The low rainbow building of Eight
Colors, near the spaceport of Procyon Alpha, had not
changed; and when Bart went in, as he had done a year
ago, it seemed that the same varnished girl was sitting
before the same glass desk, neon-edged and brittle,
with the same chrome-tinged hair and blue fingernails.
She looked at Bart in his Lhari clothing, at Meta in
her Mentorian robe and cloak, at Ringg, and her unruffled
dignity did not turn a hair.
“May I help you?” she inquired, still
not caring.
“I want to see Raynor One.”
“On what business, please?”
“Tell him,” said Bart,
with immense satisfaction, “that his boss is
here Bart Steele and wants to
see him right away.”
It had a sort of disrupting effect.
She seemed to go blurred at the edges. After
a minute, blinking carefully, she spoke into the vision-screen,
and reported, numbly, “Go on up, Mr. Steele.”
He wasn’t expecting a welcome.
He said so as the elevator rose. “After
all, if I’d never come back, he’d doubtless
have inherited the whole Eight Colors line, unencumbered.
I don’t expect he’ll be happy to see me.
But he’s the only one I can turn to.”
The elevator stopped, opened.
They stepped out, and a man stepped nervously toward
them. For a moment, expecting Raynor One, Bart
was deceived; then as the man’s face spread
in a smile of welcome, he stopped in incredulous delight.
“Raynor Three!”
In overflowing gladness, Bart hugged
him. It was like a meeting with the dead.
He felt as if he had really come home. “But but
you remember me!” he exclaimed, backing away,
in amazement.
Slowly, the man nodded. His eyes
were grave. “Yes. I decided it wasn’t
worth it, Bart, to go on losing everything that meant
anything to me. Even if it meant I had to give
up the stars, never travel again except as a passenger,
I couldn’t go on being afraid to remember, never
knowing the consequences or responsibilities of what
I’d done.” His sad smile was strangely
beautiful. “The Multiphase sailed
without me. I’ve been here, hoping against
hope that someday I’d know the rest.”
Associations clicked into place in
Bart’s mind. The Multiphase.
So Raynor Three was the Mentorian who had smuggled
David Briscoe off the ship, and whose memories, wrung
out by the Lhari captain of that ship, had touched
off so many deaths. But he had paid for that paid
many times over. And now must he pay for this,
too?
Raynor One strode toward them.
“So it’s really you. I thought it
might be a trap, but Three wouldn’t listen.
Word came from Antares that Montano had been arrested
and his ship confiscated for illegal landing on Lharillis.
I thought you were probably dead.”
“We sent a boy to do a man’s
job,” Raynor Three said, “and he came back
a man. But tell me ” He looked
curiously at Ringg and Meta.
Bart introduced them, adding, “I
came for help, really. I’m facing charges,
and I’m afraid you are, too.”
Raynor One said harshly, “A
trap, after all, Three! He trapped you, and he’s
led the Lhari to you!”
“No,” Raynor Three said,
“or he wouldn’t be walking around free
and unguarded and with all his memories intact.
Tell me about it, Bart.” And when Bart
had given a quick narration of the Lhari judgment,
he nodded, slowly.
“That’s all we ever wanted.
Don’t think you failed, Bart. The horrible
part was only the way they were trying to keep it secret.”
Ringg interrupted, “Do not judge
the Lhari by them, Raynor Three,” and Raynor
Three said in good Lhari, “I don’t, feathertop.
Raynors have been working with Lhari since the days
of Rhazon of Nedrus. But I wanted an open, official
statement of Lhari policy not secret murders
by fanatics. I had confidence in the Lhari as
a people, but not in individuals. What good did
it do to know that the Lhari council in another galaxy
would have condemned the murders and manhunts, when
they were going on in this one, day after day?
“Don’t you see, Bart?”
he continued, “you didn’t fail not
if we’re going to have the publicity of a test
case, publicly heard. That means the Lhari are
prepared to admit, before our whole galaxy, that humans
can survive warp-drive without cold-sleep.
