“Well, Corporal Westerburg,”
Doctor Henry Harris said gently, “just why do
you think you’re a plant?”
As he spoke, Harris glanced down again
at the card on his desk. It was from the Base
Commander himself, made out in Cox’s heavy scrawl:
Doc, this is the lad I told you about. Talk
to him and try to find out how he got this delusion.
He’s from the new Garrison, the new check-station
on Asteroid Y-3, and we don’t want anything
to go wrong there. Especially a silly damn thing
like this!
Harris pushed the card aside and stared
back up at the youth across the desk from him.
The young man seemed ill at ease and appeared to be
avoiding answering the question Harris had put to him.
Harris frowned. Westerburg was a good-looking
chap, actually handsome in his Patrol uniform, a shock
of blond hair over one eye. He was tall, almost
six feet, a fine healthy lad, just two years out of
Training, according to the card. Born in Detroit.
Had measles when he was nine. Interested in jet
engines, tennis, and girls. Twenty-six years old.
“Well, Corporal Westerburg,”
Doctor Harris said again. “Why do you think
you’re a plant?”
The Corporal looked up shyly.
He cleared his throat. “Sir, I am
a plant, I don’t just think so. I’ve
been a plant for several days, now.”
“I see.” The Doctor
nodded. “You mean that you weren’t
always a plant?”
“No, sir. I just became a plant recently.”
“And what were you before you became a plant?”
“Well, sir, I was just like the rest of you.”
There was silence. Doctor Harris
took up his pen and scratched a few lines, but nothing
of importance came. A plant? And such a
healthy-looking lad! Harris removed his steel-rimmed
glasses and polished them with his handkerchief.
He put them on again and leaned back in his chair.
“Care for a cigarette, Corporal?”
“No, sir.”
The Doctor lit one himself, resting
his arm on the edge of the chair. “Corporal,
you must realize that there are very few men who become
plants, especially on such short notice. I have
to admit you are the first person who has ever told
me such a thing.”
“Yes, sir, I realize it’s quite rare.”
“You can understand why I’m
interested, then. When you say you’re a
plant, you mean you’re not capable of mobility?
Or do you mean you’re a vegetable, as opposed
to an animal? Or just what?”
The Corporal looked away. “I
can’t tell you any more,” he murmured.
“I’m sorry, sir.”
“Well, would you mind telling
me how you became a plant?”
Corporal Westerburg hesitated.
He stared down at the floor, then out the window at
the spaceport, then at a fly on the desk. At last
he stood up, getting slowly to his feet. “I
can’t even tell you that, sir,” he said.
“You can’t? Why not?”
“Because because I promised not to.”
The room was silent. Doctor Harris
rose, too, and they both stood facing each other.
Harris frowned, rubbing his jaw. “Corporal,
just who did you promise?”
“I can’t even tell you that, sir.
I’m sorry.”
The Doctor considered this. At
last he went to the door and opened it. “All
right, Corporal. You may go now. And thanks
for your time.”
“I’m sorry I’m not
more helpful.” The Corporal went slowly
out and Harris closed the door after him. Then
he went across his office to the vidphone. He
rang Commander Cox’s letter. A moment later
the beefy good-natured face of the Base Commander
appeared.
“Cox, this is Harris. I
talked to him, all right. All I could get is the
statement that he’s a plant. What else is
there? What kind of behavior pattern?”
“Well,” Cox said, “the
first thing they noticed was that he wouldn’t
do any work. The Garrison Chief reported that
this Westerburg would wander off outside the Garrison
and just sit, all day long. Just sit.”
“In the sun?”
“Yes. Just sit in the sun.
Then at nightfall he would come back in. When
they asked why he wasn’t working in the jet repair
building he told them he had to be out in the sun.
Then he said ” Cox hesitated.
“Yes? Said what?”
“He said that work was unnatural.
That it was a waste of time. That the only worthwhile
thing was to sit and contemplate outside.”
“What then?”
“Then they asked him how he
got that idea, and then he revealed to them that he
had become a plant.”
“I’m going to have to
talk to him again, I can see,” Harris said.
“And he’s applied for a permanent discharge
from the Patrol? What reason did he give?”
“The same, that he’s a
plant now, and has no more interest in being a Patrolman.
All he wants to do is sit in the sun. It’s
the damnedest thing I ever heard.”
“All right. I think I’ll
visit him in his quarters.” Harris looked
at his watch. “I’ll go over after
dinner.”
“Good luck,” Cox said
gloomily. “But who ever heard of a man turning
into a plant? We told him it wasn’t possible,
but he just smiled at us.”
“I’ll let you know how I make out,”
Harris said.
Harris walked slowly down the hall.
It was after six; the evening meal was over.
