Those Who Watch ROBERT SILVERBERG         Other books by this author available from New English Library: DYING INSIDE THORNS NEW ENGLISH LIBRARY TimesMirror First published in the United States by The New American Library Inc., T967 © by Robert Silverberg in 1967 FIRST NEL PAPERBACK EDITION SEPTEMBER 1977 Conditions of sale: This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser. NEL Books are published by NewEnglish Library Limited from Barnard's Inn, Holborn, London F.C1N 2JR Made and printed in Great Britain by Hunt Barnard Printing Ltd., Aylesbury, Bucks. 45003260 4 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 One The explosion was painfully bright against the dark back­drop of the moonless New Mexico sky. To those who looked up at that precise moment - and there were many who hap­pened to look up - it was as though a new star had momentarily blossomed in blue-white incandescence. The brightness moved in a track from northeast to south­west. It came sputteringly alive in the sacred mountains east of Taos, and grew more fierce as it carved a track roughly over the valley of the Rio Grande, passing above the dusty little pueblos and the bustling city of Santa Fe. Just south of Santa Fe the brightness became unbearable, and eyes were averted as the sudden radiation stabbed at retinas. But now the actinic peak was past. Was the savage flare burning itself out, or was the blaze simply damped by the city lights of sprawling Albuquerque? No matter. The arc of light speared past Isleta Pueblo and was lost somewhere over the Mesa del Oro. Darkness returned, rolling back over the New Mexico sky like the returning tide. In the broad plaza of San Miguel Pueblo, forty miles south of Santa Fe, Charley Estancia put his knuckles to his eyes a moment, crushed away the pain, and grinned up at the inverted black bowl of night. 'Shooting star!' he whispered sharply. 'Shooting star! Beauty! Beauty!' He laughed. He was eleven years old, skinny and smudge-faced, and he had often seen the ragged tails of the meteors as they sped across the sky. He knew what they were, even if no one else in the pueblo did. But Charley had never seen one like that before. He could still feel the track of it sizzling in his skull. When he blinked, the line of whiteness remained. Others in the village had seen it too. The plaza was a crowded, busy place tonight, for in another week came the Fire Society dance, and many white folk would travel out from the cities to watch and take pictures and, perhaps, spend money. Charley Estancia heard the gasps, saw the pointing arms of his uncles and cousins and sisters. 'Maiyanyi!'someone muttered. 'Spirits!' Talk of demons, whispers of bad magic, anguished excla­mations of doubt and fear crisscrossed the plaza. Charley saw two of his maternal uncles rush toward the tall round windowless kiva, the ceremonial house, and clamber quickly down the ladder to take refuge within. He saw his sister Rosita pull forth the crucifix that hung between her breasts and clasp it against her cheek like some sort of amulet. He saw his father's brother Juan make the sign of the cross, and three more men rush into the kiva. They were all talking of evil spirits, now. The pueblo bristled with television aerials, and shiny automobiles stood outside the adobe houses, but it took nothing more than a shooting star to send everybody wild with superstitious awe. Charley kicked at the dusty ground. His sister Lupe flashed past him, looking terrified. He reached out and caught her thin wrist. 'Where are you going?' 'Into the house. Devils are in the sky!' 'Sure. Thekachinas are coming. They're going to do the Fire Society dance because we don't do it right anymore,' Charley said. He laughed. Lupe was in no mood for Charley's brand of sarcasm. She twisted at his grip. 'Let go! Let go! She was twelve, and only a girl, but she was much stronger than he was. She planted her hand in the middle of his shallow chest and pushed hard, yanking her arm from his grasp at the same time. Charley went over on his back and lay in the dust, looking up at a sky that now had returned to normal. Lupe fled, sobbing. Charley shook his head. Crazy, all of them. Crazy with fear, crazy with religion. Why couldn't they think? Why did they have to be Indians all the time? Look at them, running around madly, scattering cornmeal, blurt­ing out prayers whose words were only empty sound to them, diving into the kiva, sprinting toward the church! 'Shooting star!' Charley shouted. 'Nothing to be afraid of! Just a big shooting star!' As usual, no one paid attention to him. He was thought to be a little crazy in the head, a skinny boy full of dreams and white man's ideas. His voice was lost in the night wind. He picked himself up, shivering, and brushed the plaza's dust from his jeans. It would be funny, this superstitious panic, if it were not so sad. Ah! There was the padre now! Charley grinned. The priest came out of the whitewashed little church andheld up both arms in what Charley supposed was intended tobe a comforting gesture. He called out in Spanish: 'Don't be afraid! It's all right! Into the church, everyone, and staycalm!' Some of the women moved toward the church. Most of the men were in the kiva, now - and, of course, women were forbidden there. Charley watched the priest. Padre Herrera was a small, bald-headed man who had come up from El Paso a few years ago, after the old priest had died. He had a hard time here. Everybody in San Miguel was a Roman , Catholic, but everybody also believed in the old pueblo religion, and in a way nobody believed much in any religion,   So at a time of stress like this, people ran in all directions, very few of them into Padre Herrera's church, and the padre did not look pleased. Charley went up to the priest. 'What was it, Padre? A shooting star, is all?' The priest glowered.'Perhaps a sign of Heaven, Charley.' 'I saw it with these eyes! A shooting star!' Padre Herrera flashed a quick, hollow smile and turned away, going about the business of shepherding his worried flock into the house of God. Charley realized he had been dismissed. The priest had once told Rosita Estancia that her younger brother Charley was a damned soul, and Charley had found out about it. In a way, he was rather flattered. Hopefully, Charley looked to the sky. But there were no more shooting stars. Now the plaza was empty; the dozens of Indians who had been in it a few minutes ago had taken refuge. Charley looked across the way, toward the gift shop. The door opened and Marty Moquino came out. He was holding a little spray can of liquor, and a cigarette drooped from the corner of his mouth. 'Where'd everybody go?' Marty Moquino asked. 'They ran away. Scared.' Charley forced a chuckle. 'You should've seen them go!' He was a little afraid of Marty Moquino, and despised him a good deal; yet at the same time Charley looked up to him as a man who had done things and gone places. Marty was nineteen years old. Two years ago he had left the pueblo and gone to live in Albuquerque, and he was supposed to have been all the way out to Los Angeles, too. He was a mocker, a troublemaker, but more than anyone else around here he had lived in the white man's world. Now Marty was back because he had lost his job. People whispered that he made love to Rosita Estancia these days. Charley hated him for that; Still, he felt that he had much to learn from Marty Moquino. Charley hoped to escape from San Miguel himself, one day. They stood together in the middle of the empty plaza,' Charley short and thin, Marty tall and thin. Marty offeredhim a cigarette. Charley took it and expertly flipped its ignition cap. They grinned at each other like brothers. 'Did you see it?' Charley asked. 'The shooting star?' Marty nodded. He gave the spray can of whiskey a squirt into his mouth. 'I was out back,' he said after a moment. 'I saw it. But it wasn't any shooting star.' 'It was thekachinas coming to visit, huh?' Laughing, Marty said, 'Kid, don't you know what that thing was? You never saw a shooting star like that. That was a flying saucer blowing up over Taos!' Kathryn Mason saw the light in the sky only by accident. Ordinarily on these dark winter nights she stayed indoors after nightfall. The house was warm and bright, purring with its array of electrical appliances, and she felt comfortable indoors. Anything might lurk outside. Anything. But her daughter's kitten had been missing for three days now, which was the biggest crisis in the Mason family for a. long time. It seemed to Kathryn that she heard faint meows outside. Finding the kitten was more important to her than remaining locked indoors in this cozy shelter of an automatic house. She rushed outside, hoping against hope to see the fluffy black-and-white thing scratching against the doormat. But there was no kitten there; and, abruptly, a streak of light lanced through the sky. She had no way of knowing that it had already begun to lose intensity. It was the brightest thing she had ever seen in the sky, so bright that instinctively she clapped her hands to her eyes. An instant later, though, she pulled her hands away and forced herself to watch as it completed its fiery trajec­tory. What could it be? Kathryn's mind supplied an immediate answer: it was the trail of an exploding Air Force jet, one of the boys out of the Kirtland base at Albuquerque going to his death on a train­ing flight. Of course. Of course. And tonight there would be a new widow somewhere, a new set of mourners. Kathryn shivered. To her surprise, tears did not come this time. She followed the path of light. She watched it curve away toward the south, toward down Albuquerque, and then it disappeared, lost in the haze of brightness that rose from the city. Instantly Kathryn manufactured a new catastrophe, for in her private world catastrophe was always readily at hand. She saw the flaming jet crashing at Mach Three into Central Avenue, plowing up a dozen streets, taking a thou­sand lives, sending gas mains erupting with volcanic fury. Sirens wailing, women screaming, ambulances, hearses. . . . Fighting back the hysteria she knew to be foolish, she tried more calmly to assess what she had just seen. The light was gone now, and the world was back to usual again, as usual as it could ever get in these days of her sudden, snowy widow­hood. It seemed to her that she heard a muffled boom far inthe distance, as of a crash. But all of her experience around Air Force environments told her that that giant streak of light in the sky could not have been an exploding jet, unless there were experimental models with yet-unannounced characteristics. She had seen jets blow up a couple of times, and they made a gaudy burst of light, but nothing like that. What then? An intercontinental rocket, maybe, carrying five hundred passengers to a fiery doom? She could hear her husband's voice saying. Think it through, Kate. Think it through.' He had said that a great deal, before he was killed. Kathryn tried to think it through. The brightness had come from the north, from Santa Fe or Taos, heading south. The intercontinental rockets traveled