Read The Second Murray Leinster Megapack Online
Authors: Murray Leinster
Tags: #classic science fiction, #pulp fiction, #Short Stories, #megapack, #Sci-Fi
With an odd tentativeness, Butch tried to turn the winding-key. He was not strong enough. After an instant he went loping across to the dwelling-cave. The winding-key was a metal ring. Butch fitted that over a throw-stone point, and twisted the toy about: He wound it up. He put the toy on the floor and watched it work. Worden’s jaw dropped.
“Brains!” he said wryly. “Too bad, Butch! You know the principle of the lever. At a guess you’ve an eight-year-old human brain! I’m sorry for you, fella!”
At the regular communication-hour he made his report to Earth. Butch was teachable. He only had to see a thing done once—or at most twice—to be able to repeat the motions involved.
“And,” said Worden, carefully detached, “he isn’t afraid of me now. He understands that I intend to be friendly. While I was carrying him I talked to him. He felt the vibration of my chest from my voice.
“Just before I left him I picked him up and talked to him again. He looked at my mouth as it moved and put his paw on my chest to feel the vibrations. I put his paw at my throat. The vibrations are clearer there. He seemed fascinated. I don’t know how you’d rate his intelligence but it’s above that of a human baby.”
Then he said with even greater detachment, “I am disturbed. If you must know I don’t like the idea of exterminating his kind. They have tools—they have intelligence. I think we should try to communicate with them in some way—try to make friends—stop killing them for dissection.”
* * * *
The communicator was silent as his voice traveled a second and a half to Earth and for the answer to come a second and a half back. Then the recording clerk’s voice said briskly, “Very good, Mr. Worden! Your voice was very clear!”
Worden shrugged his shoulders. The Lunar Station in Tycho was a highly official enterprise. The staff on the Moon had to be competent—and besides political appointees did not want to risk their precious lives—but the Earth end of the business of the Space-Exploration Bureau was run by the sort of people who do get on official payrolls. Worden felt sorry for Butch—and for Butch’s relatives.
In a later lesson-session Worden took an empty coffee-tin into the nursery. He showed Butch that its bottom vibrated when he spoke into it, just as his throat did. Butch experimented busily. He discovered for himself that it had to be pointed at Worden to catch the vibrations.
Worden was unhappy. He would have preferred Butch to be a little less rational. But for the next lesson he presented Butch with a really thin metal diaphragm stretched across a hoop; Butch caught the idea at once.
When Worden made his next report to Earth he felt angry.
“Butch has no experience of sound as we have of course,” he said curtly. “There’s no air on the Moon. But sound travels through rocks. He’s sensitive to vibrations in solid objects just as a deaf person can feel the vibration of a dance-floor if the music is loud enough.
“Maybe Butch’s kind has a language or a code of sounds sent through the rock underfoot. They do communicate somehow! And if they’ve brains and a means of communication they aren’t animals and shouldn’t be exterminated for our convenience!”
He stopped. The Chief Biologist of the Space-Exploration Bureau was at the other end of the communication-beam then. After the necessary pause for distance his voice came blandly.
“Splendid, Worden! Splendid reasoning! But we have to take the longer view. Exploration of Mars and Venus is a very popular idea with the public. If we are to have funds—and the appropriations come up for a vote shortly—we have to make progress toward the nearer planet. The public demands it. Unless we can begin work on a refueling base on the Moon public interest will cease!”
Worden said urgently, “Suppose I send some pictures of Butch? He’s very human, sir! He’s extraordinarily appealing! He has personality. A reel or two of Butch at his lessons ought to be popular!”
Again that irritating wait while his voice traveled a quarter-million miles at the speed Of light and the wait for the reply.
“The—ah—Lunar creatures, Worden,” said the Chief Biologist regretfully, “have killed a number of men who have been publicized as martyrs to science. We cannot give favorable publicity to creatures that have killed men!” Then he added blandly, “But you are progressing splendidly, Worden—
Splendidly!
