“Murderer! Our daughter’s name is Finette! And she hates German food! I’m through with you, you . . . you Bluebeard!” She turned to flee. As Lew jumped after her, Carla aimed a roundhouse slap that connected with a report like a dropped light bulb.
“Keep away from me, you deviate!” she yelped.
“Look at the hairdo,” Abe mourned.
“Mr. Fleischpultzer!” A penetrating voice sounded. A small, pouty-faced man in an expensive gray Gooberlon executive coverall had appeared from behind a fly.
“Why—if it isn’t the sponsor, Mr. Harlowe Goober of Goober Industries,” Hugo babbled. “Welcome to the set, Mr. Goober, which we were just horsing around a little, you know, high spirits and all that—”
“I’m canceling the show,” Goober barked. “I’ve noticed for some time the gradual disintegration of the moral tone of this network. This orgy is the final straw. I’m taking my trade to NABAC!”
“But—Mr. Goober—”
“Unless—that person is replaced at once!” Goober pointed dramatically at Lew Jantry.
“But . . . but . . . but . . . his contract!” Hugo blurted. “And what about the script? They’re about to have a baby!”
“Let him die in childbirth,” Goober proposed, and stamped off the set.
“My lawyer will call you, you bum!” Marta shrilled. “Married to an actor is bad enough—but an out-of-work actor . . . !”
“But the Guild,” Lew rallied weakly. “Hugo, say something!”
“Half the Guild’s working on Goober-sponsored accounts.” Fleischpultzer shrugged. “They won’t buck him.”
“We’ll have him suicide when it comes out he’s an embezzler.” Carla’s voice sounded above the hubbub. “And I’ll meet that handsome obstetrician . . . ”
“You mean—” Lew swallowed hard, watching the set empty as all personnel moved to disassociate themselves from failure. “You mean I’m washed up in TV? But what will I do? All those hours of leisure time—”
“View TV,” Hugo said. “Or maybe get a job in a factory.”
“And stand by an automated machine two hours a day, watching telly? You don’t understand, Hugo! I’m an artist, not a . . . a drone!”
“Well . . . there is just one remote possibility,” Hugo said reluctantly. “But no—you wouldn’t go for it.”
“Anything!” Lew said hastily. “Anything at all, Hugo!”
“Well—if I work it right, I think I can get you a spot in a new documentary.”
“I’ll take it!”
“Sign here!” Hugo whipped out a thick bundle of contract documents. Lew grabbed the pen.
“I’ll be in a star slot, of course?”
“Natcherally. Would I do you that way?”
Lew signed. “Thanks a million, Hugo.” He sighed, gathering his blanket about him. “What set do I report to?”
Hugo shook his head. “No set, Lew. The pic ain’t being shot here.”
“You don’t mean—not—not on location?”
“You guessed it.”
“Omigod. Where?”
“A place called Byrdland.”
“Birdland?” Lew brightened.
“Byrdland. It’s in Antarctica.”
2
“It’s the biggest, finest Eskimo reservation on the globe!” Hugo’s parting words rang in Lew Jantry’s ears as he peered out through the bubble canopy of the automatic one-passenger flitter that was ferrying him on the last stage of the journey south. Across the blue-black sheen of the South Polar Sea, a line of dazzling white cliffs loomed ahead. Dropping rapidly, the machine skimmed low over the peaks, settling toward a rugged terrain resembling nothing so much as a vast frosted cake, a jumble of glassy blocks and smooth-drifted whiteness. Now he could make out the porous texture of the surface below, the network of wind-scoured ridges rushing up at him with surprising swiftness—
At the last possible instant, Lew realized that the robot voice of the autopilot, over the rushing of the wind, was squawking “Mayday! Mayday!” He grabbed the safety-frame lever, yanked it hard in the same moment that the craft struck with an impact that turned the universe into a whirling pinwheel of stars.