on east-west courses. Unless one of them was badly off course, her theory was faulty. And the rockets weren't sup­posed to go off course. The guidance systems were infallible. Think, Kate, think it through. A Chinese missile, maybe? The war beginning at last? But she'd have seen the night turn into day, then. She'd have felt the terrible explosion as the fusion bomb ripped New Mexico apart. Think. . . . Some kind of meteor, maybe? How about a flying saucer, coming in for a landing at Kirtland? People talked so much about the saucers these days. Creatures from space, so theysaid, watching us, snooping around. Green men with ropy tentacles and bulging eyes? Kathryn shook her head. There might be something about it on video, she thought. The sky seemed peaceful now, as though nothing at all had happened. She drew her wrap closer around her. At night, here at the edge of the desert, the wind ripped in as if it came straight from the Pole. Kathryn lived at the northernmost house of her subdivision; she could look out and see only the dry wasteland of sagebrush and sand ahead of her. When she and Ted had bought the house, two years ago, the agent had solemnly told her that new houses soon would be built to the north of theirs. It hadn't happened. Financial problems, shortage of money, something like that, and Kathryn still lived on the boundary between somewhere and nowhere. South of her lay the town of Bernalillo, a suburb of Albu­querque, and civilization was spreading in an ever-widening strip along Highway 25 up from Albuquerque to here. But out to the north was nothing, open country full of coyotes and God knows what else. The coyotes had probably de­voured her daughter's kitten. Remembering the kitten, Kath­ryn clenched her fists and listened once more for the feeble sounds that had brought her outside in the first place. Nothing. She heard only the whistling of the wind, or perhaps the mocking song of the coyotes. She looked warily at the sky; then, quickly, she turned and went indoors, closing the door, sealing it, putting her thumb to the alarm switch and waiting until the central office gave her the signal. It was good to be inside, in this well-lit, cozy house. She had loved it here at first, while Ted was alive. Now, the best she could do was hang on, and bar the doors to death, and wait for the numbness of widowhood to leave her. She was only thirty. Too young to remain numb forever. A sleepy voice. 'Mommy, where are you?' 'Here, Jilly. Here.' 'Did you find Kitten-cat?' 'No, sweet.' 'Why'd you go outside?' 'Just to look.' 'Did Kitten-cat go to look for Daddy, Mommy?' The words stabbed her. Kathryn went into her daughter's bedroom. The little girl lay snug and well covered in her bed, with the golden eye of the monitor peering solemnly down at her. At not quite three, Jill was old enough to climb out of the bed, not old enough to make a safe landing by herself, and so Kathryn still left the baby-monitor on, the watchful electronic guardian. You were supposed to stop using the monitor once a child was past its second birthday, but Kath-tryn could not bring herself to give up the added security. Kathryn switched on the night lamp. Jill blinked. She had her father's dark hair, her father's delicate features. Some day she'd be beautiful, not a plain jane like her mother at all, for which Kathryn was grateful. But what good was it all, if • Ted hadn't lived to see it? Lost in action over Syria during the Peace Offensive of 1981. What had Syria ment to him? Why had a foreign land taken from her the only thing that mattered? Correction:almost the only thing. 'Will Kitten-cat find Daddy and bring him back?' Jill asked. 'I hope so, love. Go to sleep and dream about Kitten-cat. And Daddy.' Kathryn adjusted the monitor's control console, setting up a gentle vibration in the girl's mattress. Jill smiled. Her eyes closed. Kathryn nudged the light lower, and then off. As she stepped back into the living room, she decided to see if there was something on the eight o'clock news about that thing in the sky. 'Flying saucers have landed - ' something like that. She cupped her hand over the wall stud, and the video screen bloomed into vibrant life. She was just in time. ' - reports from Taos as far south as Albuquerque. Also observed at Los Alamos, Grants, and Jemez Pueblo. The meteor was one of the brightest ever seen, according to Dr J. F. Kelly, of the Los Alamos technical staff. A scientific team will begin searching for the remnants of the big fireball tomorrow. For those who missed it, we've got a tape replay coming up in just ninety seconds. And we repeat, there's no cause for alarm, absolutely no cause for alarm over this unusual meteor.' Thank God, Kathryn thought. A meteor. A shooting star. Not an exploding jet, not a crashing rocket. No new widows tonight. She did not want anyone else to suffer as she had had to suffer. If only the kitten would return now. She could not hope that Ted would walk through the door, but the kitten might still be alive, perhaps safe somewhere, living in a garage down the block. Kathryn switched off the video. She listened for meows. Everything was silent out there. Colonel Tom Falkner did not see the fireball. While it streaked across the sky he was in the officers' lounge at the Air Force base, drinking too much cheap Japanese Scotch and watching without interest a televised basketball game between New York and San Diego. He heard, above the buzz of the announcer's voice, two lieutenants talking in low tones about saucers. One man was pretty passionately convinced that they were the real thing, ships from space. The other man took an orthodox skeptic's tack: show me a man from another world, show me a piece of a saucer's landing gear, show me anything I can touch, and I'll believe it. Not until then. They were both a little liquored up, Falkner knew, or they wouldn't be talking about saucers at all. Not with him in the room. As it was, they thought they were keeping their conversation to themselves, sparing Colonel Falkner the em­barrassment of having to hear the silly words 'flying saucer' once again. Everyone was very tactful to poor Colonel Falkner around the base. Everyone knew that he had been handed a slicing by fate, and they tried to make things as easy as possible for him. He elbowed out of his vibrator chair and walked stiffly over to the bar. The obliging young noncom on bar duty gave him a bright smile. 'Sir?' 'Another Scotch. Make it a double.' Was that a hint of reproach in the bartender's eyes? A flicker of contempt for the boozy colonel? Barkeeps weren't supposed to be patronizing toward their customers, even if the barkeep happened to be a clean-cut Oklahoma kid who wouldn't touch the stuff except on a direct order from an officer. Falkner scowled. He told himself that he was too sensitive, that he was reading much too much into every­body's expressions and words and even their silences these days. He was just a bundle of raw nerve endings, that was the trouble. And he drank this stinking ersatz-san pseudo-Glenlivet to ease his tensions, only it just left him with a new load of guilt and misery. The boy pushed a glass toward him. Spray cans weren't fashionable here in the officers' lounge. So long as there was personnel around to pour, officers who were gentlemen liked to have their alcoholic beverages poured decently into glasses, not squirted like medicine in the approved 1982 manner. Falkner grunted in acknowledgment and slid a hairy-knuckled hand around the glass. Down the hatch.Foosh. He winced. "Pardon my inquisitiveness, sir, but howis that Japanese stuff, anyway?' 'You've never had it?' 'Oh, no, sir.' The bartender looked at Falkner as though the colonel had just suggested some particularly foul form of self-abuse. 'Never. I'm just not a drinking man at all. I guess that's why the computer put me on bar duty here. Heh. Heh.' 'Heh,' Falkner said sourly. He eyed the Scotch bottle, so-called. 'It'll do, I guess. It's got spirits in it and it tastes almost like the real thing, only terrible. And until we can do business with Scotland again, I'll just have to go on drinking it. This damned crazy embargo. The President ought to have his - ' Falkner caught himself. The boy grinned shyly. Despite himself, Falkner grinned too, and made his way back to his seat. He stared at the glowing screen. That San Diego center, the seven-foot-six fellow, went high to dunk the ball throughthe net. You just wait, you lousy long-legged goon, Falkner told him silently. Next season there'll be a couple of eight-footers in the league, I bet. They'll knock you off your high horse. A wisp of talk drifted his way: 'If thereare aliens from space watching us, how come they haven't contacted us yet, eh?' 'Maybe they have.' 'Sure, and Frederic Storm is the prophet of the century, too. Don't tell me you belong to a Contact Cult!' I didn't say...." Falkner kept his head rigidly trained toward the television wall. He would not, could not, let himself think about flying saucers during his free time. He hated even the very name of the things. It was all a bad joke, this saucer thing, and the joke was on him. He was 43 years old, though he sometimes felt 143. He could remember, vaguely, when flying saucers first had come into the news. That had been in 1947, right after the Second World War. Falkner couldn't remember the war itself - he had been born in 1939, on the day Poland was invaded, and he'd been in first grade when the war ended - but he did remember the flying saucer thing, because it had scared him. He had read about it in one of the slick magazines, and it had left him chilly with terror to think that a man out in Oregon or wherever was seeing ships from other worlds. Little Tommy Falkner had always been curious about the planets, about space, the original space bug himself at a time when such things were mysteries to the general public, but it had given him a crawly feeling and a week of night­mares to think about those 1947 saucers. Saucer stories had come and gone. Crackpots had crept out of the woodwork to talk about their rides in space. Tom Falkner was also after a ride in space, but a real one. By the time he entered the Air Force Academy in 1957 he had forgotten all about the saucer craze, had thrown his science fiction magazines away. He was going to enroll in the American space program, if it ever got started. He was going to be a spaceman. Falkner took an angry gulp at his drink. A couple of weeks after he became a cadet, the Russians had a sputnik in orbit. Eventually an American space pro­gram materialized, lame, overdue, but authentic. Funny how the wordspaceman dropped from the vocabulary, once science fiction started to turn real.Astronauts, that's what they were called. Lieutenant Thomas Falkner enrolled in the astronaut program. He was a lot too young for Project Mercury, he watched in envy as the Gemini astronauts went up and came down; but there was room for him in Project Apollo. He was down on the list for a trip to the Moon in 1973. With luck, he figured, he might even make it to Mars before he turned forty. In those years, space was real, space was earnest. He spent his days in flight simulation, his nights wrestling with mathe­matics. Flying saucers? For lunatics. 