worlds
+of tenderness and rejoicing.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor the husbands
+congratulated one another
+and came in smelling of cigar
+smoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Have a cigar! That's right.
+Eight pounds at birth. That's unusual,
+isn't it? Brightest kid you
+ever saw. Knew his old man
+right off."</p>
+
+<p>He was beside her suddenly,
+standing straight and still in
+shadows.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, darling," she whispered.
+"Why did you wait? It's been three
+whole days."</p>
+
+<p>"Three days?" he asked, leaning forward
+to stare down at his
+son. "Really! It didn't seem that
+long."</p>
+
+<p>"Where were you? You didn't
+even phone!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes it's difficult to
+phone," he said slowly, as if
+measuring his words. "You have
+given me a son. That pleases me
+very much."</p>
+
+<p>A coldness touched her heart
+and a despair took hold of her.
+"It pleases you! Is that all you can
+say? You stand there looking at
+me as if I were a&mdash;a patient ..."</p>
+
+<p>"A patient?" His expression
+grew quizzical. "Just what do you
+mean, Sally?"</p>
+
+<p>"You said you were pleased.
+If a patient is ill her doctor hopes
+that she will get well. He is
+pleased when she does. If a
+woman has a baby a doctor will
+say, 'I'm so pleased. The baby is
+doing fine. You don't have to
+worry about him. I've put him on
+the scales and he's a bouncing,
+healthy boy.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Medicine is a sane and wise
+profession," Sally's husband said.
+"When I look at my son that is
+exactly what I would say to the
+mother of my son. He is healthy
+and strong. You have pleased me,
+Sally."</p>
+
+<p>He bent as he spoke and picked
+Sally's son up. He held the infant
+in the crook of his arm, smiling
+down at it.</p>
+
+<p>"A healthy male child," he said.
+"His hair will come in thick and
+black. Soon he will speak, will
+know that I am his father."</p>
+
+<p>He ran his palm over the baby's
+smooth head, opened its mouth
+gently with his forefinger and
+looked inside.</p>
+
+<p>Sally rose on one elbow, her
+tormented eyes searching his face.</p>
+
+<p>"He's your child, your son!"
+she sobbed. "A woman has a
+child and her husband comes and
+puts his arms around her. He
+holds her close. If they love each
+other they are so happy, so very
+happy, they break down and cry."</p>
+
+<p>"I am too pleased to do anything
+so fantastic, Sally," he said.
+"When a child is born no tears
+should be shed by its parents. I
+have examined the child and I
+am pleased with it. Does not that
+content you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it doesn't!" Sally almost
+shrieked. "Why do you stare at
+your own son as if you'd never
+seen a baby before? He isn't a
+mechanical toy. He's our own
+darling, adorable little baby. <i>Our
+child!</i> How can you be so <i>inhumanly</i>
+calm?"</p>
+
+<p>He frowned, put the baby
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a time for love-making
+and a time for parenthood,"
+he said. "Parenthood is a serious
+responsibility. That is where
+medicine comes in, surgery. If a
+child is not perfect there are
+emergency measures which can be
+taken to correct the defect."</p>
+
+<p>Sally's mouth went suddenly
+dry. "Perfect! What do you mean,
+Jim? Is there something <i>wrong</i>
+with Tommy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so," her husband
+said. "His grasp is firm and strong.
+He has good hearing and his eyesight
+appears to be all that could
+be desired. Did you notice how
+his eyes followed me every moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't looking at his eyes!"
+Sally whispered, her voice tight
+with alarm. "Why are you trying
+to frighten me, Jim? If Tommy
+wasn't a normal, healthy baby do
+you imagine for one instant they
+would have placed him in my
+arms?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is a very sound observation,"
+Sally's husband said.
+"Truth is truth, but to alarm you
+at a time like this would be unnecessarily
+cruel."</p>
+
+<p>"Where does that put you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I simply spoke my mind as the
+child's father. I had to speak as
+I did because of my natural concern
+for the health of our child.
+Do you want me to stay and talk
+to you, Sally?"</p>
+
+<p>Sally shook her head. "No,
+Jim. I won't let you torture me
+any more."</p>
+
+<p>Sally drew the baby into her
+arms again and held it tightly.
+"I'll scream if you stay!" she
+warned. "I'll become hysterical
+unless you leave."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," her husband said.
+"I'll come back tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>He bent as he spoke and kissed
+her on the forehead. His lips were
+ice cold.</p>
+
+<p>For eight years Sally sat across
+the table from her husband at
+breakfast, her eyes fixed upon a
+nothingness on the green-blue wall
+at his back. Calm he remained
+even while eating. The eggs she
+placed before him he cracked
+methodically with a knife and
+consumed behind a tilted newspaper,
+taking now an assured sip
+of coffee, now a measured glance
+at the clock.</p>
+
+<p>The presence of his young son
+bothered him not at all. Tommy
+could be quiet or noisy, in trouble
+at school, or with an <i>A</i> for good
+conduct tucked with his report
+card in his soiled leather zipper
+jacket. It was always: "Eat slowly,
+my son. Never gulp your food.
+Be sure to take plenty of exercise
+today. Stay in the sun as much
+as possible."</p>
+
+<p>Often Sally wanted to shriek:
+"Be a father to him! A real father!
+Get down on the floor and play
+with him. Shoot marbles with
+him, spin one of his tops. Remember
+the toy locomotive you
+gave him for Christmas after I got
+hysterical and screamed at you?
+Remember the beautiful little
+train? Get it out of the closet and
+wreck it accidentally. He'll warm
+up to you then. He'll be broken-hearted,
+but he'll feel close to you,
+then you'll know what it means to
+have a son!"</p>
+
+<p>Often Sally wanted to fly at
+him, beat with her fists on his
+chest. But she never did.</p>
+
+<p><i>You can't warm a stone by
+slapping it, Sally. You'd only
+bruise yourself. A stone is neither
+cruel nor tender. You've married
+a man of stone, Sally.</i></p>
+
+<p>He hasn't missed a day at the
+office in eight years. She'd never
+visited the office but he was always
+there to answer when she phoned.
+"I'm very busy, Sally. What did
+you say? You've bought a new
+hat? I'm sure it will look well on
+you, Sally. What did you say?
+Tommy got into a fight with a new
+boy in the neighborhood? You
+must take better care of him,
+Sally."</p>
+
+<p>There are patterns in every
+marriage. When once the mold
+has set, a few strange behavior
+patterns must be accepted as a
+matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll drop in at the office tomorrow,
+darling!" Sally had
+promised right after the breakfast
+pattern had become firmly established.
