John Andrew Farmer scowled at the
octopus that sprawled on his living-room couch, rubbed
his stubbly jaw with a stubby fist, and said, “I
love you.”
Farmer was uncomfortable. He
was almost always uncomfortable, for various reasons;
though it rarely if ever occurred to him, as he considered
each individual irritant, that this was his normal
state of existence. Right now he was acutely
conscious of how ridiculous it must look for him to
be making love to an octopus, but he was even more
conscious of the very real pains of unrequited love.
It wasn’t even a respectable,
ordinary-looking octopus. To be accurate, it
would have to be called a nonapus; each of the nine
tentacles had a lobsterish claw at its tip, and there
were various other unusual appendages. It would
be hard enough to explain an earthly octopus in his
living-room if the necessity arose, Farmer reflected
for the teenteenth time but how in the
name of Neptune could he ever explain this?
It had all started with Judge Ray.
Ray had not been a real judge, obviously, but had
used the title in lieu of any other first name.
That was the first of the inexplicable things; Farmer
would have expected the odd little old man to call
himself a professor of something or other. But
Ray insisted on Judge.
Ray had come to the office of the
Stein, Fine, Bryans Publishing Co., where Farmer
was working as an assistant editor, and announced that
he was about to write the greatest book of the age.
And yes, he wanted an advance against royalties it
didn’t have to be large; Ray lived simply to
tide him over while doing the actual writing, which
shouldn’t take more than a very few weeks.
Now, Farmer wasn’t much of an
editor, even as editors go. The one useful quality
he had was a homespun, ingratiating air which put nervous
young geniuses at their ease, so that they could give
a reasonably coherent verbal picture of what their
books were about. This often saved Stein, Fine
& Bryans a lot of reading of unpublishable manuscripts.
At least, that had been the theory when they gave
Farmer the job; as it worked out, John Andrew was
a person who found it virtually impossible to say
“no”; he generally took the manuscripts
in hand and, when he couldn’t stick some other
member of the firm with the task, read them himself
until the wee hours.
Farmer was not able to say no to Ray,
but even he looked dubious at the small gray fellow’s
voluble outpouring of pseudo-scientific jargon.
Ray, made sensitive by years of open skepticism on
the part of many listeners, caught the look and insisted
on a demonstration of his fabulous invention.
So the oddly assorted pair quick,
foxlike little Ray and big, awkward, uncomfortable
Farmer sputtered out into Long Island Sound
in an indescribable old motor launch, and the adventure
was on.
Finally Ray shut off the racketing
engine and let out the rusty anchor. He opened
a large wooden case, which showed evidence of some
really good cabinet-work, and took out a peculiar
machine, which showed evidence of unarguably excellent
machining. These details were the first things
that made Farmer think Ray might not be a complete
crackpot, after all. If he hadn’t been
feeling just the slightest touch of seasickness, John
Andrew would have breathed a sigh of relief.
Ray polished off the somewhat rabbit-from-hatty
routine by bringing out a portable television set,
connecting it to the boat’s electrical generator,
and stringing an assortment of wires between it and
his invention. He would not allow Farmer very
close to the latter, but to the editor’s untechnical
eye it looked like a fairly ordinary radio set, with
more than enough dials and switches added to it to
furnish the dashboards of several Rolls Royces.
Ray held up a hand purely
for drama, since there was silence already. “This
is a great moment in the course of human history,”
he said. “You are about to witness the
first demonstration of Ray’s Ray, the work of
genius which will allow mankind his first really close
contact with the last remaining frontier on his home
planet the bottom of the sea!”
Farmer looked impressed, then began
to realize what some of this meant. He caught
himself, straightened out his face, and licked his
lips. “You mean you’ve never tried
the thing before?” he protested. “How
do you know it will work?”
Ray’s glance took on a touch
of icy fury. The launch rocked gently in the
swell for a long, silent minute, and Farmer began to
feel slightly afraid. Was he alone, in a spot
like this, with a madman? The salty breeze turned
colder.
Then Ray smiled a smile
that was surprisingly soft and sweet. John Andrew
reached two decisions: that he was safe, and that
he liked the “Judge.” (One of Farmer’s
weaknesses, in fact, was that though thoroughly
masculine himself he completely distrusted
women, and was too trusting with men.)
