A Martian Odyssey
Jarvis stretched himself as luxuriously as he could in the cramped general quarters of the Ares.
âAir you can breathe!â he exulted. âIt feels as thick as soup after the thin stuff out there!â He nodded at the Martian landscape stretching flat and desolate in the light of the nearer moon, beyond the glass of the port.
The other three stared at him sympatheticallyâ âPutz, the engineer, Leroy, the biologist, and Harrison, the astronomer and captain of the expedition. Dick Jarvis was chemist of the famous crew, the Ares expedition, first human beings to set foot on the mysterious neighbor of the earth, the planet Mars. This, of course, was in the old days, less than twenty years after the mad American Doheny perfected the atomic blast at the cost of his life, and only a decade after the equally mad Cardoza rode on it to the moon. They were true pioneers, these four of the Ares. Except for a half-dozen moon expeditions and the ill-fated de Lancey flight aimed at the seductive orb of Venus, they were the first men to feel other gravity than earthâs, and certainly the first successful crew to leave the earth-moon system. And they deserved that success when one considers the difficulties and discomfortsâ âthe months spent in acclimatization chambers back on earth, learning to breathe the air as tenuous as that of Mars, the challenging of the void in the tiny rocket driven by the cranky reaction motors of the twenty-first century, and mostly the facing of an absolutely unknown world.
Jarvis stretched and fingered the raw and peeling tip of his frostbitten nose. He sighed again contentedly.
âWell,â exploded Harrison abruptly, âare we going to hear what happened? You set out all shipshape in an auxiliary rocket, we donât get a peep for ten days, and finally Putz here picks you out of a lunatic ant-heap with a freak ostrich as your pal! Spill it, man!â
âSpeel?â queried Leroy perplexedly. âSpeel what?â
âHe means âspiel,âââ explained Putz soberly. âIt iss to tell.â
Jarvis met Harrisonâs amused glance without the shadow of a smile. âThatâs right, Karl,â he said in grave agreement with Putz. âIch spiel es!â He grunted comfortably and began.
âAccording to orders,â he said, âI watched Karl here take off toward the North, and then I got into my flying sweatbox and headed South. Youâll remember, Capâ âwe had orders not to land, but just scout about for points of interest. I set the two cameras clicking and buzzed along, riding pretty highâ âabout two thousand feetâ âfor a couple of reasons. First, it gave the cameras a greater field, and second, the under-jets travel so far in this half-vacuum they call air here that they stir up dust if you move low.â
âWe know all that from Putz,â grunted Harrison. âI wish youâd saved the films, though. Theyâd have paid the cost of this junket; remember how the public mobbed the first moon pictures?â
âThe films are safe,â retorted Jarvis. âWell,â he resumed, âas I said, I buzzed along at a pretty good clip; just as we figured, the wings havenât much lift in this air at less than a hundred miles per hour, and even then I had to use the under-jets.
âSo, with the speed and the altitude and the blurring caused by the under-jets, the seeing wasnât any too good. I could see enough, though, to distinguish that what I sailed over was just more of this grey plain that weâd been examining the whole week since our landingâ âsame blobby growths and the same eternal carpet of crawling little plant-animals, or biopods, as Leroy calls them. So I sailed along, calling back my position every hour as instructed, and not knowing whether you heard me.â
âI did!â snapped Harrison.
âA hundred and fifty miles south,â continued Jarvis imperturbably, âthe surface changed to a sort of low plateau, nothing but desert and orange-tinted sand. I figured that we were right in our guess, then, and this grey plain we dropped on was really the Mare Cimmerium which would make my orange desert the region called Xanthus. If I were right, I ought to hit another grey plain, the Mare Chronium in another couple of hundred miles, and then another orange desert, Thyle I or II. And so I did.â
âPutz verified our position a week and a half ago!â grumbled the captain. âLetâs get to the point.â
âComing!â remarked Jarvis. âTwenty miles into Thyleâ âbelieve it or notâ âI crossed a canal!â
âPutz photographed a hundred! Letâs hear something new!â
âAnd did he also see a city?â
âTwenty of âem, if you call those heaps of mud cities!â
âWell,â observed Jarvis, âfrom here on Iâll be telling a few things Putz didnât see!â He rubbed his tingling nose, and continued. âI knew that I had sixteen hours of daylight at this season, so eight hoursâ âeight hundred milesâ âfrom here, I decided to turn back. I was still over Thyle, whether I or II Iâm not sure, not more than twenty-five miles into it. And right there, Putzâs pet motor quit!â
âQuit? How?â Putz was solicitous.
âThe atomic blast got weak. I started losing altitude right away, and suddenly there I was with a thump right in the middle of Thyle! Smashed my nose on the window, too!â He rubbed the injured member ruefully.
âDid you maybe try vashing der combustion chamber mit acid sulphuric?â inquired Putz. âSometimes der lead giffs a secondary radiationâ ââ
âNaw!â said Jarvis disgustedly. âI wouldnât try that, of courseâ ânot more than ten times! Besides, the bump flattened the landing gear and busted off the under-jets. Suppose I got the thing workingâ âwhat then? Ten miles with the blast coming right out of the bottom and Iâd have melted the floor from under me!â He rubbed his nose again. âLucky for me a pound only weighs seven ounces here, or Iâd have been mashed flat!â
âI could have fixed!â ejaculated the engineer. âI bet it vas not serious.â
âProbably not,â agreed Jarvis sarcastically. âOnly it wouldnât fly. Nothing serious, but I had my choice of waiting to be picked up or trying to walk backâ âeight hundred miles, and perhaps twenty days before we had to leave! Forty miles a day! Well,â he concluded, âI chose to walk. Just as much chance of being picked up, and it kept me busy.â
âWeâd have found you,â said Harrison.
âNo doubt. Anyway, I rigged up a harness from some seat straps, and put the water tank on my back, took a cartridge belt and revolver, and some iron rations, and started out.â
âWater tank!â exclaimed the little biologist, Leroy. âShe weigh one-quarter ton!â
âWasnât full. Weighed about two hundred and fifty pounds earth-weight, which is eighty-five here. Then, besides, my own personal two hundred and ten pounds is only seventy on Mars, so, tank and all, I grossed a hundred and fifty-five, or fifty-five pounds less than my everyday earth-weight. I figured on that when I undertook the forty-mile daily stroll. Ohâ âof course I took a thermo-skin sleeping bag for these wintry Martian nights.
