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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Long Voyage, by Carl Jacobi
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Long Voyage, by Carl Richard Jacobi
+
+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 Long Voyage
+
+Author: Carl Richard Jacobi
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2009 [EBook #29742]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LONG VOYAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="bk1"><p><i><small>When we published Carl Jacobi's last story we had no assurance he would be
+with us so soon again. For when a uniquely gifted science-fantasy writer
+becomes radio-active on the entertainment meter and goes voyaging into the
+unknown, he may be gone from the world we know for as long as yesterday's
+tomorrow. But Carl Jacobi has not only returned almost with the speed of
+light&mdash;he has brought with him shining new nuggets of wonder and surmise.</small></i></p></div>
+
+<div class="bk2"><h1><b>the<br />
+long<br />
+voyage</b></h1>
+
+<h2><small><i>by ... Carl Jacobi</i></small></h2>
+
+<p class="pr1"><big><b>The secret lay hidden at the end of nine landings,
+and Medusa-dark was one man's search for it&mdash;in
+the strangest journey ever made.</b></big></p></div>
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="smcap">A&nbsp;soft</span> gentle rain began to fall
+as we emerged from the dark
+woods and came out onto the shore.
+There it was, the sea, stretching as
+far as the eye could reach, gray and
+sullen, and flecked with green-white
+froth. The blue <i>hensorr</i> trees,
+crowding close to the water's edge,
+were bent backward as if frightened
+by the bleakness before them. The
+sand, visible under the clear patches
+of water, was a bleached white like
+the exposed surface of a huge bone.</p>
+
+<p>We stood there a moment in silence.
+Then Mason cleared his
+throat huskily.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here goes," he said.
+"We'll soon see if we have any
+friends about."</p>
+
+<p>He unslung the packsack from
+his shoulders, removed its protective
+outer shield and began to assemble
+the organic surveyor, an
+egg-shaped ball of white carponium
+secured to a segmented forty-foot
+rod. While Brandt and I raised the
+rod with the aid of an electric fulcrum,
+Mason carefully placed his
+control cabinet on a piece of outcropping
+rock and made a last adjustment.</p>
+
+<p>The moment had come. Even
+above the sound of the sea, you
+could hear the strained breathing
+of the men. Only Navigator Norris
+appeared unconcerned. He stood
+there calmly smoking his pipe, his
+keen blue eyes squinting against the
+biting wind.</p>
+
+<p>Mason switched on the speaker.
+Its high-frequency scream rose deafeningly
+above us and was torn
+away in unsteady gusts. He began
+to turn its center dial, at first a
+quarter circle, and then all the
+way to the final backstop of the
+calibration. All that resulted was
+a continuation of that mournful
+ululation like a wail out of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Mason tried again. With stiff
+wrists he tuned while perspiration
+stood out on his forehead, and the
+rest of us crowded close.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no use," he said. "This
+pickup failure proves there isn't
+a vestige of animal life on Stragella&mdash;on
+this hemisphere of the planet,
+at least."</p>
+
+<p>Navigator Norris took his pipe
+from his mouth and nodded. His
+face was expressionless. There was
+no indication in the man's voice
+that he had suffered another great
+disappointment, his sixth in less
+than a year.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll go back now," he said,
+"and we'll try again. There must
+be some planet in this system that's
+inhabited. But it's going to be hard
+to tell the women."</p>
+
+<p>Mason let the surveyor rod down
+with a crash. I could see the anger
+and resentment that was gathering
+in his eyes. Mason was the youngest
+of our party and the leader of
+the antagonistic group that was
+slowly but steadily undermining the
+authority of the Navigator.</p>
+
+<p>This was our seventh exploratory
+trip after our sixth landing since
+entering the field of the sun Ponthis.
+Ponthis with its sixteen equal-sized
+planets, each with a single
+satellite. First there had been Coulora;
+then in swift succession, Jama,
+Tenethon, Mokrell, and R-9. And
+now Stragella. Strange names of
+strange worlds, revolving about a
+strange star.</p>
+
+<p>It was Navigator Norris who
+told us the names of these planets
+and traced their positions on a chart
+for us. He alone of our group was
+familiar with astrogation and cosmography.
+He alone had sailed the
+spaceways in the days before the
+automatic pilots were installed and
+locked and sealed on every ship.</p>
+
+<p>A handsome man in his fortieth
+year, he stood six feet three with
+broad shoulders and a powerful
+frame. His eyes were the eyes of
+a scholar, dreamy yet alive with
+depth and penetration. I had never
+seen him lose his temper, and he
+governed our company with an iron
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>He was not perfect, of course.
+Like all Earthmen, he had his
+faults. Months before he had joined
+with that famed Martian scientist,
+Ganeth-Klae, to invent that all-use
+material, <i>Indurate</i>, the formula for
+which had been stolen and which
+therefore had never appeared on
+the commercial market. Norris
+would talk about that for hours. If
+you inadvertently started him on
+the subject a queer glint would
+enter his eyes, and he would dig
+around in his pocket for a chunk
+of the black substance.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I ever show you a piece
+of this?" he would say. "Look at
+it carefully. Notice the smooth
+grainless texture&mdash;hard and yet not
+brittle. You wouldn't think that it
+was formed in a gaseous state, then
+changed to a liquid and finally to
+a clay-like material that could be
+worked with ease. A thousand years
+after your body has returned to
+dust, that piece of <i>Indurate</i> will
+still exist, unchanged, unworn.
+Erosion will have little effect upon
+it. Beside it granite, steel are nothing.
+If only I had the formula ..."</p>
+
+<p>But he had only half the formula,
+the half he himself had developed.
+The other part was locked
+in the brain of Ganeth-Klae, and
+Ganeth-Klae had disappeared.
+What had become of him was a
+mystery. Norris perhaps had felt
+the loss more than any one, and
+he had offered the major part of
+his savings as a reward for information
+leading to the scientist's
+whereabouts.</p>
+
+<p>Our party&mdash;eighteen couples and
+Navigator Norris&mdash;had gathered
+together and subsequently left
+Earth in answer to a curious advertisement
+that had appeared in the
+Sunday edition of the London
+<i>Times</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="bq"><p>WANTED: <i>A group of married
+men and women, young,
+courageous, educated, tired of
+political and social restrictions,
+interested in extra-terrestrial colonization.
+Financial resources no
+qualification.</i></p></div>
+
+<p>After we had been weeded out,
+interviewed and rigorously questioned,
+Norris had taken us into the
+hangar, waved a hand toward the
+<i>Marie Galante</i> and explained the
+details.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Marie Galante</i> was a cruiser-type
+ship, stripped down to essentials
+to maintain speed, but equipped
+with the latest of everything.
+For a short run to Venus, for which
+it was originally built, it would
+accommodate a passenger list of
+ninety.</p>
+
+<p>But Norris wasn't interested in
+that kind of run. He had knocked
+out bulkheads, reconverted music
+room and ballroom into living
+quarters. He had closed and sealed
+all observation ports, so that only
+in the bridge cuddy could one see
+into space.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall travel beyond the
+orbit of the sun," he said. "There
+will be no turning back; for the
+search for a new world, a new life,
+is not a task for cowards."</p>
+
+<p>Aside to me, he said: "You're
+to be the physician of this party,
+Bagley. So I'm going to tell you
+what to expect when we take off.
+We're going to have some mighty
+sick passengers aboard then."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, sir?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>He pointed with his pipe toward
+the stern of the vessel. "See that
+... well, call it a booster. Ganeth-Klae
+designed it just before he disappeared,
+using the last lot of <i>Indurate</i>
+in existence. It will increase
+our take-off speed by five times,
+and it will probably have a bad
+effect on the passengers."</p>
+
+<p>So we had left Earth, at night
+from a field out in Essex. Without
+orders, without clearance papers,
+without an automatic pilot check.
+Eighteen couples and one navigator&mdash;destination
+unknown. If the Interstellar
+Council had known what
+Norris was up to, it would have
+been a case for the Space-Time Commission.</p>
+
+<p>Of that long initial lap of our
+voyage, perhaps the less said the
+better. As always is the case when
+monotony begins to wear away the
+veneer of civilization, character
+quirks came to the surface, cliques
+formed among the passengers, and
+gossip and personalities became
+matters of pre-eminent importance.</p>
+
+<p>Rising to the foreground out of
+our thirty-six, came Fielding Mason,
+tall, taciturn, and handsome,
+with a keen intellect and a sense of
+values remarkable in so young a
+man. Mason was a graduate of
+Montape, the French outgrowth of
+St. Cyr. But he had majored in
+military tactics, psychology and
+sociology and knew nothing at all
+about astrogation or even elemental
+astronomy. He too was a man
+of good breeding and refinement.
