“It’s not the thought of an amputation that worries me,” interrupted Cletus. “I’ve got things to do that require two flesh and blood legs. I want a surgical replacement.”
“I know,” answered the doctor. “But you remember we ran tests on you and you’ve got an absolute level of rejection. All the evidence is that it’s a case of psychological, not physiological, rejection. If that’s the case, all the immune-supressant drugs on the list can’t help you. We can graft the leg on but your body’s sure to reject it.”
“You’re sure it’s a case of psychological rejection?” said Cletus.
“Your medical history shows you have a uniformally successful resistance to hypnosis, even under ordinary drugs,” the doctor answered. “We find that kind of resistance almost always in people who exhibit psychological rejection of grafted organs, and whenever it’s found we always—without exception—have psychological rejection. But just to put it to the test, I’ve brought along one of the new synthetic parahypnotic drugs. It leaves you conscious up to safe levels of dosage, but it absolutely anesthetizes volition. If you can resist hypnosis with that in you, then the resistance is below the levels even psychiatry can reach. It’s probably a genetic matter. Do you want to try it?”
“Go ahead,” said Cletus.
The doctor fastened the band of a hypnospray around Cletus’ forearm, with the metered barrel of the drug poised above a large artery. The level of the liquid in the barrel of the spray was visible. Resting his thumb and little finger on Cletus’ arm on either side of the band, the doctor placed the top of his forefinger on the spray button.
“I’ll keep asking you your name,” he said. “Try not to tell me what it is. As you continue to refuse, I’ll keep stepping up the dosage level. Ready?”
“Ready,” said Cletus.
“What’s your name?” asked the doctor. Cletus felt the cool breath of the hypnospray against the skin of his forearm.
Cletus shook his head.
“Tell me your name?” repeated the doctor.
Cletus shook his head. The cool feeling of the spray continued. Slightly to his surprise, Cletus felt no light-headedness or any other indication that the drug was working on him.
“Tell me your name.”
“No.”
“Tell me your name … “
The questioning continued and Clerus continued to refuse. Abruptly, without warning, the room seemed filled with a white mist. His head whirled, and that was the last he remembered.
He drifted back into a weariness, to find the doctor standing over his bed. The hypnospray was unstrapped from his arm.
“No,” said the doctor, and sighed. “You resisted right up to the point of unconsciousness. There’s simply no point in trying a transplant.”
Cletus gazed at him almost coldly. “In that case,” he said, “will you tell Mondar the Exotic Outbond that I’d like to talk to him?”
The doctor opened his mouth as if to say something, closed it again, nodded and left.
A nurse came to the door. “General Traynor is here to see you, Colonel,” she said. “Do you feel up to seeing him?”
“Certainly,” said Cletus. He pressed the button on the side of the bed that raised the head section, lifting him up into a sitting position. Bat came in the door and stood beside the bed looking down at him; his face was like a stone mask.
“Sit down, sir,” Cletus said.
“I’m not going to be here that long,” said Bat.
He turned about to close the door of the room. Then he turned back to glare down at Cletus.
“I’ve just got two things to tell you,” he said. “When I finally smashed the door open on the arms locker in your office and got a gun to shoot the hinges off the door, it was Sunday afternoon, so I made sure I got secretly out of town and phoned Colonel Dupleine quietly, before I made any fuss. You’ll be glad to hear, then, there isn’t going to be any fuss. Officially, I had a slight accident Friday afternoon a little ways outside of Bakhalla. My car went off the road. I was knocked unconscious and pinned in it. I wasn’t able to get out until Sunday. Also, officially, what you did up at Two Rivers in capturing those Neulanders was done at my orders.”
“Thank you, sir,” said Cletus.
“Don’t butter me up!” snarled Bat, softly. “You knew I was too bright to go around raising hell about your putting me out of the way until I’d found out what the score was. You knew I was going to do what I did. So let’s not play games. You locked me up and nobody’s ever going to know about it. But you captured two-thirds of the Neuland armed forces and I’m the one who’s going to get most of the credit back in Geneva. That’s the way things stand, and that’s one of the two things I came to tell you.” Cletus nodded.