âOff I went, bouncing along pretty quickly. Eight hours of daylight meant twenty miles or more. It got tiresome, of courseâ âplugging along over a soft sand desert with nothing to see, not even Leroyâs crawling biopods. But an hour or so brought me to the canalâ âjust a dry ditch about four hundred feet wide, and straight as a railroad on its own company map.
âThereâd been water in it sometime, though. The ditch was covered with what looked like a nice green lawn. Only, as I approached, the lawn moved out of my way!â
âEh?â said Leroy.
âYeah, it was a relative of your biopods. I caught oneâ âa little grass-like blade about as long as my finger, with two thin, stemmy legs.â
âHe is where?â Leroy was eager.
âHe is let go! I had to move, so I plowed along with the walking grass opening in front and closing behind. And then I was out on the orange desert of Thyle again.
âI plugged steadily along, cussing the sand that made going so tiresome, and, incidentally, cussing that cranky motor of yours, Karl. It was just before twilight that I reached the edge of Thyle, and looked down over the gray Mare Chronium. And I knew there was seventy-five miles of that to be walked over, and then a couple of hundred miles of that Xanthus desert, and about as much more Mare Cimmerium. Was I pleased? I started cussing you fellows for not picking me up!â
âWe were trying, you sap!â said Harrison.
âThat didnât help. Well, I figured I might as well use what was left of daylight in getting down the cliff that bounded Thyle. I found an easy place, and down I went. Mare Chronium was just the same sort of place as thisâ âcrazy leafless plants and a bunch of crawlers; I gave it a glance and hauled out my sleeping bag. Up to that time, you know, I hadnât seen anything worth worrying about on this half-dead worldâ ânothing dangerous, that is.â
âDid you?â queried Harrison.
âDid I! Youâll hear about it when I come to it. Well, I was just about to turn in when suddenly I heard the wildest sort of shenanigans!â
âVot iss shenanigans?â inquired Putz.
âHe says, âJe ne sais quoi,âââ explained Leroy. âIt is to say, âI donât know what.âââ
âThatâs right,â agreed Jarvis. âI didnât know what, so I sneaked over to find out. There was a racket like a flock of crows eating a bunch of canariesâ âwhistles, cackles, caws, trills, and what have you. I rounded a clump of stumps, and there was Tweel!â
âTweel?â said Harrison, and âTveel?â said Leroy and Putz.
âThat freak ostrich,â explained the narrator. âAt least, Tweel is as near as I can pronounce it without sputtering. He called it something like âTrrrweerrlll.âââ
âWhat was he doing?â asked the Captain.
âHe was being eaten! And squealing, of course, as anyone would.â
âEaten! By what?â
âI found out later. All I could see then was a bunch of black ropy arms tangled around what looked like, as Putz described it to you, an ostrich. I wasnât going to interfere, naturally; if both creatures were dangerous, Iâd have one less to worry about.
âBut the birdlike thing was putting up a good battle, dealing vicious blows with an eighteen-inch beak, between screeches. And besides, I caught a glimpse or two of what was on the end of those arms!â Jarvis shuddered. âBut the clincher was when I noticed a little black bag or case hung about the neck of the bird-thing! It was intelligent! That or tame, I assumed. Anyway, it clinched my decision. I pulled out my automatic and fired into what I could see of its antagonist.
âThere was a flurry of tentacles and a spurt of black corruption, and then the thing, with a disgusting sucking noise, pulled itself and its arms into a hole in the ground. The other let out a series of clacks, staggered around on legs about as thick as golf sticks, and turned suddenly to face me. I held my weapon ready, and the two of us stared at each other.
âThe Martian wasnât a bird, really. It wasnât even birdlike, except just at first glance. It had a beak all right, and a few feathery appendages, but the beak wasnât really a beak. It was somewhat flexible; I could see the tip bend slowly from side to side; it was almost like a cross between a beak and a trunk. It had four-toed feet, and four fingered thingsâ âhands, youâd have to call them, and a little roundish body, and a long neck ending in a tiny headâ âand that beak. It stood an inch or so taller than I, andâ âwell, Putz saw it!â
The engineer nodded. âJa! I saw!â
Jarvis continued. âSoâ âwe stared at each other. Finally the creature went into a series of clackings and twitterings and held out its hands toward me, empty. I took that as a gesture of friendship.â
âPerhaps,â suggested Harrison, âit looked at that nose of yours and thought you were its brother!â
âHuh! You can be funny without talking! Anyway, I put up my gun and said âAw, donât mention it,â or something of the sort, and the thing came over and we were pals.
âBy that time, the sun was pretty low and I knew that Iâd better build a fire or get into my thermo-skin. I decided on the fire. I picked a spot at the base of the Thyle cliff, where the rock could reflect a little heat on my back. I started breaking off chunks of this desiccated Martian vegetation, and my companion caught the idea and brought in an armful. I reached for a match, but the Martian fished into his pouch and brought out something that looked like a glowing coal; one touch of it, and the fire was blazingâ âand you all know what a job we have starting a fire in this atmosphere!
âAnd that bag of his!â continued the narrator. âThat was a manufactured article, my friends; press an end and she popped openâ âpress the middle and she sealed so perfectly you couldnât see the line. Better than zippers.
âWell, we stared at the fire a while and I decided to attempt some sort of communication with the Martian. I pointed at myself and said âDickâ; he caught the drift immediately, stretched a bony claw at me and repeated âTick.â Then I pointed at him, and he gave that whistle I called Tweel; I canât imitate his accent. Things were going smoothly; to emphasize the names, I repeated âDick,â and then, pointing at him, âTweel.â
âThere we stuck! He gave some clacks that sounded negative, and said something like âP-p-p-proot.â And that was just the beginning; I was always âTick,â but as for himâ âpart of the time he was âTweel,â and part of the time he was âP-p-p-proot,â and part of the time he was sixteen other noises!
âWe just couldnât connect. I tried ârock,â and I tried âstar,â and âtree,â and âfire,â and Lord knows what else, and try as I would, I couldnât get a single word! Nothing was the same for two successive minutes, and if thatâs a language, Iâm an alchemist! Finally I gave it up and called him Tweel, and that seemed to do.
âBut Tweel hung on to some of my words. He remembered a couple of them, which I suppose is a great achievement if youâre used to a language you have to make up as you go along. But I couldnât get the hang of his talk; either I missed some subtle point or we just didnât think alikeâ âand I rather believe the latter view.