A dim concept was coming into his mind, but it was
much too soon to be sure. He increased his pace,
turning right at the end of the hall. Two nurses
passed, hurrying by. Westerburg was quartered
with a buddy, a man who had been injured in a jet
blast and who was now almost recovered. Harris
came to the dorm wing and stopped, checking the numbers
on the doors.
“Can I help you, sir?”
the robot attendant said, gliding up.
“I’m looking for Corporal Westerburg’s
room.”
“Three doors to the right.”
Harris went on. Asteroid Y-3
had only recently been garrisoned and staffed.
It had become the primary check-point to halt and examine
ships entering the system from outer space. The
Garrison made sure that no dangerous bacteria, fungus,
or what-not arrived to infect the system. A nice
asteroid it was, warm, well-watered, with trees and
lakes and lots of sunlight. And the most modern
Garrison in the nine planets. He shook his head,
coming to the third door. He stopped, raising
his hand and knocking.
“Who’s there?” sounded through the
door.
“I want to see Corporal Westerburg.”
The door opened. A bovine youth
with horn-rimmed glasses looked out, a book in his
hand. “Who are you?”
“Doctor Harris.”
“I’m sorry, sir. Corporal Westerburg
is asleep.”
“Would he mind if I woke him
up? I want very much to talk to him.”
Harris peered inside. He could see a neat room,
with a desk, a rug and lamp, and two bunks. On
one of the bunks was Westerburg, lying face up, his
arms folded across his chest, his eyes tightly closed.
“Sir,” the bovine youth
said, “I’m afraid I can’t wake him
up for you, much as I’d like to.”
“You can’t? Why not?”
“Sir, Corporal Westerburg won’t
wake up, not after the sun sets. He just won’t.
He can’t be wakened.”
“Cataleptic? Really?”
“But in the morning, as soon
as the sun comes up, he leaps out of bed and goes
outside. Stays the whole day.”
“I see,” the Doctor said.
“Well, thanks anyhow.” He went back
out into the hall and the door shut after him.
“There’s more to this than I realized,”
he murmured. He went on back the way he had come.
It was a warm sunny day. The
sky was almost free of clouds and a gentle wind moved
through the cedars along the bank of the stream.
There was a path leading from the hospital building
down the slope to the stream. At the stream a
small bridge led over to the other side, and a few
patients were standing on the bridge, wrapped in their
bathrobes, looking aimlessly down at the water.
It took Harris several minutes to
find Westerburg. The youth was not with the other
patients, near or around the bridge. He had gone
farther down, past the cedar trees and out onto a
strip of bright meadow, where poppies and grass grew
everywhere. He was sitting on the stream bank,
on a flat grey stone, leaning back and staring up,
his mouth open a little. He did not notice the
Doctor until Harris was almost beside him.
“Hello,” Harris said softly.
Westerburg opened his eyes, looking
up. He smiled and got slowly to his feet, a graceful,
flowing motion that was rather surprising for a man
of his size. “Hello, Doctor. What
brings you out here?”
“Nothing. Thought I’d get some sun.”
“Here, you can share my rock.”
Westerburg moved over and Harris sat down gingerly,
being careful not to catch his trousers on the sharp
edges of the rock. He lit a cigarette and gazed
silently down at the water. Beside him, Westerburg
had resumed his strange position, leaning back, resting
on his hands, staring up with his eyes shut tight.
“Nice day,” the Doctor said.
“Yes.”
“Do you come here every day?”
“Yes.”
“You like it better out here than inside.”
“I can’t stay inside,” Westerburg
said.
“You can’t? How do you mean, ’can’t’?”
“You would die without air, wouldn’t
you?” the Corporal said.
“And you’d die without sunlight?”
Westerburg nodded.
“Corporal, may I ask you something?
Do you plan to do this the rest of your life, sit
out in the sun on a flat rock? Nothing else?”
Westerburg nodded.
“How about your job? You
went to school for years to become a Patrolman.
You wanted to enter the Patrol very badly. You
were given a fine rating and a first-class position.
How do you feel, giving all that up? You know,
it won’t be easy to get back in again. Do
you realize that?”
“I realize it.”
“And you’re really going to give it all
up?”
“That’s right.”
Harris was silent for a while.
At last he put his cigarette out and turned toward
the youth. “All right, let’s say you
give up your job and sit in the sun. Well, what
happens, then? Someone else has to do the job
instead of you. Isn’t that true? The
job has to be done, your job has to be done.
And if you don’t do it someone else has to.”
“I suppose so.”
“Westerburg, suppose everyone
felt the way you do? Suppose everyone wanted
to sit in the sun all day? What would happen?
No one would check ships coming from outer space.