+The desire to see where
+her husband worked had been
+from the start a strong, bright
+flame in her. But he asked her to
+wait a while before visiting his
+office.</p>
+
+<p>A strong will can dampen the
+brightest flame, and when months
+passed and he kept saying 'no,'
+Sally found herself agreeing with
+her husband's suggestion that the
+visit be put off indefinitely.</p>
+
+<p>Snuff a candle and it stays
+snuffed. A marriage pattern once
+established requires a very special
+kind of re-kindling. Sally's husband
+refused to supply the needed
+spark.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever Sally had an impulse
+to turn her steps in the direction
+of the office a voice deep in her
+mind seemed to whisper: "No
+sense in it, Sally. Stay away. He's
+been mean and spiteful about it
+all these years. Don't give in to
+him now by going."</p>
+
+<p>Besides, Tommy took up so
+much of her time. A growing boy
+was always a problem and Tommy
+seemed to have a special gift for
+getting into things because he was
+so active. And he went through
+his clothes, wore out his shoes
+almost faster than she could replace
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Right now Tommy was playing
+in the yard. Sally's eyes came to
+a focus upon him, crouching by a
+hole in the fence which kindly old
+Mrs. Wallingford had erected as a
+protection against the prying inquisitiveness
+of an eight-year-old
+determined to make life miserable
+for her.</p>
+
+<p>A thrice-widowed neighbor of
+seventy without a spiteful hair in
+her head could put up with a boy
+who rollicked and yelled perhaps.
+But peep-hole spying was another
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>Sally muttered: "Enough of
+that!" and started for the kitchen
+door. Just as she reached it the
+telephone rang.</p>
+
+<p>Sally went quickly to the phone
+and lifted the receiver. The instant
+she pressed it to her ear she
+recognized her husband's voice&mdash;or
+thought she did.</p>
+
+<p>"Sally, come to the office!"
+came the voice, speaking in a
+hoarse whisper. "Hurry&mdash;or it will
+be too late! Hurry, Sally!"</p>
+
+<p>Sally turned with a startled
+gasp, looked out through the
+kitchen window at the autumn
+leaves blowing crisp and dry
+across the lawn. As she looked
+the scattered leaves whirled into
+a flurry around Tommy, then
+lifted and went spinning over the
+fence and out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>The dread in her heart gave
+way to a sudden, bleak despair.
+As she turned from the phone
+something within her withered,
+became as dead as the drifting
+leaves with their dark autumnal
+mottlings.</p>
+
+<p>She did not even pause to call
+Tommy in from the yard. She
+rushed upstairs, then down again,
+gathering up her hat, gloves and
+purse, making sure she had
+enough change to pay for the taxi.</p>
+
+<p>The ride to the office was a
+nightmare ... Tall buildings swept
+past, facades of granite as gray
+as the leaden skies of mid-winter,
+beehives of commerce where men
+and women brushed shoulders
+without touching hands.</p>
+
+<p>Autumnal leaves blowing, and
+the gray buildings sweeping past.
+Despite Tommy, despite everything
+there was no shining vision
+to warm Sally from within. A cottage
+must be lived in to become a
+home and Sally had never really
+had a home.</p>
+
+<p>One-night stand! It wasn't an
+expression she'd have used by
+choice, but it came unbidden into
+her mind. If you live for nine
+years with a man who can't relax
+and be human, who can't be warm
+and loving you'll begin eventually
+to feel you might as well live
+alone. Each day had been like a
+lonely sentinel outpost in a desert
+waste for Sally.</p>
+
+<p>She thought about Tommy ...
+Tommy wasn't in the least like his
+father when he came racing home
+from school, hair tousled, books
+dangling from a strap. Tommy
+would raid the pantry with unthinking
+zest, invite other boys in
+to look at the Westerns on TV,
+and trade black eyes for marbles
+with a healthy pugnacity.</p>
+
+<p>Up to a point Tommy <i>was</i>
+normal, <i>was</i> healthy.</p>
+
+<p>But she had seen mirrored in
+Tommy's pale blue eyes the same
+abnormal calmness that was always
+in his father's, and the look
+of derisive withdrawal which made
+him seem always to be staring
+down at her from a height. And
+it filled her with terror to see that
+Tommy's mood could change as
+abruptly and terrifyingly cold ...</p>
+
+<p>Tommy, her son. Tommy, no
+longer boisterous and eager, but
+sitting in a corner with his legs
+drawn up, a faraway look in his
+eyes. Tommy seeming to look
+right through her, into space.
+Tommy and Jim exchanging silent
+understanding glances. Tommy
+roaming through the cottage, staring
+at his toys with frowning disapproval.
+Tommy drawing back
+when she tried to touch him.</p>
+
+<p><i>Tommy, Tommy, come back to
+me!</i> How often she had cried out
+in her heart when that coldness
+came between them.</p>
+
+<p>Tommy drawing strange figures
+on the floor with a piece of colored
+chalk, then erasing them quickly
+before she could see them, refusing
+to let her enter his secret
+child's world.</p>
+
+<p>Tommy picking up the cat and
+stroking its fur mechanically, while
+he stared out through the kitchen
+window at rusty blackbirds on
+the wing ...</p>
+
+<p>"This is the address you gave
+me, lady. Sixty-seven Vine
+Street," the cab driver was saying.</p>
+
+<p>Sally shivered, remembering
+her husband's voice on the phone,
+remembering where she was ...
+"<i>Come to the office, Sally! Hurry,
+hurry&mdash;or it will be too late!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Too late for what? Too late to
+recapture a happiness she had
+never possessed?</p>
+
+<p>"This is it, lady!" the cab driver
+insisted. "Do you want me to
+wait?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," Sally said, fumbling for
+her change purse. She descended
+from the taxi, paid the driver and
+hurried across the pavement to the
+big office building with its mirroring
+frontage of plate glass and
+black onyx tiles.</p>
+
+<p>The firm's name was on the
+directory board in the lobby, white
+on black in beautifully embossed
+lettering. White for hope, and
+black for despair, mourning ...</p>
+
+<p>The elevator opened and closed
+and Sally was whisked up eight
+stories behind a man in a checkered
+suit.</p>
+
+<p>"Eighth floor!" Sally whispered,
+in sudden alarm. The elevator
+jolted to an abrupt halt and the
+operator swung about to glare at
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have told me
+when you got on, Miss!" he complained.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry," Sally muttered, stumbling
+out into the corridor. How
+horrible it must be to go to business
+every day, she thought wildly.
+To sit in an office, to thumb
+through papers, to bark orders, to
+be a machine.</p>
+
+<p>Sally stood very still for an
+instant, startled, feeling her sanity
+threatened by the very absurdity
+of the thought. People who
+worked in offices could turn for
+escape to a cottage in the sunset's
+glow, when they were set free by
+the moving hands of a clock.