“I could go into theories and
scientific details,” Ray said; “I could
explain principles of operation and the construction
of the machine for hours. But you would be bored,
and wouldn’t understand anyway. It is sufficient
to say that the Ray will work because I
invented it!”
Farmer caught himself nodding, and
blamed the boat’s motion. He shifted uneasily
on the built-in seat, and got a splinter in a vital
spot. He frowned.
Ray was bending over his machine,
making motions designed to impress as well as to make
it work. “In very simple terms,” he
was saying, “this is a combination of color
television and super-radar. It will bring in a
perfect color picture of the ocean at whatever depth
I set it for, or will set itself automatically to
present a view of the ocean floor. It will....”
His voice trailed off. The machine
hissed, snapped, and crackled. The television
set flickered, hummed, gave out a flashing dance of
surrealistic doodles, and abruptly presented a picture.
It was a picture of Milton Berle.
Ray looked mad, started to aim a kick
at the screen but thought better of it. A small
wave almost made him sit down on the deck before he
got both feet planted again. He swore and started
to check the wiring.
“Maybe there’s something
wrong inside the dingus itself,” John Andrew
suggested tentatively.
Ray turned on him with a look that
would have seared the Sphinx. “There’s
nothing wrong with the machine!” he said,
almost-but-not-quite shouting. “There’s
nothing wrong with the television! There’s
nothing wrong with the wiring! There must
be something wrong at the other end where
the Ray is focussed! And I intend to find out!”
Farmer pondered the idea of a transmitter
that worked under water like a ball-point pen, broadcasting
weary vaudeville routines. He scratched his head
and looked wistfully at the New England shoreline or
was that Long Island? He wasn’t sure any
more....
A clank and clatter brought his attention
to the launch. He gawked; Ray had thrown back
a deck hatch and produced a diving suit which looked
as un-shipshape as the rest of the boat’s equipment.
Ray looked it over hastily, then turned
a speculative glance on Farmer. He shook his
head. “Too small for you,” he murmured.
“You wouldn’t know what to look for anyway;
I’ll have to go down myself.”
Farmer changed his mind again about
Ray’s being cracked. “Listen.”
He said the first thing that came to mind. “Didn’t
you say you rented this boat for the first time today?
How do you know that thing doesn’t leak?”
Ray smiled again, as he climbed briskly
into the suit. “I’ll be all right,”
he said serenely. “You just keep an eye
on things here but don’t touch anything.
I’ll be right back....” He settled
the helmet on his head, motioned for Farmer to help
him check the connections of the suit’s self-contained
oxygen supply.
John Andrew was straightening up from
doing this when he saw the nonapus for the first time.
It was climbing over the rail at the stern, and already
beginning to make a puddle on the deck. Farmer
froze, and gulped wordlessly.
Behind the barred faceplate, Ray looked
puzzled, then annoyed. From the corner of his
eye, Farmer could see Milton Berle still cavorting
silently on the television screen, and this seemed
to add the final touch of insanity to the scene.
Farmer finally succeeded in pointing, and Ray clumped
slowly in a half-circle, just as the nonapus dropped
to the deck with a plank-shivering thump.
The scene assumed some of the aspects
of a bad movie comedy. The background was an
out-of-focus blur, although Farmer was dimly conscious
of motion in it somewhere something else
breaking the surface of the water as it emerged.
In the foreground, the boat and its occupants were
sharply etched, but seemed to have gone into slow motion.
The nonapus crept forward ponderously,
and Farmer searched dazedly for a weapon. It
was Ray who first started stumbling in the direction
of the boathook, but John Andrew, in a sudden fit
of bravery, shoved past him and grabbed the fragile-looking
thing from its cleats.
He swung to face the monster with
a sick feeling in his stomach, and got another surprise.
The thing had stopped moving. Straddling the rail
behind it, and similarly dripping, was a migawd!
It he looked
almost like a man, but that only made the difference
worse. The details resolved as Farmer stared at
him. The oddness about head and shoulders became
finny crests; what had looked at first like a red
skin-tight costume became a scaly hide. Farmer
realized with a shock that the creature wasn’t
wearing anything.
Farmer crouched. The point of
the boathook wavered, aimed first at the nonapus,
then at the fishman. To the editor, both were
alien but he couldn’t decide which
one was more dangerous. For a long moment, neither
of them advanced, and he wondered if they could really
be frightened of his puny weapon.
