The single thing to fear was
fearghastly, walking fear!
Stiff with shock, Naomi Heckscher
stood just inside the door to Cappy’s one-room
cabin, where she’d happened to be when her husband
discovered the old man’s body.
Her nearest neighbor old
Cappy dead. After all his wire-pulling
to get into the First Group, and his slaving to make
a farm on this alien planet, dead in bed!
Naomi’s mind circled frantically,
contrasting her happy anticipations with this shocking
actuality. She’d come to call on a friend,
she reminded herself, a beloved friend round,
white-haired, rosy-cheeked; lonely because he’d
recently become a widower. To her little boy,
Cappy was a combination Grandpa and Santa Claus; to
herself, a sort of newly met Old Beau.
Her mouth had been set for a sip of
his home brew, her eyes had pictured the delight he’d
take in and give to her little boy.
She’d walked over with son and
husband, expecting nothing more shocking than an ostentatiously
stolen kiss. She’d found a corpse.
And to have let Cappy die alone, in this strange world
...
She and Ted could at least have been
with him, if they’d known.
But they’d been laughing and
singing in their own cabin only a mile away, celebrating
Richard’s fifth birthday. She’d been
annoyed when Cappy failed to show up with the present
he’d promised Richard. Annoyed while
the old man pulled a blanket over his head, turned
his round face to the wall, and died.
Watching compassionately, Naomi was
suddenly struck by the matter-of-fact way Ted examined
the body. Ted wasn’t surprised.
“Why did you tell Richard to
stay outside, just now?” she demanded. “How
did you know what we’d find here? And why
didn’t you tell me, so I could keep Richard
at home?”
She saw Ted start, scalded by the
splash of her self-directed anger, saw him try to
convert his wince into a shrug.
“You insisted on coming,”
he reminded her gently. “I couldn’t
have kept you home without without saying
too much, worrying you with the Earth-ship
still a year away. Besides, I didn’t know
for sure, till we saw the tree-things around the cabin.”
The tree-things. The trees-that-were-not.
Gnarled blue trunks, half-hidden by yellow leaf-needles
stretching twenty feet into the sky. Something
like the hoary mountain hemlocks she and Ted had been
forever photographing on their Sierra honeymoon, seven
life-long years ago.
Three of those tree-things had swayed
over Cappy’s spring for a far longer time than
Man had occupied this dreadful planet. Until just
now ...
The three of them had topped the rise
that hid Cappy’s farm from their own. Richard
was running ahead like a happily inquisitive puppy.
Suddenly he’d stopped, pointing with a finger
she distinctly recalled as needing thorough soapy
scrubbing.
“Look, Mommie!” he’d
said. “Cappy’s trees have moved.
They’re around the cabin, now.”
He’d been interested, not surprised.
In the past year, Mazda had become Richard’s
home; only Earth could surprise him.
But, Ted, come to think of it, had
seemed withdrawn, his face a careful blank. And
she?
“Very pretty,” she’d
said, and stuffed the tag-end of fear back into the
jammed, untidy mental pigeon-hole she used for all
unpleasant thoughts. “Don’t run too
far ahead, dear.”
But now she had to know what Ted knew.
“Tell me!” she said.
“These tree-things ”
“There’ve been other deaths!
How many?”
“Sixteen. But I didn’t
want to tell you. Orders were to leave women and
children home when we had that last Meeting, remember.”
“What did they say at the Meeting? Out
with it, Ted!”
“That that the tree-things think!”
“But that’s ridiculous!”
“Well, unfortunately, no.
Look, I’m not trying to tell you that terrestrial
trees think, too, nor even that they have a nervous
system. They don’t. But well,
on Earth, if you’ve ever touched a lighted match
to the leaf of a sensitive plant like the mimosa, say and
I have you’ve been struck by the
speed with which other leaves close up and
droop. I mean, sure, we know that the leaves droop
because certain cells exude water and nearby leaves
feel the heat of the match. But the others don’t,
yet they droop, too. Nobody knows how it works
...”