+There could be a fierce joy at the
+thought of deliverance, at the
+prospect of going home at five
+o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>But for Sally was the brightness,
+the deliverance withheld.
+The corridor was wide and deserted
+and the black tiles with
+their gold borders seemed to converge
+upon her, hemming her
+into a cool magnificence as structurally
+somber as the architectural
+embellishments of a costly mausoleum.</p>
+
+<p>She found the office with her
+surface mind, working at cross-purposes
+with the confusion and
+swiftly mounting dread which
+made her footsteps falter, her
+mouth go dry.</p>
+
+<p><i>Steady, Sally! Here's the office,
+here's the door. Turn the knob
+and get it over with ...</i></p>
+
+<p>Sally opened the door and
+stepped into a small, deserted reception
+room. Beyond the reception
+desk was a gate, and beyond
+the gate a large central office
+branched off into several smaller
+offices.</p>
+
+<p>Sally paused only an instant.
+It seemed quite natural to her that
+a business office should be deserted
+so late in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>She crossed the reception room
+to the gate, passed through it,
+utter desperation giving her
+courage.</p>
+
+<p>Something within her whispered
+that she had only to walk across
+the central office, open the first
+door she came to to find her
+husband ...</p>
+
+<p>The first door combined privacy
+with easy accessibility. The instant
+she opened the door she
+knew that she had been right to
+trust her instincts. This was his
+office ...</p>
+
+<p>He was sitting at a desk by the
+window, a patch of sunset sky
+visible over his right shoulder. His
+elbows rested on the desk and his
+hands were tightly locked as if he
+had just stopped wringing them.</p>
+
+<p>He was looking straight at her,
+his eyes wide and staring.</p>
+
+<p>"Jim!" Sally breathed. "Jim,
+what's wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer, did not
+move or attempt to greet her in
+any way. There was no color at
+all in his face. His lips were
+parted, his white teeth gleamed.
+And he was more stiffly controlled
+than usual&mdash;a control so intense
+that for once Sally felt more alarm
+than bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>There was a rising terror in her
+now. And a slowly dawning horror.
+The sunlight streamed in,
+gleaming redly on his hair, his
+shoulders. He seemed to be the
+center of a flaming red ball ...</p>
+
+<p><i>He sent for you, Sally. Why
+doesn't he get up and speak to
+you, if only to pour salt on the
+wounds you've borne for eight
+long years?</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Poor Sally! You wanted a
+strong, protective, old-fashioned
+husband. What have you got instead?</i></p>
+
+<p>Sally went up to the desk and
+looked steadily into eyes so calm
+and blank that they seemed like
+the eyes of a child lost in some
+dreamy wonderland barred forever
+to adult understanding.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant her terror ebbed
+and she felt almost reassured.
+Then she made the mistake of
+bending more closely above him,
+brushing his right elbow with her
+sleeve.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>That single light woman's
+touch unsettled him. He started
+to fall, sideways and very fast.
+Topple a dead weight and it
+crashes with a swiftness no opposing
+force can counter-balance.</p>
+
+<p>It did Sally no good to clutch
+frantically at his arm as he fell,
+to tug and jerk at the slackening
+folds of his suit. The heaviness of
+his descending bulk dragged him
+down and away from her, the
+awful inertia of lifeless flesh.</p>
+
+<p>He thudded to the floor and
+rolled over on his back, seeming
+to shrink as Sally widened her
+eyes upon him. He lay in a grotesque
+sprawl at her feet, his jaw
+hanging open on the gaping black
+orifice of his mouth ...</p>
+
+<p>Sally might have screamed and
+gone right on screaming&mdash;if she
+had been a different kind of
+woman. On seeing her husband
+lying dead her impulse might have
+been to throw herself down beside
+him, give way to her grief in a
+wild fit of sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>But where there was no grief
+there could be no sobbing ...</p>
+
+<p>One thing only she did before
+she left. She unloosed the collar
+of the unmoving form on the floor
+and looked for the small brown
+mole she did not really expect to
+find. The mole she knew to be on
+her husband's shoulder, high up
+on the left side.</p>
+
+<p>She had noticed things that
+made her doubt her sanity; she
+needed to see the little black mole
+to reassure her ...</p>
+
+<p>She had noticed the difference
+in the hair-line, the strange slant
+of the eyebrows, the crinkly texture
+of the skin where it should
+have been smooth ...</p>
+
+<p>Something was wrong ... horribly,
+weirdly wrong ...</p>
+
+<p>Even the hands of the sprawled
+form seemed larger and hairier
+than the hands of her husband.
+Nevertheless it was important to
+be sure ...</p>
+
+<p>The absence of the mole
+clinched it.</p>
+
+<p>Sally crouched beside the body,
+carefully readjusting the collar.
+Then she got up and walked out
+of the office.</p>
+
+<p>Some homecomings are joyful,
+others cruel. Sitting in the taxi,
+clenching and unclenching her
+hands, Sally had no plan that
+could be called a plan, no hope
+that was more than a dim flickering
+in a vast wasteland, bleak
+and unexplored.</p>
+
+<p>But it was strange how one light
+burning brightly in a cottage window
+could make even a wasteland
+seem small, could shrink and
+diminish it until it became no
+more than a patch of darkness
+that anyone with courage might
+cross.</p>
+
+<p>The light was in Tommy's room
+and there was a whispering behind
+the door. Sally could hear
+the whispering as she tiptoed upstairs,
+could see the light streaming
+out into the hall.</p>
+
+<p>She paused for an instant at the
+head of the stairs, listening. There
+were two voices in the room, and
+they were talking back and forth.</p>
+
+<p>Sally tiptoed down the hall,
+stood with wildly beating heart
+just outside the door.</p>
+
+<p>"She knows now, Tommy," the
+deepest of the two voices said.
+"We are very close, your mother
+and I. She knows now that I sent
+her to the office to find my 'stand
+in.' Oh, it's an amusing term,
+Tommy&mdash;an Earth term we'd
+hardly use on Mars. But it's a
+term your mother would understand."</p>
+
+<p>A pause, then the voice went
+on, "You see, my son, it has taken
+me eight years to repair the ship.
+And in eight years a man can
+wither up and die by inches if he
+does not have a growing son to go
+adventuring with him in the end."</p>
+
+<p>"Adventuring, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have read a good many
+Earth books, my son, written
+especially for boys. <i>Treasure
+Island</i>, <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>, <i>Twenty
+Thousand Leagues Under The
+Sea</i>. What paltry books they are!
