Hard-Luck Diggings: The Early Jack Vance, Volume One (41 page)

BOOK: Hard-Luck Diggings: The Early Jack Vance, Volume One
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When Raymond and Mary awoke, a pink glow seeped through the drawn shades: Robundus, possibly with Maude. “Look at the clock,” yawned Mary. “Is it day or night?”

Raymond raised up on his elbow. Their clock was built into the wall, a replica of the Clock on Salvation Bluff, and guided by radio pulses from the central movement. “It’s six in the afternoon—ten after.”

They rose and dressed in their neat puttees and white shirts. They ate in the meticulous kitchenette, then Raymond telephoned the Rest Home.

Director Birch’s voice came crisp from the sound box. “God help you, Brother Raymond.”

“God help you, Director. How’s the chief?”

Director Birch hesitated. “We’ve had to keep him under sedation. He’s got pretty deep-seated troubles.”

“Can you help him? It’s important.”

“All we can do is try. We’ll have a go at him tonight.”

“Perhaps we’d better be there,” said Mary.

“If you like…Eight o’clock?”

“Good.”

The Rest Home was a long, low building on the outskirts of Glory City. New wings had recently been added; a set of temporary barracks could also be seen to the rear.

Director Birch greeted them with a harassed expression.

“We’re so pressed for room and time; is this Flit so terribly important?”

Raymond gave him assurance that the chief’s sanity was a matter of grave concern for everyone.

Director Birch threw up his hands. “Colonists are clamoring for therapy. They’ll have to wait, I suppose.”

Mary asked soberly, “There’s still—the trouble?”

“The Home was built with five hundred beds,” said Director Birch. “We’ve got thirty-six hundred patients now; not to mention the eighteen hundred colonists we’ve evacuated back to Earth.”

“Surely things are getting better?” asked Raymond. “The Colony’s over the hump; there’s no need for anxiety.”

“Anxiety doesn’t seem to be the trouble.”

“What
is
the trouble?”

“New environment, I suppose. We’re Earth-type people; the surroundings are strange.”

“But they’re not really!” argued Mary. “We’ve made this place the exact replica of an Earth community. One of the nicer sort. There are Earth houses and Earth flowers and Earth trees.”

“Where is the chief?” asked Brother Raymond.

“Well—right now, in the maximum-security ward.”

“Is he violent?”

“Not unfriendly. He just wants to get out. Destructive! I’ve never seen anything like it!”

“Have you any ideas—even preliminary?”

Director Birch shook his head grimly. “We’re still trying to classify him. Look.” He handed Raymond a report. “That’s his zone survey.”

“Intelligence zero.” Raymond looked up. “I
know
he’s not that stupid.”

“You’d hardly think so. It’s a vague referent, actually. We can’t use the usual tests on him—thematic perception and the like; they’re weighted for our own cultural background. But these tests here—” he tapped the report “—they’re basic; we use them on animals—fitting pegs into holes; matching up colors; detecting discordant patterns; threading mazes.”

“And the chief?”

Director Birch sadly shook his head. “If it were possible to have a negative score, he’d have it.”

“How so?”

“Well, for instance, instead of matching a small round peg into a small round hole, first he broke the star-shaped peg and forced it in sideways, and then he broke the board.”

“But why?”

Mary said, “Let’s go see him.”

“He’s safe, isn’t he?” Raymond asked Birch.

“Oh, entirely.”

The chief was confined in a pleasant room exactly ten feet on a side. He had a white bed, white sheets, gray coverlet. The ceiling was restful green, the floor was quiet gray.

“My!” said Mary brightly, “you’ve been busy!”

“Yes,” said Director Birch between clenched teeth. “He’s been busy.”

The bedclothes were shredded, the bed lay on its side in the middle of the room, the walls were befouled. The chief sat on the doubled mattress.

Director Birch said sternly, “Why do you make this mess? It’s really not clever, you know!”

“You keep me here,” spat the chief. “I fix the way I like it. In your house you fix the way
you
like.” He looked at Raymond and Mary. “How much longer?”

“In just a little while,” said Mary. “We’re trying to help you.”

