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| author | pgww <pgww@lists.pglaf.org> | 2025-09-18 20:22:01 -0700 |
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| committer | pgww <pgww@lists.pglaf.org> | 2025-09-18 20:22:01 -0700 |
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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/76899-0.txt b/76899-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..47be0c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/76899-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,780 @@ + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76899 *** + +[Illustration] + + The Man Who Saved New York + + By Ray Cummings + + + Porky’s ego wouldn’t stay in his own body, and + that, believe it or not, was what saved the city! + + +Of course, as you know, I didn’t figure in the excitement over the +Green Giant. The newspapers and the radio boys never mentioned me, or +Lisbeth, or Baldy or even Porky Jenks. Why would they? We have kept +strictly silent about the whole affair. Not from shyness; none of us +are against a little wholesome publicity. But it never does one any +good to be billed as a first class candidate for the nut-house. So that +Green Giant who waded around in the ocean off Sandy Hook will remain a +mystery. + +Not that I can actually explain him. I can’t. He’s as much a mystery to +me as to anybody else. But, as it happened, there probably never would +have been any Green Giant at all if it hadn’t been for me. I don’t mind +telling the real facts, but I think it’s quite a bit safer for them +just to go as fiction. You can take them or leave them, so to speak. + +And there’s another angle to the thing. The war actually would have +been won by now--if Lisbeth hadn’t queered it. Hitler would have been +smashed and everything would have been just swell. I had it all +planned--and then Lisbeth put the jinx on it. I’m sorry about that. But +you’ll realize there’s not a thing I could have done. + +The queer affair began last Spring--a warmish afternoon when I was +sitting in my study trying to figure out a plot. Porky Jenks came in to +see me. I used to know Porky quite well, but hadn’t seen him for a +couple of years. He was a likeable young fellow, always with a ready +laugh which is what made him so fat, I suppose. But this was a +different Porky. He wedged himself down, collapsing in my only +armchair. His clothes were rumpled as though he’d slept in them; his +collar was wilted, hanging soggily on his bulging throat. His thin +sandy hair was plastered on his sweating forehead; he pulled out a big +blue handkerchief and mopped his face and just stared at me with pale +blue eyes that looked haunted. + +“Well, well, Porky, glad to see you,” I said. “How are you?” + +“I’m awful,” he declared. Just out of habit, I suppose, he tried to +laugh, but it was only a wan, sickly grin. “There’s--something the +matter with me, Ray. Something terrible. That’s why I’ve come to you, +see? You’re up on all that nutty stuff--the bizarre, the queer, the +unbelievable--” + +“Oh,” I said. + +He stared at me with that haunted look. “Listen,” he said, “do I look +crazy? Insane? A maniac? Tell me I’m not, Ray.” + +“You’re not,” I said. “Cheer up. What have you been doing with +yourself? Last I heard you were just finishing college.” + +“I’m a hardware salesman. Retail trade. That is, I was, but what with +the war and all, it’s no good.” + +“Tough luck,” I said. + +“It’s just as well. Walking so much made my feet hurt--they just +wouldn’t stand it.” He sighed heavily. “Maybe that’s why I’m in 4-F, +too. That and my weight--my heart. But that’s nothing serious--” + +“Oh well, that’s fine,” I agreed. “But now--you’ve got some other +trouble?” + + * * * * * + +The haunted look came back into his earnest eyes. “I’ll have to tell +you,” he agreed. “After all, that’s what I came here for.” He gulped. +“Listen,” he said, “hang onto yourself--you’ll get a shock. The thing +hit me just about a week ago. Like a bolt from the blue--I didn’t have +any warning at all. I was feeling perfectly all right, honest.” + +“What hit you?” I prompted. + +“I was just sitting by the window of my boarding house room.” His voice +had that awed, solemn tone like you use telling a ghost story. “When +all of a sudden I wasn’t myself at all. I was sitting in the chair all +right--I knew that. But also I was a man walking down the street past +my window.” + +“You were--what?” + +“A man walking past my window,” he repeated drably. “A perfectly +strange man--and I was worried because I was late getting home and my +wife’d give me hell. I was henpecked, scared to death of her, see?” + +“No, I don’t see,” I declared. + +His fat hands made a hopeless gesture. “Well, that’s what I mean, Ray. +You think I’m crazy. That’s why I can’t go see a doctor. He’d just slam +me into an asylum or something.” His chubby hands reached out and +gripped my arm. “Listen--you’ve got to believe me. Anyway--I can show +you--give you a demonstration--it’s easy enough.” + +“Is it?” I said. + +“Sure it is. You see, my ego, id, personality or something, doesn’t +seem to want to stay put in my body any more. It--it wants to wander--” + +“Let’s get this straight,” I interrupted. “You say you suddenly usurped +the mind and body of some strange man walking down the street--” + +“Yes, that’s it! Usurpsed! That’s a good word, Ray. I was sort of +conscious that he was confused, too--my usurping him that way. He kind +of resented it for a second or two--and then I guess he went blank. +Anyway, I was in full control--” + +“And what did you do? With him, I mean.” + +“Oh. Well, I remember I decided I wouldn’t bother going back to my +wife--his wife, I mean.” + +I could only nod. + +“So I went into a Bar and Grill and started to absorb whiskeys and soda +and to the devil with his wife.” + +“And then?” I prompted. + +“Well, I can remember getting pretty blurry eventually. Seems like I +was telling the bartender all my secret thoughts about the wife.” He +smiled wryly. “And then I--well, you can’t blame me, Ray--it occurred +to me I might be getting into some sort of jam. So I just--withdrew.” + +“Withdrew?” + +“I gave that little fellow back his body,” Porky said. He shrugged. +“What else could I do? I just jerked myself back to my own body--in the +chair by the window, see?” + +For a minute I couldn’t think of anything to say. I’ve juggled with +weird things like that for years--but strictly on paper, you +understand. Now, meeting one in real life gave me a creepy feeling. +Because Porky was telling me the truth. I wouldn’t doubt it. He was +plainly about frightened out of his wits. + +“You say you can do this any time you like?” I said at last. + +“Sure I can. That’s just the trouble--sometimes it’s almost +involuntarily, if I’m dozing, half asleep for instance, I just seem +suddenly to slip into it. I got into a nasty jam just last night.” + +He waited for me to ask him, what? But I just stared at him. + + * * * * * + +“Seems a man and his wife were having a big argument--the room over me +in my boarding house,” he went on. “I could hear them. I don’t know +what possessed me but all of a sudden I decided to take the wife’s +part. So I did. She was a little woman, but when my--my personality got +control of her--she’d always been meek, see? Afraid of the big bruiser, +see? Well, anyway, it seems I changed all that in a hurry--” Porky +smiled weakly. “Sort of hard to explain--” + +“I get what you mean. Go on.” + +“Well, the little woman took a few socks at him which surprised him--” + +“I should think it might,” I commented. + +“And just as he was socking back at her--” + +“You withdrew?” + +“Yes--yes I did. And that’s what worries me too, Ray. Not just for +myself--this damned thing, see? It can work injustice to other +people--” + +“Easily,” I agreed. “That henpecked husband getting home drunk, for +instance.” + +“That’s what I mean.” He was still gripping my arm and his hands were +shaking. “Ray, listen--a fellow oughtn’t to be able to do a thing like +this. It’s not normal, is it?” + +“No,” I admitted. “No--certainly not exactly normal. But you’re not +sick, Porky? Nothing seems to be the matter with you--except this, of +course?” + +“No. If I wouldn’t be so scared I guess I’d feel all right.” He +shuddered. “But what am I going to _do_? Want me to show you how the +thing works? It’s easy enough. Let’s look out your window here. You +just pick out anybody--anybody at all--” + + * * * * * + +It was just then that Lisbeth and Baldy Green walked in on us. Lisbeth +is my daughter. She’s a nice girl. And good looking--a mop of unruly, +wavy brown hair, and a figure with curves in all the right places. She +wants to be a career girl--a news photographer, newspaper reporter of +the sob sister style maybe, with a big by-line and write feature +articles; and maybe hold down the City Desk job and publish the +newspaper. A few little odds and ends like that. Baldy is a cartoonist +on one of the big dailies. Middle aged, with a wife and six kids. A +good friend of mine; and he had just gotten Lisbeth a job on his paper. +Neither he nor Lisbeth had ever met Porky Jenks. I introduced them now. +And then--because you had to do something to explain Porky’s frightened +aspect--and maybe I didn’t look too normal either--I thought I’d better +explain the problem in hand. + +Well, as you can imagine, Lisbeth and Baldy were pretty nonplussed. And +skeptical. But Porky, more gloomy than ever at all this discussion, +waved away their doubts. + +“Then let me show you,” he declared. “Pick anybody out there on the +street. Anybody at all.” He shoved his armchair up to my open window, +with us three standing around behind him. + +“Will it--will it hurt him?” Lisbeth asked. + +“It won’t hurt Porky,” I said. “But it might very easily hurt the other +fellow.” I must admit the thing had me pretty jittery. I could begin to +see the possibilities of what might happen. The hazards, so to speak. I +gripped Porky by the shoulder. “Now listen,” I told him. “You’ve +evidently had a lot of luck so far. You haven’t killed anybody, have +you?” + +He gulped. “Killed anybody? Oh my heavens no! How could I--” + +“Listen--suppose while you--er--have possession of some +stranger--suppose you got killed?” I suggested. “Or committed suicide +for instance?” + +“Oh please--please be careful,” Lisbeth put in. + +“It isn’t Porky I’m worried about, it’s the other fellow,” I said. +“Look here, Porky--it only takes you a second to--withdraw, as you put +it?” + +“Why--yes. Less than that, maybe. Instantaneous maybe--” + +“And so you’d be sitting here in your chair, but the other fellow would +be dead.” + +“Don’t quibble,” Baldy said. “Let’s see him do it. That’s the important +part.” Baldy also has a good imagination, which is why his cartoons are +so successful. “If he can do a thing like that, it’s a gift,” Baldy +added with mounting enthusiasm. “Why, we can capitalize on it in a +thousand ways--maybe make a fortune--” + +“I just want to get rid of it,” Porky said. “But here goes--just so you +won’t think I’m crazy.” + +Well, he showed us, all right. A meek-looking old woman with a shawl +over her head and an umbrella under her arm happened to come along, and +at the busy intersection just under my window she stood looking +confused, as though afraid of the traffic. + +“Try her,” Baldy suggested. “She looks like a weak character. You can +take possession of a weak one better, can’t you?” + +“Doesn’t seem to make any difference,” Porky said. “All right, she’ll +do. Now just watch. Keep your eyes on her.” + +We were all of us pretty tense, I guess. I recall that I was trying to +watch the old woman, and Porky simultaneously. There was the old woman, +standing on the corner, nervously waiting for the light to change; and +then when it did, she seemed afraid to start across because cars were +turning from the side street. And here in his chair, Porky just took a +good, intense look at his victim. That was queer too. I saw a sort of +predatory look jump into his pale blue eyes. And then he sat back in +his chair with a hand up to his forehead. + + * * * * * + +Then it happened. Down on the corner the old woman seemed to start; for +a second she looked dazed; I think she gave a twitch. Here in the chair +was a thud. That was Porky’s head falling back inert against the chair; +and there he lay, motionless, in a trance. Lisbeth noticed him and gave +a frightened little gasp. + +“He’s all right,” I murmured. + +“Shut up,” Baldy admonished. “Look--oh migosh, look at the old woman!” + +She was something to look at, no argument on that. The light had +changed back, but that didn’t stop her. With imperious, if shaking +steps, she strode out from the curb, holding up a hand to stop the +traffic. By some miracle nothing hit her. And at the exact center of +the intersection she stopped. + +“Oh-h,” I heard Baldy murmur. “She’s gonna direct the traffic!” + +That undoubtedly was her general idea. She had the closed umbrella +gripped in her hand, holding it over her head as she gestured for the +cars to stop, or come forward. It was quite a sight. And in a minute or +two there were a lot of sounds --cars honking, the drivers yelling; the +grinding, bumping crash of a couple of minor collisions. How long it +went on I have no idea. I was pretty scared. The vague impulse came to +me that I ought to give Porky’s inert body a shake to rouse him; but I +didn’t dare. What that would have done, heaven only knows. Anyway, down +in the street policemen were coming on the run. The scene down there +was quite a mess, with that old woman still vigorously telling the +traffic what it ought to do. Nothing had yet hit her. Then the +policemen reached her; gripped her. The vague thought struck me that +Porky would probably think this the proper time to withdraw. Evidently +he did. I saw the old woman stiffen and then go limp in the policemen’s +arms; and here in the chair Porky gave a twitch, with his head coming +up, his eyes open staring at me, and a nervous smile on his lips. + +That was all there was to it. Just as simple as that.... Porky was the +first of us to speak. + +“Well, there you are,” he said. + +“How’d it work?” + +“Take a look,” I told him. + +He looked. “See?” he said. “That’s what I mean. I got her in trouble +and I didn’t intend it, honest.” + +Beyond any doubt the old woman was in trouble. Four policemen were +telling her off; and then a radio car came and they bundled her into +it. + +“That’s tough,” Baldy murmured. “How’s she gonna explain it? She’ll +wind up in Bellevue.” + +“Well, he didn’t intend it,” Lisbeth said. Then she turned on me. “Why +don’t you go down there and do something about it? Get her off--you can +just tell them--” + +“Not me,” I said. “You go. And I’ll come to the asylum and try and get +you out. This whole thing is crazy, and anybody connected with it--” + +“It may be crazy, but it works,” Baldy declared. “Listen, you lugs, +don’t you realize what we’ve got? A gold mine! Fame! Fortune! Why +listen, we’ll put Porky in the movies--” + +“I don’t want to go in the movies,” Porky said. “I just want to get rid +of--” + +“He doesn’t have to if he doesn’t want to,” Lisbeth put in. + +“That’s silly,” I told Baldy. “What would it look like in the movies? +Like nothing. Just trick photography.” + +“Well then, vaudeville,” Baldy declared. “The scientific wonder of the +age. He takes possession of various people in the audience--” + +“Wouldn’t _that_ make a hit with them!” I retorted. + +“It would not!” + +“I’ll bet we could get a thousand a week for it,” Baldy insisted. + +“I won’t do it,” Porky said. “I’d wind up in the insane asylum, or in +jail. Listen, I came here to see Ray, just to ask him would he +please--” + + * * * * * + +It was then that the big idea came to me. The war! Money is a wonderful +thing, but what with all the publicity the war gets, naturally it’s on +your mind even more than money. How could we use Porky’s gift to help +with the war? I’ve always had a vivid imagination, and this thing +seemed suddenly to give it an immense stimulus. Lisbeth was about to +tell Baldy and me again that Porky didn’t have to do anything he didn’t +want to do, but I silenced her. + +“Look here, Porky,” I demanded, “why did you make that old woman direct +traffic?” + +“I dunno, it just occurred to me. When I was a kid I always wanted to +be a policeman when I grew up.” + +“That’s it!” Baldy exclaimed. “His subconscious! You see--” + +I interrupted him. “Porky, listen, could you take possession of somebody +who’s out of sight?” + +“Sure I could,” he agreed readily. “Remember? I told you--that woman in +the room above me, arguing with her husband. I couldn’t see them.” + +“All right. Now then, could you--” Baldy interrupted me. He happened to +be looking out the window. Down the street from me there’s an +Undertaking Parlour, with a Neon sign of ghastly green. “Say,” he +exclaimed, “here’s a thought! I wonder could he take possession of a +corpse, for instance? There’s probably one over there in that +Undertaker’s place. Suppose he made it come walking out! Think of how +wonderful it would--” + +“I’m thinking about it and I won’t do it,” Porky declared. + +“I should say not,” Lisbeth agreed. “Dad, listen, he’s told you ten +times all he wants is to--” + +“Don’t be gruesome,” I told Baldy. “I’m thinking of something +important.” + +“Like what?” Lisbeth demanded. + +“The war,” I said. “I’ve got it all worked out.” + +I told them. And I must say, it sounded even more feasible, telling it, +that it did thinking it up. Nazi submarines are always lurking off our +coast. We know that. + +“Like this,” I said. “We go down near Sandy Hook. Porky doesn’t +actually have to see his victim--that’s been demonstrated. So he just +mentally selects one of the lurking submarines and takes possession of +its Commander.” + +“Do I?” Porky said. + +“You do.” + +“And _then_ what do