'And Then There Were None' by Eric Frank Russell [Part 1/4]

'And Then There Were None' by Eric Frank Russell

Source: https://www.abelard.org/e-f-russell.php

  Index: chapter 
      1 chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 end notes
     Chapter 1
     [The ambassador] went silent as the ship closed in and the planet’s 
      day-side face rapidly expanded. Then followed the usual circling and photographing. 
      A lot of villages and small towns were to be seen, also cultivated areas 
      of large extent. It was obvious that this planet—while by no means 
      fully exploited—was in the hands of colonists who were energetic and 
      numerically strong.
    Relieved that life was full, abundant and apparently free from alien disease. 
      Grayder brought the ship down onto the first hard-standing he saw. Its enormous 
      mass landed feather-like on a long, low hump amid well-tended fields. Again 
      all the ports became filled with faces as everyone had a look at the new 
      world.
    The midway airlock opened, the gangway went down. As before, exit was made 
      in strict order of precedence starting with the Ambassador and finishing 
      with Sergeant Major Bidworthy. Grouping near the bottom of the gangway they 
      spent the first few moments absorbing sunshine and fresh air.
    His Excellency scuffled the thick turf under his feet, plucked a blade 
      of it grunting as he stooped. He was so constructed that the effort came 
      close to an athletic feat and gave him a crick in the belly.
    ‘Earth-type grass. See that, Captain? Is it just a coincidence or 
      did they bring seed with them?’
    ‘Could be either. Several grassy worlds are known. And almost all 
      colonists went away loaded with seeds.’
    ‘It’s another touch of home, anyway. I think I’m going 
      to like this place.’ The Ambassador gazed into the distance, doing 
      it with pride of ownership. ‘Looks like there’s someone working 
      over there. He’s using a little motor-cultivator with a pair of fat 
      wheels. They can’t be very backward, it seems.
    ‘H’m-m-m !’ He rubbed a couple of chins. ‘Bring him 
    here. We’ll have a talk and find out where it’s best to make a 
    start.’
    ‘Very well.’ Captain Grayder turned to Colonel 
      Shelton. ‘His Excellency wishes to speak to that farmer.’ He 
      pointed to the faraway figure.
    ‘That farmer,’said Shelton to Major Hame. ‘His Excellency 
      wants him at once.’
    ‘Bring that farmer here,’ Hame ordered Lieutenant Deacon. ‘Quickly.’
     ‘Go get that farmer,’ Deacon told Sergeant Major Bid-worthy. 
      ‘And hurry—His Excellency is waiting.’
    
    Bidworthy sought around for a lesser rank, remembered that they were all 
      inside, cleaning ship and not smoking, by his order. He, it seemed, was 
      elected.
    Tramping across four fields and coming within hailing distance of his objective, 
      he performed a precise military halt, released a barracks square bellow 
      of, ‘Hi, you!and waved urgently.
    The farmer stopped his steady trudging behind the tiny cultivator, wiped 
      his forehead, glanced casually around. His indifferent manner suggested 
      that the mountainous bulk of the ship was a mirage such as are five a penny 
      around these parts. Bidworthy waved again, making it an authoritative summons. 
      Now suddenly aware of the sergeant major’s existence, the farmer calmly 
      waved back, resumed his work.
    Bidworthy employed a brief but pungent expletive which—when its flames 
      had died out—meant, ‘Dear me!and marched fifty paces 
      nearer. He could now see that the other was bushy-browed, leather-faced, 
      tall and lean.
    ‘Hi!’ he bawled.
    Stopping the cultivator again, the farmer leaned on one of of its shafts 
      and idly picked his teeth.
    Smitten by the ingenious thought that perhaps during the last few centuries 
    the old Terran language had been abandoned in favour of some other lingo, 
    Bidworthy approached to within normal talking distance and asked, ‘Can 
    you understand me?’
    Can any person understand another?’ inquired 
      the farmer with clear diction. 
    Bidworthy found himself afflicted with a moment of confusion. Recovering, 
      he informed hurriedly, ‘His Excellency the Earth Ambassador wishes 
      to speak with you at once.’
    ‘Is that so?’ The other eyed him speculatively, had another 
      pick at his teeth. ‘And what makes him excellent?’
    ‘He is a person of considerable importance,’ said Bidworthy, 
      unable to decide whether the other was trying to be funny at this expense 
      or alternatively was what is known as a character. A lot of these long-isolated 
      pioneering types liked to think of themselves as characters.
    ‘Of considerable importance,’ echoed the farmer, narrowing 
      his eyes at the horizon. He appeared to be trying to grasp a completely 
      alien concept. After a while, he inquired, ‘What will happen to your 
      home world when this person dies?’
    ‘Nothing,’ Bidworthy admitted.
    ‘It will roll on as before?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Round and round the sun?’
    ‘Of course.’
    ‘Then,’ declared the farmer flatly, ‘if his existence 
      or nonexistence makes no difference he cannot be important.’ with 
      that, his little engine went chuff-chuff and the cultivator rolled forward.
    Digging his nails into the palms of his hands, Bidworthy spent half a minute 
      gathering oxygen before he said in hoarse tones, ‘Are you going to 
      speak to the Ambassador or not?’
    ‘Not.’
    ‘I cannot return without at least a message for His Excellency.’
    ‘Indeed?’ The other was incredulous. ‘What is to stop 
      you?’ Then, noticing the alarming increase in Bidworthy’s colour, 
      he added with compassion, ‘Oh, well. you may tell him that I said’—he 
      paused while he thought it over—‘God bless you and good-bye.’
    Sergeant Major Bidworthy was a powerful man who weighed more than two hundred 
      pounds, had roamed the cosmos for twenty-five years and feared nothing. 
      He had never been known to permit the shiver of one hair—but he was trembling all 
      over by the time he got back to the base of the gangway.
      


  
    
  



   His Excellency fastened a cold eye upon him and demanded, ‘Well?’
