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diff --git a/30002-0.txt b/30002-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c10424e --- /dev/null +++ b/30002-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1546 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30002 *** + +[Illustration] + + + _Wilbur Murphy sought romance, excitement, and an impossible + Horseman of Space. With polite smiles, the planet frustrated him at + every turn--until he found them all the hard way!_ + + +SJAMBAK + +By Jack Vance + +Illustrated by VIRGIL FINLAY + + +Howard Frayberg, Production Director of _Know Your Universe!_, was a man +of sudden unpredictable moods; and Sam Catlin, the show's Continuity +Editor, had learned to expect the worst. + +"Sam," said Frayberg, "regarding the show last night...." He paused to +seek the proper words, and Catlin relaxed. Frayberg's frame of mind was +merely critical. "Sam, we're in a rut. What's worse, the show's dull!" + +Sam Catlin shrugged, not committing himself. + +"_Seaweed Processors of Alphard IX_--who cares about seaweed?" + +"It's factual stuff," said Sam, defensive but not wanting to go too far +out on a limb. "We bring 'em everything--color, fact, romance, sight, +sound, smell.... Next week, it's the Ball Expedition to the Mixtup +Mountains on Gropus." + +Frayberg leaned forward. "Sam, we're working the wrong slant on this +stuff.... We've got to loosen up, sock 'em! Shift our ground! Give 'em +the old human angle--glamor, mystery, thrills!" + +Sam Catlin curled his lips. "I got just what you want." + +"Yeah? Show me." + +Catlin reached into his waste basket. "I filed this just ten minutes +ago...." He smoothed out the pages. "'Sequence idea, by Wilbur Murphy. +Investigate "Horseman of Space," the man who rides up to meet incoming +space-ships.'" + +Frayberg tilted his head to the side. "Rides up on a _horse_?" + +"That's what Wilbur Murphy says." + +"How far up?" + +"Does it make any difference?" + +"No--I guess not." + +"Well, for your information, it's up ten thousand, twenty thousand +miles. He waves to the pilot, takes off his hat to the passengers, then +rides back down." + +"And where does all this take place?" + +"On--on--" Catlin frowned. "I can write it, but I can't pronounce it." +He printed on his scratch-screen: CIRGAMESÇ. + +"Sirgamesk," read Frayberg. + +Catlin shook his head. "That's what it looks like--but those consonants +are all aspirated gutturals. It's more like 'Hrrghameshgrrh'." + +"Where did Murphy get this tip?" + +"I didn't bother to ask." + +"Well," mused Frayberg, "we could always do a show on strange +superstitions. Is Murphy around?" + +"He's explaining his expense account to Shifkin." + +"Get him in here; let's talk to him." + + * * * * * + +Wilbur Murphy had a blond crew-cut, a broad freckled nose, and a serious +sidelong squint. He looked from his crumpled sequence idea to Catlin and +Frayberg. "Didn't like it, eh?" + +"We thought the emphasis should be a little different," explained +Catlin. "Instead of 'The Space Horseman,' we'd give it the working +title, 'Odd Superstitions of Hrrghameshgrrh'." + +"Oh, hell!" said Frayberg. "Call it Sirgamesk." + +"Anyway," said Catlin, "that's the angle." + +"But it's not superstition," said Murphy. + +"Oh, come, Wilbur ..." + +"I got this for sheer sober-sided fact. A man rides a horse up to meet +the incoming ships!" + +"Where did you get this wild fable?" + +"My brother-in-law is purser on the _Celestial Traveller_. At Riker's +Planet they make connection with the feeder line out of Cirgamesç." + +"Wait a minute," said Catlin. "How did you pronounce that?" + +"Cirgamesç. The steward on the shuttle-ship gave out this story, and my +brother-in-law passed it along to me." + +"Somebody's pulling somebody's leg." + +"My brother-in-law wasn't, and the steward was cold sober." + +"They've been eating _bhang_. Sirgamesk is a Javanese planet, isn't it?" + +"Javanese, Arab, Malay." + +"Then they took a _bhang_ supply with them, and _hashish_, _chat_, and a +few other sociable herbs." + +"Well, this horseman isn't any drug-dream." + +"No? What is it?" + +"So far as I know it's a man on a horse." + +"Ten thousand miles up? In a vacuum?" + +"Exactly." + +"No space-suit?" + +"That's the story." + +Catlin and Frayberg looked at each other. + +"Well, Wilbur," Catlin began. + +Frayberg interrupted. "What we can use, Wilbur, is a sequence on +Sirgamesk superstition. Emphasis on voodoo or witchcraft--naked girls +dancing--stuff with roots in Earth, but now typically Sirgamesk. Lots of +color. Secret rite stuff...." + +"Not much room on Cirgamesç for secret rites." + +"It's a big planet, isn't it?" + +"Not quite as big as Mars. There's no atmosphere. The settlers live in +mountain valleys, with air-tight lids over 'em." + +Catlin flipped the pages of _Thumbnail Sketches of the Inhabited +Worlds_. "Says here there's ancient ruins millions of years old. When +the atmosphere went, the population went with it." + +Frayberg became animated. "There's lots of material out there! Go get +it, Wilbur! Life! Sex! Excitement! Mystery!" + +"Okay," said Wilbur Murphy. + +"But lay off this horseman-in-space. There _is_ a limit to public +credulity, and don't you let anyone tell you different." + + * * * * * + +Cirgamesç hung outside the port, twenty thousand miles ahead. The +steward leaned over Wilbur Murphy's shoulder and pointed a long brown +finger. "It was right out there, sir. He came riding up--" + +"What kind of a man was it? Strange-looking?" + +"No. He was Cirgameski." + +"Oh. You saw him with your own eyes, eh?" + +The steward bowed, and his loose white mantle fell forward. "Exactly, +sir." + +"No helmet, no space-suit?" + +"He wore a short Singhalût vest and pantaloons and a yellow Hadrasi hat. +No more." + +"And the horse?" + +"Ah, the horse! There's a different matter." + +"Different how?" + +"I can't describe the horse. I was intent on the man." + +"Did you recognize him?" + +"By the brow of Lord Allah, it's well not to look too closely when such +matters occur." + +"Then--you _did_ recognize him!" + +"I must be at my task, sir." + +Murphy frowned in vexation at the steward's retreating back, then bent +over his camera to check the tape-feed. If anything appeared now, and +his eyes could see it, the two-hundred million audience of _Know Your +Universe!