BY JIM HARMON
So, General, I came in to tell you
I’ve found the loneliest man in the world for
the Space Force.
How am I supposed to rate his loneliness
for you? In Megasorrows or Kilofears? I
suspect I know quite a library on the subject, but
you know more about stripes and bars. Don’t
try to stop me this time, General.
Now that you mention it, I’m
not drunk. I had to have something to back me
up so I stopped off at the dispensary and stole a needle.
I want you to get off my back with
that kind of talk. I’ve got enough there it
bends me over like I had bad kidneys. It isn’t
any of King Kong’s little brothers. They
over rate the stuff. It isn’t the way you’ve
been riding me either. Never mind what I’m
carrying. Whatever it is and believe
me, it is I have to get rid of it.
Let me tell it, for God’s sake.
Then for Security’s sake? I thought you
would let me tell it, General.
I’ve been coming in here and
giving you pieces of it for months but now I want
to let you be drenched in the whole thing. You’re
going to take it all.
There were the two of them, the two
lonely men, and I found them for you.
You remember the way I found them for you.
The intercom on my blond desk made
an electronic noise at me and the words I had been
arranging in my mind for the morning letters splattered
into alphabet soup like a printer dropping a prepared
slug of type.
I made the proper motion to still the sound.
“Yes,” I grunted.
My secretary cleared her throat on my time.
“Dr. Thorn,” she said,
“there’s a Mr. Madison here to see you.
He lays claim to be from the Star Project.”
He could come in and file his claim, I told the girl.
I rummaged in the wastebasket and
uncrumpled the morning’s facsimile newspaper.
It was full of material about the Star Project.
We were building Man’s first interstellar spaceship.
A surprising number of people considered
it important. Flipping from the rear to page
one, Wild Bill Star in the comics who had been blasting
all the way to forty-first sub-space universe for
decades was harking back to the good old days of Man’s
first star flight (which he had made himself through
the magic of time travel), the editor was calling the
man to make the jaunt the Lindbergh of Space, and the
staff photographer displayed a still of a Space Force
pilot in pressure suit up front with his face blotted
out by an air-brushed interrogation mark.
Who was going to be the Lindbergh of Space?
We had used up the Columbus of Space,
the Magellan of Space, the Van Reck of Space.
Now it was time for the Lone Eagle, one man who would
wait out the light years to Alpha Centauri.
I remembered the first Lindbergh.
I rode a bus fifty miles to see him
at an Air Force Day celebration when I was a dewy-eared
kid. It’s funny how kids still worship heroes
who did everything before they were even born.
Uncle Max had told me about standing outside the hospital
with a bunch of boys his own age the evening Babe
Ruth died of cancer. Lindbergh seemed like an
old man to me when I finally saw him, but still active.
Nobody had forgotten him. When his speech was
over I cheered him with the rest just as if I knew
what he had been talking about.
But I probably knew more about what
he meant then as a boy than I did feeling the reality
of the newspaper in my hands. Grown-up, I could
only smile at myself for wanting to go to the stars
myself.
Madison rapped on my office door and
breezed in efficiently.
I’ve always thought Madison
was a rather irritating man. Likable but irritating.
He’s too good looking in an unassuming masculine
way to dress so neatly it makes him look
like a mannequin. That polite way of his of using
small words slowly and distinctly proves that he loves
his fellow man even if his fellow always
does have less brains or authority than Madison himself.
That belief would be forgivable in him if it wasn’t
so often true.
Madison folded himself into the canary
yellow client’s chair at my direction, and took
a leather-bound pocket secretary from inside his almost-too-snug
jacket.
“Dr. Thorn,” he said expansively,
“we need you to help us locate an atavism.”
I flicked professional smile No. Three at him
lightly.
“I’m a historical psychologist,”
I told him. “That sounds in my line.
Which of your ancestors are you interested in having
me analyze?”
“I used the word ‘atavism’
to mean a reversion to the primitive.”
I made a pencil mark on my desk pad.
I could make notes as well as he could read them.
“Yes, I see,” I murmured.