    ‘He refuses to come.’ Bidworthy’s veins stood out 
      on his forehead. ‘And, sir, if only I could have him in the space 
      troops for a few months I’d straighten him up and teach him to 
      move at the double.’ 
    ‘I don’t doubt that, Sergeant Major,’ the Ambassador 
      soothed. He continued in a whispered aside to Colonel Shelton. ‘He’s 
      a good fellow but no diplomat. Too abrupt and harsh-voiced. Better go 
      yourself and fetch that farmer. We can’t loaf around forever waiting 
      to learn where to begin.’
    ‘Very well, Your Excellency.’ Trudging across the field, 
      Shelton caught up with the farmer, smiled pleasantly and said, ‘Good 
      morning, my man.’
    Stopping his machine, the farmer sighed as if it were one of those 
      days one has sometimes. His eyes were dark brown, almost black as they 
      regarded the newcomer.
    ‘What makes you think I’m your man.’
    ‘It is a figure of speech,’ explained Shelton. He could 
      see what was wrong now. Bidworthy had fallen foul of an irascible type. 
      They’d been like two dogs snarling at one another. Oh, well, as 
      a high- ranking officer he was competent to handle anybody, the good 
      and the bad, the sweet and the sour, the jovial and the liverish. Shelton 
      went on oilily, ‘I was only trying to be courteous.’
    ‘It must be said,’ meditated the farmer, ‘that that 
      is something worth trying for—if you can make it.’
    Pinking a little, Shelton continued with determination, ‘I am 
      commanded to request the pleasure of your company at the ship.’
    ‘Commanded?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Really and truly commanded?’
    ‘Yes.’
    The other appeared to wander into a momentary daydream before he came 
      back and asked blandly, ‘Think they’ll get any pleasure 
      out of my company?’
    ‘I’m sure of it,’ said Shelton.
    ‘You’re a liar,’ said the farmer.
    His colour deepening, Colonel Shelton snapped, ‘I do not permit 
      people to call me a liar.’
    ‘You’ve just permitted it,’ the farmer pointed out. 
      Letting it pass, Shelton insisted, ‘Are you coming to the ship?’
    ‘No.’
    ‘Why not?’
    ‘Myob!’ said the farmer.
    ‘What was that?’
    ‘Myob!’ he repeated. It sounded like some sort of insult. 
      Shelton went back, told the Ambassador, ‘That fellow is one of 
      those too-clever types. At the finish all I could get out of him was 
      ‘Myob’ whatever that means.’
    ‘Local slang,’ chipped in Grayder. ‘An awful lot 
      of it develops in four centuries. I’ve come across one or two 
      worlds where there has been so much of it that to all intents and purposes 
      it formed a new language.’
    ‘He understood your speech?’ asked the Ambassador of Shelton.
    ‘Yes, Your Excellency. And his own is quite good. But he won’t 
      leave his work.’ He reflected briefly, suggested, ‘If it 
      were left to me I’d bring him in by force with an armed escort.’
    ‘That would encourage him to give essential information,’ 
      commented the Ambassador with open sarcasm. He patted his stomach, smoothed 
      his jacket, glanced down at his glossy shoes. ‘Nothing for it 
      but to go and speak to him myself.’
    Shelton was shocked. ‘Your Excellency, you can’t do that!’
    ‘Why can’t I?’
    ‘It would be undignified.’
    ‘I am fully aware of the fact,’said the Ambassador dryly. 
      ‘What alternative do you suggest?’
    ‘We can send out a patrol to find someone more co-operative.’
     ‘Someone better informed, too,’ Captain Grayder offered. 
      ‘At best we won’t get much out of one surly hayseed. I doubt 
      whether he knows one quarter of what we require to learn.’
    ‘All right.’ The Ambassador dropped the idea of doing his 
      own chores. ‘Organise a patrol and let’s have some results.’
    ‘A patrol,’ said Colonel Shelton to Major Hame. ‘Nominate 
      one immediately.’
    ‘Call out a patrol,’ Hame ordered Lieutenant Deacon. ‘At 
      once.’
    ‘Parade a patrol forthwith, Sergeant Major,’ said Deacon.
    Bidworthy lumbered up the gangway, stuck his head into the airlock 
      and shouted,’ sergeant Gleed, out with your squad and make it 
      snappy!’ He gave a suspicious sniff and went farther into the 
      lock. His voice gained several more decibels. ‘Who’s been 
      smoking? By heavens, if I catch the man—’
    Across the fields something quietly went chuff-chuff while 
      fat wheels crawled along.
    The patrol formed by the right in two ranks of eight men each, turned 
    at a barked command and marched off in the general direction of the ship’s 
    nose. They moved with perfect rhythm if no great beauty of motion. Their 
    boots thumped in unison, their accoutrements clattered with martial noises 
    and the orange-coloured sun made sparkles on their metal.
    Sergeant Gleed did not have to take his men far. They were one hundred 
      yards beyond the ship’s great snout when he noticed a man ambling 
      across the field to his right. Treating the ship with utter indifference, 
      this character was making toward the farmer still toiling far over to 
      the left.
    ‘Patrol, right wheel!’ yelled Gleed, swift to take advantage 
      of the situation. The patrol right-wheeled, marched straight past the 
      wayfarer who couldn’t be bothered even to wave a handkerchief 
      at them. Now Gleed ordered an about-turn and followed it with a take-him 
      gesture.
    Speeding up its pace, the patrol opened its ranks and became a double 
      file of men tramping on either side of the lone pedestrian. Ignoring 
      his suddenly acquired escort the latter continued to plod straight ahead 
      like one long convinced that all is illusion.
    ‘Left wheel!’ roared Gleed, trying to bend the whole caboodle 
      toward the waiting Ambassador.
    Swiftly obedient, the double file headed leftward, one, two, three, 
      hup! It was neat, precise execution beautiful to watch. Only one thing 
      spoiled it: the man in the middle stubbornly maintained his self-chosen 
      orbit and ambled casually between numbers four and five of the right-hand 
      file.
