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Title: Cosmic enginers. Author: Clifford D. Simak

He spun on the Engineer. “How much longer?” he asked. “How much longer have

we?”

“Very little time,” said the Engineer. “Very little. I fear that energy may

flood in upon us at any time.”

“That energy,” said Kingsley, a fanatical flame in his eyes. “Think of what

could be done with it. We could set up a huge framework of

fifth-dimensional space, use it as an absorber, a battery. We could send

energy almost anywhere throughout the universe. A central universal power

plant.”

“First,” declared Tommy, “you’d have to control it, be able to direct it in

a tight beam.”

“First,” insisted Caroline, “we have to do something about this other

universe.”

“Wait a second,” said Gary. “We’ve forgotten something. We asked those

people in the other universe to come over and help us, but we don’t need

them now.”

He looked at the Engineer. “Have you heard from them?” he asked.

“Yes,” said the Engineer. “I have heard from them. They still want to

come.”

“They still want to come?” Astonishment rang in Gary’s voice. “Why should

they want to come?”

“They want to emigrate to our universe,” said the Engineer. “And I have

agreed to allow them to do so.”

“You have agreed?” rumbled Kingsley. “And since when has this universe been

in the market for immigrants? We don’t know what kind of people they are.

They might be dangerous. They may want to destroy the present life within

the universe.”

“There is plenty of room for them,” said the Engineer, and if possible, his

voice seemed colder and more impersonal than ever. “There is room to spare.

We have over fifty billion galaxies – and more than fifty billion stars in

each galaxy. Only one out of every ten thousand of the stars has a solar

system, that is true, of course… but only one out of every hundred solar

systems has life. And if we need more solar systems we can manufacture

them. With the power of the dimension of eternity at our command, we can

move stars, we can hurl them together to make solar systems. With this

power we can reshape the universe, mold it to our needs.”

The idea impacted with stunning force on Gary’s brain. They could reshape

the universe! Working with the raw materials at hand, with the almost

infinite power at their command, they could alter the course of stars,

could realign the galaxies, could manufacture planets, set up a well

coordinated plan to offset entropy, the tendency to run down, the tendency

to go amuck. His mind groped futilely at the ideas, pawing them over and

over, but back of it all was a curtain of wonderment and awe. And through

his brain sang a subtle warning… a persistent little warning that

hammered at his thoughts. Mankind itself wasn’t ready for such power,

couldn’t use it intelligently, perhaps would destroy the universe with it.

Was there any other entity in the universe qualified to use it? Would it be

wise to place such power in the hands of any entity?

“But why,” Caroline was asking, “do they want to come?”

“Because,” said the Engineer, “we are going to destroy their universe to

save ours.”

It was as if a bombshell had been dropped among them. Silence clapped down.

Gary felt Caroline’s hand creep into his. He held it tight.

“But why destroy their universe?” shouted Tommy. “We have the means at hand

to save them both. All we have to do is create more of those

five-dimensional screens to absorb the energy.”

“No,” said the Engineer, “we cannot do it. Given time, we could. But there

is so little time, not nearly enough. The energy would overwhelm us once it

came. It would take so many screens and we have so little time.”

His thoughts cut off and Gary heard the shuffle of Kingsley’s feet.

“These other beings,” the Engineer went on, “know that their universe has

very little longer to exist in any event. It has almost reached the end of

its time. It soon will die the heat death. Throughout its space, matter and

energy are being swiftly distributed. Soon the day will arrive when it will

be equally distributed, when the heat, the energy, the mass throughout the

universe will be spread so thin that it scarcely exists.”

Gary sucked in his breath. “Like a watch running down,” he said.

“You’re right,” said Kingsley. “Like a watch that has run down. That is

what will happen to our universe in time.”

“Not,” said Gary, “if we have the energy from interspace at our command.”

“Already,” said the Engineer, “only one corner of this other universe is

still suitable for life… the area that is facing us. Into that corner all

life has been driven and now it has been, or is being, assembled to

transfer itself to our universe.”

“But,” asked Herb, “just how are they going to get here?”

“They will use a time warp,” said the Engineer. “They will bud out from

their universe, but in doing so they will distort the time factor in the

walls of their hypersphere – a distortion that will send them ahead in

time, will push their little universe closer to us than to their universe.

Our gravity will grasp their hypersphere and draw it in.”

“But that,” protested Gary, “will produce more energy. Their little

universe will be destroyed.”

“No,” declared the Engineer, “because they will merge their space-time

continuum with the continuum of our universe as soon as the two come

together. They will immediately become a part of our universe.”

“You told them how to create a hypersphere?” asked Herb.

“I did,” said the Engineer. “And it will save the people of that other

universe. They had tried many things, had worked out theories and new

branches of mathematics in their efforts to escape. They discovered many

things that we do not know, but they never thought of budding out from

their universe. They apparently are a mechanistic people, a people very

much like we Engineers. They seem to have lost that vital spark of

imagination with which your people are so well supplied.”

“My Lord,” said Gary, “think of it! Imagination saving the people of

another universe. The imagination of a little third-rate race that hasn’t

even started really using its imagination yet.”

“You are right,” declared the Engineer, “and in the aeons to come that

imagination will make your race the masters of the entire universe.”

“Prophesy,” said Gary.

“I know,” said the Engineer.

“There’s just one thing,” said Herb. “How is that other universe going to

be destroyed?”

“We are going to destroy it,” said the Engineer, “in exactly the same way

we destroyed the Hellhounds.”

Chapter Seventeen

Tommy sat in the pilot’s seat and urged the ship slowly forward, using

rocket blast after rocket blast to keep it on its course.

“You have to fight to stand still here,” he gritted between his teeth. “A

man can’t tell just where he is. There doesn’t seem to be any direction,

nothing to orient oneself.”

“Of course not,” rumbled Kingsley. “We’re in a sort of place no other man

has ever been. We’re right out in the area where space and time are

breaking down, where lines of force are all distorted, where everything is

jumbled and broken up.”

“The edge of the universe,” said Caroline.

Gary stared out through the vision plate. There was nothing to see, nothing

but a deep blue void that queerly seemed alive with a deep intensity of

life.

He turned from the panel and asked the Engineer:

“Any signs of energy yet?”

“Faint signs,” said the Engineer, bending lower to peer at the dial set in

a detector instrument. “Very faint signs. The other universe is almost upon

us now and the lines of force are just beginning to make themselves felt.”

“How much longer will it take?” asked Kingsley.

“I cannot tell,” said the Engineer. “We know very little about the laws out

here. It may be a very short while or it may be some time as yet.”

“Well,” said Herb, “the fireworks can start any time now. The folks from

the other universe have crossed safely and there’s no reason for the other

universe to exist. We can blast it any time we want to.”

“Gary,” said Kingsley, “you and Herb better get over to those guns. We may

want action fast.”

Gary nodded and walked to the controls of a disintegrator gun. He slid into

the seat back of the controls and reached out a hand to grasp the swivel

butt. He swung it back and forth, knew that outside the ship the grim

muzzle of the weapon was swinging in a wide arc.

Through the tiny port in front of him he could see the blue intensity of

the void in which they moved.

Out here time and space were thinning down and breaking up. Like a boat

riding on the surface of a heaving sea, they were riding the very rim of

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