The Lighter Side By Keith Laumer

“If you got to go, you should’ve went before you come in here. Better tighten up and wait. You only got fifty-one seconds and you’re on the air.”

“How about the big blue one there?”

“What for you want more light on deck? The boys are crying their eyes out now.”

“The middle-sized yellow one?”

“The screens is already hot, can’t you see ’em? Boy, the greenies they send out to me!”

“I know; this immense black lever is the one—”

“You don’t need no filters, for Pud’s sake! It’s nighttime!”

Waverly ran both hands through his hair and then pointed to various levers in turn: “Eenie, meenie, minie, moe . . . ”

“Lay off that one you called ‘minie,’ ” the instructor cautioned. “You touch that, you’ll dump the whole load onto the left stabilizer complex—”

A door banged. Waverly looked up. A vast, white-robed being with arms like coiled boa constrictors had burst into the room, was goggling stem-mounted eyes like peeled tomatoes at Waverly.

“Hey—come down from there, you!” the new arrival bellowed. The snaky arms whipped up toward Waverly; he ducked, seized the forbidden lever, and slammed it home.

A shudder went through the seat under him; then the floor rose up like a stricken freighter up-ending for her last dive. A loud screech sounded in Waverly’s ear as the warty being bounded into his lap and wrestled with the big lever. He rolled sideways, dived, saw the vast form of Balvovats cannon past and carom off the control pedestal, ophidioid members flailing murderously. Lights were flashing all around the room. A siren broke into a frantic, rising wail. Gongs gonged. Waverly, on the floor now and clinging to a cabinet support, saw an access panel pop open, exposing a foot square terminal block. “In for a penny, in for a pound,” he muttered and grabbed a handful of intricately color-coded leads and ripped them loose.

The resultant cascade of fire sent him reeling backward just as a baseball-bat-thick tentacle whipped down across the spot he had been occupying. A dull boom! rocked the deck plates under him. Smoke poured from the ruined circuitry. He tottered to his feet, saw Balvovats secure a grip on a stanchion and haul his bulk upright.

“You!” the giant bellowed and launched itself at Waverly. He sprang for the door, tripped, rolled aside as the door banged wide. A gaggle of frantic spectacle-makers hurtled through, collided with the irate director. On all fours, Waverly pulled himself up the slanted deck and through the door.

In the corridor, the blare of gongs and sirens was redoubled. Buffeted by milling technicians, Waverly was spun, jostled, shoved, lifted along the passage and out onto the windswept deck. All around, loose gear was sliding and bounding down the thirty-degree slant. Waverly threw himself flat, barely avoiding a ricocheting cable drum, clawed his way toward the high edge of the barge.

“There he goes!” a bull-roar sounded behind him. He twisted, saw Balvovats winching himself upward in close pursuit. One extensible member lashed out, slapped the deck bare inches short of Waverly’s foot. He groped for the automatic. It was gone. Ahead, a superstructure loomed up at the barge’s edge, like a miniature Eiffel Tower. He scrambled for it, got a grip on a cross-member and pulled himself around to the far side. Balvovats’ questing arm grabbed after him. He held on with both hands and one foot and delivered a swift kick to the persistent member; it recoiled, as a yell sounded from the darkness below. The deck lights had failed, leaving only the feeble gleam of colored rigging lights. Something struck the cross-bar by Waverly’s head with a vicious pwangg! He clambered hastily higher.

On deck, someone had restored a spotlight to usefulness. The smoky beam probed upward, found Waverly’s feet, jumped up to pin him against a girder fifty feet above the deck.

“A fat bonus to the one that nails him!” Balvovats’ furious tones roared. At once, spitting sounds broke out below, accompanied by vivid flashes of pink light. Waverly scrambled higher. The spotlight followed him. Across the deck, a door burst open and smoke and flames rushed out. Waverly felt a shock through the steel tower, saw a gout of fire erupt through curled deck plating below.

“We’re sinking!” a shrill voice keened.

“Get him!” Balvovats boomed.