Bacteria and toxic crystals would enter the system
and cause mass death and suffering. Isn’t
that right?”
“If everyone felt the way I do they wouldn’t
be going into outer space.”
“But they have to. They
have to trade, they have to get minerals and products
and new plants.”
“Why?”
“To keep society going.”
“Why?”
“Well ” Harris gestured.
“People couldn’t live without society.”
Westerburg said nothing to that.
Harris watched him, but the youth did not answer.
“Isn’t that right?” Harris said.
“Perhaps. It’s a
peculiar business, Doctor. You know, I struggled
for years to get through Training. I had to work
and pay my own way. Washed dishes, worked in
kitchens. Studied at night, learned, crammed,
worked on and on. And you know what I think,
now?”
“What?”
“I wish I’d become a plant earlier.”
Doctor Harris stood up. “Westerburg,
when you come inside, will you stop off at my office?
I want to give you a few tests, if you don’t
mind.”
“The shock box?” Westerburg
smiled. “I knew that would be coming around.
Sure, I don’t mind.”
Nettled, Harris left the rock, walking
back up the bank a short distance. “About
three, Corporal?”
The Corporal nodded.
Harris made his way up the hill, to
the path, toward the hospital building. The whole
thing was beginning to become more clear to him.
A boy who had struggled all his life. Financial
insecurity. Idealized goal, getting a Patrol
assignment. Finally reached it, found the load
too great. And on Asteroid Y-3 there was too much
vegetation to look at all day. Primitive identification
and projection on the flora of the asteroid.
Concept of security involved in immobility and permanence.
Unchanging forest.
He entered the building. A robot
orderly stopped him almost at once. “Sir,
Commander Cox wants you urgently, on the vidphone.”
“Thanks.” Harris
strode to his office. He dialed Cox’s letter
and the Commander’s face came presently into
focus. “Cox? This is Harris. I’ve
been out talking to the boy. I’m beginning
to get this lined up, now. I can see the pattern,
too much load too long. Finally gets what he wants
and the idealization shatters under the ”
“Harris!” Cox barked.
“Shut up and listen. I just got a report
from Y-3. They’re sending an express rocket
here. It’s on the way.”
“An express rocket?”
“Five more cases like Westerburg.
All say they’re plants! The Garrison Chief
is worried as hell. Says we must find out
what it is or the Garrison will fall apart, right
away. Do you get me, Harris? Find out what
it is!”
“Yes, sir,” Harris murmured. “Yes,
sir.”
By the end of the week there were
twenty cases, and all, of course, were from Asteroid
Y-3.
Commander Cox and Harris stood together
at the top of the hill, looking gloomily down at the
stream below. Sixteen men and four women sat in
the sun along the bank, none of them moving, none
speaking. An hour had gone by since Cox and Harris
appeared, and in all that time the twenty people below
had not stirred.
“I don’t get it,”
Cox said, shaking his head. “I just absolutely
don’t get it. Harris, is this the beginning
of the end? Is everything going to start cracking
around us? It gives me a hell of a strange feeling
to see those people down there, basking away in the
sun, just sitting and basking.”
“Who’s that man there with the red hair?”
“That’s Ulrich Deutsch.
He was Second in Command at the Garrison. Now
look at him! Sits and dozes with his mouth open
and his eyes shut. A week ago that man was climbing,
going right up to the top. When the Garrison
Chief retires he was supposed to take over. Maybe
another year, at the most. All his life he’s
been climbing to get up there.”
“And now he sits in the sun,” Harris finished.
“That woman. The brunette,
with the short hair. Career woman. Head of
the entire office staff of the Garrison. And the
man beside her. Janitor. And that cute little
gal there, with the bosom. Secretary, just out
of school. All kinds. And I got a note this
morning, three more coming in sometime today.”
Harris nodded. “The strange
thing is they really want to sit
down there. They’re completely rational;
they could do something else, but they just don’t
care to.”
“Well?” Cox said.
“What are you going to do? Have you found
anything? We’re counting on you. Let’s
hear it.”
“I couldn’t get anything
out of them directly,” Harris said, “but
I’ve had some interesting results with the shock
box. Let’s go inside and I’ll show
you.”
“Fine,” Cox turned and
started toward the hospital. “Show me anything
you’ve got. This is serious. Now I
know how Tiberius felt when Christianity showed up
in high places.”
Harris snapped off the light.
The room was pitch black. “I’ll run
this first reel for you. The subject is one of
the best biologists stationed at the Garrison.
Robert Bradshaw. He came in yesterday. I
got a good run from the shock box because Bradshaw’s
mind is so highly differentiated. There’s
a lot of repressed material of a non-rational nature,
more than usual.”
