Then he laughed. He surprised me; he sounded almost happy. He said, “Well, hell, Dick—I had to tell somebody about it sooner or later. Why not you?”

  I can’t tell you all of what he said. I’ll tell most of it—but not the part that matters.

  I’ll never tell that part to anybody.

  Larry said, “I should have known you’d remember.” He smiled at me ruefully, affectionately. “Those bull sessions in the Caféterias, eh? Talking all night about everything. But you remembered.”

  “You claimed that the human mind possessed powers of psychokinesis,” I said. “You argued that just by the mind, without moving a finger or using a machine, a man could move his body anywhere, instantly. You said that nothing was impossible to the mind.”

  I felt like an absolute fool saying those things; they were ridiculous notions. Imagine a man thinking himself from one place to another! But—I had been on that gallery.

  I licked my lips and looked to Larry Connaught for confirmation.

  “I was all wet,” Larry laughed. “Imagine!”

  I suppose I showed surprise, because he patted my shoulder.

  He said, becoming sober, “Sure, Dick, you’re wrong, but you’re right all the same. The mind alone can’t do anything of the sort—that was just a silly kid notion. But,” he went on, “but there are—well, techniques—linking the mind to physical forces—simple physical forces that we all use every day—that can do it all. Everything! Everything I ever thought of and things I haven’t found out yet.

  “Fly across the ocean? In a second, Dick! Wall off an exploding bomb? Easily! You saw me do it. Oh, it’s work. It takes energy—you can’t escape natural law. That was what knocked me out for a whole day. But that was a hard one; it’s a lot easier, for instance, to make a bullet miss its target. It’s even easier to lift the cartridge out of the chamber and put it in my pocket, so that the bullet can’t even be fired. Want the Crown Jewels of England? I could get them, Dick!”

  I asked, “Can you see the future?”

  He frowned. “That’s silly. This isn’t supersti—”

  “How about reading minds?”

  ~ * ~

  Larry’s expression cleared. “Oh, you’re remembering some of the things I said years ago. No, I can’t do that either, Dick. Maybe, some day, if I keep working at this thing— Well, I can’t right now. There are things I can do, though, that are just as good.”

  “Show me something you can do,” I asked.

  He smiled. Larry was enjoying himself; I didn’t begrudge it to him. He had hugged this to himself for years, from the day he found his first clue, through the decade of proving and experimenting, almost always being wrong, but always getting closer.... He needed to talk about it. I think he was really glad that, at last, someone had found him out.

  He said, “Show you something? Why, let’s see, Dick.” He looked around the room, then winked. “See that window?”

  I looked. It opened with a slither of wood and a rumble of sash weights. It closed again.

  “The radio,” said Larry. There was a click and his little set turned itself on. “Watch it.”

  It disappeared and reappeared.

  “It was on top of Mount Everest,” Larry said, panting a little.

  The plug on the radio’s electric cord picked itself up and stretched toward the baseboard socket, then dropped to the floor again.

  “No,” said Larry, and his voice was trembling, “I’ll show you a hard one. Watch the radio, Dick. I’ll run it without plugging it in! The electrons themselves—”

  He was staring intently at the little set. I saw the dial light go on, flicker, and hold steady; the speaker began to make scratching noises. I stood up, right behind Larry, right over him.

  I used the telephone on the table beside him. I caught him right beside the ear and he folded over without a murmur. Methodically, I hit him twice more, and then I was sure he wouldn’t wake up for at least an hour. I rolled him over and put the telephone back in its cradle.

  I ransacked his apartment. I found it in his desk: All his notes. All the information. The secret of how to do the things he could do.

  I picked up the telephone and called the Washington police. When I heard the siren outside, I took out my service revolver and shot him in the throat. He was dead before they came in.

  ~ * ~

  For, you see, I knew Laurence Connaught. We were friends. I would have trusted him with my life. But this was more than just a life.

  Twenty-three words told how to do the things that Laurence Connaught did. Anyone who could read could do them. Criminals, traitors, lunatics—the formula would work for anyone.

  Laurence Connaught was an honest man and an idealist, I think. But what would happen to any man when he became God? Suppose you were told twenty-three words that would let you reach into any bank vault, peer inside any closed room, walk through any wall? Suppose pistols could not kill you?

  They say power corrupts; and absolute power corrupts absolutely. And there can be no more absolute power than the twenty-three words that can free a man of any jail or give him anything he wants. Larry was my friend. But I killed him in cold blood, knowing what I did, because he could not be trusted with the secret that could make him king of the world.

  >

  ~ * ~

  The Mapmakers

  It was one of those crazy, chance-in-a-million accidents. A particle of meteoric matter slammed into Starship Terra II in hyperspace. It was only a small particle, but it penetrated three bulkheads, injuring Lieutenant Groden and destroying the Celestial Atlas. It couldn’t happen in a hundred years - but it had happened.

