What Have I Done?
Mark Clifton
IT HAD to be I. It would be stupid to say that the burden should have
fallen to a great statesman, a world leader, a renowned scientist. With all
modesty, I think I am one of the few who could have caught the problem early
enough to avert disaster. I have a peculiar skill. The whole thing hinged on
that. I have learned to know human beings.
The first tithe I saw
the fellow, I was at the drug-store counter buying cigarettes. He was standing
at the magazine rack. One might have thought from the expression on his face
that he had never seen magazines before. Still, quite a number of people get
that rapt and vacant look when they can't make up their minds to a choice.
The thing which
bothered me in that casual glance was that I couldn't recognize him.
There are others who
can match my record in taking case histories. I happened to be the one who came
in contact with this fellow. For thirty years I have been listening to, talking
with, counseling people—over two hundred thousand of them. They have not been
routine interviews. I have brought intelligence, sensitivity and concern to
each of them.
Mine has been a
driving, burning desire to know people. Not from the western scientific point
of view of devising tools and rules to measure animated robots and ignoring the
man beneath. Nor from the eastern metaphysical approach to painting a picture
of the soul by blowing one's breath upon a fog to be
blurred and dispersed by the next breath.
Mine was the aim to
know the man by making use of both. And there was some success.
A competent geographer
can look at a crude sketch of a map and instantly orient himself to it anywhere
in the world—the bend of a river, the angle of a lake, the twist of a mountain
range. And he can mystify by telling in finest detail what is to be found
there.
After about fifty
thousand studies where I could predict and then observe and check, with me it
became the lift of a brow, the curve of a mouth, the gesture of a hand, the
slope of a shoulder. One of the universities became interested, and over a
long, controlled period they rated me 92 per cent accurate. That was fifteen
years ago. I may have improved some since.
Yet standing there at
the cigarette counter and glancing at the young fellow at the magazine rack, I
could read nothing. Nothing at all.
If this had been an
ordinary face, I would have catalogued it and forgotten it automatically. I see
them by the thousands. But this face would not be catalogued nor forgotten,
because there was nothing in it.
I started to write
that it wasn't even a face, but of course it was. Every human being has a
face—of one sort or another.
In build he was short,
muscular, rather well proportioned. The hair was crew cut and blond, the eyes
were blue, the skin fair. All nice and standard Teutonic—only it wasn't.
I finished paying for
my cigarettes and gave him one more glance, hoping to surprise an expression
which had some meaning. There was none. I left him standing there and walked
out on the street and around the corner. The street, the
store fronts, the traffic cop on the corner, the warm sunshine were all
so familiar I didn't see them. I climbed the stairs to my office in the building
over the drug store. My employment-agency waiting room was empty. I don't
cater to much of a crowd because it cuts down my
opportunity to talk with people and further my study.
Margie, my
receptionist, was busy making out some kind of a report and, merely nodded as I
passed her desk to my own office. She is a good, conscientious girl who can't
understand why I spend so much time working with bums and drunks and other
psychos who obviously won't bring fees into the sometimes too small bank
account.
I sat down at my desk
and said aloud to myself, "The guy is a fake! As
obvious as a high-school boy's drafting of a dollar bill."
I heard myself say
that and wondered if I was going nuts, myself. What did I mean by fake? I
shrugged. So I happened to see a bird I couldn't read, that was all.
Then it struck me. But
that would be unique. I hadn't had that experience for twenty years. Imagine
the delight, after all these years, of exploring an unreadable!
I rushed out of my
office and back down the stairs to the street. Hallahan,
the traffic cop, saw me running up the street and looked at me curiously. I
signaled to him with a wave of a hand that everything was all right. He lifted
his cap and scratched his head. He shook his head slowly and settled his cap
back down. He blew a whistle at a woman driver and went back to directing
traffic.
I ran into the drug
store. Of course the guy wasn't there. I looked all around, hoping he was
hiding behind the pots and pans counter, or something. No guy.