He pressed a switch. The projector
whirred, and on the far wall a three-dimensional image
appeared in color, so real that it might have been
the man himself. Robert Bradshaw was a man of
fifty, heavy-set, with iron grey hair and a square
jaw. He sat in the chair calmly, his hands resting
on the arms, oblivious to the electrodes attached to
his neck and wrist. “There I go,”
Harris said. “Watch.”
His film-image appeared, approaching
Bradshaw. “Now, Mr. Bradshaw,” his
image said, “this won’t hurt you at all,
and it’ll help us a lot.” The image
rotated the controls on the shock box. Bradshaw
stiffened, and his jaw set, but otherwise he gave
no sign. The image of Harris regarded him for
a time and then stepped away from the controls.
“Can you hear me, Mr. Bradshaw?” the image
asked.
“Yes.”
“What is your name?”
“Robert C. Bradshaw.”
“What is your position?”
“Chief Biologist at the check-station on Y-3.”
“Are you there now?”
“No, I’m back on Terra. In a hospital.”
“Why?”
“Because I admitted to the Garrison Chief that
I had become a plant.”
“Is that true? That you are a plant.”
“Yes, in a non-biological sense.
I retain the physiology of a human being, of course.”
“What do you mean, then, that you’re a
plant?”
“The reference is to attitudinal response, to
Weltanschauung.”
“Go on.”
“It is possible for a warm-blooded
animal, an upper primate, to adopt the psychology
of a plant, to some extent.”
“Yes?”
“I refer to this.”
“And the others? They refer to this also?”
“Yes.”
“How did this occur, your adopting this attitude?”
Bradshaw’s image hesitated,
the lips twisting. “See?” Harris said
to Cox. “Strong conflict. He wouldn’t
have gone on, if he had been fully conscious.”
“I ”
“Yes?”
“I was taught to become a plant.”
The image of Harris showed surprise
and interest. “What do you mean, you were
taught to become a plant?”
“They realized my problems and
taught me to become a plant. Now I’m free
from them, the problems.”
“Who? Who taught you?”
“The Pipers.”
“Who? The Pipers? Who are the Pipers?”
There was no answer.
“Mr. Bradshaw, who are the Pipers?”
After a long, agonized pause, the
heavy lips parted. “They live in the woods....”
Harris snapped off the projector,
and the lights came on. He and Cox blinked.
“That was all I could get,” Harris said.
“But I was lucky to get that. He wasn’t
supposed to tell, not at all. That was the thing
they all promised not to do, tell who taught them to
become plants. The Pipers who live in the woods,
on Asteroid Y-3.”
“You got this story from all twenty?”
“No.” Harris grimaced.
“Most of them put up too much fight. I couldn’t
even get this much from them.”
Cox reflected. “The Pipers.
Well? What do you propose to do? Just wait
around until you can get the full story? Is that
your program?”
“No,” Harris said.
“Not at all. I’m going to Y-3 and
find out who the Pipers are, myself.”
The small patrol ship made its landing
with care and precision, its jets choking into final
silence. The hatch slid back and Doctor Henry
Harris found himself staring out at a field, a brown,
sun-baked landing field. At the end of the field
was a tall signal tower. Around the field on all
sides were long grey buildings, the Garrison check-station
itself. Not far off a huge Venusian cruiser was
parked, a vast green hulk, like an enormous lime.
The technicians from the station were swarming all
over it, checking and examining each inch of it for
lethal life-forms and poisons that might have attached
themselves to the hull.
“All out, sir,” the pilot said.
Harris nodded. He took hold of
his two suitcases and stepped carefully down.
The ground was hot underfoot, and he blinked in the
bright sunlight. Jupiter was in the sky, and
the vast planet reflected considerable sunlight down
onto the asteroid.
Harris started across the field, carrying
his suitcases. A field attendant was already
busy opening the storage compartment of the patrol
ship, extracting his trunk. The attendant lowered
the trunk into a waiting dolly and came after him,
manipulating the little truck with bored skill.
As Harris came to the entrance of
the signal tower the gate slid back and a man came
forward, an older man, large and robust, with white
hair and a steady walk.
“How are you, Doctor?”
he said, holding his hand out. “I’m
Lawrence Watts, the Garrison Chief.”
They shook hands. Watts smiled
down at Harris. He was a huge old man, still
regal and straight in his dark blue uniform, with his
gold epaulets sparkling on his shoulders.
“Have a good trip?” Watts
asked. “Come on inside and I’ll have
a drink fixed for you. It gets hot around here,
with the Big Mirror up there.”
“Jupiter?” Harris followed
him inside the building. The signal tower was
cool and dark, a welcome relief. “Why is
the gravity so near Terra’s? I expected
to go flying off like a kangaroo. Is it artificial?”