_ could see it with him. + +When he looked up, Murphy made a frantic grab for the stanchion, then +relaxed. Cirgamesç had taken the Great Twitch. It was an illusion, a +psychological quirk. One instant the planet lay ahead; then a man winked +or turned away, and when he looked back, "ahead" had become "below"; the +planet had swung an astonishing ninety degrees across the sky, and they +were _falling_! + +Murphy leaned against the stanchion. "'The Great Twitch'," he muttered +to himself, "I'd like to get _that_ on two hundred million screens!" + +Several hours passed. Cirgamesç grew. The Sampan Range rose up like a +dark scab; the valley sultanates of Singhalût, Hadra, New Batavia, and +Boeng-Bohôt showed like glistening chicken-tracks; the Great Rift Colony +of Sundaman stretched down through the foothills like the trail of a +slug. + +A loudspeaker voice rattled the ship. "Attention passengers for +Singhalût and other points on Cirgamesç! Kindly prepare your luggage for +disembarkation. Customs at Singhalût are extremely thorough. Passengers +are warned to take no weapons, drugs or explosives ashore. This is +important!" + + * * * * * + +The warning turned out to be an understatement. Murphy was plied with +questions. He suffered search of an intimate nature. He was +three-dimensionally X-rayed with a range of frequencies calculated to +excite fluorescence in whatever object he might have secreted in his +stomach, in a hollow bone, or under a layer of flesh. + +His luggage was explored with similar minute attention, and Murphy +rescued his cameras with difficulty. "What're you so damn anxious about? +I don't have drugs; I don't have contraband ..." + +"It's guns, your excellency. Guns, weapons, explosives ..." + +"I don't have any guns." + +"But these objects here?" + +"They're cameras. They record pictures and sounds and smells." + +The inspector seized the cases with a glittering smile of triumph. "They +resemble no cameras of my experience; I fear I shall have to impound ..." + +A young man in loose white pantaloons, a pink vest, pale green cravat +and a complex black turban strolled up. The inspector made a swift +obeisance, with arms spread wide. "Excellency." + +The young man raised two fingers. "You may find it possible to spare Mr. +Murphy any unnecessary formality." + +"As your Excellency recommends...." The inspector nimbly repacked +Murphy's belongings, while the young man looked on benignly. + +Murphy covertly inspected his face. The skin was smooth, the color of +the rising moon; the eyes were narrow, dark, superficially placid. The +effect was of silken punctilio with hot ruby blood close beneath. + +Satisfied with the inspector's zeal, he turned to Murphy. "Allow me to +introduce myself, Tuan Murphy. I am Ali-Tomás, of the House of +Singhalût, and my father the Sultan begs you to accept our poor +hospitality." + +"Why, thank you," said Murphy. "This is a very pleasant surprise." + +"If you will allow me to conduct you...." He turned to the inspector. +"Mr. Murphy's luggage to the palace." + + * * * * * + +Murphy accompanied Ali-Tomás into the outside light, fitting his own +quick step to the prince's feline saunter. This is coming it pretty +soft, he said to himself. I'll have a magnificent suite, with bowls of +fruit and gin pahits, not to mention two or three silken girls with skin +like rich cream bringing me towels in the shower.... Well, well, well, +it's not so bad working for _Know Your Universe!_ after all! I suppose I +ought to unlimber my camera.... + +Prince Ali-Tomás watched him with interest. "And what is the audience of +_Know Your Universe!_?" + +"We call 'em 'participants'." + +"Expressive. And how many participants do you serve?" + +"Oh, the Bowdler Index rises and falls. We've got about two hundred +million screens, with five hundred million participants." + +"Fascinating! And tell me--how do you record smells?" + +Murphy displayed the odor recorder on the side of the camera, with its +gelatinous track which fixed the molecular design. + +"And the odors recreated--they are like the originals?" + +"Pretty close. Never exact, but none of the participants knows the +difference. Sometimes the synthetic odor is an improvement." + +"Astounding!" murmured the prince. + +"And sometimes ... Well, Carson Tenlake went out to get the +myrrh-blossoms on Venus. It was a hot day--as days usually are on +Venus--and a long climb. When the show was run off, there was more smell +of Carson than of flowers." + +Prince Ali-Tomás laughed politely. "We turn through here." + +They came out into a compound paved with red, green and white tiles. +Beneath the valley roof was a sinuous trough, full of haze and warmth +and golden light. As far in either direction as the eye could reach, the +hillsides were terraced, barred in various shades of green. Spattering +the valley floor were tall canvas pavilions, tents, booths, shelters. + +"Naturally," said Prince Ali-Tomás, "we hope that you and your +participants will enjoy Singhalût. It is a truism that, in order to +import, we must export; we wish to encourage a pleasurable response to +the 'Made in Singhalût' tag on our _batiks_, carvings, lacquers." + +They rolled quietly across the square in a surface-car displaying the +House emblem. Murphy rested against deep, cool cushions. "Your +inspectors are pretty careful about weapons." + +Ali-Tomás smiled complacently. "Our existence is ordered and peaceful. +You may be familiar with the concept of _adak_?" + +"I don't think so." + +"A word, an idea from old Earth. Every living act is ordered by ritual. +But our heritage is passionate--and when unyielding _adak_ stands in the +way of an irresistible emotion, there is turbulence, sometimes even +killing." + +"An _amok_." + +"Exactly. It is as well that the _amok_ has no weapons other than his +knife. Otherwise he would kill twenty where now he kills one." + +The car rolled along a narrow avenue, scattering pedestrians to either +side like the bow of a boat spreading foam. The men wore loose white +pantaloons and a short open vest; the women wore only the pantaloons. + +"Handsome set of people," remarked Murphy. + +Ali-Tomás again smiled complacently. "I'm sure Singhalût will present an +inspiring and beautiful spectacle for your program." + +Murphy remembered the keynote to Howard Frayberg's instructions: +"_Excitement! Sex! Mystery!_" Frayberg cared little for inspiration or +beauty. "I imagine," he said casually, "that you celebrate a number of +interesting festivals? Colorful dancing? Unique customs?" + +Ali-Tomás shook his head. "To the contrary. We left our superstitions +and ancestor-worship back on Earth. We are quiet Mohammedans and indulge +in very little festivity. Perhaps here is the reason for _amoks_ and +sjambaks." + +"Sjambaks?" + +"We are not proud of them. You will hear sly rumor, and it is better +that I arm you beforehand with truth." + +"What is a sjambak?" + +"They are bandits, flouters of authority. I will show you one +presently." + +"I heard," said Murphy, "of a man riding a horse up to meet the +space-ships. What would account for a story like that?" + +"It can have no possible basis," said Prince Ali-Tomás. "We have no +horses on Cirgamesç. None whatever." + +"But ..." + +"The veriest idle talk. Such nonsense will have no interest for your +intelligent participants." + +The car rolled into a square a hundred yards on a side, lined with +luxuriant banana palms. Opposite was an enormous pavilion of gold and +violet silk, with a dozen peaked gables casting various changing sheens. +In the center of the square a twenty-foot pole supported a cage about +two feet wide, three feet long, and four feet high. + +Inside this cage crouched a naked man. + +The car rolled past. Prince Ali-Tomás waved an idle hand. The caged man +glared down from bloodshot eyes. "That," said Ali-Tomás, "is a sjambak. +As you see," a faint note of apology entered his voice, "we