Search the Sky by C. M. Kornbluth and Frederik Pohl (the best electronic book reader .txt) đ
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Bernie said over his shoulder, âHome, huh? That place you call Halseyâs Planet?â
Ross shook his head. âNot this time. I got this far and 107Iâm still alive; maybe I can finish the job. Anyway, Iâll try. The first solid suggestion Iâve had ever since I took off was what that half-witted old moronâââ He ignored a little gasp from Helena. âââsaid back on âMinerva.â If Flarney had lived, he would have gone there; weâll go there now.â He finished manipulating the calculator and began to set it up on the board. He said, âThe name of the place isâEarth.â
IT took Ross a while to learn a lesson, but when he learned it, it stuck. This time, he promised himself, no spaceport.
They sneaked into the solar system that held fabulous old Earth from far outside the ecliptic, where the chance of radar detection was least; they came to a relative dead halt millions of miles from the planet and cautiously scanned the surrounding volume of space with their own radar.
No ships seemed to be in space. Earthâs solar system turned out to be a trivial affair, only five planets, scarcely a half-dozen moons among them. None of the planets except Earth itself was anything like inhabitable.
âHold tight,â said Ross grimly, âIâm not so good at this fine navigation.â He cautiously applied power along a single vector; the starship leaped and bucked. He corrected with another; and the distant sun swelled in their view plates with frightening rapidity. The alarm beeps bleated furiously, and the automatic cutoff restored all controls to neutral.
Ross, sweating, picked himself up from the floor and staggered back to the panel. Helena said carefully, âYouâre doing fine, Ross, but if youâd like me to take over for a minuteâââ
109Ross swallowed his pride and stood back. After one wide-eyed stare of shockâshe wasnât even calculating!âhe gripped the loops and closed his eyes and waited for death.
There was a punishing bump and his eyes flew open. Helena was looking at him apologetically. âYou would have done it better,â she lied, âbut anyway weâre down.â
Ross lied, âOf course, but Iâm glad you had the practice. Whereâuh, where are we?â
Helena silently showed him the radar plot. Earth, it seemed, had a confusing multiplicity of continents; they were on one in the northern hemisphere, a large one as Earthâs continents went, and smack in the middle of it. It was night on their side of Earth just then; and, by the plot, a largish city was only a dozen or so miles away.
âOkay,â said Ross wearily, âlanding party away. Helena, you stay here while Bernie and Iâââ
Helena said simply, âNo.â
Ross stared at her a minute, then shrugged. âAll right. Then Bernie will stay whileâââ
âI will not!â said Bernie.
Clearly it was time for a showdown. Ross roared: âWhoâs the captain here, anyway?â
âYou are,â Helena said promptly. âAs long as I donât have to stay here alone.â
âYeah,â said Bernie.
Ross said, âOh.â He thought for a while and then said, âWell, letâs all go.â They thought it was a wonderful idea.
Earth wasnât a very unusual planetâlots of green sand and purple vegetation. Either the master star chart was wrong or the gravity meter was off; the former, strangely enough, gave Earthâs gravity as 1.000000 and the latter as 0.8952, a whopping ten per cent discrepancy. Further, the principal inert gas in Earthâs atmosphere was, according to the master chartâs planetary supplement, nitrogen; and according to the shipâs instruments was indubitably neon. A terrific aurora polaris display constantly flickering in the northern sky bore that out.
But the gap between the chart and the facts didnât particularly worry Ross as they swung along overland. So the 110chart was off, or perhaps things had changed. This wasâaccording to Flarney via Whitkerâthe place where people knew about the formula, where his questions would be answered. After this, he thought happily, itâs off to Halseyâs Planet and an unspecified glorious future, revered as the savior of humanity instead of a lousy Yards clerk pushing invoices around. And Helena, he thought sentimentally....
He turned to smile at her and found she and Bernie were giggling.
âListen, you two!â Captain Ross roared. âHavenât you learned anything yet? Whatâs the good of us exploring if we stroll along with our silly heads in the clouds, not paying attention? Do you realize that this place may be as dangerous as Azor or worse?â
âRossâââ Helena said.
âDonât interrupt! What this outfit needs is some disciplineâtightening up. You two have got to accept your responsibilities. Keep alert! Be on the lookout! Any single thing out of the ordinary may be a deathtrap. Watch forâââ
Helena was looking not at Ross but over his shoulder. Bernie was making strangled noises and pointing.
Ross turned. Behind him stood a mechanical monstrosity vaguely recognizable as a heavily-armed truck, its motor faintly humming. A man leaned darkly from the cab and transfixed them to the ground with a powerful spotlight. From the dazzling circle of light his voice came, hasty and furtive. âThought it was two women and a man, but I guess youâre the ones. Ugh, those faces on you! Yes, youâre the ones. Get in. Fast.â
The light blinked out. When their eyes adjusted to the dimmer illumination of the stars and the aurora display they saw a side door in the body of the truck standing open. Too, one of the long, slim gun barrels with which the truck seemed copiously supplied swiveled to cover them.
Ross stupidly read aloud a sign on the truck: âJones Floor-Cover Company. Finest Tile on Jones. Wall-to-Wall a Specialty. âRugs Fit For a Jonesâ.â
âYeah,â the man said. âYeah, yeah. Just donât try to buy any. Get in, for Jonesâ sake! If Iâd of known you were half-wits 111I wouldnât of taken this job for a million Joneses, cash. Get in!â His voice was hysterical and the gun covering them moved ominously. âIf this is a frameâââ he began to shrill.
âGet in,â Ross said shakily to the others. They climbed in and the door slammed violently and automatically. Helena began to cry in a preoccupied sort of way and Bernie began a long, mumbling inventory of his own mental weaknesses for ever getting involved in this crackbrained, imbecilic, feeble-minded....
