Read Time Is the Simplest Thing Online
Authors: Clifford D. Simak
He'd bed down here, he decided, just before the fire, so that the light of it would be back of him, out into the room.
He spread the robe carefully on the floor, took off his jacket and folded it for a pillow. He kicked off his shoes and lay down on the robe. It was soft and yielding, almost like a mattress despite its lack of thickness. He pulled it over him and it fell together smoothly, like a sleeping bag. There was a comfort in it that he had not felt since those days when he had been a boy and had snuggled down into his bed, underneath the blankets, in his room on the coldest winter nights.
He lay there, staring out into the darkness of the storeroom beyond the living quarters. He could see the faint outlines of barrels and bales and boxes. And lying there in the silence, unbroken except by the occasional crackle of the fire behind him, he became aware of the faint scent which perfumed the roomâthe indescribable odor of things alien to the Earth. Not an offensive scent, nor exotic, not in any way startling at all, but a smell such as was not upon the Earth, the compounded smell of spice and fabric, of wood and food, of all the many other things which were gathered from the stars. And only a small stock of it here, he knew, only the staples considered necessary for one of the smaller Posts. But a Post with the entire resources of the massive Fishhook warehouses available within a moment's notice, thanks to the transo standing in its corner.
And this was only a small part of that traffic with the starsâthis was only the part that you could put your hands upon, the one small part of it that one could buy or own.
There was also that greater unseen, almost unrealized part of the Fishhook operationâthe securing and collecting (and the hoarding, as well) of ideas and of knowledge snared from the depths of space. In the universities of Fishhook, scholars from all parts of the world sifted through this knowledge and sought to correlate and study it, and in some cases to apply it, and in the years to come it would be this knowledge and these ideas which would shape the course and the eventual destiny of all humanity.
But there was more to it than that. There was, first of all, the revealed knowledge and ideas, and secondly, the secret files of learning and the facts kept under lock and key or at the very best reviewed by most confidential boards and panels.
For Fishhook could not, in the name of humanity as well as its own self-interest, release everything it found.
There were certain new approaches, philosophies, ideas, call them what you might, which, while valid in their own particular social structures, were not human in any sense whatever, nor by any stretch of imagination adaptable to the human race and the human sense of value. And there were those others which, while applicable, must be studied closely for possible side effects on human thinking and the human viewpoint before they could be introduced, no matter how obliquely, into the human cultural pattern. And there still were others, wholly applicable, which could not be released for perhaps another hundred yearsâideas so far ahead, so revoluntionary that they must wait for the human race to catch up with them.
And in this must have lain something of what Stone had been thinking when he had started his crusade to break the monopoly of Fishhook, to bring to the paranormal people of the world outside of Fishhook some measure of the heritage which was rightly theirs by the very virtue of their abilities.
In that Blaine could find agreement with him, for it was not right, he told himself, that all the results of PK should be forever funneled through the tight controls of a monopoly that in the course of a century of existence had somehow lost the fervor of its belief and its strength of human purpose in a welter of commercialism such as no human being, nor any age, had ever known before.
By every rule of decency, parakinetics belonged to Man himself, not to a band of men, not to a corporation, not even to its discoverers nor the inheritors of its discoverersâfor the discovery of it, or the realization of it, no matter by what term one might choose to call it, could not in any case be the work of one man or one group of men alone. It was something that must lay within the public domain. It was a truly natural phenomenaâmore peculiarly a natural resource than wind or wood or water.
Behind Blaine the logs, burning to the point of collapse, fell apart in a fiery crash. He turned to look at themâ
Or tried to turn.
But he could not turn.
There was something wrong.
Somehow or other, the robe had become wrapped too tightly.
He pushed his hands out from his side to pull it loose, but he could not push his hands and it would not loosen.
Rather, it tightened. He could feel it tighten.
Terrified, he tried to thrust his body upward, trying to sit up.
He could not do it.