'California stuff', Falkner called the stories, even when they came from Michi­gan or South Dakota. In California they'd believe anything, including purple people eaters from the stars. He worked at his trade. His trade was space. Along the way, he got mar­ried, and it wasn't a bad marriage, except there were no children. He remembered a night in 1970 when he and a couple of the' other Apollo boys did too much justice to a fifth of Scotch, the authentic item, twelve-year-old Ambassador. And Ned Reynolds, looped and incautious, turned to him and said, 'You aren't going to get off Earth, Tom. You want to know why? It's because you don't have any kids. Bad public relations. The astronaut's got to have a couple clean-cut kids waiting for himto come home, or it spoils the TV part.' Falkner had been amused, in a strained sort of way. It wasn't the sort of thing a sober man would say to a friend, or the sort of thing a sober man would take from a friend, but he had laughed. 'You aren't going to get off Earth, Tom.'In vino veritas. Six months later, in a routine physical, they had discovered something awry in his inner ear, something out of kilter in the thing that governs the body's equilibrium, and that was the end of his career with Project Apollo. Serenely they flunked him out, explaining with all regret that they couldn't put a vertigo-prone man into orbit, even if he had so far displayed no overt tendencies.. .. They found him a job. It was with Project Bluebook, the Air Force's three-bit program that was set up to reassure the public that the flying saucers didn't exist after all. That was a decade ago. Project Bluebook had expanded after the man­ner of any bureaucracy, and now was AOS, the Atmospheric Objects Survey. And poor old Tom Falkner, the flunked astronaut, was the AOS stringer for Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado. He was a colonel in the flying saucer brigade. If he gritted his teeth and held on long enough, he'd be the next flying saucer general the Air Force would have. He finished the drink he was holding. At the same moment he became aware that the basketball game had been inter­rupted, half a minute ago, for a local news bulletin. Some­thing about a meteor, a big streak of light... no cause for alarm, absolutely no cause for alarm___ Falkner tried to focus his mind. Out of its depths an unwelcome thought came swimming upward.Saucer sight­ing. At last. The blue-faced bastards from Betelgeuse are here. No cause for alarm, but they just ate Washington, DC. Everything's all right. Only a meteor. He heard the telephone's insistent chiming back of the bar. And then the bartender came over and said, 'It's for you, Colonel Falkner. It's your office calling. Somebody sounds awfully upset, sir!'         Two       Aboard the Dirnan craft trouble had started over the Pole. It was a standard watcher ship, of the kind that had been patrolling the Earth for decades now, and the possibility of malfunction was so slight that a sane person did not think of such things. The ships worked well; that was all there was to it. But aboard this one there was a failure. The first indication of problems came at ninety thousand feet, when the safety lamp began to glow. At once, warning signals throbbed beneath the flesh of the three members of the ship's crew. Among the various useful circuits implanted in their bodies was one that let them know instantly if technical difficulties were arising. The essence of the mission called for the watchers to keep aloof from the watched, and the last thing any Dirnan wanted was a crash landing on Earth. The crew was busy. It consisted of a standard three-facet sexual group, in this case two males and a female. They had been together for close to a century as Earth calculates time,and for the past ten of those years they had been performing watcher duty above Earth. The female, Glair, presided over the recording equipment that sought out information from the planet below. Mirtin processed and analyzed the infor­mation. Vorneen transmitted it to the mother world. In addi­tion, they had various other duties that they shared on an informal basis: ship maintenance, food preparation, contact with other watchers, and such. They were a good team. When the warning signals came, each looked up from his own work instantly, ready to take whatever action was necessary for the safety of the craft. Mirtin - the oldest, the calmest, wearing as his chosen disguise the body of a middle-aged Earthman - was the first to reach the analysis board. His fingers moved swiftly. He gathered the data and turned to the others. 'The plasma pinch is giving out. We're going to blow within six minutes.' 'But that's impossible,' Glair protested. 'We - ' Vorneen smiled gently. 'It's happening, Glair. Itis pos­sible.' He wore a younger man's body, and he was perhaps too vain about his looks. But, of course, a Dirnan on watcher duty had to adopt the outer form of an Earthman, and it was merely sane to choose the configuration that best expressed the inner being. If Vorneen chose to look slightly too hand­some, if Glair had erred in the direction of voluptuousness, if Mirtin wished to be self-effacingly unglamorous, those all were permissible options. Glair, recovering from her momentary foolishness, was all business. 'If we shunt the current around the opaquer circuit, that might keep the plasma together, right?' 'Try it,' Vorneen said. But Glair's hands were already at work. Mirtin laughed. 'We're visible now. It gives one a naked feeling, doesn't it? Like standing in the marketplace at noon, stripped to one's bones.' 'We can't stay visible for long,' said Vorneen. 'We'll be smashing into every detector net the Earthmen have. There'll be warheads flying.' 'I doubt it,' said Glair crisply. 'They've seen our ships before and haven't attacked them. Give them credit. They know we're up here. At least, the governments do. Five minutes without our opaquer won't be that serious.' Vorneen knew that she was right. What was important now was to avert the explosion, not to fret about the fact that they had exposed themselves to every kind of Earthly detection system from the neutron screen to naked-eye observation. He pried open the hatch and wriggled into the power department. The Dirnan ship was designed for indefinite flight without refueling. Its hull, a flattened sphere, tapered below to a cupola in which a fusion generator was mounted: nothing more nor less than a miniature sun, from which the ship drew all its necessary power. At the core of the system was a plasma - a fiercely hot soup of electrons and stripped atomic nuclei - kept in check by a powerful magnetic field. Nothing solid could contain that plasma without itself becoming part of the plasma, for what was there in the universe that could serve as a bottle for a gas whose heat was measured in the hundreds of millions of degrees? But the magnetic field set up a pinch effect that controlled the plasma, keeping it apart from anything it might devour. So long as the fiery plasma remained in check, the Dirnans could tap power from it forever, or as close to forever as made no difference to living beings. But if the pinch gave way, the three would find themselves living a dozen feet away from a full-fledged sun. Briefly. Entering the crawl space, Vorneen approached the power core and saw to his dismay that five of the control rods had fused already, and ominous bluish arcs were flickering back and forth over the housing of the generator. He had no particular fear of dying, and of all ways to die this would surely be the quickest, but the professionalism in his nature drove him to try to reverse the situation if at all possible. About all he could do, he realized, was to try to draw power from elsewhere in the ship and shore up the magnetic pinch, and hope that the system would stabilize itself through thehomeostatic controls that supposedly came into automatic play at times like this.  Already, the opaquer circuit had been killed, rendering the ship visible to Earthman eyes. That was regrettable, but it had happened before, too often for Vorneen to worry about it now. There'd be a new 'flying saucer' story on the video down there tonight, he thought. But if the fusion generator blew up, and happened to take a couple of cities with it, it would be a news story bigger than he cared to create. 'Cut the transmitter circuits,' he called. 'They're cut,' Mirtin answered. 'Twenty seconds ago. You didn't notice?' 'No effect.' 'I'll knock out the lights,' said Glair. 'Better knock out everything,' Vorneen shouted. 'I'm not getting any gain. I'm losing pinch steadily!' The ship went dark. The poor Earthmen would be de­prived of the flashing red and green lights they loved so dearly; in fact, they'd be unable to see the saucer at all now, except on governmental detection equipment. Sourly Vor­neen realized that he was writing a new chapter in the vast archive of secret documentary information on the watcher ships that the governments down there were known to possess. He hated the thought that he had joined the legion of bunglers giving the show away. But it was hardly his fault. What was happening now was purely a statistical phenomenon: given so many watcher ships in orbit above Earth, at least one was bound to malfunction in some spec­tacular way. And it happened to be theirs. By now, of course, a distress signal had gone booming out across the galaxy. The moment a crew cut its transmitter circuits, breaking contact with the mother world, an SOS was automatically registered. Because of the light-year lag between Earth and Dirna, a couple of decades would pass before anyone at home knew that this particular ship was having problems, but the same distress signal was reaching hundreds of other Dirnan craft closer at hand. That was some comfort. Vorneen came back into the heart of the ship. 'No use,' he said. 'She's going to blow. We've got to abandon ship.' Glair looked flustered. 'But -' Mirtin was at the controls. 'I'll take the ship higher. We want to be above the danger range. Thirty miles up, yes?' 'Higher,' said Vorneen. 'As high as you can manage. And keep on course. We ought to be over desert country, any­way.' 'Can we take anything?' asked Glair. 'Ourselves,' said Vorneen. The ship had been their home for many years. It was painful to leave it now: more painful for her, perhaps, than for us, Vorneen told himself. It was Glair who tended the little garden of Dirnan flowers they kept aboard, Glair who added all the little feminine touches to the harshness of the ship's decor. Now they must leave garden and ship and all to their fate, and hurl themselves down onto the dark bosom of Earth. It was something every watcher had to live with, this possibility, but it had never seemed quite real to Vorneen, and he knew what an upheaval this must be for Glair. Only Mirtin seemed wholly detached from the calamity. They soared high into the night sky. Strange rumbling sounds were coming from the power compartment now. Vorneen tried not to think of what might be going on in there, or how close they might be to the actual explosion. Glair was getting into her jump equipment. He seized his. Mirtin, locking the controls in place, started to slip his harness on. 