He doubted it. He was beginning
to notice, among other things, that the nonapus was
more fearsome than it had seemed at first in
addition to nine tentacles, claws, fangs and antenna
became apparent. So did the big glassy-red disks
of the eyes and Farmer aimed the point of
the hook at one of them, started to thrust.
It was wrenched from his hands and
forced downward to stick quivering in the deck.
The development took Farmer completely unawares.
Neither of the aliens had moved; it was Judge Ray
who had disarmed him.
Judge Ray was now frantically trying
to remove his diving helmet again. Excitement
made his motions ineffective, and he signaled for Farmer
to help him, then continued to fumble with the fastenings
himself. John Andrew turned, feeling completely
doomed, to aid the man, and they started getting in
each other’s way and slowing down the operation
even more.
They finally succeeded, though; the
helmet swung back, and Ray promptly shoved Farmer
aside. Some of Farmer’s fear gave way to
amazement at the little inventor’s audacity
and what seemed to Farmer at least to be foolishly
optimistic scientific detachment.
Ray said: “My name is Ray.
It is indeed fortunate that you have met me immediately
upon your arrival here, since I am the world’s
greatest genius, and thoroughly equipped to tell you
anything you wish to know about my people and civilization.
I take it you come from Atlantis?”
Amazingly, his tongue only got tangled
once in the middle of this speech, and he regained
control of it quickly then. John Andrew felt a
touch of jealousy at the little man’s capability
in assuming control of the situation. That, and
a sudden idea of his own, forced him to speak for
himself.
It was a sad attempt. “Venus....
Spaceship....” he managed to croak, before giving
it up.
The launch rocked gently. The
nonapus crouched motionless; the fishman stood firmly,
as if untouched by anything around him, his arms folded
and a faint smile upon his damp lips.
Finally he spoke too. What he
said was: “Venus. Spaceship. My
name is Ray. It is indeed fortunate that you
have met me immediately upon your arrival here, since
I am the world’s greatest genius....”
He broke off. Apparently he interpreted
the looks of consternation on the faces of his audience
correctly, for his smile became more friendly and
he continued in a casual tone.
“Excuse me,” he said.
“I didn’t speak your language before I
arrived here, and I had to learn it and become accustomed
to its use through analyzing what you just said.
I really didn’t mean to puzzle you or make you
feel inferior by mimicking you.”
Farmer’s mind worked chaotically.
This was puzzling, he decided, and did make
him feel inferior that is, it did if the
man in the red scales had really picked up English
so quickly. And if not, why lie?
The fishman came forward. His
step was bouncy, as if he were used to a higher gravity
or greater pressure (that, Farmer complimented
himself on his cleverness, made sense at least), but
he extended his hand and said “Put ‘er
there!” like any ladies’ wear buyer at
an annual convention. Ray and Farmer shook with
him in turn. His hand was damp and webbed, but
felt fairly human for all that.
“My name is Garf,” he
said cheerfully. John Andrew tried not to stare
at him too noticeably, but Ray made no bones about
it; apparently the fishman thought nothing at all
of his state of nudity. Farmer shivered.
It was Ray who brought the conversation
back to earth or sea again.
He asked Garf, directly, exactly where he did come
from.
Garf looked hesitant, then waved the
two to the rail with him. “See those?”
he asked. They looked, and saw what seemed to
be a flight of steps, carved from stone, old, and
worn, starting abruptly just below the water level
and leading downward. There was nothing on either
side of the steps, or underneath them as far as could
be seen, but ordinary ocean. “I came up
those,” Garf said.
Farmer stared, and Ray stared.
The stairway shouldn’t be there it
certainly hadn’t been there before. Garf’s
explanations, it seemed, only compounded the confusion
caused by his presence.
Farmer, muddled, looked again at the
nonapus, which had apparently gone to sleep.
Even so, it looked deadly.
Something bit him on the arm.
He discovered Ray’s fingers, in the diving glove,
digging into his flesh in an amazingly powerful grip.
Farmer hunched his shoulders, trying to break loose,
and then he saw what Ray was staring at.
Garf had left them, and was strolling
around the launch as if he had just bought it looking
down his nose at it; at the same time, acting as if
he could afford not to give a damn how badly he’d
been stung. But the startling thing was that
he had picked up the boathook and was twirling it
unconcernedly. He had not only picked it up, however he
had also tied it in a knot.
