BY
B. J. ROGERS
The
history of space-flight begins before
man.
While our planet still lay wrapped in
its
dream of isolation, other intelligences
watched
from above—minds pure, undying,
noble—and
pathetically vulnerable....
From
Worlds of If Science Fiction, October 1958.
"Oh,
he is dead!" my mind cried out.
Novna,
my dear, I am writing this as a release for my conscience. Those things which
trouble me are not such as one exchanges with vigil companions, or indeed with
anyone not bound by ties like ours.
If
I were at home with you I would exchange with your soul in a moment the feeling
of my own, but distance permits no such consolation and it is not suitable for
me to exchange so familiarly with my colleagues.
I
find myself questioning the value of our customary refusal to communicate
thoughts of a delicate and sensitive nature. The Earth people, who speak their
thoughts, perhaps are less primitive than we like to imagine. They seem to have
no sense of the danger of overwhelming the soul of another with unwanted
confidences. The purely vocal nature of their communication does not admit an
excessive degree of emotion to their relationships. They do not have to erect
any artificial barriers between each other, as we must who exchange on a mental
level.
These
doubts of mine never could have arisen if we men of Hainos had not presumed to
observe the alien ways of those creatures on the third Earth, so like ourselves
and yet so remote, though we have hovered above them, listening and watching,
for twelve of their generations.
This
vigil, though it is to last but one journey around the sun, has seemed longer
and less fruitful than all the others. I think I shall not come again, but
leave such work to those who can remain efficient and disinterested Observers,
unmoved by doubt and anxiety. Novna, you must begin to think what we two shall
do with the rest of our eternity, for now that I have spent some small portion
of mine in fifty vigils, I find they have become distasteful. We might go to
the Palace of Art and study to be poet-priests. My last vigil has convinced me
that I am more fitted for that life than this.
When
our mission left Hainos for the third Earth, there was aboard our ship the
poet-priest Gven. You must remember the many nights we sat beneath the rocks by
the ocean, listening as his soul gave ours his songs. Innocent they were, and
filled with talk of purity and light, though Gven is as old as the rest of us,
even if he is as different from you and me as the Earth child is from its
parents.
You
have never seen him, I think. He is smaller than I, slight of build and
tender-faced. How out of place he looked among the ship's sturdy men of
science, with their ages of discipline and austerity written indelibly into
their features. They did not want him. They told the commissioner that they did
not want him.
"Let
him stay at home," they said, "and sing his songs to those who wish
to listen."
But
the commissioner himself, and, I suspect, the commissioner's wife, was as fond
as any of Gven and his songs, so he said Gven was to come if he liked.
Poor
Gven tried hard enough to make us like him. He offered us the only gift he had,
that of his songs, but no one cared to hear them except me, and I was ashamed
to say so. In the end he was reduced to sitting for hours, looking out into the
night through which the ship bore us, saying nothing to anyone, for fear of our
scorn. He would have liked us to tell him about the Earth people, for his
studies at the Palace fitted him sadly for a scientific expedition.
Of
the Earth people, however, we hesitated to speak freely, even among ourselves,
for all of us feel strongly about them, in one way or another. Our exchanges on
the matter have always been burdened with emotion; and we find we cannot share
easily our thoughts about Earth people, unless we banter lightly and say little
of what we really feel.
When
our long-ship drew near the third Earth, we were transferred into the
round-ship in which we were to carry on our observations. I could see Gven was
limp with excitement, but as always, I would not exchange with him for fear of
the others, not even to drain off that excess of feeling which was to prove so
dangerous to him.
Perhaps
he thought it would be different, once we had established ourselves in our
designated area of observation. Then we might warm toward him, giving him the
comforts of our experience. If such were his expectations, he was disappointed.
Whatever he gathered from us was purely accidental, information that we
exchanged among ourselves as we worked. Only in this way did he learn of those
few bonds we had forged with the Earth people.
