From b6a61d176fb3509c80ab1bf74fb94deabeff4f19 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Roger Frank Date: Tue, 14 Oct 2025 19:53:49 -0700 Subject: initial commit of ebook 30474 --- .gitattributes | 3 + 30474-0.txt | 288 ++++++++++++ 30474-h.zip | Bin 0 -> 135502 bytes 30474-h/30474-h.htm | 548 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 30474-h/images/t.png | Bin 0 -> 4197 bytes 30474-h/images/title-1.png | Bin 0 -> 42192 bytes 30474-h/images/title-2.png | Bin 0 -> 78377 bytes 30474.txt | 676 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 30474.zip | Bin 0 -> 11956 bytes LICENSE.txt | 11 + README.md | 2 + old/30474-h.zip | Bin 0 -> 135502 bytes old/30474-h/30474-h.htm | 961 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ old/30474-h/images/t.png | Bin 0 -> 4197 bytes old/30474-h/images/title-1.png | Bin 0 -> 42192 bytes old/30474-h/images/title-2.png | Bin 0 -> 78377 bytes old/30474.txt | 676 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ old/30474.zip | Bin 0 -> 11956 bytes 18 files changed, 3165 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .gitattributes create mode 100644 30474-0.txt create mode 100644 30474-h.zip create mode 100644 30474-h/30474-h.htm create mode 100644 30474-h/images/t.png create mode 100644 30474-h/images/title-1.png create mode 100644 30474-h/images/title-2.png create mode 100644 30474.txt create mode 100644 30474.zip create mode 100644 LICENSE.txt create mode 100644 README.md create mode 100644 old/30474-h.zip create mode 100644 old/30474-h/30474-h.htm create mode 100644 old/30474-h/images/t.png create mode 100644 old/30474-h/images/title-1.png create mode 100644 old/30474-h/images/title-2.png create mode 100644 old/30474.txt create mode 100644 old/30474.zip diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/30474-0.txt b/30474-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..969704f --- /dev/null +++ b/30474-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,288 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30474 *** + + This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact & Fiction + September 1961. Extensive research did not uncover any + evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was + renewed. + + + + +[Illustration] + +THEY ALSO SERVE + +By DONALD E. WESTLAKE + +Illustrated by Douglas + + _Why should people hate vultures? After all, a vulture never + kills anyone..._ + + +The launch carrying the mail, supplies and replacements eased slowly +in toward the base, keeping the bulk of the Moon between itself and +Earth. Captain Ebor, seated at the controls, guided the ship to the +rocky uneven ground with the easy carelessness of long practice, then +cut the drive, got to his walking tentacles, and stretched. Donning +his spacesuit, he left the ship to go over to the dome and meet +Darquelnoy, the base commander. + +An open ground-car was waiting for him beside the ship. The driver, +encased in his spacesuit, crossed tentacles in a sloppy salute, and +Ebor returned the gesture quite as sloppily. Here on the periphery, +cast formalities were all but dispensed with. + +Ebor stood for a moment and watched the unloading. The cargo crew, +used to working in spacesuits, had one truck already half full. The +replacements, unused to spacesuits and, in addition, awed and a bit +startled by the bleakness of this satellite, were moving awkwardly +down the ramp. + +Satisfied that the unloading was proceeding smoothly, Ebor climbed +aboard the ground-car, awkward in his suit, and settled back heavily +in the seat to try to get used to gravity again. The gravity of this +Moon was slight, of course--barely one-sixth the gravity of the Home +World or most of the colonies--but it still took getting used to, +after a long trip in free-fall. + +The driver sat at the controls, and the car jerked into motion. Ebor, +looking up, noticed for the first time that the dome wasn't there any +more. The main dome, housing the staff and equipment of the base, just +wasn't there. + +And the driver, he now saw, was aiming the car toward the nearby +crater wall. Extending two of his eyes till they almost touched the +face-plate of his helmet, he could see activity at the base of the +crater wall, and what looked like an air-lock entrance. He wondered +what had caused the change, which had obviously been done at top +speed. The last time he'd been here, not very long ago, the dome had +still been intact, and there had been no hint of any impending move +underground. + +The driver steered the car into the open air lock, and they waited +until the first cargo truck had lumbered in after them. Then the outer +door closed, the pumps were turned on, and in a minute the red light +flashed over the inner door. Ebor removed the spacesuit gratefully, +left it in the car, and walked clumsily through the inner door into +the new base. + +A good job had been done on it, for all the speed. Rooms and corridors +has been melted out of the rock, the floors had been carpeted, the +walls painted, and the ceiling lined with light panels. All of the +furnishings had been transferred here from the original dome, and the +result looked, on the whole, quite livable. As livable as the dome had +been, at least. + +But the base commander, Darquelnoy, waiting for his old friend Ebor +near the inner door of the lock, looked anything but happy with the +arrangement. At Ebor's entrance he raised a limp tentacle in weary +greeting and said, "Come in, my friend, come in. Tell me the new jokes +from home. I could use some cheering up." + +"None worth telling," said Ebor. He looked around. "What's happened +here?" he asked. "Why've you gone underground? Why do you need +cheering up?" + +Darquelnoy clicked his eyes in despair. "Those _things_!" he cried. +"Those annoying little creatures on that blasted planet up there!" + +Ebor repressed an amused ripple. He knew Darquelnoy well enough to +know that the commander invariably overstated things. "What've they +been up to, Dar?" he asked. "Come on, you can tell me over a hot cup +of restno." + +"I've been practically living on the stuff for the last two dren," +said Darquelnoy hopelessly. "Well, I suppose another cup won't kill +me. Come on to my quarters." + +"I've worked up a fine thirst on the trip," Ebor told him. + + * * * * * + +The two walked down the long corridor together and Ebor said, "Well? +What happened?" + +"They came here," Darquelnoy told him simply. At Ebor's shocked look, +he rippled in wan amusement and said, "Oh, it wasn't as bad as it +might have been, I suppose. It was just that we had to rush around so +frantically, unloading and dismantling the dome, getting this place +ready--" + +"What do you mean, they _came_ here?" demanded Ebor. + +"They are absolutely the worst creatures for secrecy in the entire +galaxy!" exclaimed Darquelnoy in irritation. "Absolutely the worst." + +"Then you've picked up at least one of their habits," Ebor told him. +"Now stop talking in circles and tell me what happened." + +"They built a spaceship, is the long and the short of it," Darquelnoy +answered. + +Ebor stopped in astonishment. "No!" + +"Don't tell me no!" cried Darquelnoy. "I _saw_ it!" He was obviously +at his wit's end. + +"It's unbelievable," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy. He led the way into his quarters, motioned +Ebor to a perch, and rang for his orderly. "It was just a little +remote-controlled apparatus, of course," he said. "The fledgling +attempt, you know. But it circled this Moon here, busily taking +pictures, and went right back to the planet again, giving us all a +terrible fright. There hadn't been the slightest indication they were +planning anything _that_ spectacular." + +"None?" asked Ebor. "Not a hint?" + +"Oh, they've been boasting about doing some such thing for ages," +Darquelnoy told him. "But there was never any indication that they +were finally serious about it. They have all sorts of military +secrecy, of course, and so you never know a thing is going to happen +until it does." + +"Did they get a picture of the dome?" + +"Thankfully, no. And before they had a chance to try again, I whipped +everything underground." + +"It must have been hectic," Ebor said sympathetically. + +"It was," said Darquelnoy simply. + +The orderly entered. Darquelnoy told him, "Two restno," and he left +again. + +"I can't imagine them making a spaceship," said Ebor thoughtfully. "I +would have thought they'd have blown themselves up long before +reaching that stage." + +"I would have thought so, too," said Darquelnoy. "But there it is. At +the moment, they've divided themselves into two camps--generally +speaking, that is--and the two sides are trying like mad to outdo each +other in everything. As a part of it, they're shooting all sorts of +rubbish into space and crowing every time a piece of the other side's +rubbish malfunctions." + +"They could go on that way indefinitely," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy gloomily. "And here we sit." + +Ebor nodded, studying his friend. "You don't suppose this is all a +waste of time, do you?" he asked, after a minute. + +Darquelnoy shook a tentacle in negation. "Not at all, not at all. +They'll get around to it, sooner or later. They're still boasting +themselves into the proper frame of mind, that's all." + +Ebor rippled in sympathetic amusement. "I imagine you sometimes wish +you could give them a little prodding in the right direction," he +said. + +Darquelnoy fluttered his tentacles in horror, crying, "Don't even +_think_ of such a thing!" + +"I know, I know," said Ebor hastily. "The laws--" + +"Never mind the laws," snapped Darquelnoy. "I'm not even thinking +about the laws. Frankly, if it would do any good, I might even +consider breaking one or two of the laws, and the devil with my +conditioning." + +"You _are_ upset," said Ebor at that. + +"But if we were to interfere with those creatures up there," continued +Darquelnoy, "interfere with them in any way at all, it would be +absolutely disastrous." + +The orderly returned at that point, with two steaming cups of restno. +Darquelnoy and Ebor accepted the cups and the orderly left, making a +sloppy tentacle-cross salute, which the two ignored. + + * * * * * + +"I wasn't talking necessarily about attacking them, you know," said +Ebor, returning to the subject. + +"Neither was I," Darquelnoy told him. "We wouldn't have to attack +them. All we would have to do is let them know we're here. Not even +_why_ we're here, just the simple fact of our presence. That would be +enough. _They_ would attack _us_." + +Ebor extended his eyes in surprise. "As vicious as all that?" + +"Chilling," Darquelnoy told him. "Absolutely chilling." + +"Then I'm surprised they haven't blown themselves to pieces long +before this." + +"Oh, well," said Darquelnoy, "you see, they're cowards, too. They have +to boast and brag and shout a while before they finally get to clawing +and biting at one another." + +Ebor waved a tentacle. "Don't make it so vivid." + +"Sorry," apologized Darquelnoy. He drained his cup of restno. "Out +here," he said, "living next door to the little beasts day after day, +one begins to lose one's sensibilities." + +"It has been a long time," agreed Ebor. + +"Longer than we had originally anticipated," Darquelnoy said frankly. +"We've been ready to move in for I don't know how long. And instead we +just sit here and wait. Which isn't good for morale, either." + +"No, I don't imagine it is." + +"There's already a theory among some of the workmen that the blow-up +just isn't going to happen, ever. And since that ship went circling +by, of course, morale has hit a new low." + +"It would have been nasty if they'd spotted you," said Ebor. + +"Nasty?" echoed Darquelnoy. "Catastrophic, you mean. All that crowd up +there needs is an enemy, and it doesn't much matter to them who that +enemy is. If they were to suspect that we were here, they'd forget +their own little squabbles at once and start killing us instead. And +that, of course, would mean that they'd be united, for the first time +in their history, and who knows how long it would take them before +they'd get back to killing one another again." + +"Well," said Ebor, "you're underground now. And it can't possibly take +them _too_ much longer." + +"One wouldn't think so," agreed Darquelnoy. "In a way," he added, +"that spaceship was a hopeful sign. It means that they'll be sending a +manned ship along pretty soon, and that should do the trick. As soon +as one side has a base on the Moon, the other side is bound to get +things started." + +"A relief for you, eh?" said Ebor. + +"You know," said Darquelnoy thoughtfully, "I can't help thinking I was +born in the wrong age. All this scrabbling around, searching +everywhere for suitable planets. Back when the Universe was younger, +there were lots and lots of planets to colonize. Now the old problem +of half-life is taking its toll, and we can't even hope to keep up +with the birth rate any more. If it weren't for the occasional planets +like that one up there, I don't know what we'd do." + +"Don't worry," Ebor told him. "They'll have their atomic war pretty +soon, and leave us a nice high-radiation planet to colonize." + +"I certainly hope it's soon," said Darquelnoy. "This waiting gets on +one's nerves." He rang for the orderly. + + +THE END + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. Westlake + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30474 *** diff --git a/30474-h.zip b/30474-h.zip new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b97721b Binary files /dev/null and b/30474-h.zip differ diff --git a/30474-h/30474-h.htm b/30474-h/30474-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..57564ed --- /dev/null +++ b/30474-h/30474-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,548 @@ + + + + + + + They Also Serve, by Donald E. Westlake + + + + + + +
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30474 ***
+ +
+