“But that’s just defensive!”
“Sure. But that’s just on
Earth!”
“All right, dear. I won’t
argue any more. But I still don’t understand.
Go on about the Meeting.”
“Well, they said these tree-things
both create and respond to the patterned electrical
impulses of the mind. It’s something like
the way a doctor creates fantasies by applying a mild
electric current to the right places on a patient’s
brain. In the year we’ve been here, the
trees or some of them have learned
to read from and transmit to our minds. The range,
they say, is around fifty feet. But you have to
be receptive ”
“Receptive?”
“Fearful. That’s
the condition. So I didn’t want to tell
you because you must not let yourself become
afraid, Naomi. We’re clearing trees from
the land, in certain areas. And it’s their
planet, after all. Fear is their weapon and fear
can kill!”
“You still all you
men should have let us women know!
What do you think we are? Besides, I don’t
really believe you. How can fear kill?”
“Haven’t you ever heard
of a savage who gets in bad with his witch-doctor
and is killed by magic? The savage is convinced,
having seen or heard of other cases, that he can
be killed. The witch-doctor sees to it he’s
told he will be killed. And sometimes the
savage actually dies ”
“From poison, I’ve always thought.”
“The poison of fear. The
physical changes that accompany fear, magnified beyond
belief by belief itself.”
“But how in the world could
all this have affected Cappy? He wasn’t
a savage. And he was elderly, Ted. A bad
heart, maybe. A stroke. Anything.”
“He passed his pre-flight physical
only a year ago. And well, he lived
all alone. He was careful not to let you see it,
but I know he worried about these three trees on his
place. And I know he got back from the Meeting
in a worried state of mind. Then, obviously, the
trees moved grouped themselves around his
cabin within easy range. But don’t be afraid
of them, Naomi. So long as you’re not, they
can’t hurt you. They’re not bothering
us now.”
“No. But where’s Richard?”
Naomi’s eyes swept past Ted,
encompassing the cabin. No Richard! He’d
been left outside ...
Glass tinkled and crashed as she flung
back the cabin door. “Richard! Richard!”
Her child was not in sight. Nor
within earshot, it seemed.
“Richard Heckscher! Where
are you?” Sanity returned with the conventional
primness. And it brought her answer.
“Here I am, Mommie! Look-at!”
He was in a tree! He was fifteen
feet off the ground, high in the branches of a tree-thing,
swaying
For an instant, dread flowed through
Naomi as if in her bloodstream and something was cutting
off her breath. Then, as the hands over mouth
and throat withdrew, she saw they were Ted’s.
She let him drag her into the cabin and close the
broken door.
“Better not scare Richard,”
he said quietly, shoving her gently into a chair.
“He might fall.”
Dumbly she caught her breath, waiting
for the bawling out she’d earned.
But Ted said, “Richard keeps
us safe. So long as we fear for him, and not
ourselves ”
That was easy to do. Outside,
she heard a piping call: “Look at me now,
Mommie!”
“Showing off!” she gasped.
In a flashing vision, Richard was half boy, half vulture,
flapping to the ground with a broken wing.
“Here,” said Ted, picking
up a notebook that had been on the table. “Here’s
Cappy’s present. A homemade picture book.
Bait.”
“Let me use it!”
she said. “Richard may have seen I was scared
just now.”
Outside again, under the tree, she
called, “Here’s Cappy’s present,
Richard. He’s gone away and left it for
you.”
Would he notice how her voice had
gone up half an octave, become flat and shrill?
“I’m coming down,” Richard said.
“Let me down, tree.”
He seemed to be struggling. The branches were
cagelike. He was caught!
Naomi’s struggle was with her
voice. “How did you ever get up there?”
she called.
“The tree let me up, Mommie,”
Richard explained solemnly, “but he won’t
let me down!” He whimpered a little.
He must not become frightened!