It should have splintered in his hands,
assuming he was strong enough to bend it at all.
It hadn’t; it was in perfect shape, except for
the knot. Or so it seemed, at least, for even
as Ray started forward with outstretched hand, obviously
hoping to examine the thing, Garf gave it a final
twirl and scaled it carelessly overboard.
John Andrew began to feel quick-frozen
again. Being alone at sea in a rickety craft
with a possible madman had been bad enough. To
have a weird creature with superhuman powers, and
an impossible pet monster, added to the crew was a
little too much.
Garf turned his attention to the television
set, which was still presenting its hysterical vaudeville.
“Great-uncle’s gills!” he exclaimed,
and lapsed into a fascinated silence. He studied
the proceedings carefully, holding the arms-crossed
pose again. Finally he turned to Ray.
“Weren’t you saying something
about civilization a while ago, finless?” he
asked. His voice was sneering.
Ray frowned, and said something about
mass-appeal. “Pay no attention to that,”
he continued. “Just listen to me.
I’ll tell you about our civilization, and our
science, and....”
His voice broke off as if he had been
struck in the face. In a way, he had; Garf had
deliberately turned his back on the old fellow.
The Judge’s bloodshot little eyes darted about
as if he wanted to pick up something heavy and hit
Garf on the crest with it.
John Andrew’s brain had finally
resumed normal operations; he was thinking slowly,
but clearly. He examined the evidence with care.
He decided that Garf’s superior attitude and
powers boded no good; that if the fishman once became
slightly irritated he would sic the nonapus on Ray
and himself. (Probably, in fact, Garf would try to
conquer the world anyway; that was how it went in
stories as corny as this situation.) Farmer further
decided that Ray was too egocentrically eccentric to
be trusted to get them out of this fix; he decided
he’d have to do something himself.
Having decided all this, Farmer went
back over the territory to see if he could find any
flaws in it or any other way out. It
still made sense, and he added a decision to get the
boat back to shore as fast as possible. He approached
the engine.
As he did so, the engine melted into
a solid, irregular lump of metal. John Andrew
gulped, and put out a tentative hand toward the fused
mess. It was not particularly warm but
it had melted.
Farmer looked at Garf again with fear
and awe, and the fishman looked back with cold amusement.
But not for long. Garf turned to the Judge’s
invention and started to show some genuine
interest for the first time since he had showed up.
He stood over the thing, webbed hands
on scaly hips, peering at it intently. After
a long silence, he knelt, and started feeling over
the machine with his webbed hands. Finally he
placed his fingers on the largest of the control switches then
changed his mind and gestured imperatively to Judge
Ray.
“You the ‘intelligent’
one,” he said. The quotes around ‘intelligent’
were clear in his intonation. “Explain this
to me. It’s obviously what reactivated
the gate but whoever made it did a screwball
job. There are all sorts of things that don’t
seem to belong, and even the parts that should be
there seem wrong, somehow....”
He paused. “Of course,”
he added, smugly, “I’m not a transportation
expert. If I were, I’d have made my own
activator long ago, and done some visiting on the
closed worlds before this. Not that they’d
have kept me from getting bored for long, but yours
looks as if it’s going to be slightly amusing,
at least.”
A struggle showed in Ray’s face.
Farmer saw insulted anger, hurt pride, a desire to
brag about his gadgetry, a question about Garf’s
last words, and a caution that was not too far from
fear. John Andrew had stopped trying to hide
his own fear, and though he had plenty of questions
of his own, he was mainly concerned with looking for
a means of escape.
Garf was rising again, looking impatient.
Ray reached a decision, said “Go to hell!”,
and turned his back on the fishman. Garf looked
astonished, then angry, and raised a hand. Ray
jumped, not very far because of the heavy diving suit,
stumbled on oddly twisted legs, and collapsed on the
deck, writhing, moaning, and turning red in the face.
The diving helmet clattered on the planks.
Farmer got mad. He started to
charge across the deck at Garf, but his own feet went
out from under him and he landed flat on his nose.
There were waves of fire chasing each other around
his body, and his stomach was trying to turn itself
inside out.
As instantaneously as it had come,
the pain left him. It left him weak and quivering,
and John Andrew Farmer lay on his back waiting for
his strength to seep back. As the red haze drifted
from before his eyes, he realized that the launch
had acquired another occupant.
In appearance, she could easily have
been Garf’s sister or his wife.