I do?” + +“You have him run his submarine up on the shore and smash it,” I told +him enthusiastically. “Maybe the crew would get suspicious and stop +you? If they did--then all you have to do is open valve and sink the +sub. Or blow it up with one of its own torpedoes. I’m no expert on +submarines, but don’t you see, when you’re the Commander you’ll know +all about them. No trouble at all to find a dozen ways of blasting the +whole thing to smithereens.” + +“And kill himself, too,” Lisbeth murmured. “Dad, I thought you had +better sense than--” + +“Not at all,” I explained. “In one split second he jumps out to the +safety of his own body which is with us on shore. That’s been +demonstrated. Why, the thing’s perfect. One sub gone. Then he jumps +into another one! And another! The Battle of the Atlantic is the big +hitch in our war effort. You know that. Why, this will--” + + * * * * * + +Baldy was beginning to get the bigness of my idea. “It’s perfect!” he +exclaimed. “Why, listen, when Hitler finds his subs just aren’t coming +back, he’ll be afraid to send any more out! Then we can get busy on the +Japs. Take a Jap battleship, for instance. Or a Jap General, ordering +all his men in the wrong direction! What chaos! What a cinch for our +forces--” + +“Well, I won’t do it,” Porky said. “It just wouldn’t work and I won’t +do it.” + +“Why wouldn’t it work?” I demanded. “Lisbeth, stop trying to tell me he +doesn’t have to do what he doesn’t want to do. He does have to. This is +too important a thing--” + +“It might work with just the first submarine,” Porky admitted. “But how +do I know I can jump out of the Commander’s body with everything +exploding around me? I never tried anything like that. Suppose I +calculate it wrong and I’m dead before I jump. How do I know whether I +can jump out of a dead body or not? I never tried it--” + +That made Baldy mad. “Listen, you big hunk of junk,” he said, “are you +going to put your own personal safety ahead of a chance to win the war +for Uncle Sam?” + +“More than just a chance--practically a sure thing,” I agreed. + +“That’s because you and Baldy aren’t taking the chance,” Lisbeth put +in. “You two are safe and he gets killed. For just one submarine. It’s +suicide--just plain suicide and I won’t let him do it.” + +“All right, I’ll try it,” Porky said suddenly. “I’m no coward, if you +go and put it that way. Only I sure hope it works.” + +I patted him on the back. “Good boy. That’s the stuff. Now listen, +everybody, this thing will have to be kept absolutely secret, of +course.” + +“Of course--definitely,” Baldy agreed. + +“We’ll just go ahead and do it and say nothing,” I went on. “The war +will be won in a hurry--and why it got won will be the mystery. Who +cares, so long as we win it?” + +Well, we planned the thing for about an hour. It was so simple, though, +there really wasn’t much planning to do. We decided that about eleven +o’clock that same night, we’d all go quietly down near Coney Island or +somewhere and go to work on the first sub that came within Porky’s +range. The range was an unknown quantity, of course. But, so far as any +of us could figure, there wasn’t any reason why Porky’s astral body +couldn’t jump a mile--ten miles, for instance--just as well as from my +window down into the street. + +“Well, let’s go to dinner,” I said at last. + +“I was thinking I would take Lisbeth to dinner,” Porky said. “Just to +talk things over, you know.” He gazed at Lisbeth with sort of shy +confusion I expect you’d call it, and she gazed back. + +“I’d like that,” Lisbeth said. “Come on, let’s go.” + +“And you be back here by eleven o’clock promptly,” I warned. + +“Yes, of course--sure we will,” Porky agreed. + +“Because the war depends on you.” + +“Should you go A. W. O. L.,” Baldy put in--and he didn’t smile when he +said it--“I will personally see that you get put into an insane asylum +for the rest of your natural life.” + + * * * * * + +It occurred to me to mention that Porky could jump out of an insane +asylum without much trouble, but I decided to keep that thought to +myself. Lisbeth and Porky departed with more promises; and Baldy and I +had dinner and loafed around discussing the thing, waiting impatiently +for eleven o’clock. About quarter past eleven Lisbeth and Porky came +back. You’d have thought they might have spent the evening soberly +discussing the weird, dangerous things into which Porky was about to +plunge. Not at all. They had been to a double-feature movie--“Love’s +Lingering,” and “Passion’s Pretty Flowers,” or something like that. +They were very happy about it. But they sobered down when I mentioned +that Porky had the fate of the war on his hands; and by the time we got +down to the seashore Porky was looking a little white around the gills. + +“I sure hope this thing works,” he said weakly. + +“Of course it will,” Baldy and I assured him. We sat him down on the +sand. It was a lonely stretch, with the waves rolling up in long +rhythmic lines of white and the open sea a deep purple with leaden +clouds overhead and a wan moon trying to break through. + +“Now then, make yourself comfortable,” I told Porky as we stretched him +out on the sand. “We’ll be right here by you all the time.” + +That didn’t seem to comfort him much. “I sure hope this thing works,” +he said. + +With the fate of the war at stake, I sure hoped so myself; but I wasn’t +going to express any doubts about it. Baldy and I sat down and lighted +up our pipes. + +“Just keep your mind on the nearest submarine Commander,” I said. “And +then jump into him and go to work. Then--withdraw. You’ll be back here +with us instantaneously and we’ll start you right off again, it’s a +cinch,” I assured him. + +“I sure hope so,” he agreed. + +“Nazi submarine Commander,” Baldy put in with sudden thought. “There +might be a U. S. sub out there, Porky. Now listen--don’t you get this +thing mixed--” + +“It’s just plain suicide--that’s what it is,” Lisbeth murmured +resentfully. But Baldy and I silenced her. + +And then Porky went to work. He was stretched on the sand with head and +shoulders propped up by his elbows behind him. We all held our breaths. +For a minute or two Porky just stared moodily out at the purple sea. +Concentrating. Lisbeth was sitting beside him; she seemed afraid to +look at him. + +“I won’t let him do it,” she muttered. + +“Shut up,” Baldy growled. “You’ll break the spell.” + +Then suddenly Porky gave a twitch. His body stiffened, then went limp. +There was a little thud as his head and shoulders fell back onto the +sand. Lisbeth gave a suppressed cry. Baldy and I exhaled; and then went +back to puffing at our pipes. You’ve got to have poise in a thing like +that; take it in stride, so to speak. + +“Well, he’s at work,” Baldy murmured at last. “Pretty soon we ought to +be getting results.” + +“Yes,” I agreed. “I’ll bet those Nazi sailors on the sub are getting +kind of surprised, just about now.” + +I could picture it. A startled wonderment spreading around the sub at +the queer actions of the Commander. Or maybe the whole thing was +exploding just about now. + +More time passed. On the sand beside us Porky’s body lay inert. You +could hardly tell that he wasn’t dead. I could feel Lisbeth’s gaze +roving Baldy and me as though we were a couple of murderers. Then all +of a sudden Lisbeth gave a sharp, startled cry. + +“Oh, my heavens! Look! Look there!” + +We all saw it at once. Out in front of us, half a mile out maybe, the +purple sea suddenly heaved up. There was a great cascade of water out +of which a monstrous dark green shape rose towering two or three +hundred feet into the air. The Green Giant! There he was. How can I +describe him? I can’t. Not adequately, because he was too awesome, too +weird, too incredible--but there he was. A great green man-shape. + + * * * * * + +The pallid moonlight shone on him--a green giant who must have been +five or six hundred feet tall. He was wading waist deep in the +water--wading, not at us, thank heavens, but parallel to the beach, +toward Sandy Hook by the entrance to New York Harbor. The moonlight +shone on his glistening torso--green scales and a slimy sea-look as +though algae and barnacles might be clustered on it. A Green Giant +almost in human form. Anyway, I remember that he had a browny chest +that bulged out over the ocean surface; wide thick shoulders and +monstrous arms that dangled down into the water as he strode forward, +with a line of white waves churning at his waist. I saw his face +plainly. You couldn’t call it human, but that was its general idea. He +was breathing through his mouth now with a snort that was a gruesome +rumbling roar; but I could see that he had gills or some such apparatus +in the sides of his neck. + +For a minute maybe Baldy and I and Lisbeth must have just sat there +stricken, numb, with the body of Porky beside us. And then suddenly an +immense amount of amazing things began to happen all more or less +simultaneously. In