    That upset Gleed, especially since the patrol continued to thump steadily 
      ambassadorwards for lack of a further order. His Excellency was being 
      treated to the unmilitary spectacle of an escort dumbly boot-beating 
      one way while its prisoner airily mooched another way. In due course 
      Colonel Shelton would have plenty to say about it and anything he forgot 
      Bidworthy would remember.
    ‘Patrol!’ hoarsed Gleed, pointing an outraged finger at 
      the escapee and momentarily dismissing all regulation commands from 
      his mind, ‘Get that mug!’
    Breaking ranks, they moved at the double and surrounded the wanderer too 
    closely to permit further progress. Perforce he stopped.
    Gleed came up and said somewhat breathlessly, ‘Look, the Earth 
      Ambassador wants to speak to you—that’s all.’
    The other gazed at him with mild blue eyes. He was a funny looking sample, 
    long overdue for a shave. He had a fringe of ginger whiskers sticking 
    out all around his face and bore faint resemblance to a sunflower.
    ‘I should care,’ be said.
    ‘Are you going to talk with His Excellency?’ Gleed persisted.
    ‘Naw.’ The other nodded toward the farmer. ‘Going 
      to talk to Zeke.’
    ‘The Ambassador first,’ retorted Gleed, wearing his tough 
      expression. ‘He’s a big noise.’
    ‘I don’t doubt that,’ remarked the sunflower, showing 
      what sort of a noise he had in mind.
    ‘Smartie Artie, eh?’ grated Gleed, pushing his face close 
      and making it unpleasant. He signed to his men. ‘All right, hustle 
      him along. We’ll show him!’
    Smartie Artie chose this moment to sit down. He did it sort of solidly, 
      giving himself the aspect of a squatting statue anchored for the remainder 
      of eternity. But Gleed had handled sitters before, the only difference 
      being that this one was cold sober.
    ‘Pick him up,’ commanded Gleed, ‘and carry him.’
    So they picked him up and carried him, feet first, whiskers last. He 
      hung limp and unresisting in their hands, a dead weight made as difficult 
      as possible to bear. In this inauspicious manner he arrived in the presence 
      of the Ambassador where the escort plonked him on his feet.
    Promptly he set out for Zeke.
    ‘Hold him, darn you!’ howled Gleed.
    The patrol grabbed and clung tight. The Ambassador eyed the whiskers 
      with well-bred concealment of distaste, coughed delicately and spoke.
    ‘I am truly sorry that you had to come to me in this fashion.’
    ‘In that case,’ suggested the prisoner, ‘you could 
      have saved yourself some mental anguish by not permitting it to happen.’
    ‘There was no other choice. We’ve got to make contact somehow.’
    ‘I don’t see it’ said Ginger Whiskers. ‘What’s 
      so special about this date?’
    ‘The date?’ The Ambassador frowned in puzzlement. ‘What 
      has the date got to do with it?’
    ‘That’s exactly what I’m asking.’
    ‘The point eludes me.’ The Ambassador turned to the others. 
      ‘Do you understand what he’s aiming at?’
    Shelton said, ‘I can hazard a guess, Your Excellency. I think 
      he is hinting that since we’ve left them without contact for four 
      hundred years there is no particular urgency about making it today.’ 
      He looked to the sunflower for confirmation.
    That worthy rallied to his support by remarking, ‘You’re 
      doing pretty well for a halfwit.’
    Regardless of Shelton’s own reaction, this was too much for Bidworthy 
      purpling nearby. His chest came up and his eyes caught fire. His voice 
      was an authoritative rasp.
    ‘Be more respectful while addressing high-ranking officers!’
    The prisoner’s mild blue eyes turned upon him in childish amazement, 
      examined him slowly from feet to head and all the way down again. The 
      eyes drifted back inquiringly to the Ambassador.
    ‘Who is this preposterous person?’
    Dismissing the question with an impatient wave of his hand, the Ambassador 
      said, ‘see here, it is not our purpose to bother you from sheer 
      perversity, as you seem to think. Neither do we wish to detain you any 
      longer than is necessary. All w—’
    Pulling at his face-fringe as if to accentuate its offensiveness, the 
      other interjected, ‘It being you, of course, who determines the 
      length of the necessity?’
    ‘On the contrary, you may decide that for yourself,’ gave 
      back the Ambassador, displaying admirable self-control. ‘All you 
      need do is tell us—’
    ‘Then I’ve decided it right now,’ the prisoner chipped 
      in. He tried to heave himself free of his escort .‘Let me go talk 
      to Zeke.’
    ‘All you need do,’ the Ambassador persisted, ‘is 
      tell us where we can find a local official who can put us into touch 
      with your central government.’ His gaze was stern, commanding, 
      as he added, ‘For instance where is the nearest police post?’
    ‘Myob!’ said Ginger Whiskers.
    ‘What was that?’
    ‘Myob!’
    ‘The same to you,’ retorted the Ambassador, his patience 
      evaporating.
    ‘That’s precisely what I’m trying to do,’ insisted 
      the prisoner, enigmatically. ‘Only you won’t let me do it.’
    If I may make a suggestion, Your Excellency,’ but in Shelton, 
      ‘allow me—’
    ‘I require no suggestions and I won’t allow you,’ 
      said the Ambassador, somewhat out of temper. ‘I have had enough 
      of all this stupid tomfoolery. I think we have landed at random in an 
      area reserved for imbeciles. It would be as well to recognize the fact 
      and get out of it with no more delay.’
    ‘Now you’re talking,’ approved Ginger Whiskers. ‘And 
      the farther the better.’
    ‘We have no intention of leaving this planet, if that is what’s 
      in your incomprehensible mind,’ asserted the Ambassador. He stamped 
      a proprietory foot into the turf. ‘This is part of the Terran 
      Empire. As such it is going to be recognized, charted and organized.’
    ‘Heah, heah!’ put in the senior civil servant who aspired 
      to honours in elocution.