“We don’t use the term that way. Perhaps
you don’t understand my work. It’s
been an honest way to make a living for a few generations
but it’s so specialized it might sound foolish
to someone outside the psychological industry.
I psychoanalyze historical figures for history books
(of course), and scholars, interested descendants,
what all, and that’s all I do.”
“All you have done,”
Madison admitted, “but your government is certain
that you can do this new work for them in
fact, that you are one of the few men prepared to
locate this esoteric that is, this odd aberration
since I understand you often have to deal with it in
analyzing the past. Doctor, we want you to find
us a lonely man.”
I laid my chrome yellow pencil down
carefully beside the cream-colored pad.
“History is full of loneliness most
of the so-called great men were rather neurotic but
I thought, Madison, that introspection was pretty
much of a thing of the, well, past.”
The government representative inhaled
deeply and steepled his manicured fingers.
“Our system of childhood psycho-conditioning
succeeds in burying loneliness in the subconscious
so completely that even the records can’t reveal
if it was ever present.”
I cleared my throat in order to stall, to think.
“I’m not acquainted with
contemporary psychology, Madison. This
comes as news to me. You mean people aren’t
really well-adjusted today, that they have just been
conditioned to act as if they were?”
He nodded. “Yes, that’s
it. It’s ironic. Now we need a lonely
man and we can’t find him.”
“To pilot the interstellar spaceship?”
“For the Evening Star, yes,” Madison
agreed.
I picked up my pencil and held it
between my two index fingers. I couldn’t
think of a damned thing to say.
“The whole problem,” Madison
was saying, “goes back to the early days of
space travel. Men were confined in a small area
facing infinite space for measureless periods in freefall.
Men cracked and ships, they cracked up.
But as space travel advanced ships got larger, carried
more people, more ties and reminders of human civilization.
Pilots became more normal.”
I made myself look up at the earnest young man.
“But now,” I said, “now
you want me to find you an abnormal pilot who is used
to being alone, who can stand it, maybe even like it?”
“Right.”
I constructed a genuine smile for him for the first
time.
“Madison, do you really think
I can find your man when evidently all the
government agencies have failed?”
The government representative pocketed
his notebook deftly and then spread his hands clumsily
for an instant.
“At least, Doctor,” he
said, “you may know it if you do find
him.”
It was a lonely job to find a lonely
man, General, and maybe it was a crooked job to walk
a crooked mile to find a crooked man.
I had to do it alone. No one
else had enough experience in primitive psychology
to recognize the phenomenon of loneliness, even as
Madison had said.
The working conditions suited me.
I had to think by myself but I had a comfortable staff
to carry out my ideas. I liked my new office and
the executive apartment the government supplied me.
I had authority and respect and I had security.
The government assured me they would find further
use for my services after I found them their man.
I knew this was to keep me from dragging my tracks.
But nevertheless I got right down to work.
I found Gordon Meyverik exactly five
weeks from the day Madison first visited me in my
old office.
“Of course, I planned the whole
thing, Dr. Thorn,” Gordon said crisply.
I knew what he meant although I hadn’t
guessed it before. He could tell it to me himself,
I decided.
“Doesn’t seem much to
brag about,” I said. “Anybody who
can make up a grocery list should be able to figure
out how to isolate himself on Seal Island.”
He sat forward, a lean Viking with
a hot Latin glance, very confident of himself.
“I reckoned on you locating
me, on you hustling me back to pilot the Evening
Star. That’s why I holed in there.”
“I can’t accept your story,”
I lied cheerfully. “Nobody is going to
maroon himself on an island for three years because
of a wild possibility like that.”
Meyverik smiled and his sureness swelled
out until it almost jabbed me in the stomach.
“I took a broad gamble,”
he said, “but it hit the wire, didn’t it?”
I didn’t reply, but he had his answer.
Instead I scanned the report Madison
had given me from Intelligence concerning the man’s
unorthodox behavior.
