He could see the picnic basket falling. Smaller. Gone.

  The plastic wrap. Fluttering down. Gone.

  Then, nothing but the white mist.

  On a far-distant day they would call the phenomenon Plateau trance. It was a form of autohypnosis well known to Plateau citizens of both social classes, differing from other forms only in that nearly anyone could fall into such a state by accident. In this respect Plateau trance compares to ancient, badly authenticated cases of “highway hypnosis” or to more recent studies of “the far look,” a form of religious trance endemic to the Belt of Sol. The far look comes to a miner who spends too many minutes staring at a single star in the background of naked space. Plateau trance starts with a long, dreamy look down into the void mist.

  For a good eight hours Matt had not had a chance to relax. He would not get a chance tonight, and he didn’t want to dwell on that now. Here was his chance. He relaxed.

  He came out of it with a niggling suspicion that time had passed. He was lying on his side, his face over the edge staring down into unfathomable darkness. It was night. And he felt wonderful.

  Until he remembered.

  He got up and climbed carefully over the wall. It would not do to slip, three feet from the edge, and he was often clumsy when he felt this nervous. Now his stomach seemed to have been replaced by a plastic demonstration model from a biology class. There was a jerkiness in his limbs.

  He walked a little way from the wall and stopped. Which way was the Hospital?

  Come now, he thought. This is ridiculous.

  Well, there was a swelling hill to his left. Light glowed faintly along its rim. He’ll try that.

  The grass and the earth beneath it ended as he reached the top. Now there was stone beneath his bare feet, stone and rock dust untouched by three hundred years of the colony planting program. He stood at the crest of the hill looking down on the Hospital. It was half a mile away and blazed with light. Behind and to either side were other lights, the lights of houses, none within half a mile of the Hospital. Against their general glow he saw the black tongue of forest he’d noticed that morning.

  In a direction not quite opposite to the dark, sprawling line of trees, a straighter line of light ran from the Hospital to a cluster of buildings at the perimeter of the bare region. A supply road.

  He could reach the trees by moving along the edge of town. The trees would give him cover until he reached the wall—but it seemed a poor risk. Why would Implementation leave that one line of cover across a bare, flat protective field? That strip of forest must be loaded with detection equipment.

  He started across the rock on his belly.

  He stopped frequently. It was tiring, moving like this. Worse than that, what was he going to do when he got inside? The Hospital was big, and he knew nothing about the interior. The lighted windows bothered him. Didn’t the Hospital ever sleep? The stars shone bright and cold. Each time he stopped to rest, the Hospital was a little closer.

  So was the wall that surrounded it. It leaned outwards and on this side there was no break at all.

  He was a hundred yards from the wall when he found the wire. There were big metal pegs to hold it off the ground, pegs a foot high and thirty yards apart, driven into the rock. The wire itself was bare coppery metal strung taut a few inches off the ground. Matt had not touched it. He crossed it very carefully, staying low but not touching the wire at any time.

  Faintly there came the sound of alarm bells ringing inside the wall. Matt stopped where he was. Then he turned and was over the wire in one leap. When he hit the ground he didn’t move. His eyes were closed tight. He felt the faint touch of numbness which meant a sonic beam. Evidently he was out of range. He risked a look behind him. Four searchlights hunted him across the bare rock. The wall was lousy with police.

  He turned away, afraid they’d see his face shining. There were whirring sounds. Mercy-bullets falling all around him, slivers of glassy chemical which dissolved in blood. They weren’t as accurate as lead pellets, but one must find him soon.

  A light pinned him. And another, and a third.

  From the wall came a voice. “Cease fire.” The whirr of anesthetic slivers ended. The voice spoke again, bored, authoritative, tremendously amplified. “Stand up, you. You may as well walk, but we’ll carry you if we have to.”

  Matt wanted to burrow like a rabbit. But even a rabbit wouldn’t have made headway in the pitted, dusty stone. He stood up with his hands in the air.

  There was no sound, no motion.

