By
William Fitzgerald Jenkins
Legends do, of course, get somewhat
distorted in the passage of time. In the future,
the passage across space to other planets may cause
a slight modification here and there ...
President O’Hanrahan of the
planetary government of Eire listened unhappily to
his official guest. He had to, because Sean O’Donohue
was chairman of the Dail of Eire on Earth Committee
on the Condition of the Planet Eire. He could
cut off all support from the still-struggling colony
if he chose. He was short and opinionated, he
had sharp, gimlet eyes, he had bristling white hair
that once had been red, and he was the grandfather
of Moira O’Donohue, who’d traveled to Eire
with him on a very uncomfortable spaceship. That
last was a mark in his favor, but now he stood four-square
upon the sagging porch of the presidential mansion
of Eire, and laid down the law.
“I’ve been here three
days.” he told the president sternly, while his
granddaughter looked sympathetic, “and I’m
of the opinion that there’s been shenanigans
goin’ on to keep this fine world from becoming’
what it was meant for a place for the people
of Eire on Earth to emigrate to when there was more
of them than Erin has room for. Which is now!”
“We’ve had difficulties ”
began the president uneasily.
“This world should be ready!”
snapped Sean O’Donohue accusingly. “It
should be waitin’ for the Caseys and Bradys and
Fitzpatricks and other fine Erse people to move to
and thrive on while the rest of the galaxy goes to
pot with its new-fangled notions. That’s
the reason for this world’s very existence.
What set aside Erin on Earth, where our ancestors
lived an’ where their descendants are breathin’
down each other’s necks because there’s
so many of them? There was no snakes there!
St. Patrick drove them out. What sets this world
apart from all the other livable planets men have
put down their smelly spaceships on? There’s
no snakes here! St. Patrick has great influence
up in Heaven. He knew his fine Erse people would
presently need more room than there was on Earth for
them. So he’d a world set aside, and marked
by the sign that no least trace of a serpent could
exist on it. No creature like the one that blarneyed
Mother Eve could be here! No ”
“Our trouble’s been dinies,”
began the president apologetically.
But he froze. Something dark
and sinuous and complacent oozed around the corner
of the presidential mansion. The president of
Eire sweated. He recognized the dark object.
He’d believed it safely put away in pleasant
confinement until the Dail Committee went away.
But it wasn’t. It was Timothy, the amiable
six-foot black snake who faithfully and cordially
did his best to keep the presidential mansion from
falling down. Without him innumerable mouse-sized
holes, gnawed by mouse-sized dinies, would assuredly
have brought about its collapse. The president
was grateful, but he’d meant to keep Timothy
out of sight. Timothy must have escaped and as
a faithful snake, loyal to his duty, he’d wriggled
straight back to the presidential mansion.
Like all Eire, he undoubtedly knew
of the pious tradition that St. Patrick had brought
the snakes to Eire, and he wasn’t one to let
St. Patrick down. So he’d returned and
doubtless patrolled all the diny tunnels in the sagging
structure. He’d cleaned out any miniature,
dinosaurlike creatures who might be planning to eat
some more nails. He now prepared to nap, with
a clear conscience. But if Sean O’Donohue
saw him !
Perspiration stood out on President
O’Hanrahan’s forehead. The droplets
joined and ran down his nose.
“It’s evident,”
said the chairman of the Dail Committee, with truculence,
“that we’re a pack of worthless, finagling’
and maybe even Protestant renegades from the ways
an’ the traditions of your fathers! There
is been shenanigans goin’ on! I’ll
find ’em!”
The president could not speak, with
Timothy in full view. But then what was practically
a miracle took place. A diny popped out of a hole
in the turf. He looked interestedly about.
He was all of three inches long, with red eyes and
a blue tail, and in every proportion he was a miniature
of the extinct dinosaurs of Earth. But he was
an improved model. The dinies of Eire were fitted
by evolution or Satan to plague
human settlers. They ate their crops, destroyed
their homes, devoured their tools, and when other
comestibles turned up they’d take care of them,
too.
This diny surveyed its surroundings.
The presidential mansion looked promising. The
diny moved toward it. But Timothy nap
plans abandoned flung himself at the diny
like the crack of a whip. The diny plunged back
into its hole. Timothy hurtled after it in pursuit.
He disappeared.
The president of Eire breathed.
He’d neglected that matter for some minutes,
it seemed. He heard a voice continuing, formidably:
“And I know ye’ll try
to hide the shenanigans that’ve destroyed all
the sacrifices Earth’s made to have Eire a true
Erse colony, ready for Erse lads and colleens to move
to and have room for their children and their grandchildren
too. I know ye’ll try! But unless I
do find out not another bit of help will
this colony get from Earth! No more tools!
No more machinery that ye can’t have worn out!
No more provisions that ye should be raisin’
for yourselves! Your cold-storage plant should
be bulgin’ with food! It’s near empty!
It will not be refilled! And even the ship that
we pay to have stop here every three months, for mail no
ship!”