Meyverik had quit his post-graduate
studies and passed by the secured job that had been
waiting for him eighteen months in a genial government
office to barricade himself in an old shelter on Seal
Island. It was hard to know what to make of it.
He had brought impressive stores of food with him,
books, sound and vision tapes but not telephone or
television. For the next three years he had had
no contact with humanity at all.
And he said he had planned it all.
“Sure,” he drawled.
“I knew the government was looking for somebody
to steer the interstellar ship that’s been gossip
for decades. That job,” he said distinctly,
“is one I would give a lot to settle into.”
I looked at him across my unlittered
brand new desk and accepted his irritating blond masculinity,
disliked him, admired him, and continued to examine
him to decide on my final evaluation.
“You’ve given three years
already,” I said, examining the sheets of the
report with which I was thoroughly familiar.
He twitched. He didn’t
like that, not spending three years. It was spendthrift,
even if a good buy. He was planning on winding
up somewhere important and to do it he had to invest
his years properly.
“You are trying to make me believe
you deliberately extrapolated the government’s
need for a man who could stand being alone for long
periods, and then tried to phoney up references for
the work by staying on that island?”
“I don’t like that word ’phoney’,”
Meyverik growled.
“No? You name your word for it.”
Meyverik unhinged to his full height.
“It was proof,” he said. “A
test.”
“A man can’t test himself.”
“A lot you know,” the big blond snorted.
“I know,” I told
him drily. “A man who isn’t a hopeless
maniac depressive can’t consciously create a
test for himself that he knows he will fail.
You proved you could stay alone on an island, buster.
You didn’t prove you could stay alone in a spaceship
out in the middle of infinity for three years.
Why didn’t you rent a conventional rocket and
try looking at some of our local space? It all
looks much the same.”
Meyverik sat down.
“I don’t know why I didn’t do that,”
he whispered.
Probably for the first time since
he had got clever enough to beat up his big brother
Meyverik was doubting himself, just a little, for just
a time.
I don’t know whether it was
good or bad for him contemporary psychology
isn’t in my line but I knew I couldn’t
trust a cocky kid.
But I had to find out if he could
still hit the target uncocked.
Stan Johnson was our second lonely
man, remember, General?
He was stubborn.
I questioned him for a half hour the
first day, two hours the second and on the third I
turned him over to Madison.
Then as I was having my lunch I suddenly
thought of something and made steps back to my office.
I got there just in time to grab Madison’s bony
wrist.
The thing in his fist was silver and
sharp, a hypodermic needle. Johnson’s forearm
was tanned below the torn pastel sleeve. Two sad-faced
young men were holding him politely by the shoulders
in the canvas chair. Johnson met my glance expressionlessly.
I tugged on Madison’s arm sharply.
“What’s in that damned sticker?”
“Polypenthium.” Madison’s
face was as blank as Johnson’s only
his body seemed at once tired and taut.
“What’s it for?” I rasped.
“You’re the psychologist,” he said
sharply.
I met his eyes and held on but it was impossible to
stare him down.
“I don’t know about physical
methods, I told you. I’ve been dealing with
people in books, films, tapes all my life, not living
men up till now, can’t you absorb that?”
“Apparently I’ve had more
experience with these things than you then, Doctor.
Shall I proceed?”
“You shall not,” I cried
omnisciently. “I know enough to understand
we can’t get the results the government wants
by drugs. You going to put that away?”
Madison nodded once.
“All right,” he said.
I unshackled my fingers and he put
the shiny needle away in its case, in his suitcoat
pocket.
“You understand, Thorn,” he said, “that
the general won’t like this.”
I turned around and looked at him.
“Did he order you to drug Johnson?”
The government agent shook his head.
“I didn’t think so.”
I was beginning to understand government operations.
“He only wanted it done. Get out.”
Madison and his assistants marched
out in orthodox Euclidian triangle formation.
The doors hissed shut.
“You know what?” The words
jerked out from Johnson. “I think the bunch
of you are crazy. Crazy.”
I decided to treat him like a client.
Maybe that was the way contemporary psychologists
handled their men.