    His Excellency threw a frown behind, went on, ‘We’ll move 
      the ship to some other section where brains are brighter.’ He 
      turned attention to the escort. ‘Let him go. Probably he is in 
      a hurry to borrow a razor.’
    They released their grips. Ginger Whiskers at once turned toward the 
      distant farmer much as if he were a magnetized needle irresistibly drawn 
      Zekeward. Without another word he set off at his original slovenly pace. 
      Disappointment and disgust showed on the faces of Bidworthy and Gleed 
      as they watched him depart.
    ‘Have the vessel shifted at once, Captain,’ the Ambassador 
      said to Grayder. ‘Plant it near to a likely town—not out 
      in the wilds where every yokel views strangers as a bunch of crooks.’
    He marched importantly up the gangway. Captain Grayder followed, then 
      Colonel Shelton, then the elocutionist. Next, their successors in correct 
      order of precedence. Lastly, Gleed and his men. The airlock closed. 
      The warning siren sounded. Despite its immense bulk the ship shivered 
      briefly from end to end and soared without deafening uproar or spectacular 
      display of flame.
    Indeed, there was silence save for a little engine going chuff-chuff and the murmurings of the two men walking behind it. Neither took the 
      trouble to look around to see what was happening.
    ‘Seven pounds of prime tobacco is a heck of a lot to give for 
      one case of brandy,’ Ginger Whiskers protested.
    ‘Not for my brandy,’ said Zeke. ‘It’s stronger 
      than a thousand Gands and smoother than an Earthman’s downfall.’



  Chapter 
      2
    The great ship’s next touchdown was made on a wide flat about 
      two miles north of a town estimated to hold twelve to fifteen thousand 
      people. Grayder would have preferred to survey the place from low altitude 
      before making his landing but one cannot handle a huge space-going vessel 
      as if it were an atmospheric tug. Only two things can be done when so 
      close to a planetary surface—the ship is taken straight up or 
      brought straight down with no room for fiddling between-times.
    So Grayder dumped the ship in the best spot he could find when finding 
      is a matter of split-second decisions. It made a rut only ten feet deep, 
      the ground being hard with a rock bed. The gangway was shoved out. The 
      procession descended in the same order as before.
    Casting an anticipatory look toward the town, the Ambassador registered 
      irritation. ‘Something is badly out of kilter here. There’s 
      the town not so far away. Here we are in plain view with a ship like 
      a metal mountain. At least a thousand people must have seen us coming 
      down even if all the rest are holding seances behind drawn curtains 
      or playing poker in the cellars. Are they interested? Are they excited?’
    ‘It doesn’t seem so,’ contributed Shelton, pulling 
      industriously at an eyelid for the sake of feeling it spring back.
    ‘I wasn’t asking you. I am telling you. They are not excited. 
      They are not surprised. They are not even interested. One would almost 
      think they’d had a ship here that was full of smallpox or that 
      swindled them out of something. what’s wrong with them?’
    ‘Possibly they lack curiosity,’ Shelton ventured.
    ‘Either that or they’re afraid. Or maybe the entire gang 
      of them is more cracked than any bunch on any other world. Practically 
      all these planets were appropriated by dotty people who wanted to establish 
      a haven where their eccentricities could run loose. And nutty notions 
      become conventional after four hundred years of undisturbed continuity. 
      It is then considered normal and proper to nurse the bats out of your 
      grandfather’s attic. That and generations of inbreeding can create 
      some queer types. But we’ll cure them before we’re through.’
    ‘Yes, Your Excellency, most certainly we will.’
    ‘You don’t look so well-balanced yourself, chasing that 
      eyelid around your face,’ reproved the Ambassador. He pointed 
      south-east as Shelton stuck the fidgety hand firmly into a pocket. ‘There’s 
      a road over there. Wide and well-built by the looks of it. They don’t 
      construct a highway for the mere fun of it. Ten to one it’s an 
      important artery.’
    ‘That’s how it looks to me,’ Shelton agreed.
    ‘Put that patrol across it, Colonel. If your men don’t 
      bring in a willing talker within reasonable time we’ll send the 
      entire battalion into the town itself.’
    ‘A patrol,’ said Shelton to Major Hame.
    ‘Call out the patrol,’ Hame ordered Lieutenant Deacon.
    ‘That patrol again, Sergeant Major,’ said Deacon.
    Bidworthy raked out Gleed and his men, indicated the road, barked a 
      bit and shooed them on their way.
    They marched, Gleed in front. Their objective was half a mile away 
      and angled toward the town. The left-hand file had a clear view of the 
      nearest suburbs, eyed the buildings wistfully, wished Gleed in warmer 
      regions with Bidworthy stoking the hell-fire beneath him.
    Hardly had they reached their goal than a customer appeared. He came 
      from the town’s outskirts, zooming along at fast pace on a contraption 
      vaguely like a motorcycle. It ran on a big pair of rubber balls and 
      was pulled by a caged fan. Gleed spread his men across the road.
    The oncomer’s machine suddenly gave forth a harsh, penetrating 
      sound that reminded everybody of Bidworthy in the presence of dirty 
      boots.
    ‘Stay put,’ warned Gleed. ‘I’ll skin the fellow 
      who gives way and leaves a gap.’
    Again the shrill metallic warning. Nobody moved. The machine slowed, 
      came up to them at a crawl and stopped. Its fan continued to spin at 
      slow rate, the blades almost visible and giving out a steady hiss.
    ‘What’s the idea?’ demanded the rider. He was lean-featured, 
      in his middle thirties, wore a gold ring in his nose and had a pigtail 
      four feet long.
    Blinking incredulously at this get-up, Gleed managed to jerk an indicative 
    thumb toward the metal mountain and say, ‘Earthship.’
    ‘Well, what do you expect me to do about it?—throw a fit 
      of hysterics?’
