IX
There was a large conference chamber on the twenty-ninth floor where the directors of the world police had formerly met to discuss minor peace infringements, hear complaints from various governments and transact the multitudinous affairs when seven billion humans had inhabited the planet.
Murals ran around the walls. A large T-shaped table, capable of seating over a hundred, occupied the center of the room. And the acoustics were so fine that a whisper could be heard distinctly from end to end.
Here the small party of explorers met immediately after dinner. They were all there, except the four look-outs. Matt sat at the crossing of the T, looking down the long table, with Captain Bascom on his left and Isaac Trigg on his right.
The twenty-four Amazons, chained ankle to ankle, were ranged against the back wall.
"Understand," said Isaac Trigg, his gray Van Dyke jerking angrily, "we have a democracy in its purest form—not anarchism. Whatever the decision of the majority is, it will hold for all of us!" And he bent his gaze on Nesbit.
The palaeontologist looked sullen, Matt thought. His jaw was still swollen and bruised. He sat about halfway down the table, gazing into space.
"Before we take any steps about our—er—captives," Isaac went on, "there are two things that should be made clear.
"In the present crisis, we need every hand we can get. If we are to save any forms of carbon life at all—especially vegetation—there isn't a moment to spare. This fort has to be converted into an airtight island for our form of protoplasm, because, in weeks or months at the longest, the alien protozoa will have made a desert of Earth!"
Matt heard a leg-band clank behind him in the silence. He twisted around. Margot Drake was staring open mouthed at the director.
"It's not possible! You're lying!" she burst out in a throaty voice.
Isaac wheeled around.
"Lying? The chances are that all the normal bacterial organisms whether in the water, soil or air have already been destroyed by the alien amoebas! What do you think of that, young woman?"
Margot didn't say anything.
Isaac turned back to the table. "The second factor to be considered is that these women are emotionally unbalanced."
There was a gasp of indrawn breath from his audience. He said, "Barb, will you tell them of your findings?" and sat down.
Barb Poindexter, the psychiatrist, stood up slowly. She smoothed her hands down her plump hips nervously.
"I have been examining the captives." Her voice gained in confidence as she went on. "But, first, how many of you are not familiar with Marties' law of equilibrium?"
At least half of them expressed their ignorance. "Then I'd better explain it," she replied.
"Amiel Marties, who founded the school of mechanistic psychology, formulated the law that whenever the equilibrium between life and death is upset by war, famine, or pestilence, nature makes an effort to restore the balance." She paused as several blank expressions still met her eyes.
"In other words, when some catastrophe decimates the population, a wave of seeming licentiousness grips everyone. Men and women appear to be hurled into each other's arms by the force of their desires. It's nature's attempt to restore life."
The psychologist's voice was very earnest. She talked, Matt thought, as if she were reading a paper. As a plant biologist, he was familiar with Marties' law of equilibrium.
"The catastrophe that depopulated the Earth is—is...." She groped for an adjective, and gave up. "There's been nothing like it before. Although we didn't witness the plague, we've been touched ourselves. We lived together intimately for three years with no liaisons that I'm aware of.
"But, when we return to find humanity destroyed, we become obsessed with the necessity of producing children, restoring the equilibrium.
"These women"—she waved a plump hand toward the Amazons—"lived through the plague. They don't realize it, but they are psychologically twisted by that awful pestilence.
"Witness the fact that they have adopted every child that they could find—and spoiled them and pampered them beyond reason. Witness their squabble for men—and the rapidity with which they have abandoned established morals and their former settled way of life.
"They are the product of a ravening nature trying desperately to restore a status quo after a debacle, the magnitude of which has never been rivaled in history.
"They aren't quite human!"
She stood there, looking searchingly up and down the table to see what effect her words had had. After a moment she asked, "Are there any questions?"
Matt, who believed in striking while the iron was hot, asked, "You can substantiate this?"
