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Clifford D. Simak. Way Station

you. All that he could do was to make his protest. The rest was up to you.

He could not lay aside his dignity by suggesting what you should do about

it. For the record, he must remain the injured party.”

“Sometimes,” said Enoch, “this business is enough to drive one crazy.

Despite the briefings from Galactic Central, there are always some

surprises, always yawning traps for you to tumble into.”

“There may come a day,” Ulysses said, “when it won’t be like that. I

can look ahead and see, in some thousands of years, the knitting of the

galaxy together into one great culture, one huge area of understanding. The

local and the racial variations still will exist, of course, and that is as

it should be, but overriding all of these will be a tolerance that will make

for what one might be tempted to call a brotherhood.”

“You sound,” said Enoch, “almost like a human. That is the sort of hope

that many of our thinkers have held out.”

“Perhaps,” Ulysses said. “You know that a lot of Earth seems to have

rubbed off on-me. You can’t spend as long as I did on your planet without

picking up at least a bit of it. And by the way, you made a good impression

on the Vegan.”

“I hadn’t noticed it,” Enoch told him. “He was kind and correct, of

course, but little more.”

“That inscription on the gravestone. He was impressed by that.”

“I didn’t put it there to impress anyone. I wrote it out because it was

the way I felt. And because I like the Hazers. I was only trying to make it

right for them.”

“If it were not for the pressure from the galactic factions,” Ulysses

said, “I am convinced the Vegans would be willing to forget the incident and

that is a greater concession than you can realize. It may be that, even so,

they may line up with us when the showdown comes.”

“You mean they might save the station?”

Ulysses shook his head. “I doubt anyone can do that. But it will be

easier for all of us at Galactic Central if they threw their weight with

us.”

The coffeepot was making sounds and Enoch went to get it. Ulysses had

pushed some of the trinkets on the coffee table to one side to make room for

two coffee cups. Enoch filled them and set the pot upon the floor.

Ulysses picked up his cup, held it for a moment in his hands, then put

it back on the table top.

“We’re in bad shape,” he said. “Not like in the old days. It has

Galactic Central worried. All this squabbling and haggling among the races,

all the pushing and the shoving.”

He looked at Enoch. “You thought it was all nice and cozy.”

“No,” said Enoch, “not that. I knew that there were conflicting

viewpoints and I knew there was some trouble. But I’m afraid I thought of it

as being on a fairly lofty plane-gentlemanly, you know, and good-mannered.”

“That was the way it was at one time. There always have been differing

opinions, but they were based on principles and ethics, not on special

interests. You know about the spiritual force, of course-the universal

spiritual force.”

Enoch noped. “I’ve read some of the literature. I don’t quite

understand, but I’m willing to accept it. There is a way, I know, to get in

contact with the force.”

“The Talisman,” said Ulysses.

“That’s it. The Talisman. A machine, of sorts.”

“I suppose,” Ulysses agreed, “you could call it that. Although the

word, ‘machine’ is a little awkward. More than mechanics went into the

making of it. There is just the one. Only one was ever made, by a mystic who

lived ten thousand of your years ago. I wish I could tell you what it is or

how it is constructed, but there is no one, I am afraid, who can tell you

that. There have been others who have attempted to duplicate the Talisman,

but no one has succeeded. The mystic who made it left no blueprints, no

plans, no specifications, not a single note. There is no one who knows

anything about it.”

“There is no reason, I suppose,” said Enoch, “that another should not

be made. No sacred taboos, I mean. To make another one would not be

sacrilegious.”

“Not in the least,” Ulysses told him. “In fact, we need another badly.

For now we have no Talisman. It has disappeared.”

Enoch jerked upright in his chair.

“Disappeared?” he asked.

“Lost,” said Ulysses. “Misplaced. Stolen. No one knows.”

“But I hadn’t …”

Ulysses smiled bleakly. “You hadn’t heard. I know. It is not something

that we talk about. We wouldn’t dare. The people must not know. Not for a

while, at least.”

“But how can you keep it from them?”

“Not too hard to do. You know how it worked, how the custodian took it

from planet to planet and great mass meetings were held, where the Talisman

was exhibited and contact made through it with the spiritual force. There

had never been a schedule of appearances; the custodian simply wandered. It

might be a hundred of your years or more between the visits of the custodian

to any particular planet. The people hold no expectations of a visit. They

simply know there’ll be one, sometime; that some day the custodian will show

up with the Talisman.”

“That way you can cover up for years.”

“Yes,” Ulysses said. “Without any trouble.”

“The leaders know, of course. The administrative people.”

Ulysses shook his head. “We have told very few. The few that we can

trust. Galactic Central knows, of course, but we’re a close-mouthed lot.”

“Then why …”

“Why should I be telling you. I know; I shouldn’t. I don’t know why I

am. Yes, I guess I do. How does it feel, my friend, to sit as a

compassionate confessor?”

“You’re worried,” Enoch said. “I never thought I would see you

worried.”

“It’s a strange business,” Ulysses said. “The Talisman has been missing

for several years or so. And no one knows about it-except Galactic Central

and the- what would you call it?-the hierarchy, I suppose, the organization

of mystics who takes care of the spiritual setup. And yet, even with no one

knowing, the galaxy is beginning to show wear. It’s coming apart at the

seams. In time to come, it may fall apart. As if the Talisman represented a

force that all unknowingly held the races of the galaxy together, exerting

its influence even when it remained unseen.”

“But even if it’s lost, it’s somewhere,” Enoch pointed out. “It still

would be exerting its influence. It couldn’t have been destroyed.”

“You forget,” Ulysses reminded him, “that without its proper custodian,

without its sensitive, it is inoperative. For it’s not the machine itself

that does the trick. The machine merely acts as an intermediary between the

sensitive and the spiritual force. It is an extension of the sensitive. It

magnifies the capability of the sensitive and acts as a link of some sort.

It enables the sensitive to perform his function.”

“You feel that the loss of the Talisman has something to do with the

situation here?”

“The Earth station. Well, not directly, but it is typical. What is

happening in regard to the station is symptomatic. It involves the sort of

petty quarreling and mean bickering that has broken out through many

sections of the galaxy. In the old days it would have been-what did you say,

gentlemanly and on a plane of principles and ethics.”

They sat in silence for a moment, listening to the soft sound that the

wind made as it blew through the gable gingerbread.

“Don’t worry about it,” Ulysses said. “It is not your worry. I should

not have told you. It was indiscreet to do so.”

“You mean I shouldn’t pass it on. You can be sure I won’t.”

“I know you won’t,” Ulysses said. “I never thought you would.”

“You really think relations in the galaxy are deteriorating?”

“Once,” Ulysses said, “the races all were bound together. There were

differences, naturally, but these differences were bridged, sometimes rather

artificially and not too satisfactorily, but with both sides striving to

maintain the artificial bridging and generally succeeding. Because they

wanted to, you see. There was a common purpose, the forging of a great

cofraternity of all intelligences. We realized that among us, among all the

races, we had a staggering fund of knowledge and of techniques-that working

together, by putting together all this knowledge and capability, we could

arrive at something that would be far greater and more significant than any

race, alone, could hope of accomplishing. We had our troubles, certainly,

and as I have said, our differences, but we were progressing. We brushed the

small animosities and the petty differences underneath the rug and worked

only on the big ones. We felt that if we could get the big ones settled, the

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