The stainless steel rat.., p.186

  The Stainless Steel Rat Collection, p.186

   part  #1 of  Stainless Steel Rat Series

The Stainless Steel Rat Collection
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  It had stopped speaking now as the opening gaped wider and wider, moist and filled with sharp, dark edges.

  I sawed and choked. I couldn’t see very well. I kept on sawing.

  The opening was just in front of my face when I cut the last fibrous strand and fell backwards.

  I was vaguely aware of Angelina dragging me along the ground away from the thing which was now booming Out loudly and hoarsely.

  “I wonder if… it sure… read my ugly…”

  I sat up and rubbed my sore throat. “That was … too close.”

  “How do you feel?”

  “Bruised-but all right.” I looked down and realized that the knife and my right hand were covered with the thick and sticky liquid. And I was still clutching the severed end of the stalk, with a red globe attached to it, in my other hand.

  “Let’s go back to the ocean,” I said, as hoarsely as our opponent who was still talking, feeding back a mixture of our thoughts to us. “I want to wash off this gunk-and see what this red thing is.”

  “I’ll carry it,” Angelina said. “Move-before this monster pulls itself out of the ground and comes after us.”

  She meant it as a jest, but I did walk that much faster. Back to the shore where I scrubbed and cleaned off the congealing liquid. Angelina was beside me dunking the globe into the water.

  “Let me have the knife,” she said. “It’s my turn to try the local cuisine.”

  “The knife is getting soft.”

  “I’ll be quick.”

  Before I could stop her she had sliced the thing open to reveal wet and even redder tissue inside. It looked uncomfortably like flesh. She cut off a sliver and sniffed it.

  “Doesn’t smell too bad.”

  “Don’t!” I said, but I was too late. She had popped it into her mouth, chewed quickly-and swallowed it.

  “Not too bad,” she said. “Tastes sort of like a cross between seafood and candy.”

  “You shouldn’t have done that…”

  “Why not? Someone had to. And as I said-it was my turn to do the testing. And I still feel fine.”

  “Well, at least we know why the path went around the clearing, Ouch!” I had touched my sore neck. “We stay on the path from now on. You were right about that. That thing, it’s like an angler fish.”

  “A what?”

  “A fish that lives at pelagic depths in the ocean. It has sort of a fishing-pole organ growing out of the top of its head that dangles in front of its mouth-hence the name. It has a lump at the end that glows in the dark and attracts other fish. They snap at it-and get eaten.”

  “But why the mind-reading stunt?”

  I sighed and shrugged. “Anyone’s guess. It must work well on the local life forms-what are you doing?”

  She had cut off another piece of the red globe and was chewing on it.

  “Eating, of course. I still feel fine, and I am more than a little hungry.”

  I watched the shadows move and tried to estimate how much time had elapsed: Angelina looked at my face, then reached out and patted my hand.

  “Poor Jim. You look so worried. I’m fine, but still hungry.”

  “Let me try some before you eat any more of it. Maybe it is a sex-specific poison.”

  “What a charming thought,” she said and scowled fiercely.

  “Sorry, shouldn’t say things like that. This place must be getting me down.” I cut, chewed and swallowed. “Not bad. But after we finish this fruit I’m not going back for a second try at that thing.”

  “Agreed. And you have noticed that it is getting dark again?”

  “I have. I suggest we doze here until dawn and then press on along the path. Second the motion?”

  “Absolutely.”

  When the sun woke us we were alive and well and hungry. We divided up the fruit and ate it all. Washed off the juice, yawned and stretched and looked at the path.

  “Can I have the knife today?” Angelina asked. “So I can break trail.”

  “Gone,” I said, pointing to a damp knife-shaped spot in the sand.

  “I’ll see if I can find a rock that will do.”

  She found one shaped not unlike a hand ax, traditional tool of mankind. I looked for another one, then put a few more rocks in my pockets. Angelina led the way since she was as strong and fit as I was, possibly with better reflexes. And I was not about to start discussing the equality of the sexes with her at any time.