"Marties' Law?" She replied in a puzzled voice. "There are volumes of proof. Marties' own paper. 'The Law of Nature's Equilibrium.' It has pages and pages of statistics ... the abnormal laxity of morals during World Wars I and II ... the effect of the cholera plagues in Naples, in...." She broke off. "Oh, I could cite examples the rest of the night."
"So what?" came Nesbit's challenging voice like a sword-cut. Barb turned to him as if facing a heckler, her face suffusing rosily with anger. "If you're unable to see how dangerous these women are, you should be psychoanalyzed yourself!"
Matt said, "Explain, Barb."
"They've reverted to the primitive. A matriarchy is one of the earliest forms of society. They are irresponsible and untrustworthy. If we are to use them at all in the work ahead, they'll have to be handled like a chain gang!"
"Amen!" said Matt with satisfaction.
Nesbit's face went white; he stared at Matt venomously.
Isaac Trigg asked, "Are their cases hopeless?"
"I wouldn't say that. But it will require weeks of treatment before they can be admitted among us without danger. There's a mob psychology about their aberration that is contagious." Barb Poindexter sank slowly into her chair.
"That settles that!" said Matt. "Or is there any further objection to keeping them segregated?" and he looked straight at Nesbit.
The palaeontologist looked as if he wanted to say plenty, but he kept his mouth shut.
Margot Drake said suddenly in a ringing voice, "Do you mind if I ask a question?"
Everyone turned to stare at the red-headed leader of the Amazons. She was regarding them coolly.
"No," said Matt. "Go ahead."
"I'll pass up those cracks about our sanity," Margot said. "They may or may not be true. I don't care. But is it a fact that the world is coming to an end?"
It was the fat biologist who answered. "For our type of life—yes. For this alien silicon-base species of protoplasm—no. A million, two million years hence, the silicon amoebas may even evolve an intelligent species. But, unless we establish a sanctuary here, there won't be any humans to witness it. Does that answer your question?"
"Yes," replied Margot. "Now I've a proposition to make."
"Go ahead," said Matt. There was a speculative gleam in his blue eyes.
"We need you," began Margot. "I'm not denying that. You've got the knowledge monopolized. But you need us, too. We've got the woman-power necessary to do the work that must be done...."
"You're suggesting that we combine forces?" said Matt.
Margot nodded.
"There's only one hitch," Matt pointed out. "We can't trust you!"
The red-head looked taken aback. "No," she agreed after a moment of silence. "No, I suppose not—if you've swallowed all that hogwash...."
"And," Matt relentlessly pressed his point, "we have the fort. We have tanks and guns and ammunition. We can build the sanctuary despite your Amazons. It may take us longer, but it can be done. And your girls can't save themselves from the gradual destruction of all carbon life. They haven't the special knowledge that's needed."
"Then you won't consider...."
"No," interrupted Matt. "I didn't say that."
Margot Drake regarded the stocky black-haired palaeobotanist in perplexity. "What do you propose?"
"That your forces disarm and give themselves up."
Two bright spots began to burn in Margot Drake's cheek bones. "That's preposterous!"
Matt shrugged. The red-haired woman chewed her lip savagely. At length she asked, "What would happen to us then?"
"Nothing," Matt replied with a grin. "You would have to work, of course. But we're all going to do that—and take orders. Then you would have to be segregated, at least until we get the fort encased, the hydroponic gardens growing. But that's all."
"Segregated?"
"Yes. We could turn over a couple of floors to your girls. Put guards at the stairways and elevators. I ought to warn you that I'd give orders that any of them who are found off their floors should be shot on sight."
For a long tense moment the silence held.
"We haven't much choice," Margot said at length from between her teeth. "How can I contact my girls?"
Matt's eyes were bright. "We'll release you. You can go talk to them yourself. Of course we'll keep these other women as hostages. You can have three hours. At the end of that time, if you haven't returned, we'll hang one of your girls at the front gate every hour until you do!"
Margot stared at him in disbelief, then gradually realized that he was serious. "When can I go?"