    ‘We expect you to co-operate,’ informed Gleed, still bemused 
      by the pigtail. He had never seen such a thing before. It was in no 
      way effeminate, he decided. Rather did it lend a touch of ferocity like 
      that worn—according to the picture books—by certain North 
      American aborigines in the dim and distant past.
    ‘Co-operation,’ mused the rider. ‘Now there is a 
      beautiful word. You know exactly what it means, of course?’
    ‘I’m not a dope.’
    ‘The precise degree of your idiocy is not under discussion at 
      the moment,’ the rider pointed out. His nose-ring waggled a bit 
      as he spoke. ‘We are talking about co-operation. I take it you 
      do quite a lot of it yourself?’
    ‘You bet I do,’ Gleed assured. ‘And so does everyone 
      else who knows what’s good for him.’
    ‘Let’s keep to the subject, shall we? Let’s not sidetrack 
      and go rambling all over the conversational map.’ He revved up 
      his fan a little then let it slow down again. ‘You are given orders 
      and you obey them?’
    ‘Of course. I’d have a rough time if—’
    ‘That is what you call co-operation?’ put in the other. 
      He hunched his shoulders, pursed his bottom lip. ‘Well, it’s 
      nice to check the facts of history. The books could be wrong.’ 
      His fan flashed into a circle of light and the machine surged forward. 
      ‘Pardon me.’
    The front rubber ball barged forcefully between two men, knocking them 
      aside without injury. With a high whine the machine shot down the road, 
      its fan-blast making its rider’s plaited hairdo point horizontally 
      backward.
    ‘You substandard morons!’ raged Gleed as the pair got up 
      and dusted themselves. ‘I told you to stand fast What d’you 
      mean by letting him run out on us like that?’
    ‘Didn’t have much choice about it, Sarge,’ answered 
      one surlily.
    ‘I want none of your back-chat. You could have busted one of 
      his balloons if you’d had your guns ready. That would have stopped 
      him.’
    ‘You didn’t tell us to use our guns.’
    ‘Where was your own, anyway?’ added a sneaky voice.
    Gleed whirled on the others and demanded, ‘Who said that?’ 
      His eyes raked a long row of impassive faces. It was impossible to detect 
      the culprit ‘I’ll shake you up with the next quota of fatigues,’ 
      he promised. ‘I’ll see to it that—’
    ‘The Sergeant Major’s coming,’ one of them warned.
    Bidworthy was four hundred yards away and making martial progress towards 
      them. Arriving in due time, he cast a cold, contemptuous glance over 
      the patrol.
    ‘What happened?’
    ‘Giving me a lot of lip, he was,’ complained Gleed after 
      providing a brief account of the incident. ‘He looked like one 
      of those Chickasaws with an oil-well.’
    ‘Did he really?’ Bidworthy surveyed him a moment, then 
      invited, ‘And what is a Chickasaw?’
    ‘I read about them somewhere once when I was a kid,’ explained 
      Gleed, happy to bestow a modicum of learning. ‘They got rich on 
      oil. They had long, plaited haircuts, wore blankets and rode around 
      in gold-plated automobiles.’
    ‘Sounds crazy to me,’ said Bidworthy. ‘I gave up 
      all that magic-carpet stuff when I was seven. I was deep in ballistics 
      before I was twelve and military logistics when I was fourteen.’ 
      He sniffed loudly and gave the other a jaundiced eye. ‘Some guys 
      suffer from arrested development.’
    ‘They actually existed,’ Gleed maintained. ‘They—’
      ‘So did fairies,’ snapped Bidworthy. ‘My 
    mother said so. My mother was a good woman. She didn’t tell me a 
    lot of goddam lies—often.’ He spat on the road. ‘Be 
    your age!Then he glowered at the patrol. ‘All right, get 
    out your guns—assuming that you’ve got them and know where 
    they are and which hand to hold them in. Take orders from me. I’ll 
    deal personally with the next character who comes along.’
    Sitting on a large rock by the roadside, be planted an expectant gaze 
      on the town. Gleed posed near him, slightly pained. The patrol remained 
      strung across the road with guns held ready. Half an hour crawled by 
      without anything happening.
    One of the men pleaded, ‘Can we smoke, Sergeant Major?’
    ‘No!’
    They fell into lugubrious silence, licking their lips from time to 
      time and doing plenty of thinking. They had lots about which to think. 
      A town—any town of human occupation—had desirable features 
      not to be found anywhere else in the cosmos. Lights, company, freedom, 
      laughter, all the makings of life. And one can go hungry too long.
    Eventually a large coach emerged from the town’s outskirts, hit 
      the high road and came bowling towards them. A long, shiny, streamlined 
      job, it rolled on twenty balls in two rows of ten, gave forth a whine 
      similar to but louder than that of the motorcycle, and had no visible 
      fans. It was loaded with people.
    At a point two hundred yards from the road-block a loud-speaker under 
      the vehicle’s bonnet blared an urgent, ‘Make way! Make way!’
    ‘This is it,’ commented Bidworthy with much satisfaction. 
      ‘We’ve caught a dollop of them. One of them is going to 
      confess or I’ll resign from the space-service.’ He got off 
      his rock and stood in readiness.
    ‘Make way! Make way!’
    ‘Perforate his balloons if he tries to bull his way through,’ 
      ordered Bidworthy.
    It wasn’t necessary. The coach lost pace, stopped with its bonnet 
      a yard from the waiting file. Its driver peered out of the side of his 
      cab. Other faces snooped curiously farther back.
    Composing himself and determined to try the effect of fraternal cordiality, 
      Bidworthy went up to the driver and said with great difficulty, ‘Good 
      morning!’
    ‘Your time-sense is shot to pot,’ responded the other ungratefully. 
      He had a heavy blue jowl, a broken nose, cauliflower ears and looked 
      the sort who usually drives with others in hot and vengeful pursuit. 
      ‘Can’t you afford a watch?’
    ‘Eh?’
    ‘It isn’t morning. It’s late afternoon.’
    ‘So it is,’ admitted Bidworthy, forcing a cracked smile.