  With our stomachs full, our bodies rested, we made good time. And followed the path around the clearing. I stopped just long enough to throw a rock at the creature there; I had carried it all the way from the beach just for this moment. It thudded nicely and the tentacle thrashed violently.

  “I wish… I had a power saw the thing said.

  “Did you think that?” I asked.

  “You better believe it.”

  We struggled up the last and steepest part of the path to the ridge at the top. And stopped.

  “Quite a change,” Angelina said.

  All the green growth ended sharply. As though a line had been drawn along the summit. A bowl in the hills stretched out ahead of us. Completely devoid of life. Sand and rock and nothing more; an empty, barren desert.

  “You said that it never rains on this planet?” I asked.

  “Never.”

  “If it did that would also be a sloppy end for the glass life forms. It also means that the carbon and chlorophyll life can’t get too far from the ocean. I’ll bet they dip their roots into it or get dew from the air. So up here-no water, so no life.”

  “But the path goes on,” she said, pointing.

  “Interesting. So I guess that we do too.”

  We followed it as it twisted and turned between boulders as big as houses, on to a central flat desert of sand.

  “What on earth is that?” Angelina asked. I could not think of an answer.

  In the sand was a small pyramid apparently made of rock. It was seamless-but hollow. That was obvious because the top was broken off and we could see inside. It was empty. But what was most interesting was the slightly larger pyramid close by. Also with an opening in the top. And the next and the next. Stretching out in a straight line across the desert. Each one with an opening in the top, each larger than the one before.

  “An alien enigma,” I said brightly; Angelina just sniffed, not considering this worth an answer. We left the path and walked along the line of pyramids. There were over thirty of them, the final one taller than we were.

  “The last one,” Angelina said, pointing. “The top. It comes to a point-and it is solid. Any explanations?”

  For a rare moment I was silent.

  “Shall I tell you what is happening?” she said.

  “Speak, I beg of you.”

  “This has obviously been constructed by a silicon life form. It digests sand and excretes rock thus building a pyramid around itself. When it grows too big for the pyramid it cracks out, moves along and builds another one.”

  “Highly interesting,” I said, dazed by her logic. “But how did it get to build the first one in the first place-and how does it build a pyramid from the inside?”

  “You can’t expect me to know everything,” she said, with impeccable logic. “Let’s get back to the path.”

  “Let’s not quite yet,” I said pointing. “Isn’t that something following the path and moving towards us?”

  “Some things not a thing.”

  “You’re right. Any reason we shouldn’t stay out of sight until we see what they are?”

  She nodded and we stepped into the shadow of the largest pyramid where we might see and possibly not be seen. Angelina cocked her head, then pressed her ear to the side of the pyramid. “Listen,” she said. “Isn’t there a kind of crunching sound coming from inside?”

  “Please, not now. Possibly later. One alien mystery at a time if you don’t mind.”

  The marching file of creatures was surely mystery enough. There were eleven of them and they were roughly man-size. But the resemblance ended right there. A fringe of legs or tentacles or something twitched quickly against the ground and carried each creature along. These moving parts supported a solid trunk the color and texture of tree bark-it could be a tree trunk for all we knew. A single stalk, very much like the one on the creature that had tried to eat me, emerged from the top of the trunk with what looked like a bulbous eye at the end. The eyes bobbed and looked about, apparently not seeing us pyramid lurking in the shadow.

  They shuffled by in silence, stirring up a quickly settling cloud of dust, climbed over the rim and vanished down the ridge on the other side.

  “Now will you listen to the pyramid?” Angelina asked.

  “Yes, of course, sure.” I listened and perhaps I did hear a distant crunching. “I can hear something…”

  “They’re coming back,” she said.

  And so they were. Whether it was the same bunch or a different lot it was of course impossible to tell. Different ones, surely, because in the brief time they had been out of sight they had changed completely. The ribbed trunks had become globeshaped and transparent, expanded from within so the ribbing now formed irregular stripes on the surface.