Carry on!” His image faded from the video screen. Worden said naughty words as he turned away. He’d come to like Butch. Butch trusted him. Butch now slid down from that crazy perch of his and came rushing to his arms every time he entered the nursery.
Butch was ridiculously small—no more than eighteen inches high. He was preposterously light and fragile in his nursery, where only Moon-gravity obtained. And Butch was such an earnest little creature, so soberly absorbed in everything that Worden showed him.
He was still fascinated by the phenomena of sound. Humming or singing—even Worden’s humming and singing—entranced him. When Worden’s lips moved now Butch struck an attitude and held up the hoop-diaphragm with a tiny finger pressed to it to catch the vibrations Worden’s voice made.
Now too when he grasped an idea Worden tried to convey he tended to swagger. He became more human in his actions with every session of human-contact. Once indeed Worden looked at the video-screens which spied on Butch and saw him—all alone—solemnly, going through every gesture and every movement Worden had made. He was pretending to give a lesson to an imaginary still-tinier companion. He was pretending to be Worden, apparently for his own satisfaction!
Worden felt a lump in his throat. He was enormously fond of the little mite. It was painful that he had just left Butch to help in the construction of a vibrator-microphone device which would transfer his voice to rock-vibrations and simultaneously pick up any other vibrations that might be made in return.
If the members of Butch’s race did communicate by tapping on rocks or the like men could eavesdrop on them—could locate them, could detect ambushes in preparation and apply mankind’s deadly military counter-measures.
Worden hoped the gadget wouldn’t work. But it did. When he put it on the floor of the nursery and spoke into the microphone, Butch did feel the vibrations underfoot. He recognized their identity with the vibrations he’d learned to detect in air.
He made a skipping exultant hop and jump. It was plainly the uttermost expression of satisfaction. And then his tiny foot pattered and scratched furiously on, the floor. It made a peculiar scratchy tapping noise which the microphone picked up. Butch watched Worden’s face, making the sounds which were like highly elaborated footfalls.
“No dice, Butch,” said Worden unhappily. “I can’t understand it. But it looks as if you’ve started your treason already. This’ll help wipe out some of your folks.”
* * * *
He reported it reluctantly to the Head of the station. Microphones were immediately set into the rocky crater-floor outside the station and others were made ready for exploring parties to use for the detection of Moon-creatures near them. Oddly enough the microphones by the station yielded results right away.
It was near sunset. Butch had been captured near the middle of the three-hundred—and-thirty-four-hour Lunar day. In all the hours between—a week by Earth-time—he had had no nourishment of any sort. Worden had conscientiously offered him every edible and inedible substance in the station. Then at least one sample of every mineral in the station collection.
Butch regarded them all with interest but without appetite. Worden—liking Butch—expected him to die of starvation and thought it a good idea. Better than encompassing the death of all his race anyhow. And it did seem to him that Butch was beginning to show a certain sluggishness, a certain lack of bounce and energy. He thought it was weakness from hunger.
Sunset progressed. Yard by yard, fathom by fathom, half-mile by half-mile, the shadows of the miles-high western walls of Tycho crept across the crater floor. There came a time when only the central hump had sunlight. Then the shadow began to creep up the eastern walls. Presently the last thin jagged line of light would vanish and the colossal cup of the crater would be filled to overflowing with the night.
Worden watched the incandescent sunlight growing even narrower on the cliffs. He would see no other sunlight for two weeks Earth-time. Then abruptly an alarm-bell rang. It clanged stridently, furiously. Doors hissed shut, dividing the Station into airtight sections.
Loudspeakers snapped,
“Noises in the rock outside! Sounds like moon-creatures talking nearby! They may plan an attack! Everybody into space-suits and get guns ready!”
At just that instant the last, thin sliver of sunshine disappeared. Worden thought instantly of Butch. There was no space-suit to fit him. Then he grimaced a little. Butch didn’t need a spacesuit.