+But in them there is a little of the
+fire, a little of the glow of <i>our</i>
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"No, father. I started them but
+I threw them away for I did not
+like them."</p>
+
+<p>"As you and I must throw
+away all Earth things, my son. I
+tried to be kind to your mother,
+to be a good husband as husbands
+go on Earth. But how could I
+feel proud and strong and reckless
+by her side? How could I share
+her paltry joys and sorrows, chirp
+with delight as a sparrow might
+chirp hopping about in the grass?
+Can an eagle pretend to be a
+sparrow? Can the thunder muffle
+its voice when two white-crested
+clouds collide in the shining depths
+of the night sky?"</p>
+
+<p>"You tried, father. You did
+your best."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my son, I did try. But
+if I had attempted to feign emotions
+I did not feel your mother
+would have seen through the pretense.
+She would then have turned
+from me completely. Without her
+I could not have had you, my
+son."</p>
+
+<p>"And now, father, what will
+we do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now the ship has been repaired
+and is waiting for us. Every
+day for eight years I went to the
+hill and worked on the ship. It
+was badly wrecked, my son, but
+now my patience has been rewarded,
+and every damaged astronavigation
+instrument has been
+replaced."</p>
+
+<p>"You never went to the office,
+father? You never went at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my son. My stand-in
+worked at the office in my place.
+I instilled in your mother's mind
+an intense dislike and fear of the
+office to keep her from ever coming
+face to face with the stand-in.
+She might have noticed the difference.
+But I had to have a
+stand-in, as a safeguard. Your
+mother <i>might</i> have gone to the
+office despite the mental block."</p>
+
+<p>"She's gone now, father. Why
+did you send for her?"</p>
+
+<p>"To avoid what she would call
+a scene, my son. That I could not
+endure. I had the stand-in summon
+her on the office telephone,
+then I withdrew all vitality from
+it. She will find it quite lifeless.
+But it does not matter now. When
+she returns we will be gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Was constructing the stand-in
+difficult, father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not for me, my son. On Mars
+we have many androids, each constructed
+to perform a specific
+task. Some are ingenious beyond
+belief&mdash;or would seem so to
+Earthmen."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause, then the
+weaker of the two voices said, "I
+will miss my mother. She tried to
+make me happy. She tried very
+hard."</p>
+
+<p>"You must be brave and strong,
+my son. We are eagles, you and I.
+Your mother is a sparrow, gentle
+and dun-colored. I shall always
+remember her with tenderness.
+You want to go with me, don't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, father. Oh, yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then come, my son. We must
+hurry. Your mother will be returning
+any minute now."</p>
+
+<p>Sally stood motionless, listening
+to the voices like a spectator
+sitting before a television screen.
+A spectator can see as well as
+hear, and Sally could visualize
+her son's pale, eager face so clearly
+there was no need for her to
+move forward into the room.</p>
+
+<p>She could not move. And nothing
+on Earth could have wrenched
+a tortured cry from her. Grief and
+shock may paralyze the mind and
+will, but Sally's will was not
+paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if the thread of her
+life had been cut, with only one
+light left burning. Tommy was
+that light. He would never change.
+He would go from her forever.
+But he would always be her son.</p>
+
+<p>The door of Tommy's room
+opened and Tommy and his father
+came out into the hall. Sally
+stepped back into shadows and
+watched them walk quickly down
+the hall to the stairs, their voices
+low, hushed. She heard them
+descend the stairs, their footsteps
+dwindle, die away into silence ...</p>
+
+<p><i>You'll see a light, Sally, a great
+glow lighting up the sky. The ship
+must be very beautiful. For eight
+years he labored over it, restoring
+it with all the shining gifts of skill
+and feeling at his command. He
+was calm toward you, but not toward
+the ship, Sally&mdash;the ship
+which will take him back to Mars!</i></p>
+
+<p>How is it on Mars, she wondered.
+My son, Tommy, will become
+a strong, proud adventurer
+daring the farthest planet of the
+farthest star?</p>
+
+<p>You can't stop a boy from adventuring.
+Surprise him at his
+books and you'll see tropical seas
+in his eyes, a pearly nautilus,
+Hong Kong and Valparaiso resplendent
+in the dawn.</p>
+
+<p><i>There is no strength quite like
+the strength of a mother, Sally.
+Endure it, be brave ...</i></p>
+
+<p>Sally was at the window when
+it came. A dazzling burst of radiance,
+starting from the horizon's
+rim and spreading across the
+entire sky. It lit up the cottage
+and flickered over the lawn, turning
+rooftops to molten gold and
+gilding the long line of rolling
+hills which hemmed in the town.</p>
+
+<p>Brighter it grew and brighter,
+gilding for a moment even Sally's
+bowed head and her image mirrored
+on the pane. Then, abruptly,
+it was gone ...</p>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+This etext was produced from <i>Fantastic Universe</i> May 1954.
+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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Calm Man, by Frank Belknap Long
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Calm Man, by Frank Belknap Long
+
+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: The Calm Man
+
+Author: Frank Belknap Long
+
+Release Date: April 21, 2009 [EBook #28583]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CALM MAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Dip the pen of a Frank Belknap Long into a bottle of ink and the
+ result is always bound to be a scintillating piece of brilliant
+ imaginative science fiction. And he's done it again in the tortured
+ story of Sally._
+
+
+ the
+ calm
+ man
+
+ _by ... Frank Belknap Long_
+
+
+ Sally watched the molten gold glow in the sky. Then knew she
+ would not see her son and her husband ever again on Earth.
+
+
+Sally Anders had never really thought of herself as a wallflower. A girl
+could be shy, couldn't she, and still be pretty enough to attract and
+hold men?
+
+Only this morning she had drawn an admiring look from the milkman and a
+wolf cry from Jimmy on the corner, with his newspapers and shiny new
+bike. What if the milkman was crowding sixty and wore thick-lensed
+glasses? What if Jimmy was only seventeen?
+
+A male was a male, and a glance was a glance. Why, if I just primp a
+little more, Sally told herself, I'll be irresistible.
+
+Hair ribbons and perfume, a mirror tilted at just the right angle, an
+invitation to a party on the dresser--what more did a girl need?
+
+"Dinner, Sally!" came echoing up from the kitchen. "Do you want to be
+late, child?"
+
+Sally had no intention of being late. Tonight she'd see him across a
+crowded room and her heart would skip a beat. He'd look at her and
+smile, and come straight toward her with his shoulders squared.
+
+There was always one night in a girl's life that stands above all other
+nights. One night when the moon shone bright and clear and the clock on
+the wall went _tick tock, tick tock, tick tock_. One night when each
+tick said, "You're beautiful! Really beautiful!"