It
is our custom, as you know, for each man to select one of the Earth people as
his subject. This is not part of our work, it is only a device to drive away
the tedium that descends upon men far from home and bound to exacting work in a
confined place. We begin to feel quite passionately concerned with our
subjects, and occasionally find it difficult to return to our primary concerns.
________________________________________
________________________________________
For
some time I had been spending my free hours in the world of a gentle old
merchant named Jacobs. I lived his life with him briefly, seeing his wife and
children as he saw them, going with him to his store. His memories were good
ones, filled with hard work and simple pleasures. One day, when I had left the
computing tables to prepare for dinner, I sought the mind of Jacobs. He was
crossing the street and as he turned his head, he saw the shining lights of an
automobile just before it struck him. I withdrew from his mind in a shower of
pain and darkness.
"Oh,
he is dead," my mind cried out to my vigil companions before I could
smother the shock and emotion in it. They looked up at me, questioning. Then I
exchanged with them more coolly, "My man Jacobs has been killed crossing
the street."
Keven,
the fuel technician, reached my mind first. "A pity, I lost a subject
myself that way not long ago. It is a bad death for them, poor things. They
might build overpasses, mightn't they? A pity."
It
has never failed to unsettle me, the way my companions have come to accept the
idea of death so easily. To me it is always a horror, unnatural and alien. You
cannot quite see how it is, Novna, for you have never been in the mind of one
who dies.
I
withdrew for a little while to mourn my man Jacobs, for my sorrow was not to be
shared with the others. It was while I sat thinking of the dead Jacobs that
Gven approached hesitantly and sat near me.
"Is
it possible," he asked, "that one can read the soul of an Earth man?
Could I? Or perhaps that would not be permitted to me?"
His
eagerness made me ashamed of the silence I had maintained between us. "It
is certainly possible for you to try, though it cannot always be done. You need
ask no one for permission."
The
delight in his eyes made me forget Jacobs a little. "I may try anyone at
all?"
"I
advise you to search about a little. Don't seize on the first one you contact
as a subject. You have less time than the rest of us for this sort of thing."
Gven
thanked me shyly and went away. Later I saw him sitting at the open panels,
looking down at the cloud-topped mountains and sandy valleys over which we
circled. His face was still and pale as he concentrated.
The
next day at dinner, Gven sat playing with his food, looking up at the rest of
us frequently, as if his fear of our coldness were contending with his wish to
open his mind to us. I was not the only one to notice his excitement, but the
rest sat looking at their plates stonily. They liked Gven even less than they
had at first, and preferred to ignore his presence altogether. At last I lifted
my head defiantly and my thought streamed across the table into the mind of
Gven with such energy and violence that the others raised their eyes from their
food in quick surprise.
"It
must be that you have found a subject. I should like to hear about it."
At
once Gven let his thoughts explode in undisciplined profusion. The men drew
back a little, shocked by the unfamiliar impact of another's passion on their
minds.
"The
very first mind I sought was that of a girl who calls herself Maria Dolores.
Often her mind turns in upon itself and she reflects like this, 'Maria Dolores,
you have behaved badly to your papa today. Now you must go and ask him to
forgive you and give him a kiss.' In this way she scolds herself for small
misdemeanors. Her world is composed of happy, innocent trivialities, though as
her purity touches on them and causes them to glow briefly before they are left
behind, it seems that there are no more divine and lovely things in existence
than those in the world of my Maria Dolores."
Gven
blushed and paused for a moment, then rushed on. "I sense that her father
and mother have barricaded her from everyone else. They are strict with Maria
Dolores and sometimes she wishes she could go out to dances as the other girls
do. But she is not sad for long, and goes to gather flowers for the dinner
table. She sets them in long silver dishes, that reflect the pink and red glow
of the sunset slanting through the window. This pleases Maria Dolores and she
stands watching for a long time."
Gven
would have said more, but all at once Corven, the cultural researcher,
interrupted, looking at me. "Noven, what have you brought upon us by your
curiosity? We are being buried in an avalanche of poetic fancies."