I walked quickly back
out on the street and down to the next corner. I looked up and down the side
streets. No guy.
I dragged my feet
reluctantly back toward the office. I called up the face again to study it. It
did no good. The first mental glimpse of it told me there was nothing to find.
Logic told me there was nothing to find. If there had been, I
wouldn't be in such a stew. The face was empty—completely void of human
feelings or character.
No, those weren't the
right words. Completely void of human—being!
I walked on past the
drug store again and looked in curiously, hoping I would see him. Hallahan was facing my direction again, and he grinned
crookedly at me. I expect around the neighborhood I am known as a character. I
ask the queerest questions of people, from a layman's point of view. Still,
applicants sometimes tell me that when they asked a cop where was an employment agent they could trust they were sent to
me.
I climbed the stairs
again, and walked into my waiting room. Margie looked at me curiously, but she
only said, "There's an applicant. I had him wait in your office." She
looked like she wanted to say more, and then shrugged. Or maybe she shivered. I
knew there was something wrong with the bird, or she would have kept him in the
waiting room.
I opened the door to
my office, and experienced an overwhelming sense of relief, fulfillment. It
was he. Still, it was logical that he should be there. I run an employment agency, People come to me to get help in finding work. If
others, why not he?
My
skill indudes the control of my outward reactions. That fellow could have no idea of the delight I felt
at the opportunity to get a full history. If I had found him on the street, the
best I might have done was a stock question about what time is it, or have you
got a match, or where is the city hall. Here I could question him to my heart's. content.
I took his history
without comment, and stuck to routine questions. It was all exactly right.
He was an ex-G.I.,
just completed college, major in astronomy, no experience, no skills, no
faintest idea of what he wanted to do, nothing to offer an employer—all
perfectly normal for a young grad„
No feeling or
expression, either. Not so normal. Usually they're petulantly resentful that
business doesn't swoon at the chance of hiring them. I resigned myself to the
old one-two of attempting to steer him toward something practical.
"Astronomy?" I asked. "That means you're heavy in math.
Frequently we can place a strong math skill in statistical work." I was
hopeful I could get a spark of something.
It turned out he
wasn't very good at math. "I haven't yet reconciled my math to . . ."
he stopped. For the first time he showed a reaction—hesitancy. Prior to that he
had been a statue from Greece—the rounded, expressionless eyes, the too-perfect
features undisturbed by thou2ht.
He caught his remark
and finished, "I'm just not very good at math, that's all."
I sighed to myself.
I'm used to that, too. They give degrees nowadays to get rid of the guys, I
suppose. Sometimes I'll go for days without uncovering any usable knowledge. So
in a way, that was normal.
The only abnormal part
of it was he seemed to think it didn't sound right. Usually the lads don't even
realize they should know something. He seemed to think he'd pulled a boner by
admitting that a man can take a degree in astronomy without learning math. Well,
I wouldn't be surprised to see them take their degrees without knowing how many
planets there are.
He began to fidget a
bit. That was strange, also. I thought I knew every possible combination of
muscular contractions and expansions. This fidget had all the reality of a
puppet activated by an amateur. And the eyes—still completely
blank.
I led him up one
mental street and down the next. And of all the false-fronted stores and
cardboard houses and paper lawns, I never saw the like. I get something of that
once in a while from a fellow who has spent a long term in prison and comes in
with a manufactured past—but never anything as phony as this one was.
Interesting
aspect to it. Most guys, when they
realize you've spotted them for a phony, get out as soon as they can. He
didn't. I was almost as though he were—well testing, to see if his answers
would stand up.
I tried talking
astronomy, of which I thought I knew a little. I found I didn't know anything,
or he didn't. This bird's astronomy and mine had no point of reconciliation.
And then he had a slip
of the tongue—yes he did. He was talking, and said, "The ten planets ..."