“You tell that tree you’ve got to come
right down this instant!” she ordered.
She leaned against the cabin for support.
Ted came out and slipped his arm around her.
“Break off a few leaves, Richard,”
he suggested. “That’ll show your tree
who’s boss!”
Standing close against her husband,
Naomi tried to stop shaking. But she lacked firm
support, for Ted shook, too.
His advice to Richard was sound, though.
What had been a trap became, through grudging movement
of the branches, a ladder. Richard climbed down,
scolding at the tree like an angry squirrel.
Naomi thought she’d succeeded
in shutting her mind. But when her little boy
slid down the final bit of trunk and came for his present,
Naomi broke. Like a startled animal, she thrust
the book into his hands, picked him up and ran.
Her mind was a jelly, red and quaking.
She stopped momentarily after running
fifty yards. “Burn the trees!” she
screamed over her shoulder. “Burn the cabin!
Burn it all!” She ran on, Ted’s answering
shouts beyond her comprehension.
Fatigue halted her. At the top
of the rise between Cappy’s farm and their own,
pain and dizziness began flowing over her in waves.
She set Richard down on the mauve soil and collapsed
beside him.
When she sat up, Richard squatted
just out of reach, watching curiously. She made
an effort at casualness: “Let’s see
what Daddy’s doing back there.”
“He’s doing just what
you said to, Mommie!” Richard answered indignantly.
Her men were standing together, Naomi
realized. She laughed. After a moment, Richard
joined her. Then he looked for his book, found
it a few paces away, and brought it to her.
“Read to me, Mommie.”
“At home,” she said.
Activity at Cappy’s interested
her now. Wisps of smoke were licking around the
trees. A tongue of flame lapped at one while she
watched. Branches writhed. The trees were
too slow-moving to escape ...
But where was Ted? What had she
exposed him to, with her hysterical orders? She
held her breath till he moved within sight, standing
quietly by a pile of salvaged tools. Behind him
the cabin began to smoke.
Ted wasn’t afraid, then.
He understood what he faced. And Richard wasn’t
afraid, either, because he didn’t understand.
But she? Surreptitiously Naomi
pinched her hip till it felt black and blue.
That was for being such a fool. She must not
be afraid!
“Daddy seems to be staying there,”
she said. “Let’s wait for him at
home, Richard.”
“Are you going to make Daddy burn our
tree?”
She jumped as if stung. Then,
consciously womanlike, she sought relief in talk.
“What do you think we should do, dear?”
“Oh, I like the tree,
Mommie. It’s cool under there. And
the tree plays with me.”
“How, Richard?”
“If I’m pilot, he’s
navigator. Or ship, maybe. But he’s
so dumb, Mommie! I always have to tell him everything.
Doesn’t know what a fairy is, or Goldilocks,
or anything!”
He clutched his book affectionately,
rubbing his face on it. “Hurry up, Mommie.
It’ll be bedtime before you ever read to me!”
She touched his head briefly.
“You can look at the book while I fix your supper.”
But to explain Cappy’s pictures crudely
crayoned cartoons, really she had to fill
in the story they illustrated. She told it while
Richard ate: how the intrepid Spaceman gallantly
used his ray gun against the villainous Martians to
aid the green-haired Princess. Richard spooned
up the thrills with his mush, gazing fascinated at
Cappy’s colorful and fantastic pictures, propped
before him on the table. Had Ted been home, the
scene might almost have been blissful.
It might have been ... if their own
tree hadn’t reminded her of Cappy’s.
Still, she’d almost managed to stuff her fear
back into that mental pigeon-hole before their own
tree. It was unbelievable, but she’d been
glancing out the window every few minutes, so she saw
it start. Their own tree began to walk.
Down the hill it came right
there! framed in the window behind Richard’s
head, moving slowly but inexorably on a root system
that writhed along the surface. Like some ancient
sculpture of Serpents Supporting the Tree of Life.
Except that it brought death ...
“Are you sick, Mommie?”