After
this, Gven sat silent, his face burning, and the rest of us began to talk of
the relation between the sites of mines and the locations of proving grounds.
For
many days, I watched Gven covertly. He no longer seemed to care about our
rebuffs, nor did he show any desire to ask us questions. He only sat by the
panels, his expression withdrawn and intent, while the rest of us hustled
busily and a little self-consciously around him. I came to notice a certain perplexity
in his face after a time, and felt that I should ask if he needed any
assistance. But I was awkward and unsure of myself, so I only watched him and
said nothing. At last he came to me, having built up a powerful reserve of
feeling that overflowed with the more violence for having been repressed so
long.
"There
is something that is to happen in the life of my Maria Dolores," Gven
began directly.
Unaccountably,
I tensed and tried to suppress the warmth I felt toward him. "Well, what
is it then?" I answered.
He
seemed not to notice the strain I was under. "They have told her she is to
be married to a young man whom they have chosen for her. She is unhappy, but
cannot tell them. Now they are making many preparations. Maria Dolores spends
her time with her mother, sewing dresses and packing them away. Then her mother
speaks to her of things that frighten her and me, things that seem to happen
when men and women are alone at night. She does not understand and lies awake
when her mother has gone, afraid and wondering. We are uneasy, Maria Dolores
and I."
Here,
Novna, I must attempt to explain the marriage of Earth people. While with us
marriage is the spiritualized union of masculine and feminine natures in one
soul, it is to them a more concrete thing. Their junction is not only one of
minds, but one of bodies as well.
The
union seems not to be unpleasant for those who take part in it, but for us, who
so jealously guard our bodies from another's touch, the marriage of Earth
people is difficult to contemplate without revulsion.
I
was rescued from having to answer Gven by the laughter of Corven, who had
overheard the last of the poet's words. "Well then, poet, if she is
unhappy, you must take her away, mustn't you? That's what you want, it seems,
to take her away to Hainos and make her your Gvna."
Gven
stood up and glared angrily at Corven. "Would it be so bad a thing to
carry back one person of Earth? Why shouldn't we?" he flung at the other
man.
Corven
turned away in disgust. "You know we have no authority to intervene in
their affairs. This is what comes of letting a poet-priest meddle in the
concerns of science."
A
sullenness came over Gven's face, and he withdrew from us again, turning back
to the panels. I knew he was with Maria Dolores. Though I was uneasy over his
ignorance, I could not help feeling relieved that I had not been forced to
enlighten him.
My
anxiety proved to be well-founded. It was only a few weeks later that we reaped
the results of our long-cultivated conspiracy of silence against the poet-priest.
We were deeply engrossed in our work at the computing tables when our nerves
were shattered by a cry of anguish from the mind of Gven. In a moment we were
standing around him, avoiding each other's eyes and scarcely daring to look at
the man shuddering before us, his face in his hands.
"It
is done." Gven cast his anger at us like a stone. "It is as though
she had been killed. Why couldn't you tell me? You, Noven, I asked you. Why
couldn't you have spared me this?"
The
men looked uneasily at me and back at Gven. Shaken, they drifted away, back to
their work, still ashamed to meet each other's eyes. Gven sat there, grinding
his fist into his palm, staring straight ahead.
He
has been gone for some time now. At his request, a long-ship stopped for him on
its homeward cruise. I have not tried to reach another subject, nor have any of
the others. At least, if they have, they do not speak of it. We are reluctant
to attempt any communion with these creatures whose alien nature has been so
strikingly demonstrated to us. The game of Observation itself has become less a
game, and we go about our work with a vague sense of unrest, as though the
descent of catastrophe upon us were imminent.
Gven
gave us one last gift before he left. He sang us a song that made us want to
bend our heads to the ground in shame. If his songs are bitter now, and if
there is no innocence in them, one needs not look far to find the reason.