He caught himself,
"Oh that's right. There are only nine."
Could be ignorance,
but I didn't think so. Could be he knew of the existence of a planet we hadn't
yet discovered.
I smiled. I opened a
desk drawer and pulled out a couple science-fiction magazines. "Ever read
any of these?" I asked.
"I looked through
several of them at the newsstand a while ago," he answered.
"They've enlarged
my vision," I said. "Even to the point where I could believe that
some other star system might hold intelligence." I lit a cigarette and
waited. If I was wrong, he would merely think I was talking at random.
His blank eyes
changed. They were no longer Greek-statue eyes. They were no longer blue. They
were black, deep bottomless black, as deep and cold as space itself.
"Where did I fail
in my test?" he asked. His lips formed a smile which was not a smile—a
carefully painted-on-canvas sort of smile.
Well, I'd had my
answer. I'd explored something unique, all right. Sitting there before me, I
had no way of determining whether he was benign or evil. No way of knowing his
motive. No way of judging—anything. When it takes a lifetime of learning how to
judge even our own kind, what standards have we for judging an entity from
another star system?
At that moment I would
like to have been one.. of
those space-opera heroes who, in similar circumstances, laugh casually and say,
"What ho! So you're from Arcturus. Well, well.
It's a small universe after all, isn't it?" And then with linked arms they
head for the nearest bar, bosom pals.
I had the almost
hysterical thought, but carefully suppressed, that I didn't know if this fellow
would like beer or not. I will not go through the intermuscular
and visceral reactions I experienced. I kept my seat and maintained a polite
expression. Even with humans, I know when to walk carefully.
"I couldn't feel
anything about you," I answered his question. "I couldn't feel
anything but blankness."
He looked blank. His
eyes were nice blue marble again. I liked them better that way.
There should be a
million questions to be asked, but I must have been bothered by the feeling
that I held a loaded bomb in my hands. And not knowing what might set it off,
or how, or when. I could think of only the most trivial.
"How long have
you been on Earth?" I asked. Sort of a when did you get
back in town, Joe, kind of triviality.
"For several of
your weeks," he was answering. "But this is my first time out among
humans."
"Where have you
been in the meantime?" I asked. "Training."
His answers were getting short and his muscles began to fidget again.
"And where do you
train?" I kept boring in.
As an answer he stood
up and held out his hand, all quite correctly. "I must go now," he
said. "Naturally you can cancel my application for employment. Obviously
we have more to learn."
I raised an eyebrow.
"And I'm supposed to just pass over the whole thing? A
thing like this?"
He smiled again. The contrived smile which was a symbol to indicate courtesy.
"I believe your custom on this planet is to turn your problems over to
your police. You might try that." I could not tell whether it was ironic
or logic.
At that moment I could
think of nothing else to say. He walked out of my door while I stood beside my
desk and watched him go.
Well, what was I
supposed to do? Follow him?
I followed him.
Now I'm no private
eye, but I've read my share of mystery stories. I knew enough to keep out of
sight. I followed him about a dozen blocks into a quiet residential section of
small homes. I was standing behind a palm tree, lighting a cigarette, when he went
up the walk of one of these small houses. I saw him twiddle with the door, open
it, and walk in. The door dosed.
I hung around a while
and then went up to the door. I punched the doorbell. A motherly, gray-haired
woman came to the door, drying her hands on her apron. As she opened the door
she said, "I'm not buying anything today."
Just the same, her
eyes looked curious as to what I might have.
I grinned
my best grin for elderly ladies. "I'm not selling anything, either,"
I answered. I handed her my agency card. She looked at it curiously and then
looked a question at me.
"I'd like to see
Joseph Hoffman," I said politely.
She looked puzzled.
"I'm afraid you've got the wrong address, sir," she answered.
I got prepared to
stick my foot in the door, but it wasn't necessary. "He was in my office
just a few minutes ago," I said. "He gave that name and this address.