“It’s the dinies,”
said the president feebly. “They’re
a great trouble to us, sir. They’re our
great handicap.”
“Blather and nonsense!”
snapped Sean O’Donohue. “They’re
no bigger than mice! Ye could’ve trapped
’em! Ye could’ve raised cats!
Don’t tell me that fancy-colored little lizards
could hinder a world especially set aside by the intercession
of St. Patrick for the Erse people to thrive on!
The token’s plain! There’s no snakes!
And with such a sign to go by, there must’ve
been shenanigans goin’ on to make things go wrong!
And till those shenanigans are exposed an’ stopped there’ll
be no more help from Earth for ye blaggards!”
He stamped his way into the presidential
mansion. The door slammed shut. Moira, his
granddaughter, regarded the president with sympathy.
He looked bedraggled and crushed. He mopped his
forehead. He did not raise his eyes to her.
It was bad enough to be president of a planetary government
that couldn’t even pay his salary, so there were
patches in his breeches that Moira must have noticed.
It was worse that the colony was, as a whole, entirely
too much like the remaining shanty areas in Eire back
on Earth. But it was tragic that it was ridiculous
for any man on Eire to ask a girl from Earth to join
him on so unpromising a planet.
He said numbly:
“I’ll be wishing you good morning, Moira.”
He moved away, his chin sunk on his
breast. Moira watched him go. She didn’t
seem happy. Then, fifty yards from the mansion,
a luridly colored something leaped out of a hole.
It was a diny some eight inches long, in enough of
a hurry to say that something appalling was after
it. It landed before the president and took off
again for some far horizon. Then something sinuous
and black dropped out of a tree upon it and instantly
violent action took place in a patch of dust.
A small cloud arose. The president watched, with
morbid interest, as the sporting event took place.
Moira stared, incredulous. Then,
out of the hole from which the diny had leaped, a
dark round head appeared. It could have been Timothy.
But he saw that this diny was disposed of. That
was that. Timothy if it was Timothy withdrew
to search further among diny tunnels about the presidential
mansion.
Half an hour later the president told
the solicitor general of Eire about it. He was
bitter.
“And when it was over, there
was Moira starin’ dazed-like from the porch,
and the be-damned snake picked up the diny it’d
killed and started off to dine on it in private.
But I was in the way. So the snake waited, polite,
with the diny in its mouth, for me to move on.
But it looked exactly like he’d brought over
the diny for me to admire, like a cat’ll show
dead mice to a person she thinks will be interested!”
“Holy St. Patrick!” said
the solicitor general, appalled. “What’ll
happen now?”
“I reason,” said the president
morbidly, “she’ll tell her grandfather,
and he’ll collar somebody and use those gimlet
eyes on him and the poor omadhoum will blurt
out that on Eire here it’s known that St. Patrick
brought the snakes and is the more reverenced for it.
And that’ll mean there’ll be no more ships
or food or tools from Earth, and it’ll be lucky
if we’re evacuated before the planet’s
left abandoned.”
The solicitor general’s expression
became one of pure hopelessness.
“Then the jig’s up,”
he said gloomily. “I’m thinkin’,
Mr. President, we’d better have a cabinet meeting
on it.”
“What’s the use,”
demanded the president. “I won’t leave!
I’ll stay here, alone though I may be.
There’s nothing left in life for me anywhere,
but at least, as the only human left on Eire I’ll
be able to spend the rest of my years knockin’
dinies on the head for what they’ve done!”
Then, suddenly, he bellowed. “Who let loose
the snakes! I’ll have his heart’s
blood ”
The Chancellor of the Exchequer peered
around the edge of the door into the cabinet meeting
room. He saw the rest of the cabinet of Eire
assembled. Relieved, he entered. Something
stirred in his pocket and he pulled out a reproachful
snake. He said:
“Don’t be indignant, now!
You were walkin’ on the public street. If
Sean O’Donohue had seen you ”
He added to the other members of the cabinet:
“The other two members of the Dail Committee
seem to be good, honest, drinkin’ men.
One of them now the shipbuilder I think
it was wanted a change of scenery from
lookin’ at the bottom of a glass. I took
him for a walk. I showed him a bunch of dinies
playin’ leapfrog tryin’ to get one of
their number up to a rain spout so he could bite off
pieces and drop ’em down to the rest. They
were all colors and it was quite somethin’ to
look at. The committeeman good man
that he is! staggered a bit and looked
again and said grave that whatever of evil might be
said of Eire, nobody could deny that its whisky had
imagination!”
He looked about the cabinet room.
There was a hole in the baseboard underneath the sculptured
coat of arms of the colony world. He put the
snake down on the floor beside the hole. With
an air of offended dignity, the snake slithered into
the dark opening.
“Now what’s
the meeting for?” he demanded. “I’ll
tell you immediate that if money’s required
it’s impractical.”