“No. There’s a dense
core of some kind to the asteroid, some kind of metallic
deposit. That’s why we picked this asteroid
out of all the others. It made the construction
problem much simpler, and it also explains why the
asteroid has natural air and water. Did you see
the hills?”
“The hills?”
“When we get up higher in the
tower we’ll be able to see over the buildings.
There’s quite a natural park here, a regular
little forest, complete with everything you’d
want. Come in here, Harris. This is my office.”
The old man strode at quite a clip, around the corner
and into a large, well-furnished apartment. “Isn’t
this pleasant? I intend to make my last year
here as amiable as possible.” He frowned.
“Of course, with Deutsch gone, I may be here
forever. Oh, well.” He shrugged.
“Sit down, Harris.”
“Thanks.” Harris
took a chair, stretching his legs out. He watched
Watts as he closed the door to the hall. “By
the way, any more cases come up?”
“Two more today,” Watts
was grim. “Makes almost thirty, in all.
We have three hundred men in this station. At
the rate it’s going ”
“Chief, you spoke about a forest
on the asteroid. Do you allow the crew to go
into the forest at will? Or do you restrict them
to the buildings and grounds?”
Watts rubbed his jaw. “Well,
it’s a difficult situation, Harris. I have
to let the men leave the grounds sometimes. They
can see the forest from the buildings, and
as long as you can see a nice place to stretch out
and relax that does it. Once every ten days they
have a full period of rest. Then they go out
and fool around.”
“And then it happens?”
“Yes, I suppose so. But
as long as they can see the forest they’ll want
to go. I can’t help it.”
“I know. I’m not
censuring you. Well, what’s your theory?
What happens to them out there? What do they
do?”
“What happens? Once they
get out there and take it easy for a while they don’t
want to come back and work. It’s boondoggling.
Playing hookey. They don’t want to work,
so off they go.”
“How about this business of their delusions?”
Watts laughed good-naturedly.
“Listen, Harris. You know as well as I do
that’s a lot of poppycock. They’re
no more plants than you or I. They just don’t
want to work, that’s all. When I was a cadet
we had a few ways to make people work. I wish
we could lay a few on their backs, like we used to.”
“You think this is simple goldbricking, then?”
“Don’t you think it is?”
“No,” Harris said.
“They really believe they’re plants.
I put them through the high-frequency shock treatment,
the shock box. The whole nervous system is paralyzed,
all inhibitions stopped cold. They tell the truth,
then. And they said the same thing and
more.”
Watts paced back and forth, his hands
clasped behind his back. “Harris, you’re
a doctor, and I suppose you know what you’re
talking about. But look at the situation here.
We have a garrison, a good modern garrison. We’re
probably the most modern outfit in the system.
Every new device and gadget is here that science can
produce. Harris, this garrison is one vast machine.
The men are parts, and each has his job, the Maintenance
Crew, the Biologists, the Office Crew, the Managerial
Staff.
“Look what happens when one
person steps away from his job. Everything else
begins to creak. We can’t service the bugs
if no one services the machines. We can’t
order food to feed the crews if no one makes out reports,
takes inventories. We can’t direct any kind
of activity if the Second in Command decides to go
out and sit in the sun all day.
“Thirty people, one tenth of
the Garrison. But we can’t run without
them. The Garrison is built that way. If
you take the supports out the whole building falls.
No one can leave. We’re all tied here, and
these people know it. They know they have no
right to do that, run off on their own. No one
has that right anymore. We’re all too tightly
interwoven to suddenly start doing what we want.
It’s unfair to the rest, the majority.”
Harris nodded. “Chief, can I ask you something?”
“What is it?”
“Are there any inhabitants on the asteroid?
Any natives?”
“Natives?” Watts considered.
“Yes, there’s some kind of aborigines
living out there.” He waved vaguely toward
the window.
“What are they like? Have you seen them?”
“Yes, I’ve seen them.
At least, I saw them when we first came here.
They hung around for a while, watching us, then after
a time they disappeared.”
“Did they die off? Diseases of some kind?”
“No. They just just
disappeared. Into their forest. They’re
still there, someplace.”
“What kind of people are they?”
“Well, the story is that they’re
originally from Mars. They don’t look much
like Martians, though. They’re dark, a kind
of coppery color. Thin. Very agile, in their
own way. They hunt and fish. No written language.
We don’t pay much attention to them.”
“I see.” Harris paused.
“Chief, have you ever heard of anything called The
Pipers?”
“The Pipers?” Watts frowned. “No.
Why?”
“The patients mentioned something
called The Pipers. According to Bradshaw, the
Pipers taught him to become a plant. He learned
it from them, a kind of teaching.”
