The Sheep Look Up (24 page)

Read The Sheep Look Up Online

Authors: John Brunner

During the wait Alan had said, "By the way, how are you?"

"Doug says another week at most."

"Isn't it hell, sweating out the time? This is my longest stretch without since I was sixteen."

At least it was a relief to be able to talk casually about it. With it so common, it was absurd to pretend it didn't exist.

The flight number went up on the arrivals board and they headed for the barrier, looking. Philip was vaguely expecting someone small and yellow with horn-rimmed glasses and a habit of continual stooping, half-formed bows. But there wasn't anyone like that. There was only a man of about forty, wearing a black coat, roughly as tall as himself, slightly sallow and with the skin around his eyes drawn tight on the bone.

"Mr. Katsamura?" Alan said, offering his hand. "Yes, sir!" said Mr.

Katsamura, who had learned a great deal very quickly during his so far two and a half weeks in the States, chiefly concerning proper social conduct and right use of jargon-correction,
slang.
He shook, smiled, was introduced to Philip too, and apologized for making them wait yet one moment longer.

It was face-losing. But utterly unavoidable. Had been also on the plane. Troublesome and problematic. Moreover, of excessive long-standing: since the first day of the tour! Medicine bought in Texas was used up and had not cured the distressing malfunction. It would be constructive to investigate a doctor here.

Behind him the door swung to which was marked MEN.

Nervous in a gown bought specially for the occasion and a brand-new wig, Denise served cocktails and appetizers when they brought him on from the hotel where he'd dumped his bags-and made further use of excellent American apparatus. Her nervousness faded within minutes. He talked freely and fluently with everyone: to Doug about their respective reactions to the foreignness of each other's countries; to Sandy Bollinger about the impact of the European depression on international finance; to Denise about the ailments of children because his own were continually suffering minor allergies, fevers, similar disorders. Behind his back Millicent caught Philip's eye and ringed her thumb and forefinger: okay! Philip grinned back, thinking what a stroke of luck it had been to meet Doug.

And Katsamura faded to the bathroom again.

"Something's wrong with that guy," Alan said in a low tone. "He went at the airport too, and the hotel."

"
Turismo
?" offered Angela McNeil

"But he's been in the country over two weeks," Mabel Bollinger objected. "Even in Brazil I never had it longer than three or four days."

"Well, we have a doctor right here," Dorothy Black said practically.

Doug bit his lip. "I'll see if I can help," he said, but sounded doubtful. "Phil, do you keep any specifics for diarrhea?

Chlorhydroxyquinoline, say?"

"Well-uh-no. I generally use khat, and we could hardly offer him that. I mean it's not legal. Honey, you got anything for the kids?"

"Not right now," Denise said. "I used up the last lot. Meant to get some more but in all this rush I forgot."

"Khat, did you say?" Dorothy inquired. "What does that have to do with it?"

"Entrains constipation as a side effect," Doug answered. And snapped his fingers. "Side effect! Yes, I think I have something in my bag."

"If it's not impolite of me," he murmured a minute later, "you do know I'm a doctor, don't you?"

Katsamura flushed sallow rose.

"Swallow two of these-not with tap-water, I got you some bottled water from the kitchen. Here. Tomorrow I'll arrange for Phil Mason to deliver you something better, but this will help for a few hours." Slipping a little white packet into the other's hand.

Alone again, Katsamura reflected that this was most sound, most sensible, calculated to reduce the risk of later and worse embarrassments. It was known there were substantial funds behind the Prosser bid, if not as great as those at Chicago. This had led to acceptance of the dinner invitation in a private home and other unstrictly protocolic gestures.

He decided suddenly: I will recommend the Colorado franchise go to these people, I should like it to go to them. Most uncommercial.

Anti-businesslike. Not allow personal bias to interfere with better judgment. Even so.

How long for the tablets to work? It was to be hoped another two minutes would not spoil the dinner. Hastily he lifted the toilet lid again.

THE TRIAL RUNS

Latro, California:
"Terrible diarrhea, Doctor, and I feel so weak!" /

"Take these pills and come back in three days if you're not better."