President O’Hanrahan said morbidly:
“‘Twas called, it seems,
to put the curse o’ Cromwell on whoever let
the black snakes loose. But they’d been
cooped up, and they knew they were not keepin’
the dinies down, and they got worried over the work
they were neglectin’. So they took turns
diggin’, like prisoners in a penitentiary, and
presently they broke out and like the faithful creatures
they are they set anxious to work on their backlog
of diny-catchin’. Which they’re doin’.
They’ve ruined us entirely, but they meant well.”
The minister of Information asked
apprehensively: “What will O’Donohue
do when he finds out they’re here?”
“He’s not found out yet,”
said the president without elation. “Moira
didn’t tell him. She’s an angel!
But he’s bound to learn. And then if he
doesn’t detonate with the rage in him, he’ll
see to it that all of us are murdered slowly,
for treason to the Erse and blasphemy directed at
St. Patrick.” Then the president said with
a sort of yearning pride: “D’ye know
what Moira offered to do? She said she’d
taken biology at college, and she’d try to solve
the problem of the dinies. The darlin’!”
“Bein’ gathered together,”
observed the chief justice, “we might as well
try again to think of somethin’ plausible.”
“We need a good shenanigan,”
agreed the president unhappily. “But what
could it be? Has anybody the trace of an idea?”
The cabinet went into session.
The trouble was, of course, that the Erse colony on
Eire was a bust. The first colonists built houses,
broke ground, planted crops and encountered
dinies. Large ones, fifty and sixty feet long,
with growing families. They had thick bodies with
unlikely bony excrescences, they had long necks which
ended in very improbable small heads, and they had
long tapering tails which would knock over a man or
a fence post or the corner of a house, impartially,
if they happened to swing that way. They were
not bright.
That they ate the growing crops might
be expected, though cursed. But they ate wire
fences. The colonists at first waited for them
to die of indigestion. But they digested the
fences. Then between bales of more normal foodstuffs
they browsed on the corrugated-iron roofs of houses.
Again the colonists vengefully expected dyspepsia.
They digested the roofs, too. Presently the lumbering
creatures nibbled at axes the heads, not
the handles. They went on to the plows. When
they gathered sluggishly about a ground-car and began
to lunch on it, the colonists did not believe.
But it was true.
The dinies’ teeth weren’t
mere calcium phosphate, like other beasts. An
amateur chemist found out that they were an organically
deposited boron carbide, which is harder than any
other substance but crystallized carbon diamond.
In fact, diny teeth, being organic, seemed to be an
especially hard form of boron carbide. Dinies
could chew iron. They could masticate steel.
They could grind up and swallow anything but tool-steel
reinforced with diamond chips. The same amateur
chemist worked it out that the surface soil of the
planet Eire was deficient in iron and ferrous compounds.
The dinies needed iron. They got it.
The big dinies were routed by burning
torches in the hands of angry colonists. When
scorched often enough, their feeble brains gathered
the idea that they were unwelcome. They went
lumbering away.
They were replaced by lesser dinies,
approximately the size of kangaroos. They also
ate crops. They also hungered for iron. To
them steel cables were the equivalent of celery, and
they ate iron pipe as if it were spaghetti. The
industrial installations of the colony were their
special targets. The colonists unlimbered guns.
They shot the dinies. Ultimately they seemed
to thin out. But once a month was shoot-a-diny
day on Eire, and the populace turned out to clear the
environs of their city of Tara.
Then came the little dinies.
Some were as small as two inches in length. Some
were larger. All were cute. Colonists’
children wanted to make pets of them until it was
discovered that miniature they might be, but harmless
they were not. Tiny diny-teeth, smaller than the
heads of pins, were still authentic boron carbide.
Dinies kept as pets cheerily gnawed away wood and
got at the nails of which their boxes were made.
They ate the nails.
Then, being free, they extended their
activities. They and their friends tunneled busily
through the colonists’ houses. They ate
nails. They ate screws. They ate bolts,
nuts, the nails out of shoes, pocket knives and pants
buttons, zippers, wire staples and the tacks out of
upholstery. Gnawing even threads and filings of
metal away, they made visible gaps in the frames and
moving parts of farm tractors.
Moreover, it appeared that their numbers
previously had been held down by the paucity of ferrous
compounds in their regular diet. The lack led
to a low birth rate. Now, supplied with great
quantities of iron by their unremitting industry,
they were moved to prodigies of multiplication.
The chairman of the Dail Committee
on the Condition of the Planet Eire had spoken of
them scornfully as equal to mice. They were much
worse. The planetary government needed at least
a pied piper or two, but it tried other measures.
It imported cats. Descendants of the felines of
Earth still survived, but one had only to look at their
frustrated, neurotic expressions to know that they
were failures. The government set traps.
The dinies ate their springs and metal parts.
It offered bounties for dead dinies. But the
supply of dinies was inexhaustible, and the supply
of money was not. It had to be stopped.
