She almost smiled. “But—you seemed so helpless at first. And later—in the A-P station—”
“It worked,” I said. “It got us here—together.” She looked at me as if I’d just told her there was a Santa, after all.
“You mean—all this—was part of some prearranged scheme?”
“I’m counting on it,” I said.
“Please explain, Ravel.”
I let my thoughts rove back, looking for words to make her understand how it was with me; to understand enough but not too much…
“Back in Buffalo,” I said, “I was just Jim Kelly; I had a job, a room in a boardinghouse. I spent my off-hours mooching around town like the rest of the young males, sitting in movies and bars, watching the girls go by. And sometimes watching other things. I never really questioned it when I’d find myself pacing back and forth across the street from an empty warehouse at 3:00 A.M. I just figured I couldn’t sleep. But I watched; and I recorded what I saw. And after a while the things made a pattern, and it was as if a light went on and said, ‘Advance to phase B.’ I don’t remember just when it was I remembered I was a Timecast agent. The knowledge was just there one day, waiting to be used. And I knew what to do—and did it.”
“That’s when you left your Lisa.”
I nodded. “After I’d taken out the Karg, I taped my data and reported back to base. When the attack came, I reacted automatically. One thing led to another. All those things led us, here, now.”
“But—what comes next?”
“I don’t know. There are a lot of unanswered questions. Such as why you’re here.”
“You said a Karg sent me here.”
I nodded. “I don’t know what his objective was, but it doesn’t coincide with anything you or I would like to see come to pass.”
“I… see,” she murmured.
“What was the program you were embarked on here?”
“I was trying to set up a school.”
“Teaching what?”
“Freud, Darwin, Kant. Sanitation, birth control, political philosophy, biology—”
“Plus free love and atheism, if not Popery?” I wagged my head at her. “No wonder you ended up on a tar-and-feathers party. Or was it the ducking stool?”
“Just—a public whipping. I thought—”
“Sure; the Karg planted the idea you were carrying out a noble trust, bringing enlightenment to the heathen, rewards to the underprivileged, and truth to the benighted.”
“Is that bad? If these people could be educated to think straightforwardly about matters that affect their lives—”
“The program couldn’t have been better designed to get you hanged if it had been planned for the purpose… .” I was listening to footsteps; ones I had heard before.
“Possibly I can clear up the mystery, Mr. Ravel,” a familiar unctuous voice said from the kitchen door. The Karg stood there, garbed in drab local woolens, gazing placidly at us. He came across to the table, seated himself opposite me as he had done once before.
“You’ve got a habit of barging in without waiting for an invitation,” I said.
“Ah, but why should I not, Mr. Ravel? After all—it’s my party.” He smiled blandly at Mellia. She looked back at him coldly.
“Are you the one who sent me here?” she asked.
“It’s as Agent Ravel surmised. In order for you to involve yourself in a predicament from which it would be necessary for Mr. Ravel to extricate you.”
“Why?”
He raised his plump hands and let them fall. “It’s a complex matter, Miss Gayl. I think Mr. Ravel might understand, since he fancies his own expertise in such matters.”
“We were being manipulated,” I said, sounding disgusted. “There are forces at work that have to be considered when you start reweaving the Timestem. There has to be a causal chain behind any action to give it entropic stability: It wouldn’t do to just dump the two of us here—with a little help from our friendly neighborhood Karg.”
“Why didn’t he just appear when we were together at Dinosaur Beach—the night we met?”
“Simple,” I said. “He didn’t know where we were.”
“I searched,” the Karg said. “Over ten years of effort; but you eluded me—for a time. But time, Mr. Ravel, is a commodity of which I have an ample supply.”
“You came close at the deserted station—the one where we found the old lady,” I said.
The Karg nodded. “Yes. I waited over half a century—and missed you by moments. But no matter. We’re all here now, together—just as I planned.”
“As you planned—” Mellia started, and fell silent. The Karg looked slightly amused. Maybe he felt amused; they’re subtle machines, Kargs.
