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Christ, but it would be great to walk out without having to consult the schedule for Pedestrian Traffic in Hall and Corridor Routes. He could have been home from the Codep Block four hours ago. Of course, it had been great meeting the rest of the Phase III group. Their leader and the metropologist of the group, Dr. Hu Shih, was quite a guy; soft-spoken but firm, he seemed to know every frame of the Spacedep survey and the Alreldep reports. Hu Shih must have just got in under the age wire, too.

Ken spared a moment of wonder for the courage and tenacity of the many, many Codep assignees who never had made it off-planet, or who had turned overage before Spacedep released even a resources planet to Codep. God, to live a whole lifetime with nothing-nothing but a dream that would never be realized! To put up with the inferior quarters all inactive Codepers were given, the subsistence allowance, the disrespect, the sneers and condescension and then never get off-planet? Well, that had been one of the arguments of his friends and family when he'd applied: Codep men died young suicides!

But not Ken Reeve. He and his were going. And the dream that had taken fire the day he'd stood on the amazing soil of his Regional Square Mile, felt grass, seen sky above him, blue and limitless, was going to be ful-filled.

Inadvertently Ken had lengthened his stride in the Corridor and trodden on the heels of a citizen in front of him.

Your number? the man rasped out indignantly.

"I'll be off-world before you can bring it to Court," Ken replied in a loud, carefree voice. Suddenly he no longer cared about earth-bound conventions-not when he would soon have a whole planet to conquer. I'm going to Doona!"

Indignation turned to shocked outrage.

Off-world? He's mad! Idiot! Social deviant! Anarchist! were some of the clearly projected whispers around him.

Your number! the offended citizen demanded again.

Sweat it, man, Ken advised him crudely and hopped off the Corridor, ducking down the Aisle three up from his own. Let that proper citizen search for him there! And Ken didn't care that it would take him another fifteen minutes even at the acceleration permitted in an Aisle to double back to Aisle 45.

At a heel-thumping walk, he passed two shuffling women, arm-locked, faces nose-to-nose as they carried on a private mutter.

They squealed thinly as he thudded past them, but he had put too many other pedestrians between himself and them before they could form a protest.

Fortuitously his own Aisle was sparsely occupied Todd had driven away any resident who could wangle a transfer. He lengthened his stride, passing others without the customary obsequiousness, ignoring the exclamations of those who did recognize him. Their complaints, too, would not come up on the docket before he left. And thank God, Pat and the kids would be transferred to Co-dep's Cubed Block now that the whole family was on active assignment.

Active assignment! He chanted the alliteration like a prayer. Maybe now they rated additional acoustical shielding so that Pat wouldn't suffer so much ostracism because of Todd's asocial traits. Active assignment aids additional acoustics, he expanded the litany, grinning foolishly.

As he threw open the door to their two rooms, he heard Pat's startled warning. He managed to prevent the door handle from jamming into the thin back threatened by his precipitate entrance.

Mr. Reeve, it is easy to see where your son received his unsocial tendencies, a whining whisper informed him.

Quickly closing the door behind him, Ken stared down at the socially correct, emaciated skeleton that housed the petty spirited Proctor of their Aisle Section.

A pleasant day to you, Ken replied with such jaunty good humor that Pat, who had obviously been taking a terrible tongue-lashing, stared at him with dawning hope.

How can it be pleasant when a steady stream of tenants report insupportable noise emanating from these rooms? Proctor Edgar demanded.

Oh, but it is the pleasantest of days. Now take your nosy intolerant bitching elsewhere!

Ken! Pat screamed in a well-trained sotto voce. Then the strain and pallor of her face were replaced by incredulous joy. Active assignment?

You bet!

Mr. Reeve. Moderate your voice this instant. Your family has already been reported nine times this week for social misdemeanors. I am reluctant to reduce your calorie allowance any further but I must demand . . .

Demand away, Ken encouraged him, beaming at Pat. You have no jurisdiction over us any more. We're out of it. We're going to Doona!

Doona! Pat stifled her elation but she could not suppress the relief she felt, even in the presence of non-family observers. Oh, Ken, is it really true?

True-true-true, Pat, and Ken, deliberately aggravating the outraged Proctor, picked up his wife and kissed her lustily.

Reeve!" the Proctor's protest was barely audible over the smack of the embrace.

Get out if you can't stand it, Ken advised. Go invade someone else's privacy on the excuse of official business. He kept his hold on his wife with one arm as he opened the door and shoved the Proctor back into the Aisle. At the door's resounding slam, Pat came to her senses.

"Ken, you're mad. He'll, he'll " she floundered helplessly.

He can't do a damned thing to us, not ever again, Ken assured her, burying his face in Pat's silky hair and hugging her for the joy bursting inside him. We're going. We're going to be free to run and yell and stride and feel!

Chapter III. SURPRISE

WELL, GENTLEMEN, Hu Shih announced as they finished breakfast that morning, the town is in good order, all winter damage is cleared away, fences mended, fields plowed and sown, and our houses await our families. I believe it is therefore safe to inaugurate those secondary projects we planned during the long months of our winter.

When the cheering died, Ken Reeve pointed across the table at Sam Gaynor. C'mon, pal. Our project is the other side of the river.

Damn walk-about nut, Gaynor growled with an anticipatory grin spreading across his face. Remember, you guys, every man jack heard Ken bet he could walk me, me! off my feet.

Anyone who wants to walk after the winter we put in, Lee Lawrence exclaimed, throwing up his hands in disgust, is queer.

It's spring, man, you don't need snowshoes, Ken countered, grabbing up a handful of lunch rations.

Spring! When a man's fancies should turn to more than long tiring walks, Lee Lawrence remarked sourly.

Speaks the sociologist? Macy McKee taunted, for Lee was famed for his ingenuity in avoiding exercise.

Walking won't be so bad now it's spring, Vic Solinari put in. And next winter won't be so bad either, now we know what it's like during winter on Doona, he added, thinking of the exigencies which he, as storemaster, had had to practice over the incredible ten-month winter season.

Long and cold, Sam quipped.

But next winter, and Lee leered significantly, we'll have our wives with us.

Ezra Moody, the doctor, groaned. God, I'll be busy next spring!

Who's going to let you wait till next spring? Lee demanded, bringing his chair down with a crash

They'll be here any day now, Ken sighed with a sudden harsh yearning. C'mon, Sam, shake a leg! he urged and started for the door.

Their exit signalized an exodus from the mess hall in which they had spent so much of their time. In fact, by the time Ken and Sam were depositing their gear in the small powered skiff at the river's edge, only Solinari was left in the Common.

An hour later, when Ken and Sam returned at a dead run and in a kind of incredulous wrath, they had to hang on the air whistle for five minutes before anyone returned.

What'n'hell's the matter with you, Reeve? demanded Lee Lawrence, the first to arrive.

We're not alone on Doona, Lee, Ken cried, waving the quick-prints at the startled sociologist. We're not alone!

You're round the bend, man!

No, he's not, growled Sam Gaynor, his face set in hard, bitter lines. There's a village across the river in that grove of porous wood trees, where the river widens below the falls. A big village, full of furred, tailed cats that walk on their hind legs and carry knives.