I walked there a million times and it took that many times before the power within me was strong enough to take me back.
For I was trapped. The word, the thought, the concept that took me into the cobbly world was a one way ticket and while it took me there it could not take me back. But there was another way, a way I did not know. That even now I do not know.
«You said there was a way,» urged Homer.
«A way?»
«Yes, a way to stop the ants?»
Jenkins nodded. «I am going to find out. I’m going to Geneva.»
Jon Webster awoke.
And this is strange, he thought, for I said eternity.
I was to sleep forever and forever has no end.
All else was mist and the grayness of sleep forgetfulness, but this much stood out with mind-sharp clarity. Eternity, and this was not eternity.
A word ticked at his mind, like feeble tapping on a door that was far away.
He lay and listened to the tapping and the word became two words … words that spoke his name:
«Jon Webster. Jon Webster.» On and on, on and on. Two words tapping at his brain.
«Jon Webster.»
«Jon Webster.»
«Yes,» said Webster’s brain, and the words stopped and did not come again.
Silence and the thinning of the mists of forgetfulness. And the trickling back of memory. One thing at a time.
There was a city and the name of the city was Geneva.
Men lived in the city, but men without a purpose.
The Dogs lived outside the city … in the whole world outside the city.
The Dogs had purpose and a dream.
Sara climbed the hill to take a century of dreams.
And I … I, thought Jon Webster, climbed the hill and asked for eternity.
This is not eternity.
«This is Jenkins, Jon Webster.»
«Yes, Jenkins,» said Jon Webster, and yet he did not say it, not with lip and tongue and throat, for he felt the fluid that pressed around his body inside its cylinder, fluid that fed him and kept him from dehydrating. Fluid that sealed his lips and eyes and ears.
«Yes, Jenkins,» said Webster, speaking with his mind. «I remember you. I remember you now. You were with the family from the very first. You helped us teach the Dogs. You stayed with them when the family was no more.»
«I am still with them,» said Jenkins.
«I sought eternity,» said Webster. «I closed the city and sought eternity.»
«We often wondered,» Jenkins told him. «Why did you close the city?»
«The Dogs,» said Webster’s mind. «The Dogs had to have their chance. Man would have spoiled their chance.»
«The dogs are doing well,» said Jenkins.
«But the city is open now?»
«No, the city still is closed.»
«But you are here.»
«Yes, but I’m the only one who knows the way. And there will be no others. Not for a long time, anyway.»
«Time,» said Webster. «I had forgotten time. How long is it, Jenkins?»
«Since you closed the city? Ten thousand years or so.»
«And there are others?»
«Yes, but they are sleeping.»
«And the robots? The robots still keep watch?»
«The robots still keep watch.»
Webster lay quietly and a peace came upon his mind. The city still was closed and the last of men were sleeping. The Dogs were doing well and the robots stayed on watch.
«You should not have wakened me,» he said. «You should have let me sleep.»
«There was a thing I had to know. I knew it once, but I have forgotten and it is very simple. Simple and yet terribly important.»
Webster chuckled in his brain. «What is it, Jenkins?»
«It’s about ants,» said Jenkins. «Ants used to trouble men. What did you do about it?»
«Why, we poisoned them,» said Webster.
Jenkins gasped. «Poisoned them!»
«Yes,» said Webster. «A very simple thing. We used a base of syrup, sweet, to attract the ants. And we put poison in it, a poison that was deadly to ants. But we did not put in enough of it to kill them right away. A slow poison, you see, so they would have time to carry it to the nest. That way we killed many instead of just two or three.»
Silence hummed in Webster’s head … the silence of no thought, no word.
«Jenkins,» he said. «Jenkins, are you …»
«Yes, Jon Webster, I am here.»
«That is all you want?»
«That is all I want.»
«I can go to sleep again.»
«Yes, Jon Webster. Go to sleep again.»
Jenkins stood upon the hilltop and felt the first rough forerunning wind of winter whine across the land. Below him the slope that ran down to the river was etched in black and gray with the leafless skeletons of trees.
To the northeast rose the shadow-shape, the cloud of evil omen that was called the Building. A growing thing spawned in the mind of ants, built for what purpose and to what end nothing but an ant could even closely guess.
But there was a way to deal with ants.
The human way.
The way Jon Webster had told him after ten thousand years of sleep. A simple way and a fundamental way, a brutal, but efficient way. You took some syrup, sweet, so the ants would like it, and you put some poison in it … slow poison so it wouldn’t work too fast.
The simple way of poison, Jenkins said. The very simple way.
Except it called for chemistry and the Dogs knew no chemistry.
Except it called for killing and there was no killing.
Not even fleas, and the Dogs were pestered plenty by the fleas. Not even ants … and the ants threatened to dispossess the animals of the world they called their birthplace.
There had been no killing for five thousand years or more. The idea of killing had been swept from the minds of things.
And it is better that way, Jenkins told himself. Better that one should lose a world than go back to killing.
He turned slowly and went down the hill.
Homer would be disappointed, he told himself.
Terribly disappointed when he found the websters had no way of dealing with the ants …
Buckets of Diamonds
The number of ways in which the alien—or at least, the weird—can come to a Midwestern American town, in the middle of the twentieth century, is apparently endless; and Clifford D. Simak could imagine enough of them to create his own subgenre. And the resulting stories were instantly recognizable to Simak fans as arising in «Simak country.»
This story originally appeared in the April, 1969, issue of Galaxy Magazine, and I read it when that issue came out; I was starting to learn what «Simak country» was all about, and I remember thinking that my home town—which was even smaller than Willow Grove—would not have handled this situation any better…
—dww
The police picked up Uncle George walking west on Elm Street at 3 o’clock in the morning. He was shuffling along, muttering to himself, and his clothes were soaked, as if he’d been out in the rain—and Cottonwood County for the past three months had been suffering a drought, with the corn withering in the field and day after day not a cloud in sight. He was carrying a good-sized painting underneath one arm and in the other hand he carried a pail filled to the brim with diamonds. He was in his stocking feet; he’d lost his shoes somewhere. When Officer Alvin Saunders picked him up, he asked Uncle George what was going on, and George mumbled something that Alvin couldn’t quite make out. He seemed to be befuddled.
So Alvin took him to the station, and it wasn’t until then they saw that his pockets bulged. So they emptied his pockets and laid all the stuff out on a table, and when they’d had a good look at it, Sergeant Steve O’Donnell phoned Chief Chet Burnside to ask him what to do. The chief, sore at being hauled out of bed, said to throw George into pokey. So that is what they did.