That’s all David Briscoe was trying to prove,
or your father either may they rest in peace.
So, whatever happens, we’ve won.”
“If you two idealists will give
me a minute for cold realities,” Raynor One
said, “there’s this. Among other things.
Bart’s not yet of legal age. You may not
know this, Bart, but your father appointed me your
legal guardian. When I turned you over to Three,
I’m afraid, I assumed legal responsibility for
all the consequences. I ought to have kept you
under my own supervision.”
Bart smiled at Raynor One’s
stern face. “I crossed two galaxies, and
faced the Lhari High Council, without you to hold my
hand. I can face the Trade Federation.”
“Naturally I will be responsible
for your defense,” Raynor One said stiffly.
“But I don’t need a defense,”
Bart said, turning to Raynor Three and meeting his
eyes. “I’m going to tell the truth,
and let it stand. Don’t worry, I’ll
make sure they don’t hold you responsible for
my actions.”
“Another thing. Some lunatic
from Capella arrived here and all but accused me of
having you murdered. Do you know a Tommy Kendron?”
“Do I know him!”
Bart interrupted with a joyful yell. “Tommy’s
here? Quick where do I get
in touch with him?”
An hour later they were all gathered
at Raynor Three’s country house. The talk
went on far into the night. Tommy wanted to know
everything, and both Raynors wanted to know every
detail of Bart’s year among the Lhari, while
Meta and Ringg were both curious about how it had begun.
Bart tried to forget that the next
day might bring trouble, even imprisonment. The
Lhari Council had told him to talk as much as he liked
about his voyage, and this might be his only chance.
When he had finished, Tommy leaned forward and gripped
Bart’s hand tightly.
“You make them sound like pretty
decent people,” he said, looking at Ringg.
“A year ago, if you’d told me I’d
be here with a Lhari spaceman and a bunch of Mentorians,
I’d never have believed it.”
“Nor I, that I would be as friend
under a human roof,” Ringg replied. “But
a friend to Bart is my friend also.” He
touched the faint discolored scars on his brow, saying
softly, “But for Bart, I would not be here to
greet anyone, man or Lhari, as friend.”
“So,” said Tommy triumphantly,
“you haven’t failed, even if you didn’t
discover the secret of the Eighth Color
But a sudden, blinding light burst
over Bart as Ringg moved his hand to the scars.
Once again he searched a cave beneath a green star,
where Ringg lay unconscious and bleeding, and played
his Lhari light fearfully over a waterfall of colored
minerals. And there was one whose color he could
not identify red, blue, violet, green, none
of these the color of an unknown star in an unknown galaxy, the shimmer of a
landing Lhari ship, the color of an unknown element in an unknown fuel
“The secret of the Eighth Color,”
he said, and stood up, his hands literally shaking
in excitement. “I’m an idiot!
No, don’t ask me any questions! I could
still be wrong. But even if I go to a prison planet,
the Eighth Color isn’t a secret any more!”
When the others had gone back to the
city, he sat with Raynor Three in the room where the
latter had told him of his father’s death, where
he had first seen his terrifying Lhari face.
They spoke little, but Raynor Three finally asked,
“Were you serious about not wanting a defense,
Bart?”
“I was. All I want is a
chance to tell my own story in my own way. Where
everyone will hear me.”
Raynor Three looked at him curiously.
“There’s something you’re not telling,
Bart. Want to tell me?”
Bart hesitated, then held out his
hand and clasped his kinsman’s. “Thanks but
no.”
Raynor Three saw his hesitation and
chuckled. “All right, son. Forget I
asked. You’ve grown up.”
It was good to sleep in a soft human-type
bed again, to eat breakfast and shave and dress in
ordinary human clothing again. But Bart folded
his Lhari tights and the cloak tenderly, with regret.
They were the memory of an experience no one else
would ever have.