Then upon the spaceport of Eire a
certain Captain Patrick Brannicut, of Boston, Earth,
descended. It was his second visit to Eire.
On the first he’d learned of the trouble.
On his second he brought what still seemed the most
probable solution. He landed eighteen hundred
adult black snakes, two thousand teen-agers of the
same species, and two crates of soft-shelled eggs
he guaranteed to hatch into fauna of the same kind.
He took away all the cash on the planet. The government
was desperate.
But the snakes chased dinies with
enthusiasm. They pounced upon dinies while the
public watched. They lay in wait for dinies, they
publicly digested dinies, and they went pouring down
into any small hole in the ground from which a diny
had appeared or into which one vanished. They
were superior to traps. They did not have to be
set or emptied. They did not need bait.
They were self-maintaining and even self-reproducing except
that snakes when overfed tend to be less romantic
than when hungry. In ten years a story began encouraged
by the Ministry of Information to the effect
that St. Patrick had brought the snakes to Eire, and
it was certain that if they didn’t wipe out
the dinies, they assuredly kept the dinies from wiping
out the colony. And the one hope of making Eire
into a splendid new center of Erse culture and tradition including
a reverence for St. Patrick lay in the
belief that some day the snakes would gain a permanent
upper hand.
Out near the spaceport there was an
imported monument to St. Patrick. It showed him
pointing somewhere with his bishop’s staff, while
looking down at a group of snakes near his feet.
The sculptor intended to portray St. Patrick telling
the snakes to get the hell out of Eire. But on
Eire it was sentimentally regarded as St. Patrick telling
the snakes to go increase and multiply.
But nobody dared tell that to Sean
O’Donohue! It was past history, in a way,
but also it was present fact. On the day of the
emergency cabinet meeting it was appalling fact.
Without snakes the planet Eire could not continue
to be inhabited, because of the little dinies.
But the Republic of Eire on Earth would indignantly
disown any colony that had snakes in it. And
the colony wasn’t ready yet to be self-supporting.
The cabinet discussed the matter gloomily. They
were too dispirited to do more. But Moira the
darlin’ did research.
It was strictly college-freshman-biology-lab
research. It didn’t promise much, even
to her. But it gave her an excuse to talk anxiously
and hopefully to the president when he took the Dail
Committee to McGillicuddy Island to look at the big
dinies there, while the populace tried to get the
snakes out of sight again.
Most of the island lay two miles off
the continent named for County Kerry back on Earth.
At one point a promontory lessened the distance greatly,
and at one time there’d been a causeway there.
It had been built with great pains, and with pains
destroyed.
The president explained as the boat
bearing the committee neared the island.
“The big dinies,” he said
sadly, “trampled the fences and houses and ate
up the roofs and tractors. It could not be borne.
They could be driven away with torches, but they came
back. They could be killed, but the people could
only dispose of so many tons of carcasses. Remember,
the big males run sixty feet long, and the most girlish
females run forty. You wouldn’t believe
the new-hatched babies! They were a great trial,
in the early days!”
Sean O’Donohue snorted.
He bristled. He and the other two of the committee
had been dragged away from the city of Tara. He
suspected shenanigans going on behind his back.
They did. His associates looked bleary-eyed.
They’d been treated cordially, and they were
not impassioned leaders of the Erse people, like the
O’Donohue. One of them was a ship builder
and the other a manufacturer of precision machinery,
elected to the Dail for no special reason. They’d
come on this junket partly to get away from their
troubles and their wives. The shortage of high-precision
tools was a trouble to both of them, but they were
forgetting it fully.
“So the causeway was built,”
explained President O’Hanrahan. “We
drove the big beasts over, and rounded up all we could
find drivin’ them with torches and
then we broke down the causeway. So there they
are on McGillicuddy Island. They don’t
swim.”
The boat touched ground a
rocky, uninviting shore. The solicitor general
and the Chancellor of the Exchequer hopped ashore.
They assisted the committee members to land.
They moved on. The president started to follow
but Moira said anxiously:
“Wait a bit. I’ve
something to tell you. I ... said I’d experiment
with the dinies. I did. I learned something.”
“Did you now?” asked the
president. His tone was at once admiration and
despair. “It’s a darlin’ you
are, Moira, but ”
“I ... wondered how they knew
where iron was,” said Moira hopefully, “and
I found out. They smell it.”
“Ah, they do, do they!”
said the president with tender reverence. “But
I have to tell you, Moira, that ”
“And I proved it!” said
Moira, searching his face with her eyes. “If
you change a stimulus and a specimen reacts, then its
reaction is to the change. So I made the metal
smell stronger.”
President O’Hanrahan blinked at her.
“I ... heated it,” said
Moira. “You know how hot metal smells.
I heated a steel hairpin and the dinies came out of
holes in the wall, right away! The smell drew
them. It was astonishing!”
The president looked at her with a strange expression.
“That’s ... that’s
all I had time to try,” said Moira. “It
was yesterday afternoon. There was an official
dinner. I had to go. You remember!