'We're going to be scattered,' Vorneen said. 'We may land hundreds of miles apart from each other.' He saw Glair's frightened eyes. Ruthlessly, he went on, 'We may be injured in landing, or perhaps even killed. But we've got to jump. Somehow we'll find each other again.' He yanked the ejection lever, and the hatch they had never expected to use yawned wide. The atmosphere rushed from the ship's cabin; but the jump equipment protected them from the airlessness. Hastily they moved toward the hatch. 'Out,' Vorneen said to Glair. She jumped. He watched in cold horror as she spun away from the ship, arcing out into nothingness with such violence that he feared she had lost consciousness. She had not been trained to jump so clumsily. But it was a long time since they had run a jump drill aboard this ship. Sickened, he knew that Glair must have jumped to her death, and at the loss of one of his mates he felt an anguish far more terrible than he had ever known. Abandoning the ship was nothing, really; but losing Glair ... 'Out,' said Mirtin behind him. And then Vorneen left the ship. For all his torment, he executed the jump perfectly. This was the moment when nightmares became solid; any watcher dreamed hundreds of times of making the jump, but for most it remained just a dream. Here he was, hurtling downward with thirty miles of void beneath him, and Glair probably dead already, and a planet of hostile strangers waiting for him. Yet with strange calmness he cut in his life-support system and felt the sudden impact as his deployment screen steadied his fall. He would live. And Mirtin? It was difficult to look up. Vorneen tried. But he was thousands of feet below the ship now, and he could see neither the ship itself nor any sign of Mirtin. Had he jumped? Of course he had. Mirtin made a fetish of ration­ality; no last-minute panic for him, no staying aboard the doomed ship. No doubt Mirtin was smoothly falling Earth­ward at this moment. Vorneen looked downward once again. An instant later the explosion came. It was more horrifying than he would ever have dreamed it might be. If it had happened a moment before, while he was stupidly looking up, it would have boiled away his eyes. As it was he shook with awe as the heavens above him glowed with the quick light of a sudden sun. There was no hard radiation in a fusion generator, of course; neither he nor the distant towns below would suffer. Nor did the well-spaced atmospheric molecules up here transmit much sound. He felt heat on his back and shoulders, but after all, this had been only a tiny sun, strong enough to power one small spacecraft, and he was not charred, nor would anyone below be aware of warmth. What was frightening was the light, that savage glare passing above him and streaking through the sky. It was as though the universe had cracked open up there, allowing the primal light of first creation to shine through. Closing his eyes scarcely helped. What would it look like, down on Earth, he wondered? Would they ex­perience terror and awe? Or would it seem like no more than a robust meteor trail? There it went, following the trajectory of what had been the ship. At least there would be no fragments of the craft to arouse mystery on Earth: a small blessing. But that light! That monstrous light! Vorneen lost consciousness. When he regained control of himself, he was appalled to find a row of houses not far below his dangling feet. On Earth, so soon? Another thousand yards and he would at last be touching the soil of the planet he had watched so long. Down ... down.... By now Glair would have landed. He tried not to think about her fate. It was Mirtin he had to find, the sooner the better, and together they'd await the rescue crew that shortly would be here to pick them up. Meanwhile the problem was survival. He cursed the luck that had brought him down in civilization, with all this good wilderness about. Vorneen did what he could to steer himself away from the houses, toward the flat scrubby plateau just beyond. Now the ground was rushing toward him. He had never expected the landing to be like this. Didn't one waft gently to the ground? No. No. He was falling like a bomb. He would smash right through the roof of the last house in that row. He would - He swerved, but only by a matter of feet. Then the most savage pain he had ever experienced, in a life that had been almost wholly free from pain, struck him and stunned him, and the man from the stars toppled heavily forward and lay still, more dead than alive.       Three       At the Albuquerque office of the Atmospheric Objects Survey, everything was ready to roll half an hour after the fireball had been sighted. The maintenance men had loaded fully charged batteries into the six electric half-tracks; the computer had already produced a vector chart showing pos­sible landing sites for the space debris, if any; Bronstein, Colonel Falkner's adjutant, had summoned the off-duty men. Now they stood in an uneasy semicircle around the glow-board in the main office, staring at the streaky red line that marked the plotted path of the Atmospheric Object. Fifteen feet away, behind the locked and bolted door of the bathroom, Tom Falkner was trying hard to sober up. On the jeep ride over here from the officers' lounge Falkner had swallowed an antistim tablet. They were handy little things, guaranteed to clear the cobwebs out of an alcohol-woozy mind in half an hour or so. But the process wasn't pleasant. What the pills did was to deliver a neat double jolt to the thyroid and the pituitary, temporarily deranging the hormone balance and putting the metabolism into high gear. All bodily processes were accelerated, includ­ing the one that burned the alcohol out of the blood. Under antistims, you lived six or seven hours in a realtime environ­mental situation lasting about ten minutes. It was rugged, but it worked. When you had settled down to a leisurely evening of stupefying yourself, and suddenly discovered that it was vital to destupefy yourself at once, there was no alternative but to use the tablets. Falkner crouched on the bathroom's tiled floor, gripping the towel rack with both hands. He was shaking. Great blotches of sweat darkened his uniform. His face was red, his pulse rate was over a hundred and climbing, and the terrible thunder of his heart was like a drum pounding in his rib cage. He had already vomited, getting rid of the last four or five ounces of Scotch before it had had a chance to filter very far into his system, and this violent inner purge was taking care of the rest. His brain was clearing. This was only the fourth or fifth time in his life he had found it necessary to take the antistims, and each time he hoped it would be the last. After a long time he rose. His fingers, extended experimentally before him, waggled as though he were typing a letter. He fought to steady them. The blood had drained from his face now. Falkner eyed him­self in the mirror, and shuddered at what he saw. He was a big man, blocky-shouldered, with close-cropped black curly hair and a little bristly mustache and bloodshot eyes. In his astronaut days he had been careful not to let his weight get above 165, but those days were long gone, and now he had fleshed out to the full capacity of his frame and then some. In uniform he looked burly and massive. Stripped of that khaki exoskeleton, he tended to sag and bulge a little. He wasn't proud of what he had become in his middle years. But he hadn't asked for any of this, neither the inner-ear problem nor the flying saucer detail. He felt a little better now. He dabbed cold water on his face, wiped the sweat, adjusted his collar. Though not whollysober even now, he no longer felt the worse effects of his binge. That prickly sensation at the tip of his nose was gone; his ears no longer felt like slabs of cardboard; his eyes worked as eyes were supposed to work. Moving with great care, Falkner opened the bathroom door and went into the office. Captain Bronstein seemed to have everything under con­trol, as usual. There he was, briefing the men, speaking crisply, never slurring so much as a syllable. When he caught sight of Falkner, Bronstein turned smoothly and said, 'We're ready to go when you say the word, Colonel.' 'Everything calculated? The routes allotted?' 'Everything,' Bronstein said. He flashed a quick, possibly mocking smile. 'The board's lit up like a Christmas tree. We've had a thousand reports on the AO so far, and they're still coming in. It's a live one this time.' 'Swell,' Falkner muttered. 'We'll be famous. Extraterres­trial spaceship crash-lands; pilot bails out; brave officers of AOS subdue with bare hands. We -' Falkner caught himself. He had begun to run off at the mouth again, a sign that perhaps he wasn't so sober after all. The warning glance from Bronstein had been explicit. For a moment their eyes met, and Falkner was infuriated to see how sorry for him Bronstein looked. A surge of pure hatred ran through the colonel's body. At times like this Falkner stubbornly insisted to himself that he did not hate Bronstein merely because Bronstein was Jewish. Jewishness had nothing to do with it. He hated Bronstein because the dapper little captain was ambitious, because he was capable, because he was always in full con­trol of himself, and because he believed that the flying saucers came from another world. Bronstein was the only officer Falkner knew who hadvolunteered for AOS. The department was considered a dumping-ground for career men whose usefulness had otherwise been expended, but Bronstein had clawed his way into the job. Why? Because he believed the saucers were the coming thing, the biggest job the Air Force had ever handled. Honestly. And he wanted tobe right there, soaking up the glory and collecting the head­lines, when fantasy turned into open reality. To Bronstein the saucer patrol was the gateway to greater things. Senator Bronstein. President Bronstein. Falkner's mood grew more foul. He snapped, 'All right, let's get moving. Out into the desert and find that meteorite before dawn!Schnell!' The men hurried from the room. Bronstein lingered. In a soft voice he said, 'Tom, I think this one's reallyit. The bailout situation we've been waiting for.' 'Go to hell.' 'Won't you be surprised when you find an interstellar ambassador sitting in the sagebrush?" 'It was a meteor,' said Falkner frozenly. 'Did you see it?' 'No. I was - studying reports.' 'I saw it,' Bronstein said. 'It wasn't any meteor. It damn near burned my eyes out. That was some kind of fusion generator blowing up, above the stratosphere. It was like a little sun turning on for a couple of minutes, Tom. That's what the boys at Los Alamos said, too. You know of any Air Force projects that fly fusion generators?' 'No.' 'Neither do I. So -' 'So it was a Chinese spy ship,' Falkner said. Bronstein laughed. 