âIâve other reasons for believing that. After a while I gave up the language business, and tried mathematics. I scratched two plus two equals four on the ground, and demonstrated it with pebbles. Again Tweel caught the idea, and informed me that three plus three equals six. Once more we seemed to be getting somewhere.
âSo, knowing that Tweel had at least a grammar school education, I drew a circle for the sun, pointing first at it, and then at the last glow of the sun. Then I sketched in Mercury, and Venus, and Mother Earth, and Mars, and finally, pointing to Mars, I swept my hand around in a sort of inclusive gesture to indicate that Mars was our current environment. I was working up to putting over the idea that my home was on the earth.
âTweel understood my diagram all right. He poked his beak at it, and with a great deal of trilling and clucking, he added Deimos and Phobos to Mars, and then sketched in the earthâs moon!
âDo you see what that proves? It proves that Tweelâs race uses telescopesâ âthat theyâre civilized!â
âDoes not!â snapped Harrison. âThe moon is visible from here as a fifth magnitude star. They could see its revolution with the naked eye.â
âThe moon, yes!â said Jarvis. âYouâve missed my point. Mercury isnât visible! And Tweel knew of Mercury because he placed the Moon at the third planet, not the second. If he didnât know Mercury, heâd put the earth second, and Mars third, instead of fourth! See?â
âHumph!â said Harrison.
âAnyway,â proceeded Jarvis, âI went on with my lesson. Things were going smoothly, and it looked as if I could put the idea over. I pointed at the earth on my diagram, and then at myself, and then, to clinch it, I pointed to myself and then to the earth itself shining bright green almost at the zenith.
âTweel set up such an excited clacking that I was certain he understood. He jumped up and down, and suddenly he pointed at himself and then at the sky, and then at himself and at the sky again. He pointed at his middle and then at Arcturus, at his head and then at Spica, at his feet and then at half a dozen stars, while I just gaped at him. Then, all of a sudden, he gave a tremendous leap. Man, what a hop! He shot straight up into the starlight, seventy-five feet if an inch! I saw him silhouetted against the sky, saw him turn and come down at me head first, and land smack on his beak like a javelin! There he stuck square in the center of my sun-circle in the sandâ âa bullâs eye!â
âNuts!â observed the captain. âPlain nuts!â
âThatâs what I thought, too! I just stared at him open-mouthed while he pulled his head out of the sand and stood up. Then I figured heâd missed my point, and I went through the whole blamed rigamarole again, and it ended the same way, with Tweel on his nose in the middle of my picture!â
âMaybe itâs a religious rite,â suggested Harrison.
âMaybe,â said Jarvis dubiously. âWell, there we were. We could exchange ideas up to a certain point, and thenâ âblooey! Something in us was different, unrelated; I donât doubt that Tweel thought me just as screwy as I thought him. Our minds simply looked at the world from different viewpoints, and perhaps his viewpoint is as true as ours. Butâ âwe couldnât get together, thatâs all. Yet, in spite of all difficulties, I liked Tweel, and I have a queer certainty that he liked me.â
âNuts!â repeated the captain. âJust daffy!â
âYeah? Wait and see. A couple of times Iâve thought that perhaps weâ ââ He paused, and then resumed his narrative. âAnyway, I finally gave it up, and got into my thermo-skin to sleep. The fire hadnât kept me any too warm, but that damned sleeping bag did. Got stuffy five minutes after I closed myself in. I opened it a little and bingo! Some eighty-below-zero air hit my nose, and thatâs when I got this pleasant little frostbite to add to the bump I acquired during the crash of my rocket.
âI donât know what Tweel made of my sleeping. He sat around, but when I woke up, he was gone. Iâd just crawled out of my bag, though, when I heard some twittering, and there he came, sailing down from that three-story Thyle cliff to alight on his beak beside me. I pointed to myself and toward the north, and he pointed at himself and toward the south, but when I loaded up and started away, he came along.
âMan, how he traveled! A hundred and fifty feet at a jump, sailing through the air stretched out like a spear, and landing on his beak. He seemed surprised at my plodding, but after a few moments he fell in beside me, only every few minutes heâd go into one of his leaps, and stick his nose into the sand a block ahead of me. Then heâd come shooting back at me; it made me nervous at first to see that beak of his coming at me like a spear, but he always ended in the sand at my side.
âSo the two of us plugged along across the Mare Chronium. Same sort of place as thisâ âsame crazy plants and same little green biopods growing in the sand, or crawling out of your way. We talkedâ ânot that we understood each other, you know, but just for company. I sang songs, and I suspect Tweel did too; at least, some of his trillings and twitterings had a subtle sort of rhythm.
âThen, for variety, Tweel would display his smattering of English words. Heâd point to an outcropping and say ârock,â and point to a pebble and say it again; or heâd touch my arm and say âTick,â and then repeat it. He seemed terrifically amused that the same word meant the same thing twice in succession, or that the same word could apply to two different objects. It set me wondering if perhaps his language wasnât like the primitive speech of some earth peopleâ âyou know, Captain, like the Negritoes, for instance, who havenât any generic words. No word for food or water or manâ âwords for good food and bad food, or rain water and sea water, or strong man and weak manâ âbut no names for general classes. Theyâre too primitive to understand that rain water and sea water are just different aspects of the same thing. But that wasnât the case with Tweel; it was just that we were somehow mysteriously differentâ âour minds were alien to each other. And yetâ âwe liked each other!â
âLooney, thatâs all,â remarked Harrison. âThatâs why you two were so fond of each other.â
âWell, I like you!â countered Jarvis wickedly. âAnyway,â he resumed, âdonât get the idea that there was anything screwy about Tweel. In fact, Iâm not so sure but that he couldnât teach our highly praised human intelligence a trick or two. Oh, he wasnât an intellectual superman, I guess; but donât overlook the point that he managed to understand a little of my mental workings, and I never even got a glimmering of his.â
âBecause he didnât have any!â suggested the captain, while Putz and Leroy blinked attentively.
âYou can judge of that when Iâm through,â said Jarvis. âWell, we plugged along across the Mare Chronium all that day, and all the next. Mare Chroniumâ âSea of Time! Say, I was willing to agree with Schiaparelliâs name by the end of that march! Just that grey, endless plain of weird plants, and never a sign of any other life. It was so monotonous that I was even glad to see the desert of Xanthus toward the evening of the second day.