attempt to +discourage them." + +"What's that metal object on his chest?" + +"The mark of his trade. By that you may know all sjambak. In these +unsettled times only we of the House may cover our chests--all others +must show themselves and declare themselves true Singhalûsi." + +Murphy said tentatively, "I must come back here and photograph that +cage." + +Ali-Tomás smilingly shook his head. "I will show you our farms, our +vines and orchards. Your participants will enjoy these; they have no +interest in the dolor of an ignoble sjambak." + +"Well," said Murphy, "our aim is a well-rounded production. We want to +show the farmers at work, the members of the great House at their +responsibilities, as well as the deserved fate of wrongdoers." + +"Exactly. For every sjambak there are ten thousand industrious +Singhalûsi. It follows then that only one ten-thousandth part of your +film should be devoted to this infamous minority." + +"About three-tenths of a second, eh?" + +"No more than they deserve." + +"You don't know my Production Director. His name is Howard Frayberg, +and ..." + + * * * * * + +Howard Frayberg was deep in conference with Sam Catlin, under the +influence of what Catlin called his philosophic kick. It was the phase +which Catlin feared most. + +"Sam," said Frayberg, "do you know the danger of this business?" + +"Ulcers," Catlin replied promptly. + +Frayberg shook his head. "We've got an occupational disease to +fight--progressive mental myopia." + +"Speak for yourself," said Catlin. + +"Consider. We sit in this office. We think we know what kind of show we +want. We send out our staff to get it. We're signing the checks, so back +it comes the way we asked for it. We look at it, hear it, smell it--and +pretty soon we believe it: our version of the universe, full-blown from +our brains like Minerva stepping out of Zeus. You see what I mean?" + +"I understand the words." + +"We've got our own picture of what's going on. We ask for it, we get it. +It builds up and up--and finally we're like mice in a trap built of our +own ideas. We cannibalize our own brains." + +"Nobody'll ever accuse you of being stingy with a metaphor." + +"Sam, let's have the truth. How many times have you been off Earth?" + +"I went to Mars once. And I spent a couple of weeks at Aristillus Resort +on the Moon." + +Frayberg leaned back in his chair as if shocked. "And we're supposed to +be a couple of learned planetologists!" + +Catlin made grumbling noise in his throat. "I haven't been around the +zodiac, so what? You sneezed a few minutes ago and I said _gesundheit_, +but I don't have any doctor's degree." + +"There comes a time in a man's life," said Frayberg, "when he wants to +take stock, get a new perspective." + +"Relax, Howard, relax." + +"In our case it means taking out our preconceived ideas, looking at +them, checking our illusions against reality." + +"Are you serious about this?" + +"Another thing," said Frayberg, "I want to check up a little. Shifkin +says the expense accounts are frightful. But he can't fight it. When +Keeler says he paid ten munits for a loaf of bread on Nekkar IV, who's +gonna call him on it?" + +"Hell, let him eat bread! That's cheaper than making a safari around the +cluster, spot-checking the super-markets." + +Frayberg paid no heed. He touched a button; a three-foot sphere full of +glistening motes appeared. Earth was at the center, with thin red lines, +the scheduled space-ship routes, radiating out in all directions. + +"Let's see what kind of circle we can make," said Frayberg. "Gower's +here at Canopus, Keeler's over here at Blue Moon, Wilbur Murphy's at +Sirgamesk ..." + +"Don't forget," muttered Catlin, "we got a show to put on." + +"We've got material for a year," scoffed Frayberg. "Get hold of +Space-Lines. We'll start with Sirgamesk, and see what Wilbur Murphy's up +to." + + * * * * * + +Wilbur Murphy was being presented to the Sultan of Singhalût by the +Prince Ali-Tomás. The Sultan, a small mild man of seventy, sat +crosslegged on an enormous pink and green air-cushion. "Be at your ease, +Mr. Murphy. We dispense with as much protocol here as practicable." The +Sultan had a dry clipped voice and the air of a rather harassed +corporation executive. "I understand you represent Earth-Central Home +Screen Network?" + +"I'm a staff photographer for the _Know Your Universe!_ show." + +"We export a great deal to Earth," mused the Sultan, "but not as much as +we'd like. We're very pleased with your interest in us, and naturally we +want to help you in every way possible. Tomorrow the Keeper of the +Archives will present a series of charts analyzing our economy. +Ali-Tomás shall personally conduct you through the fish-hatcheries. We +want you to know we're doing a great job out here on Singhalût." + +"I'm sure you are," said Murphy uncomfortably. "However, that isn't +quite the stuff I want." + +"No? Just where do your desires lie?" + +Ali-Tomás said delicately. "Mr. Murphy took a rather profound interest +in the sjambak displayed in the square." + +"Oh. And you explained that these renegades could hold no interest for +serious students of our planet?" + +Murphy started to explain that clustered around two hundred million +screens tuned to _Know Your Universe!_ were four or five hundred million +participants, the greater part of them neither serious nor students. The +Sultan cut in decisively. "I will now impart something truly +interesting. We Singhalûsi are making preparations to reclaim four more +valleys, with an added area of six hundred thousand acres! I shall put +my physiographic models at your disposal; you may use them to the +fullest extent!" + +"I'll be pleased for the opportunity," declared Murphy. "But tomorrow +I'd like to prowl around the valley, meet your people, observe their +customs, religious rites, courtships, funerals ..." + +The Sultan pulled a sour face. "We are ditch-water dull. Festivals are +celebrated quietly in the home; there is small religious fervor; +courtships are consummated by family contract. I fear you will find +little sensational material here in Singhalût." + +"You have no temple dances?" asked Murphy. "No fire-walkers, +snake-charmers--voodoo?" + +The Sultan smiled patronizingly. "We came out here to Cirgamesç to +escape the ancient superstitions. Our lives are calm, orderly. Even the +_amoks_ have practically disappeared." + +"But the sjambaks--" + +"Negligible." + +"Well," said Murphy, "I'd like to visit some of these ancient cities." + +"I advise against it," declared the Sultan. "They are shards, weathered +stone. There are no inscriptions, no art. There is no stimulation in +dead stone. Now. Tomorrow I will hear a report on hybrid soybean +plantings in the Upper Kam District. You will want to be present." + + * * * * * + +Murphy's suite matched or even excelled his expectation. He had four +rooms and a private garden enclosed by a thicket of bamboo. His bathroom +walls were slabs of glossy actinolite, inlaid with cinnabar, jade, +galena, pyrite and blue malachite, in representations of fantastic +birds. His bedroom was a tent thirty feet high. Two walls were dark +green fabric; a