SECOND LANDING
By
Floyd Wallace
A gentle fancy for the Christmas Season an oft-told tale with a wistful twistful of Something that left the Earth with a wing and a prayer.
Earth was so far away that it wasn’t
visible. Even the sun was only a twinkle.
But this vast distance did not mean that isolation
could endure forever. Instruments within the
ship intercepted radio broadcasts and, within the
hour, early TV signals. Machines compiled dictionaries
and grammars and began translating the major languages.
The history of the planet was tabulated as facts became
available.
The course of the ship changed slightly;
it was not much out of the way to swing nearer Earth.
For days the two within the ship listened and watched
with little comment. They had to decide soon.
“We’ve got to make or break,” said
the first alien.
“You know what I’m in favor of,”
said the second.
“I can guess,” said Ethaniel,
who had spoken first. “The place is a complete
mess. They’ve never done anything except
fight each other and invent better weapons.”
“It’s not what they’ve
done,” said Bal, the second alien. “It’s
what they’re going to do, with that big bomb.”
“The more reason for stopping,”
said Ethaniel. “The big bomb can destroy
them. Without our help they may do just that.”
“I may remind you that in two
months twenty-nine days we’re due in Willafours,”
said Bal. “Without looking at the charts
I can tell you we still have more than a hundred light-years
to go.”
“A week,” said Ethaniel.
“We can spare a week and still get there on
time.”
“A week?” said Bal.
“To settle their problems? They’ve
had two world wars in one generation and that the
third and final one is coming up you can’t help
feeling in everything they do.”
“It won’t take much,”
said Ethaniel. “The wrong diplomatic move,
or a trigger-happy soldier could set it off.
And it wouldn’t have to be deliberate.
A meteor shower could pass over and their clumsy instruments
could interpret it as an all-out enemy attack.”
“Too bad,” said Bal.
“We’ll just have to forget there ever was
such a planet as Earth.”
“Could you? Forget so many people?”
“I’m doing it,”
said Bal. “Just give them a little time
and they won’t be here to remind me that I have
a conscience.”
“My memory isn’t convenient,”
said Ethaniel. “I ask you to look at them.”
Bal rustled, flicking the screen intently.
“Very much like ourselves,” he said at
last. “A bit shorter perhaps, and most certainly
incomplete. Except for the one thing they lack,
and that’s quite odd, they seem exactly like
us. Is that what you wanted me to say?”
“It is. The fact that they
are an incomplete version of ourselves touches me.
They actually seem defenseless, though I suppose they’re
not.”
“Tough,” said Bal. “Nothing
we can do about it.”
“There is. We can give them a week.”
“In a week we can’t negate
their entire history. We can’t begin to
undo the effect of the big bomb.”
“You can’t tell,” said Ethaniel.
“We can look things over.”
“And then what? How much authority do we
have?”
“Very little,” conceded
Ethaniel. “Two minor officials on the way
to Willafours and we run directly into
a problem no one knew existed.”
“And when we get to Willafours
we’ll be busy. It will be a long time before
anyone comes this way again.”
“A very long time. There’s
nothing in this region of space our people want,”
said Ethaniel. “And how long can Earth last?
Ten years? Even ten months? The tension
is building by the hour.”
“What can I say?” said
Bal. “I suppose we can stop and look them
over. We’re not committing ourselves by
looking.”
They went much closer to Earth, not
intending to commit themselves. For a day they
circled the planet, avoiding radar detection, which
for them was not difficult, testing, and sampling.
Finally Ethaniel looked up from the monitor screen.
“Any conclusions?”
“What’s there to think? It’s
worse than I imagined.”
“In what way?”
“Well, we knew they had the
big bomb. Atmospheric analysis showed that as
far away as we were.”
“I know.”
“We also knew they could deliver
the big bomb, presumably by some sort of aircraft.”
“That was almost a certainty.
They’d have no use for the big bomb without
aircraft.”
“What’s worse is that
I now find they also have missiles, range one thousand
miles and upward. They either have or are near
a primitive form of space travel.”
“Bad,” said Ethaniel.
“Sitting there, wondering when it’s going
to hit them. Nervousness could set it off.”
“It could, and the missiles
make it worse,” said Bal. “What did
you find out at your end?”