“The Pipers. What are they?”
“I don’t know,”
Harris admitted. “I thought maybe you might
know. My first assumption, of course, was that
they’re the natives. But now I’m
not so sure, not after hearing your description of
them.”
“The natives are primitive savages.
They don’t have anything to teach anybody, especially
a top-flight biologist.”
Harris hesitated. “Chief,
I’d like to go into the woods and look around.
Is that possible?”
“Certainly. I can arrange
it for you. I’ll give you one of the men
to show you around.”
“I’d rather go alone. Is there any
danger?”
“No, none that I know of. Except ”
“Except the Pipers,” Harris
finished. “I know. Well, there’s
only one way to find them, and that’s it.
I’ll have to take my chances.”
“If you walk in a straight line,”
Chief Watts said, “you’ll find yourself
back at the Garrison in about six hours. It’s
a damn small asteroid. There’s a couple
of streams and lakes, so don’t fall in.”
“How about snakes or poisonous insects?”
“Nothing like that reported.
We did a lot of tramping around at first, but it’s
grown back now, the way it was. We never encountered
anything dangerous.”
“Thanks, Chief,” Harris
said. They shook hands. “I’ll
see you before nightfall.”
“Good luck.” The
Chief and his two armed escorts turned and went back
across the rise, down the other side toward the Garrison.
Harris watched them go until they disappeared inside
the building. Then he turned and started into
the grove of trees.
The woods were very silent around
him as he walked. Trees towered up on all sides
of him, huge dark-green trees like eucalyptus.
The ground underfoot was soft with endless leaves
that had fallen and rotted into soil. After a
while the grove of high trees fell behind and he found
himself crossing a dry meadow, the grass and weeds
burned brown in the sun. Insects buzzed around
him, rising up from the dry weed-stalks. Something
scuttled ahead, hurrying through the undergrowth.
He caught sight of a grey ball with many legs, scampering
furiously, its antennæ weaving.
The meadow ended at the bottom of
a hill. He was going up, now, going higher and
higher. Ahead of him an endless expanse of green
rose, acres of wild growth. He scrambled to the
top finally, blowing and panting, catching his breath.
He went on. Now he was going
down again, plunging into a deep gully. Tall
ferns grew, as large as trees. He was entering
a living Jurassic forest, ferns that stretched out
endlessly ahead of him. Down he went, walking
carefully. The air began to turn cold around him.
The floor of the gully was damp and silent; underfoot
the ground was almost wet.
He came out on a level table.
It was dark, with the ferns growing up on all sides,
dense growths of ferns, silent and unmoving. He
came upon a natural path, an old stream bed, rough
and rocky, but easy to follow. The air was thick
and oppressive. Beyond the ferns he could see
the side of the next hill, a green field rising up.
Something grey was ahead. Rocks,
piled-up boulders, scattered and stacked here and
there. The stream bed led directly to them.
Apparently this had been a pool of some kind, a stream
emptying from it. He climbed the first of the
boulders awkwardly, feeling his way up. At the
top he paused, resting again.
As yet he had had no luck. So
far he had not met any of the natives. It would
be through them that he would find the mysterious Pipers
that were stealing the men away, if such really existed.
If he could find the natives, talk to them, perhaps
he could find out something. But as yet he had
been unsuccessful. He looked around. The
woods were very silent. A slight breeze moved
through the ferns, rustling them, but that was all.
Where were the natives? Probably they had a settlement
of some sort, huts, a clearing. The asteroid
was small; he should be able to find them by nightfall.
He started down the rocks. More
rocks rose up ahead and he climbed them. Suddenly
he stopped, listening. Far off, he could hear
a sound, the sound of water. Was he approaching
a pool of some kind? He went on again, trying
to locate the sound. He scrambled down rocks and
up rocks, and all around him there was silence, except
for the splashing of distant water. Maybe a waterfall,
water in motion. A stream. If he found the
stream he might find the natives.
The rocks ended and the stream bed
began again, but this time it was wet, the bottom
muddy and overgrown with moss. He was on the right
track; not too long ago this stream had flowed, probably
during the rainy season. He went up on the side
of the stream, pushing through the ferns and vines.
A golden snake slid expertly out of his path.
Something glinted ahead, something sparkling through
the ferns. Water. A pool. He hurried,
pushing the vines aside and stepping out, leaving them
behind.
He was standing on the edge of a pool,
a deep pool sunk in a hollow of grey rocks, surrounded
by ferns and vines. The water was clear and bright,
and in motion, flowing in a waterfall at the far end.
It was beautiful, and he stood watching, marveling
at it, the undisturbed quality of it. Untouched,
it was. Just as it had always been, probably.