    ‘Good afternoon!’
    ‘I’m not so sure about that,’ mused the driver, leaning 
      on his steering-wheel and moodily scratching his head. ‘We get 
      an afternoon in every day. It’s always the same. Morning goes 
      and what happens? You’re stuck with an afternoon. I’ve become 
      hardened to it. And this one is just another nearer the grave.’
    ‘That may be,’ conceded Bidworthy, little struck with this 
      ghoulish angle, ‘but I have other things to worry about and—’
    ‘Fat lot of use worrying about anything, past, present or whatever,’ 
      advised the driver. ‘Because there are far bigger worries to come. 
      Stick around long enough and you’ll have some real stinkers in 
      your lap.’
    ‘Perhaps so,’ said Bidworthy, inwardly feeling that this 
      was a poor time to contemplate the darker side of existence. ‘But 
      I prefer to deal with my own troubles in my own way.’
    ‘Nobody’s troubles are entirely their own, nor their methods 
      of coping,’ continued the tough-looking oracle. ‘Are they 
      now?’
    ‘I don’t know and I don’t care,’ growled Bidworthy, 
      his composure thinning down as his blood-pressure built up. He was irefully 
      conscious of Gleed and the patrol watching, listening and probably grinning 
      like stupid apes behind his back. There was also the load of gaping 
      passengers. ‘I think you’re talking just to stall me. You 
      might as well know that it won’t work. I’m here for a purpose 
      and that purpose is going to be served. The Terran Ambassador is waiting—’
    ‘So are we,’ emphasised the driver.
    ‘He wants to speak to you,’ Bidworthy went stubbornly on, 
      ‘and he’s going to speak to you.’
    ‘I’d be the last to prevent him. We’ve got free speech 
      here. Let him step up and say his piece so that we can go our way.’
    ‘You,’ informed Bidworthy, ‘are going to him.’ 
      He signed to the rest of the coach. ‘The whole lot of you.’
    ‘Not me,’ denied a fat man sticking his head out of a side 
      window. He wore thick-lensed glasses that made his eyes look like poached 
      eggs. Moreover, he was adorned with a tall hat candy-striped in white 
      and pink. ‘Not me,’ repeated this vision with considerable 
      firmness.
    ‘Me neither,’ supported the driver.
    ‘All right.’ Bidworthy displayed maximum menace. ‘Move 
      this birdcage one inch backward or forward and we’ll shoot your 
      pot-bellied tyres to thin strips. Get out of that cab.’
    ‘Ha-ha. I’m too comfortable. Try fetching me.’
    Bidworthy beckoned to the nearest six men. ‘You heard him—take 
      him up on that.’
    Tearing open the cab door, they grabbed. If they had expected the victim 
      to put up a futile fight against heavy odds, they were disappointed. 
      He made no attempt to resist. They got him, lugged together and he yielded 
      with good grace. His body leaned to one side and came halfway out of 
      the door.
    That was as far as they could get him.
    ‘Come on,’ urged Bidworthy, showing impatience. ‘Heave 
      him loose. You don’t have to be feeble. Show him who’s who. 
      He isn’t a fixture.’
    One of the men climbed over the body, poked around inside the cab and 
      announced, ‘He is, you know.’
    ‘What d’you mean?’
    ‘He’s chained to the steering column.’
    ‘Nonsense. Let me see.’ He had a look and found that it 
      was so. A chain and a small but heavy and complicated padlock linked 
      the driver’s leg to his coach. ‘Where’s the key?’
    ‘Search me,’ invited the driver.
    They did just that. The effort proved futile. No key.
    ‘Who’s got it?’
    ‘Myob!’
    ‘Shove him back into his seat,’ ordered Bidworthy, looking 
    savage. ‘We’ll take the passengers. One yap is as good as 
    another so far as I’m concerned.’ Striding to the doors, he 
    jerked them open.
    ‘All out and make it snappy.’
    Nobody budged. They studied him silently, with various expressions 
      not one of which did anything to help his ego. The fat man with the 
      candy-striped hat mooned at his sardonically. Bidworthy decided that 
      he did not like the fat man and that a stiff course of military calisthenics 
      might thin him down a bit.
    ‘You can come out on your feet,’ he suggested to the passengers 
      in general and the fat man in particular, ‘or on your necks. Whichever 
      you prefer. Make up your minds.’
    ‘If you can’t use your head you can at least use your eyes,’ 
      commented the fat man happily. He shifted in his seat to the accompaniment 
      of metallic clanking noises.
    Bidworthy accepted the idea, leaning through the doors for a better look. 
    Then he clambered into the vehicle, went its full length while carefully 
    studying each passenger. His florid features were two shades darker when 
    he emerged and spoke to Sergeant Gleed.
    ‘They are all chained. Every one of them.’ He glared at 
      the driver. ‘What’s the purpose of manacling the lot?’
    ‘Myob!’ said the driver airily.
    ‘Who has the keys?’
    ‘Myob!’
    Taking a deep breath, Bidworthy declaimed to nobody in particular, 
      ‘Every once in a while I hear of somebody running amok and laying 
      them out by the dozens. I’ve always wondered why—but now 
      I know.’ He gnawed his knuckles, added to Gleed, ‘We can’t 
      run this contraption to the ship with that dummy blocking the controls. 
      Either we must find the keys or get tools and cut them loose.’
    ‘Or you could wave us on our way and then go take a pill,’ 
      offered the driver.
    ‘Shut up! If I’m stuck here another million years I’ll see to it that—’
    ‘Here’s the Colonel,’ muttered Gleed, giving him 
      a nudge.
      



  
    
  


  Colonel Shelton arrived, walked once slowly and officiously around 
      the outside of the coach, examined its construction and weighed up its 
      occupants. He flinched at the striped hat whose owner leered at him 
      through the glass. Then he came over to the disgruntled group.
    ‘What’s the trouble this time, Sergeant Major?’