'You know something, Tom? I think it's a hell of a lot more probable that that ship came from Procyon Twelve, or someplace like that, from another solar system, than from Peking. So tell me I'm crazy. It's what I believe.' Falkner did not reply. He swung back and forth on the balls of his feet for a moment, trying to persuade himself that he was living this and not merely dreaming it. Then, scowling, he gestured to Bronstein and they went out into the night. Four of the half-tracks had already left. Falkner got into one of the remaining ones, Bronstein into the other, and they were rumbling away from the base. Falkner's cabin contained a complete communications link that hooked him in to the other search vehicles, to the Albuquerque office, to the main headquarters of AOS in Topeka, and to the various local headquarters under his jurisdiction in the four south­western states. The board was plenty busy just now, too. A dozen message lights were flashing all at once. Falkner keyed in Topeka and watched the face of his commanding officer, General Weyerland, take on form and color in the little screen. Weyerland, like Falkner himself, was cosmic debris, a wash-up from the space program who had been transferred to the dead end that was AOS. At least Weyerland had four stars on his shoulder by way of consolation, though. Con­sidering that he held personal responsibility for the deaths of two astronauts who perished in a space experiment, Weyer­land was pretty lucky to have a job at all, even with AOS, Falkner figured. But he kept up a good front. Weyerland always acted as though this thing meant something to him. The general said, 'What's the story up to now, Tom?' 'Nothing much, sir. Streak of light in the sky, a lot of citizens upset, and now a standard check. I'm going out with six half-tracks from here, and we're sending a couple north from Santa Fe. Plus the usual metal-detector sweeps. It's routine, like all these sightings.' 'I'm not so sure,' said Weyerland. 'Sir?' 'Washington's been on the phone twice. I mean the big man, too. He's upset. You know, this streak of light was seen over thousands of square miles? They picked it up in Cali­fornia and it's driving them wild out there.' 'California.'Falkner made the word sound unutterably obscene. 'Yes, I know. But the public's alarmed. They're pressuring the White House, and he's pressuring us.' 'There's a One-o-seven already out, isn't there?' 'On every channel,' said Weyerland. The designation '107' was the code term for a soft-pedalling announcement thatthe mysterious object was merely a natural phenomenon and there was nothing to worry about. 'But we've sent out so many One-o-sevens, Tom, that nobody believes them. We say "meteor", everybody translates it "flying saucer". The time's coming when we'll have to start telling the truth.' What truth?Falkner wanted to ask. He didn't. He said, 'Tell the President we'll report back as soon as we've got anything solid.' 'Check in with me every hour,' Weyerland said. 'Whether there's anything solid or not.' The general broke the circuit. Immediately, Falkner began to key in the others. On four of them he was getting data from the detector nets spotted around the national defense periphery. Sure enough, they had all recorded a massive object coming down across the Pole at an altitude of ninety-thousand feet and climbing still higher over Manitoba, then smashing up completely above Central New Mexico. Well, sure, something had been up there tonight. But there was a rational explanation for it, as well as a fantastic one. The thing had been a heavy blob of iron that had drifted into our atmosphere and burned up. Why conjure up galactic space­ships when meteors were so common? Falkner's half-track crunched steadily onward, now head­ing northwest out of Albuquerque in the general direction of Cibola National Forest. To his left, the colonel could see the distant headlights of cars swooshing rapidly along Highway 40. He was nearing the Rio Puerco - just a dry wash, right now, after a rainless autumn. The stars seemed exceptionally sharp, hard-edged. It was a good night for snow, but he knew no snow would fall tonight. Moodily, he continued to jab at the control panel before him, going through all the motions of doing his job. The public was worried.The public! Let a helicopter buzz by overhead and a million people rushed to their telephones to tell the police about the flying saucer. Tonight's little heavenly display, Falkner thought sullenly, had probably brought a small fortune in extra revenues to Mountain States Tel and Tel. Jammed lines all evening. The whole dealwas just a promotional scheme dreamed up by the phone company. Sure. One of the things that bothered Falkner about the flying saucer stories was the ascending grapth line of reported sightings. Saucer sightings seemed to fluctuate in keeping with the temperature of international events: the first ones just after the Second World War, in the new atomic tensions of the U.S.-Russian rivalry, and then a lull for a while in the Eisenhower years, followed by a fresh flareup of the things about 1960. Then, after the Kennedy assassination, saucers spotted all over the place, and since 1966 or so a steadily mounting frequency, tending to bunch into the seasons when the quarrel with China was closest to bursting wide open. You couldn't correlate meteor showers with global politics. You could, though, blame the saucer stories on private anxieties, to some extent. Perhaps 99 percent of the sightings, Falkner figured, were inspired by edgy nerves. But the others - The trouble was that the quality of the sighters was changing. At first, most of the saucer stories had come from menopausal matrons and goitrous, slab-jawed rustics with steel-framed eyeglasses, but gradually there had been a shift away from the obvious crank segment of the population and toward those whose words carried intrinsic weight. When bank presidents, policemen, congressmen, and physics pro­fessors all began seeing round shapes in the sky, the thing was past the crackpot stage, Falkner had to admit. And, particularly since 1975, the number of sightings and the number of respectable sighters had risen sharply. The lunatic fringe, the i-rode-in-a-flying-saucer fringe, was always around. Falkner ignored them. He could not ignore the others Still, he had a deep and abiding emotional commitment to his work, of a negative sort. He could not allow himself to believe that the so-called saucers were anything more than natural phenomena. If they really were ships from space, then his assignment to AOS was really important, and the pang of bitterness that pricked him would withdraw. TomFalkner needed that pang as his spur. And so he growled with hostility at any suggestion that his job might really be concerned with actual events, or that it might have any relevance to his country's security. He jacked out the data banks and keyed in the news from the metal-detectors. Nothing. No unusual objects seen on the desert. He talked to Bronstein, who by now was eighty miles south of him, in the vicinity of Acoma Pueblo. 'Any news? Any reports?' 'Nothing from here,' said Bronstein. 'They saw the sky-streak at Acoma, though. Also at Laguna. The chief says a lot of his people are scared.' 'Tell them there's nothing to worry about.' 'I did. It doesn't help. They're spooked, Tom.' 'Tell them to do a spook dance, then.' 'Tom - ' 'Okay, I'm sorry.Sir.' Falkner hit the sarcasm heavily. Yawning, he said, 'You know, the White House is spooked too? Poor Weyerland's been getting the needles for the last hour. He wants results, or else.' 'I know. He called me.' Falkner frowned. He didn't like the idea of his superior officer conferring with his adjutant. There was a chain of command to deal with such situations. He broke off and switched to a different channel. The half-track clunked along westward. On its roof sensitive antennae twirled, seeking data, anything useful. A glint of metal on the desert, and he'd know about it. The thermal detectors were hunting for the infrared radiation of any living body larger than the size of a kangaroo rat. Every thirty seconds a laser beam pinged out, bounced off a focal sphere eighty miles away, and came back newsless. Restlessly, Falkner pushed buttons, twisted dials, jacked circuits in and out. On each of these fruitless search trips through the desert after some kind of sighting, he took a dry pleasure in letting his hands rove over the intricate control panel, making full use of his electronic gadgetry even though he was firmly convinced that he would never find anything. A couple of months ago it had finally dawned on him what he was doing when he fiddled with the equipment in this compulsive way. He was playing astronaut. Sitting here hunched in his warm half-track, he might just as well be hunched in a space capsule orbiting four hundred miles up. Except, of course, that his buttocks registered the jolting crunch of track against sand. But he had the whole array of bright lights and tiny screens, a child's dream of spaceman's hardware, and he could punch in data to his heart's content. He had not been happy to draw the parallel, because it brought home to him the futility of these saucer searches, and his own shattering failure of career. Yet he went on, randomly stabbing buttons. He talked to Topeka again. He chatted with the boys in the two northern half-tracks, one out past Taos by now and the other cruising near the Spanish towns on the other side of Santa Fe National Forest. He monitored the four southern half-tracks that were fanned out from Socorro to Isleta, and as far west as Pie Town. He exchanged brief comments with Bronstein, who was in the forlorn, empty country south of Acoma Pueblo, and heading vaguely toward the Zuni Reser­vation. Between them, they maintained a total surveillance spread over the entire trajectory area of the alleged meteor, but nobody had found anything. Every hour on the hour Falkner cut in on the commercial radio and video outlets and picked up the news. Evidently a lot of people were yelling 'Flying saucer!' tonight, because the announcers were going to great pains to insist that it was nothing but a meteor. Moving from station to station, Falkner heard the same bland assertions. They were all quoting Kelly from Los Alamos. Who was Kelly? An astronomer, maybe? No, just 'of the technical staff', whatever that meant. Probably a janitor. But the media were using the magic of his Los Alamos affiliation as a talisman to reassure the troubled listeners. And now they were tossing in a few astronomers, too.A, certain Alvarez, from Mount Palomar, had released a statement. So had one Matsuoko, a leading Japanese astronomer. Had Alvarez seen the fireball himself? Nothing in his words indicated that. Had Matsuoko? Of course not. Yet both of them were speaking learnedly of meteors, prissily drawing the distinction between meteor and meteorite, smothering any anxiety in a torrent of comforting verbiage. By mid­night, the Government was releasing selected bits of in­formation from the detector nets and the eye satellites. Yes, the eyes up there