âI was fair worn out, but Tweel seemed as fresh as ever, for all I never saw him drink or eat. I think he could have crossed the Mare Chronium in a couple of hours with those block-long nose dives of his, but he stuck along with me. I offered him some water once or twice; he took the cup from me and sucked the liquid into his beak, and then carefully squirted it all back into the cup and gravely returned it.
âJust as we sighted Xanthus, or the cliffs that bounded it, one of those nasty sand clouds blew along, not as bad as the one we had here, but mean to travel against. I pulled the transparent flap of my thermo-skin bag across my face and managed pretty well, and I noticed that Tweel used some feathery appendages growing like a mustache at the base of his beak to cover his nostrils, and some similar fuzz to shield his eyes.â
âHe is a desert creature!â ejaculated the little biologist, Leroy.
âHuh? Why?â
âHe drink no waterâ âhe is adapt for sand stormâ ââ
âProves nothing! Thereâs not enough water to waste anywhere on this desiccated pill called Mars. Weâd call all of it desert on earth, you know.â He paused. âAnyway, after the sand storm blew over, a little wind kept blowing in our faces, not strong enough to stir the sand. But suddenly things came drifting along from the Xanthus cliffsâ âsmall, transparent spheres, for all the world like glass tennis balls! But lightâ âthey were almost light enough to float even in this thin airâ âempty, too; at least, I cracked open a couple and nothing came out but a bad smell. I asked Tweel about them, but all he said was âNo, no, no,â which I took to mean that he knew nothing about them. So they went bouncing by like tumbleweeds, or like soap bubbles, and we plugged on toward Xanthus. Tweel pointed at one of the crystal balls once and said ârock,â but I was too tired to argue with him. Later I discovered what he meant.
âWe came to the bottom of the Xanthus cliffs finally, when there wasnât much daylight left. I decided to sleep on the plateau if possible; anything dangerous, I reasoned, would be more likely to prowl through the vegetation of the Mare Chronium than the sand of Xanthus. Not that Iâd seen a single sign of menace, except the rope-armed black thing that had trapped Tweel, and apparently that didnât prowl at all, but lured its victims within reach. It couldnât lure me while I slept, especially as Tweel didnât seem to sleep at all, but simply sat patiently around all night. I wondered how the creature had managed to trap Tweel, but there wasnât any way of asking him. I found that out too, later; itâs devilish!
âHowever, we were ambling around the base of the Xanthus barrier looking for an easy spot to climb. At least, I was. Tweel could have leaped it easily, for the cliffs were lower than Thyleâ âperhaps sixty feet. I found a place and started up, swearing at the water tank strapped to my backâ âit didnât bother me except when climbingâ âand suddenly I heard a sound that I thought I recognized!
âYou know how deceptive sounds are in this thin air. A shot sounds like the pop of a cork. But this sound was the drone of a rocket, and sure enough, there went our second auxiliary about ten miles to westward, between me and the sunset!â
âVas me!â said Putz. âI hunt for you.â
âYeah; I knew that, but what good did it do me? I hung on to the cliff and yelled and waved with one hand. Tweel saw it too, and set up a trilling and twittering, leaping to the top of the barrier and then high into the air. And while I watched, the machine droned on into the shadows to the south.
âI scrambled to the top of the cliff. Tweel was still pointing and trilling excitedly, shooting up toward the sky and coming down head-on to stick upside down on his beak in the sand. I pointed toward the south and at myself, and he said, âYesâ âYesâ âYesâ; but somehow I gathered that he thought the flying thing was a relative of mine, probably a parent. Perhaps I did his intellect an injustice; I think now that I did.
âI was bitterly disappointed by the failure to attract attention. I pulled out my thermo-skin bag and crawled into it, as the night chill was already apparent. Tweel stuck his beak into the sand and drew up his legs and arms and looked for all the world like one of those leafless shrubs out there. I think he stayed that way all night.â
âProtective mimicry!â ejaculated Leroy. âSee? He is desert creature!â
âIn the morning,â resumed Jarvis, âwe started off again. We hadnât gone a hundred yards into Xanthus when I saw something queer! This is one thing Putz didnât photograph, Iâll wager!
âThere was a line of little pyramidsâ âtiny ones, not more than six inches high, stretching across Xanthus as far as I could see! Little buildings made of pygmy bricks, they were, hollow inside and truncated, or at least broken at the top and empty. I pointed at them and said âWhat?â to Tweel, but he gave some negative twitters to indicate, I suppose, that he didnât know. So off we went, following the row of pyramids because they ran north, and I was going north.
âMan, we trailed that line for hours! After a while, I noticed another queer thing: they were getting larger. Same number of bricks in each one, but the bricks were larger.
âBy noon they were shoulder high. I looked into a coupleâ âall just the same, broken at the top and empty. I examined a brick or two as well; they were silica, and old as creation itself!â
âHow you know?â asked Leroy.
âThey were weatheredâ âedges rounded. Silica doesnât weather easily even on earth, and in this climateâ â!â
âHow old you think?â
âFifty thousandâ âa hundred thousand years. How can I tell? The little ones we saw in the morning were olderâ âperhaps ten times as old. Crumbling. How old would that make them? Half a million years? Who knows?â Jarvis paused a moment. âWell,â he resumed, âwe followed the line. Tweel pointed at them and said ârockâ once or twice, but heâd done that many times before. Besides, he was more or less right about these.
âI tried questioning him. I pointed at a pyramid and asked âPeople?â and indicated the two of us. He set up a negative sort of clucking and said, âNo, no, no. No one-one-two. No two-two-four,â meanwhile rubbing his stomach. I just stared at him and he went through the business again. âNo one-one-two. No two-two-four.â I just gaped at him.â
âThat proves it!â exclaimed Harrison. âNuts!â
âYou think so?â queried Jarvis sardonically. âWell, I figured it out different! âNo one-one-two!â You donât get it, of course, do you?â
âNopeâ ânor do you!â
âI think I do! Tweel was using the few English words he knew to put over a very complex idea. What, let me ask, does mathematics make you think of?â
âWhyâ âof astronomy. Orâ âor logic!â
âThatâs it! âNo one-one-two!â Tweel was telling me that the builders of the pyramids werenât peopleâ âor that they werenât intelligent, that they werenât reasoning creatures! Get it?â
âHuh! Iâll be damned!â
âYou probably will.â
âWhy,â put in Leroy, âhe rub his belly?â
âWhy? Because, my dear biologist, thatâs where his brains are! Not in his tiny headâ âin his middle!â
âCâest impossible!â
âNot on Mars, it isnât! This flora and fauna arenât earthly; your biopods prove that!â Jarvis grinned and took up his narrative. âAnyway, we plugged along across Xanthus and in about the middle of the afternoon, something else queer happened. The pyramids ended.â
âEnded!â
âYeah; the queer part was that the last oneâ âand now they were ten-footersâ âwas capped! See? Whatever built it was still inside; weâd trailed âem from their half-million-year-old origin to the present.
