Read Hunt the Space-Witch! Online
Authors: Robert Silverberg
Darruu's mean temperature was 120 degrees, on the scale used by the Earthers. When it dropped to 80, Darruui cursed the cold. It was 80 now, and he was uncomfortably cold. He would have to stay that way for most of the day, at least, until in a moment of privacy he could make the necessary adjustments. Around him, the Earthers seemed to be perspiring and feeling discomfort because of the heat.
The bus filled finally, and spurted across the field to a high domed building of gleaming steel and green plastic. The driver said, “First stop is customs. Have your papers ready.”
Inside, Harris found his baggage already waiting for him at a counter labelled HAM-HAT. There were two suitcases, both of them with topological secret compartments. He surrendered his passport and, when told to do so, pressed his thumb to the opener-plate. The suitcases sprang open. The customs man poked through them perfunctorily, nodded, said, “Anything to declare?”
“Nothing.”
“Okay. Close 'em up.”
Harris locked the suitcases again, and the customs official briefly touched a tracer-stamp to them. It left no visible imprint, but the photonic scanners at every door would be watching for the radiations, and no one with an unstamped suitcase could get through the electronic barriers.
“Next stop is Immigration, Major.”
At Immigration they studied his passport briefly, noted that he was a government employee, and passed him along to Health. Here he felt a moment of alarm; about one out of every fifty incoming passengers from a starship was detained for a comprehensive medical exam, and if the finger fell upon him the game was up right here. Ten seconds in front of a fluoroscope would tell them that nobody with that kind of skeletal structure had ever been born in Cincinnati, Ohio.
He got through with nothing more than a rudimentary checkup. At the last desk his passport was stamped with a re-entry visa, and the clerk said, “You haven't been on Earth for a long time, eh, Major?”
“Not in ten years. Hope things haven't changed too much.”
“The women are still the same, anyway.” The clerk shuffled Harris' papers together, stuck them back in the portfolio, and handed them to him. “Everything's in order. Go straight ahead and out the door to your left.”
Harris thanked him and moved along, gripping one suitcase in each hand. A month ago, at the beginning of his journey, the suitcases had seemed heavy to him. But that had been on Darruu; here they weighed only two-thirds as much. He carried them jauntily.
Soon it will be spring on Darruu
, he thought. The red-leaved jasaar trees would blossom and their perfume would fill the air.
With an angry inner scowl he blanked out the thought. He was Major Abner Harris, late of Cincinnati, here on Earth for eight months' vacation.
He knew his orders. He was to establish residence, avoid detection, and in the second week of his stay make contact with the chief Darruui agent on Earth. Further instructions would come from him.
Chapter Two
It took twenty minutes by helitaxi to reach the metropolitan area from the spaceport. Handling the Terran currency as if he had used it all his life, Harris paid the driver, tipped him, and got out. He had asked for and been taken to a hotel in the heart of the cityâthe Spaceways Hotel. There was one of them in every major spaceport city in the galaxy; the spacelines operated them jointly, for the benefit of travelers who had no place to stay on the planet of their destination.
He signed in and was given a room on the 58th floor. The Earther at the desk said, “You don't mind heights, do you, Major?”
“Not at all.”
He gave the boy who had carried his bags a quarter-unit piece, received grateful thanks, and locked the door. For the first time since leaving Darruu he was really
alone
. Thumbing open his suitcases, he performed the series of complex stress-pressures that gave access to the hidden areas of the grips; miraculously, the suitcases expanded to nearly twice their former volume. There was nothing like packing your belongings in a tesseract if you wanted to keep the customs men away from them.
Busily, he unpacked.
First thing out was a small device which fit neatly and virtually invisibly to the inside of the door. It was a jammer for spybeams. It insured privacy.
A disruptor-pistol came next. He slipped it into his tunic-pocket. Several books; a flask of Darruui wine; a photograph of his birth-tree. Bringing these things had not increased his risk, since if they had been found it would only be after much more incriminating things had come to light.