The robe held him in a gentle but unyielding grasp.
He was as effectively trussed as if he'd been tied with rope. The robe, without his knowing it, had become a strait jacket that held him close and snug.
He lay quietly on his back and while a chill went through his body, sweat poured down his forehead and ran into his eyes.
For there had been a trap.
He had been afraid of one.
He had been on guard against it.
And yet, of his own free will and unsuspecting, he had wrapped the trap about him.
TWENTY-FIVE
Rand had said “I'll be seeing you,” when he had shaken hands and stepped into the transo. He had sounded cheerful and very confident. And he'd had a right to sound that way, Blaine thought ruefully, for he'd had it all planned out. He had known exactly what would happen and he'd planned it letter perfectâthe one way to apprehend a man you happened to be just a little scared of, not knowing exactly what to expect from him.
Blaine lay on the floor, stretched out, held stretched out and motionless by the encircling robeâexcept, of course, it was not a robe. It was, more than likely, one of those weird discoveries which Fishhook, for purposes of its own, had found expedient to keep under very careful cover. Foreseeing, no doubt, that certain unique uses might be found for it.
Blaine searched his memory and there was nothing thereânothing that even hinted of a thing like this, some parasitic life, perhaps, which for time on end could lie quiet and easy, making like a robe, but which came to deadly life once it was exposed to something warm and living.
It had him now and within a little while it might start feeding on him, or whatever else it might plan to do with him. There was no use, he knew, to struggle, for at every movement of his body the thing would only close the tighter.
He searched his mind again for a clue to this thing and all at once he found a placeâhe could see a placeâa murky, tumbled planet with tangled forestation and weird residents that flapped and crawled and shambled. It was a place of horror, seen only mistily through the fogs of memory, but the most startling thing about it was that he was fairly certain, even as he dredged it up, he had no such memory. He had never been there and he'd never talked to one who had, although it might have been something he'd picked up from dimensinoâfrom some idle hour of many years before, buried deep within his mind and unsuspected until this very moment.
The picture grew the brighter and the clearer, as if somewhere in his brain someone might be screwing at a lens to get a better picture, and now he could see in remarkable and mind-chilling detail the sort of life that lived within the welter of chaotic jungle. It was horrendous and obscene and it crawled and crept and there was about it a studied, cold ferociousness, the cruelty of the uncaring and unknowing, driven only be a primal hunger and a primal hate.
Blaine lay frozen by the pitlike horror of the place, for it was almost as if he actually were there, as if a part of him lay on this floor before the fireplace while the other half was standing, in all reality, within the loathsome jungle.
He seemed to hear a noise, or this other half of him seemed to hear a noise, and this other half of him looked upward into what might have been a tree, although it was too gnarled, too thorned and too obnoxious to be any proper tree, and looking up, he saw the robe, hanging from a branch, with the shattered diamond dust sparkling in its fur, about to drop upon him.
He screamed, or seemed to scream, and the planet and its denizens faded out, as if the hand within his brain had turned the viewing lens out of proper focus.
He was back, entire, in the land of fireplace and of storeroom, with the transo machine standing in its corner. The door that went into the store was opening, and Grant was coming through.
Grant moved out into the room and eased the door behind him to its closed position. Then he swung around and stood silently, huge and stolid, staring at the man upon the floor.
“Mr. Blaine,” he said, speaking softly. “Mr. Blaine, are you awake?”
Blaine did not answer.
“Your eyes are open, Mr. Blaine. Is there something wrong with you?”
“Not a thing,” said Blaine. “I was just lying here and thinking.”
“Good thoughts, Mr. Blaine?”
“Very good, indeed.”
Grant moved forward slowly, catfooted, as if he might be stalking something. He reached the table and picked up the bottle. He put it to his mouth and let it gurgle.
He put the bottle down.
“Mr. Blaine, why don't you get up? We could sit around and talk and have a drink or two. I don't get to talk to people much. They come here and buy, of course, but they don't talk to me no more than they just have to.”