third was golden rust; the fourth opened upon the +private garden. + +Murphy's bed was a pink and yellow creation ten feet square, soft as +cobweb, smelling of rose sandalwood. Carved black lacquer tubs held +fruit; two dozen wines, liquors, syrups, essences flowed at a touch from +as many ebony spigots. + +The garden centered on a pool of cool water, very pleasant in the +hothouse climate of Singhalût. The only shortcoming was the lack of the +lovely young servitors Murphy had envisioned. He took it upon himself to +repair this lack, and in a shady wine-house behind the palace, called +the Barangipan, he made the acquaintance of a girl-musician named Soek +Panjoebang. He found her enticing tones of quavering sweetness from the +_gamelan_, an instrument well-loved in Old Bali. Soek Panjoebang had the +delicate features and transparent skin of Sumatra, the supple long limbs +of Arabia and in a pair of wide and golden eyes a heritage from +somewhere in Celtic Europe. Murphy bought her a goblet of frozen +shavings, each a different perfume, while he himself drank white +rice-beer. Soek Panjoebang displayed an intense interest in the ways of +Earth, and Murphy found it hard to guide the conversation. "Weelbrrr," +she said. "Such a funny name, Weelbrrr. Do you think I could play the +_gamelan_ in the great cities, the great palaces of Earth?" + +"Sure. There's no law against _gamelans_." + +"You talk so funny, Weelbrrr. I like to hear you talk." + +"I suppose you get kinda bored here in Singhalût?" + +She shrugged. "Life is pleasant, but it concerns with little things. We +have no great adventures. We grow flowers, we play the _gamelan_." She +eyed him archly sidelong. "We love.... We sleep...." + +Murphy grinned. "You run _amok_." + +"No, no, no. That is no more." + +"Not since the sjambaks, eh?" + +"The sjambaks are bad. But better than _amok_. When a man feels the knot +forming around his chest, he no longer takes his kris and runs down the +street--he becomes sjambak." + +This was getting interesting. "Where does he go? What does he do?" + +"He robs." + +"Who does he rob? What does he do with his loot?" + +She leaned toward him. "It is not well to talk of them." + +"Why not?" + +"The Sultan does not wish it. Everywhere are listeners. When one talks +sjambak, the Sultan's ears rise, like the points on a cat." + +"Suppose they do--what's the difference? I've got a legitimate interest. +I saw one of them in that cage out there. That's torture. I want to know +about it." + +"He is very bad. He opened the monorail car and the air rushed out. +Forty-two Singhalûsi and Hadrasi bloated and blew up." + +"And what happened to the sjambak?" + +"He took all the gold and money and jewels and ran away." + +"Ran where?" + +"Out across Great Pharasang Plain. But he was a fool. He came back to +Singhalût for his wife; he was caught and set up for all people to look +at, so they might tell each other, 'thus it is for sjambaks.'" + +"Where do the sjambaks hide out?" + +"Oh," she looked vaguely around the room, "out on the plains. In the +mountains." + +"They must have some shelter--an air-dome." + +"No. The Sultan would send out his patrol-boat and destroy them. They +roam quietly. They hide among the rocks and tend their oxygen stills. +Sometimes they visit the old cities." + +"I wonder," said Murphy, staring into his beer, "could it be sjambaks +who ride horses up to meet the space-ship?" + +Soek Panjoebang knit her black eyebrows, as if preoccupied. + +"That's what brought me out here," Murphy went on. "This story of a man +riding a horse out in space." + +"Ridiculous; we have no horses in Cirgamesç." + +"All right, the steward won't swear to the horse. Suppose the man was up +there on foot or riding a bicycle. But the steward recognized the man." + +"Who was this man, pray?" + +"The steward clammed up.... The name would have been just noise to me, +anyway." + +"_I_ might recognize the name...." + +"Ask him yourself. The ship's still out at the field." + +She shook her head slowly, holding her golden eyes on his face. "I do +not care to attract the attention of either steward, sjambak--or +Sultan." + +Murphy said impatiently. "In any event, it's not who--but _how_. How +does the man breathe? Vacuum sucks a man's lungs up out of his mouth, +bursts his stomach, his ears...." + +"We have excellent doctors," said Soek Panjoebang shuddering, "but alas! +I am not one of them." + + * * * * * + +Murphy looked at her sharply. Her voice held the plangent sweetness of +her instrument, with additional overtones of mockery. "There must be +some kind of invisible dome around him, holding in air," said Murphy. + +"And what if there is?" + +"It's something new, and if it is, I want to find out about it." + +Soek smiled languidly. "You are so typical an old-lander--worried, +frowning, dynamic. You should relax, cultivate _napaû_, enjoy life as we +do here in Singhalût." + +"What's _napaû_?" + +"It's our philosophy, where we find meaning and life and beauty in every +aspect of the world." + +"That sjambak in the cage could do with a little less _napaû_ right +now." + +"No doubt he is unhappy," she agreed. + +"Unhappy! He's being tortured!" + +"He broke the Sultan's law. His life is no longer his own. It belongs to +Singhalût. If the Sultan wishes to use it to warn other wrongdoers, the +fact that the man suffers is of small interest." + +"If they all wear that metal ornament, how can they hope to hide out?" +He glanced at her own bare bosom. + +"They appear by night--slip through the streets like ghosts...." She +looked in turn at Murphy's loose shirt. "You will notice persons +brushing up against you, feeling you," she laid her hand along his +breast, "and when this happens you will know they are agents of the +Sultan, because only strangers and the House may wear shirts. But now, +let me sing to you--a song from the Old Land, old Java. You will not +understand the tongue, but no other words so join the voice of the +_gamelan_." + + * * * * * + +"This is the gravy-train," said Murphy. "Instead of a garden suite with +a private pool, I usually sleep in a bubble-tent, with nothing to eat +but condensed food." + +Soek Panjoebang flung the water out of her sleek black hair. "Perhaps, +Weelbrrr, you will regret leaving Cirgamesç?" + +"Well," he looked up to the transparent roof, barely visible where the +sunlight collected and refracted, "I don't particularly like being shut +up like a bird in an aviary.... Mildly claustrophobic, I guess." + +After breakfast, drinking thick coffee from tiny silver cups, Murphy +looked long and reflectively at Soek Panjoebang. + +"What are you thinking, Weelbrrr?" + +Murphy drained his coffee. "I'm thinking that I'd better be getting to +work." + +"And what do you do?" + +"First I'm going to shoot the palace, and you sitting here in the garden +playing your _gamelan_." + +"But Weelbrrr--not _me_!" + +"You're a part of the universe, rather an interesting part. Then I'll +take the square...." + +"And the sjambak?" + +A quiet voice spoke from behind. "A visitor, Tuan Murphy." + +Murphy turned his head. "Bring him in." He looked back to Soek +Panjoebang. She was on her feet. + +"It is necessary that I go." + +"When will I see you?" + +"Tonight--at the Barangipan." + + * * * * * + +The quiet voice said, "Mr. Rube Trimmer, Tuan." + +Trimmer was small and middle-aged, with thin shoulders and a paunch. He +carried himself with a hell-raising swagger, left over from a time +twenty years gone. His skin had the waxy look of lost floridity, his +tuft of white hair was coarse and thin, his eyelids hung in the off-side +droop that amateur physiognomists like to associate with guile. + +"I'm Resident Director of the Import-Export Bank," said Trimmer. "Heard +you were here and thought I'd pay my respects." + +"I suppose you don't see many strangers." + +"Not too many--there's nothing much to bring 'em. Cirgamesç isn't a +comfortable tourist planet. Too confined, shut in. A man with a +sensitive psyche goes nuts pretty easy here." + +"Yeah," said Murphy. "I was thinking the same thing this morning. That +dome begins to give a man the willies. How do the natives stand it? Or +do they?" + +Trimmer pulled out a cigar case. Murphy refused the offer. + +"Local tobacco," said Trimmer. "Very good." He lit up thoughtfully. +"Well, you might say that the Cirgameski are schizophrenic. They've got +the docile Javanese blood, plus the Arabian élan. The Javanese part is +on top, but every once in a while you see a flash of arrogance.... You +never know. I've been out here nine years and I'm still a stranger." He +puffed on his cigar, studied Murphy with his careful eyes. "You work for +_Know Your Universe!_, I hear." + +"Yeah. I'm one of the leg men." + +"Must be a great job." + +"A man sees a lot of the galaxy, and he runs into queer tales, like this +sjambak stuff." + +Trimmer nodded without surprise. "My advice to you, Murphy, is lay off +the sjambaks. They're not healthy around here." + +Murphy was startled by the bluntness. "What's the big mystery about +these sjambaks?" + +Trimmer looked around the room. "This place is bugged." + +"I found two pick-ups and plugged 'em," said Murphy. + +Trimmer laughed. "Those were just plants. They hide 'em where a man +might just barely spot 'em. You can't catch the real ones. They're woven +into the cloth--pressure-sensitive wires." + +Murphy looked critically at the cloth walls. + +"Don't let it worry you," said Trimmer. "They listen more out of habit +than anything else. If you're fussy we'll go for a walk." + +The road led past the palace into the country. Murphy and Trimmer +sauntered along a placid river, overgrown with lily pads, swarming with +large white ducks. + +"This sjambak business," said Murphy. "Everybody talks around it. You +can't pin anybody down." + +"Including me," said Trimmer. "I'm more or less privileged around here. +The Sultan finances his reclamation through the bank, on the basis of my +reports. But there's more to Singhalût than the Sultan." + +"Namely?" + +Trimmer waved his cigar waggishly. "Now we're getting in where I don't +like to talk. I'll give you a hint. Prince Ali thinks roofing-in more +valleys is a waste of money, when there's Hadra and New Batavia and +Sundaman so close." + +"You mean--armed conquest?" + +Trimmer laughed. "You said it, not me." + +"They can't carry on much of a war--unless the soldiers commute by +monorail." + +"Maybe Prince Ali thinks he's got the answer." + +"Sjambaks?" + +"I didn't say it," said Trimmer blandly. + +Murphy grinned. After a moment he said. "I picked up with a girl named +Soek Panjoebang who plays the _gamelan_. I suppose she's working for +either the Sultan or Prince Ali. Do you know which?" + +Trimmer's eyes sparkled. He shook his head. "Might be either one. +There's a way to find out." + +"Yeah?" + +"Get her off where you're sure there's no spy-cells. Tell her two +things--one for Ali, the other for the Sultan. Whichever one reacts you +know you've got her tagged." + +"For instance?" + +"Well, for instance she learns that you can rig up a hypnotic ray from a +flashlight battery, a piece of bamboo, and a few lengths of wire. +That'll get Ali in an awful sweat. He can't get weapons. None at all. +And for the Sultan," Trimmer was warming up to his intrigue, chewing on +his cigar with gusto, "tell her you're on to a catalyst that turns clay +into aluminum and oxygen in the presence of sunlight. The Sultan would +sell his right leg for something like that. He tries hard for Singhalût +and Cirgamesç." + +"And Ali?" + +Trimmer hesitated. "I never said what I'm gonna say. Don't forget--I +never said it." + +"Okay, you never said it." + +"Ever hear of a _jehad_?" + +"Mohammedan holy wars." + +"Believe it or not, Ali wants a _jehad_." + +"Sounds kinda fantastic." + +"Sure it's fantastic. Don't forget, I never said anything about it. But +suppose someone--strictly unofficial, of course--let the idea percolate +around the Peace Office back home." + +"Ah," said Murphy. "That's why you came to see me." + + * * * * * + +Trimmer turned a look of injured innocence. "Now, Murphy, you're a +little unfair. I'm a friendly guy. Of course I don't like to see the +bank lose what we've got tied up in the Sultan." + +"Why don't you send in a report yourself?" + +"I have! But when they hear the same thing from you, a _Know Your +Universe!_ man, they might make a move." + +Murphy nodded. + +"Well, we understand each other," said Trimmer heartily, "and +everything's clear." + +"Not entirely. How's Ali going to launch a _jehad_ when he doesn't have +any weapons, no warships, no supplies?" + +"Now," said Trimmer, "we're getting into the realm of supposition." He +paused, looked behind him. A farmer pushing a rotary tiller, bowed +politely, trundled ahead. Behind was a young man in a black turban, gold +earrings, a black and red vest, white pantaloons, black curl-toed +slippers. He bowed, started past. Trimmer held up his hand. "Don't waste +your time up there; we're going back in a few minutes." + +"Thank you, Tuan." + +"Who are you reporting to? The Sultan or Prince Ali?" + +"The Tuan is sure to pierce the veil of my evasions. I shall not +dissemble. I am the Sultan's man." + +Trimmer nodded. "Now, if you'll kindly remove to about a hundred yards, +where your whisper pick-up won't work." + +"By your leave, I go." He retreated without haste. + +"He's almost certainly working for Ali," said Trimmer. + +"Not a very subtle lie." + +"Oh, yes--third level. He figured I'd take it second level." + +"How's that again?" + +"Naturally I wouldn't believe him. He knew I knew that he knew it. So +when he said 'Sultan', I'd think he wouldn't lie simply, but that he'd +lie double--that he actually was working for the Sultan." + +Murphy laughed. "Suppose he told you a fourth-level lie?" + +"It starts to be a toss-up pretty soon," Trimmer admitted. "I don't +think he gives me credit for that much subtlety.... What are you doing +the rest of the day?" + +"Taking footage. Do you know where I can find some picturesque rites? +Mystical dances, human sacrifice? I've got to work up some glamor and +exotic lore." + +"There's this sjambak in the cage. That's about as close to the medieval +as you'll find anywhere in Earth Commonwealth." + +"Speaking