It seemed like a long time before pieces stopped raining down around him. Lew kicked free of the frame, dropped to the hard ground. The crash had burst the pod of the copter like a pumpkin, but he himself seemed to be intact. The weather suit was keeping him warm, in spite of the stiff wind that whipped the floury snow against his legs. Lew shaded his eyes and stared out across the desolate landscape. No sign of the Eskimo agent’s office, or even of the tribal structures of the aborigines. Lew snorted. He’d invoke Section Nine, Paragraph Three of his contract on this one, all right—the part that provided bonuses for inconvenience occasioned by inadequate travel and housing accommodation for artists on field assignment. And the hardship clause would come in, too. Oh, boy, wait till he got hold of Hugo, he’d make that shrewdie regret the day he fast-talked Lew Jantry into a fiasco like this one.
He flipped back the cover of his wristphone and snapped an order to the operator. There was no reply. He raised his voice, then held the tiny transceiver to his ear. The reassuring carrier tone was conspicuously lacking.
“Damn!” Lew yelled, then swallowed hard as the true seriousness of his plight struck him. Marooned—God knew how far from the nearest food, shelter, and TV. And no one would know precisely where he was. The malfunctioning copter could have wandered a hundred miles off course since Tierra, for all he knew. In fact, he was lucky to have hit land at all, with all that ocean out there.
Lew shuddered and checked his pockets, found nothing but the regulation ration capsules and a book of matches. The copter yielded a road map of Chilicothe County, Kansas, and a package of welfare-issue contraceptive devices. He tried the panel TV, caught a much-distorted snatch of Marty Snell, Trigamist, but the picture rippled into static. Too bad: it was one of the few shows he enjoyed, a wild sitcom that he liked to view while on-camera, listening to Carla make chitchat to bring late tuners-in up-to-date on the last segment.
But he had more important things than Marty Snell to worry about now. The reservation was only a couple of miles inland. Maybe he could see it from the ridge ahead. It wouldn’t hurt to walk that far. He faced into the antarctic wind and started across the treacherous footing.
He had gone a hundred yards when a sound behind him made him look back. A large polar bear had appeared beside the heli. The monster circled the downed machine, his mouth open like an awestricken yokel. The fanged head turned toward Lew, affording him a horrifying view down the creature’s throat. It stared at him for a long beat, then started toward him at any easy lope. Lew stifled a yell and sprinted for the ridge with a speed that would have astonished his fans.
Heavy pads thudded close behind as he bounded across a rough stretch, hit a glass-smooth patch and went down, skidded twenty yards on his back, came to his feet scrambling for footing among the tumbled slabs at the base of the rise. He hauled himself upslope on all fours, spurred by the buzzing sound of ursine breath behind him, reached the crest—and a squat, fur-clad figure rose up before him, raising a short-hafted harpoon with a murderous hooked blade. For an instant the Eskimo poised, arm back, his teeth bared in a ferocious grin. Then he hurled the spear.
As the weapon shot forward, Lew dived under it. He hit the smaller man amidships, carried him with him in a wild tumble down the opposite slope. At the bottom, Lew crawled clear, looked up dazedly just in time to see the yellow-white bulk of the bear hurtling down directly on him, jaws agape.
* * *
Lew awoke, staring up at the glossy white curve of a ceiling only three feet above his face, through which pale sunlight filtered. He turned his head, saw a grinning, brown-faced man in a Gooberplast playsuit sitting cross-legged on a synthetic bearskin rug, laying out a hand of solitaire. It was cool, Lew thought confusedly, but not as cold as he’d have expected in a building made of ice. He reached up and touched the ceiling. It was pleasantly warm to the touch, and dry. At that moment, he noticed a low hum in the background.
“No,” he said, shaking his head. “It can’t be an . . . an . . . ”
“An air-conditioned igloo?” the card-player inquired in a deep voice. “Why not? You Gringos think us ‘Skimos got no rights?”
“It’s not that,” Lew stuttered, sitting up. His head ached abominably. “It’s just that . . . well . . . it’s hardly what I expected. Say—” He broke off, remembering the encounter on the ridge. “Are you the fellow with the spear?”
“Right. Charlie Urukukalukuku’s the name. Charlie Kuku for short. TVVAG, Local three-four-nine-eight. I’m not really an actor, I’m a cameraman. I just do the occasional walk-on when we’re short of extras.” He held out a well-manicured hand.