Clifford D. Simak. Way Station

away by a fierce heat and the very soil and rock turned into a simmering

puping.

A laser, Enoch thought. The alien’s weapon was a laser, packing a

terrific punch in a narrow beam of light.

He gathered himself together and made a short rush up the hillside,

throwing himself prone behind a twisted birch clump.

The air made the frying sound again and there was an instant’s blast of

heat and the ozone once again. Over on the reverse slope a patch of ground

was steaming. Ash floated down and settled on Enoch’s arms. He flashed a

quick glance upward and saw that the top half of the birch clump was gone,

sheared off by the laser and reduced to ash. Tiny coils of smoke rose lazily

from the severed stumps.

No matter what it may have done, or failed to do, back there at the

station, the alien now meant business. It knew that it was cornered and it

was playing vicious.

Enoch hupled against the ground and worried about Lucy. He hoped that

she was safe. The little fool should have stayed out of it. This was no

place for her. She shouldn’t even have been out in the woods at this time of

day. She’d have old Hank out looking for her again, thinking she was

kidnapped. He wondered what the hell had gotten into her.

The dusk was deepening. Only the far peak of the treetops caught the

last rays of the sun. A coolness came stealing up the ravine from the valley

far below and there was a damp, lush smell that came out of the ground. From

some hipen hollow a whippoorwill called out mournfully.

Enoch darted out from behind the birch clump and rushed up the slope.

He reached the fallen log he’d picked as a barricade and threw himself

behind it. There was no sign of the alien and there was not another shot

from the laser gun.

Enoch studied the ground ahead. Two more rushes, one to that small pile

of rock and the next to the edge of the boulder area itself, and he’d be on

top of the hiding alien. And once he got there, he wondered, what was he to

do.

Go in and rout the alien out, of course.

There was no plan that could be made, no tactics that could be laid out

in advance. Once he got to the edge of the boulders, he must play it all by

ear, taking advantage of any break that might present itself He was at a

disadvantage in that he must not kill the alien, but must capture it instead

and drag it back, kicking and screaming, if need be, to the safety of the

station.

Perhaps, here in the open air, it could not use its stench defense as

effectively as it had in the confines of the station, and that, he thought,

might make it easier. He examined the clump of boulders from one edge to the

other and there was nothing that might help him to locate the alien.

Slowly he began to snake around, getting ready for the next rush up the

slope, moving carefully so that no sound would betray him.

Out of the tail of his eye he caught the moving shadow that came

flowing up the slope. Swiftly he sat up, swinging the rifle. But before he

could bring the muzzle round, the shadow was upon him, bearing him back,

flat upon the ground, with one great splay-fingered hand clamped upon his

mouth.

“Ulysses!” Enoch gurgled, but the fearsome shape only, hissed at him in

a warning sound.

Slowly the weight shifted off him and the hand slid from his mouth.

Ulysses gestured toward the boulder pile and Enoch noped.

Ulysses crept closer and lowered his head toward Enoch’s. He whispered

with his mouth inches from the Earthman’s ear: “The Talisman! He has the

Talisman!”

“The Talisman!” Enoch cried aloud, trying to strangle off the cry even

as he made it, remembering that he should make no sound to let the watcher

up above know where they might be.

From the ridge above a loose stone rattled as it was dislodged and

began to roll, bouncing down the slope. Enoch hunkered closer to the ground

behind the fallen log.

“Down!” he ‘shouted to Ulysses. “Down! He has a gun.”

But Ulysses’ hand gripped him by the shoulder.

“Enoch!” he cried. “Enoch, look!”

Enoch jerked himself erect and atop the pile of rock, dark against the

skyline, were two grappling figures.

“Lucy!” he shouted.

For one of them was Lucy and the other was the alien.

She sneaked up on him, he thought. The damn little fool, she sneaked up

on him! While the alien had been distracted with watching the slope, she had

slipped up close and then had tackled him. She had a club of some sort in

her hand, an old dead branch, perhaps, and it was raised above her head,

ready for a stroke, but the alien had a grip upon her arm and she could not

strike.

“Shoot,” said Ulysses, in a flat, dead voice.

Enoch raised the rifle and had trouble with the sights because of the

deepening darkness. And they were so close together! They were too close

together.

“Shoot!” yelled Ulysses.

“I can’t,” sobbed Enoch. “It’s too dark to shoot.”

“You have to shoot,” Ulysses said, his voice tense and hard. “You have

to take the chance.”

Enoch raised the rifle once again and the sights seemed clearer now and

he knew the trouble was not so much the darkness as that shot which he had

missed back there in the world of the honking thing that had strode its

world on stilts. If he had missed then, he could as well miss now.

The bead came to rest upon the head of the ratlike creature, and then

the head bobbed away, but was bobbing back again.

“Shoot!” Ulysses yelled.

Enoch squeezed the trigger and the rifle coughed and up atop the rocks

the creature stood for a second with only half a head and with tattered

gouts of flesh flying briefly like dark insects zooming against the

half-light of the western sky.

Enoch dropped the gun and sprawled upon the earth, clawing his fingers

into the thin and mossy soil, sick with the thought of what could have

happened, weak with the thankfulness that it had not happened, that the

years on that fantastic rifle range had at last paid off.

How strange it is, he thought, how so many senseless things shape our

destiny. For the rifle range had been a senseless thing, as senseless as a

billiard table or a game of cards-designed for one thing only, to please the

keeper of the station. And yet the hours he’d spent there had shaped toward

this hour and end, to this single instant on this restricted slope of

ground.

The sickness drained away into the earth beneath him and a peace came

stealing in upon him-the peace of trees and woodland soil and the first

faint hush of nightfall. As if the sky and stars and very space itself had

leaned close above him and was whispering his essential oneness with them.

And it seemed for a moment that he had grasped the edge of some great truth

and with this truth had come a comfort and a greatness he’d never known

before.

“Enoch,” Ulysses whispered. “Enoch, my brother…”

There was something like a hipen sob in the alien’s voice and he had

never, until this moment, called the Earthman brother.

Enoch pulled himself to his knees and up on the pile of tumbled

boulders was a soft and wondrous light, a soft and gentle light, as if a

giant firefly had turned on its lamp and had not turned it off, but had left

it burning.

The light was moving down across the rocks toward them and he could see

Lucy moving with the light, as if she were walking toward them with a

lantern in her hand.

Ulysses’ hand reached out of the darkness and closed hard on Enoch’s

arm.

“Do you see?” he asked.

“Yes, I see. What is …”

“It is the Talisman,” Ulysses said, enraptured, his breath rasping in

his throat. “And she is our new custodian. The one we’ve hunted through the

years.”

33

You did not become accustomed to it, Enoch told himself as they tramped

up through the woods. There was not a moment you were not aware of it. It

was something that you wanted to hug close against yourself and hold it

there forever, and even when it was gone from you, you’d probably not forget

it, ever.

It was something that was past all description – a mother’s love, a

father’s pride, the adoration of a sweetheart, the closeness of a comrade,

it was all of these and more. It made the farthest distance near and turned

the complex simple and it swept away all fear and sorrow, for all of there

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