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Clifford D. Simak. Way Station

being a certain feeling of deep sorrow in it, as if one might feel that

never in his lifetime would he know an instant like this, and that in

another instant he would lose it and never would be able to hunt it out

again. But that was not the way it was, for this ascendant instant kept

going on and on.

Lucy walked between them and she held the bag that contained the

Talisman close against her breast, with her two arms clasped about it, and

Enoch, looking at her, in the soft glow of its light, could not help but

think of a little girl carrying her beloved pussy cat.

“Never for a century,” said Ulysses, “perhaps for many centuries,

perhaps never, has it glowed so well. I myself cannot remember when it was

like this. It is wonderful, is it not?”

“Yes,” said Enoch. “It is wonderful.”

“Now we shall be one again,” Ulysses said. “Now we shall feel again.

Now we shall be a people instead of many people…”

“But the creature that had it …”

“A clever one,” Ulysses said. “He was holding it for ransom.”

“It had been stolen, then.”

“We do not know all the circumstances,” Ulysses told him. “We will find

out, of course.”

They tramped on in silence through the woods and far in the east one

could see, through the treetops, the first flush in the sky that foretold

the rising moon.

“There is something,” Enoch said.

“Ask me,” said Ulysses.

“How could that creature back there carry it and not feel – feel no

part of it? For if he could have, he would not have stolen it.”

“There is only one in many billions,” Ulysses said, “who can – how do

you say it? – tune in on it, perhaps. To you and I it would be nothing. It

would not respond to us. We could hold it in our hands forever and there

would nothing happen. But let that one in many billions lay a finger on it

and it becomes alive. There is a certain rapport, a sensitivity – I don’t

know how to say it – that forms a bridge between this strange machine and

the cosmic spiritual force. It is not the machine, itself, you understand,

that reaches out and taps the spiritual force. It is the living creature’s

mind, aided by the mechanism, that brings the force to us.”

A machine, a mechanism, no more than a tool – technological brother to

the hoe, the wrench, the hammer – and yet as far a cry from these as the

human brain was from that first amino acid which had come into being on this

planet when the Earth was very young. One was tempted, Enoch thought, to say

that this was as far as a tool could go, that it was the ultimate in the

ingenuity possessed by any brain. But that would be a dangerous way of

thinking, for perhaps there was no limit, there might, quite likely, be no

such condition as the ultimate; there might be no time when any creature or

any group of creatures could stop at any certain point and say, this is as

far as we can go, there is no use of trying to go farther. For each new

development produced, as side effects, so many other possibilities, so many

other roads to travel, that with each step one took down any given road

there were more paths to follow. There’d never be an end, he thought – no

end to anything.

They reached the edge of the field and headed up across it toward the

station. From its upper edge came the sound of running feet.

“Enoch!” a voice shouted out of the darkness. “Enoch, is that you?”

Enoch recognized the voice.

“Yes, Winslowe. What is wrong?”

The mailman burst out of the darkness and stopped, panting with his

running, at the edge of light.

“Enoch, they are coming! A couple of carloads of them. But I put a

crimp in them. Where the road turns off into your lane – that narrow place,

you know. I dumped two pounds of roofing nails along the ruts. That’ll hold

them for a while.”

“Roofing nails?” Ulysses asked.

“It’s a mob,” Enoch told him. “They are after me. The nails …

“Oh, I see,” Ulysses said “The deflation of the tires.”

Winslowe took a slow step closer, his gaze riveted on the glow of the

shielded Talisman.

“That’s Lucy Fisher, ain’t it?”

“Of course it is,” said Enoch.

“Her old man came roaring into town just a while ago and said she was

gone again. Up until then everything had quieted down and it was all right.

But old Hank, he got them stirred up again. So I went down to the hardware

store and got them roofing nails and I beat them here.”

“This mob?” Ulysses asked. “I don’t …”

Winslowe interrupted him, gasping in his eagerness to tell all his

information. “That ginseng man is up there, waiting at the house for you. He

has a panel truck.”

“That,” said Enoch, “would be Lewis with the Hazer’s body.”

“He is some upset,” said Winslowe. “He said you were expecting him.”

“Perhaps,” suggested Ulysses, “we shouldn’t just be standing here. It

seems to my poor intellect that many things, indeed, may be coming to a

crisis.”

“Say,” the mailman yelled, “what is going on here? What is that thing

Lucy has and who’s this fellow with you?”

“Later,” Enoch told him. “I’ll tell you later. There’s no time to tell

you now.”

“But, Enoch, there’s the mob.”

“I’ll deal with them,” said Enoch grimly, “when I have to deal with

them. Right now there’s something more important.”

They ran up the slope, the four of them, dodging through the waist –

high clumps of weeds Ahead of them the station reared dark and angular

against the evening sky.

“They’re down there at the turnoff,” Winslowe gasped, wheezing with his

running. “That flash of light down the ridge. That was the headlights of a

car.”

They reached the edge of the yard and ran toward the house. The black

bulk of the panel truck glimmered in the glow cast by the Talisman. A figure

detached itself from the shadow of the truck and hurried out toward them.

“Is that you, Wallace?”

“Yes,” said Enoch. “I’m sorry that I wasn’t here.”

“I was a bit upset,” said Lewis, “when I didn’t find you waiting.”

“Something unforeseen,” said Enoch. “Something that must be taken care

of.”

“The body of the honored one?” Ulysses asked. “It is in the truck?”

Lewis noped. “I am happy that we can restore it.”

“We’ll have to carry him down to the orchard,” Enoch said. “You can’t

get a car in there.”

“The other time,” Ulysses said, “you were the one who carried him.”

Enoch noped.

“My friend,” the alien said, “I wonder if on this occasion I could be

allowed the honor.”

“Why, yes, of course,” said Enoch. “He would like it that way.”

And the words came to his tongue, but he choked them back, for it would

not have done to say them – the words of thanks for lifting from him the

necessity of complete recompense, for the gesture which released him from

the utter letter of the law.

At his elbow, Winslowe said: “They are coming. I can hear them down the

road.”

He was right.

From down the road came the soft sound of footsteps paping in the dust,

not hurrying, with no need to hurry, the insulting and deliberate treading

of a monster so certain of its prey that it need not hurry.

Enoch swung around and half lifted his rifle, training it toward the

paping that came out of the dark.

Behind him, Ulysses spoke softly: “Perhaps it would be most proper to

bear him to the grave in the full glory and unshielded light of our restored

Talisman.”

“She can’t hear you,” Enoch said. “You must remember she is deaf. You

will have to show her.”

But even as he said it, a blaze leaped out that was blinding in its

brightness.

With a strangled cry Enoch half turned back to face the little group

that stood beside the truck, and the bag that had enclosed the Talisman, he

saw, lay at Lucy’s feet and she held the glowing brightness high and proudly

so that it spread its light across the yard and the ancient house, and some

of it as well spilled out into the field.

There was a quietness. As if the entire world had caught its breath and

stood attentive and in awe, waiting for a sound that did not come, that

would never come but would always be expected.

And with the quietness came an abiding sense of peace that seemed to

seep into the very fiber of one’s being. It was no synthetic thing – not as

if someone had invoked a peace and peace then was allowed to exist by

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Categories: Simak, Clifford
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