+
+Giving her hair a final pat Sally smiled at herself in the mirror.
+
+In the bathroom the water was still running and the perfumed bath soap
+still spread its aromatic sweet odor through the room. Sally went into
+the bathroom and turned off the tap before going downstairs to the
+kitchen.
+
+"My girl looks radiant tonight!" Uncle Ben said, smiling at her over his
+corned beef and cabbage.
+
+Sally blushed and lowered her eyes.
+
+"Ben, you're making her nervous," Sally's mother said, laughing.
+
+Sally looked up and met her uncle's stare, her eyes defiant. "I'm not
+bad-looking whatever you may think," she said.
+
+"Oh, now, Sally," Uncle Ben protested. "No sense in getting on a high
+horse. Tonight you may find a man who just won't be able to resist you."
+
+"Maybe I will and maybe I won't," Sally said. "You'd be surprised if I
+did, wouldn't you?"
+
+It was Uncle Ben's turn to lower his eyes.
+
+"I'll tell the world you've inherited your mother's looks, Sally," he
+said. "But a man has to pride himself on something. My defects of
+character are pretty bad. But no one has ever accused me of dishonesty."
+
+Sally folded her napkin and rose stiffly from the table.
+
+"Good night, Uncle," she said.
+
+When Sally arrived at the party every foot of floor space was taken up
+by dancing couples and the reception room was so crowded that, as each
+new guest was announced, a little ripple of displeasure went through the
+men in midnight blue and the women in Nile green and lavender.
+
+For a moment Sally did not move, just stood staring at the dancing
+couples, half-hidden by one of the potted palms that framed the sides of
+the long room.
+
+Moonlight silvered her hair and touched her white throat and arms with a
+caress so gentle that simply by closing her eyes she could fancy herself
+already in his arms.
+
+Moonlight from tall windows flooding down, turning the dancing guests
+into pirouetting ghosts in diaphanous blue and green, scarlet and gold.
+
+_Close your eyes, Sally, close them tight! Now open them! That's it ...
+Slowly, slowly ..._
+
+He came out of nothingness into the light and was right beside her
+suddenly.
+
+He was tall, but not too tall. His face was tanned mahogany brown, and
+his eyes were clear and very bright. And he stood there looking at her
+steadily until her mouth opened and a little gasp flew out.
+
+He took her into his arms without a word and they started to dance ...
+
+They were still dancing when he asked her to be his wife.
+
+"You'll marry me, of course," he said. "We haven't too much time. The
+years go by so swiftly, like great white birds at sea."
+
+They were very close when he asked her, but he made no attempt to kiss
+her. They went right on dancing and while he waited for her answer he
+talked about the moon ...
+
+"When the lights go out and the music stops the moon will remain," he
+said. "It raises tides on the Earth, it inflames the minds and hearts of
+men. There are cyclic rhythms which would set a stone to dreaming and
+desiring on such a night as this."
+
+He stopped dancing abruptly and looked at her with calm assurance.
+
+"You _will_ marry me, won't you?" he asked. "Allowing for a reasonable
+margin of error I seriously doubt if I could be happy with any of these
+other women. I was attracted to you the instant I saw you."
+
+A girl who has never been asked before, who has drawn only one lone wolf
+cry from a newsboy could hardly be expected to resist such an offer.
+
+_Don't resist, Sally. He's strong and tall and extremely good-looking.
+He knows what he wants and makes up his mind quickly. Surely a man so
+resolute must make enough money to support a wife._
+
+"Yes," Sally breathed, snuggling close to him. "Oh, yes!"
+
+She paused a moment, then said, "You may kiss me now if you wish, my
+darling."
+
+He straightened and frowned a little, and looked away quickly. "That can
+wait," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were married a week later and went to live on an elm-shaded street
+just five blocks from where Sally was born. The cottage was small, white
+and attractively decorated inside and out. But Sally changed the
+curtains, as all women must, and bought some new furniture on the
+installment plan.
+
+The neighbors were friendly folk who knew her husband as Mr. James Rand,
+an energetic young insurance broker who would certainly carve a wider
+swath for himself in his chosen profession now that he had so charming a
+wife.
+
+Ten months later the first baby came.
+
+Lying beneath cool white sheets in the hospital Sally looked at the
+other women and felt so deliriously happy she wanted to cry. It was a
+beautiful baby and it cuddled close to her heart, its smallness a
+miracle in itself.
+
+The other husbands came in and sat beside their wives, holding on tight
+to their happiness. There were flowers and smiles, whispers that
+explored bright new worlds of tenderness and rejoicing.
+
+Out in the corridor the husbands congratulated one another and came in
+smelling of cigar smoke.
+
+"Have a cigar! That's right. Eight pounds at birth. That's unusual,
+isn't it? Brightest kid you ever saw. Knew his old man right off."
+
+He was beside her suddenly, standing straight and still in shadows.
+
+"Oh, darling," she whispered. "Why did you wait? It's been three whole
+days."
+
+"Three days?" he asked, leaning forward to stare down at his son.
+"Really! It didn't seem that long."
+
+"Where were you? You didn't even phone!"
+
+"Sometimes it's difficult to phone," he said slowly, as if measuring his
+words. "You have given me a son. That pleases me very much."
+
+A coldness touched her heart and a despair took hold of her. "It pleases
+you! Is that all you can say? You stand there looking at me as if I were
+a--a patient ..."
+
+"A patient?" His expression grew quizzical. "Just what do you mean,
+Sally?"
+
+"You said you were pleased. If a patient is ill her doctor hopes that
+she will get well. He is pleased when she does. If a woman has a baby a
+doctor will say, 'I'm so pleased. The baby is doing fine. You don't have
+to worry about him. I've put him on the scales and he's a bouncing,
+healthy boy.'"
+
+"Medicine is a sane and wise profession," Sally's husband said. "When I
+look at my son that is exactly what I would say to the mother of my son.
+He is healthy and strong. You have pleased me, Sally."
+
+He bent as he spoke and picked Sally's son up. He held the infant in the
+crook of his arm, smiling down at it.
+
+"A healthy male child," he said. "His hair will come in thick and black.
+Soon he will speak, will know that I am his father."
+
+He ran his palm over the baby's smooth head, opened its mouth gently
+with his forefinger and looked inside.
+
+Sally rose on one elbow, her tormented eyes searching his face.
+
+"He's your child, your son!" she sobbed. "A woman has a child and her
+husband comes and puts his arms around her. He holds her close. If they
+love each other they are so happy, so very happy, they break down and
+cry."