Waverly looked down, saw white water breaking over the base of his perch. In the glow of the navigation lights, half a dozen small creatures were swarming up the openwork in hot pursuit. Something bumped him from behind. He shied, felt another bump, reached down and felt the hard contours of the automatic, trapped in the seat of his pajamas.

“Lucky I had them cut generously,” he murmured as he retrieved the weapon. Something spang!ed beside him, and a near-miss whined off into the darkness. Waverly took aim, shot out the deck light. Something plucked at his sleeve. He looked, saw torn cloth. Below, a red-eyed ball of sticky-looking fur was taking a bead on him from a distance of ten feet. He brought the automatic up and fired, fired again at a second pursuer a yard below the leader. Both assailants dropped, hit with twin splashes in the darkness below.

“Decks awash,” Waverly said to himself. “Dulce et decorum est, pro patria, et cetera.”

Another explosion shook the stricken barge. The tower swayed. A shot whined past his face. Another struck nearby.

“Get him, troops? Get hiburbleburble . . . ” Balvovats’ boom subsided. Waverly winced as a hot poker furrowed his shin. He saw a flicker of movement revealed by a blue rigging light, put a round into it, saw a dark body fall with a thin bleat. The spout of fire rising from the hatch on the high edge of the deck showed a white smother of foam washed almost to the survivors clinging to the rail. A gun burped below, chipped paint by Waverly’s hip. He shifted grips, leaned far out and placed a shot between a pair of overlapping, egg-white eyes. They fell away with a despairing wail.

Abruptly, the fire died with a hiss as a wave rolled entirely across the deck. Waverly felt the tower shake as a breaker thundered against it, bare yards below where he clung. The lower navigation lights gleamed up through green water now.

There was a whiffling sound above. Waverly clutched his perch convulsively, looked upward.

“Fom Berj!” he yelled.

A dark ovoid shape settled down through the night toward him. He saw the cheery glow of running lights, the gleam reflected from a canopy.

“But . . . but our canopy blew away . . . ” he faltered.

The twifler hove to, six feet above his head. A face like a plate of lasagna appeared over the edge. Squirmy hands, gripping an ominous-looking apparatus with a long barrel, came over the side, aimed at Waverly. A whirring sound started up. He brought up the pistol, squeezed the trigger—

There was an empty click.

“Superb!” the creature above exclaimed, extending a large grasping member over the side to Waverly. “What an expression of primitive savagery! Great footage, my boy! Now you’d better come aboard where we can talk contract in peace!”

7

“I’m afraid I don’t quite understand, Mr. Izlik,” Waverly said dazedly, trying not to stare at the leathery-hided bulk draped in a Clan Stewart tartan, complete with sporran and Tam o’Shanter. “One moment I was teetering on top of a sinking tower, with a horde of furry atrocities snapping at my heels—and ten minutes later . . . ” He looked wonderingly at the luxuriously appointed lounge in which he sat.

“I left my yacht anchored here at two hundred thousand feet and dropped down to spy out what Balvovats was up to,” the entrepreneur explained. “I confess I wasn’t above purloining a little free footage of whatever it was he was staging. Then I saw you, sir, in action, and presto! I perceived the New Wave in the moment of its creation! Of course, I secured only about three minutes’ actual product. We’ll have to pad it out with another hundred hours or so of the same sort of action. I can already visualize a sequence in which you find yourself pursued by flesh-eating Dinosaurs, scale a man-eating plant for safety and are attacked by flying fang-masters, make a leap across an abyss of flaming hydrocarbons and, in a single bound, attain the safety of your twifler, just as it collides with a mountaintop!”

“Ah . . . I appreciate your offer of employment,” Waverly interposed, “but I’m afraid I lack the dramatic gift.”

“Oh, it won’t be acting,” Izlik handed over a slim glass of pale fluid and seated himself across from his guest. “No, indeed! I can assure you that all my productions are recorded on location, at the actual scenes of the frightful dangers they record. I’ll see to it that the perils are real enough to inspire you to the highest efforts.”

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