Then he was at the doorway, thinking his destination. He dove through, into the workrooms of the technicians.
Here everything was confusion—machines unattended and adrift, unidentifiable instruments floating in clusters. A few technicians were visible, most of them wearing the death collars. Of the few who were still without them, one was being pursued, shrieking, by a robot.
The dim memories of his last sleep were now clear. Naismith remembered stealing out of the cubicle, going to the workrooms, capturing and subduing one of the technicians. He had put a mind helmet on the little man, had forced out of him the one secret he wanted to know.
Now he headed directly for one small doorway, half-hidden behind floating machines. He opened it with a thought, dived in.
There was a gnome before him in the narrow, blind tube. He had the rear panel already open, and was fingering the controls.
He turned a snarling face as Naismith entered; then his eyes widened, his face paled.
Naismith killed him with one blow, pushed his body aside, and turned his attention to the control board.
Here, carefully concealed and guarded, was the central control system for all the automatic devices that made life possible in the City—air generators, synthesizers, automatic weapons, robots.
Naismith examined the control disks carefully. Some had the death symbol on them, meaning their settings could not be altered without killing the operator—an underling would have to be sacrificed for each such adjustment. These were the controls for the force-fields which made up the walls of the New City; the precaution was understandable.
Others, of a slightly different color, also bore the death symbol, but in these cases it was a bluff, and Naismith touched them without hesitation. He turned off all the automatic weapons in the City, neutralized the robots, and opened the gateways between the Old and New Cities. Then, working more slowly, he opened the panel and altered the thought signals required to approach the control board. Now only he could make any further changes in its settings.
He was hungry, so he made a light snack from the food he found in the corridor. Then, at his leisure, he went back the way he had come and began the tour of the City.
Everywhere, the Lenlu Din gawked at him with pasty faces, all silent, all shaking. Those nearest the doorways fled in a panic when they saw him enter: the rest did not even try to escape, but only hung where they were, passive, staring.
He paused to examine his reflection in the silvery disk of a mirror. It was strange, and yet perfectly natural, to look at himself and see this pale, unearthly figure, with its blazing eyes in the inhuman mask of the face. He flexed his great arms, and the smaller grasping members; then the tail, watching the sharp sting emerge.
He moved on, giving new orders to the robots as he went.
In the social room he came upon a little group of fat men frantically at work upon an instrument he recognized.
They scattered as he approached, and he read the message they had been trying to send into the past: “DANGER—
ONE ZUG ALIVE. DO NOT SEND SHEFTH.” The machine was glowing, the message incomplete. He turned it off, and went on his way.
He was here, nothing they could do could alter that. That had been obvious from the beginning: but let them try.
The vast concourses and galleries of the New City absorbed his attention; he was beginning to catalogue the treasures of his new domain, a task that would occupy many months. Yet the silent throngs, the glittering color, the miles of records and information capsules, did not please him as they should. After a long time he realized what the trouble was. It was the phantom personality of the man, Naismith. It was oppressive, as if he were wearing an invisible overcoat. Irritably he tried to shrug it off, but it stayed.
Now that he was aware of it, the feeling was more annoying than ever. He stopped and floated still, appalled. Every thought, every feeling that Naismith had had during the months their minds were linked together was recorded in his brain. It was not merely that he remembered Naismith: he war Naismith.
He was a member of the race of conquerors; and he was also a man.
He made a violent mental effort to throw off that phantom mind, but the thing clung to him stubbornly, like the ghost of an amputated limb. It was no use telling himself that Naismith was dead. Naismith’s ghost was in his mind—no, not even a ghost; his living personality.
He whirled in sudden anger, and the fat little people scattered around him. Were these the rulers of Earth’s ultimate City, the inheritors of four hundred thousand years of human evolution? These puffed little parasites, selfish, neurotic and cruel?
Their race produced some great men, Naismith’s voice said soberly in his mind.
There are none among these! he answered. Nor will they ever produce any, if they live a million years.
Not under your rule.
And if I had left them to themselves, what then—would they have done any better?
No, there is no hope for them, nor perhaps even for the technicians. But there is hope for the Entertainers.
Pride stiffened his body. They are my property.
They are human beings.
In doubt and confusion, he turned to the nearest robot, a sarcophagus-shape with geometric figures inscribed in red on a gold and silver ground. “Tell me briefly, what is a human being?”
The robot whirred, hummed. “A human being,” it said, ‘is a potentiality.”
After a moment, he gestured. The robot bowed and drifted away.
The Entertainers deserve their chance, Naismith’s voice said.
No.
He turned as another robot floated up: he recognized it as one he had sent into the Old City on an errand.
“Lord, I found no Masters alive, but I have taken eggs from their bodies as you ordered. They are under the care of the technicians in the biological laboratories.”
He made a sign of dismissal and the robot went away. He went on with his tour of inspection. Everywhere, the eyes of the little fat people stared at him in dull misery.
Woe to the vanquished, said a voice in his brain: was it -his own, or Naismith’s?
With a sense of panic, he discovered that he could not tell the difference. The two were one.
He was all triumph and mastery; yet he was all commisera-tion, all regret.
Give them their lives, and their chance, said the voice.
Where?
Where but on Earth?
Naismith hung frozen for a moment, remembering the sea of grass, under the cloud-dotted sky.
A little man in white drifted up. “Master, are there any orders?”
“Yes. Find me the Entertainers Liss and Rab.” As the human bobbed his head and darted off, Naismith beckoned the nearest robot. “Bring me a vehicle.”
Still, when the robot had gone, he hung in the air, oblivious to the color and movement around him, astonished by the purpose that was in his mind. Could a Zug feel this passion of mercy, and remain a Zug?
The robot came first with the control box, then the Entertainers, looking frightened and desperate.
Naismith took the control box. “Come near, and don’t be afraid,” he said to the Entertainers. “We are going to Earth.”
“To Earth? I don’t understand,” said Liss-Yani.
“Are you going to exile us there?” Rab burst out. He turned to the girl. “Let him do it,” he said fiercely. “It’s better than staying here to be food for him.”
Liss-Yani’s face paled. After a moment, she stepped nearer, and Rab followed. Naismith touched the controls. The blue-tinted bubble of force sprang up around them; the hall drifted away. They passed through one partition, then another… then a third, and they were in space, under the cold majesty of the stars.
They stood on the grassy plain just at dawn, when the greenish-blue sky to eastward was lit with yellow fires along the horizon, and the sun bulged up red as a blood-orange above the mountains.