As long as the asteroid existed. Was he the first
to see it? Perhaps. It was so hidden, so
concealed by the ferns. It gave him a strange
feeling, a feeling almost of ownership. He stepped
down a little toward the water.
And it was then he noticed her.
The girl was sitting on the far edge
of the pool, staring down into the water, resting
her head on one drawn-up knee. She had been bathing;
he could see that at once. Her coppery body was
still wet and glistening with moisture, sparkling
in the sun. She had not seen him. He stopped,
holding his breath, watching her.
She was lovely, very lovely, with
long dark hair that wound around her shoulders and
arms. Her body was slim, very slender, with a
supple grace to it that made him stare, accustomed
as he was to various forms of anatomy. How silent
she was! Silent and unmoving, staring down at
the water. Time passed, strange, unchanging time,
as he watched the girl. Time might even have
ceased, with the girl sitting on the rock staring
into the water, and the rows of great ferns behind
her, as rigid as if they had been painted there.
All at once the girl looked up.
Harris shifted, suddenly conscious of himself as an
intruder. He stepped back. “I’m
sorry,” he murmured. “I’m from
the Garrison. I didn’t mean to come poking
around.”
She nodded without speaking.
“You don’t mind?” Harris asked presently.
“No.”
So she spoke Terran! He moved
a little toward her, around the side of the pool.
“I hope you don’t mind my bothering you.
I won’t be on the asteroid very long. This
is my first day here. I just arrived from Terra.”
She smiled faintly.
“I’m a doctor. Henry
Harris.” He looked down at her, at the slim
coppery body, gleaming in the sunlight, a faint sheen
of moisture on her arms and thighs. “You
might be interested in why I’m here.”
He paused. “Maybe you can even help me.”
She looked up a little. “Oh?”
“Would you like to help me?”
She smiled. “Yes. Of course.”
“That’s good. Mind
if I sit down?” He looked around and found himself
a flat rock. He sat down slowly, facing her.
“Cigarette?”
“No.”
“Well, I’ll have one.”
He lit up, taking a deep breath. “You see,
we have a problem at the Garrison. Something
has been happening to some of the men, and it seems
to be spreading. We have to find out what causes
it or we won’t be able to run the Garrison.”
He waited for a moment. She nodded
slightly. How silent she was! Silent and
unmoving. Like the ferns.
“Well, I’ve been able
to find out a few things from them, and one very interesting
fact stands out. They keep saying that something
called called The Pipers are responsible
for their condition. They say the Pipers taught
them ” He stopped. A strange
look had flitted across her dark, small face.
“Do you know the Pipers?”
She nodded.
Acute satisfaction flooded over Harris.
“You do? I was sure the natives would know.”
He stood up again. “I was sure they would,
if the Pipers really existed. Then they do exist,
do they?”
“They exist.”
Harris frowned. “And they’re here,
in the woods?”
“Yes.”
“I see.” He ground
his cigarette out impatiently. “You don’t
suppose there’s any chance you could take me
to them, do you?”
“Take you?”
“Yes. I have this problem
and I have to solve it. You see, the Base Commander
on Terra has assigned this to me, this business about
the Pipers. It has to be solved. And I’m
the one assigned to the job. So it’s important
to me to find them. Do you see? Do you understand?”
She nodded.
“Well, will you take me to them?”
The girl was silent. For a long
time she sat, staring down into the water, resting
her head against her knee. Harris began to become
impatient. He fidgeted back and forth, resting
first on one leg and then on the other.
“Well, will you?” he said
again. “It’s important to the whole
Garrison. What do you say?” He felt around
in his pockets. “Maybe I could give you
something. What do I have....” He brought
out his lighter. “I could give you my lighter.”
The girl stood up, rising slowly,
gracefully, without motion or effort. Harris’
mouth fell open. How supple she was, gliding to
her feet in a single motion! He blinked.
Without effort she had stood, seemingly without change.
All at once she was standing instead of sitting, standing
and looking calmly at him, her small face expressionless.
“Will you?” he said.
“Yes. Come along.” She turned
away, moving toward the row of ferns.
Harris followed quickly, stumbling
across the rocks. “Fine,” he said.
“Thanks a lot. I’m very interested
to meet these Pipers. Where are you taking me,
to your village? How much time do we have before
nightfall?”
The girl did not answer. She
had entered the ferns already, and Harris quickened
his pace to keep from losing her. How silently
she glided!
“Wait,” he called. “Wait for
me.”
The girl paused, waiting for him,
slim and lovely, looking silently back.
He entered the ferns, hurrying after her.
“Well, I’ll be damned!”
Commander Cox said. “It sure didn’t
take you long.” He leaped down the steps
two at a time. “Let me give you a hand.”
