Stanley G. Weinbaum
The Black Flame
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Table of contents
1. PENALTY — AND AFTERMATH
2. EVANIE THE SORCERESS
3. FOREST MEETING
4. A BIT OF ANCIENT HISTORY
5. THE VILLAGE
6. THE METAMORPHS
7. PANATE BLOOD
8. IN TIME OF PEACE
9. THE WAY TO URBS
10. REVOLUTION
11. FLIGHT
12. THE MESSENGER
13. THE TRAIL BACK
14. THE MASTER
15. TWO WOMEN
16. IMMORTALITY
17. THE DESTINY OF MAN
18. THE SKY-RAT
19. DEATH FLIGHT?
20. THE CONSPIRATORS
21. THE DINNER AT THE SLEEPER'S
22. DECLARATION
23. THE AMPHIMORPHS IN THE POOL
24. THE ATOMIC BOMB
25. INFERNO
26. THE MASTER SITS IN JUDGMENT
1. PENALTY — AND AFTERMATH
Thomas Marshall Connor was
about to die. The droning voice of the prison chaplain gradually
dulled his perception instead of stimulating his mind. Everything was
hazy and indistinct to the condemned man. He was going to the
electric chair in just ten minutes to pay the supreme penalty because
he had accidentally killed a man with his bare fists.
Connor, vibrantly alive,
vigorous and healthy, only twenty-six, a brilliant young engineer,
was going to die. And, knowing, he did not care. But there was
nothing at all nebulous about the gray stone and cold iron bars of
the death cell. There was nothing uncertain about the split down his
trouser leg and the shaven spot on his head.
The condemned man was
acutely aware of the solidarity of material things about him. The
world he was leaving was concrete and substantial. The approaching
footsteps of the death guard sounded heavily in the distance.
The cell door opened, and
the chaplain ceased his murmuring. Passively Thomas Marshall Connor
accepted his blessings, and calmly took his position between his
guards for his last voluntary walk.
He remained in his state
of detachment as they seated him in the chair, strapped his body and
fastened the electrodes. He heard the faint rustling of the witnesses
and the nervous, rapid scratching of reporters' pencils. He could
imagine their adjectives—"Calloused murderer"...
"Brazenly indifferent to his fate."
But it was as if the
matter concerned a third party.
He simply relaxed and
waited. To die so quickly and painlessly was more a relief than
anything. He was not even aware when the warden gave his signal.
There was a sudden silent flash of blue light. And then—nothing at
all.
So this was death. The
slow and majestic drifting through the Stygian void, borne on the
ageless tides of eternity.
Peace, at last—peace,
and quiet, and rest.
But what was this
sensation like the glimpse of a faint, faraway light which winked on
and off like a star? After an interminable period the light became
fixed and steady, a thing of annoyance. Thomas Marshall Connor,
slowly became aware of the fact of his existence as an entity, in
some unknown state. The senses and memories that were his personality
struggled weakly to reassemble themselves into a thinking unity of
being—and he became conscious of pain and physical torture.
There was a sound of
shrill voices, and a stir of fresh air. He became aware of his body
again. He lay quiet, inert, exhausted. But not as lifeless as he had
lain for—how long?
When the shrill voices
sounded again, Connor opened unseeing eyes and stared at the
blackness just above him. After a space he began to see, but not to
comprehend. The blackness became a jagged, pebbled roof no more than
twelve inches from his eyes—rough and unfinished like the under
side of a concrete walk.
The light became a glimmer
of daylight from a point near his right shoulder.
Another sensation crept
into his awareness. He was horribly, bitterly cold. Not with the
chill of winter air, but with the terrible frigidity of
inter-galactic space. Yet he was on—no, in, earth
of some sort. It was as if icy water flowed in his veins instead of
blood. Yet he felt completely dehydrated. His body was as inert as
though detached from his brain, but he was cruelly imprisoned within
it. He became conscious of a growing resentment of this fact.