âTweel and I noticed it about the same time. I yanked out my automatic (I had a clip of Boland explosive bullets in it) and Tweel, quick as a sleight-of-hand trick, snapped a queer little glass revolver out of his bag. It was much like our weapons, except that the grip was larger to accommodate his four-taloned hand. And we held our weapons ready while we sneaked up along the lines of empty pyramids.
âTweel saw the movement first. The top tiers of bricks were heaving, shaking, and suddenly slid down the sides with a thin crash. And thenâ âsomethingâ âsomething was coming out!
âA long, silvery-grey arm appeared, dragging after it an armored body. Armored, I mean, with scales, silver-grey and dull-shining. The arm heaved the body out of the hole; the beast crashed to the sand.
âIt was a nondescript creatureâ âbody like a big grey cask, arm and a sort of mouth-hole at one end; stiff, pointed tail at the otherâ âand thatâs all. No other limbs, no eyes, ears, noseâ ânothing! The thing dragged itself a few yards, inserted its pointed tail in the sand, pushed itself upright, and just sat.
âTweel and I watched it for ten minutes before it moved. Then, with a creaking and rustling likeâ âoh, like crumpling stiff paperâ âits arm moved to the mouth-hole and out came a brick! The arm placed the brick carefully on the ground, and the thing was still again.
âAnother ten minutesâ âanother brick. Just one of Natureâs bricklayers. I was about to slip away and move on when Tweel pointed at the thing and said ârockâ! I went âhuh?â and he said it again. Then, to the accompaniment of some of his trilling, he said, âNoâ ânoâ â,â and gave two or three whistling breaths.
âWell, I got his meaning, for a wonder! I said, âNo breath?â and demonstrated the word. Tweel was ecstatic; he said, âYes, yes, yes! No, no, no breet!â Then he gave a leap and sailed out to land on his nose about one pace from the monster!
âI was startled, you can imagine! The arm was going up for a brick, and I expected to see Tweel caught and mangled, butâ ânothing happened! Tweel pounded on the creature, and the arm took the brick and placed it neatly beside the first. Tweel rapped on its body again, and said ârock,â and I got up nerve enough to take a look myself.
âTweel was right again. The creature was rock, and it didnât breathe!â
âHow you know?â snapped Leroy, his black eyes blazing interest.
âBecause Iâm a chemist. The beast was made of silica! There must have been pure silicon in the sand, and it lived on that. Get it? We, and Tweel, and those plants out there, and even the biopods are carbon life; this thing lived by a different set of chemical reactions. It was silicon life!â
âLa vie silicieuse!â shouted Leroy. âI have suspect, and now it is proof! I must go see! Il faut que jeâ ââ
âAll right! All right!â said Jarvis. âYou can go see. Anyhow, there the thing was, alive and yet not alive, moving every ten minutes, and then only to remove a brick. Those bricks were its waste matter. See, Frenchy? Weâre carbon, and our waste is carbon dioxide, and this thing is silicon, and its waste is silicon dioxideâ âsilica. But silica is a solid, hence the bricks. And it builds itself in, and when it is covered, it moves over to a fresh place to start over. No wonder it creaked! A living creature half a million years old!â
âHow you know how old?â Leroy was frantic.
âWe trailed its pyramids from the beginning, didnât we? If this werenât the original pyramid builder, the series would have ended somewhere before we found him, wouldnât it?â âended and started over with the small ones. Thatâs simple enough, isnât it?
âBut he reproduces, or tries to. Before the third brick came out, there was a little rustle and out popped a whole stream of those little crystal balls. Theyâre his spores, or eggs, or seedsâ âcall âem what you want. They went bouncing by across Xanthus just as theyâd bounced by us back in the Mare Chronium. Iâve a hunch how they work, tooâ âthis is for your information, Leroy. I think the crystal shell of silica is no more than a protective covering, like an eggshell, and that the active principle is the smell inside. Itâs some sort of gas that attacks silicon, and if the shell is broken near a supply of that element, some reaction starts that ultimately develops into a beast like that one.â
âYou should try!â exclaimed the little Frenchman. âWe must break one to see!â
âYeah? Well, I did. I smashed a couple against the sand. Would you like to come back in about ten thousand years to see if I planted some pyramid monsters? Youâd most likely be able to tell by that time!â Jarvis paused and drew a deep breath. âLord! That queer creature! Do you picture it? Blind, deaf, nerveless, brainlessâ âjust a mechanism, and yetâ âimmortal! Bound to go on making bricks, building pyramids, as long as silicon and oxygen exist, and even afterwards itâll just stop. It wonât be dead. If the accidents of a million years bring it its food again, there itâll be, ready to run again, while brains and civilizations are part of the past. A queer beastâ âyet I met a stranger one!â
âIf you did, it must have been in your dreams!â growled Harrison.
âYouâre right!â said Jarvis soberly. âIn a way, youâre right. The dream-beast! Thatâs the best name for itâ âand itâs the most fiendish, terrifying creation one could imagine! More dangerous than a lion, more insidious than a snake!â
âTell me!â begged Leroy. âI must go see!â
âNot this devil!â He paused again. âWell,â he resumed, âTweel and I left the pyramid creature and plowed along through Xanthus. I was tired and a little disheartened by Putzâs failure to pick me up, and Tweelâs trilling got on my nerves, as did his flying nosedives. So I just strode along without a word, hour after hour across that monotonous desert.
âToward mid-afternoon we came in sight of a low dark line on the horizon. I knew what it was. It was a canal; Iâd crossed it in the rocket and it meant that we were just one-third of the way across Xanthus. Pleasant thought, wasnât it? And still, I was keeping up to schedule.
âWe approached the canal slowly; I remembered that this one was bordered by a wide fringe of vegetation and that Mud-heap City was on it.
