Short Fiction Stanley G. Weinbaum (read 50 shades of grey TXT) đ
- Author: Stanley G. Weinbaum
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âIf you did, it must have been in your dreams!â growled Harrison.
âYouâre right!â said Jarvis soberly. âIn a way, youâre right. The dream-beast! Thatâs the best name for itâ âand itâs the most fiendish, terrifying creation one could imagine! More dangerous than a lion, more insidious than a snake!â
âTell me!â begged Leroy. âI must go see!â
âNot this devil!â He paused again. âWell,â he resumed, âTweel and I left the pyramid creature and plowed along through Xanthus. I was tired and a little disheartened by Putzâs failure to pick me up, and Tweelâs trilling got on my nerves, as did his flying nosedives. So I just strode along without a word, hour after hour across that monotonous desert.
âToward mid-afternoon we came in sight of a low dark line on the horizon. I knew what it was. It was a canal; Iâd crossed it in the rocket and it meant that we were just one-third of the way across Xanthus. Pleasant thought, wasnât it? And still, I was keeping up to schedule.
âWe approached the canal slowly; I remembered that this one was bordered by a wide fringe of vegetation and that Mud-heap City was on it.
âI was tired, as I said. I kept thinking of a good hot meal, and then from that I jumped to reflections of how nice and homelike even Borneo would seem after this crazy planet, and from that, to thoughts of little old New York, and then to thinking about a girl I know thereâ âFancy Long. Know her?â
âVision entertainer,â said Harrison. âIâve tuned her in. Nice blondeâ âdances and sings on the Yerba Mate Hour.â
âThatâs her,â said Jarvis ungrammatically. âI know her pretty wellâ âjust friends, get me?â âthough she came down to see us off in the Ares. Well, I was thinking about her, feeling pretty lonesome, and all the time we were approaching that line of rubbery plants.
âAnd thenâ âI said, âWhat ân Hell!â and stared. And there she wasâ âFancy Long, standing plain as day under one of those crackbrained trees, and smiling and waving just the way I remembered her when we left!â
âNow youâre nuts, too!â observed the captain.
âBoy, I almost agreed with you! I stared and pinched myself and closed my eyes and then stared againâ âand every time, there was Fancy Long smiling and waving! Tweel saw something, too; he was trilling and clucking away, but I scarcely heard him. I was bounding toward her over the sand, too amazed even to ask myself questions.
âI wasnât twenty feet from her when Tweel caught me with one of his flying leaps. He grabbed my arm, yelling, âNoâ ânoâ âno!â in his squeaky voice. I tried to shake him offâ âhe was as light as if he were built of bambooâ âbut he dug his claws in and yelled. And finally some sort of sanity returned to me and I stopped less than ten feet from her. There she stood, looking as solid as Putzâs head!â
âVot?â said the engineer.
âShe smiled and waved, and waved and smiled, and I stood there dumb as Leroy, while Tweel squeaked and chattered. I knew it couldnât be real, yetâ âthere she was!
âFinally I said, âFancy! Fancy Long!â She just kept on smiling and waving, but looking as real as if I hadnât left her thirty-seven million miles away.
âTweel had his glass pistol out, pointing it at her. I grabbed his arm, but he tried to push me away. He pointed at her and said, âNo breet! No breet!â and I understood that he meant that the Fancy Long thing wasnât alive. Man, my head was whirling!
âStill, it gave me the jitters to see him pointing his weapon at her. I donât know why I stood there watching him take careful aim, but I did. Then he squeezed the handle of his weapon; there was a little puff of steam, and Fancy Long was gone! And in her place was one of those writhing, black, rope-armed horrors like the one Iâd saved Tweel from!
âThe dream-beast! I stood there dizzy, watching it die while Tweel trilled and whistled. Finally he touched my arm, pointed at the twisting thing, and said, âYou one-one-two, he one-one-two.â After heâd repeated it eight or ten times, I got it. Do any of you?â
âOui!â shrilled Leroy. âMoiâ âje le comprends! He mean you think of something, the beast he know, and you see it! Un chienâ âa hungry dog, he would see the big bone with meat! Or smell itâ ânot?â
âRight!â said Jarvis. âThe dream-beast uses its victimâs longings and desires to trap its prey. The bird at nesting season would see its mate, the fox, prowling for its own prey, would see a helpless rabbit!â
âHow he do?â queried Leroy.
âHow do I know? How does a snake back on earth charm a bird into its very jaws? And arenât there deep-sea fish that lure their victims into their mouths? Lord!â Jarvis shuddered. âDo you see how insidious the monster is? Weâre warned nowâ âbut henceforth we canât trust even our eyes. You might see meâ âI might see one of youâ âand back of it may be nothing but another of those black horrors!â
âHowâd your friend know?â asked the captain abruptly.
âTweel? I wonder! Perhaps he was thinking of something that couldnât possibly have interested me, and when I started to run, he realized that I saw
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