Then, stimulated by the
shrilling, piping voices and the patter of tiny feet out there
somewhere to the right, he made a tremendous effort to move. There
was a dry, withered crackling sound—like the crumpling of old
parchment—but indubitably his right arm had lifted!
The exertion left him weak
and nauseated. For a time he lay as in a stupor. Then a second effort
proved easier. After another timeless interval of struggling torment
his legs yielded reluctant obedience to his brain. Again he lay
quietly, exhausted, but gathering strength for the supreme effort of
bursting from his crypt.
For he knew now where he
was. He lay in what remained of his grave. How or why, he did not
know. That was to be determined.
With all his weak strength
he thrust against the left side of his queer tomb, moving his body
against the crevice at his right. Only a thin veil of loose gravel
and rubble blocked the way to the open. As his shoulder struck the
pile, it gave and slid away, outward and downward, in a miniature
avalanche.
Blinding daylight smote
Connor like an agony. The shrill voices screamed.
"'S moom!" a
child's voice cried tremulously. "'S moom again!"
Connor panted from
exertion, and struggled to emerge from his hole, each movement
producing another noise like rattling paper. And suddenly he was
free! The last of the gravel tinkled away and he rolled abruptly down
a small declivity to rest limply at the bottom of the little
hillside.
He saw now that erosion
had cut through this burial ground—wherever it was—and had opened
a way for him through the side of his grave. His sight was strangely
dim, but he became aware of half a dozen little figures in a
frightened semicircle beyond him.
Children! Children in
strange modernistic garb of bright colors, but nevertheless human
children who stared at him with wide-open mouths and popping eyes.
Their curiously cherubic faces were set in masks of horrified terror.
Suddenly recalling the
terrors he had sometimes known in his own childhood, Connor was
surprised they did not flee. He stretched forth an imploring hand and
made a desperate effort to speak. This was his first attempt to use
his voice, and he found that he could not.
The spell of dread that
held the children frozen was instantly broken. One of them gave a
dismayed cry: "A-a-a-h! 'S a specker!"
In panic, shrieking that
cry, the entire group turned and fled. They disappeared around the
shoulder of the eroded hill, and Connor was left, horribly alone. He
groaned from the depths of his despair and was conscious of a faint
rasping noise through his cracked and parched lips.
He realized suddenly that
he was quite naked—his shroud had long since moldered to dust. At
the same moment that full comprehension of what this meant came to
him, he was gazing in horror at his body. Bones! Nothing but bones,
covered with a dirty, parchment-like skin!
So tightly did his skin
cover his skeletal framework that the very structure of the bones
showed through. He could see the articulation at knuckles, knees, and
toes. And the parchment skin was cracked like an ancient Chinese
vase, checked like aged varnish. He was a horror from the tomb, and
he nearly fainted at the realization.
After a swooning space, he
endeavored to arise. Finding that he could not, he began crawling
painfully and laboriously toward a puddle of water from the last
rain. Reaching it, he leaned over to place his lips against its
surface, reckless of its potability, and sucked in the liquid until a
vast roaring filled his ears.
The moment of dizziness
passed. He felt somewhat better, and his breathing rasped a bit less
painfully in his moistened throat. His eyesight was slowly clearing
and as he leaned above the little pool, he glimpsed the specter
reflected there. It looked like a skull—a face with lips shrunken
away from the teeth, so fleshless that it might have been a death's
head.
"Oh, God!" he
called out aloud, and his voice croaked like that of a sick raven.
"What and where am I!"
In the back of his mind
all through this weird experience, there had been a sense of
something strange aside from his emergence from a tomb in the form of
a living scarecrow. He stared up at the sky.
The vault of heaven was
blue and fleecy with thewhitest of clouds. The sun was shining as he
had never thought to see it shine again. The grass was green. The
ground was normally earthy. Everything was as it should be—but
there was a strangeness about it that frightened him. Instinctively
he knew that something was direfully amiss.
It was not the fact that
he failed to recognize his surroundings. He had not had the strength
to explore; neither did he know where he had been buried. It was that
indefinable homing instinct possessed in varying degree by all
animate things. That instinct was out of gear. His time sense had
stopped with the throwing of that electric switch—how long ago?
