To landward, there was nothing but mud.
He sat down again, looked dubiously at his half-finished quart, decided to let it rest awhile. The glass had a green tinge from the sand around it. Resolutely, he turned his mind to the exploring party, tramping around in that godforsaken wilderness again. Well, what do you think, Shoemaker? he asked himself. How long will it take those supermen to give up their little paper-chase? Two more days? Three? A week? Shoemaker, he answered, I don’t know and at this point I don’t give a damn. I got more important things to worry about.
That seemed to settle that. He stared gloomily at the bottle, then picked it up and drank.
When he lowered the bottle again, pushing the cap shut with his thumb, the little green man was there.
No, it was a different one this time. Rigid with shock, he could still see that this one was fatter around the middle and had shorter whiskers.
But the expression was the same. Like a fiend on his way to a dismemberment party.
He found his voice. “Where did you come from?”
The little man smiled unpleasantly. “Mud and moss,” he said.
Shoemaker wanted to yell. Holding a conversation with a hunk of mist, a nonexistent goblin! He hardly recognized his own voice when he said, “What do you want?”
The green man walked toward him. “Heaved out my Scotch,” he said, and leered.
Shoemaker did yell. Leaping to his feet, flinging his arms wide, he bellowed like a wounded carabao. The bottle slipped out of his fingers and looped gracefully into the sea. The goblin turned his head to follow it.
Then, astonishingly, he looked at Shoemaker, said, “It’ll come back,” and dived in after the bottle.
Neither of them came up, though Shoemaker hung onto the frame of the sallyport and watched for half an hour.
Shoemaker heard their voices through the hull when they came back that night.
“Where’s the old soak?” That was Burford.
“Now, Charley, that isn’t nice. He didn’t say anything, but you could tell he wasn’t feeling so good when he found out you’d located his cache. I dunno’s we should of done that. He’s sure to get real uncooperative on us, and we need him.”
“All right!” said Burford. “But have you noticed how shaky he’s been the last couple of days? What if he cracks up, then where’ll we be? I say it isn’t enough to just throw out his liquor-he’ll make more as soon as we get into space again. We ought to make him take the cure. Force it down his throat if we have to.”
“Sure,” said Hale. “Just tell him we’re through kidding around. He’s got to take it and like it.
“Now, boys, take it easy,” Davies said. “We’ve been all over this before …”
Shoemaker grinned sourly. So that was what they were cooking up. Well, forewarned was forearmed; as a matter of fact, he’d given this possibility some thought a long time ago, and acted accordingly. So he had one hole card, anyway. But getting them to agree to an immediate takeoff was another horse.
Wait a minute … There was an idea. If he played it right-it was tricky, but it might work.
They were coming in the sallyport now. Shoemaker ducked down to the chem storeroom, found the bottle he was looking for and filled a small capsule from it. His hands were shaking, he noticed. That was what the fear of hellfire did to you.
Shoemaker had reached a decision. Delirium tremens wasn’t a good enough answer; it didn’t fit. If he thought it was that, he’d gladly take the cure, even though the idea made his belly crawl. Of course, it was too late for that, anyway-he’d thrown out the drug in Burford’s sick-box and substituted plain baking soda long ago.
But Shoemaker thought he knew what was happening to him, and it wasn’t d. t.’s. It wasn’t the usual dipso’s collection of crazy daymares at all; there was a horrid kind of logic to it. Instead of delirium, it was-judgment.
That was as far as he’d gone. He knew he had it coming to him, and now he thought he was going to get it. But he hadn’t given up yet. There was one thing he could still do, and that was to run-get clear away from this damned planet. After that, he’d just have to take his chances. Maybe the things could follow him into space, maybe not. Shoemaker wasn’t sure of anything any more.
He slipped the capsule into his pocket where he could get at it when he needed it, and went on up the passageway.
“Oh, there you are,” said Burford. “We were wondering where you’d got to.”
Shoemaker glared at him. “Okay, go ahead, ask me if I was digging for a microspectrograph mine.”
Burford looked shocked. “Why, Jim, you know I wouldn’t say a nasty thing like that.” He took Shoemaker’s arm. “Come on up to the galley. We’re having a powwow.”
Oh-oh, thought Shoemaker. This looks like it. He put his hand in his pocket and folded his handkerchief over the capsule.
Davies and Hale stared at him solemnly as he came through the door with Burford behind him. He looked back at them, poker-faced, and sat down.
Davies cleared his throat. “Er-um. Jim, we’ve been worried about you lately. You don’t act like you’re feeling too chipper.”
“That’s right,” said Shoemaker, looking doleful. “I’ve been thinking about my poor old mother.”
Burford snorted. “Your poor old mother died fifty years ago.”
“She did,” said Shoemaker, taking out his handkerchief, “and she died with one great wish unfulfilled.”
“Yeah? What was that?” Burford asked skeptically.
“She always wanted to have a son like you,” Shoemaker said, “so that she could whale the living daylights out of him.” He blew his nose raucously, slipped the capsule into his mouth, put his handkerchief away and smiled beatificially.
Davies was frowning. “Jim,” he said, “I wish you wouldn’t make jokes about it. We all know what’s the matter with you. You been fightin’ the liquor too hard.”
“Who says so?” Shoemaker demanded. “Now, Jim, don’t make things difficult. I don’t like this any more’n you do, but-”
“Like what?”
Burford made an impatient gesture. “Go ahead, tell him, Lou. No use dragging it out.”
“That’s right,” Hale put in, glowering. “Shut up, you,” said Shoemaker. He turned to Davies. “Tell me what? You’re not going to bring up that ‘cure’ chestnut again, by any chance?”
Davies looked uncomfortable. “I’m sorry, Jim. I know you don’t want to take it. I argued against it, but the boys finally convinced me. You know, Jim, if it was only you that we had to think about, I wouldn’t try to make you do anything you didn’t want to. But, don’t you see, this is it-either we all stick together or we’re sunk. I f we don’t all keep in good shape and able to do our jobs, why… well, you see, don’t you, Jim-”
“What he means,” said Burford, “is that this time you’re going to take the cure, whether you want to or not.” Shoemaker got up and put his chair very carefully out of the way.
“Let’s see you make me,” he said.
It had to look good, so when Burford grabbed for him he stepped back and swung a hearty right into the middle of Burford’s face.
Burford staggered, but kept on coming. He clipped Shoemaker’s jaw glancingly, swung again and missed, then gave him a beauty in the eye.
Shoemaker aimed for the midriff and got it. “Uff!” said Burford. Then Hale tackled him from behind and the three of them were all over him.
Shoemaker writhed, kicking, biting and using his elbows, but every time he tore loose they brought him down again. After a while he was beginning to wonder if he could get away even if he really meant it. Then, somehow, Davies got a half Nelson on him and bore down. Shoemaker decided it was time to quit.