âI was tired, as I said. I kept thinking of a good hot meal, and then from that I jumped to reflections of how nice and homelike even Borneo would seem after this crazy planet, and from that, to thoughts of little old New York, and then to thinking about a girl I know thereâ âFancy Long. Know her?â
âVision entertainer,â said Harrison. âIâve tuned her in. Nice blondeâ âdances and sings on the Yerba Mate Hour.â
âThatâs her,â said Jarvis ungrammatically. âI know her pretty wellâ âjust friends, get me?â âthough she came down to see us off in the Ares. Well, I was thinking about her, feeling pretty lonesome, and all the time we were approaching that line of rubbery plants.
âAnd thenâ âI said, âWhat ân Hell!â and stared. And there she wasâ âFancy Long, standing plain as day under one of those crackbrained trees, and smiling and waving just the way I remembered her when we left!â
âNow youâre nuts, too!â observed the captain.
âBoy, I almost agreed with you! I stared and pinched myself and closed my eyes and then stared againâ âand every time, there was Fancy Long smiling and waving! Tweel saw something, too; he was trilling and clucking away, but I scarcely heard him. I was bounding toward her over the sand, too amazed even to ask myself questions.
âI wasnât twenty feet from her when Tweel caught me with one of his flying leaps. He grabbed my arm, yelling, âNoâ ânoâ âno!â in his squeaky voice. I tried to shake him offâ âhe was as light as if he were built of bambooâ âbut he dug his claws in and yelled. And finally some sort of sanity returned to me and I stopped less than ten feet from her. There she stood, looking as solid as Putzâs head!â
âVot?â said the engineer.
âShe smiled and waved, and waved and smiled, and I stood there dumb as Leroy, while Tweel squeaked and chattered. I knew it couldnât be real, yetâ âthere she was!
âFinally I said, âFancy! Fancy Long!â She just kept on smiling and waving, but looking as real as if I hadnât left her thirty-seven million miles away.
âTweel had his glass pistol out, pointing it at her. I grabbed his arm, but he tried to push me away. He pointed at her and said, âNo breet! No breet!â and I understood that he meant that the Fancy Long thing wasnât alive. Man, my head was whirling!
âStill, it gave me the jitters to see him pointing his weapon at her. I donât know why I stood there watching him take careful aim, but I did. Then he squeezed the handle of his weapon; there was a little puff of steam, and Fancy Long was gone! And in her place was one of those writhing, black, rope-armed horrors like the one Iâd saved Tweel from!
âThe dream-beast! I stood there dizzy, watching it die while Tweel trilled and whistled. Finally he touched my arm, pointed at the twisting thing, and said, âYou one-one-two, he one-one-two.â After heâd repeated it eight or ten times, I got it. Do any of you?â
âOui!â shrilled Leroy. âMoiâ âje le comprends! He mean you think of something, the beast he know, and you see it! Un chienâ âa hungry dog, he would see the big bone with meat! Or smell itâ ânot?â
âRight!â said Jarvis. âThe dream-beast uses its victimâs longings and desires to trap its prey. The bird at nesting season would see its mate, the fox, prowling for its own prey, would see a helpless rabbit!â
âHow he do?â queried Leroy.
âHow do I know? How does a snake back on earth charm a bird into its very jaws? And arenât there deep-sea fish that lure their victims into their mouths? Lord!â Jarvis shuddered. âDo you see how insidious the monster is? Weâre warned nowâ âbut henceforth we canât trust even our eyes. You might see meâ âI might see one of youâ âand back of it may be nothing but another of those black horrors!â
âHowâd your friend know?â asked the captain abruptly.
âTweel? I wonder! Perhaps he was thinking of something that couldnât possibly have interested me, and when I started to run, he realized that I saw something different and was warned. Or perhaps the dream-beast can only project a single vision, and Tweel saw what I sawâ âor nothing. I couldnât ask him. But itâs just another proof that his intelligence is equal to ours or greater.â
âHeâs daffy, I tell you!â said Harrison. âWhat makes you think his intellect ranks with the human?â
âPlenty of things! First, the pyramid-beast. He hadnât seen one before; he said as much. Yet he recognized it as a dead-alive automaton of silicon.â
âHe could have heard of it,â objected Harrison. âHe lives around here, you know.â
âWell how about the language? I couldnât pick up a single idea of his and he learned six or seven words of mine. And do you realize what complex ideas he put over with no more than those six or seven words? The pyramid-monsterâ âthe dream-beast! In a single phrase he told me that one was a harmless automaton and the other a deadly hypnotist. What about that?â
âHuh!â said the captain.
âHuh if you wish! Could you have done it knowing only six words of English? Could you go even further, as Tweel did, and tell me that another creature was of a sort of intelligence so different from ours that understanding was impossibleâ âeven more impossible than that between Tweel and me?â
âEh? What was that?â
âLater. The point Iâm making is that Tweel and his race are worthy of our friendship. Somewhere on Marsâ âand youâll find Iâm rightâ âis a civilization and culture equal to ours, and maybe more than equal. And communication is possible between them and us; Tweel proves that. It may take years of patient trial, for their minds are alien, but less alien than the next minds we encounteredâ âif they are minds.â
âThe next ones? What next ones?â
âThe people of the mud cities along the canals.â Jarvis frowned, then resumed his narrative. âI thought the dream-beast and the silicon-monster were the strangest beings conceivable, but I was wrong. These creatures are still more alien, less understandable than either and far less comprehensible than Tweel, with whom friendship is possible, and even, by patience and concentration, the exchange of ideas.
âWell,â he continued, âwe left the dream-beast dying, dragging itself back into its hole, and we moved toward the canal. There was a carpet of that queer walking-grass scampering out of our way, and when we reached the bank, there was a yellow trickle of water flowing. The mound city Iâd noticed from the rocket was a mile or so to the right and I was curious enough to want to take a look at it.
âIt had seemed deserted from my previous glimpse of it, and if any creatures were lurking in itâ âwell, Tweel and I were both armed. And by the way, that crystal weapon of Tweelâs was an interesting device; I took a look at it after the dream-beast episode. It fired a little glass splinter, poisoned, I suppose, and I guess it held at least a hundred of âem to a load. The propellent was steamâ âjust plain steam!â
âShteam!â echoed Putz. âFrom vot come, shteam?â
âFrom water, of course! You could see the water through the transparent handle and about a gill of another liquid, thick and yellowish. When Tweel squeezed the handleâ âthere was no triggerâ âa drop of water and a drop of the yellow stuff squirted into the firing chamber, and the water vaporizedâ âpop!â âlike that. Itâs not so difficult; I think we could develop the same principle. Concentrated sulphuric acid will heat water almost to boiling, and so will quicklime, and thereâs potassium and sodiumâ â
âOf course, his weapon hadnât the range of mine, but it wasnât so bad in this thin air, and it did hold as many shots as a cowboyâs gun in a Western movie. It was effective, too, at least against Martian life; I tried it out, aiming at one of the crazy plants, and darned if the plant didnât wither up and fall apart! Thatâs why I think the glass splinters were poisoned.