Harris grinned, lugging his heavy
suitcases. He set them down and breathed a sigh
of relief. “It isn’t worth it,”
he said. “I’m going to give up taking
so much.”
“Come on inside. Soldier,
give him a hand.” A Patrolman hurried over
and took one of the suitcases. The three men
went inside and down the corridor to Harris’
quarters. Harris unlocked the door and the Patrolman
deposited his suitcase inside.
“Thanks,” Harris said.
He set the other down beside it. “It’s
good to be back, even for a little while.”
“A little while?”
“I just came back to settle
my affairs. I have to return to Y-3 tomorrow
morning.”
“Then you didn’t solve the problem?”
“I solved it, but I haven’t
cured it. I’m going back and get
to work right away. There’s a lot to be
done.”
“But you found out what it is?”
“Yes. It was just what the men said.
The Pipers.”
“The Pipers do exist?”
“Yes.” Harris nodded.
“They do exist.” He removed his coat
and put it over the back of the chair. Then he
went to the window and let it down. Warm spring
air rushed into the room. He settled himself on
the bed, leaning back.
“The Pipers exist, all right in
the minds of the Garrison crew! To the crew,
the Pipers are real. The crew created them.
It’s a mass hypnosis, a group projection, and
all the men there have it, to some degree.”
“How did it start?”
“Those men on Y-3 were sent
there because they were skilled, highly-trained men
with exceptional ability. All their lives they’ve
been schooled by complex modern society, fast tempo
and high integration between people. Constant
pressure toward some goal, some job to be done.
“Those men are put down suddenly
on an asteroid where there are natives living the
most primitive of existence, completely vegetable lives.
No concept of goal, no concept of purpose, and hence
no ability to plan. The natives live the way
the animals live, from day to day, sleeping, picking
food from the trees. A kind of Garden-of-Eden
existence, without struggle or conflict.”
“So? But ”
“Each of the Garrison crew sees
the natives and unconsciously thinks of his
own early life, when he was a child, when he
had no worries, no responsibilities, before he joined
modern society. A baby lying in the sun.
“But he can’t admit this
to himself! He can’t admit that he might
want to live like the natives, to lie and sleep
all day. So he invents The Pipers, the idea of
a mysterious group living in the woods who trap him,
lead him into their kind of life. Then he can
blame them, not himself. They ‘teach’
him to become a part of the woods.”
“What are you going to do? Have the woods
burned?”
“No.” Harris shook
his head. “That’s not the answer;
the woods are harmless. The answer is psychotherapy
for the men. That’s why I’m going
right back, so I can begin work. They’ve
got to be made to see that the Pipers are inside them,
their own unconscious voices calling to them to give
up their responsibilities. They’ve got to
be made to realize that there are no Pipers, at least,
not outside themselves. The woods are harmless
and the natives have nothing to teach anyone.
They’re primitive savages, without even a written
language. We’re seeing a psychological
projection by a whole Garrison of men who want to lay
down their work and take it easy for a while.”
The room was silent.
“I see,” Cox said presently.
“Well, it makes sense.” He got to
his feet. “I hope you can do something
with the men when you get back.”
“I hope so, too,” Harris
agreed. “And I think I can. After all,
it’s just a question of increasing their self-awareness.
When they have that the Pipers will vanish.”
Cox nodded. “Well, you
go ahead with your unpacking, Doc. I’ll
see you at dinner. And maybe before you leave,
tomorrow.”
“Fine.”
Harris opened the door and the Commander
went out into the hall. Harris closed the door
after him and then went back across the room.
He looked out the window for a moment, his hands in
his pockets.
It was becoming evening, the air was
turning cool. The sun was just setting as he
watched, disappearing behind the buildings of the city
surrounding the hospital. He watched it go down.
Then he went over to his two suitcases.
He was tired, very tired from his trip. A great
weariness was beginning to descend over him. There
were so many things to do, so terribly many. How
could he hope to do them all? Back to the asteroid.
And then what?
He yawned, his eyes closing.
How sleepy he was! He looked over at the bed.
Then he sat down on the edge of it and took his shoes
off. So much to do, the next day.
He put his shoes in the corner of
the room. Then he bent over, unsnapping one of
the suitcases. He opened the suitcase. From
it he took a bulging gunnysack. Carefully, he
emptied the contents of the sack out on the floor.
Dirt, rich soft dirt. Dirt he had collected during
his last hours there, dirt he had carefully gathered
up.
When the dirt was spread out on the
floor he sat down in the middle of it. He stretched
himself out, leaning back. When he was fully
comfortable he folded his hands across his chest and
closed his eyes. So much work to do But
later on, of course. Tomorrow. How warm the
dirt was....
He was sound asleep in a moment.