So I locked up the dinies ”
“Moira darlin’,”
said President O’Hanrahan gently, “you
don’t lock up dinies. They gnaw through
steel safes. They make tunnels and nests in electric
dynamos. You don’t lock up dinies, darlin’!”
“But I did!” she insisted.
“They’re still locked up. I looked
just before we started for here!”
The president looked at her very unhappily.
“There’s no need for shenanigans
between us, Moira!” Then he said: “Couldn’t
ye be mistaken? Keepin’ dinies locked up
is like bottlin’ moonlight or writin’
down the color of Moira O’Donohue’s eyes
or ” He stopped. “How
did ye do it?”
“The way you keep specimens,”
she told him. “When I was in college we
did experiments on frogs. They’re cold-blooded
just like dinies. If you let them stay lively,
they’ll wear themselves out trying to get away.
So you put them in a refrigerator. In the vegetable
container. They don’t freeze there, but
they do ... get torpid. They just lay still till
you let them warm up again. To room temperature.”
The president of the planet Eire stared.
His mouth dropped open. He blinked and blinked
and blinked. Then he whooped. He reached
forward and took Moira into his arms. He kissed
her thoroughly.
“Darlin’!” he said
in a broken voice. “Sit still while I drive
this boat back to the mainland! I’ve to
get back to Tara immediate! You’ve done
it, my darlin’, you’ve done it, and it’s
a great day for the Irish! It’s even a
great day for the Erse! It’s your birthday
will be a planetary holiday long after we’re
married and our grandchildren think I’m as big
a nuisance as your grandfather Sean O’Donohue!
It’s a fine grand marriage we’ll be havin’ ”
He kissed her again and whirled the
boat about and sent it streaking for the mainland.
From time to time he whooped. Rather more frequently,
he hugged Moira exuberantly. And she tended to
look puzzled, but she definitely looked pleased.
Behind them, of course, the Committee
of the Dail on the Condition of the Planet Eire explored
McGillicuddy Island. They saw the big dinies sixty-footers
and fifty-footers and lesser ones. The dinies
ambled aimlessly about the island. Now and again
they reached up on elongated, tapering necks with
incongruously small heads on them, to snap off foliage
that looked a great deal like palm leaves. Now
and again, without enthusiasm, one of them stirred
the contents of various green-scummed pools and apparently
extracted some sort of nourishment from it. They
seemed to have no intellectual diversions. They
were not interested in the visitors, but one of the
committee members not Moira’s grandfather shivered
a little.
“I’ve dreamed about them,”
he said plaintively, “but even when I was dreamin’
I didn’t believe it!”
Two youthful dinies they
would weigh no more than a couple of tons apiece engaged
in languid conflict. They whacked each other with
blows which would have destroyed elephants. But
they weren’t really interested. One of
them sat down and looked bored. The other sat
down. Presently, reflectively, he gnawed at a
piece of whitish rock. The gnawing made an excruciating
sound. It made one’s flesh crawl. The
diny dozed off. His teeth had cut distinct, curved
grooves in the stone. The manufacturer of precision
machinery back on Earth turned
pale.
“L-let’s get out of here!”
The committee and the two members
of the cabinet returned to the shore. There was
no boat. It was far away, headed for the mainland.
“Shenanigans!” said Sean
O’Donohue in a voice that would have curdled
sulphuric acid. “I warned him no shenanigans!
The dirty young bog-trotter’s left us here to
be eaten up by the beasts!”
The solicitor general said hastily:
“Divvil a bit of it, sir. We’re his
friends and he left us in the same boat no,
he left us out of the same boat. It must’ve
been that something important occurred to him ”
But it was not convincing. It
seemed highly unconvincing, later, because some long-delayed
perception produced a reaction in the dinies’
minuscule brains. They became aware of their visitors.
They appeared, in a slow-motion fashion, to become
interested in them. Slowly, heavily, numbly,
they congregated about them the equivalent
of a herd of several hundred elephants of all the
colors of the rainbow, with small heads wearing plaintive
but persistent expressions. Long necks reached
out hopefully.
“The devil!” said the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, fretfully. “I’m
just thinkin’. You’ve iron in your
shoes and mainsprings in your watches and maybe pocket
knives in your pockets. The dinies have a longin’
for iron, and they go after it. They’ll
eat anything in the world that’s got the barest
bit of a taste of iron in it! Oh, it’s perfectly
all right, of course, but ye’ll have to throw
stones at them till the boat comes back. Better,
find a good stout stick to whack them with. Only
don’t let ’em get behind ye!”
“Ye will?” roared the
solicitor general, vengefully. “Take that!”
Whack! “Tryin’ to take somethin’
out of the gentleman’s hip pocket an’
aimin’ to grab the rump beyond it just to make
sure!”
Whack! A large head moved plaintively
away. But another reached hopefully forward,
and another. The dinies were not bright.
The three committeemen and two members of the cabinet
were thigh-deep in water when the boat came back.