Somehow, lying there under the warming rays of the sun, he felt like
an alien presence in a strange country.
"Lost!" he
whimpered like a child.
After a long space in
which he remained in a sort of stupor, he became aware of the sound
of footsteps. Dully he looked up. A group of men, led by one of the
children, was advancing slowly toward him. They wore brightly colored
shirts—red, blue, violet—and queer baggy trousers gathered at the
ankles in an exotic style.
With a desperate burst of
energy, Connor gained his knees. He extended a pleading skeletonlike
claw.
"Help me!" he
croaked in his hoarse whisper.
The beardless, queerly
effeminate-looking men halted and stared at him in horror.
"'Assim!"
shrilled the child's voice. "'S a specker. 'S dead."
One of the men stepped
forward, looking from Connor to the gaping hole in the hillside.
"Wassup?" he
questioned.
Connor could only repeat
his croaking plea for aid.
"'Esick," spoke
another man gravely. "Sleeper, eh?"
There was a murmur of
consultation among the men with the bright clothes and oddly soft,
womanlike voices.
"T' Evanie!"
decided one. "T' Evanie, the Sorc'ess."
They closed quickly around
the half reclining Connor and lifted him gently. He was conscious of
being borne along the curving cut to a yellow country road, and then
black oblivion descended once more to claim him.
When he regained
consciousness the next time, he found that he was within walls,
reclining on a soft bed of some kind. He had a vague dreamy
impression of a girlish face with bronze hair and features like
Raphael's angels bending over him. Something warm and sweetish, like
glycerin, trickled down his throat.
Then, to the whispered
accompaniment of that queerly slurred English speech, he sank into
the blissful repose of deep sleep.
2. EVANIE THE SORCERESS
There were successive
intervals of dream and oblivion, of racking pain and terrible
nauseating weakness; of voices murmuring queer, unintelligible words
that yet were elusively familiar.
Then one day he awoke to
the consciousness of a summer morning. Birds twittered; in the
distance children shouted. Clear of mind at last, he lay on a
cushioned couch puzzling over his whereabouts, even his identity, for
nothing within his vision indicated where or who he was.
The first thing that
caught his attention was his own right hand. Paper- thin, incredibly
bony, it lay like the hand of death on the rosy coverlet, so
transparent that the very color shone through. He could not raise it;
only a twitching of the horrible fingers attested its union with his
body.
The room itself was
utterly unfamiliar in its almost magnificently simple furnishings.
There were neither pictures nor ornaments. Only several chairs of
aluminum-like metal, a gleaming silvery table holding a few ragged
old volumes, a massive cabinet against the opposite wall, and a
chandelier pendant by a chain from the ceiling. He tried to call out.
A faint croak issued.
The response was
startlingly immediate. A soft voice said, "Hahya?" in his
ear and he turned his head pain-fully to face the girl of the bronze
hair, seated at his side. She smiled gently.
She was dressed in curious
green baggy trousers gathered at the ankle, and a brilliant green
shirt. She had rolled the full sleeves to her shoulders. Hers was
like the costume of the men who had brought him here.
"Whahya?" she
said softly.
He understood.
"Oh! I'm—uh—Thomas
Connor, of course."
"F'm 'ere?"
"From St. Louis."
"Selui? 'S far off."
Far off? Then where was
he? Suddenly a fragment of memory returned. The trial—Ruth—that
catastrophic episode of the grim chair. Ruth! The yellow-haired girl
he had once adored, who was to have been his wife—the girl who had
coldly sworn his life away because he had killed the man she loved.
Dimly memory came back of
how he had found her in that other man's arms on the very eve of
their wedding; of his bitter realization that the man he had called
friend had stolen Ruth from him. His outraged passions had flamed,
the fire had blinded him, and when the ensuing battle had ended, the
man had been crumpled on the green sward of the terrace, with a
broken neck.
He had been electrocuted
for that. He had been strapped in that chair!