had seen the meteor. No, there was nothing to fear. Purely natural phenomena. Falkner felt sick. His ingrained obstinate skepticism about the Atmospheric Objects was matched only by his ingrained obstinate skepti­cism about official Government announcements. If the Gov­ernment was going to all this trouble to keep people calm, then there had to be something big to worry about. That much was axiomatic. On the other hand, trained as he was in interpreting the phoniness of official handouts, Falkner had a deep and abiding need to believe in the futility and emptiness of his own assignment. He could not let himself believe in real saucers. But he did not believe the Government, either. It was well past midnight now. He peered at the thick neck of his driver, sealed off from him in the front compartment, and fought back a yawn. He would ride all night. There was nothing waiting for him back in Albuquerque but an empty bed and a day of crushed cigarette butts. His wife was vacationing in Buenos Aires with her new husband. Falkner had grown accustomed to being alone by now, but he did not like it much. Other men soothed themselves in their work at such times, but Falkner's work was no work for a grown man, he often said. At three in the morning he was right up at the edge of the mountains. There was a logging road through the national forest that he could take if he wanted to take it, but he ordered the driver to swing around. He would return to Albuquerque on a big loop, around the Mesa Prieta, skirting Jemez Pueblo, and down the western side of the Rio Grande to home. They were still awake in Topeka, and probably in Washington as well. Good for them, the heroes. The information flow on the various channels was slowing down. To fill in the time, Falkner ran off the taped playback of the fireball a few times. By this time, he had picked up half a dozen relayed shots of it from several points along its trajectory. He studied them carefully, and had to admit that the sudden glowing streak must have been an impressive sight. Too bad he had been indoors tanking up and had missed it. But it still looked like a meteor track, Falkner told himself stubbornly. A big meteor, but what of that? How about the one that had slashed its way through the Siberian forest in 1908 and cut such a swath? Or the giant meteor crater in Arizona? What were those, if not natural phenom­ena? And the ferocity of the actinic radiation? Simple. He had been arguing about that with Bronstein two hours ago. 'Postulate a lump of contraterrene matter dropping into our atmosphere,' Falkner said. 'A couple of tons of anti-iron, say. A great slew of antiprotons and antineutrons meet­ing and annihilating terrene matter.' 'That's old hat, Tom.' 'So what? It's plausible, isn't it?' 'Not plausible enough. It involves the necessity to postu­late a large mass of antimatter somewhere in our part of the universe,' said Bronstein, 'and there's no real evidence that such a mass exists, or even can exist. It's a far simpler hypothesis to postulate an intelligent extraterrestrial race sending observers here. Just apply Occam's Razor to your antimatter idea and you'll see what a lousy theory it is.' 'Apply Occam's Razor to your throat, Bronstein. And press hard.' Falkner liked the idea despite Bronstein's objections. Sure, it violated the law of the least complex hypothesis. But Occam's Razor was a logical tool, not an inflexible condition of the universe, and it didn't hold good in all conditions. Falkner blinked hard, and wished he had some Scotch. Pale streaks of dawn were beginning to strain the eastern sky. In   the nation's capital it was morning already, and they were up and forming their traffic jams. Now, if we look at this notion of antimatter in a rigorous fashion, we find - Something wentping on one of the half-track's external detector systems. 'Stop the truck!' Falkner yelled to the driver. The vehicle halted. The pinging didn't. Very carefully, Colonel Falkner examined his inputs and tried to discover what the hell was going on. He isolated the cause of the disturbance. The detectors were picking up the thermals of a human being with a mass of some eighty to one hundred pounds within a radius of a thousand yards. Sure enough, the metal-detectors were confirming it, coming up with plenty of data. Someone was out there. The nearest town was twenty miles away. There wasn't even a road within a dozen miles. This was lonely country, nothing but lots of sagebrush, a few tufts of yucca and bear grass, here and there a misplaced juniper or pinon tree that belonged to the highlands. No streams, no ponds, no houses. Nothing. And nobody belonged out here. This land wasn't good for anything. Falkner told himself that his detector was picking up an Eagle Scout camping for the night, or some­thing equally innocuous. Nevertheless, he had to check. Leaving the driver in the half-track, Falkner got out. Which way? A thousand yards to cover - that was plenty, when you converted radius to circumference and started thinking in terms of area. He switched on the mercury beacon at his hip, but it didn't do much good; in this gray predawn light, artificial illumination was little help. He decided to look around for fifteen minutes and then call for a copter to bring a search party. The trouble with these fancy detecting systems was that they didn't function well at really close range. He chose a direction at random and picked his way over the rough, sandy ground. When he had gone fifty paces, he saw what looked like a bundle of old clothes lying in a clumpof sage, and ran toward it, feeling a kind of wild, fearful excitement that he could not understand. When he reached the bundle of old clothes, he saw that it was a woman, blond, young, a pretty face except for the smears of blood on her lips and chin. She was alive. She didn't seem to be conscious. She was wearing some sort of spacesuit of a design Falkner had never seen before, with elaborate personnel-transport jets, a sleek faceplate, and fabric of a shimmering, oddly lovely texture. Instantly he suspected that the girl must be a Chinese or Russian obser­ver who had been forced to bail out from some kind of overflight. Racially, of course, she was anything but Chinese, but there was no reason why Peking could not hire a blonde from Brooklyn as a spy, if necessary. If this was what a Chinese spacesuit looked like these days, you had to take your hat off to them. She had clearly had a bumpy landing, though. He couldn't see much of her body, but from the way she was hunched up Falkner suspected that she had a couple of broken legs, for openers, and probably internal injuries. Well, there was a power stretcher in the half-track; he'd scoop her up, get her safely back to town, and turn her over to the medics. At least she wasn't from some other galaxy, unless there was a galaxy out there that produced beautiful blondes. Her faceplate had been jarred open in the landing. Falkner saw that she was stirring, that she appeared to be murmuring something, and he nudged the clear plate away from his lips, bending close to listen. She wasn't talking Russian: the words were too liquid for that. She wasn't talking Chinese: the inflection was a mono­tone. She wasn't talking any language Falkner had ever heard. That made him a little queasy. He refused to let himself believe that she was speaking a language of another world. This was delirium he was hearing. Mere ravings. Was that something in English, now? If they will help . .. they speak which here? English. Yes ...English...'   He looked the spacesuit over again, saw how alien it was, and his flesh began to crawl; The girl's eyes opened. Beautiful eyes. Frightened eyes. Pain-misted eyes. 'Help me,' she said.           Four       As he fell toward Earth, Mirtin knew that he was going to be severely injured. He took that calmly, as he took every­thing else. The matter was out of his hands. What he re­gretted was the notoriety that this involuntary exploit would win him at home, not the pain his body would suffer in the immediate future. Sooner or later, some watcher ship had been bound by probability to malfunction and force its crew to make an unscheduled landing on Earth, but Mirtin had never thought the malfunctioning ship would be his own. There were techniques for calming one's spirit in a time of stress. He used them as he hurtled toward the dark world below. The loss of the ship was a minor matter to him. The embarrassment of this accident was also minor. The dangers he would encounter on Earth were less minor, but also no real source of sorrow; he would survive, or he would not survive, and why weep? Nor did he brood over the injuries he was certain to receive in landing. Those could be repaired.   No, what troubled Mirtin now was the disruption of his sexual group. As the oldest, the steadiest, he felt a responsi­bility for protecting the other two, and now they were beyond his help. Glair was probably dead. That was a harsh blow. Mirtin had watched her make her clumsy leap, had seen her go pinwheeling out into emptiness in the worst of all possible dives. Perhaps she had pulled out of it, but what was most likely was that she had fallen, stonelike, to a quick and horrid death. Mirtin had lost group partners before, long ago, and he knew the trauma it brought. And Glair was special, uniquely sensitive to the needs of the group, the perfect female bridge to link the two males. She could not easily be replaced. Vorneen had made a better jump, and in any case Vorneen could look out for himself. But he would land many miles from Mirtin's impact point, and they might never find each other. Even if they did, their position would not be an easy one - especially without Glair. Mirtin calmed himself. Impact could not be far away, now. They said that making a jump like this delivered an impact equal to dropping from a height of a hundred feet. Such a fall would not kill a Dirnan, but it would still be a substan­tial jolt. Since they had left the ship at an altitude far above the recommended one for a jump, it was reasonable to expect severe bodily damage. Mirtin did what he could, coiling his Dirnan interior securely within his fleshy outer shell, his Earthman disguise. That was all he could do. The bones that supported his shell would probably break; the Dirnan gristle and cartilage within was safe. But it would cause him pain and inconvenience to break bones, all the same. This housing he wore was now his body, even though he had not been born in it. Down. Consciousness threatened to leave him in the last few moments. Making a strenuous effort, Mirtin maintained his awareness. He saw that he was landing far from any largecity. To the east He observed the rectangular mud buildings of an Indian village, one of those living curios of the past that the Earthmen preserved so carefully in this part of their world. To the west, in the distance, was the great cleft of a canyon. In between was his landing area, a furrowed plain marked by deep gorges, eroded terraces, steeply rising mesas. Down here he was subject to atmospheric currents; Mirtin felt them lift him