Parkington, Texas:
"Terrible diarrhea…" / "Take these pills…"

Hainesport, Louisiana:
"Terrible…" / "Take…"

Baker Bay, Florida

Washington, DC

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

New York, New York

Boston, Massachuetts

Chicago, Illinois:
"Doctor, I know it's Sunday, but the kid's in such a terrible state-you've got to help me!" / "Give him some junior aspirin and bring him to my office tomorrow. Goodbye."

EVERYWHERE, USA: a sudden upswing in orders for very small coffins, the right size to take a baby dead from acute infantile enteritis.

MAY
GRAB WHILE THE GRABBING'S GOOD

When I came here there was nothing to be seen
But the forest drear and the prairie green.

Coyotes howled in the vale below

With the deer and the bear and the buffalo,
To my whack-fol-the-day, whack-fol-the-do,

Whack-fol-the-day-fol-the-didy-o!

So I took my axe and I cut the trees

And I made me a shack for to lie at ease,

With the walls of log and the roof of sod

And I gave my thanks at night to God,

To my whack…

And I took my gun and my powder-horn

And I killed the varmints that stole my corn.

With meat and bread I had a good life,

So I looked for a woman who would be my wife,
To my whack…

When he was a boy I taught my son

To use the plow and the hoe and the gun.

The fields spread out as the trees came down-There was room at last for a little town,

To my whack…

There's a church of clapboard with a steeple,
And Sunday morning it's full of people.

There's a bank, a saloon and a general store
And a hundred houses weren't there before,

To my whack…

And now that I'm old and prepared to go

There are cattle instead of the buffalo.

They'll carry my coffin to my grave

Down roads they say they're going to pave,

To my whack…

So I'm happy to know I made my mark

On the land which once was drear and dark,

And I'm happy to know my funeral prayer

Will be heard in the land that was stark and bare,
To my whack…

-"Boelker's Camp Fire Songster," 1873

BLANKET

"Where are they?" Gerry Thorne kept muttering all through Nancy's funeral in the small Pennsylvania town where she had been born and her parents still resided. "Where are the mothers? It's a fucking conspiracy!"

Everyone understood he was overwrought; however, this language did not seem fitting while the substitute minister droned through the service. (The regular minister had enteritis.) So they pretended not to hear.

It was not the guests he meant. There were a great many of those, some of them important and/or famous. Jacob Bamberley had flown east specially to attend, with Maud but without the children. (They had enteritis.) Minor officials from the embassies or UN delegations of countries which had been helped by Globe Relief were likewise in the chapel. Moses Greenbriar had intended to come but he and Elly were unwell. (Enteritis.) Old friends of the family who were prominent in the community, such as the mayor, and the principal of the school Nancy had attended (free today because it was closed through enteritis), were also on hand. But he didn't mean them.

"Christ, not even one reporter!" he muttered. "Let alone a TV team.

And I kicked ABS in the ass over and over!"

He was wrong. There was one reporter. A girl had been sent by a local weekly with a circulation of nearly twenty thousand.

There was a slightly embarrassing incident just before the cremation, when a lady trying to slip away to the toilets fell in the aisle and-well, they did their collective best to ignore that, too. But eventually the coffin was consigned to the flames and they emerged under the yellow-gray sky.

Gerry had been against cremation at first, because of the smoke.

He'd changed his mind when he saw how she was scarred.

The sun showed as a bright diffuse blur today; the weather had been exceptionally fine all week. Casting no shadow, face as white as paper, the muscles of his jaw standing out, Thorne kept on saying,

"Where are the bastards? I'll murder them for this!"

"There is an epidemic, you know," said Mr. Cowper, his father-in-law, who was very much one to maintain the proprieties and had been shuddering under his black suit throughout the service. "I'm told it's very bad in New York."

His wife, who had also annoyed him by snuffling at his side loud enough to be heard by everyone in the chapel, not from grief but a head cold, excused herself for a moment. Usual trouble.

"Epidemic, hell!" Thorne snapped. "It's official pressure! They don't like the stink I've been kicking up!"