This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact & Fiction September 1961. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.

+
+
 
+
  +
+ Various scenes of a satellite circling the moon +
+
+ A lumpy man-like alien with 4 eyes holds what appears to be a coffee cup. +
+

THEY ALSO SERVE

+

By DONALD E. + WESTLAKE

+

Why should people hate + vultures? After all, a vulture + never kills anyone…

+

Illustrated by Douglas

+
+ + +

 TThe launch carrying the +mail, supplies and replacements +eased slowly +in toward the base, +keeping the bulk of the +Moon between itself and Earth. Captain +Ebor, seated at the controls, guided +the ship to the rocky uneven +ground with the easy carelessness of +long practice, then cut the drive, got +to his walking tentacles, and +stretched. Donning his spacesuit, he +left the ship to go over to the dome +and meet Darquelnoy, the base commander.

+ +

An open ground-car was waiting +for him beside the ship. The driver, +encased in his spacesuit, crossed tentacles +in a sloppy salute, and Ebor returned +the gesture quite as sloppily. +Here on the periphery, cast formalities +were all but dispensed with.

+ +

Ebor stood for a moment and +watched the unloading. The cargo +crew, used to working in spacesuits, +had one truck already half full. The +replacements, unused to spacesuits +and, in addition, awed and a bit +startled by the bleakness of this satellite, +were moving awkwardly down +the ramp.

+ +

Satisfied that the unloading was +proceeding smoothly, Ebor climbed +aboard the ground-car, awkward in +his suit, and settled back heavily in +the seat to try to get used to gravity +again. The gravity of this Moon was +slight, of course—barely one-sixth +the gravity of the Home World or +most of the colonies—but it still +took getting used to, after a long +trip in free-fall.

+ +

The driver sat at the controls, and +the car jerked into motion. Ebor, +looking up, noticed for the first time +that the dome wasn’t there any more. +The main dome, housing the staff and +equipment of the base, just wasn’t +there.