slightly, deflect him toward the Indian village a mile or two. He checked the trend with his stabilizer jets, and cut in the deployment screen to spare himself the worse effects of impact. At the last moment he blanked out anyway, despite his hard work. It was just as well; for when he regained his consciousness, Mirtin knew that he was badly injured. The first order of business was to deal with the pain. He went down the rows of ganglia, deliberately switching them off. Some, of course, had to remain active - the ones that operated his autonomous nervous system. He needed the breathing reflex and the cluster of nerves that powered his digestive/respiratory/circulatory nexus. But anything that could be spared was disconnected, for the time being. With­out that feverish haze of pain, he could survey his situation more clearly and see what else needed to be done. More than an hour passed before Mirtin had shut off enough of his nervous system to reduce the pain to a toler­able level. He needed half an hour more to wash the accumulated pain-poisons from his body. Then he took stock. He was lying on his back, toward the eastern end of a triangular wedge of land slightly elevated above the sur­rounding terrain. To his left ran the dry gully of what must be a stream in springtime. To his right was a steeply rising cliff, and by the faint light of approaching morning he saw that the stone was soft and sandy, pocked with many small openings. No more than a dozen body-lengths behind him was the dark mouth of a cave. If he could crawl in there somehow, he would have the sanctuary he needed while his body went through the healing process, But he could not crawl. He could not move at all. It was difficult to evaluate the bodily damage with so much of his nervous system disconnected, but Mirtin guessed that he had suffered a perpendicular break across his central inner column. His legs and arms seemed to be all right, but there was no motor response in them, which meant that he must have snapped his spine. He could repair that, given enough time. First the bone would have to knit, and then he would have to regenerate the paths of the nerves. It would take, say, two months of local time. His inner, Dirnan, body was basically whole, so all he had to do was recreate his shell. Lying out here on his back in the open, though? In winter? Without food? His body had many special abilities unknown on Earth, but it could not do without food indefinitely. Mirtin estimated that he would starve to death long before he was healed enough to rise and seek food. That was academic, anyway; a week without water would finish him off. He needed shelter and food and water, and in his present state he could get none of those things unaided, which meant that he needed help. Vorneen? Glair? If they were alive, they had problems of their own. Mirtin was unable to activate his communicator, which was mounted on his side just above his hip, and there was no way of signaling them. His only hope was the arrival of some friendly Earthman. And, in this wasteland, Mirtin did not find that very probable. He realized that he was going to die. Not yet, though. He resolved to wait three days, and see what happened. By then, the lack of water would be causing him great distress, and he would have just enough strength left to disconnect the rest of his nervous system and slip into a peaceful death. His corpse would decay swiftly, even in this dry climate, and some day only his empty suit would be discovered. These artificial Earthman bodies were designed to rot in a hurry, bones and all, once the inner spark ofDirnan life was withdrawn; the planners took every pre­caution to keep the watched from learning of the presence of the watchers. Mirtin waited. Morning came, a slow increase of brightness rising out of the gully. He lay patiently. Another morning, and then another, and all would be over. He reviewed his life. He thought of Glair and Vorneen, and how deeply he had loved them. He wondered, in a calm way, whether it had been fruitful to give his life for his world like this. He became aware, eventually, that someone was approach­ing him. Mirtin had not expected that. He was already resigned to lying broken-backed in the desert for his arbitrarily chosen three days, letting the clock run out, and extinguishing him­self. Yet it seemed he would be discovered after all. Though he could not lift his head, he could roll his eyes. In the distance he saw an Earthman and a pet animal corning toward him, though not in any purposeful way. They moved circuitously, the animal leaping and frolicking, the Earthman pausing to hurl stones into the gully. Mirtin debated the proper course to take. A quick death, now, before he was discovered? If any risk existed that he would be brought before authorities, he was bound by oath to destroy himself. But the Earthman looked young. A boy, merely. Mirtin forced himself to think in English, to shift his entire frame of reference. What was the animal? He had forgotten most of what he knew about local mammals. Cat, rat, bat?Dog. Dog. The dog was on his scent, now. A small lean brown creature with a long white-tufted tail, a bristly nose, yellow eyes. Heading this way. Sniffing. Mirtin could see the bony ridges along the dog's back. The boy followed. The black snout was up against his faceplate now. The boy stood over him, eyes wide, mouth agape. Mirtin summoned his knowledge. The boy was in the prepuberty stage, perhaps ten or eleven years old. Black hair, black-brown eyes, light brown skin. A Negro-group member? No. The hair was straight. The lips were thin. The nose was narrow-bridged. Amember of the surviving aborigines of this continent. Does he speak English? Is he malevolent? The mouth no longer gaped. Now it was closed, its corners turning upward. A smile. A sign of friendliness. Mirtin tried to smile too, and was relieved to find that his facial muscles worked. 'Hello,' the boy said. 'Are you hurt?' 'I - Yes. I'm hurt very badly.' The boy knelt beside him. Shining dark eyes peered into his own. The dog, tail wagging, nosed around Mirtin, prod­ding at him. With a quick slap the boy sent the animal away. Mirtin sensed sympathy from the young Earthman. 'Where'd you come from?' the boy whispered. 'You fall out of an airplane?' Mirtin let the awkward question slide past. I need food ... water___' 'Yeah. What should I do, call the chief? They can send a truck out. Take you to the hospital in Albuquerque, maybe.' Mirtin tensed. Hospital? Internal examination? He couldn't risk it. Let an Earthman doctor shine one of their radiation machines through his body and see what was coiled within it, and the game was up. He was pledged to die first. Shaping his words with care, Mirtin said, 'Could you bring me food out here? Something to drink? Help me into that cave, maybe? Just until I'm all right.' There was a long silence. Then - a lucky stab, an intuitive leap, perhaps? - the boy narrowed his mouth and made a whistling sound and said, 'Hey, I know! You fell off the flying saucer!' It was a direct hit, and Mirtin flinched. He hadn't been prepared for anything like that. Automatically he said, 'Fly­ing saucer? No ... No, not a flying saucer. I was riding in a car. There was an accident. 1 was thrown from it.' 'Where's the car, then?' Mirtin's eyes looked toward the gully. 'Down there, I suppose. I don't know. I was unconscious.' 'There isn't any car. You couldn't drive anything in here. Look, you came off that flying saucer, mister. You aren'tfooling me. What planet you from, huh? How come you look so much like Earthpeople there?' Mirtin felt like laughing. There was so much intelligence in the pinched, angular little face, such a keen, skeptical mind behind those shining eyes. He liked the boy tremen­dously. Just a shabby child, who didn't even speak English very well, and yet Mirtin could sense a potential within him, a spark of something. He wished he could be honest with the boy and drop this elaborate facade of lies. Mirtin said, 'Can you bring me food? Something to drink?' 'You mean, bring it to you out here?' 'Yes. If I could just stay in that cave - until I'm well again -' 'But I could get help from the pueblo. We'd take you to a hospital.' 'I don't want to go to a hospital. I just want to stay out here... alone.' Silence for a moment. The boy said, 'You don't look like a jailbird. You aren't running away. So why don't you want the hospital? You in this funny suit. And you talk kind of funny, around the edges. Come on, mister. What planet you from? Mars? Saturn? You can trust me. I don't get along so good with the pueblo, nohow. I help you, you help me. Yeah?' Mirtin saw his opportunity. Why not confide in the boy? After all, he wasn't under any binding oath to keep all Earthmen in ignorance of his extraterrestrial origin. He had to use his judgment about that. He might have more to gain by telling the truth to the smudge-faced boy, and getting help that way, than by maintaining secrecy. Especially if the only alternatives were to die out here or to go to a hospital and have his secret discovered by those most likely to expose it widely. 'Can I trust you?' Mirtin asked. 'You help me, I'll help you. Sure.' 'All right. I baled out of a watcher ship. A saucer. You saw it explode last night?' 'You bet I did!' 'Well, that was me. Us. I landed here. I'm hurt - a broken back. It'll take me a long time to get well. But if you take care of me, and bring me food and water, and don't tell anybody I'm out here, I'll be all right. And then I'll try to help you, anything you want. But you mustn't tell anyone about this.' 'You think anybody would believe me, anyway? A flying saucer man out in the desert? I won't tell.' 'Good. What's your name?' 'Charley Estancia. San Miguel tribe. I got two sisters Lupe and Rosita, and two brothers. They're all dopes. What's your name?' 'Mirtin.' Charley repeated it. 'That's all? Just Mirtin?* 'That's all.' 'What does it mean?' 'It's a coded pattern of sound. It includes information on the place of my birth, the names of the members of my parent-group, and my vocational skills. There's a lot packed into those two syllables.'                                         'So how come you look like an Earthman, Mirtin?' 'It's a disguise. I'm different inside. That's why I don't want to go to a hospital.' 'They'd X-ray you and find out, huh?' 'Right.' 'What are you like inside?' 'You'd say I was plenty strange. I'll try to tell you what I'm like. Later.' 'Will you show me?' 'I can't do that,' said Mirtin. 'My disguise - doesn't come off that easily, Charley. It's part of me. But I'll tell you what's underneath it, when we have time. I'll tell you all about it.' 'You speak English pretty good.' 'I've had a long time to study it. I've been assigned to Earth since - ' he paused, calculating ' - since 1972. Ten years.' 'You speak any other languages? Spanish?' 'Pretty well.' 'What about Tewa? That's my pueblo language. You know that?' 'I'm afraid not,' Mirtin confessed. The boy exploded with laughter. 