Raynor Three let him take the controls
as they flew back to the spaceport city; and a little
before noon they entered the great crystal pylon that
was the headquarters of the Federation Trade Bureau
on Procyon Alpha. Men and Lhari were moving in
the lobby; among them Bart saw Vorongil, Meta at his
side. He smiled at her, received a wan smile
in return.
Would Vorongil feel that Bart had
deceived him, betrayed him, when he heard Bart today?
In the hearing room, four white-crested
Lhari sat across from four dignified, well-dressed
men, representatives of the Federation of Intergalactic
Trade. The space beyond was wholly filled with
people, crowded together, and carrying stereo cameras,
intercom equipment, the creepie-peepie of the on-the-spot
space commentator.
“Mr. Steele, we had hoped to
make this a quiet hearing, without undue publicity.
But we cannot deny the news media the privilege of
covering it, unless you wish to claim the right to
privacy.”
“No, indeed,” Bart said
clearly. “I want them all to hear what I’m
going to say.”
Raynor One came up to the bench.
“Bart, as your guardian, I advise against it.
Some people will call this a publicity stunt.
It won’t do Eight Colors any good to admit that
men have been spying on the Lhari
“I want press coverage,”
Bart repeated stubbornly, “and as many star-systems
on the relay as possible.”
“All right. But I wash
my hands of it,” Raynor One said angrily.
Bart told his story simply: his
meeting with the elder Briscoe, his meeting with Raynor
One carefully not implicating Raynor One
in the plot Raynor Three’s work in
altering his appearance to that of a Lhari, and the
major events of his cruise on the Swiftwing.
When he came to the account of the shift into warp-drive,
he saw the faces of the press reporters, and realized
that for them this was the story of the year or
century: humans can endure star-drive!
But he went on, not soft-pedaling Montanos attempted murder, his own choice,
the trip to the Lhari world
One of the board representatives interrupted
testily, “What is the point of this lengthy
narrative? You can give the story to the newsmen
without our official sanction, if you want to make
it a heroic epic, young Steele. We have heard
sufficient to prove your guilt, and that of Raynor,
in the violation of treaty
“Nevertheless, I want this official,”
Bart said. “I don’t want to be mobbed
when they hear that I have the secret of the star-drive.”
The effect was electric. The
four Lhari sat up; their white crests twitched.
Vorongil stared, his gray eyes darkening with fear.
One of the Lhari leaned forward, shooting the question
at him harshly.
“You did not discover
the coordinates of the Council Planet of Ke Lhiro!
You did not discover
“I did not,” Bart said
quietly. “I don’t know them and I
have no intention of trying to find them. We
don’t need to go to the Lhari Galaxy to find
the mineral that generates the warp-frequencies, that
they call ‘Catalyst A’ and that the Mentorians
call the ‘Eighth Color.’ There is
a green star called Meristem, and a spectroscopic analysis
of that star, I’m sure, will reveal what unknown
elements it contains, and perhaps locate other stars
with that element. There must be others in our
galaxy, but the coordinates of the star Meristem are
known to me.”
Vorongil was staring at him, his mouth
open. He leaped up and cried out, shaking, “But
they assured us that among your memories there
was nothing of danger to us
Compassionately, gently, Bart said,
“There wasn’t not that they
knew about, Vorongil. I didn’t realize
it myself. I might never have remembered seeing
a mineral that was of a color not found in the spectrum.
Certainly, a memory like that meant nothing to the
Lhari medics who emptied out my mind and turned over
all my thoughts. You Lhari can’t see color
at all.
“So no one but I saw the color
of the mineral in the cave; you Lhari yourselves don’t
know that your fuel looks unlike anything else
in the universe. You never cared to find out
how your world looked to your Mentorians. So
your medics never questioned my memories of an eighth
color. To you, it’s just another shade of
gray, but under a light strong enough to blind any
but Mentorian eyes, it takes on a special color
The conference broke up in disorder,
the four Lhari clustering together in a furious babble,
then hastily leaving the room. Bart stood waiting,
feeling empty and cold. Vorongil’s stare
baffled him with unreadable emotion.
