Short Fiction Fritz Leiber (free e books to read .txt) š
- Author: Fritz Leiber
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I guess cultural queers and time travelers simply donāt understand, though to be so blind it seems to me that they have to overlook much of the history of the Last War and of the subsequent years, especially the mushrooming of crackpot cults with a murder tinge: the werewolf gangs, the Berserkers and Amuckers, the revival of Shiva worship and the Black Mass, the machine wreckers, the kill-the-killers movements, the new witchcraft, the Unholy Creepers, the Unconsciousers, the radioactive blue gods and rocket devils of the Atomites, and a dozen other groupings clearly prefiguring Deathlander psychology. Those cults had all been as unpredictable as Thuggee or the Dancing Madness of the Middle Ages or the Childrenās Crusade, yet they had happened just the same.
But cultural queers are good at overlooking things. They have to be, I suppose. They think theyāre humanity growing again. Yes, despite their laughable warpedness and hysterical crippledness, they actually believeā āeach howlingly different community of themā āthat theyāre the new Adams and Eves. Theyāre all excited about themselves and whether or not they wear fig leaves. They donāt carry with them, twenty-four hours a day, like us Deathlanders do, the burden of all that was forever lost.
Since Iāve gone this far Iāll go a bit further and make the paradoxical admission that even us Deathlanders donāt really understand our urge to murder. Oh, we have our rationalizations of it, just like everyone has of his ruling passionā āwe call ourselves junkmen, scavengers, gangrene surgeons; we sometimes believe weāre doing the person we kill the ultimate kindness, yes and get slobbery tearful about it afterwards; we sometimes tell ourselves weāve finally found and are rubbing out the one man or woman who was responsible for everything; we talk, mostly to ourselves, about the aesthetics of homicide; we occasionally admit, but only each to himself alone, that weāre just plain nuts.
But we donāt really understand our urge to murder, we only feel it.
At the hateful sight of another human being, we feel it begins to grow in us until it becomes an overpowering impulse that jerks us, like a puppet is jerked by its strings, into the act itself or its attempted commission.
Like I was feeling it grow in me now as we did this parallel deathmarch through the reddening haze, me and this girl and our problem. This girl with the blue eyes and the jaunty scar.
The problem of the two urges, I said. The other urge, the sexual, is one that I know all cultural queers (and certainly our time traveler) would claim to know all about. Maybe they do. But I wonder if they understand how intense it can be with us Deathlanders when itās the only release (except maybe liquor and drugs, which we seldom can get and even more rarely dare use)ā āthe only complete release, even though a brief one, from the overpowering loneliness and from the tyranny of the urge to kill.
To embrace, to possess, to glut lust on, yes even briefly to love, briefly to shelter inā āthat was good, that was a relief and release to be treasured.
But it couldnāt last. You could draw it out, prop it up perhaps for a few days, for a month even (though sometimes not for a single night)ā āyou might even start to talk to each other a little, after a whileā ābut it could never last. The glands always tire, if nothing else.
Murder was the only final solution, the only permanent release. Only us Deathlanders know how good it feels. But then after the kill the loneliness would come back, redoubled, and after a while Iād meet another hateful humanā āā ā¦
Our problem of the two urges. As I watched this girl slogging along parallel to me, as I kept constant watch on her of course, I wondered how she was feeling the two urges. Was she attracted to the ridgy scars on my cheeks half revealed by my scarf?ā āto me they have a pleasing symmetry. Was she wondering how my head and face looked without the black felt skullcap low-visored over my eyes? Or was she thinking mostly of that hook swinging into my throat under the chin and dragging me down?
I couldnāt tell. She looked as poker-faced as I was trying to.
For that matter, I asked myself, how was I feeling the two urges?ā āhow was I feeling them as I watched this girl with the blue eyes and the jaunty scar and the arrogantly thinned lips that asked to be smashed, and the slender throat?ā āand I realized that there was no way to describe that, not even to myself. I could only feel the two urges grow in me, side by side, like monstrous twins, until they would simply be too big for my taut body and one of them would have to get out fast.
I donāt know which one of us started to slow down first, it happened so gradually, but the dust puffs that rise from the ground of the Deathlands under even the lightest treading became smaller and smaller around our steps and finally vanished altogether, and we were standing still. Only then did I notice the obvious physical trigger for our stopping. An old freeway ran at right angles across our path. The shoulder by which weād approached it was sharply eroded, so that the pavement, which even had a shallow cave eroded under it, was a good three feet above the level of our path, forming a low wall. From where Iād stopped I could almost reach out
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