"Now."
"Now?" she said. "Where do I bring them?"
"Into the freight entrance—unarmed!—and in three hours."
"What about these irons?"
"We'll strike them off." He sent the chief engineer after the torch. They waited in tense silence until the chief returned.
"Wait a moment," said Matt. "Hadn't we better put this to a vote?"
"Yes," agreed Isaac. He stood up. "Any objections?" They were too stunned to offer any.
"Very well," said Isaac. "Strike off her shackles, Steve."
Matt leaned down the table. "Get your automatic, Lynn. Take Duff and Jacob Haddin with you and escort her to the gate. Let her out, then come straight back here."
Lynn nodded and slipped from the room. She was back by the time Margot's shackle had dropped to the floor.
"O.K.," said Matt to the red-headed leader. "You can go now." He glanced at his watch. "But if you're not back by eleven o'clock we begin to hang your girls, one every hour until you do get back!"
Margot nodded silently. Escorted by Lynn and the two men, she disappeared through the door.
Captain Bascom inquired in a tight voice, "What in hell are you proposing, Matt?"
"To put the lot of them in irons. You don't suppose I'd trust them to live up to their side of the agreement, do you?"
The vast echoing hall that was the freight depot was ablaze with lights. Matt Magoffin paced nervously back and forth in front of the door, his chunky figure casting a monstrous shadow.
He glanced at his watch and took a last reassuring glance about the hall. The freight elevator's door that lined the right hand wall were all closed. The ramp was blocked; all the other exits were bolted.
The minutes dragged past.
Matt suddenly heard voices. Then a bell began to ring shrilly. He went to the control box and pressed a button. The massive outer doors swept soundlessly open.
The driveway outside was massed with women—lean women and fat women, old and young, big and little. Margot Drake was at their head.
"Have you disposed of your arms?" Matt called.
"Yes." The red-headed leader stared into the silent empty hall, her eyes narrowed suspiciously.
"Then bring 'em in."
Margot hesitated, and then turned around. "Come on," she said.
Silent and curious, they filed inside. Matt spotted Sparks, a sheepish expression on his face, and the two pilots.
"Hello," Matt called. "I see you boys are returning to the fold." They grinned but didn't say anything.
The children trooped in last, almost a hundred of them. When they were all inside, Matt walked to the door, closed and bolted it. Margot Drake was at his elbow. "What floors do we get?"
"Twenty-ninth and thirtieth."
"How does it happen no one else is here?"
Matt could feel his heart thumping in his throat and his mouth was dry, but he managed to grin.
"If you were planning treachery, I'm the only one you'd get." He started for the side of the hall. "I'll call an elevator."
Matt could feel his palms sweating. He reached the wall and pressed the button. A bell began to ring in the elevator shaft.
Eight of the doors slid open, revealing an ugly machine gun in each car. Matt nimbly skipped into the nearest one.
"Get your women against the far wall, Margot Drake," he yelled, "or we'll chop them into hamburger with the guns!"
X
Summer was on the wane before the last plastic plate was welded in the dome over the fortress, and the work was done.
Matt, accompanied by Isaac Trigg, made a tour of inspection from the lowest basement with its water-purifiers to the park atop the roof. They inspected the massive airlock, capable of passing a large freight car, and the hydroponic gardens that occupied the entire seventh and eighth floors.
"Not so fast, Matt," Isaac puffed. "I'm not as young as I used to be."
Matt grinned, slowing down. "Is Nesbit back from Louisville yet?"
"Yes. He thinks the city should be converted into a vast warehouse where we could accumulate spoils from the other cities."
"That's not a bad idea," said Matt. "In a few years they won't have to be guarded against anything except the weather. Sawyer was telling me yesterday that he's discovered two hundred and thirty new species of the silicon amoeba."
"They adapt fast," Isaac agreed. "We didn't get the fort sealed any too soon. Let's take the elevator."