+Nevertheless conflict began to develop
+between him and Navigator
+Norris. That conflict began the day
+we landed on Coulora.</p>
+
+<p>Norris stepped out of the air
+lock into the cold thin air, glanced
+briefly about him and faced the
+eighteen men assembled.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll divide into three groups,"
+he said. "Each group to carry an
+organic surveyor and take a different
+direction. Each group will so
+regulate its marching as to be back
+here without fail an hour before
+darkness sets in. If you find no
+sign of animal life, then we will
+take off again immediately on your
+return."</p>
+
+<p>Mason paused halfway in the act
+of strapping on his packsack.</p>
+
+<p>"What's that got to do with it?"
+he demanded. "There's vegetation
+here. That's all that seems to be
+necessary."</p>
+
+<p>Norris lit his pipe. "If you find
+no sign of animal life we will take
+off immediately on your return,"
+he said as if he hadn't heard.</p>
+
+<p>But the strangeness of Coulora
+tempered bad feelings then. The
+blue <i>hensorr</i> trees were actually not
+trees at all but a huge cat-tail-like
+growth, the stalks of which were
+quite transparent. In between the
+stalks grew curious cabbage-like
+plants that changed from red to
+yellow as an intruder approached
+and back to red again after he had
+passed. Rock outcroppings were
+everywhere, but all were eroded
+and in places polished smooth as
+glass.</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange kind of dust
+that acted as though endowed with
+life. It quivered when trod upon,
+and the outline of our footsteps
+slowly rose into the air, so that
+looking back I could see our trail
+floating behind us in irregular
+layers.</p>
+
+<p>Above us the star that was this
+planet's sun shown bright but faintly
+red as if it were in the first stages
+of dying. The air though thin was
+fit to breathe, and we found it
+unnecessary to wear space suits. We
+marched down the corridors of
+<i>hensorr</i> trees, until we came to an
+open spot, a kind of glade. And
+that was the first time Mason tuned
+his organic surveyor and received
+absolutely nothing.</p>
+
+<p>There was no animal life on
+Coulora!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Within an hour we had blasted
+off again. The forward-impact delivered
+by the Ganeth-Klae booster
+was terrific, and nausea and vertigo
+struck us all simultaneously. But
+again, with all ports and observation
+shields sealed shut, Norris
+held the secret of our destination.</p>
+
+<p>On July twenty-second, the ship
+gave that sickening lurch and came
+once again to a standstill.</p>
+
+<p>"Same procedure as before,"
+Norris said, stepping out of the
+airlock. "Those of you who desire
+to have their wives accompany you
+may do so. Mason, you'll make a
+final correlation on the organic surveyors.
+If there is no trace of animal
+life return here before dark."</p>
+
+<p>Once our group was out of sight
+of the ship, Mason threw down his
+packsack, sat down on a boulder
+and lighted a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Bagley," he said to me, "has
+the Old Man gone loco?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think not," I said, frowning.
+"He's one of the most evenly balanced
+persons I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he's hiding something,"
+Mason said. "Why else should he
+be so concerned with finding animal
+life?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know the answer to that,"
+I said. "We're here to colonize, to
+start a new life. We can't very
+well do that on a desert."</p>
+
+<p>"That's poppycock," Mason replied,
+flinging away his cigarette.
+"When the Albertson expedition
+first landed on Mars, there was no
+animal life on the red planet. Now
+look at it. Same thing was true
+when Breslauer first settled Pluto.
+The colonies there got along. I
+tell you Norris has got something
+up his sleeve, and I don't like it."</p>
+
+<p>Later, after Mason had taken
+his negative surveyor reading, the
+flame of trouble reached the end
+of its fuse!</p>
+
+<p>Norris had given orders to return
+to the <i>Marie Galante</i>, and the
+rest of us were sullenly making
+ready to start the back trail. Mason,
+however, deliberately seized his
+pick and began chopping a hole in
+the rock surface, preparatory apparently
+to erecting his plastic tent.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll make temporary camp
+here," he said calmly. "Brandt, you
+can go back to the ship and bring
+back the rest of the women." He
+turned and smiled sardonically at
+Navigator Norris.</p>
+
+<p>Norris quietly knocked the ashes
+from his pipe and placed it in his
+pocket. He strode forward, took
+the pick from Mason's hands and
+flung it away. Then he seized Mason
+by the coat, whipped him
+around and drove his fist hard
+against the younger man's jaw.</p>
+
+<p>"When you signed on for this
+voyage, you agreed to obey my
+orders," he said, not raising his
+voice. "You'll do just that."</p>
+
+<p>Mason picked himself up, and
+there was an ugly glint in his eyes.
+He could have smashed Norris to
+a pulp, and none knew it better
+than the Navigator. For a brief instant
+the younger man swayed
+there on the balls of his feet, fists
+clenched. Then he let his hands
+drop, walked over and began to put
+on his packsack.</p>
+
+<p>But I had seen Mason's face, and
+I knew he had not given in as
+easily as it appeared. Meanwhile
+he began to circulate among the
+passengers, making no offers, yet
+subtly enlisting backers for a policy,
+the significance of which grew on
+me slowly. It was mutiny he was
+plotting! And with his personal
+charm and magnetism he had little
+trouble in winning over converts.
+I came upon him arguing before
+a group of the women one day,
+among them his own wife, Estelle.
+He was standing close to her.</p>
+
+<p>"We have clothing and equipment
+and food concentrate," Mason
+said. "Enough to last two generations.
+We have brains and intelligence,
+and we certainly should
+be able to establish ourselves without
+the aid of other vertebrate
+forms of life.</p>
+
+<p>"Coulora, Jama, Tenethon, Mokrell,
+R-9, and Stragella. We could
+have settled on any one of those
+planets, and apparently we should
+have, for conditions have grown
+steadily worse at each landing. But
+always the answer is no. Why? Because
+Norris says we must go on
+until we find animal life."</p>
+
+<p>He cleared his throat and gazed
+at the feminine faces before him.
+"Go where? What makes Norris
+so sure he'll find life on any planet
+in this system? And incidentally
+where in the cosmos is this system?"</p>
+
+<p>One of the women, a tall blonde,
+stirred uneasily. "What do you
+mean?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean we don't know if our
+last landing was on Stragella or
+Coulora. I mean we don't know
+where we are or where we're going,
+and I don't think Norris does
+either. <i>We're lost!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>That was in August. By the last
+of September we had landed on
+two more planets, to which Norris
+gave the simple names of R-12 and
+R-14. Each had crude forms of
+vegetable life, represented principally
+by the blue <i>hensorr</i> trees, but
+in neither case did the organic surveyor
+reveal the slightest traces of
+animal life.</p>
+
+<p>There was, however, a considerable
+difference in physical appearance
+between R-12 and R-14, and
+for a time that fact excited Norris
+tremendously. Up to then, each
+successive planet, although similar
+in size, had exhibited signs of
+greater age than its predecessor.
+But on R-12 there were definite
+manifestations of younger geologic
+development.</p>
+
+<p>Several pieces of shale lay exposed
+under a fold of igneous rock.
+Two of those pieces contained
+fossils of highly developed <i>ganoids</i>,
+similar to those found on Venus.
