Even with the two thousand megakline tau generator at the University, it takes several hours to charge the ninety liters of water we use in the demonstration.”
“But the water does move in tune, doesn’t it?” one of the detectives had demanded.
“Yes, but only a fraction of a microsecond, Lieutenant. The molecules are really only partly out of synch with our t.e.
matrix. If there were a real displacement, they would simply vanish.”
The detectives would not give up. Wasn’t it possible to develop the temporal energy process to a point where a man could travel in time?
“Possible, yes,” he had told them angrily. “For someone thousands of years more advanced in science than we are. For us, now, it’s a complete impossibility!”
Then they came back to Bursar Ramsdell. What grudge had he had against Ramsdell? “None! I scarcely knew him!”
Then it was just a coincidence, was it, that Ramsdell had been murdered horribly just after being seen with Naismith? “Yes!”
Guided by instinct, Naismith did not mention the parcel Ramsdell had given him. He could not explain the strength of the feeling to himself, but he was convinced that if he let the police take possession of the machine, a vital clue would be out of his hands.
Then the questioners turned to Churan, who had not appeared to identify Naismith, and could not be found. Had he murdered Churan, too, and hidden the body?
He patiently recounted what had happened at Churan’s office, and named the pink young man as a witness.
Then what about the death of his housekeeper, Mrs. Becker
—was that a coincidence, too?
Naismith grunted, clasping his head in his hands. How could it be coincidental that two people close to him had been killed in the same baffling way, within hours of each other? It was as if he were a sort of Typhoid Mary, an untouched carrier of disaster….
An idea came to him, and Naismith sat up straight. Erect and still, he was concentrating furiously when the outer cell door opened with a clang.
Startled, Naismith looked up. The jailer in his sweaty blue uniform was entering. He walked to Naismith’s door, fitted a key to the lock, swung the door open. “Okay, you can go,” he grunted.
Naismith stood up warily. “I’m being released?”
“Your lawyer got you out on a writ. Come on, this way.”
“My lawyer? But—” Naismith fell silent and followed the jailer. Wells, when they had allowed Naismith to see him an hour before, had told him he would get a lawyer, but not to expect anything tonight. It’s a first-degree murder charge,” the psychiatrist had said, “and they won’t release you on bail, I know. But I’ll have Howard come down first thing in the morning. Be patient until then.”
Had he lost track of time—was it morning already? No, the wall clock in the jailer’s office read 9:05 P.M.
“Here’s your stuff,” the jailer said, tossing an envelope at him across the counter. “Sign for it.”
Naismith scrawled his name, put the envelope in his pocket, and followed the jailer again. In the waiting room, a slender gray-haired man arose to meet them. He was dressed in a dinner jacket and carried a sleek pigskin briefcase.
“He’s all yours,” said the jailer, and walked away.
“Mr. Howard?” Naismith said, advancing with his hand out.
“Eh? No, no. Jerome is the name; how do you do.” The gray-haired man shook Naismith’s hand perfunctorily, then dropped it. He turned back his cuff to look at a wafer-thin wristwatch. “My heavens, it’s late. I didn’t realize—although I must say the writ didn’t take long. Well, anyhow, you’re out.
I really shouldn’t have come down at all.” He paused, with a faintly bewildered expression on his pale face. “Shouldn’t have come at all,” he repeated.
They were descending the stone steps of the jail. Naismith said uneasily, “Did Wells arrange with you about your fee?”
“Wells?” the other man echoed, looking abstracted. “No, not Wells—I don’t think I know him. You know,” he said, stopping again and facing Naismith, “it’s incredible that I came out tonight at all. I can’t understand it. Why, I was at a dinner party. Good heavens, my daughter is getting married tomor-row—” His face twitched. “Well, good night then,” he said abruptly, and turned away.
“Wait,” Naismith called after him. “If it wasn’t Wells who asked you to help me, then who?”
Jerome did not pause. “Your friend Churan,” he said testily over his shoulder. His footsteps dwindled down the echoing walk. Presently he was gone.
Naismith woke up, aware that he was not alone in the room.
He had reached home close to midnight, dog-tired, and had fallen almost immediately into an exhausted sleep. Now he was wide awake in the darkness, sitting up, every sense alert to a warning of danger that crawled invisibly in the room.
There was no sound of movement; but the darkness was electric with the presence of something powerful and menacing.
Then, slowly, like a mirage in the air, a faint bluish glow came to life in the middle of the room.
Naismith caught his breath; the blue glow was continuing to grow slowly brighter, until now he could make out the squat shape of something hanging in mid-air.
It was a shape like a fat piece of tubing, bent downward to form an L. It was a gun, he saw now, as the light continued to grow: a pistol, clearly and unmistakably, although it was like no pistol that he had ever seen before. The thick handle was toward him, the barrel pointing away. Heavy and squat, the gun was a thing of subtle, powerful curves that melted into one another. Intuitively, he knew it was of the same family as the enigmatic machine Ramsdell had given him: completely different in form, they were still alike as brothers.
It hung there, unsupported, solid and real, and yet somehow spectral-looking in the blue light. It was bigger than any pistol made for a normal man’s hand: Naismith could imagine himself getting out of bed, reaching out and taking the handle in his hand. And he knew that his grip would be barely big enough to hold it; his finger would barely reach far enough to press the trigger.
The silence was absolute. Naismith had forgotten to breathe.
The feeling of menace was still in the room, stronger than before, and it emanated partly from the weapon in the air, partly from the shadows beyond. The gun radiated a sense of brutal power: Naismith longed to touch it, and yet he was instinctively afraid of it—afraid of what ravening energies might be released if he touched the trigger. He knew, without any doubt or question, that the gun was no ordinary gun.
Then the darkness seemed to lift.
At the far side of the room, where his dresser and wardrobe should have been, Naismith saw a Something that stirred, with an impossibly fluid reptilian motion, and looked at him with tiny red eyes.
He was out of bed without knowing how he had left it, every muscle taut, the hair standing erect on his head.
The gun seemed to drift closer.
The darkness lifted still more, and Naismith saw the hideous, insect-reptilian form of the Thing, heard its armored plates grate together as it moved.
A thin voice suddenly whispered: “The Zug! The Zug! Kill it? Take the gun—kill it, quick!”
Naismith moved faster than he had ever done in his remembered life. With one hand he swept up the wooden chair beside his bed, swung it hard and let go. The chair crashed full into the suspended gun.
There was a sound like silk ripping, and a blinding flare of blue light that undulated across the walls and was gone. Half-blinded, heart hammering in his chest, Naismith found the wall switch and lighted the room.
The gun was gone. The Thing was gone. The chair lay smashed and blackened in the middle of the floor.