That was true enough, not just a boast. He had taken a savage pride in exploiting his status as a senior executive of Globe Relief to publicize Nancy's death and the cause of it. In consequence resorts all down the Atlantic coast, and throughout the Caribbean, and as far into the ocean as Bermuda, were suffering tens of thousands of canceled bookings. Officials insisted that the quantity of Lewisite dumped in 1919 could not possibly affect so vast an area, and it was mere chance that trawling had brought up two separate batches, and in any case weathering rendered the stuff harmless in a day or two. It made no difference. Thorne had publicized at least one other death from the gas, previously concealed-he had traced relatives of eight other victims, but someone was leaning on them and they wouldn't talk-and that was good enough for the public, having been lied to once before. This year we take our vacation somewhere else. Where is there where Americans aren't likely to be stoned by a howling mob? Spain, Greece? No, got to be out of range of the stench from the Med. Looks like we might as well stay home.

The substitute minister, Reverend Horace Kirk, came to join them.

"A very touching ceremony, Reverend," said Mr. Cowper.

"Thank you."

"I'll sue the bastards, then," Thorne said suddenly. "If that's the way they want it!"

Mr. Cowper touched his arm solicitously. "Gerry, you're overwrought. Come home with us and try to relax."

"No, I'm going straight to my lawyers. If it takes every cent I have I'll get back at the mothers who dumped that gas!"

"One understands how affected you've been by this tragedy," Mr.

Bamberley said, matching Mr. Cowper's soothing tone. "But surely you must realize-"

"Jack!"

To everyone's astonishment, the interruption came from Maud, who was stuffing into her sleeve the handkerchief she had soaked with tears during the service.

"Gerry's right!" she exclaimed. "It's disgraceful! It's disgusting! I don't care how long ago they say they threw that stuff in the sea-it belongs to the government, and it's killing people, and the government is responsible!"

"Now, Maud dear-"

"Jack, it's all right for you! The worst thing that ever goes wrong for you is when some bug eats your precious what-you-call-um thingumbobii!
You
don't spend every hour of every day wondering which of the boys is going to fall sick next! That's all I ever do, from one year's end to the next-if it isn't fits it's fever, if it isn't nausea it's diarrhea! How long can we go on like this? It's like living in hell!"

She broke off, choked with sobs, and leaned blindly on the minister for support, which he awkwardly provided, while her husband stared at her as though he had never seen her before.

Mr. Kirk coughed gently, which was a mistake. It was invariably a mistake nowadays, apparently, even in a small town, and Mr. Cowper had to take over Maud from him. But he recovered without losing his aplomb, and said, "Well, Mr. Thorne, though I'm not fully acquainted with the details of your sad loss-"

"Aren't you?" Thorne broke in. "That's not my fault! I got it on TV, I put it in the papers and magazines!"

"As I was about to say…" Frigidly; we are still in the presence of a death and it's not seemly to shout. "I do feel you'd be ill-advised to sue an organ of the government. The chance of securing compensation is bound to be small, and-"

"The hell with compensation!" Thorne blasted. "What I want is justice! You can't tell me that when they dumped that gas they didn't know people would want to fish the ocean, bathe in it, build houses fronting on the beach! You can't tell me the bastards didn't know what they were doing-they just relied on not being around when the trouble started! So I'm going to make trouble! Before I'm through I'll have those stinking generals fishing it up with their bare hands!"

He spun on his heel and headed at a run toward his car.

After a long pause Mr. Kirk said uncertainly, "I think it may rain, don't you? Perhaps we should make a move."

"Ah-yes," Mr. Cowper agreed. "One wouldn't want to be caught in a shower, would one?"

THUS FAR: NO FATHER

Later, when they were alone, Mr. Bamberley snapped at Maud,

"Well, what would you have me do with the boys-lock 'em up like Roland does with Hector, so he wouldn't know what dirt looks like if he saw it?"

THE ILL WIND

Like most modern high-priced apartment blocks, the building where the Masons lived was protected by a sliding steel portcullis, bullet-proof glass, and a man with a gun on duty night and day. Doug McNeil presented his ID to the suspicious black who sat in the gas-proof booth today. It was a Saturday, which probably accounted for his not having seen this guard before. What with the soaring cost of living, especially food, a lot of people moonlighted jobs like this for evenings or weekends only.

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