“You fool, you unspeakable young
idiot!” Raynor One groaned. “Why did
you blurt it out like that before every news media
in the galaxy? Why, we could have had a monopoly
on the star-drive Eight Colors and Vega
Interplanet!” As he saw the men of the press
approaching with their microphones, lights, cameras
and TV equipment, he gripped Bart urgently by the
arm.
“We can still salvage something!
Don’t talk any more! Refer them to me say
I’m your guardian and your business manager you
can still make something of this
“That’s just what I don’t
want to do,” Bart replied, and broke away from
him to approach the newsmen.
“Yes, certainly, I’ll
answer all your questions, gentlemen.”
Raynor One flung up his hands in despair,
but over their shoulder he saw the glowing face of
Meta, and smiled. She, at least, would understand.
So would Raynor Three.
A page boy touched Bart on the arm.
“Mr. Steele,” he said, “you are to
appear immediately before the World Council!”
He was to be asked one question again
and again in the days that followed, but his real
answer was to Meta and Raynor Three, looking quietly
past Raynor One and speaking to the news cameras that
would carry his words all over the galaxy to men and
Lhari:
“Why didn’t I keep it
for myself? Because there are always men like
Montano, who in their mistaken pride will murder and
steal for such things. I want this knowledge
to be open to all men, to be used for their benefit.
There has been too much secrecy already. I want
all men to have the stars.”
He had to tell his story again and
again to the hastily summoned representatives of the
Galactic Federation. At one point the delegate
from his home star of Vega actually rose and shouted
to him, “This is treason! You betrayed
your home world and the whole human race!
Don’t you know the Lhari may fight a war over
this?”
Bart remembered Vorongil’s silent,
sad confession of the Lhari fears.
“No,” he said gently.
“No. There won’t be any war unless
we start one. The Lhari won’t start any
war. Believe me.”
But inwardly, he sweated. What would the
Lhari do?
They had to wait for representatives
of the Lhari Council to make the journey from their
home galaxy; meanwhile they kept Bart in protective
custody. There was, of course, no question of
sending him to a “prison planet”; public
opinion would have crucified any government that suggested
punishment for the man who had discovered a human world
with deposits of Catalyst A. Bart could claim an “explorer’s
share,” and Raynor One had lost no time in filing
that claim on his behalf.
But he was lonely and anxious.
They had confined him to a set of rooms high in the
building overlooking the spaceport; from the balcony
he could see the ships landing and departing.
Life went on, ships came and went, and out there in
the vast night of space, the suns and colors flamed
and rolled, heedless of the little atoms that traveled
and intrigued between them.
A night came when the buzzer sounded
and he opened the door to Raynor One and Raynor Three.
“Better turn on your vision-screen,
Bart. The Elder of the Lhari Council has arrived
with their official decision, and he’s going
to announce it.”
Bart waited, anxiously, pacing the
room, while on the TV screen various dignitaries presented
the Elder.
“We are the first race to travel
the stars.” A bald head, an ancient Lhari
face seamed like glazed pottery, looked at Bart from
the screen, and Bart remembered when he had stood
before that face, sick with defeat. But now he
need not pretend to hold his head erect.
“We have had a long and triumphant
time as masters of the stars,” the Lhari said.
“But triumph and power will sicken and stagnate
the race which holds them too long unchallenged.
We reached this point once before. Then a Lhari
captain, Rhazon of Nedrun, abandoned the safe ways
of caution, and out of his blind leap in the blind
dark came many good things. Trade with the human
race. Our Mentorian allies. A system of
mathematics to take the hazards from our star-travel.
“Yet once again the Lhari had
grown cautious and fearful. And a young man named
Bartol took a blind leap into unknown darkness, all
alone
“Not alone,” Bart said
as if to himself, “it took two men called Briscoe.
