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Deepfreeze.
by Robert Donald Locke.
Life and the future belong to the strong--so Dollard laughed as he fled Earth and Mankind's death agony. But the last laugh was yet to come....
Edwin Dollard's nervous stubby fingers spilled three precious drops of his fifth Scotch highball, as he veered his head away from the horrors on the telescreen. He was in time to observe Garth enter by the paneled tunnel door.
"Two more hours--and the s.h.i.+p will be ready," Garth announced. "The men still know nothing." His thin lips cracked into a forced smile. "I slipped them the poison at noon mess. There'll be no tales out of those greaseb.a.l.l.s."
Dollard's pudgy features relaxed. "Just you and I, Garth ... to survive. The others--stupid sheep--let them die!" l.u.s.t spread his heavy cheeks into a wide grin. "As for women, there'll be time enough for them ... on Venus."
"I know," said Garth slowly. "Plague-untouched women. It'll be like being reborn again." His pained somber eyes lit up. "It's right good we understand each other...."
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"Just see that we continue understanding one another," Edwin Dollard snapped. "I'm still the boss."
The last of America's industrial tyc.o.o.ns refocussed his attention on the world telecasts. Since breakfast, he had sat glued to the news while a battery of video announcers reported from central strongholds on the progress of the bacterial epidemic that already had swept the Atlantic seaboard.
"Any late news?" Garth asked, over Dollard's shoulder.
"For your information, I picked up a flash from Denver. Just before you came in--"
"Bad, eh?"
"You said it, Garth. A thousand new cases. Some think the Asiatics got another two or three missiles through the Canadian radar barrier. More likely, the germs. .h.i.tch-hiked westward on human carriers, gangs of them streaming out of the eastern states. The mobs are like vermin; you can't hold 'em back. They sneak through the quarantine at a hundred points."
"They're people, aren't they?" said Garth, quietly.
"People? They're no more people than the loutish mechs you just did away with today."
"Under your orders," Garth pointed out.
"But it had to be done. Let's not be squeamish children--"
"Yes, so it did. You're safe enough."
"You and I both," Dollard completed. "As long as we're together, we're both safe...."
Dollard gripped his hands together and glanced nervously about the timbered walls of his High Sierra lodge, as if to a.s.sure himself that this carefully guarded retreat would protect him from the grisly crawling death that was demolis.h.i.+ng his invincible country. Even in the presence of his most trusted hireling, Garth, who had been executive officer of Dollard's vast combine, the millionaire was ashamed to admit how the report from Colorado--which claimed the enemy-seeded plague had already crossed the broad prairie states--had been enough to send him into a cowering state of panic. And now, even after a.s.surance that he could soon take off in his private vessel, bound for bacteria-free s.p.a.ce and the antiseptic sanctuary of Venus, he was still suffering a paroxysm of fear so great that not even a double slug of his costly h.o.a.rded alcohol could banish it completely.
Outside, hired thugs, outfitted with hydroflame rifles, patrolled the two roads entering the narrow valley--armed with orders to shoot to kill all unauthorized intruders. Already, the guards' task was proving more difficult as refugees from the Los Angeles area poured into the mountains by way of Bishop and Highway 395. Ragged foodless marauders, they swarmed through the resort villages in vicious bands, plundering and murdering in futile efforts to stave off starvation and death.
Dollard got up from his position before the teleset, squinting sidewise at Garth while he poured himself three fingers of additional courage. "You're not sorry at leaving your wife?" he inquired. "Ellen meant a lot to you, didn't she, Garth?"
Garth shrugged. "She's safe enough where she is. That's all that matters."
Dollard poked him in the ribs. "All that matters ... is survival. You know that, Garth." He chuckled. "Why bother to save anybody else?"
"That's right, sir," said Garth. The muscles of his face continued to compress his features into an unbending mask.
"And one thing's certain, there's no hope for humanity. Not on this planet, at any rate--or not for a long while, I'm positive. You know what they're saying now?"
"No."
"The bigdomes are a.s.serting that only a complete mutation among the unborn can save the higher forms of organic life. Get this, Garth.
They say that all the vertebrates, and particularly all mammals, will have to develop new germ-resistant species--or the plague will eventually kill off even the strongest. What's more, those d.a.m.ned Asiatics are in the same boat with us, _at last_."
Garth mulled over the news. He said, "Then, any survivors on earth will have to mutate into something other than mankind?"
"That sums it up...." Edwin Dollard raised his highball. "Here's to _h.o.m.o the sap_," he said in mock salute to the vanis.h.i.+ng human race.