I sat on the edge of the desk jauntily,
confidently, and tried to let the domino mask up a
father image.
“You may as well get it straight,
Stan. The government needs you and it’s
pointless for you to say that need is unconstitutional
or anything. Bring it up and it won’t be
long. When survival is outside the rules, the
rules change.”
The eyes of Johnson were strikingly
like Meyverik’s, dark and unsettled. Only
this boy, younger, smaller than the Nordic, had an
appropriate skin tone, stained by the tropical sun
somewhere in his ancestral past. He dropped his
gaze, expelled his breath mightily and pounded one
angular knee with a half-closed fist.
“I’m not complaining about
conscription without representation, Doctor, but I
can’t make any sense out of these fool questions
you keep firing at me. What in blazes are you
trying to get at? What kind of reason are you
after for my staying by myself? I just do it because
I like it that way.”
With a galvanic jolt, I realized he
was telling the painfully simple truth. I groaned
at the realization.
Meyverik had convinced all of us that
in our well-adjusted or at any rate well-conditioned
world somebody had to have some purposeful reason
in loneliness, solitude, so on that one instance our
thinking had already been patterned, discarding all
the other evidence of generations that the lonely
man was only a personality type, like Johnson.
I felt I had achieved at least the
quantum state of a fool.
Johnson silently studied the half-cupped
hands laying in his lap.
“The hunting lodge in the Andes
seemed as good a place as any to live after mother
and father were killed. You might think it was
lonesome at night in the mountains, but it isn’t
at all. You aren’t alone when you can watch
the burning worlds shadow the bow of God....”
I cleared my throat. The poor
kid sounded like he would begin spouting something
akin to poetry next.
“So I believe you,” I
told him. “That doesn’t finish it.
We have to convince them. I don’t
like this, but the simplest way would be to volunteer
for their hibitor injection. I’ve found
out Madison and his crowd don’t believe men
awake, only assorted dopes.”
Johnson deflated his area of the room
with his breath intake.
“Okay,” he said at last. “I
guess so.”
When Johnson gave us what we needed
to clear the problem, it didn’t take me long
to finish processing the rest of the handful of possible
loners we had located. Unlike Johnson, all the
rest had reasons for their self-imposed loneliness.
Unlike Meyverik none of their reasons were associated
with the interstellar flight. They instead involved
literary research, swindles, isolated paranoid insanity
and other things in which the government had no interest.
Suddenly I found my job was done and
that we had located only the two of them.
Madison read my final report braced
on the edge of my desk, his hand comradely on my shoulder.
“Good job, Doc,” he vouched
replacing the papers on my blotter with a final rustle.
“Now I’ve got news for you. The government
wants you to test these boys for us now that
you’ve found ’em for us.”
I closed my jaw. Thats completely out of line my line.
I know you need a contemporary man for that job.”
Madison punched me on the bicep, fast enough to hurt.
“Doc, after this project you
know more about contemp’ stuff than any professor
who got his degree studying the textbooks you
wrote.”
It was impossible to dislike Madison
except for practiced periods that was probably
one reason he had his job.
“All right,” I growled.
“Get your dirty pants off my clean desk and I’ll
get out the bottle. We’ll celebrate,
huh?”
But you know how I felt, General?
You remember how I tried to get out of it. I
felt like I had led in the lambs and now I had to help
shear them. As a part-time historian I can tell
you there’s a word for that Judas
goat. Give or take a word.
“It isn’t the real thing,
Doc,” Madison spelled out for me, wearing a
lemon twist of smile.
I looked at the twin banks of gauge-facings
and circuit housings in which centered TV screens
picturing either Meyverik or Johnson. Red and
sea-green lights chased each other around the control
boards, died, were born again. On the screens
the three color negatives mixed to purple, shifted
through a series of wrong combinations and settled
to normal as the stereo-oscillation echoed, convexed
insanely, and deepened to hold. Video reception
is lousy from five hundred thousand miles out.
I was too eye-heavy to be surprised.
“Don’t tell me this is
The Strange Flight of Richard Clayton all over
again?”