+They were perfectly preserved.</p>
+
+<p>It meant that animal life had
+existed on R-12, even if it didn't
+now. It meant that R-12, though a
+much older planet than Earth, was
+still younger than Stragella or the
+rest.</p>
+
+<p>For a while Norris was almost
+beside himself. He cut out rock
+samples and carried them back to
+the ship. He personally supervised
+the tuning of the surveyors. And
+when he finally gave orders to take
+off, he was almost friendly to Mason,
+whereas before his attitude
+toward him had been one of cold
+aloofness.</p>
+
+<p>But when we reached R-14, our
+eighth landing, all that passed. For
+R-14 was old again, older than any
+of the others.</p>
+
+<p>And then, on October sixteenth,
+Mason opened the door of the
+locked cabin. It happened quite by
+accident. One of the <i>arelium-thaxide</i>
+conduits broke in the <i>Marie
+Galante's</i> central passageway, and
+the resulting explosion grounded
+the central feed line of the instrument
+equipment. In a trice the
+passageway was a sheet of flame,
+rapidly filling with smoke from
+burning insulation.</p>
+
+<p>Norris, of course, was in the
+bridge cuddy with locked doors between
+us and him, and now with
+the wiring burned through there
+was no way of signalling him he
+was wanted for an emergency. In
+his absence Mason took command.</p>
+
+<p>That passageway ran the full
+length of the ship. Midway down
+it was the door leading to the
+women's lounge. The explosion
+had jammed that door shut, and
+smoke was pouring forth from under
+the sill. All at once one of the
+women rushed forward to announce
+hysterically that Mason's wife,
+Estelle, was in the lounge.</p>
+
+<p>Adjoining the lounge was a small
+cabin which since the beginning
+of our voyage had remained locked.
+Norris had given strict orders that
+that cabin was not to be disturbed.
+We all had taken it as a matter of
+course that it contained various
+kinds of precision instruments.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however, Mason realized
+that the only way into the lounge
+was by way of that locked cabin.
+If he used a heat blaster on the
+lounge door there was no telling
+what would happen to the woman
+inside.</p>
+
+<p>He ripped the emergency blaster
+from its wall mounting, pressed it
+to the magnetic latch of the sealed
+cabin door and pressed the stud.
+An instant later he was leading
+his frightened wife, Estelle, out
+through the smoke.</p>
+
+<p>The fire was quickly extinguished
+after that and the wiring spliced.
+Then when the others had drifted
+off, Mason called Brandt and me
+aside.</p>
+
+<p>"We've been wondering for a
+long time what happened to
+Ganeth-Klae, the Martian inventor
+who worked with Norris to invent
+<i>Indurate</i>," he said very quietly.
+"Well, we don't need to wonder
+any more. He's in there."</p>
+
+<p>Brandt and I stepped forward
+over the sill&mdash;and drew up short.
+Ganeth-Klae was there all right,
+but he would never trouble himself
+about making a voyage in a locked
+cabin. His rigid body was encased
+in a transparent block of amber-colored
+solidifex, the after-death
+preservative used by all Martians.</p>
+
+<p>Both of us recognized his still
+features at once, and in addition
+his name-tattoo, required by Martian
+law, was clearly visible on his
+left forearm.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>For a brief instant the discovery
+stunned us. Klae dead? Klae whose
+IQ had become a measuring guide
+for the entire system, whose Martian
+head held more ordinary horse
+sense, in addition to radical postulations
+on theoretical physics, than
+anyone on the planets. It wasn't
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>And what was the significance of
+his body on Norris' ship? Why had
+Norris kept its presence a secret
+and why had he given out the story
+of Klae's disappearance?</p>
+
+<p>Mason's face was cold as ice.
+"Come with me, you two," he
+said. "We're going to get the answer
+to this right now."</p>
+
+<p>We went along the passage to
+the circular staircase. We climbed
+the steps, passed through the scuttle
+and came to the door of the
+bridge cuddy. Mason drew the bar
+and we passed in. Norris was
+bent over the chart table. He looked
+up sharply at the sound of our
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the meaning of this
+intrusion?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>It didn't take Mason long to
+explain. When he had finished, he
+stood there, jaw set, eyes smouldering.</p>
+
+<p>Norris paled. Then quickly he
+got control of himself, and his old
+bland smile returned.</p>
+
+<p>"I expected you to blunder into
+Klae's body one of these days," he
+said. "The explanation is quite
+simple. Klae had been ill for many
+months, and he knew his time was
+up. His one desire in life was to
+go on this expedition with me, and
+he made me promise to bury him
+at the site of our new colony. The
+pact was between him and me, and
+I've followed it to the letter, telling
+no one."</p>
+
+<p>Mason's lips curled in a sneer.
+"And just what makes you think
+we're going to believe that story?"
+he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Norris lit a cigar. "It's entirely
+immaterial to me whether you believe
+it or not."</p>
+
+<p>But the story was believed, especially
+by the women, to whom the
+romantic angle appealed and Mason's
+embryonic mutiny died without
+being born, and the <i>Marie
+Galante</i> sailed on through uncharted
+space toward her ninth and last
+landing.</p>
+
+<p>As the days dragged by and no
+word came from the bridge cuddy,
+restlessness began to grow amongst
+us. Rumor succeeded rumor, each
+story wilder and more incredible
+than the rest. Then just as the
+tension had mounted to fever pitch,
+there came the sickening lurch and
+grinding vibration of another landing.</p>
+
+<p>Norris dispensed with his usual
+talk before marching out from the
+ship. After testing the atmosphere
+with the ozonometer, he passed out
+the heat pistols and distributed the
+various instruments for computing
+radioactivity and cosmic radiation.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the planet Nizar," he
+said shortly. "Largest in the field
+of the sun Ponthis. You will make
+your survey as one group this time.
+I will remain here."</p>
+
+<p>He stood watching us as we
+marched off down the cliff side.
+Then the blue <i>hensorr</i> trees rose
+up to swallow him from view. Mason
+swung along at the head of
+our column, eyes bright, a figure
+of aggressive action. We had gone
+but a hundred yards when it became
+apparent that, as a planet,
+Nizar was entirely different from
+its predecessors. There was considerable
+top soil, and here grew a
+tall reed-shaped plant that gave off
+varying chords of sound when the
+wind blew.</p>
+
+<p>It was as if we were progressing
+through the nave of a mighty
+church with a muted organ in the
+distance. There was animal life too,
+a strange lizard-like bird that rose
+up in flocks ahead of us and flew
+screaming overhead.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't exactly like it, Bagley,"
+he said. "There's something unwholesome
+about this planet. The
+evolution is obviously in an early
+state of development, but I get the
+impression that it has gone backward;
+that the planet is really old
+and has reverted to its earlier life."</p>
+
+<p>Above us the sky was heavily
+overcast, and a tenuous white mist
+rising up from the <i>hensorr</i> trees
+formed curious shapes and designs.
+In the distance I could hear the
+swashing of waves on a beach.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Mason stopped.
+"Look!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>Below us stretched the shore of
+a great sea. But it was the structure
+rising up from that shore that drew
+a sharp exclamation from me.
+Shaped in a rough ellipse, yet
+mounted high toward a common
+point, was a large building of
+multiple hues and colors. The upper
+portion was eroded to crumbling
+ruins, the lower part studded with
+many bas-reliefs and triangular
+doorways.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go," Mason said, breaking
+out into a fast loping run.</p>
+
+<p>The building was farther away
+than we had thought, but when we
+finally came up to it, we saw that
+it was even more of a ruin than
+it had at first appeared. It was
+only a shell with but two walls
+standing, alone and forlorn. Whatever
+race had lived here, they had
+come and gone.</p>
+
+<p>We prowled about the ruins for
+more than an hour. The carvings
+on the walls were in the form of
+geometric designs and cabalistic
+symbols, giving no clue to the city's
+former occupants' identity.</p>
+
+<p>And then Mason found the stairs
+leading to the lower crypts. He
+switched on his ato-flash and led
+the way down cautiously. Level one
+... level two ... three ... we
+descended lower and lower. Here
+water from the nearby sea oozed in
+little rivulets that glittered in the
+light of the flash.</p>
+
+<p>We emerged at length on a wide
+underground plaisance, a kind of
+amphitheater, with tier on tier of
+seats surrounding it and extending
+back into the shadows.</p>
+
+<p>"Judging from what we've seen,"
+Mason said, "I would say that the
+race that built this place had
+reached approximately a grade C-5
+of civilization, according to the
+Mokart scale. This apparently was
+their council chamber."</p>
+
+<p>"What are those rectangular
+stone blocks depending from the
+ceiling?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>Mason turned the light beam upward.
+"I don't know," he said.