A job came in right after he left the office, and since I was going to be in
this neighborhood anyway, I thought I'd drop by and tell him in person. It's
sort of rush," I finished. It had happened many times before, but this
time it sounded lame.
"Nobody lives
here but me and my husband," she insisted. "He's retired."
I didn't care if he
hung by his toes from trees. I wanted a young fellow.
"But I saw the
young fellow come in here," I argued. "I was just coming around the
corner, trying to catch him. I saw him."
She looked at me
suspiciously. "I don't know what your racket is," she said through
thin lips, "but I'm not buying anything. I'm not signing anything. I
don't even want to talk to you." She was stubborn about it.
I apologized and
mumbled something about maybe making a mistake.
"I should say you
have," she rapped out tartly and shut the door in righteous indignation. Sincere, too. I could tell.
An employment agent
who gets the reputation of being a right guy makes all kinds of friends. That
poor old lady must have thought a plague of locusts had swept in on her for the
next few days.
First the telephone
repair man had to investigate an alleged complaint. Then a gas service man had
to check the plumbing. An electrician complained there was a power short in the
block and he had to trace their house wiring. We kept our fingers crossed
hoping the old geezer had never been a construction man. There was a mistake in
the last census, and a guy asked her a million questions.
That house was gone
over rafter by rafter and sill by sill, attic and basement. It was precisely as
she said. She and her husband lived there; nobody else.
In frustration, I
waited three months. I wore out the sidewalks haunting the neighborhood. Nothing.
Then one day my office
door opened and Margie ushered a young man in. Behind his back she was
radiating heart throbs and fluttering her eyes.
He was the
traditionally tall, dark and handsome young fellow, with a ready grin and
sparkling dark eyes. His personality hit me like a sledge hammer. A guy like
that never needs to go to an employment agency. Any employer will hire him at
the drop of a hat, and wonder later why he did it.
His name was Einar Johnson. Extraction, Norwegian.
The dark Norse strain, I judged. I took a chance on his thinking he had walked
into a booby hatch.
"The last time I
talked with you," I said, "your name was Joseph Hoffman. You were
Teutonic then. Not Norse."
The sparkle went out
of his eyes. His face showed exasperation and there was plenty of it. It
looked real, too, not painted on.
"All right. Where did I flunk this time?" he asked impatiently.
"It would take me
too long to tell you," I answered. "Suppose you start talking."
Strangely, I was at ease. I knew that underneath he was the same
incomprehensible entity, but his surface was so good that I was lulled.
He looked at me
levelly for a long moment. Then he said, "I didn't think there was a
chance in a million of being recognized. I'll admit that other character we
created was crude. We've learned considerable since then, and we've
concentrated everything on this personality I'm wearing."
He paused and flashed
his teeth at me. I felt like hiring him, myself. "I've been all over
Southern California in this one," he said. "I've had a short job as a
salesman. I've been to dances and parties. I've got drunk and sober again.
Nobody, I say nobody, has shown even the slightest
suspicion."
"Not very
observing, were they?" I taunted.
"But you
are," he answered. "That's why I came back here
for the final test. I'd like to know where I failed." He was firm.
"We get quite a few phonies," I answered. "The guy drawing
unemployment and stalling until it is run out. The geezik whose wife drives him out and threatens to quit her
job if he doesn't go to work. The plain-clothes detail
smelling around to see if maybe we aren't a cover for a bookie joint or
something. Dozens of phonies."
He looked curious. I
said in disgust, "We know in the first two minutes they're phony. You were
phony also, but not of any class I've seen before. And," I finished dryly,
"I've been waiting for you."
"Why was I
phony?" he persisted.
"Too much
personality force," I answered. "Human beings just don't have that
much force. I felt like I'd been knocked fiat on my . . . well . . .
back."
He sighed. "I've
been afraid you would recognize me one way or another. I communicated with
home. I was advised that if you spotted me, I was to instruct you to assist
us."