  “They’re filled with water,” Angelina said, and I nodded dumb agreement.

  “Possibly, possibly,’ I muttered.

  “They march out of the desert and fill with water from a spring or from the ocean. Then march back with it. Why?”

  “There is only way to find out-follow them.”

  Perhaps it was not wise. Possibly dangerous. But there were too many curious and unsolvable puzzles on this planet. We both had the desire to see if we might possibly solve at least one of these. When they were out of sight we followed them down the path.

  Nor did we have far to go. The path led to a row of large boulders and vanished between two of them.

  “Suspicious,” I said. “Those rocks have been placed there.”

  ‘It could be a natural formation.”

  “It could, but the problem is the same. Do we stay out-or go in to investigate. And you will recall what happened the last time I got nosy. .

  “Behind you!”

  I took one look and jumped aside. Another string of water carriers was approaching-and they were almost upon us. We stood by the path tense and ready to fight.

  And while they were aware of us, our presence was completely ignored. The string shuffled on by in silence, each eye focusing on us in turn as they passed.

  “They don’t seem too interested in us,” I said.

  “Well I’m interested in them. Let’s go.”

  We did. Slipping between the large boulders, then following the path between a second row to walk inside a circular, rock-girt area. Where we stopped-and did our best not to gape and bulge our eyes as though we had a joint IQ about that of body temperature.

  It was so alien that it was hard to make out just what was happening here. One thing at least was certain-we knew where the water was going. The creatures we had been following wandered through a green labyrinth spraying water and shrinking their bodies at the same time. When this was finished, one walked away from the growth, then another and another. They milled about in a little group until, with sudden decision-or obeying some unseen signal-a line formed and they shuffled through the exit and were gone.

  We walked closer to the confused growth, stopped when we saw movement under the broad, leaflike structures. In the semidarkness, spiderlike creatures were climbing about, apparently tending the growth. Fragments of green fell down to the ground where other creatures cleaned them up. Another dropped down on the end of a cord or tentacle clutching something red.

  “Very much like that fruit you got your neck squeezed for,” Angelina said.

  “Could be, could be-and look where it’s going.”

  A tall opening in the rock led to some kind of cavern beyond. I bent to try and look inside when there was a light pulling at my leg, a feathery touch.

  “What is that?” Angelina asked.

  As always on this world there was no easy answer. It was like a soft bundle of sticks, or a complex insect made of twigs. Whatever it was it was plucking at my trouser leg. Then it stopped and shuffled towards the cave. Stopped and waited. Then returned and rustled the fabric once again.

  “It’s trying to communicate,” I said. “I think it wants me to follow it. Well—why not?”

  “No arguments. We’ve come this far.”

  When we started forward it scurried ahead. Stopped and waited, then moved ahead again. Sunshine filtered through the mouth of the cave, more than enough to see the sprouting creature that sprawled inside.

  That was the only way to describe it. It was covered with complex structures that were apparently growing from its green hide. Some I recognized; there was the top half of a water carrier. Another was a bristle of growths bundled together like our guide. And there were others that were totally incomprehensible. Then one of the working creatures hurried by with a red globe which it dropped into an opening in the thing’s side.

  “It’s looking at us,” Angelina said, pointing. A group of whip-like tentacles, each ending in a bulging eye, had turned towards us.

  “Hello,” I said.

  “Hello,” it boomed out in return.

  CHAPTER 13

  “TALKING-OR MIMICKING” ANGELINA SAID.

  “Talking-talking-talking.”

  Which wasn’t much of an answer. The eye-stalks still swayed in our direction-as did another organ or mushrooming growth that started to form under the eyes. It began as a swelling, then opened up into a sort of trumpet-shaped flower. This moved back and forth as though searching for something, then turned and pOinted directly at me. I stepped back-Color, sound. movement, terror.