Madison clapped me on the shoulder
and breathed mint at me, eyes on twittering round
faces.
“Who wrote that? Poe?
No, no mock-up to fake space conditions for them but
calculate the cost of the real interstellar
ship. We couldn’t trust either of them
with it yet. You didn’t really think we
could afford two ships. Why do you think
we haven’t told one man about his opposite in
a second ship? No safety margin allowable in our
appropriation, Doc. Or so they tell me. There’s
enough fuel and food to take Johnson and Meyverik
a long way but not the distance.”
He shook his lean head almost wistfully.
“Damn it, Madison, do you mean
I’ve been beating my lobes out for weeks for
nothing? I tested them. I checked
them out. Either was capable of making the flight
successfully for their own different reasons.”
Madison took his hand off my shoulder
and made a fist of it.
“I’m not questioning your
decision! Will you ram that through your obscene
skull, Thorn!”
“Who is?” I whispered.
“Not me. Not I, not I.”
“The general,” I announced.
“Just not me.” Was
he actually trembling? But it wasn’t concern
about what I thought of him. Somebody closer,
maybe. Things were building up for him.
He jammed his nose almost up against
the glass dial surfaces, swaying gently in his cups,
staring slightly cross-eyed at the arrowed numbers.
“You’ll continue your
tests from here,” Madison said. “Tell
them they are going to die.”
My face was at once cool and damp.
“That’s a tough examination,” I
gasped.
“A lie,” Madison told
me. “The boys at Psychicentre worked out
the problems.”
“You told me you wanted me!” I screamed
at him furiously.
“Control your passionate, dainty
voice. You worked well with those two. The
experts could work through you better.”
“Right through me, like a razor
blade through margarine,” I said. “It’s
not fair.”
“No, it’s science.
Psychology as a science, not an art. Don’t
damn me I’m not the inventor,”
Madison continued.
“I’m one of them,”
I murmured, “but I’d just as rather you
didn’t blame me either.”
Madison punched the button for me
with a palsied, manicured thumb.
“Guess what, Meyverik?”
I said viciously. “You’re going to
die.”
“What the blazes are you babbling
about?” the blond doll snapped at me from the
box of the video screen.
I scanned the typed, stiff-backed
Idiot Prompters Madison shoved into my fist.
“It’s true. You can’t
get out alive.”
“What’s happened?” His face perfectly
blank.
“Nothing out of the ordinary,”
I said. “They have just informed me it
was planned this way. It wasn’t possible
to build a round-trip rocket yet. You need a
lot of fuel to make course adjustments for the curvature
of space, so forth. The radio will send back your
reports on the Alpha Centaurian planets. Undoubtedly
by all rules of probability they won’t support
life without a mass of equipment. They suckered
me too, Meyverik, I swear. You turning back?”
“No,” he said almost immediately.
“I thought you were after the
rewards, trained to get them. You won’t
be able to enjoy them posthumously.”
The video blanked. He had turned off his camera.
“I guess I thought so,”
Meyverik’s voice said. “But I kind
of like it out here alone. I like
people but back there there’s no one to touch.
They smother you but you can’t reach them.
I can’t do anything better back there than I
can do here.”
Madison got a bottle and he and I
got sloppily drunk, leaning on each other, singing
innocently obscene songs of our youth. The technicians,
good government men, were openly disgusted with us.
Two hours after we had contacted Meyverik,
I left Madison snoring on the desk and lurched to
the control board, bunching my soiled shirt at the
throat with my hand.
I called Johnson.
“Going to die, Johnson.
Tricked you. Can’t get back, Johnson.
Not ever. No fuel. Ha, you can’t ever
go home again, Johnson. Like that, you damned
runny-nosed little poet?”
His dark face worked weakly.
Ha, he sure as thunderation didn’t like
it.
He asked for the bloody details and I fed them to
him.
“Turning back, aren’t you?” I jeered.
“I just wanted a place and a
time for thinking,” he said across the Solar
System. “But I’ll die and I don’t
know if you can dream in death.”
“Just what I thought,” I sneered.