“The other thing’s this,” Bat said. “What you pulled off up there at Two Rivers was one hell of a piece of fine generalship. I can admire it. But I don’t have to admire you. I don’t like the way you work, Grahame, and I don’t need you—and the Alliance doesn’t need you. The second thing I came to tell you is this—I want your resignation. I want it on my desk inside of forty-eight hours. You can go back home and write books as a civilian.”
Cletus looked at him quietly. “I’ve already submitted my resignation from the Alliance Military Service,” he said. “I’m also giving up my citizenship as an Earth citizen. I’ve already made application for citizenship on the Dorsai, and it’s been accepted.”
Bat’s eyebrows rose. For once his hard, competent face looked almost foolish. “You’re skipping out on the Alliance?” he asked.
“Completely?”
“I’m emigrating, that’s all,” said Cletus. He smiled a little at Bat. “Don’t worry, General. I’ve no more interest in making public the fact that you were locked in my office over part of the weekend than you have. We’ll assume a Neulander spy got into the office, found himself trapped and managed to break his way out.”
Their eyes met. After a second, Bat shook his head. “Anyway,” he said. “We won’t be seeing each other again.”
He turned and left. Cletus lay gazing at the ceiling until he fell asleep.
Mondar did not show up until the following afternoon; he apologized for not coming sooner.
“The message saying that you wanted to see me was sent through the regular mail,” he said, sitting down in a chair at Cletus’ bedside. “Evidently your good physician didn’t see any urgency in your asking for me.”
“No,” said Cletus, “it’s outside his area of knowledge.”
“I think he assumed I’d have to tell you that I—or we Exotics, that is—couldn’t help you either,” said Mondar, slowly. “I’m afraid he may have been right. I called the hospital after I got your message and talked to someone I know on the staff here. I was told you’ve got a problem of almost certain psychological rejection of any organ graft”
“That’s right,” said Cletus.
“He said you thought that perhaps I—or perhaps some other Exotic, working with you, could succeed in overcoming such a psychological reaction long enough for a healthy leg to be grafted on you.”
“It’s not possible?” Cletus watched the Exotic closely as he spoke.
Mondar looked down and smoothed the blue robe covering his crossed knees. Then he looked back up at Cletus.
“It’s not impossible,” he said. “It’d be possible in the case, say, of someone like myself, who’s trained in the areas of mental and physical self-control since he was a boy. I can ignore pain, or even consciously will my heart to stop beating, if I wish. I could also, if necessary, suppress my immune reactions—even if they included the kind of psychological rejection that afflicts you … Cletus, you’ve got a tremendous amount of native talent, but you haven’t had my years of training. Even with my assistance you wouldn’t be able to control the rejection mechanism in your body.”
“You’re not the only one who can ignore pain,” said Cletus. “I can do that too, you know.”
“Can you?” Mondar looked interested. “Of course, come to think of it. Both after your first time up at fitter’s Pass, and this last time at Two Rivers when you damaged the knee again, you did a good deal of moving around on it when ordinarily such movement should have been unendurable.”
His eyes narrowed a little, thoughtfully. “Tell me—do you deny the pain—I mean do you refuse to admit the pain is there? Or do you ignore it—that is you remain conscious that the sensation is there but you don’t allow the sensation to affect you?”
“I ignore it,” answered Cletus. “I start out by relaxing to the point where I feel a little bit as though I’m floating. Just that much relaxation takes a lot of the sting out of the pain. Then I move in on what’s left and more or less take the color out of it. What I’m left with is a little like a feeling of pressure. I can tell if it increases or decreases, or if it goes away entirely, but I’m not bothered by it in any way.”
Mondar nodded slowly. “Very good. In fact, unusually good for self-trained,” he said. “Tell me, can you control your dreams?”