  Pain and red sounds, sharp memories.

  A scream… a shout…

  Then it ended and I realized that the person shouting was me. Hands on my arms, I blinked my eyes clear, saw that Angelina was holding on to me.

  “What happened?” she asked.

  “I… don’t know. What did you see?”

  “You closed your eyes and, well, just dropped to the ground. Then you just sort of scrunched up, shouting and twisting. It only lasted a moment.”

  “That thing, I said, my breathing rough. “It was in my brain, trying to communicate or something. Big and strong-“

  “Did it try to hurt you?”

  “Not at all, quite the opposite. There was curiosity there but I had no sensation of threat or menace. Whatever it wanted it, well, didn’t find. It just pulled out. Perhaps I’m not in its intellectual league.”

  While .1 was talking the flower growth closed and disappeared. Next to it the water-carrier that had been growing larger stopped and began a sort of twisting motion. Then, with a plopping sound, it pulled free of the surface. Jumped to the ground and hurried away.

  “It’s the queen thing.” Angelina said. “Growing parts of the colony.”

  “Or maybe it is the colony.”

  After that one attempt to communicate the creature never tried again. The eyes were withdrawn as though it had lost all interest. But it knew we were there because one of the leg creatures came hurrying into the cave with two of the red fruit we had seen growing outside. It plopped one into an opening in the giant creature’s hide-then dropped then other one in front of us before rushing outside again.

  “Thanks, Queenie,” I said. “Very kind of you. Is it chow time? Looks like the one we ate before-and our friend here just ate one. Shall we give it a try?” I squatted down to look more closely at it. I prodded it with my finger and it split open. I licked the juice from my hand. “Tastes very much like the other one we had to fight for.”

  “Why not? If that murderous thing in the clearing is offering tempting goodies I suppose they must be edible. Give me a piece, if you please.”

  We finished it between us. Then, feeling very much ignored, we went back out of the cave into the alien garden.

  “What about another One?” I asked.

  “You’re on.”

  None of the scurrying creatures came near us-nor took any notice when I reached up high and plucked another red fruit. We sat comfortably against the rock wall and ate it. It was very pulpy and liquid, food and drink at the same time.

  “Now what?” Angelina asked, licking the last drop of juice from her fingers.

  “A good question. And I suggest that we sleep on it.”

  “One of us at a time though. I still don’t trust this queen-of-the-hive creature.”

  “Then we’ll get out of here, find a secluded spot away from the path. We can always come back when we get hungry.”

  Angelina yawned gracefully. “You are on, husband mine. It certainly has been a long day.”

  We did this for two of the short days and nights. Sleeping, then going back for more fruit, mulling over our options, very limited indeed, and trying to figure out just what we should do next. With great effort at cogitation, we managed to never reach any important conclusions. Then we would sleep and start the whole process over again. On the third daylet Angelina came up with an observation that finally forced us to make a decision. She had been on this exotic world longer than I had-and had gone much longer without a decent meal.

  “You are losing weight, Jim. And so am I.” Which was true, but I just did not want to mention it to her. “The fruit is filling all right-but do you notice how quickly you get hungry again after eating?”

  “I have been thinking about it, wondering really.”

  “Stop wondering. Water is water, hydrogen and oxygen. Since we don’t get thirsty we must have been getting enough to drink from the fruit. But the food is a different matter. Who knows what kind of elements and molecules make up this fruit. I don’t think we are ingesting any nourishment at all. If we stay here and keep on eating this stuff-we are just going to curl up and die of starvation in the end.”

  I sighed unhappily. “I’m forced to agree. The idea was tickling at my brain but I thought I was being stupid. It’s been sort of fun here in a completely alien way. Back to Glass land?”

  “Nothing else to do. And you have strange tastes if you think our stay here was fun. I say back to civilization and some good food and a hot bath. Let’s head for that clearing where we arrived. We’ll see if anyone has found your message yet.”

 
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