“Crazy talk, everybody crazy.” The chief was losing his good accent; his words rasped with fricatives and glottals. “Why you bring me here?”

“It’ll be just for a day or two,” said Mary soothingly, “then you get salt—lots of it.”

“Day—that’s while the sun is up.”

“No,” said Brother Raymond. “See this thing?” He pointed to the clock in the wall. “When this hand goes around twice—that’s a day.”

The chief smiled cynically.

“We guide our lives by this,” said Raymond. “It helps us.”

“Just like the big Clock on Salvation Bluff,” said Mary.

“Big Devil,” the chief said earnestly. “You good people; you all crazy. Come to Fleetville. I help you; lots of good goat. We throw rocks down at Big Devil.”

“No,” said Mary quietly, “that would never do. Now you try your best to do what the doctor says. This mess for instance—it’s very bad.”

The chief took his head in his hands. “You let me go. You keep salt; I go home.”

“Come,” said Director Birch kindly. “We won’t hurt you.” He looked at the clock. “It’s time for your first therapy.”

Two orderlies were required to conduct the chief to the laboratory. He was placed in a padded chair, and his arms and legs were constricted so that he might not harm himself. He set up a terrible, hoarse cry. “The Devil, the Big Devil—it comes down to look at my life…”

Director Birch said to the orderly, “Cover over the wall clock; it disturbs the patient.”

“Just lie still,” said Mary. “We’re trying to help you—you and your whole tribe.”

The orderly administered a shot of D-beta hypnidine. The chief relaxed, his eyes open, vacant, his skinny chest heaving.

Director Birch said in a low tone to Mary and Raymond, “He’s now entirely suggestible—so be very quiet; don’t make a sound.”

Mary and Raymond eased themselves into chairs at the side of the room.

“Hello, Chief,” said Director Birch.

“Hello.”

“Are you comfortable?”

“Too much shine—too much white.”

The orderly dimmed the lights.

“Better?”

“That’s better.”

“Do you have any troubles?”

“Goats hurt their feet, stay up in the hills. Crazy people down the valley; they won’t go away.”

“How do you mean ‘crazy’?”

The chief was silent. Director Birch said in a whisper to Mary and Raymond, “By analyzing his concept of sanity we get a clue to his own derangement.”

The chief lay quiet. Director Birch said in his soothing voice, “Suppose you tell us about your own life.”

The chief spoke readily. “Ah, that’s good. I’m chief. I understand all talks; nobody else knows about things.”

“A good life, eh?”

“Sure, everything good.” He spoke on, in disjointed phrases, in words sometimes unintelligible, but the picture of his life came clear. “Everything go easy—no bother, no trouble—everything good. When it rain, fire feels good. When suns shine hot, then wind blow, feels good. Lots of goats, everybody eat.”

“Don’t you have troubles, worries?”

“Sure. Crazy people live in valley. They make town: New Town. No good. Straight—straight—straight. No good. Crazy. That’s bad. We get lots of salt, but we leave New Town, run up hill to old place.”

“You don’t like the people in the valley?”

“They good people, they all crazy. Big Devil bring them to valley. Big Devil watch all time. Pretty soon all go tick-tick-tick—like Big Devil.”

Director Birch turned to Raymond and Mary, his face in a puzzled frown. “This isn’t going so good. He’s too assured, too forthright.”

Raymond said guardedly, “Can you cure him?”

“Before I can cure a psychosis,” said Director Birch, “I have to locate it. So far I don’t seem to be even warm.”

“It’s not sane to die off like flies,” whispered Mary. “And that’s what the Flits are doing.”

The Director returned to the chief. “Why do your people die, Chief? Why do they die in New Town?”

The chief said in a hoarse voice, “They look down. No pretty scenery. Crazy cut-up. No river. Straight water. It hurts the eyes; we open canal, make good river…Huts all same. Go crazy looking at all same. People go crazy; we kill ’em.”

Director Birch said, “I think that’s all we’d better do just now till we study the case a little more closely.”

“Yes,” said Brother Raymond in a troubled voice. “We’ve got to think this over.”