    ‘They’re as crazy as all the others, sir. They’re 
      full of impudence and say, ‘Myob’ and couldn’t care 
      less about His Excellency. They don’t want to come out and we 
      can’t make them because they’re chained in their seats.’
    ‘Chained?’ Shelton’s eyebrow lifted halfway toward 
      his hair. ‘What on earth for?’
    ‘I don’t know, sir. All I can tell you is that they’re 
      fastened in like a bunch of gangsters being hauled to the pokey and—’
    Shelton moved off without waiting to hear the rest. He had a look for 
      himself, came back.
    ‘You may have something there, Sergeant Major. But I don’t 
      think they are criminals.’
    ‘No, sir?’
    ‘No.’ He threw a significant glance towards the fat man’s 
      colourful headgear and several other sartorial eccentricities including 
      a ginger-haired individual’s foot-wide polka-dotted bow. ‘It’s 
      more likely they’re a consignment of lunatics being taken to an 
      asylum. I’ll ask the driver.’ Going to the cab, he said, 
      ‘Do you mind telling me your destination?’
    ‘Yes,’ responded the other.
    ‘Very well, where is it?’
    ‘Look,’ said the driver, ‘are we talking the same 
      language?’
    ‘Eh? Why?’
    ‘You’ve just asked me whether I mind and I said yes.’ 
      He make a disparaging gesture. ‘I do mind.’
    ‘You refuse to tell?’
    ‘Your aim’s improving, Sonny.’
    ‘Sonny?’ put in Bidworthy, vibrant with outrage. ‘Do 
      you realize that you are speaking to a colonel?’
    ‘What’s a colonel?’ asked the driver interestedly.
    ‘By hokey, if your—’
    ‘Leave this to me,’ insisted Shelton, waving the furious 
      Bidworthy down. His expression was cold as he returned attention to 
      the driver. ‘On your way. I’m sorry you’ve been detained.’
    ‘Think nothing of it,’ said the driver with exaggerated 
      politeness. ‘I’ll do as much for you some day.’
    With that enigmatic remark he let his machine roll for-ward. The patrol 
      parted to make room. Building up its whine to the top note, the coach 
      sped down the road and diminished into the dusty distance.
    ‘This planet,’ swore Bidworthy, staring purple-faced after 
      it, ‘has more no-good bums in need of discipline than any place 
      this side of—’
    ‘Calm yourself, Sergeant Major,’ urged Shelton. ‘ 
      I feel exactly the same way as you do—but I’m taking care 
      of my arteries. Blowing them full of bumps like seaweed won’t 
      solve any problems.’
    ‘Maybe so, sir, but-’
    ‘We’re up against something mighty peculiar here,’ 
      Shelton went on. We’ve got to find out precisely what it is and 
      how best to cope with. In all probability it means we’ll have 
      to devise new tactics. So far the patrol has achieved nothing. It is 
      wasting its time. Obviously we’ll have to concoct a more effective 
      method of getting into touch with the powers-that-be. 
      March the men back to the ship, Sergeant Major.’
    ‘Very well, sir.’ Bidworthy saluted, swung around, clicked 
      his heels, opened a cavernous mouth. 
    ‘Patro-o-ol . . . right form—’
    Aboard ship the resulting conference lasted well into the night and 
      halfway through the following morning. During these argumentative hours 
      various oddments of traffic, mostly vehicular, passed along the road. 
      But nothing paused to view the monster spaceship, nobody approached 
      for a friendly word with its crew. The strange inhabitants of this world 
      seemed to be afflicted with a local form of mental blindness, unable 
      to see a thing until it was thrust into their faces and then surveying 
      it squint-eyed.
    One passer-by in mid-morning was a long, low truck whining on two dozen 
      balls and loaded with girls wearing bright head-scarves. The girls were 
      tunefully singing something about one little kiss before we part, dear. 
      A number of troops loafing near the gangway came eagerly to life, waved, 
      whistled and yoohooed. Their effort was a total waste for the singing 
      continued without break or pause and nobody waved back.
    To add to the discomforture of the love-hungry, Bidworthy stuck his 
      head out of the airlock and rasped, ‘If you monkeys are bursting 
      with surplus energy I can find a few jobs for you to do—nice, 
      dirty ones. ’ He seared them one at a time before he withdrew.
    Up near the ship’s nose the top brass sat around the chart-room’s 
      horseshoe table and debated the situation. Most of them were content 
      to repeat with extra emphasis what they had said the previous evening, 
      there being no new points to bring up.
    ‘Are you certain,’ the Ambassador asked Grayder, ‘that 
      this planet has not been visited since the last emigration transport 
      dumped its final load four centuries ago?’
    ‘I’m quite positive, Your Excellency. Any such visit would 
      be on record.’
    ‘Yes, if made by a Terran ship. But what about others? I feel 
      it in my bones that at sometime or other these people have fallen foul 
      of one or more vessels calling unofficially and have been leery of spaceships 
      ever since. Perhaps somebody got tough with them and tried to muscle 
      in where he wasn’t wanted. Or perhaps they’ve had to beat 
      off a gang of pirates. Or maybe they’ve been swindled by unscrupulous 
      traders.’
    ‘Absolutely impossible, Your Excellency,’ declared Grayder, 
      suppressing a smile. ‘Emigration was so widely scattered over 
      so large a number of worlds that even today every one of them is under-populated, 
      under-developed and utterly unable to build spaceships of any kind no 
      matter how rudimentary. Some may have the technical know-how but they 
      lack the industrial facilities, of which they need plenty.’
    ‘Yes, that is what I’ve always understood.’
    Grayder went on, ‘All Blieder-drive vessels are built in the 
      system of Sol and registered as Terran ships. Complete track is kept 
      of their movements and their whereabouts are always known. The only 
      other spaceships in existence are eighty or ninety antiquated rocket 
      jobs bought at scrap price by the Epsilon system for haulage work between 
      its fourteen closely-spaced planets. An old-fashioned rocket-ship couldn’t 
      reach this world in a hundred years.’