  One of the lights swung away from him. Then the others. They moved in random arcs for a while, crossing the protective-rock field with swooping blobs of light. Then, one by one, they went out.

  The amplified voice spoke again. It sounded faintly puzzled. “What set off the alarms?”

  Another voice, barely audible in the quiet night. “Don’t know, sir.”

  “Maybe a rabbit. All right, break it up.”

  The figures on the wall disappeared. Matt was standing all alone with his hands in the air. After a while he put them down and walked away.

  The man was tall and thin, with a long face and a short mouth and no expression. His Implementation-police uniform could not have been cleaner nor better pressed if he’d donned it a moment ago for the first time. He sat beside the door, bored and used to it, a man who had spent half his life sitting and waiting.

  Every fifteen minutes or so he would get up to look at the coffin.

  Seemingly the coffin had been built for Gilgamesh or Paul Bunyan. It was oak, at least on the outside. The eight gauge dials along one edge appeared to have been pirated from somewhere else and attached to the coffin by a carpenter of only moderate skill. The, long-headed man would stand up, go to the coffin, stand over the dials for a minute. Something could go wrong, after all. Then he would have to act in a hurry. But nothing ever did, and he would return to his chair and wait some more.

  Problem:

  Polly Tournquist’s mind holds information you need. How to get at it?

  The mind is the body. The body is the mind.

  Drugs would interfere with her metabolism. They might harm her. You’d risk it, but you’re not allowed drugs anyway.

  Torture? You could damage a few fingernails, bend a few bones. But it wouldn’t stop there. Pain affects the adrenal glands, and the adrenal glands affect everything. Sustained pain can have a savage, even permanent, effect on a body needed for medical supplies. Besides, torture is unethical.

  Friendly persuasion? You could offer her a deal. Her life, and resettlement in some other region of the Plateau, for anything you want to know. You’d like that, and the organ banks are full…But she won’t deal. You’ve seen them before. You can tell.

  So you give her a nice rest.

  Polly Tournquist was a soul alone in space. Less than that, for there was nothing around her that could have been identified as “space.” No heat, no cold, no pressure, no light, no darkness, no hunger, no thirst, no sound.

  She had tried to concentrate on the sound of her heartbeat, but even that had disappeared. It was too regular. Her mind had edited it out. Similarly with the darkness behind her closed, bandaged eyelids: the darkness was uniform, and she no longer sensed it. She could strain her muscles against the soft, swaddling bandages that bound her, but she sensed no result, for the slack was small fractions of an inch. Her mouth was partly open; she could neither open it further nor close it on the foam-rubber mouthpiece. She could not bite her tongue, nor find it. In no way could she produce the sensation of pain. The ineffable peace of the coffin cure wrapped her in its tender folds and carried her, screaming silently, into nothingness.

  What happened?

  He sat at the edge of the grass on the hill above the Hospital. His eyes were fixed on its blazing windows. His heart beat softly against his knee.

  What happened? They had me. They had me!

  He had walked away. Bewildered, helpless, beaten, he had waited for the magnified voic
e to shout its orders. And nothing had happened. It was as if they had forgotten him. He had walked away with the feel of death at his back, waiting for the numbness of a sonic stun-beam or the prick of a mercy-bullet or the roar of the officer’s voice.

  Gradually, against all reason, he had sensed that they were not going to come for him.

  And then he ran.

  His lungs had stopped their tortured laboring many minutes ago, but his brain still spun. Perhaps it would never stop. He had run until he collapsed, here at the top of the hill, but the fear that drove him was not the fear of the organ banks. He had fled from an impossible thing, from a universe without reason. How could he have walked away from that plain of death with no eye to watch him? It smacked of magic, and he was afraid.

  Something had suspended the ordinary laws of the universe to save his life. He had never heard of anything that could do that…except the Mist Demons. And the Mist Demons were a myth. They had told him so when he was old enough. The Mist Demons were a tale to frighten children, like the reverse of a Santa Claus. The old wives who found powerful beings in the mist beyond the edge of the world had followed a tradition older than history, perhaps as old as man. But nobody believed in the Mist Demons. They were like the Belt miners’ Church of Finagle, whose prophet was Murphy. A half-bitter joke. Something to swear by.