They still whacked valorously if wearily at intrusive
diny heads. They still had made no progress in
implanting the idea that the dinies should go away.
The men from the mainland hauled them
into the boat. They admitted that the president
had returned to Tara. Sean O’Donohue concluded
that he had gone back to supervise some shenanigans.
He had. On the way to the mainland Sean O’Donohue
ground his teeth. On arrival he learned that
the president had taken Moira with him. He ground
his teeth. “Shenanigans!” he cried
hoarsely. “After him!” He stamped
his feet. His fury was awe-inspiring. When
the ground-car drivers started back to Tara, Sean
O’Donohue was a small, rigid embodiment of raging
death and destruction held only temporarily in leash.
On the way, even his companions of
the committee were uneasy. But one of them, now
and again, brought out a small piece of whitish rock
and regarded it incredulously. It was not an
unusual kind of rock. It was ordinary milky quartz.
But it had tooth marks on it. Some diny, at some
time, had gnawed casually upon it as if it were soft
as cheese.
Faint cheering could be heard in the
distance as the ground-cars carrying the committee
neared the city of Tara. To those in the vehicles,
it seemed incredible that anybody should dare to rejoice
within at least two light-years of Sean O’Donohue
as he was at this moment. But the cheering continued.
It grew louder as the cars entered a street where
houses stood side by side. But there came a change
in the chairman of the Dail Committee, too.
The cars slowed because the pavement
was bad to nonexistent. Trees lined the way.
An overhanging branch passed within two yards of Moira’s
grandfather. Something hung on it in a sort of
graceful drapery. It was a black snake.
On Eire! Sean O’Donohue saw it. It
took no notice of him. It hung comfortably in
the tree and looked with great interest toward the
sounds of enthusiasm.
The deathly pallor of Sean O’Donohue
changed to pale lavender. He saw another black
snake. It was climbing down a tree trunk with
a purposeful air, as if intending to look into the
distant uproar. The ground-cars went on, and
the driver of the lead car swerved automatically to
avoid two black snakes moving companionably along
together toward the cheering. One of them politely
gave the ground-car extra room, but paid no other
attention to it. Sean O’Donohue turned
purple.
Yet another burst of cheering.
The chairman of the Dail Committee almost, but not
quite, detonated like a fission bomb. The way
ahead was blocked by people lining the way on a cross
street. The cars beeped, and nobody heard them.
With stiff, jerky motions Sean O’Donohue got
out of the enforcedly stopped car. It had seemed
that he could be no more incensed, but he was.
Within ten feet of him a matronly black snake moved
along the sidewalk with a manner of such assurance
and such impeccable respectability that it would have
seemed natural for her to be carrying a purse.
Sean O’Donohue gasped once.
His face was then a dark purple. He marched blindly
into the mob of people before him. Somehow, the
people of Tara gave way. But the sides of this
cross street were crowded. Not only was all the
population out and waiting to cheer, but the trees
were occupied. By black snakes. They hung
in tasteful draperies among the branches, sometimes
two or three together. They gazed with intense
interest at the scene below them. The solicitor
general, following Sean O’Donohue, saw a black
snake wriggling deftly between the legs of the packed
populace packed as if to observe a parade to
get a view from the very edge of the curb. The
Chancellor of the Exchequer came apprehensively behind
the solicitor general.
Sean O’Donohue burst through
the ranks of onlookers. He stalked out onto the
empty center of the street. He looked neither
to right nor left. He was headed for the presidential
mansion, there to strangle President O’Hanrahan
in the most lingering possible manner.
But there came a roar of rejoicing
which penetrated even his single-tracked, murder-obsessed
brain. He turned, purple-face and explosive,
to see what the obscene sound could mean.
He saw. The lean and lanky figure
of the chief justice of the supreme court of the Planet
Eire came running down the street toward him.
He bore a large slab of sheet-iron.
As he ran, he played upon it the blue
flame of a welding torch. The smell of hot metal
diffused behind him. The chief justice ran like
a deer. But he wasn’t leaving anything
behind but the smell. Everything else was close
on his heels.
A multicolored, multitudinous, swarming
tide of dinies filled the highway from gutter to gutter.
From the two-inch dwarfs to the purple-striped variety
which grew to eight inches and sometimes fought cats,
the dinies were in motion. They ran in the wake
of the chief justice, enthralled and entranced by
the smell of hot sheet iron. They were fascinated.
They were bemused. They were aware of nothing
but that ineffable fragrance. They hopped, ran,
leaped, trotted and galloped in full cry after the
head of the planet’s supreme court.
He almost bumped into the stunned
Sean O’Donohue. As he passed, he cried:
“Duck, man! The dinies are comin’
tra-la, tra-la!”
But Sean O’Donohue did not duck.
He was fixed, stuck, paralyzed in his tracks.
And the dinies arrived. They ran into him.