+
+"I am too pleased to do anything so fantastic, Sally," he said. "When a
+child is born no tears should be shed by its parents. I have examined
+the child and I am pleased with it. Does not that content you?"
+
+"No, it doesn't!" Sally almost shrieked. "Why do you stare at your own
+son as if you'd never seen a baby before? He isn't a mechanical toy.
+He's our own darling, adorable little baby. _Our child!_ How can you be
+so _inhumanly_ calm?"
+
+He frowned, put the baby down.
+
+"There is a time for love-making and a time for parenthood," he said.
+"Parenthood is a serious responsibility. That is where medicine comes
+in, surgery. If a child is not perfect there are emergency measures
+which can be taken to correct the defect."
+
+Sally's mouth went suddenly dry. "Perfect! What do you mean, Jim? Is
+there something _wrong_ with Tommy?"
+
+"I don't think so," her husband said. "His grasp is firm and strong. He
+has good hearing and his eyesight appears to be all that could be
+desired. Did you notice how his eyes followed me every moment?"
+
+"I wasn't looking at his eyes!" Sally whispered, her voice tight with
+alarm. "Why are you trying to frighten me, Jim? If Tommy wasn't a
+normal, healthy baby do you imagine for one instant they would have
+placed him in my arms?"
+
+"That is a very sound observation," Sally's husband said. "Truth is
+truth, but to alarm you at a time like this would be unnecessarily
+cruel."
+
+"Where does that put you?"
+
+"I simply spoke my mind as the child's father. I had to speak as I did
+because of my natural concern for the health of our child. Do you want
+me to stay and talk to you, Sally?"
+
+Sally shook her head. "No, Jim. I won't let you torture me any more."
+
+Sally drew the baby into her arms again and held it tightly. "I'll
+scream if you stay!" she warned. "I'll become hysterical unless you
+leave."
+
+"Very well," her husband said. "I'll come back tomorrow."
+
+He bent as he spoke and kissed her on the forehead. His lips were ice
+cold.
+
+For eight years Sally sat across the table from her husband at
+breakfast, her eyes fixed upon a nothingness on the green-blue wall at
+his back. Calm he remained even while eating. The eggs she placed before
+him he cracked methodically with a knife and consumed behind a tilted
+newspaper, taking now an assured sip of coffee, now a measured glance at
+the clock.
+
+The presence of his young son bothered him not at all. Tommy could be
+quiet or noisy, in trouble at school, or with an _A_ for good conduct
+tucked with his report card in his soiled leather zipper jacket. It was
+always: "Eat slowly, my son. Never gulp your food. Be sure to take
+plenty of exercise today. Stay in the sun as much as possible."
+
+Often Sally wanted to shriek: "Be a father to him! A real father! Get
+down on the floor and play with him. Shoot marbles with him, spin one of
+his tops. Remember the toy locomotive you gave him for Christmas after I
+got hysterical and screamed at you? Remember the beautiful little train?
+Get it out of the closet and wreck it accidentally. He'll warm up to you
+then. He'll be broken-hearted, but he'll feel close to you, then you'll
+know what it means to have a son!"
+
+Often Sally wanted to fly at him, beat with her fists on his chest. But
+she never did.
+
+_You can't warm a stone by slapping it, Sally. You'd only bruise
+yourself. A stone is neither cruel nor tender. You've married a man of
+stone, Sally._
+
+He hasn't missed a day at the office in eight years. She'd never visited
+the office but he was always there to answer when she phoned. "I'm very
+busy, Sally. What did you say? You've bought a new hat? I'm sure it will
+look well on you, Sally. What did you say? Tommy got into a fight with a
+new boy in the neighborhood? You must take better care of him, Sally."
+
+There are patterns in every marriage. When once the mold has set, a few
+strange behavior patterns must be accepted as a matter of course.
+
+"I'll drop in at the office tomorrow, darling!" Sally had promised right
+after the breakfast pattern had become firmly established. The desire to
+see where her husband worked had been from the start a strong, bright
+flame in her. But he asked her to wait a while before visiting his
+office.
+
+A strong will can dampen the brightest flame, and when months passed and
+he kept saying 'no,' Sally found herself agreeing with her husband's
+suggestion that the visit be put off indefinitely.
+
+Snuff a candle and it stays snuffed. A marriage pattern once established
+requires a very special kind of re-kindling. Sally's husband refused to
+supply the needed spark.
+
+Whenever Sally had an impulse to turn her steps in the direction of the
+office a voice deep in her mind seemed to whisper: "No sense in it,
+Sally. Stay away. He's been mean and spiteful about it all these years.
+Don't give in to him now by going."
+
+Besides, Tommy took up so much of her time. A growing boy was always a
+problem and Tommy seemed to have a special gift for getting into things
+because he was so active. And he went through his clothes, wore out his
+shoes almost faster than she could replace them.
+
+Right now Tommy was playing in the yard. Sally's eyes came to a focus
+upon him, crouching by a hole in the fence which kindly old Mrs.
+Wallingford had erected as a protection against the prying
+inquisitiveness of an eight-year-old determined to make life miserable
+for her.
+
+A thrice-widowed neighbor of seventy without a spiteful hair in her head
+could put up with a boy who rollicked and yelled perhaps. But peep-hole
+spying was another matter.
+
+Sally muttered: "Enough of that!" and started for the kitchen door. Just
+as she reached it the telephone rang.
+
+Sally went quickly to the phone and lifted the receiver. The instant she
+pressed it to her ear she recognized her husband's voice--or thought she
+did.
+
+"Sally, come to the office!" came the voice, speaking in a hoarse
+whisper. "Hurry--or it will be too late! Hurry, Sally!"
+
+Sally turned with a startled gasp, looked out through the kitchen window
+at the autumn leaves blowing crisp and dry across the lawn. As she
+looked the scattered leaves whirled into a flurry around Tommy, then
+lifted and went spinning over the fence and out of sight.
+
+The dread in her heart gave way to a sudden, bleak despair. As she
+turned from the phone something within her withered, became as dead as
+the drifting leaves with their dark autumnal mottlings.
+
+She did not even pause to call Tommy in from the yard. She rushed
+upstairs, then down again, gathering up her hat, gloves and purse,
+making sure she had enough change to pay for the taxi.
+
+The ride to the office was a nightmare ... Tall buildings swept past,
+facades of granite as gray as the leaden skies of mid-winter, beehives
+of commerce where men and women brushed shoulders without touching
+hands.
+
+Autumnal leaves blowing, and the gray buildings sweeping past. Despite
+Tommy, despite everything there was no shining vision to warm Sally from
+within. A cottage must be lived in to become a home and Sally had never
+really had a home.