+"But my guess is that they are
+burial vaults. Perhaps the creatures
+were ornithoid."</p>
+
+<p>Away from the flash the floor of
+the plaisance appeared to be a
+great mirror that caught our reflections
+and distorted them fantastically
+and horribly. We saw
+then that it was a form of living
+mold, composed of millions of tiny
+plants, each with an eye-like iris
+at its center. Those eyes seemed to
+be watching us, and as we strode
+forward, a great sigh rose up, as
+if in resentment at our intrusion.</p>
+
+<p>There was a small triangular dais
+in the center of the chamber, and
+in the middle of it stood an irregular
+black object. As we drew
+nearer, I saw that it had been
+carved roughly in the shape of this
+central building and that it was in
+a perfect state of preservation.</p>
+
+<p>Mason walked around this carving
+several times, examining it
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Odd," he said. "It looks to be
+an object of religious veneration,
+but I never heard before of a race
+worshipping a replica of their own
+living quarters."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly his voice died off. He
+bent closer to the black stone,
+studying it in the light of the
+powerful ato-flash. He got a small
+magnifying glass out of his pocket
+and focused it on one of the miniature
+bas-reliefs midway toward the
+top of the stone. Unfastening his
+geologic hammer from his belt, he
+managed, with a sharp, swinging
+blow, to break off a small protruding
+piece.</p>
+
+<p>He drew in his breath sharply,
+and I saw his face go pale. I stared
+at him in alarm.</p>
+
+<p>"What's wrong?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He motioned that I follow and
+led the way silently past the others
+toward the stair shaft. Climbing to
+the top level was a heart-pounding
+task, but Mason almost ran up
+those steps. At the surface he
+leaned against a pillar, his lips
+quivering spasmodically.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me I'm sane, Bagley," he
+said huskily. "Or rather, don't say
+anything until we've seen Norris.
+Come on. We've got to see Norris."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>All the way back to the <i>Marie
+Galante</i>, I sought to soothe him,
+but he was a man possessed. He
+rushed up the ship's gangway, burst
+into central quarters and drew up
+before Navigator Norris like a
+runner stopping at the tape.</p>
+
+<p>"You damned lying hypocrite!"
+he yelled.</p>
+
+<p>Norris looked at him in his quiet
+way. "Take it easy, Mason," he
+said. "Sit down and explain yourself."</p>
+
+<p>But Mason didn't sit down. He
+thrust his hand in his pocket, pulled
+out the piece of black stone he
+had chipped off the image in the
+cavern and handed it to Norris.</p>
+
+<p>"Take a look at that!" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Norris took the stone, glanced
+at it and laid it down on his desk.
+His face was emotionless. "I expected
+this sooner or later," he
+said. "Yes, it's <i>Indurate</i> all right.
+Is that what you want me to say?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a dangerous fanatical
+glint in Mason's eyes now. With
+a sudden quick motion he pulled
+out his heat pistol.</p>
+
+<p>"So you tricked us!" he snarled.
+"Why? I want to know why."</p>
+
+<p>I stepped forward and seized
+Mason's gun hand. "Don't be a
+fool," I said. "It can't be that important."</p>
+
+<p>Mason threw back his head and
+burst into an hysterical peal of
+laughter. "Important!" he cried.
+"Tell him how important it is,
+Norris. <i>Tell him.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Quietly the Navigator filled and
+lighted his pipe. "I'm afraid Mason
+is right," he said. "I did trick
+you. Not purposely, however. And
+in the beginning I had no intention
+of telling anything but the truth.
+Actually we're here because of a
+dead man's vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>Norris took his pipe from his
+lips and stared at it absently.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll remember that Ganeth-Klae,
+the Martian, and I worked
+together to invent <i>Indurate</i>. But
+whereas I was interested in the
+commercial aspects of that product,
+Klae was absorbed only in the experimental
+angle of it. He had
+some crazy idea that it should not
+be given to the general public at
+once, but rather should be allocated
+for the first few years to a select
+group of scientific organizations.
+You see, <i>Indurate</i> was such a departure
+from all known materials
+that Ganeth-Klae feared it would
+be utilized for military purposes.</p>
+
+<p>"I took him for a dreamer and
+a fool. Actually he was neither.
+How was I to know that his keen
+penetrating brain had seen through
+my motive to get control of all
+commercial marketing of <i>Indurate</i>?
+I had laid my plans carefully, and
+I had expected to reap a nice harvest.
+Klae must have been aware
+of my innermost thoughts, but
+Martian-like he said nothing."</p>
+
+<p>Norris paused to wet his lips and
+lean against the desk. "I didn't
+kill Ganeth-Klae," he continued,
+"though I suppose in a court of
+law I would be judged responsible
+for his death. The manufacture of
+<i>Indurate</i> required some ticklish
+work. As you know, we produced
+our halves of the formula separately.
+Physical contact with my half
+over a long period of time would
+prove fatal, I knew, and I simply
+neglected to so inform Ganeth-Klae.</p>
+
+<p>"But his ultimate death was a
+boomerang. With Klae gone, I
+could find no trace of his half of
+the formula. I was almost beside
+myself for a time. Then I thought
+of something. Klae had once said
+that the secret of his half of the
+formula lay in himself. A vague
+statement, to say the least. But I
+took the words at their face value
+and gambled that he meant them
+literally; that is, that his body itself
+contained the formula.</p>
+
+<p>"I tried everything: X-ray, chemical
+analysis of the skin. I even removed
+the cranial cap and examined
+the brain microscopically. All
+without result. Meanwhile the
+police were beginning to direct
+their suspicions toward me in the
+matter of Klae's disappearance.</p>
+
+<p>"You know the rest. It was
+necessary that I leave Earth at once
+and go beyond our system, beyond
+the jurisdiction of the planetary
+police. So I arranged this voyage
+with a sufficient complement of
+passengers to lessen the danger and
+hardship of a new life on a new
+world. I was still positive, however,
+that Klae's secret lay in his dead
+body. I took that body along, encased
+in the Martian preservative,
+solidifex.</p>
+
+<p>"It was my idea that I could
+continue my examination once we
+were safe on a strange planet But
+I had reckoned without Ganeth-Klae."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" I said
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"I said Klae was no fool. But I
+didn't know that with Martian
+stoicism he suspected the worst and
+took his own ironic means of combating
+it. He used the last lot of
+<i>Indurate</i> to make that booster, a
+device which he said would increase
+our take-off speed. He mounted it
+on the <i>Marie Galante</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Mason, that device was no
+booster. It was a time machine, so
+devised as to catapult the ship not
+into outer space, but into the space-time
+continuum. It was a mechanism
+designed to throw the <i>Marie
+Galante</i> forward into the future."</p>
+
+<p>A cloud of fear began to well
+over me. "What do you mean?"
+I said again.</p>
+
+<p>Navigator Norris paced around
+his desk. "<i>I mean that the</i> Marie
+Galante <i>has not once left Earth,
+has not in fact left the spot of its
+moorings but has merely gone forward
+in time. I mean that the nine
+'landings' we made were not stops
+on some other planets but halting
+stages of a journey into the future.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Had a bombshell burst over my
+head the effect could have been no
+greater. Cold perspiration began
+to ooze out on my forehead. In
+a flash I saw the significance of the
+entire situation. That was why
+Norris had been so insistent that
+we always return to the ship before
+dark. He didn't want us to see the
+night sky and the constellations
+there for fear we would guess the
+truth. That was why he had never
+permitted any of us in the bridge
+cuddy and why he had kept all
+ports and observation shields closed.</p>
+
+<p>"But the names of the planets
+... Coulora, Stragella, and the
+others and their positions on the
+chart...?" I objected.</p>
+
+<p>Norris smiled grimly. "All words
+created out of my imagination. Like
+the rest of you, I knew nothing of
+the true action of the booster. It
+was only gradually that truth
+dawned on me. But by the time we
+had made our first 'landing' I
+had guessed. That was why I demanded
+we always take organic
+surveyor readings. I knew we had
+traveled far into future time, far
+beyond the life period of man on
+Earth. But I wasn't sure how far
+we had gone, and I lived with the
+hope that Klae's booster might reverse
+itself and start carrying us
+backwards down the centuries."</p>
+
+<p>For a long time I stood there
+in silence, a thousand mad speculations
+racing through my mind.</p>
+
+<p>"How about that piece of <i>Indurate</i>?"
+I said at length. "It was
+chipped off an image in the ruins
+of a great building a mile or so
+from here."</p>
+
+<p>"An image?" repeated Norris.