He was an obstacle. They played leapfrog over
each other to surmount him. He went down and
was merely a bump in the flowing river of prismatic
colorings which swarmed after the racing chief justice.
But there was a limit to things.
This was not the first such event in Tara, this day.
The dinies, this time, filled no more than a block
of the street. They swarmed past him, they raced
on into the distance, and Sean O’Donohue struggled
to a sitting position.
His shoes were shreds. Dinies
had torn them swiftly apart for the nails in them.
His garters were gone. Dinies had operated on
his pants to get at the metal parts. His pockets
were ripped. The bright metal buttons of his
coat were gone. His zippers had vanished.
His suspenders dangled without any metal parts to
hold them together, nor were there any pants buttons
for them to hold onto. He opened his mouth, and
closed it, and opened it again and closed it.
His expression was that of a man in delirium.
And, even before the Chancellor of
the Exchequer and the solicitor general could lift
him gently and bear him away, there came a final catastrophe,
for the O’Donohue. The snakes who had watched
events from the curbs, as well as those which had
gazed interestedly from aloft, now began to realize
that this was an affair which affected them. They
came out and began to follow the vanishing procession,
very much as small dogs and little boys pursue a circus
parade. But they seemed to talk uneasily to each
other as they flowed past Sean O’Donohue, sitting
in the dust of the street, all his illusions vanished
and all his hopes destroyed.
But the people of Tara did not notice.
They cheered themselves hoarse.
President O’Hanrahan held himself
with some dignity in the tumble-down reception hall
of the presidential mansion. Moira gazed proudly
at him. The two still-active members of the Dail
Committee looked uncomfortably around them. The
cabinet of Eire was assembled.
“It’s sorry I am,”
said the President of Eire, “to have to issue
a defiance to the Eire on Earth we owe so much to.
But it can’t be helped. We had to have
the black creatures to keep the dinies from eating
us out of house and home altogether. We’ve
been fightin’ a rear-guard battle, and we needed
them. In time we’d have won with their
help, but time we did not have. So this mornin’
Moira told me what she’d done yesterday.
The darlin’ had used the brains God gave her,
and maybe holy St. Patrick put a flea in her ear.
She figured out that dinies must find metal by its
smell, and if its smell was made stronger by simple
heatin’ they’d be unable to resist it.
And it was so. Ye saw the chief justice runnin’
down the street with all the dinies after him.”
The two members of the committee nodded.
“He was headin,” said
the president, “for the cold-storage plant that
Sean O’Donohue had twitted me was empty of the
provisions we’d had to eat up because of the
dinies. It’s no matter that it’s empty
now though. We can grow victuals in the fields
from now on, because now the cold rooms are packed
solid with dinies that ran heedless into a climate
they are not used to an’ fell what
was the word, Moira darlin’?”
“Torpid,” said Moira, gazing at him.
“Torpid,” agreed the president.
“From now on when there’s too many dinies
we can send somebody runnin’ through the streets
with a hot plate to call them into cold storage.
We’ve pied pipers at will, to help out the black
creatures that’ve done so much for us. If
we’ve offended Eire on Earth, by havin’
the black creatures to help us, we’re sorry.
But we had to till Moira and doubtless St.
Patrick gave us the answer ye saw today. If we’re
disowned, bedamned if we don’t hang on!
We can feed ourselves now. We can feed some extra
mouths. There’ll be a ship droppin’
by out of curiosity now and then, and we’ll trade
with ’em. If were disowned we’ll
be poor. But when were the Irish ever rich?”
The committeeman who was a manufacturer
of precision machinery mopped his forehead.
“We’re rich now,”
he said resignedly. “You’d be bound
to learn it. D’you know what the dinies’
teeth are made of?”
“It’s been said,”
said President O’Hanrahan, “that it’s
bor ... boron carbide in organic form. What that
means I wouldn’t know, but we’ve got a
fine crop of it!”
“It’s the next hardest
substance to diamond,” said the committeeman
dourly. “It’s even been guessed that
an organic type might be harder. It’s used
for the tools for lathes and precision machinery, and
it sells at close to the price of diamonds of industrial
quality and I’ll make a deal to handle
all we’ve got. What Earth don’t need,
other planets will. You’re rich.”
The president stared. Then he gazed at Moira.
“It’s a pity we’re
bein’ disowned,” he said mournfully.
“It would be a fine thing to be able to tell
the grandfather Eire’s rich and can feed more
colonists and even maybe pay back what it’s cost
to keep us here so long. It would be a fine thing
to hire colonists to build the houses they’ll
be given free when they’re finished. But
since Sean O’Donohue is a stern man ”
The ship owner scratched his head.
He’d paused on the way to the presidential mansion.
He’d had restoratives for his distress.
He’d looked at the bottom of a bottle and seen
the facts.
“I’ll tell yea,”
he said warmly. “It’s the O’Donohue’s
been battlin’ to keep the colony goin’
against the politicians that wanted to economize.