'That's okay! Because we don't know it so good ourselves. The old people, they think they can say things in Tewa, but they don't really understand each other anymore. They just think so, but they're fooling themselves. It's pretty funny. Hey, you from Saturn? Neptune?' 'I'm from a different solar system,' Mirtin said. 'Far from here. From a planet that goes around another star. You know what a solar system is? And stars and planets? This is a planet right here, this Earth, and there are other -' 'You think I'm a dumb Indian?' Charley Estancia said hotly. Iknow stars and planets. And galaxies and nebulas. The whole deal. I'm no dope. I can read. They got a library truck, it comes around even to a pueblo. Where you from? When the stars come out tonight, point to it.' 'I can't point to anything, Charley. I can't lift my arm. Paralyzed.' 'It's that bad, huh?' 'For now. I'll get better, if you take care of me. But I'll show you where to look, tonight. You can see the three bright stars, right in a row.' 'You mean, Orion's belt?' Pausing, Mirtin considered the constellations as seen from Earth. 'Yes. That's the one.' 'And that's were you from?' 'That's were I'm from. The fifth planet of the star on the eastern end. It's a long way from here.' 'And you came all the way from there in a flying saucer?' Mirtin smiled. 'In a watcher ship, yes. To patrol Earth. And tonight our ship exploded. We got free just in time, and this is where I landed. I don't know about the other two.' The boy was silent, staring at him, the gleaming eyes picking out details of Mirtin's suit, searching Mirtin's faceperhaps for some hint of alienness. At length Charley said, 'I don't know who crazier. You for telling, me for believing.' 'Don't you think it's the truth?' "I don't know. What should I do? Take a knife and cut you open, see what's inside?' I'd rather you didn't' The boy laughed in his explosive way. 'Don't worry, I won't. It all sounds so crazy, though. A flying saucer man dropping right here. Look, you got to tell me what it's like out there, huh? You talk, I listen, then I'll know if it's real. I can tell if you fooling me. I'll get you into that cave, and then you'll talk to me about the stars. I got to know every­thing. I never been away from home, and you're from a planet. You're going to tell me, okay?' 'Okay,' Mirtin said. 'Now we got to get you into that cave, though. Then I'll get you something to eat, drink. The pueblo isn't far. Will it hurt if I help you stand up? You could lean on me.' 'That won't work. My legs are paralyzed too. You'll have to pull me along the ground.' 'Drag you by the arms? With you hurt bad like this? You won't like that. Hey, I got a better idea, Mirtin. I'll put you on a stretcher. It's better that way.' Mirtin watched as the boy leaped up, pulling a hunting knife from a sheath at his side, and began to slash at the nearby vegetation. He cut two slim poles from a scrawny tree, pruned away the branches, and started to hack at the stems of scrubby gray-green plants growing low to the ground. His face was set tight in concentration, lips clamped. The boy's fingers moved rapidly, weaving a network of fibers between the two poles. The sight fascinated Mirtin. It was so primitive, and yet so efficient! After a silent hour of energetic work, the stretcher was done. 'This is gonna hurt,' Charley said. I got to haul you onto that stretcher somehow. Once you're on it it'll be okay, but while I'm hauling you -' 'I can shut off my body,' Mirtin told him. 'I won't feel anything for several minutes. Longer than that and I'll die.' 'Just turn it off? Like a switch?' 'Something like that. When my eyes close, you move fast and get me on the stretcher.' For the first time, Mirtin saw something like genuine awe, even terror, come into the boy's eyes. But only for a moment. It was as though Charley had still half believed it was all a joke, until Mirtin had offered to shut down his central nervous system, and the boy had come to realize that he might actually be in the presence of a genuine extrater­restrial. But the terror passed swiftly. Charley Estancia did not seem to fear him at all. Mirtin knew that he had been amazingly lucky in his discoverer. He and Charley were going to get along fine. 'Whenever you're ready,' Charley said.; 'Now,' said Mirtin. He knocked out the remaining ganglia. Briefly, he felt thin, cold hands grasping his wrists, and then he descended into the darkness of a temporary death.       Five         About midnight Kathryn thought she heard the whimpering of Jill's kitten once again. She rolled over, telling herself it was just a dream, but the sound came again, insistently, and this time Kathryn sat up and listened. Yes, there was something out there. She could hear the soft, high-pitched mewling noise. She was certain the kitten was back. Thank God, thank God, thank God! How happy Jill would be! She sprang from the bed. Her robe lay somewhere on the floor by the foot of the bed; she snatched it up and wriggled into it, belting it tightly. Unsealing the door, neutralizing the house alarm, she stepped outside. A chilly breeze off the desert struck her broadside, cutting through her thin robe and the flimsy nightgown beneath, and she shivered at the icy hand on her flesh. Where was the kitten, now? She did not see it anywhere. But she still heard the soft high-pitched sound. And now it seemed to her that what she heard was less of a meow, more of a moan. Kathryn fought back her impulse to rush inside the house and seal it again. Someone might be hurt out here. An auto accident, maybe. She hadn't heard the sound of a crash, but perhaps she had slept through it. Warily she glanced around, looking at the neighboring house to her left, looking at the open desert to her right. She took a few hesitant steps. She saw the man, sprawled some twenty feet from her front door on a bare patch of sandy soil. He lay on his side, facing her, wearing some kind of high-altitude suit. The faceplate had split, evidently upon impact, and was dangling open. Kathryn saw smears of blood on his lips and cheeks. His eyes were shut. He was moaning steadily, but he was not moving. By his side lay three or four gleaming metal things, tools of some sort, that might have fallen out of pockets in his suit. She thought about that fireball she had seen a few hours before. Only a meteor? Or had it really been an exploding ship, and was this one of the survivors of the disaster? Kathryn rushed toward him. He stirred as she approached, but his eyes remained closed. She crouched by him, ignoring the roughness of the sand against her knees. It was difficult to tell how badly hurt he was. He seemed young - thirtyish - and in pain. And very handsome, Kathryn was surprised and shaken by the intensity of her response to the injured man's good looks. She felt herself in the grip of an instant sexual pull, and that astonished her. In annoyance she clamped her thighs tight together and bent forward to peer at him more closely. Gingerly she nudged the faceplate out of the way. His face was flecked with blood, but she had expected to find him perspiration-soaked as well, and he was not. The bloodstains seemed odd too, Kathryn thought. By the dim starlight it appeared to her that there was a distinct orange tinge to the blood. Imagination? Perhaps. She had seen blood before, in her nursing days, and she had never seen blood like this. I ought to call the police, she told herself. Or get an ambulance, or something. Yet she held back. She did not want to involve the outsideauthorities in this, just now, and she did not know why. Carefully she slipped her hand into the open helmet and touched the injured man's cheek. Feverish. But no perspir­ation? Why was that? She turned one of his eyelids up, and a cool gray eye stared briefly at her. The eye closed when she removed her finger, and the man quivered and grunted. His moans were congealing into words now. Kathryn could not make sense of them. Was he speaking some foreign language, or was this just the delirium of extreme pain? She struggled to catch even a syllable, without success. One sound seemed to flow into another. The wind howled around them. Kathryn looked up, half expecting to find the neighbors watching. But all was still. She was puzzled by her own attitude to this unexpected visitor. Something fiercely protective was welling up within her, something that told her,Take him into your house, nurse him back to health. But that was nonsense. He was a stranger, and she feared and disliked strangers. There were hospitals available. She had no business with this man who had dropped from the sky, this agent of some Communist nation. How could she even consider taking him inside for a moment? She did not understand any of this. But she leaned close, studying the seamless fabric of the man's suit, struggling to learn something of his origin. Idly she picked up the tools that lay beside him. One looked something like a flashlight, with a stud at one end. Casually Kathryn touched the stud, and gasped in shock as a golden beam flicked out and sliced across a limb of a nearby tree. The limb fell to the ground. Kathryn dropped the little metallic tube as though it had burned her. What was it? Some kind of hand-laser? A heat ray? Where does this man come from? She did not touch the other tools. She could not begin to guess their function, but suddenly they seemed incredibly strange and . . . otherworldly. She felt lightheaded. This encounter was becoming unreal. She knew that she had to get him into the house, get that suit off him, and find out what help he needed. It did not seem to her that this man, injured as he was, posed any threat to her or to her sleeping child. Last year in Syria a man had fallen from the skies just as this one had. Her husband, Ted. Had he been alive when he landed? Did anyone help him? Or did they let him lie alone in the desert until all his life had trickled away? Kathryn wondered how she could bring him inside. You weren't supposed to move an injured person at all, of course. But it wasn't far. Could she lift him? She slipped one arm around his shoulders and put the other behind his knees. She didn't intend to pick him up, simply to see how he reacted to being moved. To her be­wilderment, she found him improbably light. Although he was the size of a full-grown man, he seemed to weigh no more than seventy or eighty pounds. Without quite realizing what she was doing, Kathryn rose to her feet, holding him in her arms with effort but without intolerable strain, and moved toward her house. She nudged the door open and carried him within, and, gasping a little, hurried into the bedroom. She set him delicately down on the only convenient place -her bed, the big double bed that she had shared for six years with a husband who now was only a fading memory. The injured man moaned again and spoke rapidly in his strange language, but he did not awaken. Nor did he show any ill effects from having been carried. Good. Good. Kathryn rushed from the room, her heart pounding, her body sud­denly ablaze with bewildering sensations, her mind thick with confusion. What now? Lock and seal the door again, first. Switch on the alarm. And then - She checked