No, not sick. Just something
the matter with her throat, preventing a quick answer,
leaving no way to keep Richard from turning to look
out the window.
“I think our tree is coming to play with me,
Mommie.”
No, no! Not Richard!
“Remember how you used to say
that about Cappy? When he was really coming to
see your daddy?”
“But Daddy isn’t home!”
“He’ll get here, dear. Now eat your
supper.”
A lot to ask of an excited little
boy. And the tree was his friend, it seemed.
Cappy’s tree had even followed the child’s
orders. Richard might intercede
No! Expose him to such danger? How could
she think of it?
“Had enough to eat, dear?
Wash your hands and face at the pump, and you can
stay out and play till Daddy gets home. I I
want I may have to see your friend,
the tree, by myself ...”
“But you haven’t finished my story!”
“I will when Daddy gets home.
And if I’m not here, you tell Daddy to do it.”
“Where are you going, Mommie?”
“I might see Cappy, dear. Now go and wash,
please!”
“Sure, Mommie. Don’t cry.”
Accept his kiss, even if it is
from a mouth rimmed with supper. And don’t
rub it off till he’s gone out, you damned fool.
You frightened fool. You shaking, sweating, terror-stricken
fool.
Who’s he going to kiss when you’re not
here?
The tree has stopped. Our little
tree is having its supper. How nice. Sucking
sustenance direct from soil with aid of sun and air
in true plant fashion but exhausting our
mineral resources.
(How wise of Ted to make you go to
those lectures! You wouldn’t want to die
in ignorance, would you?)
The lecture come on, let’s
go back to the lecture! Let’s free our soil
from every tree or we’ll not hold the joint in
fee. No, not joint. A vulgarism, teacher
would say. Methinks the times are out of joint.
Aroint thee, tree!
Now a pinch. Pinch yourself hard
in the same old place so it’ll hurt real bad.
Then straighten your face and go stick your head out
the window. Your son is talking your
son, your sun.
Can your son be eclipsed by a tree?
A matter of special spatial relationships, and the
space is shrinking, friend. The tree is only a
few hundred feet from the house. It has finished
its little supper and is now running around.
Like Richard. With Richard! Congenial,
what?
Smile, stupid. Your son speaks. Answer him.
“What, dear?”
“I see Daddy! He just came
over the hill. He’s running! Can I
go meet him, Mommie?”
“No, dear. It’s too far.”
Too far. Far too far.
“Did you say something to me, Richard?”
“No. I was talking to the
tree. I’m the Spaceman and he’s the
Martian. But he doesn’t want to be the
Martian!”
Richard plays. Let us play. Let us play.
You’re close enough to get into
the game, surely. A hundred and fifty feet, maybe.
Effective range, fifty feet. Rate of motion?
Projected time-interval? Depends on which system
you observe it from. Richard has a system.
“He doesn’t want to play, Mommie.
He wants to see you!”
“You tell that tree your Mommie
never sees strangers when Daddy isn’t
home!”
“I’ll make him wait!”
Stoutly your pot-bellied little protector
prevents his protective mother from going to pot.
“If he won’t play, I’ll use my ray
gun on him!”
Obviously, the tree won’t play.
Watch your son lift empty hands, arm himself with
a weapon yet to be invented, and open fire on the advancing
foe.
“Aa-aa-aa!”
So that’s how a ray gun sounds!
“You’re dead, tree!
You’re dead! Now you can’t
play with me any more. You’re dead!”
Seeing it happen, then, watching the
tree accept the little boy’s fantasy as fact,
Naomi wondered why she’d never thought of that
herself.
So the tree was a treacherous medicine-man,
was it? A true-believing witch-doctor? And
who could be more susceptible to the poisoning of fear
than a witch-doctor who has made fear work and
believes it’s being used against him?
It was all over. She and the
tree bit the dust together. But the tree was
dead, and Naomi merely fainting, and Ted would soon
be home ...
DAVE
DRYFOOS