On the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth floors, animals were contentedly munching in stalls or exercising on treads under sun lamps.
"I'm sorry about the dogs," said Matt. "I wish to hell we could have saved some dogs."
"Too wild," said Isaac.
Matt cast a slow glance over the floor before closing the elevator doors. They had trapped cows and pigs, sheep and goats, chickens, ducks, and turkeys, but there had been room for neither horses nor dogs.
They looked in at the shops and laboratory, and the school where the children of the Amazons were being put through their lessons. It was dusk when they reached the park on the roof.
There were birds in the park, half a dozen species, but they had gone to roost in the grove of trees. The grass was green again, and the water in the pool looked like water—not liquid light. A fish jumped, making ripples that spread out and out to the tile edge. A squirrel frisked across the lawn.
"We've done a good job," said Isaac complacently.
Matt frowned. It was raining outside like the night they had landed. The water streamed down the plastic dome blurring the scene beyond. But he didn't need to see; he knew. The sere brown grass, the bare skeleton trunks and limbs of the trees.
Food had grown so scarce that the animals were mad with hunger. It was dangerous to venture outside. But the winter would take care of them. In the spring the Earth would be dead.
Not dead, exactly. There would be the community here, a tiny island of the old life. And there were the new silicon protozoa. In a million years they should evolve thousands of complex organisms. The Earth would be cloaked again with a weird and fantastic life.
Matt said, "The job's not done, Isaac. It's just beginning."
"Eh?"
"Have you seen the plans the engineers are drawing up for the new city?"
"Oh," said Isaac. He chuckled in his chest. The community was deep in plans for an immense city of plastic that was to cover thousands of acres and be hundreds of levels high. A dream city. "The crystal city," he said.
Matt regarded him shrewdly. "Yes. Crystal City. It may take generations to build, but we'll get it done."
There was a man approaching across the park. Matt recognized Nesbit.
"Hello, Matt," the palaeontologist called cheerily. "I brought you something to hang in your living room." He held out a framed picture.
Matt glanced at it in surprise. It was an original Rembrandt etching: the Goldweigher's Field.
"Thanks, Hi. I never thought I'd own a genuine Rembrandt. What have you decided about the palaeontologist exhibits in the museums?"
"They're better off left where they are right now. In time, maybe we can move them to Crystal City."
"Yes," Matt agreed. "Well, if I don't go in I'll be late for dinner." His face lengthened. "I don't want that to happen again."
Both men chuckled. Nesbit called after him, "Next time I go to the museum, I'll bring you one of Renoir's Nudes."
There had been a remarkable change in Nesbit, Matt reflected as he hurried across the grass. But it didn't take a psychologist to get to the bottom of the change.
There was the faintest hesitation in Matt's manner when he reached the door of his apartment. Then he squared his shoulders, and pushed inside.
Lynn and Margot Drake were sitting in the front room. They glanced up.
"Darling," they both said in the same breath. "You're late."
Matt winced. He said, "I've been busy."
A third girl stuck her head out of the dining room door. "So there you are. Dinner's growing cold. Hurry up."
From upstairs a woman's voice called, "Is that Matt? It's about time. We'll miss the show if we don't hurry."
Another feminine voice said from upstairs, "It's a new film Hi Nesbit found in Louisville too."
"Come on," said Matt, "let's eat."
He ate silently, while his seven wives chattered lightly. After all, he reflected, he was better off than Nesbit. The palaeontologist had thirteen.
In the next generation, there would be a more even distribution of men and women. Not, he reflected, that it would do him any good!
"Matt," said Lynn, "you won't have time to smoke."
"No," Margot chimed in, "you've barely time to dress."
He lit his cigarette deliberately.
"Matt!" Lynn's voice was frosty.
Matt's jaw set.
"Don't be pig-headed, dear," said the blonde at the foot of the table.
Matt's blue eyes narrowed.
"Get the hell out of here!" he roared suddenly. "All of you! And leave me to finish my smoke in peace!"