And my father. And a couple of Raynors. And
even a man called Montano, because without that, I’d
never have decided
“Like Rhazon of Nedrun, like
all pioneers, this young man has been cursed by his
own people, the very ones who will one day benefit
from his daring. He has found his people a firm
footing among the stars. It is too late for the
Lhari to regret that we did not sooner extend you
the hand of welcome there. You have climbed, unaided,
to join us. For good or ill, we must make room
for you.
“But there is room for all.
Competition is the lifeblood of trade, and we face
the future without fear, knowing that life still holds
many surprises for the living. I say to you:
welcome to the stars.”
Even while Bart stood speechless with
the knowledge of success, the door opened again, and
Bart, turning, cried out in amazement.
“Tommy! Ringg! Meta!”
“Sure,” Tommy exclaimed,
“we’ve got to celebrate,” but Bart
stopped, looking past them.
“Captain Vorongil!” he
said, and went to greet the old Lhari. “I
thought you’d hate me, rieko mori.”
The term of respect fell naturally from his lips.
“I did, for a time,” Vorongil
said quietly. “But I remembered the day
we stood on Lharillis, by the monument. And that
you risked perhaps your life, certainly
your eyesight to save us from death.
So when the Elder asked for my estimate of your people,
I gave it.”
“I thought it sounded like you.”
Bart felt that his happiness was complete.
“And now,” Ringg cried,
“let’s celebrate! Meta, you haven’t
even told him that he’s free!”
But while the party got rolling, Bart
wondered free for what? And after
a little while he went out on the balcony and stood
looking down at the spaceport, where the Swiftwing
lay in shadow, huge, beloved renounced.
“What now, Bartol?” Vorongil’s
quiet voice asked from his elbow. “You’re
famous notorious. You’re going
to be rich, and a celebrity.”
“I was wishing I could get away
until the excitement dies down.”
“Well,” said Vorongil,
“why don’t you? The Swiftwing
ships out tonight, Bartol for Antares and
beyond. It will be a couple of years before your
Eight Colors can be made over into an Interstellar
line and as Raynor One has said to me several
times, he’ll have to handle all those details,
for you’re not of age yet.
“I’ve been thinking.
Now that we Lhari must share space with your people,
you’ll need experienced men for your ships.
Unless we all want the disasters born of trial and
error, we Lhari had better help you train your men
quickly and well. I want you to go back on the
Swiftwing with me. Not an apprentice, but
representative of Eight Colors, to act as liaison
between men and Lhari at least until your
own affairs claim your attention.”
Behind them on the balcony, Tommy
appeared, making signals to Bart: “Say
yes! Say yes, Bart! I did!”
Bart’s eyes suddenly filled.
Out of defeat he had won success beyond his greatest
hopes. But he did not feel all glad; he felt only
a heavy responsibility. Whether good or bad came
of the gift he had snatched from the stars, would
rest in large measure on his own shoulders. He
was going back to space to learn the responsibility
that went with it.
“I accept,” he said gravely.
“Oh, boy!” Tommy dragged
Ringg into a sort of war dance of exuberant celebration,
pointing at the flaring glow of the spaceport gates.
“Here, by grace of the Lhari, stands the doorway
to all the stars,” he quoted. “Well,
maybe you were here first. But look out we’re
coming!”
A doorway to the stars. Bart
had crossed that doorway once, frightened and alone.
Dad, if you could only know! The first interstellar
ship of Eight Colors was to bear the name Rupert
Steele, but that was years in the future.
Now, looking at the Swiftwing,
at Ringg and Tommy, at Raynor Three and Vorongil,
who would all be his shipmates in the new world they
were building, he felt suddenly very lonely again.
“Come in, Bart. It’s
your party,” Meta said softly, and he felt her
hand lying in his. He looked down at the pretty
Mentorian girl. She would be with him, too.
And suddenly he knew he would never be lonely again.
His arm around Meta, his friends man
and Lhari at his shoulder, he went back
to the celebration, to plan for the first intergalactic
voyage to the stars.