+ +

And the driver, he now saw, was +aiming the car toward the nearby +crater wall. Extending two of his +eyes till they almost touched the +face-plate of his helmet, he could see +activity at the base of the crater wall, +and what looked like an air-lock entrance. +He wondered what had +caused the change, which had obviously +been done at top speed. The +last time he’d been here, not very +long ago, the dome had still been intact, +and there had been no hint of +any impending move underground.

+ +

The driver steered the car into the +open air lock, and they waited until +the first cargo truck had lumbered in +after them. Then the outer door +closed, the pumps were turned on, +and in a minute the red light flashed +over the inner door. Ebor removed +the spacesuit gratefully, left it in the +car, and walked clumsily through the +inner door into the new base.

+ +

A good job had been done on it, +for all the speed. Rooms and corridors +has been melted out of the rock, the +floors had been carpeted, the walls +painted, and the ceiling lined with +light panels. All of the furnishings +had been transferred here from the +original dome, and the result looked, +on the whole, quite livable. As livable +as the dome had been, at least.

+ +

But the base commander, Darquelnoy, + waiting for his old friend Ebor +near the inner door of the lock, +looked anything but happy with the +arrangement. At Ebor’s entrance he +raised a limp tentacle in weary greeting +and said, “Come in, my friend, +come in. Tell me the new jokes from +home. I could use some cheering up.”

+ +

“None worth telling,” said Ebor. +He looked around. “What’s happened +here?” he asked. “Why’ve you +gone underground? Why do you +need cheering up?”

+ +

Darquelnoy clicked his eyes in despair. +“Those things!” he cried. +“Those annoying little creatures on +that blasted planet up there!”

+ +

Ebor repressed an amused ripple. +He knew Darquelnoy well enough to +know that the commander invariably +overstated things. “What’ve they +been up to, Dar?” he asked. “Come +on, you can tell me over a hot cup of +restno.”

+ +

“I’ve been practically living on the +stuff for the last two dren,” said Darquelnoy +hopelessly. “Well, I suppose +another cup won’t kill me. Come on to +my quarters.”

+ +

“I’ve worked up a fine thirst on the +trip,” Ebor told him.

+ +
+ +

The two walked down the long +corridor together and Ebor said, +“Well? What happened?”

+ +

“They came here,” Darquelnoy +told him simply. At Ebor’s shocked +look, he rippled in wan amusement +and said, “Oh, it wasn’t as bad as it +might have been, I suppose. It was +just that we had to rush around so +frantically, unloading and dismantling +the dome, getting this place +ready—”

+ +

“What do you mean, they came +here?” demanded Ebor.

+ +

“They are absolutely the worst +creatures for secrecy in the entire +galaxy!” exclaimed Darquelnoy in irritation. +“Absolutely the worst.”

+ +

“Then you’ve picked up at least +one of their habits,” Ebor told him. +“Now stop talking in circles and tell +me what happened.”

+ +

“They built a spaceship, is the long +and the short of it,” Darquelnoy answered.

+ +

Ebor stopped in astonishment. +“No!”

+ +

“Don’t tell me no!” cried Darquelnoy. +“I saw it!” He was obviously at +his wit’s end.

+ +

“It’s unbelievable,” said Ebor.

+ +

“I know,” said Darquelnoy. He led +the way into his quarters, motioned +Ebor to a perch, and rang for his orderly. +“It was just a little remote-controlled +apparatus, of course,” he +said. “The fledgling attempt, you +know. But it circled this Moon here, +busily taking pictures, and went right +back to the planet again, giving us all +a terrible fright. There hadn’t been +the slightest indication they were +planning anything that spectacular.”

+ +

“None?” asked Ebor. “Not a +hint?”

+ +

“Oh, they’ve been boasting about +doing some such thing for ages,” +Darquelnoy told him. “But there was +never any indication that they were +finally serious about it. They have all +sorts of military secrecy, of course, +and so you never know a thing is + going to happen until it does.”

+ +

“Did they get a picture of the dome?”

+ +

“Thankfully, no. And before they +had a chance to try again, I whipped +everything underground.”

+ +

“It must have been hectic,” Ebor +said sympathetically.

+ +

“It was,” said Darquelnoy simply.

+ +

The orderly entered. Darquelnoy +told him, “Two restno,” and he left +again.

+ +

“I can’t imagine them making a +spaceship,” said Ebor thoughtfully. +“I would have thought they’d have +blown themselves up long before +reaching that stage.”

+ +

“I would have thought so, too,” said +Darquelnoy. “But there it is. At the +moment, they’ve divided themselves +into two camps—generally speaking, +that is—and the two sides are trying +like mad to outdo each other in everything. +As a part of it, they’re shooting +all sorts of rubbish into space and +crowing every time a piece of the +other side’s rubbish malfunctions.”

+ +

“They could go on that way indefinitely,” +said Ebor.

+ +

“I know,” said Darquelnoy gloomily. +“And here we sit.”

+ +

Ebor nodded, studying his friend. +“You don’t suppose this is all a waste +of time, do you?” he asked, after a +minute.

+ +

Darquelnoy shook a tentacle in +negation. “Not at all, not at all. +They’ll get around to it, sooner or +later. They’re still boasting themselves +into the proper frame of mind, +that’s all.”

+ +

Ebor rippled in sympathetic + amusement. “I imagine you sometimes +wish you could give them a little +prodding in the right direction,” +he said.

+ +

Darquelnoy fluttered his tentacles +in horror, crying, “Don’t even think +of such a thing!”

+ +

“I know, I know,” said Ebor hastily. +“The laws—”

+ +

“Never mind the laws,” snapped +Darquelnoy. “I’m not even thinking +about the laws. Frankly, if it would +do any good, I might even consider +breaking one or two of the laws, and +the devil with my conditioning.”

+ +

“You are upset,” said Ebor at that.

+ +

“But if we were to interfere with +those creatures up there,” continued +Darquelnoy, “interfere with them in +any way at all, it would be absolutely +disastrous.”

+ +

The orderly returned at that point, +with two steaming cups of restno. +Darquelnoy and Ebor accepted the +cups and the orderly left, making a +sloppy tentacle-cross salute, which +the two ignored.

+ +
+ +

“I wasn’t talking necessarily about +attacking them, you know,” said Ebor, +returning to the subject.

+ +

“Neither was I,” Darquelnoy told +him. “We wouldn’t have to attack +them. All we would have to do is let +them know we’re here. Not even why +we’re here, just the simple fact of our +presence. That would be enough. +They would attack us.”

+ +

Ebor extended his eyes in surprise. +“As vicious as all that?”

+ +

“Chilling,” Darquelnoy told him. +“Absolutely chilling.”

+ +

 “Then I’m surprised they haven’t +blown themselves to pieces long before +this.”

+ +

“Oh, well,” said Darquelnoy, “you +see, they’re cowards, too. They have +to boast and brag and shout a while +before they finally get to clawing +and biting at one another.”

+ +

Ebor waved a tentacle. “Don’t make +it so vivid.”