“No, thanks,” said Blaine. “I'm quite comfortable.”
Grant moved from the table and sat down in one of the chairs before the fireplace.
“It was a shame,” he said, “you didn't go back to Fishhook with Mr. Rand. Fishhook is an exciting place to be.”
“You're quite right,” Blaine told him, replying automatically, not paying much attention.
For now he knewâhe knew where he'd got that memory, where he'd picked up the mental picture of that other planet. He had gotten it from the neat stacks of information he'd picked up from the Pinkness. He, himself, of course, had never visited the planet, but the Pinkness had.
And there was more to the memory than just the magic-lantern picture of the place. There was, as well, a file of data about the planet and its life. But disorderly, not yet sorted out, and very hard to get at.
Grant leaned back into his chair, smirking just a little.
Grant reached out a hand and tapped his fingers on the robe. It gave forth a sound like a muted drum.
“Well,” he demanded, “how do you like it, Mr. Blaine?”
“I'll let you know,” Blaine told him, “when I get my hands on you.”
Grant got up from the chair and walked back to the table, following an exaggerated, mocking path around the stretched-out Blaine. He picked up the bottle and had another slug.
“You won't get your hands on me,” he said, “because in just another minute I'm going to shove you into the transo over there and back you go to Fishhook.”
He took another drink and set the bottle back.
“I don't know what you done,” he said. “I don't know why they want you. But I got my orders.”
He half lifted the bottle, then thought better of it. He shoved it back to the center of the table. He walked forward and stood towering over Blaine.
There was another picture, of another planet, and there was a thing that walked along what might have been a road. The thing was nothing such as Blaine had ever seen before. It looked something like a walking cactus, but it was not a cactus and there was every doubt that it was vegetable. But neither the creature nor the road were too significant. What was significant was that following at the creature's heels, gamboling awkwardly along the could-be road, were a half dozen of the robes.
Hunting dogs, thought Blaine. The cactus was a hunter and these were his hunting dogs. Or he was a trapper and these things were his traps. Robes, domesticated from that other jungle planet, perhaps picked up by some space-going trader, tough enough to survive stellar radiation, and brought to this planet to be bartered for something else of value.
Perhaps, Blaine thought wildly, it was from this very planet that the robe now wrapped about him had been found and taken back to Fishhook.
There was something else pounding in his brainâsome sort of phrase, a very alien phrase, perhaps a phrase from the cactus language. It was barbarous in its twisting of the tongue and it made no sense, but as Grant stooped with his hands outstretched to lift him, Blaine shouted out the phrase with all his strength.
And as he shouted, the robe came loose. It no longer held him. Blaine rolled, with a powerful twist of body, against the legs of the man who was bending over him.
Grant went over, face forward on the floor, with a roar of rage. Blaine, clawing his way to his hands and knees, broke free and lunged to his feet out beyond the table.
Grant swarmed off the floor. Blood dripped slowly from his nose where it had struck against the boards. One hand was raw with blood oozing from the knuckles where his hand had scraped.
He took a quick step forward and his face was twisted with a double fearâthe fear of a man who could free himself from the clutches of the robe, the fear of having failed his job.
Then he lunged, head lowered, arms outthrust, fingers spread, driving straight for Blaine. He was big and powerful and he was driven by an utter desperation that made him doubly dangerous since he would be careless of any danger to himself.
Blaine pivoted to one sideânot quite far enough. One of Grant's outstretched hands caught at his shoulder, slipped off it, the fingers dragging, clawing wildly, and closing on Blaine's shirt. The cloth held momentarily throwing Blaine off balance, then the fabric parted and ripped loose with a low-pitched screeching.
Grant swung around, then flung forward once again, a snarl rising in his throat. Blaine, his heels dug into the floor, brought his fist up fast, felt the jolt of it hitting bone and flesh, sensed the shiver that went through Grant's body as the big man staggered back.