I lifted a brow. I
wasn't sure just how much authority they had to instruct me to do anything.
"I was to
instruct you to take over the supervision of our final training, so that no one
could ever spot us. If we are going to carry out our original
plan that is necessary. If not, then we will have to use the
alternate." He was almost didactic in his manner, but his charm of
personality still radiated like an infrared lamp.
"You're going to
have to tell me a great deal more than that," I said.
He glanced at my dosed
door.
"We won't be
interrupted," I said. "A •personnel history is private."
"I come from one
of the planets of Arcturus," he said.
I must have allowed a
smile of amusement to show on my face, for he asked, "You find that
amusing?"
"No," I
answered soberly, and my pulses leaped because the question confirmed my condusion that he could not read my thoughts. Apparently we
were as alien to him as he to us. "I was amused," I explained,
"because the first time I saw you I said to myself that as far as
recognizing you, you might have come from Arcturus.
Now it turns out that accidentally I was correct. I'm better than I
thought."
He gave a fleeting
polite smile in acknowledgment. "My home planet," he went on,
"is similar to yours. Except that we have grown overpopulated."
I felt a twinge of
fear.
"We have made a
study of this planet and have decided to colonize it." It was a fiat
statement, without any doubt behind it.
I flashed him a look
of incredulity. "And you expect me to help you with that?"
He gave me a worldly
wise look—almost an ancient look. "Why not ?"
he asked.
"There is the
matter of loyalty to my own kind, for one thing," I said. "Not too
many generations away and we'll be overpopulated also. There would hardly be
room for both your people and ours on Earth."
"Oh that's all
right," he answered easily. "There'll be plenty of room for us for
quite some time. We multiply slowly."
"We don't,"
I said shortly. I felt this conversation should be taking place between him and
some great statesman—not me.
"You don't seem
to understand," he said patiently. "Your race won't be here. We have
found no reason why your race should be preserved. You will die away as we
absorb."
"Now just a
moment," I interrupted. "I don't want our race to die off." The
way he looked at me I felt like a spoiled brat who didn't want to go beddie time.
"Why
not?" he asked.
I was stumped. That's
a good question when it is put logically. Just try to think of a logical
reason why the human race should survive. I gave him at least something.
"Mankind," I
said, "has had a hard struggle. We've paid a tremendous price in pain and
death for our growth. Not to have a future to look forward to would be like
paying for something and never getting the use of it."
It was the best I
could think of, honest. To base argument on humanity and right and justice and
mercy would leave me wide open. Because it is obvious that man doesn't practice
any of these. There is no assurance he ever will.
But he was ready for
me, even with that one. "But if we ark never suspected, and if we absorb
and replace gradually, who is to know there is no future for humans?"
And as abruptly as the
last time, he stood up suddenly. "Of course," he said coldly,
"we could use our alternative plan: Destroy the human race without further
negotiation. It is not our way to cause needless pain to any life form. But we
can.
"If you do not
assist us, then it is obvious that we will eventually be discovered. You are
aware of the difficulty of even blending from one country on Earth to another.
How much more difficult it is where there is no point of contact at all. And if
we are discovered, destruction would be the only step left."
He smiled and all the
force of his charm hit me again. "I know you will want to think it over
for a time. I'll return."
He walked to the door,
then smiled back at me. "And don't bother to
trouble that poor little woman in that house again. Her doorway is only one of
many entrances we have opened. She doesn't see us at all, and merely wonders
why her latch doesn't work sometimes. And we can open another, anywhere,
anytime. Like this . . .”
He was gone.
I walked over and
opened the door. Margie was all prettied up and looking expectant and radiant.
When she didn't see him come out she got up and peeked into my office.
"But where did he go?" she asked with wide eyes.
"Get hold of
yourself, girl," I answered. "You're so dazed you didn't even see him
walk right by you."
"There's
something fishy going on here," she said.