+ +

“Sorry,” apologized Darquelnoy. +He drained his cup of restno. “Out +here,” he said, “living next door to the +little beasts day after day, one begins +to lose one’s sensibilities.”

+ +

“It has been a long time,” agreed +Ebor.

+ +

“Longer than we had originally +anticipated,” Darquelnoy said frankly. +“We’ve been ready to move in for +I don’t know how long. And instead +we just sit here and wait. Which +isn’t good for morale, either.”

+ +

“No, I don’t imagine it is.”

+ +

“There’s already a theory among +some of the workmen that the blow-up +just isn’t going to happen, ever. +And since that ship went circling by, +of course, morale has hit a new low.”

+ +

“It would have been nasty if they’d +spotted you,” said Ebor.

+ +

“Nasty?” echoed Darquelnoy. “Catastrophic, +you mean. All that crowd +up there needs is an enemy, and it +doesn’t much matter to them who +that enemy is. If they were to suspect +that we were here, they’d forget their +own little squabbles at once and start +killing us instead. And that, of course, +would mean that they’d be united, for +the first time in their history, and +who knows how long it would take +them before they’d get back to killing +one another again.”

+ +

“Well,” said Ebor, “you’re underground +now. And it can’t possibly +take them too much longer.”

+ +

“One wouldn’t think so,” agreed +Darquelnoy. “In a way,” he added, +“that spaceship was a hopeful sign. +It means that they’ll be sending a +manned ship along pretty soon, and +that should do the trick. As soon as +one side has a base on the Moon, the +other side is bound to get things +started.”

+ +

“A relief for you, eh?” said Ebor.

+ +

“You know,” said Darquelnoy +thoughtfully, “I can’t help thinking I +was born in the wrong age. All this +scrabbling around, searching everywhere +for suitable planets. Back when +the Universe was younger, there were +lots and lots of planets to colonize. +Now the old problem of half-life is +taking its toll, and we can’t even hope +to keep up with the birth rate any +more. If it weren’t for the occasional +planets like that one up there, I don’t +know what we’d do.”

+ +

“Don’t worry,” Ebor told him. +“They’ll have their atomic war pretty +soon, and leave us a nice high-radiation +planet to colonize.”

+ +

“I certainly hope it’s soon,” said +Darquelnoy. “This waiting gets on +one’s nerves.” He rang for the orderly.

