Read Memories of the Future Online
Authors: Robert F. Young
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Anthologies, #short stories, #Anthologies & Short Stories
“It’s not a projection—they’re transmitting her!”
“But she isn’t fully here. I can’t eject her till she is.”
“You must wait, then. And watch. She’s a genetic bomb. She can blow herself up at will!”
Kenyon understood. The girl had been born a bomb.
“You have only one chance,” the commander said. “The second her flesh becomes solid you must jettison her!”
One chance to free himself from one bomb so he could become another.
Two entry points into the Land of the Honored Dead.
He pulled the cockpit seat belt around his waist and buckled it tightly. He tried to grip the girl’s left forearm. His fingers went through empty space. He kept his hand cupped, moving it in accord with the slight vacillation of the arm, for she was not truly sitting beside him; she was drifting there, seated on a chair of air. His right foot sought and found the hatch-release control lever.
The girl’s arm remained fleshless. He sat there, looking at her face. It had none of the angularity or harshness of the faces of T’ranian women. It was rounded. Soft. Her blue eyes were fixed on his. She could see him, even though she was not fully there. He looked for hatred, saw nothing but the blueness of Old World skies.
She spoke to him in his own tongue, but her words weren’t synched with the movement of her lips. “I am the Goddess of Death.”
“I know.”
“I’ve been programmed to do what I must do. I’m sorry.”
On an impulse he told her about the springtime street down which he had walked. He told her about the sky and the trees and the lawns and the houses. He told her about the lilacs. “Such a lovely street,” she said, drifting there, promising death.
“I walked down it because I was thinking of all the little things I’d always taken for granted.”
“Don’t talk to her!” the commander screamed from the viewscreen. “She’s trying to throw you off guard!”
In the forward screen, the Pwalm ships grew like gray ghosts.
“I was thinking of the little things, too,” the girl said. “About where I used to live. About the kids I used to know. Nobody knew, not even myself, not even my parents, although they should have, that I was a bomb.”
“When were you told?”
“Less than an hour ago.”
“And you began to think of the little things then.”
“Yes. I thought of trees, too, like you did. And of birds and flowers. . . . When I’m completely here, you’re going to cast me out, aren’t you?”
“Yes.”
“If you find out before I do.”
“Yes. If I find out in time.”
“You won’t,” she said. “I’ll know before you will.”
“We’ll see.”
“You aren’t like the men of Pwalm.”
“You’re different from the women of T’ran.”
“The women of T’ran grew on the same trees the men of Pwalm grew on.”
“Not at first,” Kenyon said. “Once, they walked in mothers’ marches denouncing war. If it were up to them, they said, there’d be no more wars, ever. They forgot about Zenobia and Queen Elizabeth I and Margaret Thatcher. Or perhaps they didn’t wish to remember them. But it was in the books almost from the beginning that someday it
would
be up to them. They changed then, or perhaps they merely became outwardly what they’d been underneath all along. But whether they changed or not, reality didn’t.”
“Why would they want to grow on trees like that?”
“It’s the nature of our species.”
“Damn you, Kenyon!” the commander shouted. “Don’t listen to her!”
“Why not?” Kenyon asked. “Soon, one way or another, I’m going to join the ranks of the Honored Dead.”
* * *
The girl shifted slightly on her airy seat, and he had to recup his hand about her fleshless arm. “Yes,” she said. “The Honored Dead.”
“ ‘In Flanders Fields the poppies blow, between the crosses, row on row.’ ”
“Is that where your Honored Dead lie?”
“A few of them.”
“Why must there be an Honored Dead?”
He looked at her. She was all he had ever wanted and everything he could never have. “They’re an essential part of civilization. As long as fools keep joining their ranks, there’ll be more room for other fools to create new ideologies for which future fools can die.”
“Some fools have no choice.”
“I know. Fools like you and me.”
He squeezed his cupped hand. He felt a ghost of tissues. “No,” she said, “I’m not fully here yet. I seem to be because my awareness has preceded me.”
He tried to touch her face. He could almost feel it. “No!” the commander screamed. “That’s what she wants you to do!”
“I never thought,” Kenyon said to the girl, “that in walking down my springtime street I’d meet someone like you.”
“I’m sorry that I’m a bomb.”
“The lilacs are in bloom. Do you see that forsythia over there? Look—there’s a dogwood tree!”