  That was the end of the road for Starship Terra II. The damage-control parties patched the bulkheads easily enough. But the Atlas - the only record on board of the incomprehensible Riemannian configurations of hyperspace - was a total loss.

  The captain gave orders for Spohn, the Celestial Atlas, to be buried in space and called an emergency officers’ meeting in the wardroom.

  Terra II was in normal space and free fall. A trace of smoky kerosene odour still hung in the wardroom, but there was none of the queasy unrecognizable slipping motion of the hyperspace ‘jump’, and the captain had ordered the ship spun to give them a touch of simulated gravity. The officers were managing to look alert and responsive as they faced their skipper.

  The captain was a hard-muscled, hard-eyed career naval officer, and by definition an ambitious man - else he would hardly have asked for the command of a charting flight. He walked briskly in from his own quarters, neither hurrying nor slow. He would walk at that same pace to receive his admiral’s stars when that day came, or to his execution, if it ever came to that.

  He assumed his place at the head of the table and took the precise ten seconds his martinet mind allotted him for looking around the wardroom. Then he said,’ We’re in trouble.’

  The men in the wardroom hitched their hips a quarter inch closer to the ward table.

  The captain nodded and said it again, ‘We’re in the soup, and we’re a long way from home, and nobody is going to come to get us out of it. We’ll have to do it ourselves, if we can. Ciccarelli’s trying to get us a fix, but I can tell you right now, we’re not close to Sol. There isn’t a constellation in the sky that you or I or anybody else ever saw before. We might be a hundred light-years from home, we might be ten thousand.’

  The Exec cleared his throat. ‘Sir, what about our records ?’

  ‘What records? They went with the Atlas, Hal. We can’t retrace our way to Earth.’

  ‘No, sir, that’s not what I mean. I understand that. But our charting records from Earth to here, we still have those. They won’t do us any good, because we can’t follow them backward - hyperspace doesn’t work that way But Earth needs them.’

  ‘Sure. What can we do about it ? If we could get them back, we could get back ourselves. The whole trouble - Yes ? What is it, Lorch
?’

  Ensign Lorch saluted from the door of the wardroom. ‘Spohn’s body, sir,’ he rapped out. ‘It’s ready for burial now. Would the captain like to conduct the services ?’

  ‘The captain will. What about Groden ?’

  Lorch said. ‘He isn’t good, sir. He’s unconscious and his head is bandaged up. The surgeon thinks it’s bad. But we won’t know for sure for at least a couple of hours.’

  The captain nodded, and Lorch quickly took his seat. He was the youngest officer in Terra II in years, six months out of the Academy and still unable to vote. He listened to the discussion of ways and means with deference masking a keen feeling of excitement. The adventure of the unknown star lanes! That was why Lorch had signed up in the charting service, and he was getting it.

  Perhaps more, even, than he had bargained for.

  ~ * ~

  The trouble with Terra II was that she was playing a cosmic game of blind-man’s-buff. Jumping into hyperspace was like leaping through a shadow, blindfolded; there was no way of knowing in advance what lay on the other side.

  The first hyperspace rocket had taught a few lessons, expensively learned. On its first jump into hyperspace, Terra I had been ‘out’ for just under one second - just enough, that is, for the jump generators to swing the ship into and out of the Riemannian n-dimensional composite that they called hyperspace for lack of a better term.

  And it had taken Terra I nearly a year to limp back home, in normal space all the way, its generators a smouldering ruin. Back still again to the drawing boards!

  But it was no one’s fault. Who could have foreseen that any electric current, however faint, would so warp the field as to blow up the generators ? The lesson was plain:

  No electrical equipment in use during a jump.

  So Terra I, rebuilt, re-equipped and with a new crew, tried again. And this time there were no power failures. The only failure, this time, was the human element.

  Because in hyperspace, the Universe was a crazy-quilt of screaming patterns and shimmering lights, no more like the ordered normal-space pattern of stars than the view through a kaleidoscope is like the coloured shreds of paper at its focus.

  So the Celestial Atlas was added to the complement of a hyperspace rocket’s crew. And Terra I was rebuilt, and Terra II and Terra III and Terra IV came off the ways. And Earth cast its bait into the turgid depths of hyperspace again and again ....

  The crews of the charting service were all volunteers, all rigidly screened. The ten officers who made up the wardroom of Terra II were as brilliant and able a group as ever assembled, but the emergency officers’ meeting was a failure, all the same.

  There just wasn’t any way back.

  ‘We’re the trail-blazers,’ rumbled the captain. ‘If we had a duplicate Celestial Atlas - but we don’t. Well, that’s something for the next ship to bear in mind, if we ever get back to tell them about it.’

  Ensign Lorch said tentatively, ‘Sir, don’t we have one ?’

  The captain rasped, ‘Of course not, man! I just finished saying we didn’t. You should know that.’

  ‘Yes, sir. But that’s not exactly what I meant. We have a Library and, as I understand it, the Library is basically the same as the Atlas - a trained total-recall observer. Doesn’t any of the information in the Library duplicate the Atlas ?’