“Nothing worthwhile. I
was looking at the people while you were investigating
their weapons.”
“You must think something.”
“I wish I knew what to think.
There’s so little time,” Ethaniel said.
“Language isn’t the difficulty. Our
machines translate their languages easily and I’ve
taken a cram course in two or three of them. But
that’s not enough, looking at a few plays, listening
to advertisements, music, and news bulletins.
I should go down and live among them, read books,
talk to scholars, work with them, play.”
“You could do that and you’d
really get to know them. But that takes time and
we don’t have it.”
“I realize that.”
“A flat yes or no,” said Bal.
“No. We can’t help
them,” said Ethaniel. “There is nothing
we can do for them but we have to try.”
“Sure, I knew it before we started,”
said Bal. “It’s happened before.
We take the trouble to find out what a people are
like and when we can’t help them we feel bad.
It’s going to be that way again.”
He rose and stretched. “Well, give me an
hour to think of some way of going at it.”
It was longer than that before they
met again. In the meantime the ship moved much
closer to Earth. They no longer needed instruments
to see it. The planet revolved outside the visionports.
The southern plains were green, coursed with rivers;
the oceans were blue; and much of the northern hemisphere
was glistening white. Ragged clouds covered the
pole, and a dirty pall spread over the mid-regions
of the north.
“I haven’t thought of anything brilliant,”
said Ethaniel.
“Nor I,” said Bal.
“We’re going to have to go down there cold.
And it will be cold.”
“Yes. It’s their winter.”
“I did have an idea,”
said Bal. “What about going down as supernatural
beings?”
“Hardly,” said Ethaniel.
“A hundred years ago it might have worked.
Today they have satellites. They are not primitives.”
“I suppose you’re right,”
said Bal. “I did think we ought to take
advantage of our physical differences.”
“If we could I’d be all
for it. But these people are rough and desperate.
They wouldn’t be fooled by anything that crude.”
“Well, you’re calling it,” said
Bal.
“All right,” said Ethaniel.
“You take one side and I the other. We’ll
tell them bluntly what they’ll have to do if
they’re going to survive, how they can keep
their planet in one piece so they can live on it.”
“That’ll go over big. Advice is always
popular.”
“Can’t help it. That’s all
we have time for.”
“Special instructions?”
“None. We leave the ship
here and go down in separate landing craft. You
can talk with me any time you want to through our communications,
but don’t unless you have to.”
“They can’t intercept the beams we use.”
“They can’t, and even
if they did they wouldn’t know what to do with
our language. I want them to think that we don’t
need to talk things over.”
“I get it. Makes us seem
better than we are. They think we know exactly
what we’re doing even though we don’t.”
“If we’re lucky they’ll think that.”
Bal looked out of the port at the
planet below. “It’s going to be cold
where I’m going. You too. Sure we don’t
want to change our plans and land in the southern
hemisphere? It’s summer there.”
“I’m afraid not.
The great powers are in the north. They are the
ones we have to reach to do the job.”
“Yeah, but I was thinking of
that holiday you mentioned. We’ll be running
straight into it. That won’t help us any.”
“I know, they don’t like
their holidays interrupted. It can’t be
helped. We can’t wait until it’s
over.”
“I’m aware of that,”
said Bal. “Fill me in on that holiday, anything
I ought to know. Probably religious in origin.
That so?”
“It was religious a long time
ago,” said Ethaniel. “I didn’t
learn anything exact from radio and TV. Now it
seems to be chiefly a time for eating, office parties,
and selling merchandise.”
“I see. It has become a business holiday.”
“That’s a good description.
I didn’t get as much of it as I ought to have.
I was busy studying the people, and they’re hard
to pin down.”
“I see. I was thinking
there might be some way we could tie ourselves in
with this holiday. Make it work for us.”
“If there is I haven’t thought of it.”
“You ought to know. You’re
running this one.” Bal looked down at the
planet. Clouds were beginning to form at the twilight
edge. “I hate to go down and leave the
ship up here with no one in it.”
“They can’t touch it.
No matter how they develop in the next hundred years
they still won’t be able to get in or damage
it in any way.”
“It’s myself I’m thinking about.
Down there, alone.”
“I’ll be with you. On the other side
of the Earth.”