  They had me and they let me go. Why?

  Could they have had a purpose? Was there some reason the Hospital should let a colonist sneak to its very walls, then let him go free?

  Could the organ banks be full? But there must be someplace they could keep a prisoner until there was room.

  But if they thought he was a crew! Yes, that was it! A human figure on Alpha plateau—of course they’d assume he was crew. But so what? Surely someone would have come to question him.

  Matt began pacing a tight circle at the top of the low hill. His head whirled. He’d walked to certain death and been turned loose. By whom? Why? And what did he do next? Go back and give them another chance? Walk to the Alpha-Beta Bridge and hope nobody would see him sneaking across? Fly down the cliff, vigorously flapping his arms?

  The awful thing was that he didn’t know it wouldn’t work. Magic, magic. Hood had talked about magic.

  No, he hadn’t. He’d practically turned purple denying that magic was involved. He’d been talking about…psychic powers. And Matt had been so involved in watching, Polly that he couldn’t remember anything Hood had said.

  It was very bad luck. Because this was his only out. He had to assume that he had a psychic power, though he had not the remotest idea what that implied. At least it put a name to what had happened.

  “I’ve got a psychic power,” Matt announced. His voice rang with queer precision in the quiet night.

  Fine. So? If Hood had gone into detail on the nature of psychic powers, Matt couldn’t remember. But he could fairly well drop the idea of flying down the Alpha-Beta cliff. Whatever else was true of man’s unexplored mental powers, they must be consistent. Matt could remember the feeling that he wouldn’t be noticed if he didn’t want to be, he had never flown, nor even dreamed of flying.

  He ought to talk to Hood.

  But Hood was in the Hospital. He might be dead already.

  Well…

  Matt had been eleven years old when Ghengis, or Dad, brought two charms home for gifts. They were model cars, just the right size for charm bracelets, and they glowed in the dark. Matt and Jeanne had loved them at sight and forever.

  One night they had left the charms in a closet for several hours, thinking they would grow brighter when they “got used to the dark.” When Jeanne opened the closet, they had lost all their glow.

  Jeanne was near tears. Matt’s reaction was different. If darkness robbed the charms of their powers…

  He hung them next to a light bulb for an hour. When he turned off the light, they glowed like little blue lamps.

  A tide of small, loosely packed clouds was spreading across the stars. In all directions the town lights had gone out, all but the lights of the Hospital. The Plateau slept in a profound silence.

  Well…he’d tried to sneak into the Hospital. He’d been caught. But when he stood up in the glare of spotlights, they couldn’t see him. The why of it was just as magical as before, but he thought he was beginning to see the how of it.

  He’d have to risk it. Matt began to walk.

  He’d never planned for it to go this far. If only he’d been stopped before it was too late. But it was too late, and he had the sense to know it.

  Strictly speaking, he should have been wearing something bright. A blue shirt with a tangerine sweater, iridescent green pants, a scarlet cape with an S enclosed in a yellow triangle. And…rimmed glasses? It had been a long time since grade school. Never mind; he’d have to go as he was.

  A good thing he liked flamboyant gestures.

  He skirted the edge of the bare region until he reached the houses. Presently he was walking through dark streets. The houses were fascinating and strange. He would have enjoyed seeing them by daylight. What manner of people lived in them? Colorful, idle, happy, eternally young and healthy. He would have liked to be one of them.

  But he noticed a peculiar thing about the houses. Heterogeneous as they were in form, color, style, building material, they had one thing in common. Always they faced away from the Hospital.

  As if the Hospital inspired them with fear. Or guilt.

  There were lights ahead. Matt walked faster. He had been walking for half an hour now. Yes, there was the supply road, lit bright as day by two close-spaced lines of street lamps. A broken white line ran down the curving middle.

  Matt stepped out to the white line and began following it toward the Hospital.