“Such a lovely street it would have been to live on!”
He had recupped his hand around her arm. He felt her flesh grow firm. “Any moment now,” he said.
“Yes. Any moment. After all these years, we’ve met, only to have to die.”
“For this, we have lived our lives.”
He released her arm and closed his faceplate and kicked the hatch lever and ejected her a split second before she blew into a great red rose. In the redness he saw his own blood.
He threw in the manual override. “Kenyon, what’re you doing?” the commander cried.
“I am a Divine Wind,” Kenyon said. He altered the Kamikaze’s course.
“Kenyon, reset your course! If you hit Karowin, it’ll nova!”
“I am the breath of God,” Kenyon said, and headed toward the sun.
Cousins
T
HE CEMETERY IS NOT A LARGE ONE.
I had no trouble finding her grave.
I knew, of course, that by this time she would be dead.
Her mother’s grave and her father’s grave are close to hers. She had no brothers or sisters.
I took her to the stars with me. I tried to leave her behind, but I could not. But my fellow astronauts, Beaumont and Morris, did not know I had brought her with me. This was because I never let the memory of her show on my face.
The roses which I placed upon her grave have already begun to wither in the summer sun.
Again I read the bleak inscription on her headstone:
Beth Hullman. Born: April 6, 1989. Died: May 4, 2021.
Hullman was her family name, so I know she never married.
But why did she die so young?
I would have married you, Beth. I wanted to. But if I had, they’d have scratched my name from the list.
Astronauts slated to edge the speed of light must be free from all earthly ties.
I had to make a choice. I chose the stars.
I learned to hate them, Beth. They turned blue and laughed at me while the Lorentz-FitzGerald contraction made a mockery of my life.
Old-young, I stand here by your grave. Would that I lay beside you.
* * *
A wind comes out of nowhere and bends the sun-bleached grass. The maples along the narrow cemetery road whisper to each other in its breath. The new sun-celled roadster I bought with part of my back pay sits in the afternoon shade. There is another roadster parked just behind it. A sleek, red Ponse. I did not hear it drive in. A girl in a white summer dress steps out of it and walks toward me between the graves. She walks the way Beth walked, with a light, sure step. Her hair is dark brown and recalcitrant, the way Beth’s used to be, and she has combed it to her shoulders the way Beth once combed hers. Her face is full, like Beth’s, and her nose is Beth’s nose too, sweeping down with delicate grace from between dark birdwing brows.
I do not believe in ghosts, but I am shaken when she comes to a halt before me. She is staring at me as though my reality has upset her as much as hers has upset me. Then I see that her face, despite its strong resemblance to Beth’s is not quite the same. It is full, yes, but it lacks the little-girl aspect Beth’s had, and there is greater determination in the line of her rounded chin. Nor does it possess the “beauty mark” that adorned Beth’s left cheek. But the eyes!—they are the same: deep brown, with microscopic flecks of gold . . .
For a long while she does not speak. It is as though all the words she ever knew have fled from her mind. Then she leans forward and kisses me on the cheek and says, just the way Beth would have, “Welcome home.”
She does not need to tell me who she is. I know. But the knowledge came too late.
* * *
Why didn’t you tell me, Beth? Why didn’t you say, “Jerry, you
have
to marry me now.”
I’d have said to hell with the stars!
Children grow up and beget children—did you think of that, Beth? And they, in turn, grow up and beget more children. You told our son or our daughter who I was, Beth, so that in the far future there would be someone to welcome me home. But Beth, you forgot about your genes!
If you had told me you were going to have our child, then at least I would have been prepared. I would not have been caught like this, with all my defenses down.
But then, if you had told me, I wouldn’t have gone to the stars.
Why didn’t you say, “Jerry, you
have
to marry me now.”
* * *
“I’ve been driving by here every day,” my great granddaughter says. “I was sure that sooner or later you’d visit her grave.”
Why didn’t you come to White Sands? You wouldn’t have been permitted to talk to me, but you could have waved to me when we climbed down from the ship.
This is what I want to say, but I stand like Prufrock in the sun and say instead, “I brought roses for her grave.”
She looks down at them. “I love roses. She must have, too.”
“She died so young. Why?”