+A faint glow of interest slowly
+rose in his eyes. Then it died. "I
+don't know," he said. "It would
+seem to presuppose that the formula,
+both parts of it, was known
+by Klae and that he left it for
+posterity to discover."</p>
+
+<p>All this time Mason had been
+standing there, eyes smouldering,
+lips an ugly line. Now abruptly he
+took a step forward.</p>
+
+<p>"I've wanted to return this for
+a long time," he said.</p>
+
+<p>He doubled back his arm and
+brought his fist smashing onto
+Norris' jaw. The Navigator's head
+snapped backward; he gave a low
+groan and slumped to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>And that is where, by all logic,
+this tale should end. But, as you
+may have guessed, there is an anticlimax&mdash;what
+story-tellers call a
+happy conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Mason, Brandt, and I worked,
+and worked alone, on the theory
+that the secret of the <i>Indurate</i> formula
+would be the answer to our
+return down the time trail. We removed
+the body of Ganeth-Klae
+from its solidifex envelope and
+treated it with every chemical process
+we knew. By sheer luck the
+fortieth trial worked. A paste of
+carbo-genethon mixed with the
+crushed seeds of the Martian iron-flower
+was spread over Klae's chest
+and abdomen.</p>
+
+<p>And there, in easily decipherable
+code, was not only the formula,
+but the working principles of the
+ship's booster&mdash;or rather, time-catapult.
+After that, it was a simple
+matter to reverse the principle
+and throw us backward in the time
+stream.</p>
+
+<p>We are heading back as I write
+these lines. If they reach print and
+you read them, it will mean our
+escape was successful and that we
+returned to our proper slot in the
+epilogue of human events.</p>
+
+<p>There remains, however, one
+matter to trouble me. Navigator
+Norris. I like the man. I like him
+tremendously, in spite of his cold-blooded
+confession, and past record.
+He must be punished, of
+course. But I, for one, would hate
+to see him given the death penalty.
+It is a serious problem.</p>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+This etext was produced from <i>Fantastic Universe</i> September 1955.
+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 Long Voyage, by Carl Richard Jacobi
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Long Voyage, by Carl Richard Jacobi
+
+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 Long Voyage
+
+Author: Carl Richard Jacobi
+
+Release Date: August 20, 2009 [EBook #29742]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LONG VOYAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _When we published Carl Jacobi's last story we had no assurance he
+ would be with us so soon again. For when a uniquely gifted
+ science-fantasy writer becomes radio-active on the entertainment
+ meter and goes voyaging into the unknown, he may be gone from the
+ world we know for as long as yesterday's tomorrow. But Carl Jacobi
+ has not only returned almost with the speed of light--he has brought
+ with him shining new nuggets of wonder and surmise._
+
+
+ the
+ long
+ voyage
+
+ _by ... Carl Jacobi_
+
+
+ The secret lay hidden at the end of nine landings,
+ and Medusa-dark was one man's search for it--in
+ the strangest journey ever made.
+
+
+A soft gentle rain began to fall as we emerged from the dark woods and
+came out onto the shore. There it was, the sea, stretching as far as the
+eye could reach, gray and sullen, and flecked with green-white froth.
+The blue _hensorr_ trees, crowding close to the water's edge, were bent
+backward as if frightened by the bleakness before them. The sand,
+visible under the clear patches of water, was a bleached white like the
+exposed surface of a huge bone.
+
+We stood there a moment in silence. Then Mason cleared his throat
+huskily.
+
+"Well, here goes," he said. "We'll soon see if we have any friends
+about."
+
+He unslung the packsack from his shoulders, removed its protective outer
+shield and began to assemble the organic surveyor, an egg-shaped ball of
+white carponium secured to a segmented forty-foot rod. While Brandt and
+I raised the rod with the aid of an electric fulcrum, Mason carefully
+placed his control cabinet on a piece of outcropping rock and made a
+last adjustment.
+
+The moment had come. Even above the sound of the sea, you could hear
+the strained breathing of the men. Only Navigator Norris appeared
+unconcerned. He stood there calmly smoking his pipe, his keen blue eyes
+squinting against the biting wind.
+
+Mason switched on the speaker. Its high-frequency scream rose
+deafeningly above us and was torn away in unsteady gusts. He began to
+turn its center dial, at first a quarter circle, and then all the way to
+the final backstop of the calibration. All that resulted was a
+continuation of that mournful ululation like a wail out of eternity.
+
+Mason tried again. With stiff wrists he tuned while perspiration stood
+out on his forehead, and the rest of us crowded close.
+
+"It's no use," he said. "This pickup failure proves there isn't a
+vestige of animal life on Stragella--on this hemisphere of the planet,
+at least."
+
+Navigator Norris took his pipe from his mouth and nodded. His face was
+expressionless. There was no indication in the man's voice that he had
+suffered another great disappointment, his sixth in less than a year.
+
+"We'll go back now," he said, "and we'll try again. There must be some
+planet in this system that's inhabited. But it's going to be hard to
+tell the women."
+
+Mason let the surveyor rod down with a crash. I could see the anger and
+resentment that was gathering in his eyes. Mason was the youngest of our
+party and the leader of the antagonistic group that was slowly but
+steadily undermining the authority of the Navigator.
+
+This was our seventh exploratory trip after our sixth landing since
+entering the field of the sun Ponthis. Ponthis with its sixteen
+equal-sized planets, each with a single satellite. First there had been
+Coulora; then in swift succession, Jama, Tenethon, Mokrell, and R-9. And
+now Stragella. Strange names of strange worlds, revolving about a
+strange star.
+
+It was Navigator Norris who told us the names of these planets and
+traced their positions on a chart for us. He alone of our group was
+familiar with astrogation and cosmography. He alone had sailed the
+spaceways in the days before the automatic pilots were installed and
+locked and sealed on every ship.
+
+A handsome man in his fortieth year, he stood six feet three with broad
+shoulders and a powerful frame. His eyes were the eyes of a scholar,
+dreamy yet alive with depth and penetration. I had never seen him lose
+his temper, and he governed our company with an iron hand.
+
+He was not perfect, of course. Like all Earthmen, he had his faults.
+Months before he had joined with that famed Martian scientist,
+Ganeth-Klae, to invent that all-use material, _Indurate_, the formula
+for which had been stolen and which therefore had never appeared on the
+commercial market. Norris would talk about that for hours. If you
+inadvertently started him on the subject a queer glint would enter his
+eyes, and he would dig around in his pocket for a chunk of the black
+substance.
+
+"Did I ever show you a piece of this?" he would say. "Look at it
+carefully. Notice the smooth grainless texture--hard and yet not
+brittle. You wouldn't think that it was formed in a gaseous state, then
+changed to a liquid and finally to a clay-like material that could be
+worked with ease. A thousand years after your body has returned to dust,
+that piece of _Indurate_ will still exist, unchanged, unworn. Erosion
+will have little effect upon it. Beside it granite, steel are nothing.
+If only I had the formula ..."
+
+But he had only half the formula, the half he himself had developed. The
+other part was locked in the brain of Ganeth-Klae, and Ganeth-Klae had
+disappeared. What had become of him was a mystery. Norris perhaps had
+felt the loss more than any one, and he had offered the major part of
+his savings as a reward for information leading to the scientist's
+whereabouts.
+
+Our party--eighteen couples and Navigator Norris--had gathered together
+and subsequently left Earth in answer to a curious advertisement that
+had appeared in the Sunday edition of the London _Times_.
+
+ WANTED: _A group of married men and women, young, courageous,
+ educated, tired of political and social restrictions, interested
+ in extra-terrestrial colonization. Financial resources no
+ qualification._
+
+After we had been weeded out, interviewed and rigorously questioned,
+Norris had taken us into the hangar, waved a hand toward the _Marie
+Galante_ and explained the details.
+
+The _Marie Galante_ was a cruiser-type ship, stripped down to essentials
+to maintain speed, but equipped with the latest of everything. For a
+short run to Venus, for which it was originally built, it would
+accommodate a passenger list of ninety.
+
+But Norris wasn't interested in that kind of run. He had knocked out
+bulkheads, reconverted music room and ballroom into living quarters. He
+had closed and sealed all observation ports, so that only in the bridge
+cuddy could one see into space.
+
+"We shall travel beyond the orbit of the sun," he said. "There will be
+no turning back; for the search for a new world, a new life, is not a
+task for cowards."
+
+Aside to me, he said: "You're to be the physician of this party, Bagley.