The subspace communicator, for example. Or the narrow-beam amplifier he would use in making known his presence to the other members of the Darruui cadre on Earth.
He finished unpacking, restored his suitcases to their three-dimensional state, and took a tiny scalpel from the toolkit he had unpacked. Quickly stripping off his trousers, he laid bare the desensitized area in the fleshy part of his thigh, stared for a moment at the network of fine silver threads underlying the flesh, and, with three careful twists of the scalpel's edge, altered the thermostatic control in his body.
He shivered a moment; then, gradually, he began to feel warm. Closing the wound, he applied nuplast; moments later it had healed. He dressed again.
He surveyed his room. Twenty feet square, with a bed, a desk, a closet, a dresser. An air-conditioning grid in the ceiling. A steady greenish electroluminescent glow. An oval window beneath which was a set of polarizing controls. A molecular bath and washstand. Not bad for twenty units a week, he told himself, trying to think the way an Earthman might.
The room-calendar told him it was five-thirty in the afternoon, 22 May 2562. He was not supposed to make contact with Central for ten days or more; he computed that that would mean the first week of June. Until then he was simply to act the part of a Terran on vacation.
The surgeons had made certain minor alterations in his metabolism to give him a taste for Terran food and drink and to make it possible for him to digest the carbohydrates of which Terrans were so fond. They had prepared him well for playing the part of Major Abner Harris. And he had been equipped with fifty thousand units of Terran money, enough to last him quite a while.
Carefully he adjusted the device on the door to keep intruders out while he was gone. Anyone entering the room would get a nasty jolt of energy now. He checked his wallet, made sure he had his money with him, and pushed the door-opener.
It slid back and he stepped through into the hallway. At that moment someone walking rapidly down the hall collided with him, spinning him around. He felt a soft body pressed against his.
A woman!
The immediate reaction that boiled up in him was one of anger, but he blocked the impulse to strike her before it rose. On Darruu, a woman who jostled a Servant of the Spirit could expect a sound whipping. But this was not Darruu.
He remembered a phrase from his indoctrination:
it will help to create a sexual relationship for yourself on Earth
.
The surgeons had changed his metabolism in that respect, too, making him able to feel sexual desires for Terran females. The theory was that no one would expect a disguised alien to engage in romantic affairs with Terrans; it would be a form of camouflage.
“Excuse me!” Harris and the female Terran said, simultaneously.
His training reminded him that simultaneous outbursts were cause for laughter on Earth. He laughed. So did she. Then she said, “I guess I didn't see you. I was hurrying along the corridor and I wasn't looking.”
“The fault was mine,” Harris insisted.
Terran males are obstinately chivalrous
, he had been told. “I opened my door and just charged out blind. I'm sorry.”
She was tall, nearly his height, with soft, lustrous yellow hair and clear pink skin. She wore a black body-tight sheath that left her shoulders and the upper hemispheres of her breasts uncovered. Harris found her attractive. Wonderingly he thought,
Now I know they've changed me. She has hair on her scalp and enormous bulging breasts and yet I feel desire for her
.
She said, “It's my fault and it's your fault. That's the way most collisions are caused. Let's not argue about that. My name is Beth Baldwin.”
“Major Abner Harris.”
“Major?”
“Interstellar Development Corps.”
“Oh,” she said. “Just arrived on Earth?”
He nodded. “I'm on vacation. My last hop was Alpheratz IV.” He smiled and said, “It's silly to stand out here in the hall discussing things. I was on my way down below to get something to eat. How about joining me?”
She looked doubtful for a moment, but only for a moment. She brightened. “I'm game.”
They took the gravshaft down and ate in the third-level restaurant, an automated affair with individual conveyor-belts bringing food to each table. Part of his hypnotic training had been intended to see him through situations such as this, and so he ordered a dinner for two, complete with wine, without a hitch.
She did not seem shy. She told him that she was employed on Rigel XII, and had come to Earth on a business trip; she had arrived only the day before. She was twenty-nine, unmarried, a native-born Earther like himself, who had been living in the Rigel system the past four years.
