Short Fiction Fritz Leiber (free e books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Fritz Leiber
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âI had an uncle flew in the war they fought to lick fascism, bombardier on a Flying Fortress or something, and once when he got drunk he told me how some days it didnât bother him at all to drop the eggs on Germany; the buildings and people down there seemed just like toys that a kid sets up to kick over, and the whole business about as naive fun as poking an anthill.
âI didnât even have to fly over at seven miles what I was going to be aiming at. Only I remember sometimes getting out a map and looking at a certain large dot on it and smiling a little and softly saying, âPow!ââ âand then giving a little conventional shudder and folding up the map quick.
âNaturally we told ourselves weâd never have to do it, fire the thing, I mean, we joked about how after twenty years or so weâd all be given jobs as museum attendants of this same bomb, deactivated at last. But naturally it didnât work out that way. There came the day when our side of the world got hit and the orders started cascading down from Defense Coordinator Bigelowâ ââ
âBigelow?â Pop interrupted. âNot Joe Bigelow?â
âJoseph A., I believe,â I told him, a little annoyed.
âWhy heâs my boy then, the one I was telling you aboutâ âthe skinny runt had this horn-handle! Can you beat that?â Pop sounded startlingly happy. âHim and youâll have a lot to talk about when you get together.â
I wasnât so sure of that myself, in fact my first reaction was that the opposite would be true. To be honest I was for the first moment more than a little annoyed at Pop interrupting my story of my Big Griefâ âfor it was that to me, make no mistake. Here my story had finally been teased out of me, against all expectation, after decades of repression and in spite of dozens of assorted psychological blocksâ âand here was Pop interrupting it for the sake of a lot of trivial organizational gossip about Joes and Bills and Georges weâd never heard of and what theyâd say or think!
But then all of a sudden I realized that I didnât really care, that it didnât feel like a Big Grief any more, that just starting to tell about it after hearing Pop and Alice tell their stories had purged it of that unnecessary weight of feeling that had made it a millstone around my neck. It seemed to me now that I could look down at Ray Baker from a considerable height (but not an angelic or contemptuously superior height) and ask myself not why he had grieved so muchâ âthat was understandable and even desirableâ âbut why he had grieved so uselessly in such a stuffy little private hell.
And it would be interesting to find out how Joseph A. Bigelow had felt.
âHow does it feel, Ray, to kill a million people?â
I realized that Alice had asked me the question several seconds back and it was hanging in the air.
âThatâs just what Iâve been trying to tell you,â I told her and started to explain it all over againâ âthe words poured out of me now. I wonât put them down hereâ âit would take too longâ âbut they were honest words as far as I knew and they eased me.
I couldnât get over it: here were us three murderers feeling a trust and understanding and sharing a communion that I wouldnât have believed possible between any two or three people in the Age of the Deadersâ âor in any age, to tell the truth. It was against everything I knew of Deathland psychology, but it was happening just the same. Oh, our strange isolation had something to do with it, I knew, and that Pullman-car memory hypnotizing my mind, and our reactions to the voices and violence of Atla-Alamos, but in spite of all that I ranked it as a wonder. I felt an inward freedom and easiness that I never would have believed possible. Popâs little disorganized organization had really got hold of something, I couldnât deny it.
Three treacherous killers talking from the bottoms of their hearts and believing each other!â âfor it never occurred to me to doubt that Pop and Alice were feeling exactly like I was. In fact, we were all so sure of it that we didnât even mention our communion to each other. Perhaps we were a little afraid we would rub off the bloom. We just enjoyed it.
We must have talked about a thousand things that night and smoked a couple of hundred cigarettes. After a while we started taking little catnapsâ âweâd gotten too much off our chests and come to feel too tranquil for even our excitement to keep us awake. I remember the first time I dozed waking up with a cold start and grabbing for Motherâ âand then hearing Pop and Alice gabbing in the dark, and remembering what had happened, and relaxing again with a smile.
Of all things, Pop was saying, âYep, I imagine Ray must be good to make love to, murderers almost always are, they got the fire. It reminds me of what a guy named Fred told me, one of our boysâ ââ âŠâ
Mostly we took turns going to sleep, though I think there were times when all three of us were snoozing. About the fifth time I woke up, after some tighter shuteye, the orange soup was back again outside and Alice was snoring gently in the next seat and Pop was up and had one of his knives out.
He was looking at his reflection in the viewport.
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