+ +
+

THE END

+
+ +
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30474 ***
+ + diff --git a/30474-h/images/t.png b/30474-h/images/t.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..45586b0 Binary files /dev/null and b/30474-h/images/t.png differ diff --git a/30474-h/images/title-1.png b/30474-h/images/title-1.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb20090 Binary files /dev/null and b/30474-h/images/title-1.png differ diff --git a/30474-h/images/title-2.png b/30474-h/images/title-2.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..355b8e6 Binary files /dev/null and b/30474-h/images/title-2.png differ diff --git a/30474.txt b/30474.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d614413 --- /dev/null +++ b/30474.txt @@ -0,0 +1,676 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. Westlake + +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: They Also Serve + +Author: Donald E. Westlake + +Release Date: November 14, 2009 [EBook #30474] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THEY ALSO SERVE *** + + + + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact & Fiction + September 1961. Extensive research did not uncover any + evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was + renewed. + + + + +[Illustration] + +THEY ALSO SERVE + +By DONALD E. WESTLAKE + +Illustrated by Douglas + + _Why should people hate vultures? After all, a vulture never + kills anyone..._ + + +The launch carrying the mail, supplies and replacements eased slowly +in toward the base, keeping the bulk of the Moon between itself and +Earth. Captain Ebor, seated at the controls, guided the ship to the +rocky uneven ground with the easy carelessness of long practice, then +cut the drive, got to his walking tentacles, and stretched. Donning +his spacesuit, he left the ship to go over to the dome and meet +Darquelnoy, the base commander. + +An open ground-car was waiting for him beside the ship. The driver, +encased in his spacesuit, crossed tentacles in a sloppy salute, and +Ebor returned the gesture quite as sloppily. Here on the periphery, +cast formalities were all but dispensed with. + +Ebor stood for a moment and watched the unloading. The cargo crew, +used to working in spacesuits, had one truck already half full. The +replacements, unused to spacesuits and, in addition, awed and a bit +startled by the bleakness of this satellite, were moving awkwardly +down the ramp. + +Satisfied that the unloading was proceeding smoothly, Ebor climbed +aboard the ground-car, awkward in his suit, and settled back heavily +in the seat to try to get used to gravity again. The gravity of this +Moon was slight, of course--barely one-sixth the gravity of the Home +World or most of the colonies--but it still took getting used to, +after a long trip in free-fall. + +The driver sat at the controls, and the car jerked into motion. Ebor, +looking up, noticed for the first time that the dome wasn't there any +more. The main dome, housing the staff and equipment of the base, just +wasn't there. + +And the driver, he now saw, was aiming the car toward the nearby +crater wall. Extending two of his eyes till they almost touched the +face-plate of his helmet, he could see activity at the base of the +crater wall, and what looked like an air-lock entrance. He wondered +what had caused the change, which had obviously been done at top +speed. The last time he'd been here, not very long ago, the dome had +still been intact, and there had been no hint of any impending move +underground. + +The driver steered the car into the open air lock, and they waited +until the first cargo truck had lumbered in after them. Then the outer +door closed, the pumps were turned on, and in a minute the red light +flashed over the inner door. Ebor removed the spacesuit gratefully, +left it in the car, and walked clumsily through the inner door into +the new base. + +A good job had been done on it, for all the speed. Rooms and corridors +has been melted out of the rock, the floors had been carpeted, the +walls painted, and the ceiling lined with light panels. All of the +furnishings had been transferred here from the original dome, and the +result looked, on the whole, quite livable. As livable as the dome had +been, at least. + +But the base commander, Darquelnoy, waiting for his old friend Ebor +near the inner door of the lock, looked anything but happy with the +arrangement. At Ebor's entrance he raised a limp tentacle in weary +greeting and said, "Come in, my friend, come in. Tell me the new jokes +from home. I could use some cheering up." + +"None worth telling," said Ebor. He looked around. "What's happened +here?" he asked. "Why've you gone underground? Why do you need +cheering up?" + +Darquelnoy clicked his eyes in despair. "Those _things_!" he cried. +"Those annoying little creatures on that blasted planet up there!" + +Ebor repressed an amused ripple. He knew Darquelnoy well enough to +know that the commander invariably overstated things. "What've they +been up to, Dar?" he asked. "Come on, you can tell me over a hot cup +of restno." + +"I've been practically living on the stuff for the last two dren," +said Darquelnoy hopelessly. "Well, I suppose another cup won't kill +me. Come on to my quarters." + +"I've worked up a fine thirst on the trip," Ebor told him. + + * * * * * + +The two walked down the long corridor together and Ebor said, "Well? +What happened?" + +"They came here," Darquelnoy told him simply. At Ebor's shocked look, +he rippled in wan amusement and said, "Oh, it wasn't as bad as it +might have been, I suppose. It was just that we had to rush around so +frantically, unloading and dismantling the dome, getting this place +ready--" + +"What do you mean, they _came_ here?" demanded Ebor. + +"They are absolutely the worst creatures for secrecy in the entire +galaxy!" exclaimed Darquelnoy in irritation. "Absolutely the worst." + +"Then you've picked up at least one of their habits," Ebor told him. +"Now stop talking in circles and tell me what happened." + +"They built a spaceship, is the long and the short of it," Darquelnoy +answered. + +Ebor stopped in astonishment. "No!" + +"Don't tell me no!" cried Darquelnoy. "I _saw_ it!" He was obviously +at his wit's end. + +"It's unbelievable," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy. He led the way into his quarters, motioned +Ebor to a perch, and rang for his orderly. "It was just a little +remote-controlled apparatus, of course," he said. "The fledgling +attempt, you know. But it circled this Moon here, busily taking +pictures, and went right back to the planet again, giving us all a +terrible fright. There hadn't been the slightest indication they were +planning anything _that_ spectacular." + +"None?" asked Ebor. "Not a hint?" + +"Oh, they've been boasting about doing some such thing for ages," +Darquelnoy told him. "But there was never any indication that they +were finally serious about it. They have all sorts of military +secrecy, of course, and so you never know a thing is going to happen +until it does." + +"Did they get a picture of the dome?" + +"Thankfully, no. And before they had a chance to try again, I whipped +everything underground." + +"It must have been hectic," Ebor said sympathetically. + +"It was," said Darquelnoy simply. + +The orderly entered. Darquelnoy told him, "Two restno," and he left +again. + +"I can't imagine them making a spaceship," said Ebor thoughtfully. "I +would have thought they'd have blown themselves up long before +reaching that stage." + +"I would have thought so, too," said Darquelnoy. "But there it is. At +the moment, they've divided themselves into two camps--generally +speaking, that is--and the two sides are trying like mad to outdo each +other in everything. As a part of it, they're shooting all sorts of +rubbish into space and crowing every time a piece of the other side's +rubbish malfunctions." + +"They could go on that way indefinitely," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy gloomily. "And here we sit." + +Ebor nodded, studying his friend. "You don't suppose this is all a +waste of time, do you?" he asked, after a minute. + +Darquelnoy shook a tentacle in negation. "Not at all, not at all. +They'll get around to it, sooner or later. They're still boasting +themselves into the proper frame of mind, that's all." + +Ebor rippled in sympathetic amusement. "I imagine you sometimes wish +you could give them a little prodding in the right direction," he +said. + +Darquelnoy fluttered his tentacles in horror, crying, "Don't even +_think_ of such a thing!" + +"I know, I know," said Ebor hastily. "The laws--" + +"Never mind the laws," snapped Darquelnoy. "I'm not even thinking +about the laws. Frankly, if it would do any good, I might even +consider breaking one or two of the laws, and the devil with my +conditioning." + +"You _are_ upset," said Ebor at that. + +"But if we were to interfere with those creatures up there," continued +Darquelnoy, "interfere with them in any way at all, it would be +absolutely disastrous." + +The orderly returned at that point, with two steaming cups of restno. +Darquelnoy and Ebor accepted the cups and the orderly left, making a +sloppy tentacle-cross salute, which the two ignored. + + * * * * * + +"I wasn't talking necessarily about attacking them, you know," said +Ebor, returning to the subject. + +"Neither was I," Darquelnoy told him. "We wouldn't have to attack +them. All we would have to do is let them know we're here. Not even +_why_ we're here, just the simple fact of our presence. That would be +enough. _They_ would attack _us_." + +Ebor extended his eyes in surprise. "As vicious as all that?" + +"Chilling," Darquelnoy told him. "Absolutely chilling." + +"Then I'm surprised they haven't blown themselves to pieces long +before this." + +"Oh, well," said Darquelnoy, "you see, they're cowards, too. They have +to boast and brag and shout a while before they finally get to clawing +and biting at one another." + +Ebor waved a tentacle. "Don't make it so vivid." + +"Sorry," apologized Darquelnoy. He drained his cup of restno. "Out +here," he said, "living next door to the little beasts day after day, +one begins to lose one's sensibilities." + +"It has been a long time," agreed Ebor. + +"Longer than we had originally anticipated," Darquelnoy said frankly. +"We've been ready to move in for I don't know how long. And instead we +just sit here and wait. Which isn't good for morale, either." + +"No, I don't imagine it is." + +"There's already a theory among some of the workmen that the blow-up +just isn't going to happen, ever. And since that ship went circling +by, of course, morale has hit a new low." + +"It would have been nasty if they'd spotted you," said Ebor. + +"Nasty?" echoed Darquelnoy. "Catastrophic, you mean. All that crowd up +there needs is an enemy, and it doesn't much matter to them who that +enemy is. If they were to suspect that we were here, they'd forget +their own little squabbles at once and start killing us instead. And +that, of course, would mean that they'd be united, for the first time +in their history, and who knows how long it would take them before +they'd get back to killing one another again." + +"Well," said Ebor, "you're underground now. And it can't possibly take +them _too_ much longer." + +"One wouldn't think so," agreed Darquelnoy. "In a way," he added, +"that spaceship was a hopeful sign. It means that they'll be sending a +manned ship along pretty soon, and that should do the trick. As soon +as one side has a base on the Moon, the other side is bound to get +things started." + +"A relief for you, eh?" said Ebor. + +"You know," said Darquelnoy thoughtfully, "I can't help thinking I was +born in the wrong age. All this scrabbling around, searching +everywhere for suitable planets. Back when the Universe was younger, +there were lots and lots of planets to colonize. Now the old problem +of half-life is taking its toll, and we can't even hope to keep up +with the birth rate any more. If it weren't for the occasional planets +like that one up there, I don't know what we'd do." + +"Don't worry," Ebor told him. "They'll have their atomic war pretty +soon, and leave us a nice high-radiation planet to colonize." + +"I certainly hope it's soon," said Darquelnoy. "This waiting gets on +one's nerves." He rang for the orderly. + + +THE END + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. 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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. Westlake
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+Title: They Also Serve
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+Author: Donald E. Westlake
+
+Release Date: November 14, 2009 [EBook #30474]
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+Language: English
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This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact & Fiction September 1961. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.

+
+
 
+
  +
+ Various scenes of a satellite circling the moon +
+
+ A lumpy man-like alien with 4 eyes holds what appears to be a coffee cup. +
+

THEY ALSO SERVE

+

By DONALD E. + WESTLAKE

+

Why should people hate + vultures? After all, a vulture + never kills anyone…

+

Illustrated by Douglas

+
+ + +

 TThe launch carrying the +mail, supplies and replacements +eased slowly +in toward the base, +keeping the bulk of the +Moon between itself and Earth. Captain +Ebor, seated at the controls, guided +the ship to the rocky uneven +ground with the easy carelessness of +long practice, then cut the drive, got +to his walking tentacles, and +stretched. Donning his spacesuit, he +left the ship to go over to the dome +and meet Darquelnoy, the base commander.