+So I'm going to tell you what to expect when we take off. We're going to
+have some mighty sick passengers aboard then."
+
+"What do you mean, sir?" I said.
+
+He pointed with his pipe toward the stern of the vessel. "See that ...
+well, call it a booster. Ganeth-Klae designed it just before he
+disappeared, using the last lot of _Indurate_ in existence. It will
+increase our take-off speed by five times, and it will probably have a
+bad effect on the passengers."
+
+So we had left Earth, at night from a field out in Essex. Without
+orders, without clearance papers, without an automatic pilot check.
+Eighteen couples and one navigator--destination unknown. If the
+Interstellar Council had known what Norris was up to, it would have been
+a case for the Space-Time Commission.
+
+Of that long initial lap of our voyage, perhaps the less said the
+better. As always is the case when monotony begins to wear away the
+veneer of civilization, character quirks came to the surface, cliques
+formed among the passengers, and gossip and personalities became matters
+of pre-eminent importance.
+
+Rising to the foreground out of our thirty-six, came Fielding Mason,
+tall, taciturn, and handsome, with a keen intellect and a sense of
+values remarkable in so young a man. Mason was a graduate of Montape,
+the French outgrowth of St. Cyr. But he had majored in military tactics,
+psychology and sociology and knew nothing at all about astrogation or
+even elemental astronomy. He too was a man of good breeding and
+refinement. Nevertheless conflict began to develop between him and
+Navigator Norris. That conflict began the day we landed on Coulora.
+
+Norris stepped out of the air lock into the cold thin air, glanced
+briefly about him and faced the eighteen men assembled.
+
+"We'll divide into three groups," he said. "Each group to carry an
+organic surveyor and take a different direction. Each group will so
+regulate its marching as to be back here without fail an hour before
+darkness sets in. If you find no sign of animal life, then we will take
+off again immediately on your return."
+
+Mason paused halfway in the act of strapping on his packsack.
+
+"What's that got to do with it?" he demanded. "There's vegetation here.
+That's all that seems to be necessary."
+
+Norris lit his pipe. "If you find no sign of animal life we will take
+off immediately on your return," he said as if he hadn't heard.
+
+But the strangeness of Coulora tempered bad feelings then. The blue
+_hensorr_ trees were actually not trees at all but a huge cat-tail-like
+growth, the stalks of which were quite transparent. In between the
+stalks grew curious cabbage-like plants that changed from red to yellow
+as an intruder approached and back to red again after he had passed.
+Rock outcroppings were everywhere, but all were eroded and in places
+polished smooth as glass.
+
+There was a strange kind of dust that acted as though endowed with life.
+It quivered when trod upon, and the outline of our footsteps slowly
+rose into the air, so that looking back I could see our trail floating
+behind us in irregular layers.
+
+Above us the star that was this planet's sun shown bright but faintly
+red as if it were in the first stages of dying. The air though thin was
+fit to breathe, and we found it unnecessary to wear space suits. We
+marched down the corridors of _hensorr_ trees, until we came to an open
+spot, a kind of glade. And that was the first time Mason tuned his
+organic surveyor and received absolutely nothing.
+
+There was no animal life on Coulora!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Within an hour we had blasted off again. The forward-impact delivered by
+the Ganeth-Klae booster was terrific, and nausea and vertigo struck us
+all simultaneously. But again, with all ports and observation shields
+sealed shut, Norris held the secret of our destination.
+
+On July twenty-second, the ship gave that sickening lurch and came once
+again to a standstill.
+
+"Same procedure as before," Norris said, stepping out of the airlock.
+"Those of you who desire to have their wives accompany you may do so.
+Mason, you'll make a final correlation on the organic surveyors. If
+there is no trace of animal life return here before dark."
+
+Once our group was out of sight of the ship, Mason threw down his
+packsack, sat down on a boulder and lighted a cigarette.
+
+"Bagley," he said to me, "has the Old Man gone loco?"
+
+"I think not," I said, frowning. "He's one of the most evenly balanced
+persons I know."
+
+"Then he's hiding something," Mason said. "Why else should he be so
+concerned with finding animal life?"
+
+"You know the answer to that," I said. "We're here to colonize, to start
+a new life. We can't very well do that on a desert."
+
+"That's poppycock," Mason replied, flinging away his cigarette. "When
+the Albertson expedition first landed on Mars, there was no animal life
+on the red planet. Now look at it. Same thing was true when Breslauer
+first settled Pluto. The colonies there got along. I tell you Norris has
+got something up his sleeve, and I don't like it."
+
+Later, after Mason had taken his negative surveyor reading, the flame of
+trouble reached the end of its fuse!
+
+Norris had given orders to return to the _Marie Galante_, and the rest
+of us were sullenly making ready to start the back trail. Mason,
+however, deliberately seized his pick and began chopping a hole in the
+rock surface, preparatory apparently to erecting his plastic tent.
+
+"We'll make temporary camp here," he said calmly. "Brandt, you can go
+back to the ship and bring back the rest of the women." He turned and
+smiled sardonically at Navigator Norris.
+
+Norris quietly knocked the ashes from his pipe and placed it in his
+pocket. He strode forward, took the pick from Mason's hands and flung it
+away. Then he seized Mason by the coat, whipped him around and drove his
+fist hard against the younger man's jaw.
+
+"When you signed on for this voyage, you agreed to obey my orders," he
+said, not raising his voice. "You'll do just that."
+
+Mason picked himself up, and there was an ugly glint in his eyes. He
+could have smashed Norris to a pulp, and none knew it better than the
+Navigator. For a brief instant the younger man swayed there on the balls
+of his feet, fists clenched. Then he let his hands drop, walked over and
+began to put on his packsack.
+
+But I had seen Mason's face, and I knew he had not given in as easily as
+it appeared. Meanwhile he began to circulate among the passengers,
+making no offers, yet subtly enlisting backers for a policy, the
+significance of which grew on me slowly. It was mutiny he was plotting!
+And with his personal charm and magnetism he had little trouble in
+winning over converts. I came upon him arguing before a group of the
+women one day, among them his own wife, Estelle. He was standing close
+to her.
+
+"We have clothing and equipment and food concentrate," Mason said.
+"Enough to last two generations. We have brains and intelligence, and we
+certainly should be able to establish ourselves without the aid of other
+vertebrate forms of life.
+
+"Coulora, Jama, Tenethon, Mokrell, R-9, and Stragella. We could have
+settled on any one of those planets, and apparently we should have, for
+conditions have grown steadily worse at each landing. But always the
+answer is no. Why? Because Norris says we must go on until we find
+animal life."
+
+He cleared his throat and gazed at the feminine faces before him. "Go
+where? What makes Norris so sure he'll find life on any planet in this
+system? And incidentally where in the cosmos is this system?"
+
+One of the women, a tall blonde, stirred uneasily. "What do you mean?"
+she said.
+
+"I mean we don't know if our last landing was on Stragella or Coulora. I
+mean we don't know where we are or where we're going, and I don't think
+Norris does either. _We're lost!_"
+
+That was in August. By the last of September we had landed on two more
+planets, to which Norris gave the simple names of R-12 and R-14. Each
+had crude forms of vegetable life, represented principally by the blue
+_hensorr_ trees, but in neither case did the organic surveyor reveal the
+slightest traces of animal life.
+
+There was, however, a considerable difference in physical appearance
+between R-12 and R-14, and for a time that fact excited Norris
+tremendously. Up to then, each successive planet, although similar in
+size, had exhibited signs of greater age than its predecessor. But on
+R-12 there were definite manifestations of younger geologic development.
+
+Several pieces of shale lay exposed under a fold of igneous rock. Two of
+those pieces contained fossils of highly developed _ganoids_, similar to
+those found on Venus. They were perfectly preserved.
+
+It meant that animal life had existed on R-12, even if it didn't now. It
+meant that R-12, though a much older planet than Earth, was still
+younger than Stragella or the rest.
+
+For a while Norris was almost beside himself. He cut out rock samples
+and carried them back to the ship. He personally supervised the tuning
+of the surveyors. And when he finally gave orders to take off, he was
+almost friendly to Mason, whereas before his attitude toward him had
+been one of cold aloofness.
+
+But when we reached R-14, our eighth landing, all that passed. For R-14
+was old again, older than any of the others.