Worden got into the clumsy outfit. The lights dimmed. The harsh airless space outside the station was suddenly bathed in light. The multimillion-lumen beam made to guide rocketships to a landing even at night was turned on to expose any creatures with designs on its owners. It was startling to see how little space was really lighted by the beam, and how much-of stark blackness spread on beyond.
The loudspeaker snapped again,
“Two moon-creatures! Running away! They’re zigzagging! Anybody who wants to take a shot—”
The voice paused. It didn’t matter. Nobody is a crack shot in a space-suit.
“They left something behind!”
said the voice in the loudspeaker. It was sharp and uneasy.
“I’ll take a look at that,” said Worden. His own voice startled him but he was depressed: “I’ve got a hunch what it is.”
Minutes later he went out through the airlock. He moved lightly despite the cumbrous suit he wore. There were two other staff-members with him. All three were armed and the searchlight beam stabbed here and there erratically to expose any relative of Butch who might try to approach them in the darkness.
With the light at his back Worden could see that trillions of stars looked down upon Luna. The zenith was filled with infinitesimal specks of light of every conceivable color. The familiar constellations burned ten times, as brightly as on Earth. And the Earth itself hung nearly overhead. It was three-quarters full—a monstrous bluish giant in the sky, four times the Moon’s diameter, its ice-caps and continents mistily to be seen.
Worden went forebodingly to the object left behind by Butch’s kin. He wasn’t much surprised when he saw what it was. It was a rocking-stone on its plate with a fine impalpable dust on the plate as if something had been crushed under the egg-shaped upper stone acting as a mill.
Worden said sourly into his helmet microphone, “It’s a present for Butch. His kinfolks know he was captured alive. They suspect he’s hungry. They’ve left some grub for him, of the kind he wants or needs most.”
That was plainly what it was. It did not-make Worden feel proud. A baby—Butch—had been kidnaped by the enemies of its race. That baby was a prisoner and its captors would have nothing with which to feed it. So someone, greatly daring—Worden wondered sombrely if it was Butch’s father and mother—had risked, their lives to leave food for him with a rocking-stone to tag it for recognition as food.
“It’s a dirty shame,” said Worden bitterly. “All right! Let’s carry it back. Careful not to spill the powdered stuff!”
His lack of pride was emphasized when Butch fell to upon the unidentified powder with marked enthusiasm. Tiny pinch by tiny pinch Butch consumed it with an air of vast satisfaction. Worden felt: ashamed.
“You’re getting treated pretty rough, Butch,” said Worden. “What I’ve already learned from you will cost a good many hundred of your folks’ lives. And they’re taking chances to feed you! I’m making you a traitor and myself a scoundrel.”
Butch held up the hoop-diaphragm to catch the voice vibrations in the air. He was small and furry and absorbed. He decided that he could pick up sounds better from the rock underfoot. He pressed the communicator-microphone on Worden. He waited.
“No!”
said Worden roughly. “Your people are too human. Don’t let me find out any more, Butch. Be smart and play dumb!”
But Butch didn’t. It wasn’t very long before Worden was teaching him to read. Oddly, though, the rock-microphones that had given the alarm at the station didn’t help the tractor-parties at all. Butch’s kinfolk seemed to vanish from the neighborhood of the station altogether. Of course if that kept up the construction of a fuel-base c6uld be begun and the actual extermination of the species carried out later. But the reports on Butch were suggesting other possibilities:
“If your folks stay vanished,” Worden told Butch, “it’ll be all right for awhile—and only for awhile. I’m being urged to try to get you used to Earth-gravity. If I succeed they’ll want you on Earth in a zoo. And if that works—why—they’ll be sending other expeditions to get more of your kinfolks to put in other zoos.”
Butch watched Worden, motionless.
“And also”—Worden’s tone was very grim—“there’s some miniature mining-machinery coming up by the next rocket. I’m supposed to see if you can learn to run it.”
Butch made scratching sounds on the floor. It was unintelligible Of course but it was an expression of interest at least.
Butch seemed to enjoy the vibrations of Worden’s voice, just as a dog likes to have his master talk to him. Worden grunted.