of sjambaks ..." + +"No time," said Trimmer. "Got to get back. Drop in at my office--right +down the square from the palace." + + * * * * * + +Murphy returned to his suite. The shadowy figure of his room servant +said, "His Highness the Sultan desires the Tuan's attendance in the +Cascade Garden." + +"Thank you," said Murphy. "As soon as I load my camera." + +The Cascade Room was an open patio in front of an artificial waterfall. +The Sultan was pacing back and forth, wearing dusty khaki puttees, brown +plastic boots, a yellow polo shirt. He carried a twig which he used as a +riding crop, slapping his boots as he walked. He turned his head as +Murphy appeared, pointed his twig at a wicker bench. + +"I pray you sit down, Mr. Murphy." He paced once up and back. "How is +your suite? You find it to your liking?" + +"Very much so." + +"Excellent," said the Sultan. "You do me honor with your presence." + +Murphy waited patiently. + +"I understand that you had a visitor this morning," said the Sultan. + +"Yes. Mr. Trimmer." + +"May I inquire the nature of the conversation?" + +"It was of a personal nature," said Murphy, rather more shortly than he +meant. + +The Sultan nodded wistfully. "A Singhalûsi would have wasted an hour +telling me half-truths--distorted enough to confuse, but not +sufficiently inaccurate to anger me if I had a spy-cell on him all the +time." + +Murphy grinned. "A Singhalûsi has to live here the rest of his life." + +A servant wheeled a frosted cabinet before them, placed goblets under +two spigots, withdrew. The Sultan cleared his throat. "Trimmer is an +excellent fellow, but unbelievably loquacious." + +Murphy drew himself two inches of chilled rosy-pale liquor. The Sultan +slapped his boots with the twig. "Undoubtedly he confided all my private +business to you, or at least as much as I have allowed him to learn." + +"Well--he spoke of your hope to increase the compass of Singhalût." + +"That, my friend, is no hope; it's absolute necessity. Our population +density is fifteen hundred to the square mile. We must expand or +smother. There'll be too little food to eat, too little oxygen to +breathe." + +Murphy suddenly came to life. "I could make that idea the theme of my +feature! Singhalût Dilemma: Expand or Perish!" + +"No, that would be inadvisable, inapplicable." + +Murphy was not convinced. "It sounds like a natural." + +The Sultan smiled. "I'll impart an item of confidential +information--although Trimmer no doubt has preceded me with it." He gave +his boots an irritated whack. "To expand I need funds. Funds are best +secured in an atmosphere of calm and confidence. The implication of +emergency would be disastrous to my aims." + +"Well," said Murphy, "I see your position." + +The Sultan glanced at Murphy sidelong. "Anticipating your cooperation, +my Minister of Propaganda has arranged an hour's program, stressing our +progressive social attitude, our prosperity and financial prospects ..." + +"But, Sultan ..." + +"Well?" + +"I can't allow your Minister of Propaganda to use me and _Know Your +Universe!_ as a kind of investment brochure." + +The Sultan nodded wearily. "I expected you to take that attitude.... +Well--what do you yourself have in mind?" + +"I've been looking for something to tie to," said Murphy. "I think it's +going to be the dramatic contrast between the ruined cities and the new +domed valleys. How the Earth settlers succeeded where the ancient people +failed to meet the challenge of the dissipating atmosphere." + +"Well," the Sultan said grudgingly, "that's not too bad." + +"Today I want to take some shots of the palace, the dome, the city, the +paddies, groves, orchards, farms. Tomorrow I'm taking a trip out to one +of the ruins." + +"I see," said the Sultan. "Then you won't need my charts and +statistics?" + +"Well, Sultan, I could film the stuff your Propaganda Minister cooked +up, and I could take it back to Earth. Howard Frayberg or Sam Catlin +would tear into it, rip it apart, lard in some head-hunting, a little +cannibalism and temple prostitution, and you'd never know you were +watching Singhalût. You'd scream with horror, and I'd be fired." + +"In that case," said the Sultan, "I will leave you to the dictates of +your conscience." + + * * * * * + +Howard Frayberg looked around the gray landscape of Riker's Planet, +gazed out over the roaring black Mogador Ocean. "Sam, I think there's a +story out there." + +Sam Catlin shivered inside his electrically heated glass overcoat. "Out +on that ocean? It's full of man-eating plesiosaurs--horrible things +forty feet long." + +"Suppose we worked something out on the line of Moby Dick? _The White +Monster of the Mogador Ocean._ We'd set sail in a catamaran--" + +"Us?" + +"No," said Frayberg impatiently. "Of course not us. Two or three of the +staff. They'd sail out there, look over these gray and red monsters, +maybe fake a fight or two, but all the time they're after the legendary +white one. How's it sound?" + +"I don't think we pay our men enough money." + +"Wilbur Murphy might do it. He's willing to look for a man riding a +horse up to meet his space-ships." + +"He might draw the line at a white plesiosaur riding up to meet his +catamaran." + +Frayberg turned away. "Somebody's got to have ideas around here...." + +"We'd better head back to the space-port," said Catlin. "We got two +hours to make the Sirgamesk shuttle." + + * * * * * + +Wilbur Murphy sat in the Barangipan, watching marionettes performing to +xylophone, castanet, gong and _gamelan_. The drama had its roots in +proto-historic Mohenjō-Darō. It had filtered down through ancient India, +medieval Burma, Malaya, across the Straits of Malacca to Sumatra and +Java; from modern Java across space to Cirgamesç, five thousand years of +time, two hundred light-years of space. Somewhere along the route it had +met and assimilated modern technology. Magnetic beams controlled arms, +legs and bodies, guided the poses and posturings. The manipulator's +face, by agency of clip, wire, radio control and minuscule selsyn, +projected his scowl, smile, sneer or grimace to the peaked little face +he controlled. The language was that of Old Java, which perhaps a third +of the spectators understood. This portion did not include Murphy, and +when the performance ended he was no wiser than at the start. + +Soek Panjoebang slipped into the seat beside Murphy. She wore musician's +garb: a sarong of brown, blue, and black _batik_, and a fantastic +headdress of tiny silver bells. She greeted him with enthusiasm. + +"Weelbrrr! I saw you watching...." + +"It was very interesting." + +"Ah, yes." She sighed. "Weelbrrr, you take me with you back to Earth? +You make me a great picturama star, please, Weelbrrr?" + +"Well, I don't know about that." + +"I behave very well, Weelbrrr." She nuzzled his shoulder, looked +soulfully up with her shiny yellow-hazel eyes. Murphy nearly forgot the +experiment he intended to perform. + +"What did you do today, Weelbrrr? You look at all the pretty girls?" + +"Nope. I ran footage. Got the palace, climbed the ridge up to the +condensation vanes. I never knew there was so much water in