Part 11 (1/2)

”I guess I didn't have anything very bright in mind,” Alice admitted to me, while to Pop she said, ”All right, I forgive you for the present.”

”Don't!” Pop said with a shudder. ”I hate to think of what happened to the last b.u.g.g.e.r made the mistake of forgiving me.”

We looked around and took stock of our resources. It was time we did. It was getting dark fast, although we were chasing the sun, and there weren't any cabin lights coming on and we sure didn't know of any way of getting any.

We wadded a couple of satchels into the hole in the World Screen without trying to probe it. After a while it got warmer again in the cabin and the air a little less dusty. Presently it started to get too smoky from the cigarettes we were burning, but that came later.

We screwed off the walls the few storage bags we hadn't inspected. They didn't contain nothing of consequence, not even a flashlight.

I had one last go at the b.u.t.tons, though there weren't any left with nimbuses on them--the darker it got, the clearer that was. Even the Atla-Hi b.u.t.ton wouldn't push now that it had lost its violet halo. I tried the gunnery patterns, figuring to put in a little time taking pot shots at any mountains that turned up, but the b.u.t.tons that had been responding so well a few minutes ago refused to budge. Alice suggested different patterns, but none of them worked. That console was really locked--maybe the shot from Savannah was partly responsible, though Atla-Hi remote-locking things was explanation enough.

”The b.u.g.g.e.rs!” I said. ”They didn't have to tie us up _this_ tight.

Going east we at least had a choice--forward or back. Now we got none.”

”Maybe we're just as well off,” Pop said. ”If Atla-Hi had been able to do anything more for us--that is, if they hadn't been sieged in, I mean--they'd sure as anything have pulled us in. Pull the plane in, I mean, and picked us out of it--with a big pair of tweezers, likely as not. And contrary to your flattering opinion of my preaching (which by the way none of the religious boys in my outfit share--they call me 'that misguided old atheist'), I don't think none of us would go over big at Atla-Hi.”

We had to agree with him there. I couldn't imagine Pop or Alice or even me cutting much of a figure (even if we weren't murder-pariahs) with the pack of geniuses that seemed to make up the Atla-Alamos crowd. The Double-A Republics, to give them a name, might have their small-brain types, but somehow I didn't think so. There must be more than one Edison-Einstein, it seemed to me, back of antigravity and all the wonders in this plane and the other things we'd gotten hints of. Also, Grayl had seemed bred for brains as well as size, even if us small mammals had cooked his goose. And none of the modern ”countries” had more than a few thousand population yet, I was pretty sure, and that hardly left room for a dumbbell cla.s.s. Finally, too, I got hold of a memory I'd been reaching for the last hour--how when I was a kid I'd read about some scientists who learned to talk Mandarin just for kicks.

I told Alice and Pop.

”And if _that's_ the average Atla-Alamoser's idea of mental recreation,”

I said, ”well, you can see what I mean.”

”I'll grant you they got a monopoly of brains,” Pop agreed. ”Not sense, though,” he added doggedly.

”Intellectual sn.o.bs,” was Alice's comment. ”I know the type and I detest it.” (”You _are_ sort of intellectual, aren't you?” Pop told her, which fortunately didn't start a riot.)

Still, I guess all three of us found it fun to chew over a bit the new slant we'd gotten on two (in a way, three) of the great ”countries” of the modern world. (And as long as we thought of it as fun, we didn't have to admit the envy and wistfulness that was behind our wisecracks.)

I said, ”We've always figured in a general way that Alamos was the remains of a community of scientists and technicians. Now we know the same's true of the Atla-Hi group. They're the Brookhaven survivors.”

”Manhattan Project, don't you mean?” Alice corrected.

”Nope, that was in Colorado Springs,” Pop said with finality.

I also pointed out that a community of scientists would educate for technical intelligence, maybe breed for it too. And being a group picked for high I. Q. to begin with, they might make startlingly fast progress.

You could easily imagine such folk, unimpeded by the b.o.o.bs, creating a wonder world in a couple of generations.

”They got their troubles though,” Pop reminded me and that led us to speculating about the war we'd dipped into. Savannah Fortress, we knew, was supposed to be based on some big atomic plants on the river down that way, but its culture seemed to have a fiercer ingredient than Atla-Alamos. Before we knew it we were, musing almost romantically about the plight of Atla-Hi, besieged by superior and (it was easy to suppose) barbaric forces, and maybe distant Los Alamos in a similar predicament--Alice reminded me how the voice had asked if they were still dying out there. For a moment I found myself fiercely proud that I had been able to strike a blow against evil aggressors. At once, of course, then, the revulsion came.

”This is a h.e.l.l of a way,” I said, ”for three so-called realists to be mooning about things.”

”Yes, especially when your heroes kicked us out,” Alice agreed.

Pop chuckled. ”Yep,” he said, ”they even took Ray's artillery away from him.”