    ‘No, of course not.’
    ‘Unofficial boats capable of this long range just don’t 
      exist,’ Grayder assured. ‘Neither do space buccaneers and 
      for much the same reason. A Blieder-drive ship is so costly that a would-be 
      pirate would have to be a billionaire to become a pirate.’
    ‘Then,’ said the Ambassador heavily, ‘back we go 
      to my original theory; that a lot of inbreeding has made them crazier 
      than their colonizing ancestors.’
    ‘There’s plenty to be said in favour of that idea,’ 
      put in Shelton. ‘You should have seen the coach- load I looked 
      over. There was a fellow like a bankrupt mortician wearing odd shoes, 
      one brown and one a repulsive yellow. Also a moon-faced gump sporting 
      a hat apparently made from the skin of a barber’s pole, a1l. stripy.’ 
      With a sad attempt at wit, he finished, ‘The only thing missing 
      was his bubble-pipe-and probably he’ll be given that when he arrives.’
    ‘Arrives where?’
    ‘I don’t know, Your Excellency. They refused to tell us 
      where they were going.’
    Giving him a satirical look, the Ambassador remarked, ‘ Well, 
      that is a valuable addition to the sum total of our knowledge. Our minds 
      are now enriched by the thought that an anonymous individual may be 
      presented with a futile object for an indefinable purpose when he reaches 
      his unknown destination.’
    Shelton subsided wishing that he had never seen the fat man or, for 
      that matter, the fat man’s cockeyed world.
    ‘Somewhere they’ve got a capital, a civic seat, a centre 
      of government wherein function the people who hold all the strings,’ 
      the Ambassador asserted. ‘We’ve got to find that place before 
      we can take over and reorganize on up-to-date lines. A capital is big 
      by the standards of its own administrative area. It is never an ordinary, 
      nondescript place. It has obvious physical features giving it importance 
      above the average. It should be easily visible from the air. We must 
      make a systematic search for it—in fact that’s what we should 
      have done in the first place. Other planets’ capital cities have 
      been identified without trouble. What’s the hoodoo on this one?’
    ‘See for yourself, Your Excellency.’ Grayder poked several 
      photographs across the table. ‘The situation is rather similar 
      to that on Hygeia.[1] You can see the two hemispheres 
      quite clearly. They reveal nothing resembling a superior city. There 
      isn’t even a town conspicuously larger than its fellows or possessing 
      enough outstanding features to set it apart from the others.’
    ‘I don’t put great faith in pictures especially when taken 
      at high speed or great altitude. The naked eye can always see more. 
      We’ve got four lifeboats that should be able to search this world 
      from pole to pole. Why don’t we use them?’
    ‘Because, Your Excellency, they were not designed for such a 
      purpose.’
    ‘Does that matter so long as they get results?’
    Patiently, Grayder explained, ‘They were built to be launched 
      in free space and to hit up forty thousand miles an hour. They are ordinary, 
      old-style rocket-ships to be used only in a grave emergency.’
    ‘Well, what of it?’
    ‘It is not possible to make efficient ground-survey with the 
      naked eye at any speed in excess of about four hundred miles per hour. 
      Keep the lifeboats down to that and you’d be trying to fly them 
      at landing-speed, muffling their tubes, balling up their motors, creating 
      a terrible waste of fuel and inviting a crash which you’re likely 
      to get before you’re through.’
    ‘Then,’ commented the Ambassador, ‘it is high time 
      we had Blieder-drive lifeboats for Blieder- drive ships.’
    ‘I couldn’t agree more, Your Excellency. But the smallest 
      Blieder apparatus has an Earth-mass of more than three hundred tons. 
      That’s far too much for little boats.’ Picking up the photographs, 
      Grayder slid them into a drawer. ‘The trouble with us is that 
      everything we’ve got moves a heck of a lot too fast. What we really 
      need is an ancient, propeller-driven air-plane. It could do something 
      that we can’t-it could go slow.’
    ‘You might as well yearn for a bicycle,’ scoffed the Ambassador, 
      feeling thwarted.
    ‘We have a bicycle,’ Grayder informed. ‘Tenth Engineer 
      Harrison owns one.’
    ‘And he has actually brought it with him?’
    ‘It goes everywhere he goes. There’s a rumour that he sleeps 
      with it.’
    ‘A spaceman toting a bicycle! ’The Ambassador blew his 
      nose with a loud honk. ‘I take it that he is thrilled by the sense 
      of immense velocity it gives him, an ecstatic feeling of rushing headlong 
      through space?’
    ‘I wouldn’t know, Your Excellency.’
    ‘H’m! Bring this Harrison here. I’d like to see him. 
      Perhaps we can set a crackpot to catch a crackpot.’
    Going to the caller-board, Grayder spoke over the ship’s system. 
      ‘Tenth Engineer Harrison will report to the chart-room at once.’
    Within ten minutes Harrison appeared, breathless and dishevelled. He 
      had walked fast three-quarters of a mile from the Blieder room. He was 
      thin and woebegone, expecting trouble. His ears were large enough to 
      cut the pedalling with the wind behind him and he wiggled them nervously 
      as he faced the assembled officers. The Ambassador examined him with 
      curiosity, much as a zoologist would inspect a pink giraffe.
    ‘Mister, I understand that you possess a bicycle.’
    At once on the defensive, Harrison said, ‘There’s nothing 
      against it in the regulations, sir, and therefore—’
    ‘Damn the regulations,’ swore the Ambassador. ‘Can 
      you ride the thing?’
    ‘Of course, sir.’
    ‘All right. We’re stalled in the middle of a crazy situation 
      and we’re turning to crazy methods to get moving. Upon your ability 
      and willingness to ride a bicycle the fate of an empire may stand or 
      fall. Do you understand me, Mister?’
    ‘I do, sir,’ said Harrison, unable to make head or tail 
      of this.
    ‘So I want you to do an extremely important job for me. 

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