She does not lift her eyes quite back to mine. Instead she rests them on the pocket of my shirt. “It became a melanoma. The ‘beauty mark’ on her cheek. When she found out, it was too late.”
It is some time before the shock fades away. By then she has lifted her eyes the rest of the way to mine. What a deep brown they are! How pied with flecks of gold!
“I guess you know who I am.”
I nod my head.
“She never told you she was going to have a baby, did she.”
“No, she never did.”
“My name is Robinette. Robinette Fields. But most people just call me Robin.”
“You—you live in town?”
“In a big, pretentious house. My father is the General Manager of Metrobank.”
“My grandson?”
“Yes. My grandmother—your daughter—is the Head Librarian of the McKinnseyville Library. Her husband died last year.”
It was a girl then . . . Why didn’t
she
come to White Sands?
“You have another grandson, but he lives in California. He never married.”
“Do—do you have brothers? Sisters?”
She smiles the way Beth used to when she had something rueful to say, and for a moment I am again convinced she has risen from her grave. “No. I’m the last of the Fields. But I’m going to carry on as best a mere girl can. I’ve graduated from law school and I just passed my bar exam, and this fall I’m joining a law firm. There, now that I’ve filled you in, you can come home with me.”
I would rather plunge into a black hole. “I think it will be better if I just continue on my way.”
“You’ll do no such thing!”
“Robin, I can’t go home with you.”
“Yes, you can. And just where were you going anyway before you found out about your family tree?”
Nowhere. But I cannot tell her that. “Robin, I’m an, an anachronism—don’t you see?”
“No, I don’t see. Please get in your car and follow me.”
There is importunity in her eyes. There is another quality which I cannot put my finger on. “And what will you say when we come in the door? ‘Mom, Dad—guess who I brought home—Great-Grandfather Walsh!”
She touches my hand, and the forlorn castle, whose foundation has already been knocked awry, comes tumbling down to the ground. “No, I shall say, ‘Mom, Dad—this is Jerry.’ They’ll know who you are.”
I must have smiled, for she smiles back. Before we leave, I kneel down and rearrange the roses on Beth’s grave.
* * *
McKinnseyville has grown, but very little. It acquired the aspect of an oasis when I was stationed at the nearby Space-Training Base. But it is an oasis no longer. It is only a small, dead town, baking in the hot summer sun.
The Fields live on the outskirts, where most of the newer houses are. Their porticoed house stands well apart from the others. A turnaround semi-circles its front lawn.
I lived with foster parents till I ran away at the age of sixteen. Compared to this house, their house was a shack. I have never known a house since then. Only barracks and bleak rooms.
And the cubbyhole I slept in in the
StarSearch
.
My granddaughter-in-law does not meet us at the front door. I stand in the big living room as she descends the spiral stairway in answer to Robinette’s call. There are many new things under the sun. My granddaughter-in-law is not one of them. I am willing to bet that this blond and slender woman in the flowing lime-green dress descending the stairs with the put-on airs of a queen once belonged to the PTA. I am willing to bet that she and her husband are members of the Country Club, that each winter they sojourn in the south and that he has his car and she hers. I am willing to bet that weekly aerobics in the high school gym are responsible for her svelte figure, and that were it not for cosmetology her hair would be the color of sand.
Her eyes are green.
“Mother, this is
Jerry
,” Robinette says. “I found him putting flowers on Great-Grandmother Hullman’s grave.”
She does not offer to shake my hand. Why should she?—I’m an utter stranger, even though she may have seen me on 3V. Instead, she says, “Fred will be extremely pleased. I must go tell our
au pair
that we will have a guest for dinner.”
“My daughter,” I ask Robinette, after my granddaughter-in-law leaves the room. “Does she live here too?”
“No. She lives on the other side of town. I’ll call her and tell her that you’re here. But first let’s go back out and get your bags.”
“Robin, I can’t stay here.”
“Why can’t you?”
“You know why. Your mother and father are more than twenty years older than I am. I’ll be a constant embarrassment to them.”
“You won’t be an embarrassment to me. In fact,” she says, and there is a twinkle deep in her eyes, “you and I come awfully close to being the same age.”
“But that only makes it worse.”
“Does it really, Jerry?”