+
+One-night stand! It wasn't an expression she'd have used by choice, but
+it came unbidden into her mind. If you live for nine years with a man
+who can't relax and be human, who can't be warm and loving you'll begin
+eventually to feel you might as well live alone. Each day had been like
+a lonely sentinel outpost in a desert waste for Sally.
+
+She thought about Tommy ... Tommy wasn't in the least like his father
+when he came racing home from school, hair tousled, books dangling from
+a strap. Tommy would raid the pantry with unthinking zest, invite other
+boys in to look at the Westerns on TV, and trade black eyes for marbles
+with a healthy pugnacity.
+
+Up to a point Tommy _was_ normal, _was_ healthy.
+
+But she had seen mirrored in Tommy's pale blue eyes the same abnormal
+calmness that was always in his father's, and the look of derisive
+withdrawal which made him seem always to be staring down at her from a
+height. And it filled her with terror to see that Tommy's mood could
+change as abruptly and terrifyingly cold ...
+
+Tommy, her son. Tommy, no longer boisterous and eager, but sitting in a
+corner with his legs drawn up, a faraway look in his eyes. Tommy seeming
+to look right through her, into space. Tommy and Jim exchanging silent
+understanding glances. Tommy roaming through the cottage, staring at his
+toys with frowning disapproval. Tommy drawing back when she tried to
+touch him.
+
+_Tommy, Tommy, come back to me!_ How often she had cried out in her
+heart when that coldness came between them.
+
+Tommy drawing strange figures on the floor with a piece of colored
+chalk, then erasing them quickly before she could see them, refusing to
+let her enter his secret child's world.
+
+Tommy picking up the cat and stroking its fur mechanically, while he
+stared out through the kitchen window at rusty blackbirds on the
+wing ...
+
+"This is the address you gave me, lady. Sixty-seven Vine Street," the
+cab driver was saying.
+
+Sally shivered, remembering her husband's voice on the phone,
+remembering where she was ... "_Come to the office, Sally! Hurry,
+hurry--or it will be too late!_"
+
+Too late for what? Too late to recapture a happiness she had never
+possessed?
+
+"This is it, lady!" the cab driver insisted. "Do you want me to wait?"
+
+"No," Sally said, fumbling for her change purse. She descended from the
+taxi, paid the driver and hurried across the pavement to the big office
+building with its mirroring frontage of plate glass and black onyx
+tiles.
+
+The firm's name was on the directory board in the lobby, white on black
+in beautifully embossed lettering. White for hope, and black for
+despair, mourning ...
+
+The elevator opened and closed and Sally was whisked up eight stories
+behind a man in a checkered suit.
+
+"Eighth floor!" Sally whispered, in sudden alarm. The elevator jolted to
+an abrupt halt and the operator swung about to glare at her.
+
+"You should have told me when you got on, Miss!" he complained.
+
+"Sorry," Sally muttered, stumbling out into the corridor. How horrible
+it must be to go to business every day, she thought wildly. To sit in an
+office, to thumb through papers, to bark orders, to be a machine.
+
+Sally stood very still for an instant, startled, feeling her sanity
+threatened by the very absurdity of the thought. People who worked in
+offices could turn for escape to a cottage in the sunset's glow, when
+they were set free by the moving hands of a clock. There could be a
+fierce joy at the thought of deliverance, at the prospect of going home
+at five o'clock.
+
+But for Sally was the brightness, the deliverance withheld. The corridor
+was wide and deserted and the black tiles with their gold borders seemed
+to converge upon her, hemming her into a cool magnificence as
+structurally somber as the architectural embellishments of a costly
+mausoleum.
+
+She found the office with her surface mind, working at cross-purposes
+with the confusion and swiftly mounting dread which made her footsteps
+falter, her mouth go dry.
+
+_Steady, Sally! Here's the office, here's the door. Turn the knob and
+get it over with ..._
+
+Sally opened the door and stepped into a small, deserted reception room.
+Beyond the reception desk was a gate, and beyond the gate a large
+central office branched off into several smaller offices.
+
+Sally paused only an instant. It seemed quite natural to her that a
+business office should be deserted so late in the afternoon.
+
+She crossed the reception room to the gate, passed through it, utter
+desperation giving her courage.
+
+Something within her whispered that she had only to walk across the
+central office, open the first door she came to to find her husband ...
+
+The first door combined privacy with easy accessibility. The instant she
+opened the door she knew that she had been right to trust her instincts.
+This was his office ...
+
+He was sitting at a desk by the window, a patch of sunset sky visible
+over his right shoulder. His elbows rested on the desk and his hands
+were tightly locked as if he had just stopped wringing them.
+
+He was looking straight at her, his eyes wide and staring.
+
+"Jim!" Sally breathed. "Jim, what's wrong?"
+
+He did not answer, did not move or attempt to greet her in any way.
+There was no color at all in his face. His lips were parted, his white
+teeth gleamed. And he was more stiffly controlled than usual--a control
+so intense that for once Sally felt more alarm than bitterness.
+
+There was a rising terror in her now. And a slowly dawning horror. The
+sunlight streamed in, gleaming redly on his hair, his shoulders. He
+seemed to be the center of a flaming red ball ...
+
+_He sent for you, Sally. Why doesn't he get up and speak to you, if only
+to pour salt on the wounds you've borne for eight long years?_
+
+_Poor Sally! You wanted a strong, protective, old-fashioned husband.
+What have you got instead?_
+
+Sally went up to the desk and looked steadily into eyes so calm and
+blank that they seemed like the eyes of a child lost in some dreamy
+wonderland barred forever to adult understanding.
+
+For an instant her terror ebbed and she felt almost reassured. Then she
+made the mistake of bending more closely above him, brushing his right
+elbow with her sleeve.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That single light woman's touch unsettled him. He started to fall,
+sideways and very fast. Topple a dead weight and it crashes with a
+swiftness no opposing force can counter-balance.
+
+It did Sally no good to clutch frantically at his arm as he fell, to tug
+and jerk at the slackening folds of his suit. The heaviness of his
+descending bulk dragged him down and away from her, the awful inertia of
+lifeless flesh.
+
+He thudded to the floor and rolled over on his back, seeming to shrink
+as Sally widened her eyes upon him. He lay in a grotesque sprawl at her
+feet, his jaw hanging open on the gaping black orifice of his mouth ...
+
+Sally might have screamed and gone right on screaming--if she had been a
+different kind of woman. On seeing her husband lying dead her impulse
+might have been to throw herself down beside him, give way to her grief
+in a wild fit of sobbing.
+
+But where there was no grief there could be no sobbing ...