  ‘Now that,’ said the captain after a pause, ‘is worth thinking about. What about it, Hal ?’

  The Exec said, ‘Worth a try, captain.’

  ‘Right. Yoel, get her up here.’ Lieutenant Yoel saluted and spoke into the communications tube. The captain went on reflectively. ‘Probably won’t work, of course, but we’ll try anything. Anybody else got a suggestion ?’

  ‘Dead reckoning, sir?’ Yoel suggested. ‘I know we’ve got the record of our fixes so far; can we try just backtracking ?’

  ‘Won’t work,’ the captain said positively. ‘If we could be absolutely exact, maybe. But without an Atlas we can’t be. And a centimetres’ divergence at the beginning of a run might put us a thousand kilometres off at the end. A thousand kilometres in hyperspace - heaven knows what that might come to in normal space. Anything from a million light-years down.

  ‘I couldn’t do it, Yoel. Even Groden couldn’t do it with his eyes, and he’s the best shiphandler on board. And I don’t think he’s going to have his eyes, anyway, at least not for a long time. Maybe for ever, if we don’t get back to the eye banks on Earth: Without the Atlas, we’re as blind as Groden.’

  The speaking tube interrupted and rescued Yoel. It whistled thinly: ‘Recorder Mate Eklund reporting to the wardroom.’

  ‘Send her in,’ said the Exec, and the Library, Nancy Eklund, RM2c, marched smartly into the meeting.

  ~ * ~

  It wasn’t going to work; the captain knew it in the first few words. They spent an hour sweating the Library of all of her relevant data, but it was wasted effort.

  The captain thought wistfully of Recorder Mate Spohn, the lost Celestial Atlas. With him on the bridge, hyperspace navigation had been - well, not easy, but possible. For Spohn was trained in the techniques of total recall. The shifting, multicoloured values of Riemannian space formed totals in his mind, so that he could actually navigate by means of a process of mental analysis and synthesis so rapid and complex that it became a sort of gestalt.

  Of course, a twelve-stage electronic computer could have done the same thing, just as quickly. But Terra II had its limitations, and one of the limitations was that no electronic equipment could be operated in a jump - just when the computer would most be needed. So the designers came up with what was, after all, a fairly well tested method of filing information - the human brain. By the techniques of hypnotic conditioning all of the brain opened up to subconscious storing.

  Recorder Mate Spohn, trance-like on the bridge, had no conscious knowledge of what was going on as, machine-like, he scanned the Riemannian configurations and rapped out courses and speeds; but his subconscious never erred. With its countless cells and infinite linkages, the brain was a tank that all the world’s knowledge could hardly fill - just about big enough, in fact, to cope with the task of recognizing the meaning of hyperspace configurations.

  And the process worked so well that the delighted designers added another recorder mate to the personnel tables - the Library - which enabled them to dispense with the dead weight of books as well.

  The entire wardroom, in order of rank, shot questions at their Library, and her disciplined mind dutifully plucked out answers.

  But most of them she never knew. For Terra II was a charting ship, and though the Atlas had, as a matter of routine, transcribed his calibrations into the ship’s log - and thence into the Library - all that Nancy Eklund knew was how Terra II had reached its checkpoints in space. Hyperspace was a tricky business; backtracking was dangerous.

  When Terra II got back - if Terra II got back - those who came after them would have complete calibrations for a round trip. But they did not. Their task was as difficult and dangerous, in its way, as Columbus’s caravels. Except that Columbus had only one great fear; falling off the edge of the Earth.

  Lucky Columbus. The technology that had produced Terra II had brought plenty of new fears.

  ~ * ~

  Three shells ‘up’ - towards the ship’s centre - a surgeon’s mate named Conboy was pulling the fourth needle out of the arm of Lieutenant Groden. The big navigator should have been out cold, but he was tossing and mumbling, his head thrashing from side to side in its thick wrappings of bandage.

  Tough guy, thought Conboy critically, counting up the ampoules of opiate the blinded officer had taken. They were all tough guys, anyway, from the skipper on down. But the little pipettes brought them down to size and Conboy, though only an inch over five feet tall and the frailest on board, was the man who drove in the pipettes.

  ‘He’s under, Mr Broderick,’ he reported to the ship’s surgeon, who nodded.

  ?
??Keep it so,’ the officer ordered. ‘If anything comes up, I’ll be in the wardroom.’ The captain would be wanting to hear about Groden’s condition, and Broderick wanted very much to hear what the emergency meeting had to say about the condition of Terra II in general.

  This was fine with Conboy, who had a similar concern of his own. As soon as Commander Broderick was out of sight, Conboy took a last look at Groden and, reassured that the navigator would be out of trouble for at least half an hour, hurried to the next cabin to pry what information he could out of the chart-room.

  A spaceman-first named Coriell was methodically taking optical measurement on all the stars of second magnitude or brighter. Conboy looked uncomprehendingly at the entries on the charts. ‘Got anything ?’ he asked.