Well, I had a problem.
A first-rate, genuine, dyed-in-the-wool dilemma.
What was I to do? I
could have gone to the local authorities and got locked up for being a psycho.
I could have gone to the college professors and got locked up for being a
psycho. I could have gone to maybe the FBI and got locked up for being a
psycho. That line of thinking began to get monotonous.
I did the one thing
which I thought might bring help. I wrote up the happenings and sent it to my
favorite science-fiction magazine. I asked for help and sage counsel from the
one place I felt awareness and comprehension might be reached.
The manuscript bounced
back so fast it might have had rubber bands attached to it, stretched from
California to New York. I looked the little rejection slip all over, front and
back, and I did not find upon it those sage words of counsel I needed. There
wasn't even a printed invitation to try again some time.
And for the first time
in my life I knew what it was to be alone—genuinely and irrevocably alone.
Still, I could not
blame the editor. I could see him cast the manuscript from him in disgust,
saying, 'Bah! So another evil race comes to conquer Earth. If I gave the fans
one more of those, I'd be run out of my office." And like the deacon who
saw the naughty words written on the fence, saying, "And misspelled,
too."
The
fable of the boy who cried "Wolf! Wolf!" once too often came home to me now. I was alone with my
problem. The dilemma was my own. On one hand was immediate extermination. I
did not doubt it. A race which can open doors from one star system to another,
without even visible means of mechanism, would also know how to—disinfect.
On
the other. hand
was extinction, gradual, but equally certain, and none the less effective in
that it would not be perceived. If I refused to assist, then, acting as one
lone judge of all the race, I condemned it. If I did
assist, I would be arch traitor, with an equal final result.
For days I sweltered
in my miasma of indecision. Like many a man before me, uncertain of what to do,
I temporized. I decided to play for time. To play the role of traitor in the
hopes I might learn a way of defeating them.
Once I had made up my
mind, my thoughts raced wildly through the possibilities. If I were to be their
instructor on how to walk unsuspected among men, then I would have them wholly
in my grasp. If I could build traits into them, common ordinary traits which
they could see in men all about them, yet which would make men turn and destroy
them, then I would have my solution.
And I knew human
beings. Perhaps it was right, after all, that it became my problem. Mine alone.
I shuddered now to
think what might have happened had this being fallen into less skilled hands
and told his story. Perhaps by now there would be no man left upon Earth.
Yes, the old and
worn-out plot of the one little unknown guy who saved Earth from outer evil
might yet run its course in reality.
I was ready for the Arcturan when he returned. And he did return.
Einar Johnson and I walked out of my office after I had
sent a tearful Margie on a long vacation with fancy pay. Einar
had plenty of money, and was liberal with it. When a fellow can open some sort
of fourth-dimensional door into a bank vault and help himself, money is no
problem.
I had visions of the
poor bank clerks trying to explain things to the examiners, but that wasn't my
worry right now.
We walked out of the
office and I snapped the lock shut behind me. Always conscious of the cares of
people looking for work, I hung a sign on the door saying I was ill and didn't
know when I would be back.
We walked down the
stairs and into the parking lot. We got into my car, my own car, please note,
and I found myself sitting in a sheltered patio in Beverly Hills. Just like
that. No awful wrenching and turning my insides out. No worrisome nausea and
emptiness of space. Nothing to dramatize it at all. Car—patio, like that.
I would like to be
able to describe the Arcturans as having long snaky
appendages and evil, slobbering maws, and stuff like that. But I can't describe
the Arcturans, because I didn't see any.
I saw a gathering of
people, roughly about thirty of them, wandering around the patio, swimming in
the pool, going in and out of the side doors of the house. It was a perfect
spot. No one bothers the big Beverly Hills home without invitation.
The natives wouldn't
be caught dead looking toward a star's house. The tourists see the winding
drive, the trees and grass, and perhaps a glimpse of a gabled roof. If they can
get anythrill out of that, then bless their little
spending money hearts, they're welcome to it.