âAnyway, we trudged along toward the mud-heap city and I began to wonder whether the city builders dug the canals. I pointed to the city and then at the canal, and Tweel said âNoâ ânoâ âno!â and gestured toward the south. I took it to mean that some other race had created the canal system, perhaps Tweelâs people. I donât know; maybe thereâs still another intelligent race on the planet, or a dozen others. Mars is a queer little world.
âA hundred yards from the city we crossed a sort of roadâ âjust a hard-packed mud trail, and then, all of a sudden, along came one of the mound builders!
âMan, talk about fantastic beings! It looked rather like a barrel trotting along on four legs with four other arms or tentacles. It had no head, just body and members and a row of eyes completely around it. The top end of the barrel-body was a diaphragm stretched as tight as a drum head, and that was all. It was pushing a little coppery cart and tore right past us like the proverbial bat out of Hell. It didnât even notice us, although I thought the eyes on my side shifted a little as it passed.
âA moment later another came along, pushing another empty cart. Same thingâ âit just scooted past us. Well, I wasnât going to be ignored by a bunch of barrels playing train, so when the third one approached, I planted myself in the wayâ âready to jump, of course, if the thing didnât stop.
âBut it did. It stopped and set up a sort of drumming from the diaphragm on top. And I held out both hands and said, âWe are friends!â And what do you suppose the thing did?â
âSaid, âPleased to meet you,â Iâll bet!â suggested Harrison.
âI couldnât have been more surprised if it had! It drummed on its diaphragm, and then suddenly boomed out, âWe are v-r-r-riends!â and gave its pushcart a vicious poke at me! I jumped aside, and away it went while I stared dumbly after it.
âA minute later another one came hurrying along. This one didnât pause, but simply drummed out, âWe are v-r-r-riends!â and scurried by. How did it learn the phrase? Were all of the creatures in some sort of communication with each other? Were they all parts of some central organism? I donât know, though I think Tweel does.
âAnyway, the creatures went sailing past us, every one greeting us with the same statement. It got to be funny; I never thought to find so many friends on this Godforsaken ball! Finally I made a puzzled gesture to Tweel; I guess he understood, for he said, âOne-one-twoâ âyes!â âtwo-two-fourâ âno!â Get it?â
âSure,â said Harrison, âItâs a Martian nursery rhyme.â
âYeah! Well, I was getting used to Tweelâs symbolism, and I figured it out this way. âOne-one-twoâ âyes!â The creatures were intelligent. âTwo-two-fourâ âno!â Their intelligence was not of our order, but something different and beyond the logic of two and two is four. Maybe I missed his meaning. Perhaps he meant that their minds were of low degree, able to figure out the simple thingsâ ââOne-one-twoâ âyes!ââ âbut not more difficult thingsâ ââTwo-two-fourâ âno!â But I think from what we saw later that he meant the other.
âAfter a few moments, the creatures came rushing backâ âfirst one, then another. Their pushcarts were full of stones, sand, chunks of rubbery plants, and such rubbish as that. They droned out their friendly greeting, which didnât really sound so friendly, and dashed on. The third one I assumed to be my first acquaintance and I decided to have another chat with him. I stepped into his path again and waited.
âUp he came, booming out his âWe are v-r-r-riendsâ and stopped. I looked at him; four or five of his eyes looked at me. He tried his password again and gave a shove on his cart, but I stood firm. And then theâ âthe dashed creature reached out one of his arms, and two finger-like nippers tweaked my nose!â
âHaw!â roared Harrison. âMaybe the things have a sense of beauty!â
âLaugh!â grumbled Jarvis. âIâd already had a nasty bump and a mean frostbite on that nose. Anyway, I yelled âOuch!â and jumped aside and the creature dashed away; but from then on, their greeting was âWe are v-r-r-riends! Ouch!â Queer beasts!
âTweel and I followed the road squarely up to the nearest mound. The creatures were coming and going, paying us not the slightest attention, fetching their loads of rubbish. The road simply dived into an opening, and slanted down like an old mine, and in and out darted the barrel-people, greeting us with their eternal phrase.
âI looked in; there was a light somewhere below, and I was curious to see it. It didnât look like a flame or torch, you understand, but more like a civilized light, and I thought that I might get some clue as to the creaturesâ development. So in I went and Tweel tagged along, not without a few trills and twitters, however.
âThe light was curious; it sputtered and flared like an old arc light, but came from a single black rod set in the wall of the corridor. It was electric, beyond doubt. The creatures were fairly civilized, apparently.
âThen I saw another light shining on something that glittered and I went on to look at that, but it was only a heap of shiny sand. I turned toward the entrance to leave, and the Devil take me if it wasnât gone!
âI suppose the corridor had curved, or Iâd stepped into a side passage. Anyway, I walked back in that direction I thought weâd come, and all I saw was more dim-lit corridor. The place was a labyrinth! There was nothing but twisting passages running every way, lit by occasional lights, and now and then a creature running by, sometimes with a pushcart, sometimes without.
âWell, I wasnât much worried at first. Tweel and I had only come a few steps from the entrance. But every move we made after that seemed to get us in deeper. Finally I tried following one of the creatures with an empty cart, thinking that heâd be going out for his rubbish, but he ran around aimlessly, into one passage and out another. When he started dashing around a pillar like one of these Japanese waltzing mice, I gave up, dumped my water tank on the floor, and sat down.
âTweel was as lost as I. I pointed up and he said âNoâ ânoâ âno!â in a sort of helpless trill. And we couldnât get any help from the natives. They paid no attention at all, except to assure us they were friendsâ âouch!
âLord! I donât know how many hours or days we wandered around there! I slept twice from sheer exhaustion; Tweel never seemed to need sleep. We tried following only the upward corridors, but theyâd run uphill a ways and then curve downwards. The temperature in that damned ant hill was constant; you couldnât tell night from day and after my first sleep I didnât know whether Iâd slept one hour or thirteen, so I couldnât tell from my watch whether it was midnight or noon.