the town behind us the air-raid siren began wailing. +Then searchlights from several spots on shore sprang like great waving +silver swords in the sky. Then, far out to sea there was the drone of +planes. + +An air raid! New York City being raided by Nazi planes! The Green Giant +had nothing to do with the first alarm here on shore. It was planes +coming in from the ocean. We heard them; and in a few seconds we saw +them--four of them, flying low; Nazi planes--the moonlight disclosed +it. Who am I to try to picture exactly what happened next? It was quite +a chaos. All I can remember is that one of the planes swerved low +pretty close over the Green Giant. I imagine that Nazi pilot was sort +of startled--can you blame him? Anyway, suddenly the giant let out a +bellow of anger; his hand reached up a hundred feet or so over his head +and grabbed the plane--seized it, crunched it maybe and then flung it +away. The plane was a long finger of yellow-red flames as it fell +hissing into the sea. + +I recall I heard Baldy mutter: “Ah--good work! Very neat!” + +Good work! That tipped me off. I admit that in all the chaos the main +fact had not yet occurred to me. You’ve guessed it. Porky! By some +mischance for Hitler, quite evidently Der Fuehrer had selected this +particular night for his threatened bombing of New York. Here were his +bombing planes--four of them. And there was Porky, in the person of +that astonishing green giant, going to work on them. Those Nazi pilots +evidently got rattled. They gave up their ideas of heading up the bay +and for a moment were circling here like a flock of confused birds. +They were too far away now for Porky to clutch at them, so he stooped. +One of his hands came up out of the sea with a monstrous dripping +boulder. He flung it, and another plane crashed. + +There was worse than chaos out in front of us now. A lot of our own +planes were coming, interceptors that went like wasps after the two +remaining Nazis. One of Hitler’s prides seemed to be shot down; and +Porky accounted for the other one--that green giant leaped into the air +with a marvelous standing high jump, grabbed the Nazi plane with both +hands and tore it into bits. But now a new element entered into the +thing. Hitler evidently had a few subs around here. One of them +obviously let loose a couple of torpedos at the giant. Distinctly I saw +two explosions at the giant’s waistline--torpedos that must have gone +right into him and exploded inside. Anyway, he doubled up with a +bellowing roar of pain that rattled our ear-drums and then he went +down, sinking with a cataclysmic rush of white waves over him. + +I recall my fleeting thought that this would be just the proper time +for Porky to withdraw. And he did. As the green giant fell and +disappeared, the body of Porky here on the sand gave a convulsive +shudder and in another instant Porky was sitting up, blinking, with a +hand rubbing his forehead, and the other hand shoving away Lisbeth who +was clutching at him. + +“W-well,” Porky said. “Here you are. What happened?” + +“Plenty,” I said. “A very great deal. But you did fine, Porky.” + + * * * * * + +Baldy was on his feet, holding off Lisbeth who was struggling to get at +Porky. “Say, listen, you lug,” Baldy demanded, “where in the devil did +you ever pick up that giant? It happened to work out all right, but--” + +“Why--I dunno,” Porky said. “He was just lying around down there--” + +“On his way in from Atlantis maybe?” Baldy was sarcastic. + +“I dunno. I was concentrating on a sub Commander--how bestial they +are--you know, that sort of stuff--and all of a sudden I sort of slid +into that giant.” Porky shuddered. “It was--horrible. But--when I saw +those Nazi planes, I did my best.” + +“You did wonderful,” I agreed. + +“You saved New York from maybe a nasty air raid. Now listen, the U-boat +Commanders are still out there. All we have to do--” + +“If we had any sense we’d be getting out of here before we get into +_real_ trouble,” Lisbeth observed suddenly. + +I could see that she had something there. This section of the beach was +no longer lonely. Spectators were beginning to mill around; and there +were Coast Guards, with searchlights darting at us, and planes roaring +overhead. + +“Come on, let’s duck,” I agreed. “We’ll come back tomorrow night when +things have quieted down a bit.” + +Baldy and I planned it enthusiastically all the way back to the city. +Barring the sudden advent of green giants and such, the thing obviously +was absolutely simple. We four could tour all the coasts. And then +maybe arrange to get abroad. I figured three months--if Porky could +hold out--would wind up the war. + +That next day, Baldy and I made charts in regular military fashion, +outlining our exact plan of campaign. We didn’t see Porky or Lisbeth +that afternoon, or evening. They had wanted to have dinner together +again, but had promised faithfully to report at my study by eleven +p.m. They came, right on the dot. And they were both beaming. + +“Well,” I said. “Here you are. That’s fine. And you look in good shape +for a swell night’s work, Porky.” + +“Yes, sir,” Porky agreed. “I’m all right. But you see, +sir--there’s--er--something we want to tell you.” + +That “sir” sounded sort of queer, but I admit I didn’t get the idea. + +“He loves me and I love him and so it’s all settled,” Lisbeth said. + +I saw that Baldy looked startled. What I looked like I don’t know. +“What’s all settled?” I demanded. + +“Us--er--we’re engaged,” Porky stammered. “That is--” + +“It absolutely is,” Lisbeth beamed. “He loves me and I love him. +Definitely.” + +To say that I was nonplussed would be putting it mildly. But I have +always prided myself on having a true sense of values. What’s the +problem of a daughter compared to the problem of winning the war? +Nothing. Nothing at all. + +“Well, we’ll talk about that later,” I decided firmly. “Right now we’ve +got a war on our hands. Come on, let’s get going.” + +But Porky didn’t look at all as thought he were ready to start. “Well,” +he said, “that’s another thing I--er--have to tell you.” He looked very +pleased. “I haven’t got it any more. I’ve lost it.” + +Baldy came to life. “What’s _that_ mean?” he demanded. “What in the +devil haven’t you got any more? What have you lost?” + +“My--my gift--that’s what you called it,” Porky said. “It’s gone. +Vanished. I can’t do it any more. I tried--honest I did--but it’s +gone.” + +Lisbeth made an expressive gesture like one who wants to indicate that +a fairy has just flown out the window. + +“He tried,” she said. “He really did.” + +“I’m no coward,” Porky added. “Didn’t I do fine last night? But it’s +gone--I’m quite normal now.” He said that last with a very evident +relish. + +“Because now your soul and heart and ego and such are all tied up with +Lisbeth,” Baldy said sarcastically. + +“That’s it,” Lisbeth retorted. “And you don’t need to be sarcastic +about it. He and I figured it all out--why would his ego want to roam +abroad when it’s in my keeping--forever?” She and Porky were holding +onto each other’s hands and gazing with that dying calf look. “He +belongs to me now,” Lisbeth added. “His ego doesn’t want to go +adventuring. Besides, if it did, I wouldn’t let it.” + +And there you are. I’m sorry about not being personally able to win the +war, but you can see, there wasn’t a thing I could do about it. + + +[Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in the July 1943 issue +of _Science Fiction Stories_.] + + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76899 *** diff --git a/76899-h/76899-h.htm b/76899-h/76899-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..25026e4 --- /dev/null +++ b/76899-h/76899-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,802 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="en"> +<head> + <meta charset="utf-8"> + <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> + <title>The Man Who Saved New York</title> + <style> + body { line-height: 1.1; margin: 0 auto; padding: 40px 8%; + color: #333; } + p { text-indent:1.15em; margin-top:0.1em; + margin-bottom:0.1em; text-align:justify; } + h1 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; + font-size:1.4em; margin: 1em auto 0em auto; } + .illustration { margin: 1.5em auto; } + .pos-center { display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center; } + .tn p { text-indent:0; } + .tn { font-size:0.9em; border:1px solid silver; margin-top:1.8em; margin-left:8%; width:80%; padding:0.4em 2%; background-color: #DDDDEE; } + hr.tb { border: none; height: 1em; } + </style> +</head> +<body> +<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76899 ***</div> +<div class='illustration pos-center' style='width: 75%;' id='i001'> +<img src='images/illus-001.png' style='max-width: 100%; height: auto;' alt='Man with raised hand.'