“I’m not turning back,”
he said slowly. “People need me. I’ve
got a job to do. Haven’t I? Haven’t
I?”
“No,” I screamed
at him. “You’re just using that as
an excuse to kill yourself. Don’t try to
tell me you’re not weak! Don’t you
try to make me think you’re strong! Hear
me, Johnson, hear me?”
But he couldn’t hear me.
One of the government technicians
had broken the contact before that last spurt.
This is good, Madison said, pawing fuzzily at his pocket.
Really good.”
I studied the three or four watchdials
wobbling up and down my elongated wrist. They
seemed to say it was almost sunrise.
I leered at Madison. “Yeah, yeah, what
is it? Huh, huh?”
He shoved a crumpled card into my lax fingers.
“Now,” he said, “now tell them
“Yeah, yeah.”
“Tell them the whole thing is useless.”
My stomach retched drily, grinding
the sober pills to dust between its ulcerating walls.
“Meyverik,” I said to
the empty video tube, “they made a mistake.
They underestimated curvature. You can’t
reach Alpha Centauri. You can’t
correct enough. Free space is all you’ll
hit. Ever. You may as well come home.”
The soft voice came out of nowhere, from nothing.
“I don’t want to come
back. I like it here. This is what I’ve
always been trying to get and I never knew it.”
Madison grabbed my arm with pronged fingers.
“Shut up, Doc. That’s just the way
the government wants him to be.”
“Johnson,” I said to the
creased face in the screen, “they made a mistake.
They underestimated curvature. You can’t
reach Alpha Centauri. You can’t
correct enough. Free space is all you’ll
hit. Ever. You may as well come back.”
Johnson sighed, a whisper of breath across the miles.
“I’ll keep going.
No one has ever been so far out before. I can
report valuable things.”
I stood there. The textbooks
report it takes muscular effort to frown, more so
than to smile. But my face seemed to flow into
the lines of pain so hard it ached without any effort
of my will. And I knew it would hurt to
smile.
“They passed the final test,”
Madison said at my side. “Tell them it was
a test.”
I would do it for him. I didn’t need to
do it for myself.
I motioned the technician to open both channels.
“The ship you are in,”
I said, with no need to tell them of each other, “is
not the real Evening Star. It will not
take you to the stars. This has been only a test
to credit your fitness to pilot the real interstellar
craft of the Star Project. You must return to
the Lunar Satellite. This is a direct order.”
The two screens remained blank.
Only the windless silence of space echoed over Johnson’s
channel, but the tapes later proved that I actually
did hear a whispered laugh from Meyverik.
I faced Madison.
“They won’t come back.
They could have passed any test except the fact that
what we put them through was only a test. For
their own reasons, they will keep going. As far
as they can.”
Madison took out his notebook and
seemed to look for vital information. Except
that he never cracked the cover.
“Of course, we can’t get
them back if they won’t come,” he said.
“If cybernetic remotes functioned operationally
at this distance we wouldn’t have to send men
at all.”
He replaced the pocket secretary and
looked at me edgewise, speculatively.
I touched his arm.
“Let’s find another bottle,” I said.
He stepped back.
“You found them. You tested them.
You killed them.”
And the government man walked away and left me standing
with a murderer.
You see it now, don’t you, General?
What I’m carrying around on
my back is guilt. Not guilt complex, not guilt
fixation, just plain old Abel-Cain guilt.
In this nice, well-ordered age I’m a killer
and everybody knows it.
You see our mistake, General.
We sent men with variable amounts
of loneliness. These amounts could alter.
But now we have a golden opportunity.
The Evening Star is waiting
and I have found for you a man with the true measure
of loneliness. It is impossible for this man to
become any more or any less lonely. It isn’t
the Ultimate Possible Loneliness, understand that,
General.
It’s just that by himself or
with others he is always in a crowd of three, no more,
no less.
The interstellar ship is waiting.
So tell me, General, have you ever
seen a lonelier man than me, your humble servitor,
Dr. Thorn? No, I mean it. Have you?