âWe saw plenty of strange things. There were machines running in some of the corridors, but they didnât seem to be doing anythingâ âjust wheels turning. And several times I saw two barrel-beasts with a little one growing between them, joined to both.â
âParthenogenesis!â exulted Leroy. âParthenogenesis by budding like les tulipes!â
âIf you say so, Frenchy,â agreed Jarvis. âThe things never noticed us at all, except, as I say, to greet us with âWe are v-r-r-riends! Ouch!â They seemed to have no home-life of any sort, but just scurried around with their pushcarts, bringing in rubbish. And finally I discovered what they did with it.
âWeâd had a little luck with a corridor, one that slanted upwards for a great distance. I was feeling that we ought to be close to the surface when suddenly the passage debouched into a domed chamber, the only one weâd seen. And man!â âI felt like dancing when I saw what looked like daylight through a crevice in the roof.
âThere was aâ âa sort of machine in the chamber, just an enormous wheel that turned slowly, and one of the creatures was in the act of dumping his rubbish below it. The wheel ground it with a crunchâ âsand, stones, plants, all into powder that sifted away somewhere. While we watched, others filed in, repeating the process, and that seemed to be all. No rhyme nor reason to the whole thingâ âbut thatâs characteristic of this crazy planet. And there was another fact thatâs almost too bizarre to believe.
âOne of the creatures, having dumped his load, pushed his cart aside with a crash and calmly shoved himself under the wheel! I watched him being crushed, too stupefied to make a sound, and a moment later, another followed him! They were perfectly methodical about it, too; one of the cartless creatures took the abandoned pushcart.
âTweel didnât seem surprised; I pointed out the next suicide to him, and he just gave the most human-like shrug imaginable, as much as to say, âWhat can I do about it?â He must have known more or less about these creatures.
âThen I saw something else. There was something beyond the wheel, something shining on a sort of low pedestal. I walked over; there was a little crystal about the size of an egg, fluorescing to beat Tophet. The light from it stung my hands and face, almost like a static discharge, and then I noticed another funny thing. Remember that wart I had on my left thumb? Look!â Jarvis extended his hand. âIt dried up and fell offâ âjust like that! And my abused noseâ âsay, the pain went out of it like magic! The thing had the property of hard X-rays or gamma radiations, only more so; it destroyed diseased tissue and left healthy tissue unharmed!
âI was thinking what a present thatâd be to take back to Mother Earth when a lot of racket interrupted. We dashed back to the other side of the wheel in time to see one of the pushcarts ground up. Some suicide had been careless, it seems.
âThen suddenly the creatures were booming and drumming all around us and their noise was decidedly menacing. A crowd of them advanced toward us; we backed out of what I thought was the passage weâd entered by, and they came rumbling after us, some pushing carts and some not. Crazy brutes! There was a whole chorus of âWe are v-r-r-riends! Ouch!â I didnât like the âouchâ; it was rather suggestive.
âTweel had his glass gun out and I dumped my water tank for greater freedom and got mine. We backed up the corridor with the barrel-beasts followingâ âabout twenty of them. Queer thingâ âthe ones coming in with loaded carts moved past us inches away without a sign.
âTweel must have noticed that. Suddenly, he snatched out that glowing coal cigar-lighter of his and touched a cartload of plant limbs. Puff! The whole load was burningâ âand the crazy beast pushing it went right along without a change of pace! It created some disturbance among our âV-r-r-riends,â howeverâ âand then I noticed the smoke eddying and swirling past us, and sure enough, there was the entrance!
âI grabbed Tweel and out we dashed and after us our twenty pursuers. The daylight felt like Heaven, though I saw at first glance that the sun was all but set, and that was bad, since I couldnât live outside my thermo-skin bag in a Martian nightâ âat least, without a fire.
âAnd things got worse in a hurry. They cornered us in an angle between two mounds, and there we stood. I hadnât fired nor had Tweel; there wasnât any use in irritating the brutes. They stopped a little distance away and began their booming about friendship and ouches.
âThen things got still worse! A barrel-brute came out with a pushcart and they all grabbed into it and came out with handfuls of foot-long copper dartsâ âsharp-looking onesâ âand all of a sudden one sailed past my earâ âzing! And it was shoot or die then.
âWe were doing pretty well for a while. We picked off the ones next to the pushcart and managed to keep the darts at a minimum, but suddenly there was a thunderous booming of âv-r-r-riendsâ and âouches,â and a whole army of âem came out of their hole.
âMan! We were through and I knew it! Then I realized that Tweel wasnât. He could have leaped the mound behind us as easily as not. He was staying for me!
âSay, I could have cried if thereâd been time! Iâd liked Tweel from the first, but whether Iâd have had gratitude to do what he was doingâ âsuppose I had saved him from the first dream-beastâ âheâd done as much for me, hadnât he? I grabbed his arm, and said âTweel,â and pointed up, and he understood. He said, âNoâ ânoâ âno, Tick!â and popped away with his glass pistol.
âWhat could I do? Iâd be a goner anyway when the sun set, but I couldnât explain that to him. I said, âThanks, Tweel. Youâre a man!â and felt that I wasnât paying him any compliment at all. A man! There are mighty few men whoâd do that.
âSo I went âbangâ with my gun and Tweel went âpuffâ with his, and the barrels were throwing darts and getting ready to rush us, and booming about being friends. I had given up hope. Then suddenly an angel dropped right down from Heaven in the shape of Putz, with his under-jets blasting the barrels into very small pieces!
âWow! I let out a yell and dashed for the rocket; Putz opened the door and in I went, laughing and crying and shouting! It was a moment or so before I remembered Tweel; I looked around in time to see him rising in one of his nosedives over the mound and away.
âI had a devil of a job arguing Putz into following! By the time we got the rocket aloft, darkness was down; you know how it comes hereâ âlike turning off a light. We sailed out over the desert and put down once or twice. I yelled âTweel!â and yelled it a hundred times, I guess. We couldnât find him; he could travel like the wind and all I gotâ âor else I imagined itâ âwas a faint trilling and twittering drifting out of the south. Heâd gone, and damn it! I wishâ âI wish he hadnât!â
The four men of the Ares were silentâ âeven the sardonic Harrison. At last little Leroy broke the stillness.
âI should like to see,â he murmured.
âYeah,â said Harrison. âAnd the wart-cure. Too bad you missed that; it might be the cancer cure theyâve been hunting for a century and a half.â
âOh, that!â muttered Jarvis gloomily. âThatâs what started the fight!â He drew a glistening object from his pocket.
âHere it is.â