+
+And then, on October sixteenth, Mason opened the door of the locked
+cabin. It happened quite by accident. One of the _arelium-thaxide_
+conduits broke in the _Marie Galante's_ central passageway, and the
+resulting explosion grounded the central feed line of the instrument
+equipment. In a trice the passageway was a sheet of flame, rapidly
+filling with smoke from burning insulation.
+
+Norris, of course, was in the bridge cuddy with locked doors between us
+and him, and now with the wiring burned through there was no way of
+signalling him he was wanted for an emergency. In his absence Mason took
+command.
+
+That passageway ran the full length of the ship. Midway down it was the
+door leading to the women's lounge. The explosion had jammed that door
+shut, and smoke was pouring forth from under the sill. All at once one
+of the women rushed forward to announce hysterically that Mason's wife,
+Estelle, was in the lounge.
+
+Adjoining the lounge was a small cabin which since the beginning of our
+voyage had remained locked. Norris had given strict orders that that
+cabin was not to be disturbed. We all had taken it as a matter of course
+that it contained various kinds of precision instruments.
+
+Now, however, Mason realized that the only way into the lounge was by
+way of that locked cabin. If he used a heat blaster on the lounge door
+there was no telling what would happen to the woman inside.
+
+He ripped the emergency blaster from its wall mounting, pressed it to
+the magnetic latch of the sealed cabin door and pressed the stud. An
+instant later he was leading his frightened wife, Estelle, out through
+the smoke.
+
+The fire was quickly extinguished after that and the wiring spliced.
+Then when the others had drifted off, Mason called Brandt and me aside.
+
+"We've been wondering for a long time what happened to Ganeth-Klae, the
+Martian inventor who worked with Norris to invent _Indurate_," he said
+very quietly. "Well, we don't need to wonder any more. He's in there."
+
+Brandt and I stepped forward over the sill--and drew up short.
+Ganeth-Klae was there all right, but he would never trouble himself
+about making a voyage in a locked cabin. His rigid body was encased in a
+transparent block of amber-colored solidifex, the after-death
+preservative used by all Martians.
+
+Both of us recognized his still features at once, and in addition his
+name-tattoo, required by Martian law, was clearly visible on his left
+forearm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a brief instant the discovery stunned us. Klae dead? Klae whose IQ
+had become a measuring guide for the entire system, whose Martian head
+held more ordinary horse sense, in addition to radical postulations on
+theoretical physics, than anyone on the planets. It wasn't possible.
+
+And what was the significance of his body on Norris' ship? Why had
+Norris kept its presence a secret and why had he given out the story of
+Klae's disappearance?
+
+Mason's face was cold as ice. "Come with me, you two," he said. "We're
+going to get the answer to this right now."
+
+We went along the passage to the circular staircase. We climbed the
+steps, passed through the scuttle and came to the door of the bridge
+cuddy. Mason drew the bar and we passed in. Norris was bent over the
+chart table. He looked up sharply at the sound of our steps.
+
+"What is the meaning of this intrusion?" he said.
+
+It didn't take Mason long to explain. When he had finished, he stood
+there, jaw set, eyes smouldering.
+
+Norris paled. Then quickly he got control of himself, and his old bland
+smile returned.
+
+"I expected you to blunder into Klae's body one of these days," he said.
+"The explanation is quite simple. Klae had been ill for many months, and
+he knew his time was up. His one desire in life was to go on this
+expedition with me, and he made me promise to bury him at the site of
+our new colony. The pact was between him and me, and I've followed it to
+the letter, telling no one."
+
+Mason's lips curled in a sneer. "And just what makes you think we're
+going to believe that story?" he demanded.
+
+Norris lit a cigar. "It's entirely immaterial to me whether you believe
+it or not."
+
+But the story was believed, especially by the women, to whom the
+romantic angle appealed and Mason's embryonic mutiny died without being
+born, and the _Marie Galante_ sailed on through uncharted space toward
+her ninth and last landing.
+
+As the days dragged by and no word came from the bridge cuddy,
+restlessness began to grow amongst us. Rumor succeeded rumor, each story
+wilder and more incredible than the rest. Then just as the tension had
+mounted to fever pitch, there came the sickening lurch and grinding
+vibration of another landing.
+
+Norris dispensed with his usual talk before marching out from the ship.
+After testing the atmosphere with the ozonometer, he passed out the heat
+pistols and distributed the various instruments for computing
+radioactivity and cosmic radiation.
+
+"This is the planet Nizar," he said shortly. "Largest in the field of
+the sun Ponthis. You will make your survey as one group this time. I
+will remain here."
+
+He stood watching us as we marched off down the cliff side. Then the
+blue _hensorr_ trees rose up to swallow him from view. Mason swung along
+at the head of our column, eyes bright, a figure of aggressive action.
+We had gone but a hundred yards when it became apparent that, as a
+planet, Nizar was entirely different from its predecessors. There was
+considerable top soil, and here grew a tall reed-shaped plant that gave
+off varying chords of sound when the wind blew.
+
+It was as if we were progressing through the nave of a mighty church
+with a muted organ in the distance. There was animal life too, a strange
+lizard-like bird that rose up in flocks ahead of us and flew screaming
+overhead.
+
+"I don't exactly like it, Bagley," he said. "There's something
+unwholesome about this planet. The evolution is obviously in an early
+state of development, but I get the impression that it has gone
+backward; that the planet is really old and has reverted to its earlier
+life."
+
+Above us the sky was heavily overcast, and a tenuous white mist rising
+up from the _hensorr_ trees formed curious shapes and designs. In the
+distance I could hear the swashing of waves on a beach.
+
+Suddenly Mason stopped. "Look!" he said.
+
+Below us stretched the shore of a great sea. But it was the structure
+rising up from that shore that drew a sharp exclamation from me. Shaped
+in a rough ellipse, yet mounted high toward a common point, was a large
+building of multiple hues and colors. The upper portion was eroded to
+crumbling ruins, the lower part studded with many bas-reliefs and
+triangular doorways.
+
+"Let's go," Mason said, breaking out into a fast loping run.
+
+The building was farther away than we had thought, but when we finally
+came up to it, we saw that it was even more of a ruin than it had at
+first appeared. It was only a shell with but two walls standing, alone
+and forlorn. Whatever race had lived here, they had come and gone.
+
+We prowled about the ruins for more than an hour. The carvings on the
+walls were in the form of geometric designs and cabalistic symbols,
+giving no clue to the city's former occupants' identity.
+
+And then Mason found the stairs leading to the lower crypts. He switched
+on his ato-flash and led the way down cautiously. Level one ... level
+two ... three ... we descended lower and lower. Here water from the
+nearby sea oozed in little rivulets that glittered in the light of the
+flash.
+
+We emerged at length on a wide underground plaisance, a kind of
+amphitheater, with tier on tier of seats surrounding it and extending
+back into the shadows.
+
+"Judging from what we've seen," Mason said, "I would say that the race
+that built this place had reached approximately a grade C-5 of
+civilization, according to the Mokart scale. This apparently was their
+council chamber."
+
+"What are those rectangular stone blocks depending from the ceiling?" I
+said.
+
+Mason turned the light beam upward. "I don't know," he said. "But my
+guess is that they are burial vaults. Perhaps the creatures were
+ornithoid."
+
+Away from the flash the floor of the plaisance appeared to be a great
+mirror that caught our reflections and distorted them fantastically and
+horribly. We saw then that it was a form of living mold, composed of
+millions of tiny plants, each with an eye-like iris at its center. Those
+eyes seemed to be watching us, and as we strode forward, a great sigh
+rose up, as if in resentment at our intrusion.
+
+There was a small triangular dais in the center of the chamber, and in
+the middle of it stood an irregular black object. As we drew nearer, I
+saw that it had been carved roughly in the shape of this central
+building and that it was in a perfect state of preservation.
+
+Mason walked around this carving several times, examining it curiously.
+
+"Odd," he said. "It looks to be an object of religious veneration, but I
+never heard before of a race worshipping a replica of their own living
+quarters."
+
+Suddenly his voice died off. He bent closer to the black stone, studying
+it in the light of the powerful ato-flash. He got a small magnifying
+glass out of his pocket and focused it on one of the miniature
+bas-reliefs midway toward the top of the stone. Unfastening his geologic
+hammer from his belt, he managed, with a sharp, swinging blow, to break
+off a small protruding piece.