"The chump had a short life but a merry one--on Terra, anyhow. The poor sucker spent his days in a dream world of fraternity and equality. And all along, we, his superiors, enjoyed the liberty to work him to death for our own benefit. It's a shame there won't be any earthly historians to record man's final irony ... how we who made full use of the hordes for our convenience should be virtually the only ones to escape the hordes' destruction."
"I see," mused Garth. "That means there's not really much hope for the ones we're leaving behind? I guess I'd always thought...." His words trailed off.
"... that there'd be a few survivors?" Dollard supplied. "Perhaps there will, more probably there won't. What does it matter? There's only one chance in a thousand of licking the plague ... from the way the bacteriologists are wailing. And even if the race does survive, what sort of existence would it have--battling who knows what kind of monsters some of the other forms of life are bound to change into? No, I'm here to tell you, Garth, the remainder of the race is better off--exterminated. The few plague-free people we'll find on Venus will be enough to launch a greater, prouder race--provided, of course, that I'm their leader."
The industrialist waddled back to the telescreen, flicked a metal k.n.o.b that brought into view a transmission on one of the few ultra-high frequency channels still in operation. Electronically-produced colors provided high visual acuity to a scene that depicted Cleveland in flames. Decontamination squads with fire bombs were shown as they sought to cleanse Euclid Avenue of its infected dead.
"Scenes like this have been duplicated in a dozen cities already this afternoon," Edwin Dollard said. "It'd be enough to turn the stomach of a lesser man. Frankly, I'd hoped the health squads could contain the epidemic--but I guess at heart I never entertained any real prospect that they would. As long as we've got a little time to expend, we might as well sit here and enjoy the sight."
"Sit and wallow in it, if you like," replied Garth. "I think I better check the road guards once more. If those plug-uglies smell out your plan to desert them our lives won't be worth a punctured isotope."
"You know I'd go with you," Dollard sighed, "but I fear my presence antagonizes the lower cla.s.ses somehow. Considering the pay they're drawing down, I'll never understand why, either."
Garth strode to the lodge's steel-plated front entrance, a formidable barrier designed to match the strength of a s.p.a.ce cruiser's main airlock. Standing opposite the heavy circular plates, he gestured before the five heat-sensitive electronic tumblers and the heavy door swung open on oiled hinges. When he stepped outside, the barrier closed behind him.
Alone inside the timbered hide-away, Edwin Dollard immediately shed the affected air of corpulent la.s.situde he generally displayed in the presence of others. Now that the deadline for his attempt to sneak off the planet approached, it was essential that he attend to the completion of his personal preparations. Above the mantel of the lodge's thermionic fireplace was hung a brilliant cascading stereo of Yosemite Falls in misty motion. Dollard pressed a hidden b.u.t.ton. The mantel sank to ground level and the stereo swung outward, bringing into view a s.h.i.+ning cubical locker of beryllium steel.
From this hiding place, Dollard withdrew two loaded hydroflame pistols. These he strapped under each armpit. Next, he brought out a palm-sized stunner which he concealed in his hand by aid of a wrist-strap. The fourth object to emerge was a small chunky bag from which dangled tightly-drawn leather thongs. Dollard opened the pouch and poured the contents on to his sweaty palm; a thousand carats of glistening "Syrtis diamonds" from his own private mines. The rarity and value of these jewels, he knew, would be increased by the collapse of the terrestrial civilization that had refined them and cut and polished their rainbow facets.
These gleaming objects of unfixed price were the guardians that would stand by him during the months it would take to reestablish himself among the colonies on Venus. Not only would they purchase luxuries, but also new servants, fabrication plants, ore boats; possibly, even governments. Above all, they would serve to bribe Dollard's way through the tight network of Venusian immigration officials who might seek--in accord with the laws of their spa.r.s.ely-settled but independent world--to forbid his landing as a refugee from a diseased planet.
A full hour pa.s.sed before Garth returned, an hour that Edwin Dollard spent pacing the narrow confines of the lodge's central room. His eyes constantly consulted the slow march of minutes on the luminescent dial of his platinum chronometer ... for while it was not imperative that the s.p.a.ce yacht he had refurbished should soar starward at the precise hour agreed upon, there did reign a crucial period of four or five hours immediately at hand, during which the most advantageous pa.s.sage to Venus should be commenced.
When Garth finally reappeared through the steel doorway, his thin long face reflected the strain he also felt as departure time neared.