There were windows in the truck body and Ross turned from one to another. He saw the guns on the cab telescope into stubs, the stubs fold into the mounts, the mounts smoothly descend flush with the sheet metal. He saw the cursing driver manipulate a dozen levers as the car began to glide across the green sand, purple-dotted with vegetation. Finally, through the rear window, he saw three figures racing across the sand waving their arms, rapidly being left behind. All he could make out was that they seemed to be two women and a man.
Helena was wailing softly, âââand I am not ugly and just because weâre young and weâre strangers isnât any reason to go around insulting peopleâââ
From Bernie: âââfatheaded, goggly-eyed, no-browed, slobber-lipped, dim-wittedâââ
âShut up,â Ross said softly. âBefore I bang both your heads together.â
They stared.
âThank you. Weâve got to think. Whatâs this spot weâre in? What can we do about it? I donât have any F-T-L contact name for Earth and obviously this fellow picked us up by mistake. I saw two women and a manâremember what he said?âjust now trying to catch up with us. He seems to be some kind of criminal. Otherwise why a disguised gun-carrier? Why floor coverings âbut donât try to buy anyâ? And Jones seems to be the name of the local political subdivision, the name of the local deity and the currency. Thatâs important. It points to a rigid one-man dictatorshipâJones, of course, or possibly his dynasty. What 112course of action should we take? Kick it around. Helena, what do you think?â
âHe shouldnât have said we were ugly,â she pouted. âIsnât that important?â
âWomen!â Ross said grimly. âIf youâll kindly forget the trivial affront to your vanity perhaps we can figure something out.â
Helena said stubbornly: âBut he shouldnât. Weâre not. What if they just think we are because they all look alike and we donât look like them?â
Ross collapsed. After a long pause during which he tried and almost failed to control his temper he said slowly: âThank you, Helena. Youâre wrong, of course, but it was a contribution. You see, you canât build up such a wild, far-fetched theory from the few facts available.â His voice was beginning to choke with anger. âIt isnât reasonable and it isnât really any help. In fact itâs the God-damndest stupidest imitation of reasoning I have everâââ
âCity,â Bernard croaked, pointing. The jolting ride had become smoother, and gliding past the windows were green tiled buildings and street lights.
âFine,â Ross said bitterly. âWe had a few clear minutes to think and now we find they were wasted by the crackpot dissertation of a female and my reasonable attempt to show her the elements of logical thinking.â He put his head in his hands and tried to ignore them, tried to reason it out. But the truck made a couple of sharp turns and jolted to a stop.
The door opened and the voice of their driver said, again from behind a flashlightâs dazzling circle: âOut. Walk ahead of me.â
They did, into a fair-sized, well-lighted room with eight people in it whom they studied in amazement. Every one of the eight was exactly the same heightâsix feet. Every one had straight red hair of exactly the same shade, sprouting from an identical hairline. Every one had precisely the same buildâgangling but broad-shouldered. Their sixteen eyes were the identical blue under sixteen identical eyebrows. Head to toe, they were duplicates. One of them spokeâin exactly the same voice as the truckdriverâs.
113âSo you want to be Joneses, do you?â he said.
âAbsolutely impossible.â
âBut we took their money.â
âGive it back. Reasonable changes, yes, but look at them!â
âWe canât give it back. Look what we spent already. Anyway, Sam,âââ It sounded like âSamâ to Ross. âââanyway, Sam, look at some of the work youâve done already. You can do it. I doubt if anybody else could, but you can.â
Ross felt his eyes crossing, and gave up the effort of trying to tell which Jones was speaking to which. Even the clothing was nearly identicalâpurple pantaloons, scarlet jacket, black cummerbund sash, black shoes. Then he noticed that Third-from-the-left Jonesâthe one who seemed to be named Samâwore a frilly shirt of white under the scarlet jacket. Only a lacy edge showed at the open collar; but where his was white, the others were all muted pastels of pink and green.
Sam said coldly, âI know nobody else can do it. Anybody else! Who else is there?â
A Jones with a frill of chartreuse pursed his lips. âWell,â he said thoughtfully, âthereâs Northside Tim Jonesâââ
âNorthside Tim Jones,â Sam mimicked. âEight of his jobs are in the stockade right now! Paraffin, for Jonesâs sakeâhe still uses paraffin to mold a face!â
âI know, Sam, but after all, these people need help. If you wonât do it for them, whatâs left?â
Sam shrugged morosely. âWellâââ he said. Then he shook his head, sighed, and came forward to look at the three travelers. With an expression of revulsion he said, âStrip.â
Ross hesitated. âHold it!â he said sharply to Helena, already half out of her coveralls. âSir, there may have been some mistake. Would you mind explaining just what you propose to do?â
âThe usual thing,â Sam said irritably. âFix your hair, build up your frames, level you off at standard Jones height. The works. Though I must say,â he added bitterly, âI never saw such unpromising specimens in my life. How the Jones 114have you managed to stay out of trouble this long? Whose garrets have you been hiding in?â
Ross licked his lips. âYou mean,â he said, âyou want to make us look more like you gentlemen, is that it?â
âI want!â Sam repeated in bafflement. Over his shoulder he roared, âBen, what kind of creeps are you saddling me with?â
Ben, looking worried, said, âHoly Jones, Sam, I donât get it either. It was a perfectly normal deal. This guy came up to me in Jonesâs Joint and made a pitch. He knew the setup all right, and he had the money with him. Six hundred Joneses, cold cash; and it wasnât funny money, either.â His face clouded. âI did think, though,â he mentioned, âthat
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