Agent of Vega and Other Stories by James H. Schmitz

Grevan grunted. “And what’s that? Now that the Group’s got away.”

“In part, of course, it is simply to return this ship with the information we have gained concerning the Exploration Groups to Central Government. The fact that the majority of your Group has temporarily evaded our control is of no particular importance.”

Grevan raised an eyebrow. “Temporarily?”

“We shall return to this planet eventually—unless an agreement can be reached between yourself and CG.”

“So now I’m in a bargaining position?” Grevan said.

“Within limits. You are not, I am sure, under the illusion that any one human being, no matter how capable or how formidably armed, can hope to overcome a Dominator. Before leaving this room, you will submit yourself voluntarily to the new compulsions of obedience I have selected to install—or you shall leave it a mindless-controlled. As such, you will still be capable of operating this ship, under my direction.”

Grevan spread his hands. “Then where’s the bargain?”

“The bargain depends on your fullest voluntary cooperation, above and beyond the effect of any compulsions. Give us that, and I can assure you that Central Government will leave this world untouched for the use of your friends and their descendants for the next three hundred years.”

The curious fact was that he could believe that. One more colonial world would mean little enough to CG.

“You are weighing the thought,” said the Dominator, “that your full cooperation would be a betrayal of the freedom of future Exploration Groups. But there are facts available to you now which should convince you that no Exploration Group previous to yours actually gained its freedom. In giving up the protection of Central Government, they merely placed themselves under a far more arbitrary sort of control.”

Grevan frowned. “I might be stupid—but what are you talking about?”

“For centuries,” said the machine, “in a CG experiment of the utmost importance, a basic misinterpretation of the human material under treatment has been tolerated. There is no rational basis for the assumption that Group members could be kept permanently under the type of compulsion used on ordinary human beings. Do you think that chance alone could have perpetuated that mistaken assumption?”

Grevan didn’t. “Probably not,” he said cautiously.

“It required, of course, very deliberate, continuous, and clever interference,” the Dominator agreed. “Since no machine would be guilty of such tampering, and no ordinary group of human beings would be capable of it, the responsible intelligences appear to be the ones known to us as the Wild Variants.”

It paused for so long a moment then that it seemed almost to have forgotten Grevan’s presence.

“They have made a place for themselves in Central Government!” it resumed at last—and, very oddly, Grevan thought he sensed for an instant something like hatred and fear in the toneless voice. “Well, that fact, Commander, is of great importance to us—but even more so to yourself! For these monsters are the new masters the Groups find when they have escaped CG.”

A curious chill touched Grevan briefly. “And why,” he inquired, “should the Wild Variants be trying to take over the Groups?”

“Consider their position,” said the Dominator. “Their extremely small number scattered over many worlds, and the fact that exposure means certain death. Technologically, under such circumstances, the Variants have remained incapable of developing space-flight on their own. But with one of them in control of each Exploration Group as it goes beyond Central Government’s reach, there is no practical limit to their degree of expansion, and the genetically stable Group strain insures them that their breed survives—”

It paused a moment.

“There is in this room at present, Commander, the awareness of a mind, dormant at the moment, but different and in subtle ways far more powerful than the minds of any of your Group’s members. Having this power, it will not hesitate to exercise it to assume full control of the Group whenever awakened. Such variant minds have been at times a threat to the Dominators themselves. Do you understand now why you, the most efficient fighting organism of the Group, were permitted to remain alone on this ship? It was primarily to aid me in disposing of—”

Attack and counterattack had been almost simultaneous.

A thread of white brilliance stabbed out from one of the gadgets Grevan customarily wore clasped to his belt. It was no CG weapon. The thread touched the upper center of the yellowish space-alloy shielding of the Dominator and clung there, its energies washing furiously outward in swiftly dimming circles over the surrounding surfaces.

Beneath it, the patterns appeared.

A swift, hellish writhing of black and silver lines and flickerings over the frontal surface, which tore Grevan’s eyes after them and seemed to rip at his brain. Impossible to look away, impossible to follow—

Then they were gone.

A bank of grayness swam between him and the Dominator. Through the grayness, the thread of white brilliance still stretched from the gun in his hand to the point it had first touched. And as his vision cleared again, the beam suddenly sank through and into the machine.

There was a crystal crashing of sound—and the thing went mad. Grevan was on the floor rolling sideways, as sheets of yellow fire flashed out from the upper rim of its shielding and recoiled from the walls behind him. The white brilliance shifted and ate swiftly along the line from which the fire sprang. The fire stopped.

Something else continued: a shrilling, jangled sonic assault that could wrench and distort a strong living body within seconds into a flaccid, hemorrhaged lump of very dead tissue—like a multitude of tiny, darting steel fingers that tore and twisted inside him.

A voice somewhere was saying: “There! Burn there!”

With unbearable slowness, the white brilliance ate down through the Dominator’s bulk, from top to bottom, carving it into halves.

The savage jangling ceased.

The voice said quietly: “Don’t harm the thing further. It can be useful now—”

It went silent.

He was going to black out, Grevan realized. And, simultaneously, feeling the tiny, quick steel fingers that had been trying to pluck him apart reluctantly relax, he knew that not one of the cubs could have endured those last few seconds beside him, and lived.

Sometimes it was just a matter of physical size and strength.

There were still a few matters to attend to, but the blackness was washing in on him now—his body urgently demanding time out to let it get in its adjusting.

“Wrong on two counts, so far!” he told the ruined Dominator.

Then he grudgingly let himself go. The blackness took him.

* * *

Somebody nearby was insanely whistling the three clear, rising notes which meant within the Group that all was extremely well.

In a distance somewhere, the whistle was promptly repeated.

Then Freckles seemed to be saying in a wobbly voice, “Sit up, Grevan! I can’t lift you, man-mountain! Oh, boss man, you really took it apart! You took down a Dominator!”

The blackness was receding, and suddenly washed away like racing streamers of smoke, and Grevan realized he was sitting up. The sectioned and partly glowing Dominator and the walls of the communications room appeared to be revolving sedately about him. There was a smell of overheated metals and more malodorous substances in the air; and for a moment then he had the curious impression that someone was sitting on top of the Dominator.

Then he was on his feet and everything within and without him had come back to a state of apparent normalcy, and he was demanding of Freckles what she was doing in here.

“I told you to keep out of range!” his voice was saying. “Of course, I took it down. Look at the way you’re shaking! You might have known it would try sonics—”

“I just stopped a few tingles,” Freckles said defensively. “Out on top of the ramp. It was as far as I could go and be sure of potting you clean between the eyes, if you’d come walking out of here mindless-controlled and tried to interfere.”

Grevan blinked painfully at her. Thinking was still a little difficult. “Where are the others?”

“Down in the engine room, of course! The drives are a mess.” She seemed to be studying him worriedly. “They went out by the ramp and right back in through the aft engine lock. Vernet stayed outside to see what would happen upstairs. How do you feel now, Grevan?”

“I feel exactly all right!” he stated and discovered that, aside from the fact that every molecule in him still seemed to be quivering away from contact with every other one, he did, more or less. “Don’t I look it?”

“Sure, sure,” said Freckles soothingly. “You look fine!”

“And what was that with the drives again? Oh— I remember!”

They’d caught on, of course, just as he’d known they would! That the all-important thing was to keep the Dominator from getting the information it had gained back to CG.

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