Assignment in Eternity
“The weather is fair, but you are welcome to remain here as long as you like. Perhaps you would like to see the rest of our home and meet the other members of our household?”
“Oh, I think that would be lovely!”
“It will be my pleasure, ma’am.”
“As a matter of fact, Mr. Bierce—” Phil leaned forward a little, his face and manner serious. “—we are quite anxious to see more of your place here and to know more about you. We were speaking of it when you came in.”
“Curiosity is natural and healthy. Please ask any question you wish.”
“Well—” Phil plunged in. “Ben had a broken leg last night. Or didn’t he? It’s well this morning.”
“He did indeed have a broken leg. It was healed in the night.”
Coburn cleared his throat. “Mr. Bierce, my name is Coburn. I am a physician and surgeon, but my knowledge does not extend to such healing as that. Will you tell me more about it?”
“Certainly. You are familiar with regeneration as practiced by the lower life forms. The principle used is the same, but it is consciously controlled by the will and the rate of healing is accelerated. I placed you in hypnosis last night, then surrendered control to one of our surgeons who directed your mind in exerting its own powers to heal its body.”
Coburn looked baffled. Bierce continued, “There is really nothing startling about it. The mind and will have always the possibility of complete domination over the body. Our operator simply directs your will to master its body. The technique is simple; you may learn it, if you wish. I assure you that to learn it is easier than to explain it in our cumbersome and imperfect language. I spoke of mind and will as if they were separate. Language forced me to that ridiculous misstatement. There is neither mind, nor will, as entities; there is only—” His voice stopped. Ben felt a blow within his mind like the shock of a sixteen-inch rifle, yet it was painless and gentle. Whatever it was, it was as alive as a hummingbird, or a struggling kitten, yet it was calm and untroubled.
He saw Joan nodding her head in agreement, her eyes on Bierce.
Bierce went on in his gentle, resonant voice. “Was there any other matter troubling any one of you?”
“Why, yes, Mr. Bierce,” replied Joan, “several things. What is this place where we are?”
“It is my home, and the home of several of my friends. You will understand more about us as you become better acquainted with us.”
“Thank you. It is difficult for me to understand how such a community could exist on this mountaintop without a being a matter of common knowledge.”
“We have taken certain precautions, ma’am, to avoid notoriety. Our reasons, and the precautions they inspired will become evident to you.”
“One more question; this is rather personal; you may ignore it if you like. Are you the Ambrose Bierce who disappeared a good many years ago?”
“I am. I first came up here in 1880 in search of a cure for asthma. I retired here in 1914 because I wished to avoid direct contact with the tragic world events which I saw coming and was powerless to stop.” He spoke with some reluctance, as if the subject were distasteful, and turned the conversation. “Perhaps you would like to meet some of my friends now?”
The apartments extended for a hundred yards along the face of the mountain and for unmeasured distances into the mountain. The thirty-odd persons in residence were far from crowded; there were many rooms not in use. In the course of the morning Bierce introduced them to most of the inhabitants.
They seemed to be of all sorts and ages and of several nationalities. Most of them were occupied in one way, or another, usually with some form of research, or with creative art. At least Bierce assured them in several cases that research was in progress—cases in which no apparatus, no recording device, nothing was evident to indicate scientific research.
Once they were introduced to a group of three, two women and a man, who were surrounded by the physical evidence of their work—biological research. But the circumstances were still confusing; two of the trio sat quietly by, doing nothing, while the third labored at a bench. Bierce explained that they were doing some delicate experiments in the possibility of activating artificial colloids. Ben inquired, “Are the other two observing the work?”
Bierce shook his head. “Oh, no. They are all three engaged actively in the work, but at this particular stage, they find it expedient to let three brains in rapport direct one set of hands.”
Rapport, it developed, was the usual method of collaboration. Bierce had led them into a room occupied by six persons. One or two of them looked up and nodded, but did not speak. Bierce motioned for the three to come away. “They were engaged in a particularly difficult piece of reconstruction; it would not be polite to disturb them.”
“But Mr. Bierce,” Phil commented, “two of them were playing chess.”
“Yes. They did not need that part of their brains, so they left it out of rapport. Nevertheless they were very busy.”
It was easier to see what the creative artists were doing. In two instances, however, their methods were startling. Bierce had taken them to the studio of a little gnome of a man, a painter in oil, who was introduced simply as Charles. He seemed glad to see them and chatted vivaciously, without ceasing his work. He was doing, with meticulous realism but with a highly romantic effect, a study of a young girl dancing, a wood nymph, against a pine forest background.
The young people each made appropriate appreciative comments, Coburn commented that it was remarkable that he should be able to be so accurate in his anatomical detail without the aid of a model.
