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"What the h.e.l.l's got into you now? Why're you dummying up again?"
"I don't know about 'Nomad,' nothing."
"I'm offering a fair reward. A s.p.a.ceman can go on a h.e.l.l of a tear with twenty thousand credits... a one-year tear. What more do you want?""I don't know about 'Nomad,' nothing."
"It's us or Intelligence, Foyle."
"You ain't so anxious for them to get me, or you wouldn't be flipping through all this. But it ain't no use, anyway. I don't know about 'Nomad,' nothing."
"You son of a---" Dagenham tried to repress his anger. He had revealed just a little too much to this cunning, primitive creature. "You're right," he said. "We're not anxious for Intelligence to get you. But we've made our own preparations." His voice hardened. "You think you can dummy up and stand us off.
You think you can leave us to whistle for 'Nomad.' You've even got an idea that you can beat us to the salvage."
"No," Foyle said.
"Now listen to this. We've got a lawyer waiting in New York. He's got a criminal prosecution for piracy pending against you; piracy in s.p.a.ce, murder, and looting. We're going to throw the book at you.
Presteign will get a conviction in twenty-four hours. If you've got a criminal record of any kind, that means a lobotomy. They'll open up the top of your skull and burn out half your brain to stop you from ever jaunting again."
Dagenham stopped and looked hard at Foyle. When Foyle shook his head, Dagenham continued.
"If you haven't got a record, they'll hand you ten years of what is laughingly known as medical treatment.
We don't punish criminals in our enlightened age, we cure 'em; and the cure is worse than punishment.
They'll stash you in a black hole in one of the cave hospitals. You'll be kept in permanent darkness and solitary confinement so you can't jaunte out. They'll go through the motions of giving you shots and therapy, but you'll be rotting in the dark. You'll stay there and rot until you decide to talk. We'll keep you there forever. So make up your mind."
"I don't know nothing about 'Nomad.' Nothing!" Foyle said.
"All right," Dagenham spat. Suddenly he pointed to the orchid blossom he had enclosed with his hands. It was blighted and rotting. "That's what's going to happen to you."
CHAPTER FIVE.
SOUTH OF SAINT-GIRONS near the Spanish-French border is the deepest abyss in France, the Gouffre Martel. Its caverns twist for miles under the Pyrenees. It is the most formidable cavern hospital on Terra. No patient has ever jaunted out of its pitch darkness. No patient has ever succeeded in getting his bearings and learning the jaunte co-ordinates of the black hospital depths.
Short of prefrontal lobotomy, there are only three ways to stop a man from jaunting: a blow on the head producing concussion, sedation which prevents concentration, and concealment of jaunte co-ordinates.
Of the three, the jaunting age considered concealment the most practical.
The cells that line the winding pa.s.sages of Gouffre Martel are cut out of living rock. They are never illuminated. The pa.s.sages are never illuminated. Infrared lamps flood the darkness. It is black light visible only to guards and attendants wearing snooper goggles with specially treated lenses. For the patients there is only the black silence of Gouffre Martel broken by the distant rush of underground waters.
For Foyle there was only the silence, the rushing, and the hospital routine. At eight o'clock (or it may have been any hour in this timeless abyss) he was awakened by a bell. He arose and received his morning meal, slotted into the cell by pneumatic tube. It had to be eaten at once, for the china surrogateof cups and plates was timed to dissolve in fifteen minutes. At eight-thirty the cell door opened and Foyle and hundreds of others shuffled blindly through the twisting corridors to Sanitation.
Here, still in darkness, they were processed like beef in a slaughter house: cleansed, shaved, irradiated, disinfected, dosed, and inoculated. Their paper uniforms were removed and sent back to the shops to be pulped. New uniforms were issued. Then they shuffled back to their cells which had been automatically scrubbed out while they were in Sanitation. In his cell, Foyle listened to interminable therapeutic talks, lectures, moral and ethical guidance for the rest of the morning. Then there was silence again, and nothing but the rush of distant water and the quiet steps of goggled guards in the corridors.