Then—then the niche on
the hill. But how—how? Had he by some miracle survived the burning
current? He must have—and he still had the penalty to pay!
He tried desperately to
rise.
"Must leave here!"
he muttered. "Get away—must get away." A new thought.
"No! I'm legally dead. They can't touch me now; no double
jeopardy in this country. I'm safe!"
Voices sounded in the next
room, discussing him.
"F'm Selui, he say,"
said a man's voice. "Longo, too." "Eah," said
another. " 'S lucky to live—lucky! 'L be rich."
That meant nothing to him.
He raised his hand with a great effort; it glistened in the light
with an oil of some sort. It was no longer cracked, and the ghost of
a layer of tissue softened the bones. His flesh was growing back.
His throat felt dry. He
drew a breath that ended in a tickling cough.
"Could I have some
water?" he asked the girl.
"N-n-n!" She
shook her head. "N' water. S'm licket?" "Licket?"
Must be liquid, he reflected. He nodded, and drank the mug of thick
fluid she held to his lips.
He grinned his thanks, and
she sat beside him. He wondered what sort of colony was this into
which he had fallen—with their exotic dress and queer, clipped
English.
His eyes wandered
appreciatively over his companion; even if she were some sort of
foreigner, she was gloriously beautiful, with her bronze hair
gleaming above the emerald costume.
"C'n talk," she
said finally as if in permission.
He accepted. "What's
your name?"
"'M Evanie Sair.
Evanie the Sorc'ess."
"Evanie the
Sorceress!" he echoed. "Pretty name—Evanie. Why the
Sorceress, though? Do you tell fortunes?" The question puzzled
her.
"N'onstan," she
murmured.
"I mean—what do you
do?"
"Sorc'y." At his
mystified look, she amplified it. "To give strength—to make
well." She touched his fleshless arm.
"But that's
medicine—a science. Not sorcery."
"Bah. Science—sorc'y.
'S all one. My father, Evan Sair
the Wizard, taught me."
Her face shadowed. "'S dead now." Then abruptly: "Whe's
your money?" she asked. He stared. "Why—in St. Louis. In
a bank."
"Oh!" she
exclaimed. "N-n-n! Selui! N'safe!"
"Why not?" He
started. "Has there been another flood of bank-bustings?"
The girl looked puzzled.
"N'safe," she
reiterated. "Urbs is better. For very long, Urbs is better."
She paused. "When'd you sleep?"
"Why, last night."
"N-n-n. The long
sleep."
The long sleep! It struck
him with stunning force that his last memories before that terrible
awakening had been of a September world—and this was mid-summer! A
horror gripped him. How long—how long—had he lain in his—grave?
Weeks? No—months, at least.
He shuddered as the girl
repeated gently, "When?"
"In September,"
he muttered.
"What year?"
Surprise strengthened him.
"Year? Nineteen thirty-eight, of course!"
She rose suddenly. "'S
no Nineteen thirty-eight. 'S only Eight forty-six now!"
Then she was gone, nor on
her return would she permit him to talk. The day vanished; he slept,
and another day dawned and passed. Still Evanie Sair refused to allow
him to talk again, and the succeeding days found him fuming and
puzzled. Little by little, however, her strange clipped English
became familiar.
So he lay thinking of his
situation, his remarkable escape, the miracle that had somehow
softened the discharge of Missouri's generators. And he strengthened.
A day came when Evanie again permitted speech, while he watched her
preparing his food.
"Y'onger, Tom?"
she asked gently. "'L bea soon." He understood; she was
saying, "Are you hungry, Tom? I'll be there soon."
He answered with her own
affirmative "Eah," and watched her place the meal in a
miraculous cook stove that could be trusted to prepare it without
burning.
"Evanie," he
began, "how long have I been here?"
"Three months,"
said Evanie. "You were very sick."
"But how long was I
asleep?"
"You ought to know,"
retorted Evanie. "I told you this was Eight forty- six."
He frowned.
"The year Eight
forty-six of what?"
"Just Eight
forty-six," Evanie said matter of factly. "Of the
Enlightenment, of, course. What year did you sleep?"