“But I have a model,” he answered. “She was here last week. See?” He glanced toward the empty model’s throne. Coburn and his companions followed the glance, and saw, poised on the throne, a young girl, obviously the model for the picture, frozen in the action of the painting. She was as real as bread and butter.
Charles glanced away. The model’s throne was again vacant.
The second instance was not so dramatic, but still less comprehensible. They had met, and chatted with, a Mrs. Draper, a comfortable, matronly soul, who knitted and rocked as they talked. After they had left her Phil inquired about her.
“She is possibly our most able and talented artist,” Bierce told him.
“In what field?”
Bierce’s shaggy eyebrows came together as he chose his words. “I don’t believe I can tell you adequately at this time. She composes moods—arranges emotional patterns in harmonic sequences. It’s our most advanced and our most completely human form of art, and yet, until you have experienced it, it is very difficult for me to tell you about it.”
“How is it possible to arrange emotions?”
“Your great grandfather no doubt thought it impossible to record music. We have a technique for it. You will understand later.”
“Is Mrs. Draper the only one who does this?”
“Oh, no. Most of us try our hand at it. It’s our favorite art form. I work at it myself but my efforts aren’t popular—too gloomy.”
The three talked it over that night in the livingroom they had first entered. This suite had been set aside for their use, and Bierce had left them with the simple statement that he would call on them on the morrow.
They felt a pressing necessity to exchange views, and yet each was reluctant to express opinion. Phil broke the silence.
“What kind of people are these? They make me feel as if I were a child who had wandered in where adults were working, but that they were too polite to put me out.”
“Speaking of working—there’s something odd about the way they work. I don’t mean what it is they do—that’s odd, too, but it’s something else, something about their attitude, or the tempo at which they work.”
“I know what you mean, Ben,” Joan agreed, “they are busy all the time, and yet they act as if they had all eternity to finish it. Bierce was like that when he was strapping up your leg. They never hurry.” She turned to Phil. “Wh
at are you frowning about?”
“I don’t know. There is something else we haven’t mentioned yet. They have a lot of special talents, sure, but we three know something about special talents—that ought not to confuse us. But there is something else about them that is different.”
The other two agreed with him but could offer no help. Sometime later Joan said that she was going to bed and left the room. The two men stayed for a last cigaret.
Joan stuck her head back in the room. “I know what it is that is so different about these people,” she announced. “They are so alive.”
CHAPTER SIX
* * *
ICHABOD!
PHILIP HUXLEY WENT TO BED and to sleep as usual. From there on nothing was usual.
He became aware that he was inhabiting another’s body, thinking with another’s mind. The Other was aware of Huxley, but did not share Huxley’s thoughts.
The Other was at home, a home never experienced by Huxley, yet familiar. It was on Earth, incredibly beautiful, each tree and shrub fitting into the landscape as if placed there in the harmonic scheme of an artist. The house grew out of the ground.
The Other left the house with his wife and prepared to leave for the capital of the planet. Huxley thought of the destination as a “capital” yet he knew that the idea of government imposed by force was foreign to the nature of these people. The “capital” was merely the accustomed meeting place of the group whose advice was followed in matters affecting the entire race.
The Other and his wife, accompanied by Huxley’s awareness, stepped into the garden, shot straight up into the air, and sped over the countryside, flying hand in hand. The country was green, fertile, park-like, dotted with occasional buildings, but nowhere did Huxley see the jammed masses of a city.
They passed rapidly over a large body of water, perhaps as large as the modern Mediterranean, and landed in a clearing in a grove of olive trees.
* * *
The Young Men—so Huxley thought of them—demanded a sweeping change in custom, first, that the ancient knowledge should henceforth be the reward of ability rather than common birthright, and second, that the greater should rule the lesser. Loki urged their case, his arrogant face upthrust and crowned with bright red hair. He spoke in words, a method which disturbed Huxley’s host, telepathic rapport being the natural method of mature discussion. But Loki had closed his mind to it.
Jove answered him, speaking for all:
“My son, your words seem vain and without serious meaning. We cannot tell your true meaning, for you and your brothers have decided to shut your minds to us. You ask that the ancient knowledge be made the reward of ability. Has it not always been so? Does our cousin, the ape, fly through the air? Is not the infant soul bound by hunger, and sleep, and the ills of the flesh? Can the oriole level the mountain with his glance? The powers of our kind that set us apart from the younger spirits on this planet are now exercised by those who possess the ability, and none other. How can we make that so which is already so?
“You demand that the greater shall rule the lesser. Is it not so now? Has it not always been so? Are you ordered about by the babe at the breast? Does the waving of the grass cause the wind? What dominion do you desire other than over yourself? Do you wish to tell your brother when to sleep and when to eat? If so, to what purpose?”
Vulcan broke in while the old man was still speaking. Huxley felt a stir of shocked repu