He’s made a career of believin’ in this
world. He’s ruined if he stops. So
it might be that a little bit of blarneyin’ with
him desperate to find reason to stay friends, black
creature or no black creatures ”
The president took Moira’s hand.
“Come, my darlin’,” he said sadly.
“We’ll reason with him.”
Long, long minutes later he shook
his head as Sean O’Donohue stormed at him.
“The back o’ my hand to
you!” said Sean O’Donohue in the very
quintessence of bitterness. “And to Moira,
too, if she has more to do with you! I’ll
have naught to do with shenanigannin’ renegades
and blasphemers that actually import snakes into a
world St. Patrick had set off for the Erse from ancient
days!”
It was dark in the old man’s
room. He was a small and pathetic figure under
the covers. He was utterly defiant. He was
irreconcilable, to all seeming.
“Renegades!” he said indignantly.
“Snakes, yea say? The devil a snake there
is on Eire! I’ll admit that we’ve
some good black creatures that in a bad light and
with prejudice yea might mistake. But snakes?
Ye might as well call the dinies lizards those
same dinies that are native Erin porcupines bad
luck to them!”
There was an astounded silence from the bed.
“It’s a matter of terminology,”
said the president sternly. “And it’s
not the name that makes a thing, but what it does!
Actio sequitur esse, as the sayin’ goes.
You’ll not be denyin’ that! Now, a
diny hangs around a man’s house and it eats
his food and his tools and it’s no sort of good
to anybody while it’s alive. Is that the
action of a lizard? It is not! But it’s
notorious that porcupines hang around men’s
houses and eat the handles of their tools for the salt
in them, ignoring’ the poor man whose sweat
had the salt in it when he was laborin’ to earn
a livin’ for his family. And when a thing
acts like a porcupine, a porcupine it is and nothing
else! So a diny is a Eirean porcupine, native
to the planet, and no man can deny it!
“And what, then, is a snake?”
demanded President O’Hanrahan oratorically.
“It’s a creature that sneaks about upon
the ground and poisons by its bite when it’s
not blarneyin’ unwise females into tasting’
apples. Do the black creatures here do anything
of that sort? They do not! They go about
their business plain and open, givin’ a half
of the road and a how’d’y-do to those
they meet. They’re sober and they’re
industrious. They mind their own business, which
is killin’ the Eirean porcupines we inaccurate
call by the name of dinies. It’s their profession!
Did yea ever hear of a snake with a profession?
I’ll not have it said that there’s snakes
on Eire! And I’ll denounce yea as a conscienceless
politician if yea dare to put such a name on the honest,
friendly, industrious Eirean porcupine eaters that
up to this moment have been the savin’ of the
colony! I’ll not have it!”
There was a long silence. Then
Sean O’Donohue spoke dryly: “Porcupine
eaters, you say? Not snakes?”
“Not snakes!” repeated
the president defiantly. “Porcupine eaters!”
“Hm-m-m,” said Sean
O’Donohue. “That’s better.
The Dail’s not immune to blarney when it’s
needful to accept it and Eire back on Earth
is hard put for breathin’ room you say can be
had from now on. What would be the reason for
Moira standin’ so close to you?”
“She’s marryin’ me,” said
President O’Hanrahan firmly.
Sean O’Donohue’s voice was waspish.
“But I forbid it!” it
said sharply. “Until I’m up and about
and able to be givin’ her in marriage as her
grandfather ought to be doin’! Ye’ll
wait the few days till I’m able! Understand?”
“Yes, sir,” said the president. Meekness
seemed called for.
“Then begone!” snapped
Sean O’Donohue. Then he added sternly:
“Remember no shenanigans!”
The solicitor general watched them
depart on a wedding journey to a cottage in Ballyhanninch,
which was on Donegal Peninsular, fronting on the Emmett
Sea. He waved, like the assembled populace.
But when they were out of sight he said darkly to
the chief justice and the Chancellor of the Exchequer:
“I didn’t have the heart
to bring it up before, but there’s the devil
of a problem buildin’ up against the time he
comes back.”
“Which problem?” asked
the Chancellor of the Exchequer, warily.
“It’s the sn ... the porcupine
killers,” said the solicitor general. “Things
look bad for them. They’re out of work.
Even Timothy. There’s no dinies to speak
of for them to earn a livin’ by killin’.
It’s technological unemployment. They earned
their way faithful, doin’ work they knew an’
loved. Now they’re jobless. There’s
no work for them. What’s to be done?
Put ’em on re [remainder of text is missing]
There was a pause. The solicitor general said
firmly:
“I mean it! They’ve
a claim on us! A claim of the highest order!
They can’t starve, it’s sure! But
would you have them have to hold mass meetin’s
and set up picket lines and the like, to get justice
done them?”
“Ah,” said the chief justice.
“Some way will turn up to handle the matter.
Like Sean O’Donohue was sayin’ to me yesterday,
at the very bottom of a bottle, we Erse can always
depend on St. Patrick to take care of things!”