“Of course. Randomness plays little part in my activities, Miss Gayl. Oh, it’s true at times I’m forced to rely on statistical methods—scattering a thousand seeds that one may survive—but in the end the result is predictable. I tricked Mr. Ravel into searching you out. I followed.”
“So—now that you have us here—what do you want?” I asked him.
“There is a task which you will carry out for me, Mr. Ravel. Both of you.”
“Back to that again.”
“I require two agents—human—to perform a delicate function in connection with the calibration of certain apparatus. Not any two humans—but two humans bound by an affinity necessary to the task at hand. You and Miss Gayl fulfill that requirement very nicely.”
“You’ve made a mistake,” Mellia said sharply. “Agent Ravel and I are professional colleagues—nothing more.”
“Indeed? May I point out that the affinity to which I refer drew him—and you—into the trap I set. A trap baited, Miss Gayl, with yourself.”
“I don’t understand …”
“Easy,” I said. “The old lady. He built that dead end and tricked you into it. You were stuck for half a century, waiting for me to come along. He swooped—a little too late.”
She looked at the Karg as if he’d just crawled out of her apple.
“Before that,” I said, “when you caught me in your animal trap: I wondered why I happened to select just that spot to land, with all eternity to choose from. It was you, love—drawing me like a magnet. The same way it drew me here, now. To the moment when you needed me.”
“That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard,” she said, but some of the conviction had gone out of her voice. “You don’t love me,” she said. “You love—”
“Enough.” The Karg held up his hand. He was in command now, in full control of the situation. “The rationale of my actions is not important. What is important is the duty you’ll perform for the Final Authority—”
“Not me.” Mellia stood up. “I’ve had enough of you—both of you. I won’t carry out your orders.”
“Sit down, Miss Gayl,” the Karg said coldly. When she started to turn away, he caught her wrist, twisted it until she sank into her chair.
She looked at me with wide, scared eyes.
“If you’re wondering why Mr. Ravel fails to leap to your defense,” the Karg said, “I might explain that his considerable armory of implanted neuronic weaponry is quite powerless in this particular locus—which is why I selected it, of course.”
“Powerless—” she started.
“Sorry, doll,” I cut her off. “He played it cute. The nearest power tap is just out of range. He picked the only dead spot in a couple of thousand centuries to decoy us to.”
“Isn’t it a pity that it’s all wasted?” she said in a voice that was trying not to tremble.
“As to that, I’m sure that you will soon prove to me—” said the Karg, “and to yourselves—that I have made no error. We will now proceed to the scene where you will make your contribution to the Final Authority.” He stood.
“We haven’t had our dinner yet,” I said.
“Come, Mr. Ravel—this is no time for facetiousness.”
“I never liked cold mutton anyway,” I said, and stood. Mellia got to her feet slowly, her eyes on me.
“You’re simply going to surrender—without a struggle?”
I lifted my shoulders and smiled a self-forgiving smile. Her face went pale and her mouth came as close to sneering as such a mouth can come.
“Careful,” I said. “You’ll louse up our affinity.”
The Karg had taken a small cube from his pocket. He did things to it. I caught just a glimpse of the gnome-like landlord peeking from the kitchen before it all spun away in a whirlwind like the one that carried Dorothy to the Land of Oz.
29
“Beautiful, don’t you agree?” the Karg said. He waved a hand at the hundred or so square miles of stainless steel we were standing on. Against a black sky, sharp-cornered steel buildings thrust up like gap teeth. Great searchlights dazzled against the complex shapes of giant machines that trundled slowly, with much rumbling, among the structures.
A small rubber-wheeled cart rolled to a noiseless stop beside us. We got in and sat on the utilitarian seats, not comfortable, not uncomfortable—just something to sit on. The cart rolled forward, accelerating very rapidly. The air was cool, with a dead, reused odor. The tall buildings got closer fast. Mellia sat beside me as stiff as a mummy.