+ +

An open ground-car was waiting +for him beside the ship. The driver, +encased in his spacesuit, crossed tentacles +in a sloppy salute, and Ebor returned +the gesture quite as sloppily. +Here on the periphery, cast formalities +were all but dispensed with.

+ +

Ebor stood for a moment and +watched the unloading. The cargo +crew, used to working in spacesuits, +had one truck already half full. The +replacements, unused to spacesuits +and, in addition, awed and a bit +startled by the bleakness of this satellite, +were moving awkwardly down +the ramp.

+ +

Satisfied that the unloading was +proceeding smoothly, Ebor climbed +aboard the ground-car, awkward in +his suit, and settled back heavily in +the seat to try to get used to gravity +again. The gravity of this Moon was +slight, of course—barely one-sixth +the gravity of the Home World or +most of the colonies—but it still +took getting used to, after a long +trip in free-fall.

+ +

The driver sat at the controls, and +the car jerked into motion. Ebor, +looking up, noticed for the first time +that the dome wasn’t there any more. +The main dome, housing the staff and +equipment of the base, just wasn’t +there.

+ +

And the driver, he now saw, was +aiming the car toward the nearby +crater wall. Extending two of his +eyes till they almost touched the +face-plate of his helmet, he could see +activity at the base of the crater wall, +and what looked like an air-lock entrance. +He wondered what had +caused the change, which had obviously +been done at top speed. The +last time he’d been here, not very +long ago, the dome had still been intact, +and there had been no hint of +any impending move underground.

+ +

The driver steered the car into the +open air lock, and they waited until +the first cargo truck had lumbered in +after them. Then the outer door +closed, the pumps were turned on, +and in a minute the red light flashed +over the inner door. Ebor removed +the spacesuit gratefully, left it in the +car, and walked clumsily through the +inner door into the new base.

+ +

A good job had been done on it, +for all the speed. Rooms and corridors +has been melted out of the rock, the +floors had been carpeted, the walls +painted, and the ceiling lined with +light panels. All of the furnishings +had been transferred here from the +original dome, and the result looked, +on the whole, quite livable. As livable +as the dome had been, at least.

+ +

But the base commander, Darquelnoy, + waiting for his old friend Ebor +near the inner door of the lock, +looked anything but happy with the +arrangement. At Ebor’s entrance he +raised a limp tentacle in weary greeting +and said, “Come in, my friend, +come in. Tell me the new jokes from +home. I could use some cheering up.”

+ +

“None worth telling,” said Ebor. +He looked around. “What’s happened +here?” he asked. “Why’ve you +gone underground? Why do you +need cheering up?”

+ +

Darquelnoy clicked his eyes in despair. +“Those things!” he cried. +“Those annoying little creatures on +that blasted planet up there!”

+ +

Ebor repressed an amused ripple. +He knew Darquelnoy well enough to +know that the commander invariably +overstated things. “What’ve they +been up to, Dar?” he asked. “Come +on, you can tell me over a hot cup of +restno.”

+ +

“I’ve been practically living on the +stuff for the last two dren,” said Darquelnoy +hopelessly. “Well, I suppose +another cup won’t kill me. Come on to +my quarters.”

+ +

“I’ve worked up a fine thirst on the +trip,” Ebor told him.

+ +
+ +

The two walked down the long +corridor together and Ebor said, +“Well? What happened?”

+ +

“They came here,” Darquelnoy +told him simply. At Ebor’s shocked +look, he rippled in wan amusement +and said, “Oh, it wasn’t as bad as it +might have been, I suppose. It was +just that we had to rush around so +frantically, unloading and dismantling +the dome, getting this place +ready—”

+ +

“What do you mean, they came +here?” demanded Ebor.

+ +

“They are absolutely the worst +creatures for secrecy in the entire +galaxy!” exclaimed Darquelnoy in irritation. +“Absolutely the worst.”

+ +

“Then you’ve picked up at least +one of their habits,” Ebor told him. +“Now stop talking in circles and tell +me what happened.”

+ +

“They built a spaceship, is the long +and the short of it,” Darquelnoy answered.

+ +

Ebor stopped in astonishment. +“No!”

+ +

“Don’t tell me no!” cried Darquelnoy. +“I saw it!” He was obviously at +his wit’s end.

+ +

“It’s unbelievable,” said Ebor.

+ +

“I know,” said Darquelnoy. He led +the way into his quarters, motioned +Ebor to a perch, and rang for his orderly. +“It was just a little remote-controlled +apparatus, of course,” he +said. “The fledgling attempt, you +know. But it circled this Moon here, +busily taking pictures, and went right +back to the planet again, giving us all +a terrible fright. There hadn’t been +the slightest indication they were +planning anything that spectacular.”

+ +

“None?” asked Ebor. “Not a +hint?”

+ +

“Oh, they’ve been boasting about +doing some such thing for ages,” +Darquelnoy told him. “But there was +never any indication that they were +finally serious about it. They have all +sorts of military secrecy, of course, +and so you never know a thing is + going to happen until it does.”

+ +

“Did they get a picture of the dome?”

+ +

“Thankfully, no. And before they +had a chance to try again, I whipped +everything underground.”

+ +

“It must have been hectic,” Ebor +said sympathetically.

+ +

“It was,” said Darquelnoy simply.

+ +

The orderly entered. Darquelnoy +told him, “Two restno,” and he left +again.

+ +

“I can’t imagine them making a +spaceship,” said Ebor thoughtfully. +“I would have thought they’d have +blown themselves up long before +reaching that stage.”

+ +

“I would have thought so, too,” said +Darquelnoy. “But there it is. At the +moment, they’ve divided themselves +into two camps—generally speaking, +that is—and the two sides are trying +like mad to outdo each other in everything. +As a part of it, they’re shooting +all sorts of rubbish into space and +crowing every time a piece of the +other side’s rubbish malfunctions.”

+ +

“They could go on that way indefinitely,” +said Ebor.

+ +

“I know,” said Darquelnoy gloomily. +“And here we sit.”

+ +

Ebor nodded, studying his friend. +“You don’t suppose this is all a waste +of time, do you?” he asked, after a +minute.

+ +

Darquelnoy shook a tentacle in +negation. “Not at all, not at all. +They’ll get around to it, sooner or +later. They’re still boasting themselves +into the proper frame of mind, +that’s all.”

+ +

Ebor rippled in sympathetic + amusement. “I imagine you sometimes +wish you could give them a little +prodding in the right direction,” +he said.

+ +

Darquelnoy fluttered his tentacles +in horror, crying, “Don’t even think +of such a thing!”

+ +

“I know, I know,” said Ebor hastily. +“The laws—”

+ +

“Never mind the laws,” snapped +Darquelnoy. “I’m not even thinking +about the laws. Frankly, if it would +do any good, I might even consider +breaking one or two of the laws, and +the devil with my conditioning.”

+ +

“You are upset,” said Ebor at that.

+ +

“But if we were to interfere with +those creatures up there,” continued +Darquelnoy, “interfere with them in +any way at all, it would be absolutely +disastrous.”

+ +

The orderly returned at that point, +with two steaming cups of restno. +Darquelnoy and Ebor accepted the +cups and the orderly left, making a +sloppy tentacle-cross salute, which +the two ignored.

