“Maybe,” she said softly, “this is all just another dream, Raul. A more clever dream. Can you find Earth?”
“I know the number for Earth. I’ll set it the way Bard Lane explained. And then, quite soon, we’ll know.”
“Promise me one thing.”
He looked down at her. “What is it?”
“If we are wrong. If there are no worlds out there. Or if we lose our way, I want to die. Quickly. Promise?”
“I promise.”
He slid the partition shut and went to the control panel. His pilot’s couch was on rails so that, once he was in place, he could slide it forward under the vertical panel and lock himself in place. He strapped his ankles and his waist and pushed himself under to lie looking up at the controls. He activated the three-dimensional screen. There were the six ships, the tall white world, the sandy plain and the hills. He opened the book and took a last look at the reference number for Earth even though it had long since been memorized. He set the ten-digit number, six plus values and four minus ones, on the ten dials, checked it again. The replica ship was in neutral position. Only then did he strap the diaphragms firmly to his throat. He pulled the headband up and tightened it, slid his arms down into the straps.
And softly as he could, he made the vowel sound. The ship shuddered, trembled. On the screen the tiny image moved slowly upward, upward. Now the stern was as high as the bows of the other ships. He strengthened the vowel tone and the replica ship remained in the middle of the screen, the planet moving away below it, the curvature beginning to show, the white tower world dwindling.
He rashly strengthened his tone once more. A vast weight pressed his jaw open, punched down on his belly, blinded him by pressing his eyes back into his head. He heard, from a great distance, Leesa’s scream of pain. He ceased all sound. The pressure slowly left him. He was dizzy with weightlessness. His home planet had shrunk to the size of a fist. It appeared in the lower right-hand corner of the screen and the image of the ship had dwindled until it was a bright mote against the darkening screen.
He took a weightless arm out of the strap, thumbed the knurled knob at the side of the screen. His planet slid off the screen and, by experimentation, he made the ship image grow larger. He moved close to it. The opposite knob seemed to rotate the ship itself end for end, but he realized that it merely shifted the point of vision. He adjusted it until he was looking forward from dead astern of the ship. The vast disc of the sun was straight ahead. He moved his hand to the replica ship and turned it through a ninety-degree arc to the right. As the sun slid off the screen, the replica ship moved slowly back to neutral. The screen showed distant spots of light against the utter blackness. He began to make the vowel sound again, cautiously at first, running it each time up to the limits of endurance, then resting in silence as the ship rushed, without noise, through the void. He understood that each time he made the sound he gave it another increment of speed. At last, no matter how loudly he made the sound, he could feel no answering downward thrust and he knew that the top limit had been reached.
Somewhere, ahead, the time setting would take effect. He did not know where. He did not know how long it would be.
Fifteen
Four midnights passed. Bard and Sharan waited three hours each time. The appointment was not kept. No thrusting fingers of thought entered their minds, singing gladly of reunion. For the first three midnights, Bard and Sharan were gay with each other, laughing too easily.
After the three tense hours of waiting had passed on the fourth night, Bard looked across the room at Sharan.
“He told me that their attitude was heresy in his world, Sharan.”
“Why haven’t they come? Why?”
“Logically we can make either of two assumptions. One, that they have been punished, perhaps put to death by their own people. Two, that they have started the voyage.”
There were lines of strain around her mouth. “And the third possibility?”
“That it was a game they got tired of? That they have no ability to follow through on a course of action? Do you believe that, actually?”
Her smile was weak. “I guess not. Isn’t it odd to feel that you know them so well, never seeing them?”
“Not so odd. Not with shared thoughts. Not with two... souls, if I can use that word, sharing the same brain tissue. Sharan, we owe them something. We owe them the assumption that they were forced, somehow, to start the trip. I don’t know how long it will take. A month, possibly. Now just imagine what would happen if a ship of that description started to land here, or in Pan-Asia. Interceptor rockets would scream up. Shoot first and ask questions later. Our friends would be, within seconds, a large blue-white flash and a rain of radioactive particles. Have you thought of that?”
She put her hand slowly to her throat. “No! They wouldn’t!”
“Look, Sharan. According to Raul and Leesa, the rest of the Watchers believe, even when they can visit three other planets through the dream machines, that they are alone in the universe. What is the primary egoism of man? That his planet is the only inhabited planet, his race the life-apex of the universe. Thus any unknown ship can only be the ship of an enemy nation on this same planet.”
“Then they have no chance!”
“We are their chance, Sharan. We’ve got to let Earth know, somehow, that they are coming. They’ll laugh at us. But even so, if Raul and Leesa are in transit, it might mean that at the crucial moment, someone may decide not to push the button. I wish they had come to us once more. I intended to warn them, tell them how to go into orbit outside the reach of the rockets and make identification. The way it stands they’ll come directly in.”
“If they never come, Bard?”
“We’ll be the prize laughingstock of the century. Do you care?”
“Not really.”
“We must start by giving the true story of the end of Project Tempo. We’ll have to tell Bill Kornal first. Dr. Lurdorff will help us convince Bill. We’ve got to plant the story where it will get the maximum play from the press, radio, video, and everything else. That means that the four of us will have to put our cards, face up, in front of someone who not only can swing some weight around, but who has the sort of mind which might be receptive to this sort of thing. And Mr. X will have to have something to gain by carrying the ball. Any ideas?”
“It sounds like it ought to be somebody in government.”
“Or how about a columnist with a big following. Let me see. Pelton won’t do. I don’t think we could sell it to Trimball.”
“Say! How about Walter Howard Path? He has his column and the newscast on video. And he’s the one that revived that ancient flying saucer business several years ago and claimed that the Air Force had never released the true data. He interviewed me, you know, after I walked out of that conference. He seemed nice, and the interview he published was at least a little bit friendly.”
“I think he sounds like our boy, Sharan. There’s the phone.”
“So... so quickly?”
“How much time have we got to waste? Do you know?”
Sharan placed the call. It was almost four in the morning. Ten minutes later Walter Howard Path was on the line, speaking from his office-apartment in New York.
“Dr. Inly? Oh, yes. I remember you very well, Doctor.”
“Mr. Path, would you care to have the exclusive story of what happened to Project Tempo?”
There was a long silence. “Dr. Inly, I wouldn’t be terribly interested in it if it turns out to be some fairly tawdry little intrigue. The story wouldn’t be good enough, and Tempo has been dead too long.”