> +</div> +<h1>The Man Who Saved New York</h1> +<div style='text-align:center'>By Ray Cummings</div> + +<blockquote> +Porky’s ego wouldn’t stay in his own body, and +that, believe it or not, was what saved the city! +</blockquote> + +<p>Of course, as you know, I didn’t figure in the excitement over the +Green Giant. The newspapers and the radio boys never mentioned me, or +Lisbeth, or Baldy or even Porky Jenks. Why would they? We have kept +strictly silent about the whole affair. Not from shyness; none of us +are against a little wholesome publicity. But it never does one any +good to be billed as a first class candidate for the nut-house. So that +Green Giant who waded around in the ocean off Sandy Hook will remain a +mystery.</p> + +<p>Not that I can actually explain him. I can’t. He’s as much a mystery to +me as to anybody else. But, as it happened, there probably never would +have been any Green Giant at all if it hadn’t been for me. I don’t mind +telling the real facts, but I think it’s quite a bit safer for them +just to go as fiction. You can take them or leave them, so to speak.</p> + +<p>And there’s another angle to the thing. The war actually would have +been won by now—if Lisbeth hadn’t queered it. Hitler would have been +smashed and everything would have been just swell. I had it all +planned—and then Lisbeth put the jinx on it. I’m sorry about that. But +you’ll realize there’s not a thing I could have done.</p> + +<p>The queer affair began last Spring—a warmish afternoon when I was +sitting in my study trying to figure out a plot. Porky Jenks came in to +see me. I used to know Porky quite well, but hadn’t seen him for a +couple of years. He was a likeable young fellow, always with a ready +laugh which is what made him so fat, I suppose. But this was a +different Porky. He wedged himself down, collapsing in my only +armchair. His clothes were rumpled as though he’d slept in them; his +collar was wilted, hanging soggily on his bulging throat. His thin +sandy hair was plastered on his sweating forehead; he pulled out a big +blue handkerchief and mopped his face and just stared at me with pale +blue eyes that looked haunted.</p> + +<p>“Well, well, Porky, glad to see you,” I said. “How are you?”</p> + +<p>“I’m awful,” he declared. Just out of habit, I suppose, he tried to +laugh, but it was only a wan, sickly grin. “There’s—something the +matter with me, Ray. Something terrible. That’s why I’ve come to you, +see? You’re up on all that nutty stuff—the bizarre, the queer, the +unbelievable—”</p> + +<p>“Oh,” I said.</p> + +<p>He stared at me with that haunted look. “Listen,” he said, “do I look +crazy? Insane? A maniac? Tell me I’m not, Ray.”</p> + +<p>“You’re not,” I said. “Cheer up. What have you been doing with +yourself? Last I heard you were just finishing college.”</p> + +<p>“I’m a hardware salesman. Retail trade. That is, I was, but what with +the war and all, it’s no good.”</p> + +<p>“Tough luck,” I said.</p> + +<p>“It’s just as well. Walking so much made my feet hurt—they just +wouldn’t stand it.” He sighed heavily. “Maybe that’s why I’m in 4-F, +too. That and my weight—my heart. But that’s nothing serious—”</p> + +<p>“Oh well, that’s fine,” I agreed. “But now—you’ve got some other +trouble?”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>The haunted look came back into his earnest eyes. “I’ll have to tell +you,” he agreed. “After all, that’s what I came here for.” He gulped. +“Listen,” he said, “hang onto yourself—you’ll get a shock. The thing +hit me just about a week ago. Like a bolt from the blue—I didn’t have +any warning at all. I was feeling perfectly all right, honest.”</p> + +<p>“What hit you?” I prompted.</p> + +<p>“I was just sitting by the window of my boarding house room.” His voice +had that awed, solemn tone like you use telling a ghost story. “When +all of a sudden I wasn’t myself at all. I was sitting in the chair all +right—I knew that. But also I was a man walking down the street past +my window.”</p> + +<p>“You were—what?”</p> + +<p>“A man walking past my window,” he repeated drably. “A perfectly +strange man—and I was worried because I was late getting home and my +wife’d give me hell. I was henpecked, scared to death of her, see?”</p> + +<p>“No, I don’t see,” I declared.</p> + +<p>His fat hands made a hopeless gesture. “Well, that’s what I mean, Ray. +You think I’m crazy. That’s why I can’t go see a doctor. He’d just slam +me into an asylum or something.” His chubby hands reached out and +gripped my arm. “Listen—you’ve got to believe me. Anyway—I can show +you—give you a demonstration—it’s easy enough.”</p> + +<p>“Is it?” I said.</p> + +<p>“Sure it is. You see, my ego, id, personality or something, doesn’t +seem to want to stay put in my body any more. It—it wants to wander—”</p> + +<p>“Let’s get this straight,” I interrupted. “You say you suddenly usurped +the mind and body of some strange man walking down the street—”</p> + +<p>“Yes, that’s it! Usurpsed! That’s a good word, Ray. I was sort of +conscious that he was confused, too—my usurping him that way. He kind +of resented it for a second or two—and then I guess he went blank. +Anyway, I was in full control—”</p> + +<p>“And what did you do? With him, I mean.”</p> + +<p>“Oh. Well, I remember I decided I wouldn’t bother going back to my +wife—his wife, I mean.”</p> + +<p>I could only nod.</p> + +<p>“So I went into a Bar and Grill and started to absorb whiskeys and soda +and to the devil with his wife.”</p> + +<p>“And then?” I prompted.</p> + +<p>“Well, I can remember getting pretty blurry eventually. Seems like I +was telling the bartender all my secret thoughts about the wife.” He +smiled wryly. “And then I—well, you can’t blame me, Ray—it occurred +to me I might be getting into some sort of jam. So I just—withdrew.”</p> + +<p>“Withdrew?”</p> + +<p>“I gave that little fellow back his body,” Porky said. He shrugged. +“What else could I do? I just jerked myself back to my own body—in the +chair by the window, see?”</p> + +<p>For a minute I couldn’t think of anything to say. I’ve juggled with +weird things like that for years—but strictly on paper, you +understand. Now, meeting one in real life gave me a creepy feeling. +Because Porky was telling me the truth. I wouldn’t doubt it. He was +plainly about frightened out of his wits.</p> + +<p>“You say you can do this any time you like?” I said at last.</p> + +<p>“Sure I can. That’s just the trouble—sometimes it’s almost +involuntarily, if I’m dozing, half asleep for instance, I just seem +suddenly to slip into it. I got into a nasty jam just last night.”</p> + +<p>He waited for me to ask him, what? But I just stared at him.</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>“Seems a man and his wife were having a big argument—the room over me +in my boarding house,” he went on. “I could hear them. I don’t know +what possessed me but all of a sudden I decided to take the wife’s +part. So I did. She was a little woman, but when my—my personality got +control of her—she’d always been meek, see? Afraid of the big bruiser, +see? Well, anyway, it seems I changed all that in a hurry—” Porky +smiled weakly. “Sort of hard to explain—”</p> + +<p>“I get what you mean. Go on.”</p> + +<p>“Well, the little woman took a few socks at him which surprised him—”</p> + +<p>“I should think it might,” I commented.</p> + +<p>“And just as he was socking back at her—”</p> + +<p>“You withdrew?”</p> + +<p>“Yes—yes I did. And that’s what worries me too, Ray. Not just for +myself—this damned thing, see? It can work injustice to other +people—”</p> + +<p>“Easily,” I agreed. “That henpecked husband getting home drunk, for +instance.”</p> + +<p>“That’s what I mean.” He was still gripping my arm and his hands were +shaking. “Ray, listen—a fellow oughtn’t to be able to do a thing like +this. It’s not normal, is it?”</p> + +<p>“No,” I admitted. “No—certainly not exactly normal. But you’re not +sick, Porky? Nothing seems to be the matter with you—except this, of +course?”</p> + +<p>“No. If I wouldn’t be so scared I guess I’d feel all right.” He +shuddered. “But what am I going to <i>do</i>? Want me to show you how the +thing works? It’s easy enough. Let’s look out your window here. You +just pick out anybody—anybody at all—”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>It was just then that Lisbeth and Baldy Green walked in on us. Lisbeth +is my daughter. She’s a nice girl. And good looking—a mop of unruly, +wavy brown hair, and a figure with curves in all the right places. She +wants to be a career girl—a news photographer, newspaper reporter of +the sob sister style maybe, with a big by-line and write feature +articles; and maybe hold down the City Desk job and publish the +newspaper. A few little odds and ends like that. Baldy is a cartoonist +on one of the big dailies. Middle aged, with a wife and six kids. A +good friend of mine; and he had just gotten Lisbeth a job on his paper. +Neither he nor Lisbeth had ever met Porky Jenks. I introduced them now. +And then—because you had to do something to explain Porky’s frightened +aspect—and maybe I didn’t look too normal either—I thought I’d better +explain the problem in hand.