+ +
+ +

“I wasn’t talking necessarily about +attacking them, you know,” said Ebor, +returning to the subject.

+ +

“Neither was I,” Darquelnoy told +him. “We wouldn’t have to attack +them. All we would have to do is let +them know we’re here. Not even why +we’re here, just the simple fact of our +presence. That would be enough. +They would attack us.”

+ +

Ebor extended his eyes in surprise. +“As vicious as all that?”

+ +

“Chilling,” Darquelnoy told him. +“Absolutely chilling.”

+ +

 “Then I’m surprised they haven’t +blown themselves to pieces long before +this.”

+ +

“Oh, well,” said Darquelnoy, “you +see, they’re cowards, too. They have +to boast and brag and shout a while +before they finally get to clawing +and biting at one another.”

+ +

Ebor waved a tentacle. “Don’t make +it so vivid.”

+ +

“Sorry,” apologized Darquelnoy. +He drained his cup of restno. “Out +here,” he said, “living next door to the +little beasts day after day, one begins +to lose one’s sensibilities.”

+ +

“It has been a long time,” agreed +Ebor.

+ +

“Longer than we had originally +anticipated,” Darquelnoy said frankly. +“We’ve been ready to move in for +I don’t know how long. And instead +we just sit here and wait. Which +isn’t good for morale, either.”

+ +

“No, I don’t imagine it is.”

+ +

“There’s already a theory among +some of the workmen that the blow-up +just isn’t going to happen, ever. +And since that ship went circling by, +of course, morale has hit a new low.”

+ +

“It would have been nasty if they’d +spotted you,” said Ebor.

+ +

“Nasty?” echoed Darquelnoy. “Catastrophic, +you mean. All that crowd +up there needs is an enemy, and it +doesn’t much matter to them who +that enemy is. If they were to suspect +that we were here, they’d forget their +own little squabbles at once and start +killing us instead. And that, of course, +would mean that they’d be united, for +the first time in their history, and +who knows how long it would take +them before they’d get back to killing +one another again.”

+ +

“Well,” said Ebor, “you’re underground +now. And it can’t possibly +take them too much longer.”

+ +

“One wouldn’t think so,” agreed +Darquelnoy. “In a way,” he added, +“that spaceship was a hopeful sign. +It means that they’ll be sending a +manned ship along pretty soon, and +that should do the trick. As soon as +one side has a base on the Moon, the +other side is bound to get things +started.”

+ +

“A relief for you, eh?” said Ebor.

+ +

“You know,” said Darquelnoy +thoughtfully, “I can’t help thinking I +was born in the wrong age. All this +scrabbling around, searching everywhere +for suitable planets. Back when +the Universe was younger, there were +lots and lots of planets to colonize. +Now the old problem of half-life is +taking its toll, and we can’t even hope +to keep up with the birth rate any +more. If it weren’t for the occasional +planets like that one up there, I don’t +know what we’d do.”

+ +

“Don’t worry,” Ebor told him. +“They’ll have their atomic war pretty +soon, and leave us a nice high-radiation +planet to colonize.”

+ +

“I certainly hope it’s soon,” said +Darquelnoy. “This waiting gets on +one’s nerves.” He rang for the orderly.

