Clifford D. Simak. Way Station

know what we’ll find there. After we’ve made all the effort and spent all

the time we may find little or nothing, except possibly some more real

estate. And we have plenty of that in the galaxy. But the clusters have a

vast appeal for certain types of minds.”

Enoch noped. “I can see that. It would be the first venturing out of

the galaxy itself. It might be the first short step on the route that could

lead us to other galaxies.”

Ulysses peered at him. “You, too,” he said. “I might have known.”

Enoch said smugly: “I am that type of mind.”

“Well, anyhow, there was this globular-cluster faction-I suppose you’d

call it that-which contended bitterly when we began our move in this

direction. You understand-certainly you do-that we’ve barely begun the

expansion into this neighborhood. We have less than a dozen stations and

we’ll need a hundred. It will take centuries before the network is

complete.”

“So this faction is still contending,” Enoch said. “There still is time

to stop this spiral-arm project.”

“That is right. And that’s what worries me. For the faction is set to

use this incident of the missing body as an emotion-charged argument against

the extension of this network. It is being joined by other groups that are

concerned with certain special interests. And these special interest groups

see a better chance of getting what they want if they can wreck this

project.”

“Wreck it?”

“Yes, wreck it. They will start screaming, as soon as the body incident

becomes open knowledge, that a planet so barbaric as the Earth is no fit

location for a station. They will insist that this station be abandoned.”

“But they can’t do that!”

“They can,” Ulysses said. “They will say it is degrading and unsafe to

maintain a station so barbaric that even graves are rifled, on a planet

where the honored dead cannot rest in peace. It is the kind of highly

emotional argument that will gain wide acceptance and support in some

sections of the galaxy. The Vegans tried their best. They tried to hush it

up, for the sake of the project. They have never done a thing like that

before. They are a proud people and they feel a slight to honor-perhaps more

deeply than many other races- and yet, for the greater good, they were

willing to accept dishonor. And would have if they could have kept it quiet.

But the story leaked out somehow-by good espionage, no doubt. And they

cannot stand the loss of face in advertised dishonor. The Vegan who will be

arriving here this evening is an official representative charged with

delivering an official protest.”

“To me?”

“To you, and through you, to the Earth.”

“But the Earth is not concerned. The Earth doesn’t even know.”

“Of course it doesn’t. So far as Galactic Central is concerned, you are

the Earth. You represent the Earth.”

Enoch shook his head. It was a crazy way of thinking. But, he told

himself, he should not be surprised. It was the kind of thinking he should

have expected. He was too hidebound, he thought, too narrow. He had been

trained in the human way of thinking and, even after all these years, that

way of thought persisted. Persisted to a point where any way of thought that

conflicted with it must automatically seem wrong.

This talk of abandoning Earth station was wrong, too. It made no sort

of sense. For abandoning of the station would not wreck the project.

Although, more than likely, it would wreck whatever hope he’d held for the

human race.

“But even if you have to abandon Earth,” he said, “you could go out to

Mars. You could build a station there. If it’s necessary to have a station

in this solar system there are other planets.”

“You don’t understand,” Ulysses told him. “This station is just one

point of attack. It is no more than a toehold, just a bare beginning. The

aim is to wreck the project, to free the time and effort that is expended

here for some other project. If they can force us to abandon one station,

then we stand discredited. Then all our motives and our judgment come up for

review.”

“But even if the project should be wrecked,” Enoch pointed out, “there

is no surety that any group would gain. It would only throw the question of

where the time and energy should be used into an open debate. You say that

there are many special interest factions banding together to carry on the

fight against us. Suppose that they do win. Then they must turn around and

start fighting among themselves.”

“Of course that’s the case,” Ulysses admitted, “but then each of them

has a chance to get what they want, or think they have a chance. The way it

is they have no chance at all. Before any of them has a chance this project

must go down the drain. There is one group on the far side of the galaxy

that wants to move out into the thinly populated sections of one particular

section of the rim. They still believe in an ancient legend which says that

their race arose as the result of immigrants from another galaxy who landed

on the rim and worked their way inward over many galactic years. They think

that if they can get out to the rim they can turn that legend into history

to their greater glory. Another group wants to go into a small spiral arm

because of an obscure record that many eons ago their ancestors picked up

some virtually undecipherable messages which they believed came from that

direction. Through the years the story has grown, until today they are

convinced a race of intellectual giants will be found in that spiral arm.

And there is always the pressure, naturally, to probe deeper into the

galactic core. You must realize that we have only started, that the galaxy

still is largely unexplored, that the thousands of races who form Galactic

Central still are pioneers. And as a result, Galactic Central is continually

subjected to all sorts of pressures.”

“You sound,” said Enoch, “as if you have little hope of maintaining

this station, here on Earth.”

“Almost no hope at all,” Ulysses told him. “But so far as you yourself

are concerned, there will be an option. You can stay here and live out an

ordinary life on Earth or you can be assigned to another station. Galactic

Central hopes that you would elect to continue on with us.”

“That sounds pretty final.”

“I am afraid,” Ulysses said, “it is. I am sorry, Enoch, to be, the

bearer of bad news.”

Enoch sat numb and stricken. Bad news! It was worse than that. It was

the end of everything.

He sensed the crashing down of not only his own personal world, but of

all the hopes of Earth. With the station gone, Earth once more would be left

in the backwaters of the galaxy, with no hope of help, no chance of

recognition, no realization of what lay waiting in the galaxy. Standing

alone and naked, the human race would go on in its same old path, fumbling

its uncertain way toward a blind, mad future.

20

The Hazer was elderly. The golden haze that enveloped him had lost the

sparkle of its youthfulness. It was a mellow glow, deep and rich-not the

blinding haze of a younger being. He carried himself with a solid dignity,

and the flaring topknot that was neither hair nor feathers was white, a sort

of saintly whiteness. His face was soft and tender, the softness and the

tenderness which in a man might have been expressed in kindly wrinkles.

“I am sorry,” he told Enoch, “that our meeting must be such as this.

Although, under any circumstances, I am glad to meet you. I have heard of

you. It is not often that a being of an outside planet is the keeper of a

station. Because of this, young being, I have been intrigued with you. I

have wondered what sort of creature you might turn out to be.”

“You need have no apprehension of him,” Ulysses said, a little sharply.

“I will vouch for him. We have been friends for years.”

“Yes, I forgot,” the Hazer said. “You are his discoverer.”

He peered around the room. “Another one,” he said. “I did not know

there were two of them. I only knew of one.”

“It’s a friend of Enoch’s,” Ulysses said.

“There has been contact, then. Contact with the planet.”

“No, there has been no contact.”

“Perhaps an indiscretion.”

“Perhaps,” Ulysses said, “but under provocation that I doubt either you

or I could have stood against.”

Lucy had risen to her feet and now she came across the room, moving

quietly and slowly, as if she might be floating.

The Hazer spoke to her in the common tongue. “I am glad to meet you.

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