</p> + +<p>Well, as you can imagine, Lisbeth and Baldy were pretty nonplussed. And +skeptical. But Porky, more gloomy than ever at all this discussion, +waved away their doubts.</p> + +<p>“Then let me show you,” he declared. “Pick anybody out there on the +street. Anybody at all.” He shoved his armchair up to my open window, +with us three standing around behind him.</p> + +<p>“Will it—will it hurt him?” Lisbeth asked.</p> + +<p>“It won’t hurt Porky,” I said. “But it might very easily hurt the other +fellow.” I must admit the thing had me pretty jittery. I could begin to +see the possibilities of what might happen. The hazards, so to speak. I +gripped Porky by the shoulder. “Now listen,” I told him. “You’ve +evidently had a lot of luck so far. You haven’t killed anybody, have +you?”</p> + +<p>He gulped. “Killed anybody? Oh my heavens no! How could I—”</p> + +<p>“Listen—suppose while you—er—have possession of some +stranger—suppose you got killed?” I suggested. “Or committed suicide +for instance?”</p> + +<p>“Oh please—please be careful,” Lisbeth put in.</p> + +<p>“It isn’t Porky I’m worried about, it’s the other fellow,” I said. +“Look here, Porky—it only takes you a second to—withdraw, as you put +it?”</p> + +<p>“Why—yes. Less than that, maybe. Instantaneous maybe—”</p> + +<p>“And so you’d be sitting here in your chair, but the other fellow would +be dead.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t quibble,” Baldy said. “Let’s see him do it. That’s the important +part.” Baldy also has a good imagination, which is why his cartoons are +so successful. “If he can do a thing like that, it’s a gift,” Baldy +added with mounting enthusiasm. “Why, we can capitalize on it in a +thousand ways—maybe make a fortune—”</p> + +<p>“I just want to get rid of it,” Porky said. “But here goes—just so you +won’t think I’m crazy.”</p> + +<p>Well, he showed us, all right. A meek-looking old woman with a shawl +over her head and an umbrella under her arm happened to come along, and +at the busy intersection just under my window she stood looking +confused, as though afraid of the traffic.</p> + +<p>“Try her,” Baldy suggested. “She looks like a weak character. You can +take possession of a weak one better, can’t you?”</p> + +<p>“Doesn’t seem to make any difference,” Porky said. “All right, she’ll +do. Now just watch. Keep your eyes on her.”</p> + +<p>We were all of us pretty tense, I guess. I recall that I was trying to +watch the old woman, and Porky simultaneously. There was the old woman, +standing on the corner, nervously waiting for the light to change; and +then when it did, she seemed afraid to start across because cars were +turning from the side street. And here in his chair, Porky just took a +good, intense look at his victim. That was queer too. I saw a sort of +predatory look jump into his pale blue eyes. And then he sat back in +his chair with a hand up to his forehead.</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>Then it happened. Down on the corner the old woman seemed to start; for +a second she looked dazed; I think she gave a twitch. Here in the chair +was a thud. That was Porky’s head falling back inert against the chair; +and there he lay, motionless, in a trance. Lisbeth noticed him and gave +a frightened little gasp.</p> + +<p>“He’s all right,” I murmured.</p> + +<p>“Shut up,” Baldy admonished. “Look—oh migosh, look at the old woman!”</p> + +<p>She was something to look at, no argument on that. The light had +changed back, but that didn’t stop her. With imperious, if shaking +steps, she strode out from the curb, holding up a hand to stop the +traffic. By some miracle nothing hit her. And at the exact center of +the intersection she stopped.</p> + +<p>“Oh-h,” I heard Baldy murmur. “She’s gonna direct the traffic!”</p> + +<p>That undoubtedly was her general idea. She had the closed umbrella +gripped in her hand, holding it over her head as she gestured for the +cars to stop, or come forward. It was quite a sight. And in a minute or +two there were a lot of sounds —cars honking, the drivers yelling; the +grinding, bumping crash of a couple of minor collisions. How long it +went on I have no idea. I was pretty scared. The vague impulse came to +me that I ought to give Porky’s inert body a shake to rouse him; but I +didn’t dare. What that would have done, heaven only knows. Anyway, down +in the street policemen were coming on the run. The scene down there +was quite a mess, with that old woman still vigorously telling the +traffic what it ought to do. Nothing had yet hit her. Then the +policemen reached her; gripped her. The vague thought struck me that +Porky would probably think this the proper time to withdraw. Evidently +he did. I saw the old woman stiffen and then go limp in the policemen’s +arms; and here in the chair Porky gave a twitch, with his head coming +up, his eyes open staring at me, and a nervous smile on his lips.</p> + +<p>That was all there was to it. Just as simple as that.... Porky was the +first of us to speak.</p> + +<p>“Well, there you are,” he said.</p> + +<p>“How’d it work?”</p> + +<p>“Take a look,” I told him.</p> + +<p>He looked. “See?” he said. “That’s what I mean. I got her in trouble +and I didn’t intend it, honest.”</p> + +<p>Beyond any doubt the old woman was in trouble. Four policemen were +telling her off; and then a radio car came and they bundled her into +it.</p> + +<p>“That’s tough,” Baldy murmured. “How’s she gonna explain it? She’ll +wind up in Bellevue.”</p> + +<p>“Well, he didn’t intend it,” Lisbeth said. Then she turned on me. “Why +don’t you go down there and do something about it? Get her off—you can +just tell them—”</p> + +<p>“Not me,” I said. “You go. And I’ll come to the asylum and try and get +you out. This whole thing is crazy, and anybody connected with it—”</p> + +<p>“It may be crazy, but it works,” Baldy declared. “Listen, you lugs, +don’t you realize what we’ve got? A gold mine! Fame! Fortune! Why +listen, we’ll put Porky in the movies—”</p> + +<p>“I don’t want to go in the movies,” Porky said. “I just want to get rid +of—”</p> + +<p>“He doesn’t have to if he doesn’t want to,” Lisbeth put in.</p> + +<p>“That’s silly,” I told Baldy. “What would it look like in the movies? +Like nothing. Just trick photography.”</p> + +<p>“Well then, vaudeville,” Baldy declared. “The scientific wonder of the +age. He takes possession of various people in the audience—”</p> + +<p>“Wouldn’t <i>that</i> make a hit with them!” I retorted.</p> + +<p>“It would not!”</p> + +<p>“I’ll bet we could get a thousand a week for it,” Baldy insisted.</p> + +<p>“I won’t do it,” Porky said. “I’d wind up in the insane asylum, or in +jail. Listen, I came here to see Ray, just to ask him would he +please—”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>It was then that the big idea came to me. The war! Money is a wonderful +thing, but what with all the publicity the war gets, naturally it’s on +your mind even more than money. How could we use Porky’s gift to help +with the war? I’ve always had a vivid imagination, and this thing +seemed suddenly to give it an immense stimulus. Lisbeth was about to +tell Baldy and me again that Porky didn’t have to do anything he didn’t +want to do, but I silenced her.</p> + +<p>“Look here, Porky,” I demanded, “why did you make that old woman direct +traffic?”</p> + +<p>“I dunno, it just occurred to me. When I was a kid I always wanted to +be a policeman when I grew up.”</p> + +<p>“That’s it!” Baldy exclaimed. “His subconscious! You see—”</p> + +<p>I interrupted him. “Porky, listen, could you take possession of +somebody who’s out of sight?”</p> + +<p>“Sure I could,” he agreed readily. “Remember? I told you—that woman in +the room above me, arguing with her husband. I couldn’t see them.”</p> + +<p>“All right. Now then, could you—” Baldy interrupted me. He happened to +be looking out the window. Down the street from me there’s an +Undertaking Parlour, with a Neon sign of ghastly green. “Say,” he +exclaimed, “here’s a thought! I wonder could he take possession of a +corpse, for instance? There’s probably one over there in that +Undertaker’s place. Suppose he made it come walking out! Think of how +wonderful it would—”</p> + +<p>“I’m thinking about it and I won’t do it,” Porky declared.</p> + +<p>“I should say not,” Lisbeth agreed. “Dad, listen, he’s told you ten +times all he wants is to—”</p> + +<p>“Don’t be gruesome,” I told Baldy. “I’m thinking of something +important.”</p> + +<p>“Like what?” Lisbeth demanded.</p> + +<p>“The war,” I said. “I’ve got it all worked out.”</p> + +<p>I told them. And I must say, it sounded even more feasible, telling it, +that it did thinking it up. Nazi submarines are always lurking off our +coast. We know that.</p> + +<p>“Like this,” I said. “We go down near Sandy Hook. Porky doesn’t +actually have to see his victim—that’s been demonstrated. So he just +mentally selects one of the lurking submarines and takes possession of +its Commander.”