the air till +I saw the stream pouring off those vanes! And _hot_!" + +"We have much sunlight; it makes the rice grow." + +"The Sultan ought to put some of that excess light to work. There's a +secret process.... Well, I'd better not say." + +"Oh come, Weelbrrr! Tell me your secrets!" + +"It's not much of a secret. Just a catalyst that separates clay into +aluminum and oxygen when sunlight shines on it." + +Soek's eyebrows rose, poised in place like a seagull riding the wind. +"Weelbrrr! I did not know you for a man of learning!" + +"Oh, you thought I was just a bum, eh? Good enough to make picturama +stars out of _gamelan_ players, but no special genius...." + +"No, no, Weelbrrr." + +"I know lots of tricks. I can take a flashlight battery, a piece of +copper foil, a few transistors and bamboo tube and turn out a paralyzer +gun that'll stop a man cold in his tracks. And you know how much it +costs?" + +"No, Weelbrrr. How much?" + +"Ten cents. It wears out after two or three months, but what's the +difference? I make 'em as a hobby--turn out two or three an hour." + +"Weelbrrr! You're a man of marvels! Hello! We will drink!" + +And Murphy settled back in the wicker chair, sipping his rice beer. + + * * * * * + +"Today," said Murphy, "I get into a space-suit, and ride out to the +ruins in the plain. Ghatamipol, I think they're called. Like to come?" + +"No, Weelbrrr." Soek Panjoebang looked off into the garden, her hands +busy tucking a flower into her hair. A few minutes later she said, "Why +must you waste your time among the rocks? There are better things to do +and see. And it might well be--dangerous." She murmured the last word +off-handedly. + +"Danger? From the sjambaks?" + +"Yes, perhaps." + +"The Sultan's giving me a guard. Twenty men with crossbows." + +"The sjambaks carry shields." + +"Why should they risk their lives attacking me?" + +Soek Panjoebang shrugged. After a moment she rose to her feet. "Goodbye, +Weelbrrr." + +"Goodbye? Isn't this rather abrupt? Won't I see you tonight?" + +"If so be Allah's will." + +Murphy looked after the lithe swaying figure. She paused, plucked a +yellow flower, looked over her shoulder. Her eyes, yellow as the flower, +lucent as water-jewels, held his. Her face was utterly expressionless. +She turned, tossed away the flower with a jaunty gesture, and continued, +her shoulders swinging. + +Murphy breathed deeply. She might have made picturama at that.... + +One hour later he met his escort at the valley gate. They were dressed +in space-suits for the plains, twenty men with sullen faces. The trip to +Ghatamipol clearly was not to their liking. Murphy climbed into his own +suit, checked the oxygen pressure gauge, the seal at his collar. "All +ready, boys?" + +No one spoke. The silence drew out. The gatekeeper, on hand to let the +party out, snickered. "They're all ready, Tuan." + +"Well," said Murphy, "let's go then." + +Outside the gate Murphy made a second check of his equipment. No leaks +in his suit. Inside pressure: 14.6. Outside pressure: zero. His twenty +guards morosely inspected their crossbows and slim swords. + +The white ruins of Ghatamipol lay five miles across Pharasang Plain. The +horizon was clear, the sun was high, the sky was black. + +Murphy's radio hummed. Someone said sharply, "Look! There it goes!" He +wheeled around; his guards had halted, and were pointing. He saw a fleet +something vanishing into the distance. + +"Let's go," said Murphy. "There's nothing out there." + +"Sjambak." + +"Well, there's only one of them." + +"Where one walks, others follow." + +"That's why the twenty of you are here." + +"It is madness! Challenging the sjambaks!" + +"What is gained?" another argued. + +"I'll be the judge of that," said Murphy, and set off along the plain. +The warriors reluctantly followed, muttering to each other over their +radio intercoms. + + * * * * * + +The eroded city walls rose above them, occupied more and more of the +sky. The platoon leader said in an angry voice, "We have gone far +enough." + +"You're under my orders," said Murphy. "We're going through the gate." +He punched the button on his camera and passed under the monstrous +portal. + +The city was frailer stuff than the wall, and had succumbed to the thin +storms which had raged a million years after the passing of life. Murphy +marvelled at the scope of the ruins. Virgin archaeological territory! No +telling what a few weeks digging might turn up. Murphy considered his +expense account. Shifkin was the obstacle. + +There'd be tremendous prestige and publicity for _Know Your Universe!_ +if Murphy uncovered a tomb, a library, works of art. The Sultan would +gladly provide diggers. They were a sturdy enough people; they could +make quite a showing in a week, if they were able to put aside their +superstitions, fears and dreads. + +Murphy sized one of them up from the corner of his eye. He sat on a +sunny slab of rock, and if he felt uneasy he concealed it quite +successfully. In fact, thought Murphy, he appeared completely relaxed. +Maybe the problem of securing diggers was a minor one after all.... + +And here was an odd sidelight on the Singhalûsi character. Once clear of +the valley the man openly wore his shirt, a fine loose garment of +electric blue, in defiance of the Sultan's edict. Of course out here he +might be cold.... + +Murphy felt his own skin crawling. How could he be cold? How could he be +alive? Where was his space-suit? He lounged on the rock, grinning +sardonically at Murphy. He wore heavy sandals, a black turban, loose +breeches, the blue shirt. Nothing more. + +Where were the others? + +Murphy turned a feverish glance over his shoulder. A good three miles +distant, bounding and leaping toward Singhalût, were twenty desperate +figures. They all wore space-suits. This man here ... A sjambak? A +wizard? A hallucination? + + * * * * * + +The creature rose to his feet, strode springily toward Murphy. He +carried a crossbow and a sword, like those of Murphy's fleet-footed +guards. But he wore no space-suit. Could there be breathable traces of +an atmosphere? Murphy glanced at his gauge. Outside pressure: zero. + +Two other men appeared, moving with long elastic steps. Their eyes were +bright, their faces flushed. They came up to Murphy, took his arm. They +were solid, corporeal. They had no invisible force fields around their +heads. + +Murphy jerked his arm free. "Let go of me, damn it!" But they certainly +couldn't hear him through the vacuum. + +He glanced over his shoulder. The first man held his naked blade a foot +or two behind Murphy's bulging space-suit. Murphy made no further +resistance. He punched the button on his camera to automatic. It would +now run for several hours, recording one hundred pictures per second, a +thousand to the inch. + +The sjambaks led Murphy two hundred yards to a metal door. They opened +it, pushed Murphy inside, banged it shut. Murphy felt the vibration +through his shoes, heard a gradually waxing hum. His gauge showed an +outside pressure of 5, 10, 12, 14, 14.5. An inner door opened. Hands +pulled Murphy in, unclamped his dome. + +"Just what's going on