Yet if it should
become known that a crowd of strange-acting people are wandering around in the
grounds, no one would think a thing about it. They don't come any more zany
than the Hollywood crowd.
Only these were. These
people could have made a fortune as life-size puppets. .I could see now why it
was judged that the lifeless Teutonic I had first interviewed was thought
adequate to mingle with human beings. By comparison with these, he was a snappy
song and dance man.
But that is all I saw.
Vacant bodies wandering around, going through human motions,
without human emotions. The job looked bigger than I had thought. And
yet, if this was their idea of how to win friends and influence people, I might
be successful after all.
There are dozens of
questions the curious might want answered—such as how did they get hold of the
house and how did they get their human bodies and where did they learn to speak
English, and stuff. I wasn't too curious. I had important things to think
about. I supposed they were able to do it, because here it was.
I'll cut the following
weeks short. I cannot conceive of what life and civilization on their planet
might be like. Yardsticks of scientific psychology are used to measure a man,
and yet they give no indication at all of the inner spirit of him, likewise,
the descriptive measurements of their civilization are empty and meaningless.
Knowing about a man, and knowing a man are two
entirely different things.
For example, all those
thalamic urges and urgencies which we call emotion were completely unknown to them,
except as they saw them in antics on TV. The ideals of man were also unknown—truth,
honor, justice, perfection—all unknown. They had not even a division of sexes,
and the emotion we call love was beyond their understanding. The TV stories
they saw must have been like watching a parade of ants.
What purpose can be
gained by describing such a civilization to man? Man cannot conceive
accomplishment without first having the dream. Yet it was obvious that they
accomplished, for they were here.
When I finally
realized there was no point of contact between man and these, I knew relief and
joy once more. My job was easy. I knew how to destroy them. And I suspected
they could not avoid my trap.
They could not avoid
my trap because they had human bodies. Perhaps they conceived them out of thin
air, but the veins bled, the flesh felt pain and heat and pressure, the glands
secreted.
Ah yes, the glands
secreted. They would learn what emotion could be. And I was a master of
wielding emotion. The dream of man has been to strive toward the great and
immortal ideals. His literature is filled with admonishments to that end. In
comparison with the volume of work which tells us what we should be, there is
very little which reveals us as we are.
As part of my training
course, I chose the world's great literature, and painting, and sculpture, and
music—those mediums which best portray man lifting to the stars. I gave them
first of all, the dream.
And with the dream,
and with the pressure of the glands as kicker, they began to know emotion. I
had respect for the superb acting of Einar when I
realized that he, also, had still known no emotion.
They moved from the
puppet to the newborn babe—a newborn babe in training, with an adult body, and
its matured glandular equation.
I saw emotions, all
right. Emotions without restraint, emotions unfettered by
taboos, emotions uncontrolled by ideals. Sometimes I became frightened
and all my skill in manipulating emotions was needed. At other times they
became perhaps a little too Hollywood, even for Hollywood. I trained them into
more ideal patterns.
I will say this for
the Arcturans. They learned—fast. The
crowd of puppets to the newborn babes, to the boisterous boys and girls, to the
moody and unpredictable youths, to the matured and balanced men and women.
I watched the metamorphosis take place over the period of weeks.
I did more.
All that human beings
had ever hoped to be, the brilliant, the idealistic, the great in heart, I made
of these. My little 145 I.Q. became a moron's level. The dreams of the
greatness of man which I had known became the vaguest of wisps of fog before
the reality which these achieved.
My plan was working.
Full formed, they were
almost like gods. And training these things into them, I trained their own
traits out. One point I found we had in common. They were activated by logic,
logic carried to heights of which I had never dreamed. Yet my poor and halting
logic found point of contact.