In the afternoon came occupational therapy. The TV screen in each cell illuminated and the patient thrust his hands into the shadow frame of the screen. He saw three-dimensionally and he felt the broadcast objects and tools. He cut hospital uniforms, sewed them, manufactured kitchen utensils, and prepared foods. Although actually he touched nothing, his motions were transmitted to the shops where the work was accomplished by remote control. After one short hour of this relief came the darkness and silence again.
But every so often... once or twice a week (or perhaps once or twice a year) came the m.u.f.fled thud of a distant explosion. The concussions were startling enough to distract Foyle from the furnace of vengeance that he stoked all through the silences. He whispered questions to the invisible figures around him in Sanitation.
"What's them explosions?"
"Explosions?"
"Blow-ups. Hear 'em a long way off, me."
"Them's Blue Jauntes."
"What?"
"Blue Jauntes. Every sometime a guy gets fed up with old Jeffrey. Can't take it no more, him. Jauntes into the wild blue yonder."
"Jesus."
"Yep. Don't know where they are, them. Don't know where they're going. Blue Jaunte into the dark...
and we hear 'em exploding in the mountains. Boom! Blue Jaunte."
He was appalled, but he could understand. The darkness, the silence, the monotony destroyed sense and brought on desperation. The loneliness was intolerable. The patients buried in Gouffre Martel prison hospital looked forward eagerly to the morning Sanitation period for a chance to whisper a word and hear a word. But these fragments were not enough, and desperation came. Then there would be another distant explosion.
Sometimes the suffering men would turn on each other and then a savage fight would break out in Sanitation. These were instantly broken up by the goggled guards, and the morning lecture would switch on the Moral Fiber record preaching the Virtue of Patience.
Foyle learned the records by heart, every word, every click and crack in the tapes. He learned to loathe the voices of the lecturers: the Understanding Baritone, the Cheerful Tenor, the Man-to-Man Ba.s.s. He learned to deafen himself to the therapeutic monotony and perform his occupational therapy mechanically, but he was without resources to withstand the endless solitary hours. Fury was not enough.He lost count of the days, of meals, of sermons. He no longer whispered in Sanitation. His mind came adrift and he began to wander. He imagined he was back aboard "Nomad,"
reliving his fight for survival. Then he lost even this feeble grasp on illusion and began to sink deeper and deeper into the pit of catatonia: of womb silence, womb darkness, and womb sleep.
There were fleeting dreams. An angel hummed to him once. Another time she sang quietly. Thrice he heard her speak: "Oh G.o.d..." and "G.o.d d.a.m.n!" and "Oh..." in a heart-rending descending note.
He sank into his abyss, listening to her.
"There is a way out," his angel murmured in his ear, sweetly, comforting. Her voice was soft and warm, yet it burned with anger. It was the voice of a furious angel. "There is a way out."
It whispered in his ear from nowhere, and suddenly, with the logic of desperation, it came to him that there was a way out of Gouffre Martel. He had been a fool not to see it before.
"Yes," he croaked. "There's a way out."
There was a soft gasp, then a soft question: "Who's there?"
"Me, is all," Foyle said. "You know me."
"Where are you?"
"Here. Where I always been, me."
"But there's no one. I'm alone."
"Got to thank you for helping me."
"Hearing voices is bad," the furious angel murmured. "The first step off the deep end. I've got to stop."
"You showed me the way out. Blue Jaunte."
"Blue Jaunte! My G.o.d, this must be real. You're talking the gutter lingo. You must be real. Who are you?"
"Gully Foyle."
"But you're not in my cell. You're not even near. Men are in the north quadrant of Gouffre Martel.
Women are in the south. I'm South-goo. Where are you?"
"North-in."
"You're a quarter of a mile away. How can we- Of course! It's the Whisper Line. I always thought that was a legend, but it's true. It's working now."
"Here I go, me," Foyle whispered. "Blue Jaunte."
"Foyle, listen to me. Forget the Blue Jaunte. Don't throw this away. It's a miracle."
"What's a miracle?"
