Short Fiction Stanley G. Weinbaum (read 50 shades of grey TXT) đ
- Author: Stanley G. Weinbaum
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âNuts!â observed the captain. âPlain nuts!â
âThatâs what I thought, too! I just stared at him open-mouthed while he pulled his head out of the sand and stood up. Then I figured heâd missed my point, and I went through the whole blamed rigamarole again, and it ended the same way, with Tweel on his nose in the middle of my picture!â
âMaybe itâs a religious rite,â suggested Harrison.
âMaybe,â said Jarvis dubiously. âWell, there we were. We could exchange ideas up to a certain point, and thenâ âblooey! Something in us was different, unrelated; I donât doubt that Tweel thought me just as screwy as I thought him. Our minds simply looked at the world from different viewpoints, and perhaps his viewpoint is as true as ours. Butâ âwe couldnât get together, thatâs all. Yet, in spite of all difficulties, I liked Tweel, and I have a queer certainty that he liked me.â
âNuts!â repeated the captain. âJust daffy!â
âYeah? Wait and see. A couple of times Iâve thought that perhaps weâ ââ He paused, and then resumed his narrative. âAnyway, I finally gave it up, and got into my thermo-skin to sleep. The fire hadnât kept me any too warm, but that damned sleeping bag did. Got stuffy five minutes after I closed myself in. I opened it a little and bingo! Some eighty-below-zero air hit my nose, and thatâs when I got this pleasant little frostbite to add to the bump I acquired during the crash of my rocket.
âI donât know what Tweel made of my sleeping. He sat around, but when I woke up, he was gone. Iâd just crawled out of my bag, though, when I heard some twittering, and there he came, sailing down from that three-story Thyle cliff to alight on his beak beside me. I pointed to myself and toward the north, and he pointed at himself and toward the south, but when I loaded up and started away, he came along.
âMan, how he traveled! A hundred and fifty feet at a jump, sailing through the air stretched out like a spear, and landing on his beak. He seemed surprised at my plodding, but after a few moments he fell in beside me, only every few minutes heâd go into one of his leaps, and stick his nose into the sand a block ahead of me. Then heâd come shooting back at me; it made me nervous at first to see that beak of his coming at me like a spear, but he always ended in the sand at my side.
âSo the two of us plugged along across the Mare Chronium. Same sort of place as thisâ âsame crazy plants and same little green biopods growing in the sand, or crawling out of your way. We talkedâ ânot that we understood each other, you know, but just for company. I sang songs, and I suspect Tweel did too; at least, some of his trillings and twitterings had a subtle sort of rhythm.
âThen, for variety, Tweel would display his smattering of English words. Heâd point to an outcropping and say ârock,â and point to a pebble and say it again; or heâd touch my arm and say âTick,â and then repeat it. He seemed terrifically amused that the same word meant the same thing twice in succession, or that the same word could apply to two different objects. It set me wondering if perhaps his language wasnât like the primitive speech of some earth peopleâ âyou know, Captain, like the Negritoes, for instance, who havenât any generic words. No word for food or water or manâ âwords for good food and bad food, or rain water and sea water, or strong man and weak manâ âbut no names for general classes. Theyâre too primitive to understand that rain water and sea water are just different aspects of the same thing. But that wasnât the case with Tweel; it was just that we were somehow mysteriously differentâ âour minds were alien to each other. And yetâ âwe liked each other!â
âLooney, thatâs all,â remarked Harrison. âThatâs why you two were so fond of each other.â
âWell, I like you!â countered Jarvis wickedly. âAnyway,â he resumed, âdonât get the idea that there was anything screwy about Tweel. In fact, Iâm not so sure but that he couldnât teach our highly praised human intelligence a trick or two. Oh, he wasnât an intellectual superman, I guess; but donât overlook the point that he managed to understand a little of my mental workings, and I never even got a glimmering of his.â
âBecause he didnât have any!â suggested the captain, while Putz and Leroy blinked attentively.
âYou can judge of that when Iâm through,â said Jarvis. âWell, we plugged along across the Mare Chronium all that day, and all the next. Mare Chroniumâ âSea of Time! Say, I was willing to agree with Schiaparelliâs name by the end of that march! Just that grey, endless plain of weird plants, and never a sign of any other life. It was so monotonous that I was even glad to see the desert of Xanthus toward the evening of the second day.
âI was fair worn out, but Tweel seemed as fresh as ever, for all I never saw him drink or eat. I think he could have crossed the Mare Chronium in a couple of hours with those block-long nose dives of his, but he stuck along with me. I offered him some water once or twice; he took the cup from me and sucked the liquid into his beak, and then carefully squirted it all back into the cup and gravely returned it.
âJust as we sighted Xanthus, or the cliffs that bounded it,
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