</p> + +<p>“Do I?” Porky said.</p> + +<p>“You do.”</p> + +<p>“And <i>then</i> what do I do?”</p> + +<p>“You have him run his submarine up on the shore and smash it,” I told +him enthusiastically. “Maybe the crew would get suspicious and stop +you? If they did—then all you have to do is open valve and sink the +sub. Or blow it up with one of its own torpedoes. I’m no expert on +submarines, but don’t you see, when you’re the Commander you’ll know +all about them. No trouble at all to find a dozen ways of blasting the +whole thing to smithereens.”</p> + +<p>“And kill himself, too,” Lisbeth murmured. “Dad, I thought you had +better sense than—”</p> + +<p>“Not at all,” I explained. “In one split second he jumps out to the +safety of his own body which is with us on shore. That’s been +demonstrated. Why, the thing’s perfect. One sub gone. Then he jumps +into another one! And another! The Battle of the Atlantic is the big +hitch in our war effort. You know that. Why, this will—”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>Baldy was beginning to get the bigness of my idea. “It’s perfect!” he +exclaimed. “Why, listen, when Hitler finds his subs just aren’t coming +back, he’ll be afraid to send any more out! Then we can get busy on the +Japs. Take a Jap battleship, for instance. Or a Jap General, ordering +all his men in the wrong direction! What chaos! What a cinch for our +forces—”</p> + +<p>“Well, I won’t do it,” Porky said. “It just wouldn’t work and I won’t +do it.”</p> + +<p>“Why wouldn’t it work?” I demanded. “Lisbeth, stop trying to tell me he +doesn’t have to do what he doesn’t want to do. He does have to. This is +too important a thing—”</p> + +<p>“It might work with just the first submarine,” Porky admitted. “But how +do I know I can jump out of the Commander’s body with everything +exploding around me? I never tried anything like that. Suppose I +calculate it wrong and I’m dead before I jump. How do I know whether I +can jump out of a dead body or not? I never tried it—”</p> + +<p>That made Baldy mad. “Listen, you big hunk of junk,” he said, “are you +going to put your own personal safety ahead of a chance to win the war +for Uncle Sam?”</p> + +<p>“More than just a chance—practically a sure thing,” I agreed.</p> + +<p>“That’s because you and Baldy aren’t taking the chance,” Lisbeth put +in. “You two are safe and he gets killed. For just one submarine. It’s +suicide—just plain suicide and I won’t let him do it.”</p> + +<p>“All right, I’ll try it,” Porky said suddenly. “I’m no coward, if you +go and put it that way. Only I sure hope it works.”</p> + +<p>I patted him on the back. “Good boy. That’s the stuff. Now listen, +everybody, this thing will have to be kept absolutely secret, of +course.”</p> + +<p>“Of course—definitely,” Baldy agreed.</p> + +<p>“We’ll just go ahead and do it and say nothing,” I went on. “The war +will be won in a hurry—and why it got won will be the mystery. Who +cares, so long as we win it?”</p> + +<p>Well, we planned the thing for about an hour. It was so simple, though, +there really wasn’t much planning to do. We decided that about eleven +o’clock that same night, we’d all go quietly down near Coney Island or +somewhere and go to work on the first sub that came within Porky’s +range. The range was an unknown quantity, of course. But, so far as any +of us could figure, there wasn’t any reason why Porky’s astral body +couldn’t jump a mile—ten miles, for instance—just as well as from my +window down into the street.</p> + +<p>“Well, let’s go to dinner,” I said at last.</p> + +<p>“I was thinking I would take Lisbeth to dinner,” Porky said. “Just to +talk things over, you know.” He gazed at Lisbeth with sort of shy +confusion I expect you’d call it, and she gazed back.</p> + +<p>“I’d like that,” Lisbeth said. “Come on, let’s go.”</p> + +<p>“And you be back here by eleven o’clock promptly,” I warned.</p> + +<p>“Yes, of course—sure we will,” Porky agreed.</p> + +<p>“Because the war depends on you.”</p> + +<p>“Should you go A. W. O. L.,” Baldy put in—and he didn’t smile when he +said it—“I will personally see that you get put into an insane asylum +for the rest of your natural life.”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>It occurred to me to mention that Porky could jump out of an insane +asylum without much trouble, but I decided to keep that thought to +myself. Lisbeth and Porky departed with more promises; and Baldy and I +had dinner and loafed around discussing the thing, waiting impatiently +for eleven o’clock. About quarter past eleven Lisbeth and Porky came +back. You’d have thought they might have spent the evening soberly +discussing the weird, dangerous things into which Porky was about to +plunge. Not at all. They had been to a double-feature movie—“Love’s +Lingering,” and “Passion’s Pretty Flowers,” or something like that. +They were very happy about it. But they sobered down when I mentioned +that Porky had the fate of the war on his hands; and by the time we got +down to the seashore Porky was looking a little white around the gills.</p> + +<p>“I sure hope this thing works,” he said weakly.</p> + +<p>“Of course it will,” Baldy and I assured him. We sat him down on the +sand. It was a lonely stretch, with the waves rolling up in long +rhythmic lines of white and the open sea a deep purple with leaden +clouds overhead and a wan moon trying to break through.</p> + +<p>“Now then, make yourself comfortable,” I told Porky as we stretched him +out on the sand. “We’ll be right here by you all the time.”</p> + +<p>That didn’t seem to comfort him much. “I sure hope this thing works,” +he said.</p> + +<p>With the fate of the war at stake, I sure hoped so myself; but I wasn’t +going to express any doubts about it. Baldy and I sat down and lighted +up our pipes.</p> + +<p>“Just keep your mind on the nearest submarine Commander,” I said. “And +then jump into him and go to work. Then—withdraw. You’ll be back here +with us instantaneously and we’ll start you right off again, it’s a +cinch,” I assured him.</p> + +<p>“I sure hope so,” he agreed.</p> + +<p>“Nazi submarine Commander,” Baldy put in with sudden thought. “There +might be a U. S. sub out there, Porky. Now listen—don’t you get this +thing mixed—”</p> + +<p>“It’s just plain suicide—that’s what it is,” Lisbeth murmured +resentfully. But Baldy and I silenced her.</p> + +<p>And then Porky went to work. He was stretched on the sand with head and +shoulders propped up by his elbows behind him. We all held our breaths. +For a minute or two Porky just stared moodily out at the purple sea. +Concentrating. Lisbeth was sitting beside him; she seemed afraid to +look at him.</p> + +<p>“I won’t let him do it,” she muttered.</p> + +<p>“Shut up,” Baldy growled. “You’ll break the spell.”</p> + +<p>Then suddenly Porky gave a twitch. His body stiffened, then went limp. +There was a little thud as his head and shoulders fell back onto the +sand. Lisbeth gave a suppressed cry. Baldy and I exhaled; and then went +back to puffing at our pipes. You’ve got to have poise in a thing like +that; take it in stride, so to speak.</p> + +<p>“Well, he’s at work,” Baldy murmured at last. “Pretty soon we ought to +be getting results.”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” I agreed. “I’ll bet those Nazi sailors on the sub are getting +kind of surprised, just about now.”</p> + +<p>I could picture it. A startled wonderment spreading around the sub at +the queer actions of the Commander. Or maybe the whole thing was +exploding just about now.</p> + +<p>More time passed. On the sand beside us Porky’s body lay inert. You +could hardly tell that he wasn’t dead. I could feel Lisbeth’s gaze +roving Baldy and me as though we were a couple of murderers. Then all +of a sudden Lisbeth gave a sharp, startled cry.</p> + +<p>“Oh, my heavens! Look! Look there!”</p> + +<p>We all saw it at once. Out in front of us, half a mile out maybe, the +purple sea suddenly heaved up. There was a great cascade of water out +of which a monstrous dark green shape rose towering two or three +hundred feet into the air. The Green Giant! There he was. How can I +describe him? I can’t. Not adequately, because he was too awesome, too +weird, too incredible—but there he was. A great green man-shape.</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>The pallid moonlight shone on him—a green giant who must have been +five or six hundred feet tall. He was wading waist deep in the +water—wading, not at us, thank heavens, but parallel to the beach, +toward Sandy Hook by the entrance to New York Harbor. The moonlight +shone on his glistening torso—green scales and a slimy sea-look as +though algae and barnacles might be clustered on it. A Green Giant +almost in human form. Anyway, I remember that he had a browny chest +that bulged out over the ocean surface; wide thick shoulders and +monstrous arms that dangled down into the water as he strode forward, +with a line of white waves churning at his waist. I saw his face +plainly. You couldn’t call it human, but that was its general idea. He +was breathing through his mouth now with a snort that was a gruesome +rumbling roar; but I could see that he had gills or some such apparatus +in the sides of his neck.