  Again his shoulders were unnaturally rigid, as with the fear of death from behind. But the danger was all before him. The organ banks were the most humiliating imaginable form of death. Yet Matt feared something worse.

  Men had been released from the Hospital to tell of their trials. Not many, but they could talk. Matt could guess a little of what waited for him.

  They would see him, they would fire mercy-bullets into him, they would carry him on a stretcher into the Hospital. When he woke, he would be taken to his first and last interview with the dread Castro. The Head’s burning eyes would look into his, and he would rumble, “Keller, eh? Yes, we had to take your uncle apart. Well, Keller? You walked up here like you thought you were a crew with an appointment. What did you think you were doing, Keller?”

  And what was he going to say to that?

  The Hospital

  VAsleep, Jesus Pietro looked ten years older. His defenses—his straight back, tight muscles, and controlled features—were relaxed. His startling pale eyes were closed. His carefully combed white hair was messy, showing the bare scalp over which it had been carefully combed. He slept alone, separated from his wife by a door which was never locked. Sometimes he thrashed in his sleep, and sometimes, ridden by insomnia, he stared at the ceiling with his arms folded and muttered to himself, which was why Nadia slept next door. But tonight he lay quiet.

  He could have looked thirty again, with help. Inside his aging skin he was in good physical shape. He had good wind, thanks partly to his borrowed lung; his muscles were hard beneath loose wrinkles and deposits of fat; and his digestion was good. His teeth, all transplants, were perfect. Give him new skin, new scalp, a new liver; replace a number of sphincter and other autonomic muscles…

  But that would take a special order from the crew congress. It would be a kind of testimonial and he would accept it if it were offered, but he wasn’t going to fight for it. Transplants and the giving of transplants were the right of the crew and their most powerful reward. And Jesus Pietro was…not squeamish, but somehow reluctant to exchange parts of himself for parts of some stranger. It would be like losing part of his ego. Only the fear of death had made him accept a new lung years ago.

  He slept quietly.

  And things be
gan to add up.

  Polly Tournquist’s films: Someone had slipped through his net night before last. Keller’s getaway last night. A gnawing suspicion, only an intuition as yet, that ramrobot package #143 was even more important than anyone had guessed. Wrinkled, uncomfortable sheets. His blankets, which were a trifle too heavy. The fact that he had forgotten to brush his teeth. A mental picture of Keller diving head-down for the mist—it kept coming back to haunt him. Faint noises from outside, from the wall, noises already an hour old, noises which hadn’t awakened him but which were still unexplained. His twinges of lust for the girl in the coffin cure, and the guilt that followed. His temptation to use that ancient brainwashing technique for his own private purposes, to make the rebel girl love him for a time. Adultery! More guilt.

  Temptations. Escaped prisoners. Hot, wrinkled bedclothes.

  No use. He was awake.

  He lay rigidly on his back, arms folded, glaring into the dark. No use fighting it. Last night had fouled up his internal clock; he’d eaten breakfast at twelve-thirty. Why did he keep thinking of Keller?

  (Head down over the mist, with the fans pushing hard on the seat of his pants. Hell above and Heaven below, going up into the unknown; lost forever, destroyed utterly. The dream of the Hindu, realized in physical form. The peace of total dissolution.)

  Jesus Pietro rolled over and turned on the phone.

  A strange voice said, “Hospital—sir.”

  “Who is this?”

  “Master Sergeant Leonard V. Watts, sir. Night duty.”

  “What’s happening at the Hospital, Master Sergeant?” It was not an unusual question. Jesus Pietro had asked it scores of times at early morning hours during the last ten years.

  Watts’ voice was crisp. “Let me see. You left at seven, sir. At seven-thirty Major Jansen ordered the release of the deadheads we picked up last night, the ones without ear mikes. Major Jansen left at nine. At ten-thirty Sergeant Helios reported that all the deadheads had been returned to their homes. Mmmm…” Shuffling of papers in background. “All but two of the prisoners questioned today have been executed and stored away. The medical supplies section informs us that the banks will be unable to handle new material until further notice. Do you want a list of executions, sir?”