"I told you—Nineteen
thirty-eight," insisted Connor, perplexed. "Nineteen
thirty-eight, A.D."
"Oh," said
Evanie, as if humoring a child.
Then, "A.D.?"
she repeated. "Anno Domini, that means. Year of the Master. But
the Master is nowhere near nineteen hundred years old."
Connor was nonplussed. He
and Evanie seemed to be talking at cross- purposes. He calmly started
again.
"Listen to me,"
he said grimly. "Suppose you tell me exactly what you think I
am—all about it, just as if I were a—oh, a Martian. In simple
words."
"I know what you
are," said Evanie. "You're a Sleeper. Often they wake with
muddled minds."
"And what," he
pursued doggedly, "is a Sleeper?"
Surprisingly Evanie
answered that, in a clear, understandable—but most astonishing—way.
Almost as astonished herself that Connor should not know the answer
to his question.
"A Sleeper," she
said simply, and Connor was now able to understand her peculiar
clipped speech—the speech of all these people—with comparative
ease, "is one of those who undertake electrolepsis. That is,
have themselves put to sleep for a long term of years to make money."
"How? By exhibiting
themselves?"
"No," she said.
"I mean that those who want wealth badly enough, but won't spend
years working for it, undertake the Sleep. You must remember that—if
you have forgotten so much else. They put their money in the banks.
organized for the Sleepers. You will remember. They guarantee six
percent. You see, don't you? At that rate a Sleeper's money increases
three hundred times a century—three hundred units for each one
deposited. Six percent doubles their money every twelve years. A
thousand becomes a fortune of three hundred thousand, if the Sleeper
outlasts a century—and if he lives."
"Fairy tales!"
Connor said contemptuously, but now he understood her question about
the whereabouts of his money, when he had first awakened. "What
institution can guarantee six percent with safety? What could they
invest in?"
"They invest in one
percent Urban bonds."
"And run at a loss, I
suppose!"
"No. Their profits
are enormous—from the funds of the nine out of every ten Sleepers
who fail to waken!"
"So I'm a Sleeper!"
Connor said sharply. "Now tell me the truth."
Evanie gazed anxiously
down at him.
"Electrolepsis often
muddles one."
"I'm not muddled!"
he yelled. "I want truth, that's all. I want to know the date."
"It's the middle of
July, Eight hundred and forty-six," Evanie said patiently.
"The devil it is!
Perhaps I slept backward then! I want to know what happened to me."
"Then suppose you
tell," Evanie said gently.
"I will!" he
cried frantically. "I'm the Thomas Marshall Connor of the
newspapers—or don't you read 'em? I'm the man who was tried for
murder, and electrocuted. Tom Connor of St. Louis—St. Louis!
Understand?"
Evanie's gentle features
went suddenly pale.
"St. Louis!" she
whispered. "St. Louis—the ancient name of Selui! Before the
Dark Centuries—impossible!"
"Not
impossible—true," Connor said grimly. "Too painfully
true."
"Electrocution!"
Evanie whispered awedly. "The Ancients' punishment!" She
stared as if fascinated, then cried excitedly: "Could
electrolepsis happen by accident? Could it? But no! A milliampere too
much and the brain's destroyed; a millivolt too little and asepsis
fails. Either way's death—but it has happened if what you are
telling is the truth, Tom Connor! You must have experienced the
impossible!"
"And what is
electrolepsis?" Connor asked, desperately calm.
"It—it's the
Sleep!" whispered the tense girl. "Electrical paralysis of
the part of the brain before Rolando's Fissure. It's what the
Sleepers use, but only for a century, or a very little more.
This—this is fantastic! You have slept since before the Dark
Centuries! Not less than a thousand years!"
3. FOREST MEETING
A week—the third since
Connor's awakening to sane thought, had passed. He sat on a carved
stone bench before Evanie's cottage and reveled in the burning canopy
of stars and copper moon. He was living, if what he had been told was
true—and he was forced to believe it now—after untold billions
had passed into eternity.
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!