here?" demanded Murphy angrily. + +Prince Ali-Tomás pointed to a table. Murphy saw a flashlight battery, +aluminum foil, wire, a transistor kit, metal tubing, tools, a few other +odds and ends. + +"There it is," said Prince Ali-Tomás. "Get to work. Let's see one of +these paralysis weapons you boast of." + +"Just like that, eh?" + +"Just like that." + +"What do you want 'em for?" + +"Does it matter?" + +"I'd like to know." Murphy was conscious of his camera, recording sight, +sound, odor. + +"I lead an army," said Ali-Tomás, "but they march without weapons. Give +me weapons! I will carry the word to Hadra, to New Batavia, to Sundaman, +to Boeng-Bohôt!" + +"How? Why?" + +"It is enough that I will it. Again, I beg of you ..." He indicated the +table. + +Murphy laughed. "I've got myself in a fine mess. Suppose I don't make +this weapon for you?" + +"You'll remain until you do, under increasingly difficult conditions." + +"I'll be here a long time." + +"If such is the case," said Ali-Tomás, "we must make our arrangements +for your care on a long-term basis." + +Ali made a gesture. Hands seized Murphy's shoulders. A respirator was +held to his nostrils. He thought of his camera, and he could have +laughed. Mystery! Excitement! Thrills! Dramatic sequence for _Know Your +Universe!_ Staff-man murdered by fanatics! The crime recorded on his own +camera! See the blood, hear his death-rattle, smell the poison! + +The vapor choked him. _What a break! What a sequence!_ + + * * * * * + +"Sirgamesk," said Howard Frayberg, "bigger and brighter every minute." + +"It must've been just about in here," said Catlin, "that Wilbur's +horseback rider appeared." + +"That's right! Steward!" + +"Yes, sir?" + +"We're about twenty thousand miles out, aren't we?" + +"About fifteen thousand, sir." + +"Sidereal Cavalry! What an idea! I wonder how Wilbur's making out on his +superstition angle?" + +Sam Catlin, watching out the window, said in a tight voice, "Why not ask +him yourself?" + +"Eh?" + +"Ask him for yourself! There he is--outside, riding some kind of +critter...." + +"It's a ghost," whispered Frayberg. "A man without a space-suit.... +There's no such thing!" + +"He sees us.... Look...." + +Murphy was staring at them, and his surprise seemed equal to their own. +He waved his hand. Catlin gingerly waved back. + +Said Frayberg, "That's not a horse he's riding. It's a combination +ram-jet and kiddie car with stirrups!" + +"He's coming aboard the ship," said Catlin. "That's the entrance port +down there...." + + * * * * * + +Wilbur Murphy sat in the captain's stateroom, taking careful breaths of +air. + +"How are you now?" asked Frayberg. + +"Fine. A little sore in the lungs." + +"I shouldn't wonder," the ship's doctor growled. "I never saw anything +like it." + +"How does it feel out there, Wilbur?" Catlin asked. + +"It feels awful lonesome and empty. And the breath seeping up out of +your lungs, never going in--that's a funny feeling. And you miss the air +blowing on your skin. I never realized it before. Air feels like--like +silk, like whipped cream--it's got texture...." + +"But aren't you cold? Space is supposed to be absolute zero!" + +"Space is nothing. It's not hot and it's not cold. When you're in the +sunlight you get warm. It's better in the shade. You don't lose any heat +by air convection, but radiation and sweat evaporation keep you +comfortably cool." + +"I still can't understand it," said Frayberg. "This Prince Ali, he's a +kind of a rebel, eh?" + +"I don't blame him in a way. A normal man living under those domes has +to let off steam somehow. Prince Ali decided to go out crusading. I +think he would have made it too--at least on Cirgamesç." + +"Certainly there are many more men inside the domes...." + +"When it comes to fighting," said Murphy, "a sjambak can lick twenty men +in space-suits. A little nick doesn't hurt him, but a little nick bursts +open a space-suit, and the man inside comes apart." + +"Well," said the Captain. "I imagine the Peace Office will send out a +team to put things in order now." + +Catlin asked, "What happened when you woke up from the chloroform?" + +"Well, nothing very much. I felt this attachment on my chest, but didn't +think much about it. Still kinda woozy. I was halfway through +decompression. They keep a man there eight hours, drop pressure on him +two pounds an hour, nice and slow so he don't get the bends." + +"Was this the same place they took you, when you met Ali?" + +"Yeah, that was their decompression chamber. They had to make a sjambak +out of me; there wasn't anywhere else they could keep me. Well, pretty +soon my head cleared, and I saw this apparatus stuck to my chest." He +poked at the mechanism on the table. "I saw the oxygen tank, I saw the +blood running through the plastic pipes--blue from me to that carburetor +arrangement, red on the way back in--and I figured out the whole +arrangement. Carbon dioxide still exhales up through your lungs, but the +vein back to the left auricle is routed through the carburetor and +supercharged with oxygen. A man doesn't need to breathe. The carburetor +flushes his blood with oxygen, the decompression tank adjusts him to the +lack of air-pressure. There's only one thing to look out for; that's not +to touch anything with your naked flesh. If it's in the sunshine it's +blazing hot; if it's in the shade it's cold enough to cut. Otherwise +you're free as a bird." + +"But--how did you get away?" + +"I saw those little rocket-bikes, and began figuring. I couldn't go back +to Singhalût; I'd be lynched on sight as a sjambak. I couldn't fly to +another planet--the bikes don't carry enough fuel. + +"I knew when the ship would be coming in, so I figured I'd fly up to +meet it. I told the guard I was going outside a minute, and I got on one +of the rocket-bikes. There was nothing much to it." + +"Well," said Frayberg, "it's a great feature, Wilbur--a great film! +Maybe we can stretch it into two hours." + +"There's one thing bothering me," said Catlin. "Who did the steward see +up here the first time?" + +Murphy shrugged. "It might have been somebody up here skylarking. A +little too much oxygen and you start cutting all kinds of capers. Or it +might have been someone who decided he had enough crusading. + +"There's a sjambak in a cage, right in the middle of Singhalût. Prince +Ali walks past; they look at each other eye to eye. Ali smiles a little +and walks on. Suppose this sjambak tried to escape to the ship. He's +taken aboard, turned over to the Sultan and the Sultan makes an example +of him...." + +"What'll the Sultan do to Ali?" + +Murphy shook his head. "If I were Ali I'd disappear." + +A loudspeaker turned on. "Attention all passengers. We have just passed +through quarantine. Passengers may now disembark. Important: no weapons +or explosives allowed on Singhalût!" + +"This is where I came in," said Murphy. + + +THE END + + + + +Transcriber's Note: + + This etext was produced from _If Worlds of Science Fiction_ July + 1953. 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 Sjambak, by John Holbrook Vance + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30002 *** |