“And now tell me about you,” she said, reaching for the wine decanter.
“There isn't much to tell. I'm a fairly stodgy career man in the IDC, age forty-two, and this is the first day I've spent on Earth in ten years.”
“It must feel strange.”
“It does.”
“How long is your vacation?”
He shrugged. “Six to eight months. I can have more if I really want it. When do you go back to Rigel?”
She smiled strangely at him. “I may not go back at all. Depends on whether I can find what I'm looking for on Earth.”
“And what are you looking for?”
She grinned. “My business,” she said.
“Sorry.”
“Never mind the apologies. Let's have some more wine.”
After Harris had settled up the not inconsiderable matter of the bill, they left the hotel and went outside to stroll. The streets were crowded; a clock atop a distant building told Harris that the time was shortly after seven. He felt warm now that he had adjusted his temperature controls, and the unfamiliar foods and wines in his stomach gave him an oddly queasy feeling, though he had enjoyed the meal.
The girl slipped her hand through his looped arm and squeezed the inside of his elbow. Harris grinned. He said, “I was afraid it was going to be an awfully lonely vacation.”
“Me too. You can be tremendously alone on a planet that has twenty billion people on it.”
They walked on. In the middle of the street a troupe of acrobats was performing, using nullgrav devices to add to their abilities. Harris chuckled and tossed them a coin, and a bronzed girl saluted to him from the top of a human pyramid.
Night was falling. Harris considered the incongruity of walking arm-in-arm with an Earthgirl, with his belly full of Earth foods, and enjoying it.
Darruu seemed impossibly distant now. It lay eleven hundred light-years from Earth; its star was visible only as part of a mass of blurred dots of light.
But yet he knew it was there. He missed it.
“You're worrying about something,” the girl said.
“It's an old failing of mine.”
He was thinking:
I was born a Servant of the Spirit, and so I was chosen to go to Earth. I may never return to Darruu again
.
As the sky darkened they strolled on, over a delicate golden bridge spanning a river whose dark depths twinkled with myriad points of light. Together they stared down at the water, and at the stars reflected in it. She moved closer to him, and her warmth against his body was pleasing to him.
Eleven hundred light-years from home.
Why am I here?
He knew the answer. Titanic conflict was shaping in the universe. The Predictors held that the cataclysm was no more than two hundred years away. Darruu would stand against its ancient adversary Medlin, and all the worlds of the universe would be ranged on one side or on the other.
He was here as an ambassador. Earth was a mighty force in the galaxyâso mighty that it would resent the role it really played, that of pawn between Darruu and Medlin. Darruu wanted Terran support in the conflict to come. Obtaining it was a delicate problem in consent engineering. A cadre of disguised Darruui, planted on Earth, gradually manipulating public opinion toward the Darruu camp and away from Medlinâthat was the plan, and Harris, once Aar Khiilom, was one of its agents.
They walked until the hour had grown very late, and then turned back toward the hotel. Harris was confident now that he had established the sort of relationship that was likely to shield him from all suspicion of his true origin.
He said, “What do we do now?”
“Suppose we buy a bottle of something and have a party in your room?” she suggested.
“My room's a frightful mess,” Harris said, thinking of the many things in there he would not want her to see. “How about yours?”
“It doesn't matter.”
They stopped at an auto bar and he fed half-unit pieces into a machine until the chime sounded and a fully wrapped bottle slid out on the receiving tray. Harris tucked it under his arm, made a mock-courteous bow to her, and they continued on their way to the hotel.
The signal came just as they entered the lobby.
It reached Harris in the form of a sudden twinge in the abdomen; that was where the amplifier had been embedded. He felt it as three quick impulses,
rasp rasp rasp
, followed after a brief pause by a repeat.
The signal had only one meaning:
Emergency. Get in touch with your contactman at once
.
Her hand tightened on his arm. “Are you all right? You look so pale!”
In a dry voice he said, “Maybe we'd better postpone our party a few minutes. I'mânot quite well.”