+
+He drew in his breath sharply, and I saw his face go pale. I stared at
+him in alarm.
+
+"What's wrong?" I asked.
+
+He motioned that I follow and led the way silently past the others
+toward the stair shaft. Climbing to the top level was a heart-pounding
+task, but Mason almost ran up those steps. At the surface he leaned
+against a pillar, his lips quivering spasmodically.
+
+"Tell me I'm sane, Bagley," he said huskily. "Or rather, don't say
+anything until we've seen Norris. Come on. We've got to see Norris."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All the way back to the _Marie Galante_, I sought to soothe him, but he
+was a man possessed. He rushed up the ship's gangway, burst into central
+quarters and drew up before Navigator Norris like a runner stopping at
+the tape.
+
+"You damned lying hypocrite!" he yelled.
+
+Norris looked at him in his quiet way. "Take it easy, Mason," he said.
+"Sit down and explain yourself."
+
+But Mason didn't sit down. He thrust his hand in his pocket, pulled out
+the piece of black stone he had chipped off the image in the cavern and
+handed it to Norris.
+
+"Take a look at that!" he demanded.
+
+Norris took the stone, glanced at it and laid it down on his desk. His
+face was emotionless. "I expected this sooner or later," he said. "Yes,
+it's _Indurate_ all right. Is that what you want me to say?"
+
+There was a dangerous fanatical glint in Mason's eyes now. With a sudden
+quick motion he pulled out his heat pistol.
+
+"So you tricked us!" he snarled. "Why? I want to know why."
+
+I stepped forward and seized Mason's gun hand. "Don't be a fool," I
+said. "It can't be that important."
+
+Mason threw back his head and burst into an hysterical peal of laughter.
+"Important!" he cried. "Tell him how important it is, Norris. _Tell
+him._"
+
+Quietly the Navigator filled and lighted his pipe. "I'm afraid Mason is
+right," he said. "I did trick you. Not purposely, however. And in the
+beginning I had no intention of telling anything but the truth. Actually
+we're here because of a dead man's vengeance."
+
+Norris took his pipe from his lips and stared at it absently.
+
+"You'll remember that Ganeth-Klae, the Martian, and I worked together to
+invent _Indurate_. But whereas I was interested in the commercial
+aspects of that product, Klae was absorbed only in the experimental
+angle of it. He had some crazy idea that it should not be given to the
+general public at once, but rather should be allocated for the first few
+years to a select group of scientific organizations. You see, _Indurate_
+was such a departure from all known materials that Ganeth-Klae feared it
+would be utilized for military purposes.
+
+"I took him for a dreamer and a fool. Actually he was neither. How was I
+to know that his keen penetrating brain had seen through my motive to
+get control of all commercial marketing of _Indurate_? I had laid my
+plans carefully, and I had expected to reap a nice harvest. Klae must
+have been aware of my innermost thoughts, but Martian-like he said
+nothing."
+
+Norris paused to wet his lips and lean against the desk. "I didn't kill
+Ganeth-Klae," he continued, "though I suppose in a court of law I would
+be judged responsible for his death. The manufacture of _Indurate_
+required some ticklish work. As you know, we produced our halves of the
+formula separately. Physical contact with my half over a long period of
+time would prove fatal, I knew, and I simply neglected to so inform
+Ganeth-Klae.
+
+"But his ultimate death was a boomerang. With Klae gone, I could find no
+trace of his half of the formula. I was almost beside myself for a time.
+Then I thought of something. Klae had once said that the secret of his
+half of the formula lay in himself. A vague statement, to say the least.
+But I took the words at their face value and gambled that he meant them
+literally; that is, that his body itself contained the formula.
+
+"I tried everything: X-ray, chemical analysis of the skin. I even
+removed the cranial cap and examined the brain microscopically. All
+without result. Meanwhile the police were beginning to direct their
+suspicions toward me in the matter of Klae's disappearance.
+
+"You know the rest. It was necessary that I leave Earth at once and go
+beyond our system, beyond the jurisdiction of the planetary police. So I
+arranged this voyage with a sufficient complement of passengers to
+lessen the danger and hardship of a new life on a new world. I was still
+positive, however, that Klae's secret lay in his dead body. I took that
+body along, encased in the Martian preservative, solidifex.
+
+"It was my idea that I could continue my examination once we were safe
+on a strange planet But I had reckoned without Ganeth-Klae."
+
+"What do you mean?" I said slowly.
+
+"I said Klae was no fool. But I didn't know that with Martian stoicism
+he suspected the worst and took his own ironic means of combating it. He
+used the last lot of _Indurate_ to make that booster, a device which he
+said would increase our take-off speed. He mounted it on the _Marie
+Galante_.
+
+"Mason, that device was no booster. It was a time machine, so devised as
+to catapult the ship not into outer space, but into the space-time
+continuum. It was a mechanism designed to throw the _Marie Galante_
+forward into the future."
+
+A cloud of fear began to well over me. "What do you mean?" I said again.
+
+Navigator Norris paced around his desk. "_I mean that the_ Marie Galante
+_has not once left Earth, has not in fact left the spot of its moorings
+but has merely gone forward in time. I mean that the nine 'landings' we
+made were not stops on some other planets but halting stages of a
+journey into the future._"
+
+Had a bombshell burst over my head the effect could have been no
+greater. Cold perspiration began to ooze out on my forehead. In a flash
+I saw the significance of the entire situation. That was why Norris had
+been so insistent that we always return to the ship before dark. He
+didn't want us to see the night sky and the constellations there for
+fear we would guess the truth. That was why he had never permitted any
+of us in the bridge cuddy and why he had kept all ports and observation
+shields closed.
+
+"But the names of the planets ... Coulora, Stragella, and the others and
+their positions on the chart...?" I objected.
+
+Norris smiled grimly. "All words created out of my imagination. Like the
+rest of you, I knew nothing of the true action of the booster. It was
+only gradually that truth dawned on me. But by the time we had made our
+first 'landing' I had guessed. That was why I demanded we always take
+organic surveyor readings. I knew we had traveled far into future time,
+far beyond the life period of man on Earth. But I wasn't sure how far we
+had gone, and I lived with the hope that Klae's booster might reverse
+itself and start carrying us backwards down the centuries."
+
+For a long time I stood there in silence, a thousand mad speculations
+racing through my mind.
+
+"How about that piece of _Indurate_?" I said at length. "It was chipped
+off an image in the ruins of a great building a mile or so from here."
+
+"An image?" repeated Norris. A faint glow of interest slowly rose in his
+eyes. Then it died. "I don't know," he said. "It would seem to
+presuppose that the formula, both parts of it, was known by Klae and
+that he left it for posterity to discover."
+
+All this time Mason had been standing there, eyes smouldering, lips an
+ugly line. Now abruptly he took a step forward.
+
+"I've wanted to return this for a long time," he said.
+
+He doubled back his arm and brought his fist smashing onto Norris' jaw.
+The Navigator's head snapped backward; he gave a low groan and slumped
+to the floor.
+
+And that is where, by all logic, this tale should end. But, as you may
+have guessed, there is an anticlimax--what story-tellers call a happy
+conclusion.
+
+Mason, Brandt, and I worked, and worked alone, on the theory that the
+secret of the _Indurate_ formula would be the answer to our return down
+the time trail. We removed the body of Ganeth-Klae from its solidifex
+envelope and treated it with every chemical process we knew. By sheer
+luck the fortieth trial worked. A paste of carbo-genethon mixed with
+the crushed seeds of the Martian iron-flower was spread over Klae's
+chest and abdomen.
+
+And there, in easily decipherable code, was not only the formula, but
+the working principles of the ship's booster--or rather, time-catapult.
+After that, it was a simple matter to reverse the principle and throw us
+backward in the time stream.
+
+We are heading back as I write these lines. If they reach print and you
+read them, it will mean our escape was successful and that we returned
+to our proper slot in the epilogue of human events.
+
+There remains, however, one matter to trouble me. Navigator Norris. I
+like the man. I like him tremendously, in spite of his cold-blooded
+confession, and past record. He must be punished, of course. But I, for
+one, would hate to see him given the death penalty. It is a serious
+problem.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Fantastic Universe_ September 1955.
+ 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 Long Voyage, by Carl Richard Jacobi
+
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