They left the Rest Home through the main reception hall. The benches bulged with applicants for admission and their relatives, with custodian officers and persons in their care. Outside the sky was wadded with overcast. Sallow light indicated Urban somewhere in the sky. Rain spattered in the dust, big, syrupy drops.

Brother Raymond and Sister Mary waited for the bus at the curve of the traffic circle.

“There’s something wrong,” said Brother Raymond in a bleak voice. “Something very very wrong.”

“And I’m not so sure it isn’t in us.” Sister Mary looked around the landscape, across the young orchards, up Sarah Gulvin Avenue into the center of Glory City.

“A strange planet is always a battle,” said Brother Raymond. “We’ve got to bear faith, trust in God—and fight!”

Mary clutched his arm. He turned. “What’s the trouble?”

“I saw—or thought I saw—someone running through the bushes.”

Raymond craned his neck. “I don’t see anybody.”

“I thought it looked like the chief.”

“Your imagination, dear.”

They boarded the bus, and presently were secure in their white-walled, flower-gardened home.

The communicator sounded. It was Director Birch. His voice was troubled. “I don’t want to worry you, but the chief got loose. He’s off the premises—where we don’t know.”

Mary said under her breath, “I knew, I knew!”

Raymond said soberly, “You don’t think there’s any danger?”

“No. His pattern isn’t violent. But I’d lock my door anyway.”

“Thanks for calling, Director.”

“Not at all, Brother Raymond.”

There was a moment’s silence. “What now?” asked Mary.

“I’ll lock the doors, and then we’ll get a good night’s sleep.”

Sometime in the night Mary woke up with a start. Brother Raymond rolled over on his side. “What’s the trouble?”

“I don’t know,” said Mary. “What time is it?”

Raymond consulted the wall clock. “Five minutes to one.”

Sister Mary lay still.

“Did you hear something?” Raymond asked.

“No. I just had a—twinge. Something’s wrong, Raymond!”

He pulled her close, cradled her fair head in the hollow of his neck. “All we can do is our best, dear, and pray that it’s God’s will.”

They fell into a fitful doze, tossing and turning. Raymond got up to go to the bathroom. Outside was night—a dark sky except for a rosy glow at the north horizon. Red Robundus wandered somewhere below.

Raymond shuffled sleepily back to bed.

“What’s the time, dear?” came Mary’s voice.

Raymond peered at the clock. “Five minutes to one.”

He got into bed. Mary’s body was rigid. “Did you say—five minutes to one?”

“Why yes,” said Raymond. A few seconds later he climbed out of bed, went into the kitchen. “It says five minutes to one in here, too. I’ll call the Clock and have them send out a pulse.”

He went to the communicator, pressed buttons. No response.

“They don’t answer.”

Mary was at his elbow. “Try again.”

Raymond pressed out the number. “That’s strange.”

“Call Information,” said Mary.

Raymond pressed for Information. Before he could frame a question, a crisp voice said, “The Great Clock is momentarily out of order. Please have patience. The Great Clock is out of order.”

Raymond thought he recognized the voice. He punched the visual button. The voice said, “God keep you, Brother Raymond.”

“God keep you, Brother Ramsdell…What in the world has gone wrong?”

“It’s one of your protégés, Raymond. One of the Flits—raving mad. He rolled boulders down on the Clock.”

“Did he—did he—”

“He started a landslide. We don’t have any more Clock.”

 

 

Inspector Coble found no one to meet him at the Glory City space-port. He peered up and down the tarmac; he was alone. A scrap of paper blew across the far end of the field; nothing else moved.

Odd, thought Inspector Coble. A committee had always been on hand to welcome him, with a program that was flattering but rather wearing. First to the Arch-Deacon’s bungalow for a banquet, cheerful speeches and progress reports, then services in the central chapel, and finally a punctilious escort to the foot of the Grand Montagne.

Excellent people, by Inspector Coble’s lights, but too painfully honest and fanatical to be interesting.

He left instructions with the two men who crewed the official ship, and set off on foot toward Glory City. Red Robundus was high, but sinking toward the east; he looked toward Salvation Bluff to check local time. A clump of smoky lace-veils blocked his view.

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