The twinkle I saw in her eyes is gone. I am frightened by the quality that has taken its place. Frightened—and made helpless. We go out and get my bags and carry them upstairs. The door of the bedroom across the hall from the guest room she chooses for me is open. The bed is covered with a pink counterpane. There is a pair of slippers lying on the thick rug. Attached to the wall above the escritoire is a yellow college pennant. I know whose room it is.
* * *
My grandson is a tall, trim man whose brown hair is neatly edged with gray. His face is narrow, his nose somewhat pinched, his resolute mouth a thin, straight line. Beth’s genes seem to have skipped him altogether, and I can find no sign of mine.
He says, “Welcome back,” after we shake hands. I am thankful he did not add, “Grandpa.”
Dinner is a solemn affair. He sits at one end of the table, my granddaughter-in-law at the other. Robinette and I sit facing each other across the middle. The
au pair
is a squat, middle-aged woman with a blowzy face. She serves us the five courses of which the meal is comprised.
This is the way the rich eat. But I doubt that my grandson is as rich as he puts on. Probably, I am far richer than he. The enormous price I paid for my car hardly took a bite out of my back pay. But I do not feel rich, sitting there at the table. I feel like a country bumpkin. My suit coat is too full, it hangs upon me. My necktie, I am sure, is improperly tied. My hands, so deft in manipulating shipboard controls, have become big, truck-driver hands that fumble with forks and spoons.
Robinette makes mention of the planet Beaumont, Morris, and I found. My grandson changes the subject and begins talking about the economy. As usual, it is in bad shape.
The planet we found is a small sister of the big Jovian world that had lured us across space, and is as dead as the Moon. There are two other planets in the system, both gas giants the size of Neptune; and although there are satellites galore not a single one of them is hospitable to life, so I do not blame my grandson for changing the subject.
Nor do I blame him for again changing the subject when Robinette mentions that Beaumont and Morris and I were each awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, a fact he must already have been aware of, since the media gave it considerably play. The sad truth is that we were awarded the medals only because the people at NASA thought they had to do something to make our long journey seem worthwhile, when they knew as well as we did that they would have done far better if they had just dumped the taxpayers’ dollars down the drain.
During our absence, as though to add ironic overtones to our failure, astrophysicists conquered the curvature of space and paved the way to the discovery of three
inhabitable
planets.
No. I do not blame my grandson for brushing aside our dubious fame and going on to something else (this time, the summer drought), when out of common courtesy he could at least have said a word or two about what his grandfather had
tried
to do. I do not blame him at all. Nevertheless, his total lack of interest serves to make something painfully clear:
He does not like me.
And when my daughter fails to put in an appearance, something else becomes painfully clear:
She does not like me either.
* * *
Robinette is furious. I can see the fury in her deep brown eyes, but it is evident only to me. Later on in the evening when we go for a ride in her Ponse, she says, “You remind them of a bit of family history they’ve tried to forget. I would have warned you, but none of them ever let on the way they felt, and anyway, who would ever dream in this day and age that even three middle-class snobs would care one way or another whether or not they’d sprung from legitimate stock.”
“I would have married her if I’d known she was pregnant.”
“You don’t have to apologize to me. I’m glad you didn’t marry her. If you had, you wouldn’t be here.”
She has turned off the headlights and is driving by the light of the full moon. We have the country road all to ourselves. She turns down a wooded road that leads to the lake and parks on a bluff that overlooks the beach. She says, “When the
StarSearch
returned, I sat in front of the 3V screen for hours so I’d be certain to see you climb down from the ship. I’d read all about you in books. The books I read said that but little time would pass for you, and that when you returned to Earth you’d be but little older than when you’d left. I didn’t quite believe them, although I wanted to, and I half expected to see three old men climb down from the ship. And—and then I saw you.”
“Why didn’t you come to White Sands?”
“Because I was afraid you really would be old.”
“When I saw you, I thought you were Beth.”
“I am Beth, in a way.”
Far out upon the lake the lights of fishing boats dance upon the water. The goddess Diana looks down upon us from the mountains of the moon. We can hear the lake take in and breathe out its breath.
Robinette says, “I cut your picture out of an old magazine when I was only sixteen. I still carry it in my purse.”
I almost dare to kiss her cheek.
“I think we’d better go now, don’t you,” she says. “I think we’d better go before it’s too late,” and she backs down to the country road, and Diana looks down upon us with her omniscient eyes as we return the way we came.