+
+One thing only she did before she left. She unloosed the collar of the
+unmoving form on the floor and looked for the small brown mole she did
+not really expect to find. The mole she knew to be on her husband's
+shoulder, high up on the left side.
+
+She had noticed things that made her doubt her sanity; she needed to see
+the little black mole to reassure her ...
+
+She had noticed the difference in the hair-line, the strange slant of
+the eyebrows, the crinkly texture of the skin where it should have been
+smooth ...
+
+Something was wrong ... horribly, weirdly wrong ...
+
+Even the hands of the sprawled form seemed larger and hairier than the
+hands of her husband. Nevertheless it was important to be sure ...
+
+The absence of the mole clinched it.
+
+Sally crouched beside the body, carefully readjusting the collar. Then
+she got up and walked out of the office.
+
+Some homecomings are joyful, others cruel. Sitting in the taxi,
+clenching and unclenching her hands, Sally had no plan that could be
+called a plan, no hope that was more than a dim flickering in a vast
+wasteland, bleak and unexplored.
+
+But it was strange how one light burning brightly in a cottage window
+could make even a wasteland seem small, could shrink and diminish it
+until it became no more than a patch of darkness that anyone with
+courage might cross.
+
+The light was in Tommy's room and there was a whispering behind the
+door. Sally could hear the whispering as she tiptoed upstairs, could see
+the light streaming out into the hall.
+
+She paused for an instant at the head of the stairs, listening. There
+were two voices in the room, and they were talking back and forth.
+
+Sally tiptoed down the hall, stood with wildly beating heart just
+outside the door.
+
+"She knows now, Tommy," the deepest of the two voices said. "We are very
+close, your mother and I. She knows now that I sent her to the office to
+find my 'stand in.' Oh, it's an amusing term, Tommy--an Earth term we'd
+hardly use on Mars. But it's a term your mother would understand."
+
+A pause, then the voice went on, "You see, my son, it has taken me eight
+years to repair the ship. And in eight years a man can wither up and die
+by inches if he does not have a growing son to go adventuring with him
+in the end."
+
+"Adventuring, father?"
+
+"You have read a good many Earth books, my son, written especially for
+boys. _Treasure Island_, _Robinson Crusoe_, _Twenty Thousand Leagues
+Under The Sea_. What paltry books they are! But in them there is a
+little of the fire, a little of the glow of _our_ world."
+
+"No, father. I started them but I threw them away for I did not like
+them."
+
+"As you and I must throw away all Earth things, my son. I tried to be
+kind to your mother, to be a good husband as husbands go on Earth. But
+how could I feel proud and strong and reckless by her side? How could I
+share her paltry joys and sorrows, chirp with delight as a sparrow might
+chirp hopping about in the grass? Can an eagle pretend to be a sparrow?
+Can the thunder muffle its voice when two white-crested clouds collide
+in the shining depths of the night sky?"
+
+"You tried, father. You did your best."
+
+"Yes, my son, I did try. But if I had attempted to feign emotions I did
+not feel your mother would have seen through the pretense. She would
+then have turned from me completely. Without her I could not have had
+you, my son."
+
+"And now, father, what will we do?"
+
+"Now the ship has been repaired and is waiting for us. Every day for
+eight years I went to the hill and worked on the ship. It was badly
+wrecked, my son, but now my patience has been rewarded, and every
+damaged astronavigation instrument has been replaced."
+
+"You never went to the office, father? You never went at all?"
+
+"No, my son. My stand-in worked at the office in my place. I instilled
+in your mother's mind an intense dislike and fear of the office to keep
+her from ever coming face to face with the stand-in. She might have
+noticed the difference. But I had to have a stand-in, as a safeguard.
+Your mother _might_ have gone to the office despite the mental block."
+
+"She's gone now, father. Why did you send for her?"
+
+"To avoid what she would call a scene, my son. That I could not endure.
+I had the stand-in summon her on the office telephone, then I withdrew
+all vitality from it. She will find it quite lifeless. But it does not
+matter now. When she returns we will be gone."
+
+"Was constructing the stand-in difficult, father?"
+
+"Not for me, my son. On Mars we have many androids, each constructed to
+perform a specific task. Some are ingenious beyond belief--or would seem
+so to Earthmen."
+
+There was a pause, then the weaker of the two voices said, "I will miss
+my mother. She tried to make me happy. She tried very hard."
+
+"You must be brave and strong, my son. We are eagles, you and I. Your
+mother is a sparrow, gentle and dun-colored. I shall always remember her
+with tenderness. You want to go with me, don't you?"
+
+"Yes, father. Oh, yes!"
+
+"Then come, my son. We must hurry. Your mother will be returning any
+minute now."
+
+Sally stood motionless, listening to the voices like a spectator sitting
+before a television screen. A spectator can see as well as hear, and
+Sally could visualize her son's pale, eager face so clearly there was no
+need for her to move forward into the room.
+
+She could not move. And nothing on Earth could have wrenched a tortured
+cry from her. Grief and shock may paralyze the mind and will, but
+Sally's will was not paralyzed.
+
+It was as if the thread of her life had been cut, with only one light
+left burning. Tommy was that light. He would never change. He would go
+from her forever. But he would always be her son.
+
+The door of Tommy's room opened and Tommy and his father came out into
+the hall. Sally stepped back into shadows and watched them walk quickly
+down the hall to the stairs, their voices low, hushed. She heard them
+descend the stairs, their footsteps dwindle, die away into silence ...
+
+_You'll see a light, Sally, a great glow lighting up the sky. The ship
+must be very beautiful. For eight years he labored over it, restoring it
+with all the shining gifts of skill and feeling at his command. He was
+calm toward you, but not toward the ship, Sally--the ship which will
+take him back to Mars!_
+
+How is it on Mars, she wondered. My son, Tommy, will become a strong,
+proud adventurer daring the farthest planet of the farthest star?
+
+You can't stop a boy from adventuring. Surprise him at his books and
+you'll see tropical seas in his eyes, a pearly nautilus, Hong Kong and
+Valparaiso resplendent in the dawn.
+
+_There is no strength quite like the strength of a mother, Sally. Endure
+it, be brave ..._
+
+Sally was at the window when it came. A dazzling burst of radiance,
+starting from the horizon's rim and spreading across the entire sky. It
+lit up the cottage and flickered over the lawn, turning rooftops to
+molten gold and gilding the long line of rolling hills which hemmed in
+the town.
+
+Brighter it grew and brighter, gilding for a moment even Sally's bowed
+head and her image mirrored on the pane. Then, abruptly, it was gone ...
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Fantastic Universe_ May 1954.
+ 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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Calm Man, by Frank Belknap Long
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #28583 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/28583)