Her figure was lithe and nicely curved. Her scales
stopped in eye-catching points just above her distinctly
mammalian bosom; from there on up she looked almost
completely human. She wasn’t wearing anything
either. The over-all effect was oddly beautiful.
Farmer blushed hotly, and tried to keep his eyes on
her face.
Not that it made any difference to
her. She ignored everyone and everything but
the fishman. Glaring at him angrily, she snapped
out his name in an icy voice. “Garf!”
“Dor!”
Garf was a changed fishman; he looked
faintly frightened, moderately worried, and definitely
embarrassed. This passed, and he started to smile
in a placating manner.
“Garf!” Dor snapped again.
She followed it up, this time, with a string of intricate,
foreign-sounding words that even Farmer could tell
were hot and stinging.
The fishman backed away. He seemed
to be growing angry himself now under the whiplashing
woman’s tongue. Finally he spoke, in English.
He called Dor a puddle-snake. That wasn’t
all of what he said, by any means; the name was preceded
by several adjectives and followed by an obscene command.
Dor blanched slightly.
“Oh, yes?” she said, her
voice dripping danger. “I can speak this
language too, you know I learned it years
ago, before the gate to this world was closed!
And let me tell you something else....”
She told him something else.
John Andrew blushed furiously again, and covered his
ears with his hands.
Little Ray was on his feet, trying
to get a word in edgewise, but not succeeding at all.
He too started to get angry. Farmer hauled himself
upright, hoping to approach Ray, calm him, and get
him to figure a way out of this madhouse.
Garf yelled an expletive and gestured
with his hand. A wave of pure heat swept over
the boat, blistering what paint it still boasted.
The blow had been directed at Dor, and she showed
that she had absorbed most of it by wilting visibly but
Farmer felt as much of it as he wanted. It was
as if a blast furnace had suddenly opened beside him;
sweat popped out on his brow and filmed his eyes.
He wondered how uncomfortable he could get.
A deadly silence descended.
John Andrew was wishing that he could
swim when Dor smiled, and he began to be interested
in living again in spite of himself. The girl,
he thought, was somehow radiant really
lovely, in spite of her scales and fins. It was
peculiar; he’d never liked women at all, and
had certainly never thought he’d like a mermaid,
but....
Anyway, he decided, he wasn’t
going to take sides if the two aliens were going to
fight it out. His first interest was in saving
his own hide; his second, in getting back to shore
to give warning of the invasion. As for Dor John
Andrew had lived this long without going to the aid
of a damsel in distress without, in fact,
ever seeing one that he could remember, who wasn’t
obviously more capable of helping herself than he
was. He wasn’t going to start rescuing fair
maidens now even if she needed rescuing.
Still, there was something awfully attractive....
Damn, but he was confused!
Dor’s smile didn’t really
last that long; Farmer’s thoughts were going
fast now, somehow. He had finished those just
described before Dor said, “All right, Garf.
Fun’s fun; now let’s kiss and make up.
After all, it’s illegal for us to be here not
only our own cops, but the Galactic Federation, would
be on our necks if they knew. Let’s see
if we can close up the gate ourselves or if this needs
to be reported. And then let’s go home.”
Garf grinned. “Whatever
you say, my dear.” He dipped an eyebrow
in a wink. Behind Dor, the nonapus stirred sluggishly,
extended a tentacle, opened a claw, and nipped Dor
neatly on the behind. She screeched.
There was an explosion in Farmer’s
brain. This was too much Garf had
gone too far! The burly editor plunged across
the deck, swinging a fist. To his surprise, Garf
did nothing to stop him; probably, John Andrew figured
later, the fishman expected no further trouble from
the humans after the treatment they’d had.
Farmer’s haymaker connected.
Garf staggered across the deck until
he brought up against the rail, holding his jaw and
shaking his head muzzily. Farmer braced himself
for retaliation, hoping it would be something less
than a bolt of barbed lightning. But Garf remained
unpredictable. He mumbled something that wasn’t
“Oh the hell with it” but sounded like
it, and softly and silently slid overboard. He
disappeared under water with scarcely a ripple.
“Good!” Dor said, briskly.
“Now, I’ll just.... Ah!” She
strode directly to Ray’s invention, and Farmer
wondered why both the aliens were so interested in
a gadget that didn’t work.