They realized at last
that if they let their own life force and motivation remain active they would
carry the aura of strangeness to defeat their purpose. I worried, when they
accepted this. I felt perhaps they were laying a trap for me, as I did for
them. Then I realized that I had not taught them deceit.
And it was logical, to
them, that they follow my training completely. Reversing the position, placing
myself upon their planet, trying to become like them, I must of necessity
follow my instructor without question. What else could they do?
At first they saw no
strangeness that I should assist them to destroy my race. In their logic the Arcturan was most fit to survive, therefore he should
survive. The human was less fit, therefore he should perish.
I taught them the
emotion of compassion. And when they began to mature their human thought and
emotion, and their intellect was blended and shaded by such emotion, at last
they understood my dilemma.
There was irony in
that. From my own kind I could expect no understanding. From the invaders I
received sympathy and compassion. They understood at last my traitorous action
to buy a few more years for man.
Yet their Acturan logic still prevailed. They wept with me, but there
could be no change of plan. The plan was fixed, they
were merely instruments by which it was to be carried out.
Yet, through their compassion, I did get the plan modified.
This was the conversation which revealed that modification.
Einar Johnson, who as the most fully developed had been my
constant companion, said to me one day, "To all intents and purposes we
have become human beings." He looked at me and smiled with fondness,
"You have said it is so, and it must be so. For we begin
to realize what a great and glorious thing a human is."
The light of nobility
shone from him like an aura as he told me this. "Without human bodies, and
without the emotion-intelligence equation which you call soul, our home planet
cannot begin to grasp the growth we have achieved. We know now that we will
never return to our own form, for by doing that we would lose what we have
gained.
"Our people are
logical, and they must of necessity accept our recommendation, as long as it
does not abandon the plan entirely. We have reported what we have learned, and
it is conceived that both our races can inhabit the universe side by side.
"There will be no
more migration from our planet to yours. We will remain, and we will multiply,
and we will live in honor, such as you have taught us, among you. In time
perhaps we may achieve the greatness which all humans now have.
"And we will
assist the human kind to find their destiny among the stars as we have
done."
I bowed my head and
wept. For I knew that I had won.
Four months had gone.
I returned to my own neighborhood. On the corner Hallahan
left the traffic to shift for itself while he came over to me with the
question, "Where have you been?"
"I've been
sick," I said.
"You look
it," he said frankly. "Take care of yourself, man. Hey . . . Lookit that fool messing up
traffic." He was gone, blowing his whistle in a temper.
I climbed the stairs.
They still needed repairing as much as ever. From time to time I had been able
to mail money to Margie, and she had kept the rent and telephone paid. The sign
was still on my door. My key opened the lock.
The waiting room had
that musty, they've-gone-away look about it. The janitor had kept the windows
tightly closed and there was no freshness in the air. I half-hoped to see
Margie sitting at her desk, but I knew there was no purpose to it. When a girl
is being paid for her time and has nothing to do, the beach is a nice place to
spend it.
There was dust on my
chair, and I sank down into it without bothering about the seat of my pants. I
buried my head in my arms and I looked into the human soul.
Now the whole thing
hinged on that skill. I know human beings. I know them as well as anyone in the
world, and far better than most.
I looked into the past
and I saw a review of the great and fine and noble and divine torn and burned
and crucified by man.
Yet my only hope of
saving my race was to build these qualities, the fine, the noble, the splendid, into these thirty beings. To
create the illusion that all men were likewise great. No less power
could have gained the boon of equality for man with them.
I look into the
future. I see them, one by one, destroyed. I gave them no defence.
They are totally unprepared to meet man as he genuinely is—and they are
incapable of understanding.
For these things which
man purports to admire the most—the noble, the brilliant, the splendid—these
are the very things he cannot tolerate when he finds them.
Defenseless, because
they cannot comprehend, these thirty will go down beneath the ravening fury of
rending and destroying man always displays whenever he meets his ideal face to
face.
I bury my head in my
hands.
What have I done?