Short Fiction Mack Reynolds (best ereader for pdf and epub .txt) đ
- Author: Mack Reynolds
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Calvin went back to the plant in its little hollow, tight-hugging to the ground and half-sheltered from the wind, and looked down on its dusky basketball-sized shape, the tough hide swollen and ready to burst with seeds.
âSo you think thereâs no way out,â he said roughly.
âThere is none,â said the plant.
âWhy donât you just let yourself go if you think like that?â Calvin said. âWhy try to keep down out of the wind, if the wavesâll get you anyway, later?â
The plant did not answer for a while.
âI do not want to die,â it said then. âAs long as I am alive, there is the possibility of some great improbable chance saving me.â
âOh,â said Calvin, and he himself was silent in turn. âI thought youâd given up.â
âI cannot give up,â said the plant. âI am still alive. But I know there is no way to safety.â
âYou make a lot of sense.â Calvin straightened up to squint through the rain at the dark and distant line of the shore. âHow much more time would you say we had before the water covers this rock?â
âThe eighth part of a daylight period, perhaps more, perhaps less. The water can rise either faster or more slowly.â
âAny chance of it cresting and going down?â
âThat would be a great improbable chance such as that of which I spoke,â said the plant.
Calvin rotated slowly, surveying the water around them. Bits and pieces of flotsam were streaming by them on their way before the wind, now angling toward the near bank. But none were close enough or large enough to do Calvin any good.
âLook,â said Calvin abruptly, âthereâs a fisheries survey station upriver here, not too far. Now, I could dig up the soil holding your roots. If I did that, would you get to the survey station as fast as you could and tell them Iâm stranded here?â
âI would be glad to,â said the plant. âBut you cannot dig me up. My roots have penetrated into the rock. If you tried to dig me up, they would break offâ âand I would die that much sooner.â
âYou would, would you?â grunted Calvin. But the question was rhetorical. Already his mind was busy searching for some other way out. For the first time in his life, he felt the touch of cold about his heart. Could this be fear, he wondered. But he had never been afraid of death.
Crouching down again to be out of the wind and rain, he told himself that knowledge still remained a tool he could use. The plant must know something that was, perhaps, useless to it, but that could be twisted to a humanâs advantage.
âWhat made you come to a place like this to seed?â he asked.
âTwenty nights and days ago, when I first took root here,â said the plant, âthis land was safe. The signs were good for fair weather. And this place was easy of access from the water. I am not built to travel far on land.â
âHow would you manage in a storm like this, if you were not rooted down?â
âI would go with the wind until I found shelter,â said the plant. âThe wind and waves would not harm me then. They hurt only whatever stands firm and opposes them.â
âYou canât communicate with others of your people from here, can you?â asked Calvin.
âThere are none close,â said the plant. âAnyway, what could they do?â
âThey could get a message to the fisheries station, to get help out here for us.â
âWhat help could help me?â said the plant. âAnd in any case they could not go against the wind. They would have to be upwind of the station, even to help you.â
âWe could try it.â
âWe could try it,â agreed the plant. âBut first one of my kind must come into speaking range. We still hunt our great improbable chance.â
There was a momentâs silence between them in the wind and rain. The river was noisy, working against the rock of the island.
âThere must be something that would give us a better chance than just sitting here,â said Calvin.
The plant did not answer.
âWhat are you thinking about?â demanded Calvin.
âI am thinking of the irony of our situation,â said the plant. âYou are free to wander the water, but cannot. I can wander the water, but I am not free to do so. This is death, and it is a strange thing.â
âI donât get you.â
âI only mean that it makes no differenceâ âthat I am what I am, or that you are what you are. We could be any things that would die when the waves finally cover the island.â
âRight enough,â said Calvin impatiently. âWhat about it?â
âNothing about it, man,â said the plant. âI was only thinking.â
âDonât waste your time on philosophy,â said Calvin harshly. âUse some of that brain power on a way to get loose and get off.â
âPerhaps that and philosophy are one and the same.â
âYouâre not going to convince me of that,â said Calvin, getting up. âIâm going to take another look around the island.â
The island, as he walked around its short margin, showed itself to be definitely smaller. He paused again by the black rock. The moss was lost now, under the water, and the crack was all but under as well. He stood shielding his eyes against the wind-driven rain, peering across at the still visible shore. The waves, he noted, were not extremeâ âsome four or five feet in heightâ âwhich meant that the storm proper was probably paralleling the land some distance out in the gulf.
He clenched his fists in sudden frustration. If only he had hung on to the sailplaneâ âor any decent-sized chunk of it! At least going into the water
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