"There's an acoustical freak in Gouffre Martel... they happen in underground caves... a freak of echoes, pa.s.sages and whispering galleries. Old-timers call it the Whisper Line. I never believed them. No oneever did, but it's true. We're talking to each other over the Whisper Line. No one can hear us but us.
We can talk, Foyle. We can plan. Maybe we can escape."
Her name was Jisbella McQueen. She was hot-tempered, independent, intelligent, and she was serving five years of cure in Gouffre Martel for larceny. Jisbella gave Foyle a cheerfully furious account of her revolt against society.
"You don't know what jaunting's done to women, Gully. It's locked us up, sent us back to the seraglio."
"What's seraglio, girl?"
"A harem. A place where women are kept on ice. After a thousand years of civilization (it says here) we're still property. Jaunting's such a danger to our virtue, our value, our mint condition, that we're locked up like gold plate in a safe. There's nothing for us to do... nothing respectable. No jobs. No careers. There's no getting out, Gully, unless you bust out and smash all the rules."
"Did you have to, Jiz?"
"I had to be independent, Gully. I had to live my own life, and that's the only way society would let me.
So I ran away from home and turned crook." And j.i.z. went on to describe the lurid details of her revolt: the Temper Racket, the Cataract Racket, the Honeymoon and Obituary Robs, the Badger Jaunte, and the Glim-Drop.
Foyle told her about "Nomad" and "Vorga," his hatred and his plans. He did not tell Jisbella about his face or the twenty millions in platinum bullion waiting out in the asteroids.
"What happened to 'Nomad'?" Jisbella asked. "Was it like that man, Dagenham, said? Was she blasted by an O.S. raider?"
"I don't know, me. Can't remember, girl."
"The blast probably wiped out your memory. Shock. And being marooned for six months didn't help.
Did you notice anything worth salvaging from 'Nomad'?"
"No."
"Did Dagenham mention anything?"
"No," Foyle lied.
"Then he must have another reason for hounding you into Gouffre Martel. There must be something else he wants from 'Nomad.' "
"Yeah, Jiz."
"But you were a fool trying to blow up 'Vorga' like that. You're like a wild beast trying to punish the trap that injured it. Steel isn't alive. It doesn't think. You can't punish 'Vorga.'"
"Don't know what you mean, girl. 'Vorga' pa.s.sed me by."
"You punish the brain, Gully. The brain that sets the trap. Find out who was aboard 'Vorga.' Find out who gave the order to pa.s.s you by. Punish him."
"Yeah. How?""Learn to think, Gully. The head that could figure out how to get 'Nomad' under way and how to put a bomb together ought to be able to figure that out. But no more bombs; brains instead. Locate a member of 'Vorga's' crew. He'll tell you who was aboard. Track them down. Find out who gave the order. Then punish him. But it'll take time, Gully... time and money; more than you've got."
"I got a whole life, me."
They murmured for hours across the Whisper Line, their voices sounding small yet close to the ear. There was only one particular spot in each cell where the other could be heard, which was why so much time had pa.s.sed before they discovered the miracle. But now they made up for lost time. And Jisbella educated Foyle.
"If we ever break out of Gouffre Martel, Gully, it'll have to be together, and I'm not trusting myself to an illiterate partner."
"Who's illiterate?"
"You are," Jisbella answered firmly. "I have to talk gutter a you half the time, me."
"I can read and write."
"And that's about all... which means that outside of brute strength you'll be useless."
"Talk sense, you," he said angrily.
"I am talking sense, me. What's the use of the strongest chisel in the world if it doesn't have an edge?
We've got to sharpen your wits, Gully. Got to educate you, man, is all."
He submitted. He realized she was right. He would need training not only for the bust-out but for the search for "Vorga" as well. Jisbella was the daughter of an architect and had received an education. This she drilled into Foyle, leavened with the cynical experience of five years in the underworld. Occasionally he rebelled against the hard work, and then there would be whispered quarrels, but in the end he would apologize and submit again. And sometimes Jisbella would tire of teaching, and then they would ramble on, sharing dreams in the dark.
"I think we're falling in love, Gully."
"I think so too, Jiz."
"I'm an old hag, Gully. A hundred and five years old. What are you like?"