+ +
+

THE END

+
+ + + + + + + +
+
+
+
+
+
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+ + + diff --git a/old/30474-h/images/t.png b/old/30474-h/images/t.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..45586b0 Binary files /dev/null and b/old/30474-h/images/t.png differ diff --git a/old/30474-h/images/title-1.png b/old/30474-h/images/title-1.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb20090 Binary files /dev/null and b/old/30474-h/images/title-1.png differ diff --git a/old/30474-h/images/title-2.png b/old/30474-h/images/title-2.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..355b8e6 Binary files /dev/null and b/old/30474-h/images/title-2.png differ diff --git a/old/30474.txt b/old/30474.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d614413 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/30474.txt @@ -0,0 +1,676 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. Westlake + +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: They Also Serve + +Author: Donald E. Westlake + +Release Date: November 14, 2009 [EBook #30474] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THEY ALSO SERVE *** + + + + +Produced by Greg Weeks, Barbara Tozier and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + This etext was produced from Analog Science Fact & Fiction + September 1961. Extensive research did not uncover any + evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was + renewed. + + + + +[Illustration] + +THEY ALSO SERVE + +By DONALD E. WESTLAKE + +Illustrated by Douglas + + _Why should people hate vultures? After all, a vulture never + kills anyone..._ + + +The launch carrying the mail, supplies and replacements eased slowly +in toward the base, keeping the bulk of the Moon between itself and +Earth. Captain Ebor, seated at the controls, guided the ship to the +rocky uneven ground with the easy carelessness of long practice, then +cut the drive, got to his walking tentacles, and stretched. Donning +his spacesuit, he left the ship to go over to the dome and meet +Darquelnoy, the base commander. + +An open ground-car was waiting for him beside the ship. The driver, +encased in his spacesuit, crossed tentacles in a sloppy salute, and +Ebor returned the gesture quite as sloppily. Here on the periphery, +cast formalities were all but dispensed with. + +Ebor stood for a moment and watched the unloading. The cargo crew, +used to working in spacesuits, had one truck already half full. The +replacements, unused to spacesuits and, in addition, awed and a bit +startled by the bleakness of this satellite, were moving awkwardly +down the ramp. + +Satisfied that the unloading was proceeding smoothly, Ebor climbed +aboard the ground-car, awkward in his suit, and settled back heavily +in the seat to try to get used to gravity again. The gravity of this +Moon was slight, of course--barely one-sixth the gravity of the Home +World or most of the colonies--but it still took getting used to, +after a long trip in free-fall. + +The driver sat at the controls, and the car jerked into motion. Ebor, +looking up, noticed for the first time that the dome wasn't there any +more. The main dome, housing the staff and equipment of the base, just +wasn't there. + +And the driver, he now saw, was aiming the car toward the nearby +crater wall. Extending two of his eyes till they almost touched the +face-plate of his helmet, he could see activity at the base of the +crater wall, and what looked like an air-lock entrance. He wondered +what had caused the change, which had obviously been done at top +speed. The last time he'd been here, not very long ago, the dome had +still been intact, and there had been no hint of any impending move +underground. + +The driver steered the car into the open air lock, and they waited +until the first cargo truck had lumbered in after them. Then the outer +door closed, the pumps were turned on, and in a minute the red light +flashed over the inner door. Ebor removed the spacesuit gratefully, +left it in the car, and walked clumsily through the inner door into +the new base. + +A good job had been done on it, for all the speed. Rooms and corridors +has been melted out of the rock, the floors had been carpeted, the +walls painted, and the ceiling lined with light panels. All of the +furnishings had been transferred here from the original dome, and the +result looked, on the whole, quite livable. As livable as the dome had +been, at least. + +But the base commander, Darquelnoy, waiting for his old friend Ebor +near the inner door of the lock, looked anything but happy with the +arrangement. At Ebor's entrance he raised a limp tentacle in weary +greeting and said, "Come in, my friend, come in. Tell me the new jokes +from home. I could use some cheering up." + +"None worth telling," said Ebor. He looked around. "What's happened +here?" he asked. "Why've you gone underground? Why do you need +cheering up?" + +Darquelnoy clicked his eyes in despair. "Those _things_!" he cried. +"Those annoying little creatures on that blasted planet up there!" + +Ebor repressed an amused ripple. He knew Darquelnoy well enough to +know that the commander invariably overstated things. "What've they +been up to, Dar?" he asked. "Come on, you can tell me over a hot cup +of restno." + +"I've been practically living on the stuff for the last two dren," +said Darquelnoy hopelessly. "Well, I suppose another cup won't kill +me. Come on to my quarters." + +"I've worked up a fine thirst on the trip," Ebor told him. + + * * * * * + +The two walked down the long corridor together and Ebor said, "Well? +What happened?" + +"They came here," Darquelnoy told him simply. At Ebor's shocked look, +he rippled in wan amusement and said, "Oh, it wasn't as bad as it +might have been, I suppose. It was just that we had to rush around so +frantically, unloading and dismantling the dome, getting this place +ready--" + +"What do you mean, they _came_ here?" demanded Ebor. + +"They are absolutely the worst creatures for secrecy in the entire +galaxy!" exclaimed Darquelnoy in irritation. "Absolutely the worst." + +"Then you've picked up at least one of their habits," Ebor told him. +"Now stop talking in circles and tell me what happened." + +"They built a spaceship, is the long and the short of it," Darquelnoy +answered. + +Ebor stopped in astonishment. "No!" + +"Don't tell me no!" cried Darquelnoy. "I _saw_ it!" He was obviously +at his wit's end. + +"It's unbelievable," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy. He led the way into his quarters, motioned +Ebor to a perch, and rang for his orderly. "It was just a little +remote-controlled apparatus, of course," he said. "The fledgling +attempt, you know. But it circled this Moon here, busily taking +pictures, and went right back to the planet again, giving us all a +terrible fright. There hadn't been the slightest indication they were +planning anything _that_ spectacular." + +"None?" asked Ebor. "Not a hint?" + +"Oh, they've been boasting about doing some such thing for ages," +Darquelnoy told him. "But there was never any indication that they +were finally serious about it. They have all sorts of military +secrecy, of course, and so you never know a thing is going to happen +until it does." + +"Did they get a picture of the dome?" + +"Thankfully, no. And before they had a chance to try again, I whipped +everything underground." + +"It must have been hectic," Ebor said sympathetically. + +"It was," said Darquelnoy simply. + +The orderly entered. Darquelnoy told him, "Two restno," and he left +again. + +"I can't imagine them making a spaceship," said Ebor thoughtfully. "I +would have thought they'd have blown themselves up long before +reaching that stage." + +"I would have thought so, too," said Darquelnoy. "But there it is. At +the moment, they've divided themselves into two camps--generally +speaking, that is--and the two sides are trying like mad to outdo each +other in everything. As a part of it, they're shooting all sorts of +rubbish into space and crowing every time a piece of the other side's +rubbish malfunctions." + +"They could go on that way indefinitely," said Ebor. + +"I know," said Darquelnoy gloomily. "And here we sit." + +Ebor nodded, studying his friend. "You don't suppose this is all a +waste of time, do you?" he asked, after a minute. + +Darquelnoy shook a tentacle in negation. "Not at all, not at all. +They'll get around to it, sooner or later. They're still boasting +themselves into the proper frame of mind, that's all." + +Ebor rippled in sympathetic amusement. "I imagine you sometimes wish +you could give them a little prodding in the right direction," he +said. + +Darquelnoy fluttered his tentacles in horror, crying, "Don't even +_think_ of such a thing!" + +"I know, I know," said Ebor hastily. "The laws--" + +"Never mind the laws," snapped Darquelnoy. "I'm not even thinking +about the laws. Frankly, if it would do any good, I might even +consider breaking one or two of the laws, and the devil with my +conditioning." + +"You _are_ upset," said Ebor at that. + +"But if we were to interfere with those creatures up there," continued +Darquelnoy, "interfere with them in any way at all, it would be +absolutely disastrous." + +The orderly returned at that point, with two steaming cups of restno. +Darquelnoy and Ebor accepted the cups and the orderly left, making a +sloppy tentacle-cross salute, which the two ignored. + + * * * * * + +"I wasn't talking necessarily about attacking them, you know," said +Ebor, returning to the subject. + +"Neither was I," Darquelnoy told him. "We wouldn't have to attack +them. All we would have to do is let them know we're here. Not even +_why_ we're here, just the simple fact of our presence. That would be +enough. _They_ would attack _us_." + +Ebor extended his eyes in surprise. "As vicious as all that?" + +"Chilling," Darquelnoy told him. "Absolutely chilling." + +"Then I'm surprised they haven't blown themselves to pieces long +before this." + +"Oh, well," said Darquelnoy, "you see, they're cowards, too. They have +to boast and brag and shout a while before they finally get to clawing +and biting at one another." + +Ebor waved a tentacle. "Don't make it so vivid." + +"Sorry," apologized Darquelnoy. He drained his cup of restno. "Out +here," he said, "living next door to the little beasts day after day, +one begins to lose one's sensibilities." + +"It has been a long time," agreed Ebor. + +"Longer than we had originally anticipated," Darquelnoy said frankly. +"We've been ready to move in for I don't know how long. And instead we +just sit here and wait. Which isn't good for morale, either." + +"No, I don't imagine it is." + +"There's already a theory among some of the workmen that the blow-up +just isn't going to happen, ever. And since that ship went circling +by, of course, morale has hit a new low." + +"It would have been nasty if they'd spotted you," said Ebor. + +"Nasty?" echoed Darquelnoy. "Catastrophic, you mean. All that crowd up +there needs is an enemy, and it doesn't much matter to them who that +enemy is. If they were to suspect that we were here, they'd forget +their own little squabbles at once and start killing us instead. And +that, of course, would mean that they'd be united, for the first time +in their history, and who knows how long it would take them before +they'd get back to killing one another again." + +"Well," said Ebor, "you're underground now. And it can't possibly take +them _too_ much longer." + +"One wouldn't think so," agreed Darquelnoy. "In a way," he added, +"that spaceship was a hopeful sign. It means that they'll be sending a +manned ship along pretty soon, and that should do the trick. As soon +as one side has a base on the Moon, the other side is bound to get +things started." + +"A relief for you, eh?" said Ebor. + +"You know," said Darquelnoy thoughtfully, "I can't help thinking I was +born in the wrong age. All this scrabbling around, searching +everywhere for suitable planets. Back when the Universe was younger, +there were lots and lots of planets to colonize. Now the old problem +of half-life is taking its toll, and we can't even hope to keep up +with the birth rate any more. If it weren't for the occasional planets +like that one up there, I don't know what we'd do." + +"Don't worry," Ebor told him. "They'll have their atomic war pretty +soon, and leave us a nice high-radiation planet to colonize." + +"I certainly hope it's soon," said Darquelnoy. "This waiting gets on +one's nerves." He rang for the orderly. + + +THE END + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of They Also Serve, by Donald E. 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