Dor wasted no time. She bent
over, picked up the machine, yanking wiring loose
carelessly, straightened up, turned a beaming smile
on Farmer and Ray, said “Goodbye,” and
headed for the rail.
Ray yelped. He started after
her, but his progress in the diving suit was waddling
and slow. She reached the rail first and went
over. Ray was not too far behind, and he slammed
his helmet down angrily as he reached the rail.
Farmer, galvanized belatedly, gave chase as well.
Dor was picking her way slowly down
the stone steps, the machine cradled under her arm.
Ray climbed up on the rail, poised there a second,
then attempted a swan dive. John Andrew yelled
at him as he arced forward, but it was too late.
The old man dropped like a stone, flapping his arms,
bounced slightly on the top step, then slid forward
down several more steps on his faceplate.
Dor hesitated, her head just above
water. She looked at the limp, diving-suited
body beside her, then back at the launch and Farmer.
Again, she came to a decision quickly.
Bending, leaving a trail of bubbles
as her head went under, she set the Judge’s
invention down on a lower step and picked up the Judge
instead. Cradling him in her arms, she started
back up again, calling to Farmer to be ready to take
her burden aboard.
They got him on the boat with little
difficulty, and John Andrew laid him on the deck as
Dor sprang lithely over the rail again, showing interest
in the little fellow’s condition. The diving
helmet came off easily, not having been properly fastened
down at all. Farmer bent anxiously over the Judge,
looking for signs of life.
The diving suit had shipped some water,
and the Judge had gotten a nasty crack on the head but
he was a tough bozo. There was no blood, his
breathing seemed almost normal, and he already showed
signs of returning consciousness.
John Andrew turned to Dor. “Well,
I should thank you for bringing him back, I guess,”
he muttered. “But now that you’re
with us again” he shot out a big
paw and grabbed her by the wrist “how
about explaining some of this?”
He was very gentle with the wrist.
He didn’t want to hurt her; he was wondering
already, in fact, what had made him get so rough at
all. But she didn’t seem to mind.
“I’ve got to go quickly,”
she told him. “I think Garf will be all
right now, but he may take a notion to come back.
And I have to see that the gate is closed before ...”
“What gate? Get back where?”
Farmer managed to put more curiosity than impatience
into his tone.
“Back to my own planet Tamdivar,
sun Nogore, member of the Galactic Federation,”
she said patiently. “The gate is a matter-transmitter
between my world and yours. It was once in constant
use, but my government closed it when you people got
to the point where you were running around in submarines,
using depth bombs, and just noticing our aircraft
too much.”
Somehow, what popped into Farmer’s
head was the chorus of an old song he had sung in
boy’s camp when very young. “There’s
a hole in the bottom of the sea! There’s
a log in the hole....”
“Your machine reactivated the
gate from this side, even if that isn’t what
you designed it to do,” Dor went on. “It’s
a good thing I noticed the gate was open. Of
course, the area affected isn’t large it
includes those steps and a lot of water around them.
“The gate’ll stay open
now until it’s closed from our side but
I’ll have to take your outfit back and destroy
it, anyway. Our cops would be tough with you
if they found you operating the thing, and Federation
Securitymen would be even tougher. Take it as
a warning: don’t do it again.”
She turned to go, but Farmer held
on. “What’s this about a Galactic
Federation? And if they’ve banned all communication
with Earth, why haven’t they just blasted the
planet out of existence and gotten rid of it?
Of course, I know we’re thoroughly uncivilized
and too warlike for any other race to trust, and all
that. I can see how Earth might be considered
the plague spot of the universe....”
Dor gawked, and saw that he was very
serious. Then she threw back her head and laughed
a merry laugh. “Listen, friend,” she
said at last. “The only real trouble with
you Earth people is that you have a tremendous inferiority
complex, collectively and individually as
you’ve just illustrated. Get over that
and you’ll eliminate most of your trouble.
As for the Federation, they let us in, and
most member-races have wars occasionally; they’ll
undoubtedly accept you, once you develop space travel.
“Just at the moment, of course,
you’re at a crossroads. You could jump
in either direction, blowing yourself up or taking
the big step into space. I think you’ll
turn out okay, but not everybody agrees and
the Federation can’t take even small chances.
So you can’t be allowed to set off your atom
bombs, or worse, where they might get through to another
planet. We can’t actually interfere with
you, so we’ve closed the gates; that’s
all.”