</p> + +<p>For a minute maybe Baldy and I and Lisbeth must have just sat there +stricken, numb, with the body of Porky beside us. And then suddenly an +immense amount of amazing things began to happen all more or less +simultaneously. In the town behind us the air-raid siren began wailing. +Then searchlights from several spots on shore sprang like great waving +silver swords in the sky. Then, far out to sea there was the drone of +planes.</p> + +<p>An air raid! New York City being raided by Nazi planes! The Green Giant +had nothing to do with the first alarm here on shore. It was planes +coming in from the ocean. We heard them; and in a few seconds we saw +them—four of them, flying low; Nazi planes—the moonlight disclosed +it. Who am I to try to picture exactly what happened next? It was quite +a chaos. All I can remember is that one of the planes swerved low +pretty close over the Green Giant. I imagine that Nazi pilot was sort +of startled—can you blame him? Anyway, suddenly the giant let out a +bellow of anger; his hand reached up a hundred feet or so over his head +and grabbed the plane—seized it, crunched it maybe and then flung it +away. The plane was a long finger of yellow-red flames as it fell +hissing into the sea.</p> + +<p>I recall I heard Baldy mutter: “Ah—good work! Very neat!”</p> + +<p>Good work! That tipped me off. I admit that in all the chaos the main +fact had not yet occurred to me. You’ve guessed it. Porky! By some +mischance for Hitler, quite evidently Der Fuehrer had selected this +particular night for his threatened bombing of New York. Here were his +bombing planes—four of them. And there was Porky, in the person of +that astonishing green giant, going to work on them. Those Nazi pilots +evidently got rattled. They gave up their ideas of heading up the bay +and for a moment were circling here like a flock of confused birds. +They were too far away now for Porky to clutch at them, so he stooped. +One of his hands came up out of the sea with a monstrous dripping +boulder. He flung it, and another plane crashed.</p> + +<p>There was worse than chaos out in front of us now. A lot of our own +planes were coming, interceptors that went like wasps after the two +remaining Nazis. One of Hitler’s prides seemed to be shot down; and +Porky accounted for the other one—that green giant leaped into the air +with a marvelous standing high jump, grabbed the Nazi plane with both +hands and tore it into bits. But now a new element entered into the +thing. Hitler evidently had a few subs around here. One of them +obviously let loose a couple of torpedos at the giant. Distinctly I saw +two explosions at the giant’s waistline—torpedos that must have gone +right into him and exploded inside. Anyway, he doubled up with a +bellowing roar of pain that rattled our ear-drums and then he went +down, sinking with a cataclysmic rush of white waves over him.</p> + +<p>I recall my fleeting thought that this would be just the proper time +for Porky to withdraw. And he did. As the green giant fell and +disappeared, the body of Porky here on the sand gave a convulsive +shudder and in another instant Porky was sitting up, blinking, with a +hand rubbing his forehead, and the other hand shoving away Lisbeth who +was clutching at him.</p> + +<p>“W-well,” Porky said. “Here you are. What happened?”</p> + +<p>“Plenty,” I said. “A very great deal. But you did fine, Porky.”</p> + +<hr class='tb'> + +<p>Baldy was on his feet, holding off Lisbeth who was struggling to get at +Porky. “Say, listen, you lug,” Baldy demanded, “where in the devil did +you ever pick up that giant? It happened to work out all right, but—”</p> + +<p>“Why—I dunno,” Porky said. “He was just lying around down there—”</p> + +<p>“On his way in from Atlantis maybe?” Baldy was sarcastic.</p> + +<p>“I dunno. I was concentrating on a sub Commander—how bestial they +are—you know, that sort of stuff—and all of a sudden I sort of slid +into that giant.” Porky shuddered. “It was—horrible. But—when I saw +those Nazi planes, I did my best.”</p> + +<p>“You did wonderful,” I agreed.</p> + +<p>“You saved New York from maybe a nasty air raid. Now listen, the U-boat +Commanders are still out there. All we have to do—”</p> + +<p>“If we had any sense we’d be getting out of here before we get into +<i>real</i> trouble,” Lisbeth observed suddenly.</p> + +<p>I could see that she had something there. This section of the beach was +no longer lonely. Spectators were beginning to mill around; and there +were Coast Guards, with searchlights darting at us, and planes roaring +overhead.</p> + +<p>“Come on, let’s duck,” I agreed. “We’ll come back tomorrow night when +things have quieted down a bit.”</p> + +<p>Baldy and I planned it enthusiastically all the way back to the city. +Barring the sudden advent of green giants and such, the thing obviously +was absolutely simple. We four could tour all the coasts. And then +maybe arrange to get abroad. I figured three months—if Porky could +hold out—would wind up the war.</p> + +<p>That next day, Baldy and I made charts in regular military fashion, +outlining our exact plan of campaign. We didn’t see Porky or Lisbeth +that afternoon, or evening. They had wanted to have dinner together +again, but had promised faithfully to report at my study by eleven +p.m. They came, right on the dot. And they were both beaming.</p> + +<p>“Well,” I said. “Here you are. That’s fine. And you look in good shape +for a swell night’s work, Porky.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, sir,” Porky agreed. “I’m all right. But you see, +sir—there’s—er—something we want to tell you.”</p> + +<p>That “sir” sounded sort of queer, but I admit I didn’t get the idea.</p> + +<p>“He loves me and I love him and so it’s all settled,” Lisbeth said.</p> + +<p>I saw that Baldy looked startled. What I looked like I don’t know. +“What’s all settled?” I demanded.</p> + +<p>“Us—er—we’re engaged,” Porky stammered. “That is—”</p> + +<p>“It absolutely is,” Lisbeth beamed. “He loves me and I love him. +Definitely.”</p> + +<p>To say that I was nonplussed would be putting it mildly. But I have +always prided myself on having a true sense of values. What’s the +problem of a daughter compared to the problem of winning the war? +Nothing. Nothing at all.</p> + +<p>“Well, we’ll talk about that later,” I decided firmly. “Right now we’ve +got a war on our hands. Come on, let’s get going.”</p> + +<p>But Porky didn’t look at all as thought he were ready to start. “Well,” +he said, “that’s another thing I—er—have to tell you.” He looked very +pleased. “I haven’t got it any more. I’ve lost it.”</p> + +<p>Baldy came to life. “What’s <i>that</i> mean?” he demanded. “What in the +devil haven’t you got any more? What have you lost?”</p> + +<p>“My—my gift—that’s what you called it,” Porky said. “It’s gone. +Vanished. I can’t do it any more. I tried—honest I did—but it’s +gone.”</p> + +<p>Lisbeth made an expressive gesture like one who wants to indicate that +a fairy has just flown out the window.</p> + +<p>“He tried,” she said. “He really did.”</p> + +<p>“I’m no coward,” Porky added. “Didn’t I do fine last night? But it’s +gone—I’m quite normal now.” He said that last with a very evident +relish.</p> + +<p>“Because now your soul and heart and ego and such are all tied up with +Lisbeth,” Baldy said sarcastically.</p> + +<p>“That’s it,” Lisbeth retorted. “And you don’t need to be sarcastic +about it. He and I figured it all out—why would his ego want to roam +abroad when it’s in my keeping—forever?” She and Porky were holding +onto each other’s hands and gazing with that dying calf look. “He +belongs to me now,” Lisbeth added. “His ego doesn’t want to go +adventuring. Besides, if it did, I wouldn’t let it.”</p> + +<p>And there you are. I’m sorry about not being personally able to win the +war, but you can see, there wasn’t a thing I could do about it.</p> + +<div class='tn'> +Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in the July 1943 issue<br> +of <i>Science Fiction Stories</i>.<br> +</div> + +<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76899 ***</div> +</body> +</html> + diff --git a/76899-h/images/cover.jpg b/76899-h/images/cover.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3119f7c --- /dev/null +++ b/76899-h/images/cover.jpg diff --git a/76899-h/images/illus-001.png b/76899-h/images/illus-001.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7484eca --- /dev/null +++ b/76899-h/images/illus-001.png diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e91836f --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76899 +(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76899) |