“That’s not very close.
I’d like it better if there were someone in the
ship to bring it down in a hurry if things get rough.
They don’t think much of each other. I
don’t imagine they’ll like aliens any better.”
“They may be unfriendly,”
Ethaniel acknowledged. Now he switched a monitor
screen until he looked at the slope of a mountain.
It was snowing and men were cutting small green trees
in the snow. “I’ve thought of a trick.”
“If it saves my neck I’m for it.”
“I don’t guarantee anything,”
said Ethaniel. “This is what I was thinking
of: instead of hiding the ship against the sun
where there’s little chance it will be seen,
we’ll make sure that they do see it. Let’s
take it around to the night side of the planet and
light it up.”
“Say, pretty good,” said Bal.
“They can’t imagine that
we’d light up an unmanned ship,” said Ethaniel.
“Even if the thought should occur to them they’ll
have no way of checking it. Also, they won’t
be eager to harm us with our ship shining down on
them.”
“That’s thinking,”
said Bal, moving to the controls. “I’ll
move the ship over where they can see it best and
then I’ll light it up. I’ll really
light it up.”
“Don’t spare power.”
“Don’t worry about that.
They’ll see it. Everybody on Earth will
see it.” Later, with the ship in position,
glowing against the darkness of space, pulsating with
light, Bal said: “You know, I feel better
about this. We may pull it off. Lighting
the ship may be just the help we need.”
“It’s not we who need
help, but the people of Earth,” said Ethaniel.
“See you in five days.” With that
he entered a small landing craft, which left a faintly
luminescent trail as it plunged toward Earth.
As soon as it was safe to do so, Bal left in another
craft, heading for the other side of the planet.
And the spaceship circled Earth, unmanned,
blazing and pulsing with light. No star in the
winter skies of the planet below could equal it in
brilliancy. Once a man-made satellite came near
but it was dim and was lost sight of by the people
below. During the day the ship was visible as
a bright spot of light. At evening it seemed to
burn through the sunset colors.
And the ship circled on, bright, shining,
seeming to be a little piece clipped from the center
of a star and brought near Earth to illuminate it.
Never, or seldom, had Earth seen anything like it.
In five days the two small landing
craft that had left it arched up from Earth and joined
the orbit of the large ship. The two small craft
slid inside the large one and doors closed behind
them. In a short time the aliens met again.
“We did it,” said Bal
exultantly as he came in. “I don’t
know how we did it and I thought we were going to
fail but at the last minute they came through.”
Ethaniel smiled. “I’m tired,”
he said, rustling.
“Me too, but mostly I’m
cold,” said Bal, shivering. “Snow.
Nothing but snow wherever I went. Miserable climate.
And yet you had me go out walking after that first
day.”
“From my own experience it seemed
to be a good idea,” said Ethaniel. “If
I went out walking one day I noticed that the next
day the officials were much more cooperative.
If it worked for me I thought it might help you.”
“It did. I don’t
know why, but it did,” said Bal. “Anyway,
this agreement they made isn’t the best but
I think it will keep them from destroying themselves.”
“It’s as much as we can
expect,” said Ethaniel. “They may
have small wars after this, but never the big one.
In fifty or a hundred years we can come back and see
how much they’ve learned.”
“I’m not sure I want to,”
said Bal. “Say, what’s an angel?”
“Why?”
“When I went out walking people
stopped to look. Some knelt in the snow and called
me an angel.”
“Something like that happened to me,”
said Ethaniel.
“I didn’t get it but I
didn’t let it upset me,” said Bal.
“I smiled at them and went about my business.”
He shivered again. “It was always cold.
I walked out, but sometimes I flew back. I hope
that was all right.”
In the cabin Bal spread his great
wings. Renaissance painters had never seen his
like but knew exactly how he looked. In their
paintings they had pictured him innumerable times.
“I don’t think it hurt
us that you flew,” said Ethaniel. “I
did so myself occasionally.”
“But you don’t know what an angel is?”
“No. I didn’t have
time to find out. Some creature of their folklore
I suppose. You know, except for our wings they’re
very much like ourselves. Their legends are bound
to resemble ours.”
“Sure,” said Bal. “Anyway,
peace on Earth.”