John Andrew, thinking it over, said
“Oh,” and let go of her wrist. She
turned and went back to the rail again, after flashing
him the most de luxe smile so far. Farmer came
out of a philosophic haze to notice she was leaving.
He said, “Hey!”
She looked over her shoulder.
Farmer didn’t know what to say, but he wanted
to delay her. Finally, he pointed to the nonapus,
and said, “What about that monster? You’re
not going to leave it here?”
She laughed again. “Oh,
the robot? It’ll follow me. It’s
designed to.... Oh damn!”
The damn was for something she saw
in the water as she looked back over the rail again.
John Andrew rushed to her side and looked as she got
set for a dive. Garf, he saw immediately, had
returned, and was picking up the Judge’s invention.
“Put that down!” Dor’s
yell was high-pitched. Garf faced them, and Farmer
could just make out his lazy, contemptuous smile through
the murky water. The fishman raised his arm in
one of the now-familiar gestures.
The boat heaved, wallowed, and sank.
Farmer thought desperately again that
he couldn’t swim, and then he thought wildly
of the Judge, who hadn’t regained full consciousness.
He went under once, and came up choking and sputtering.
He decided his end had come and he didn’t
even know the identity of the enemy who had done him
in. It was ironic. He should have asked Dor
to tell him more about Garf was he a traitor,
or a Tamdivarian gangster, or what? John Andrew
gasped and started sinking again....
To find himself hauled out of the
water unceremoniously by the scruff of his neck.
As he rose, ropy tentacles twined about him, and he
saw what had saved him. He was being cradled,
gently but firmly, by the nonapus, which had Judge
Ray in another set of tentacles. And the nonapus,
it became apparent, was not only a water-creature.
It could also fly.
Garf paddled idly around Dor’s
apartment, pretending interest in the shell-paintings
that decorated the walls. He had presented her
a bouquet in which rare blossoms hid slimy, smelly
weeds, and she was sore at him again.
As she finished her conversation and switched off the
two-way radio, he turned to her. “Dor,”
he said softly.
She looked at him haughtily.
“Don’t speak to me!” she said.
“I told you you’d have to stop your irresponsible
practical joking and settle down. Some hard work
wouldn’t hurt you even if you did inherit a fortune.
I don’t mind so much when you pull these stunts
on me, but when I think of how you practically drowned
those poor, defenseless Earth-creatures....”
His mouth twisted. “Poor,
defenseless Earth-creatures! How was I to know
they couldn’t swim? Just imagine beings
that live on a world with almost as much water as
ours, who can’t use their natural abilities any
more than that! It’s ridiculous. I
never saw such moróns the big, ugly
one especially!”
He had intended that to sting, and
it did. Dor raised her nose another notch.
“I think he’s cute, and I’m learning
he’s pretty intelligent, too. He catches
on fast to everything I tell him. He and his little
friend will have their spaceship finished soon now,
and....”
“That’s another thing!”
Garf snapped, keeping her on the defensive. “Maybe
I violated Security by going to Earth when they accidentally
opened the gate, but what are you doing? What
would the Fed say if they knew you were giving out
information the Earthmen hadn’t acquired by
themselves helping them get into space?
What about that?”
Dor shrugged. “I’m
not telling them anything, really. Just dropping
a few hints of the most elementary sort. Things
they’d have figured out soon anyway and
things they still have to work hard to make practicable.
Even if some of the inventions they’ve worked
out so far have enabled them to make enough money
to live on nicely after all, those things
are the merest toys to us what could it
possibly matter?”
Garf considered. This bickering
was, as usual, getting them exactly nowhere.
He gave up. “All right, dear,” he
said. “You win; you’re right, of
course, and I’m wrong. I only hope you won’t
bother so much with talking to that Earth-slug on
the radio after we’re married.”
Dor laughed a tinkly laugh and came
into his waiting arms. “Darling,”
she cooed. “What a thing to say. I
actually believe you’re jealous and
you know I only love you.”
Which wasn’t strictly true.
The big Earthman was cute, she thought, and
it was quaint of him to be in love with her, and to
tell her so every day over the radio built into the
robot-nonapus. Of course, he was inferior to
her in every way, and she wouldn’t think of marrying
him or anything like that. But even his inferiority
was interesting, in a way.
Yes, it was nice to know he loved her.
And she loved him, too like an amusing
baby brother.