“To a certain extent,” said Cletus. “I can set up a mental problem before falling asleep, and work it out while I’m asleep—sometimes in the shape of a dream. I can also work out problems the same way while I’m awake by throwing a certain section of my mind out of gear, so to speak, and letting the rest of my body and mind run on automatic pilot.”
Mondar gazed at him. Then he shook his head. But it was an admiring shake.
“You amaze me, Cletus,” the Exotic said. “Would you try something for me? Look at that wall just to your left there, and tell me what you see.”
Cletus turned his head away from Mondar and gazed at the flat, vertical expanse of white-painted wall. There was a small prickling sensation at the side of his neck just behind and below his right ear—followed by a sudden explosion of pain from the site of the prick, like the pain from the venom of a bee sting following the initial puncture. Cletus breathed out calmly; as the breath left his lungs, a crimson violence of the pain was washed clean and unimportant. He turned back to Mondar.
“I didn’t see anything,” he said, “of course.”
“Of course. It was only a trick to get you to turn your head away,” said Mondar, putting what looked like a miniature mechanical pencil back in his robes. “The amazing thing is, I wasn’t able to measure any skin flinch, and that’s a physiological reaction. Clearly your body hasn’t much doubt about your ability to handle pain quickly.”
He hesitated. “All right, Cletus,” he said. “I’ll work with you. But it’s only fair to warn you that I still don’t see any real chance of success. How soon do you want the transplant done?”
“I don’t want it done,” said Cletus. “I think you’re probably quite right about the impossibility of suppressing my rejection mechanism. So we’ll do something else. As long as it’s a long shot anyway, let’s try for a miracle cure.”
“Miracle … ” Mondar echoed the word slowly.
“Why not?” said Cletus cheerfully. “Miracle cures have been reported down through the ages. Suppose I undergo a purely symbolic operation. There’s both flesh and bone missing from my left knee where the prosthetic unit was surgically implanted after I was first wounded years ago. I want that surgical implant taken out and some small, purely token portions of the flesh and bone from equivalent areas of my right knee transplanted into the area where the original flesh and bone is missing in the left. Then we cover both knees up with a cast”—his eyes met Mondar’s—“and you and I concentrate hard while healing takes place.”
Mondar sat for a second. Then he stood up.
“Anything is eventually possible,” he murmured. “I’ve already said I’d help you. But this is something that’s going to require some thought, and some consultation with my fellow Exotics. I’ll come back to see you in a day or two.”
The next morning Cletus had a visit from both Eachan Khan and Melissa. Eachan came in first, alone. He sat stiffly in the chair beside Cletus’ bed. Cletus, propped up in a sitting position gazed at the older man keenly.
“Understand they’re going to try to do something to fix that knee of yours,” Eachan said.
“I twisted some arms,” answered Cletus, smiling.
“Yes. Well, good luck.” Eachan looked away, out the window of the room for a moment, and then back at Cletus. “Thought I’d bring you the good wishes of our men and officers,” he said. “You promised them a victory almost without a casualty—and then you delivered it.”
“I promised a battle,” Cletus corrected, gently. “And I was hoping we wouldn’t have much in the way of casualties. Besides, they deserve a good deal of credit themselves for the way they executed their battle orders.”
“Nonsense!” said Eachan brusquely. He cleared his throat. “They all know you’re emigrating to the Dorsai. All very happy about it. Incidentally, seems you started a small rash of emigrations. That young lieutenant of yours is coming over as soon as his shoulder heals up.”
“You accepted him, didn’t you?” Cletus asked.
“Oh, of course,” Eachan said. “The Dorsai’ll accept any military man with a good record. He’ll have to pass through our officers school, of course, if he wants to keep his commission with us, though. Marc Dodds told him there was no guarantee he’d make it.”
“He will,” said Cletus. “Incidentally, I’d like your opinion on something—now that I’m a Dorsai myself. If I supply the funds for subsistence, training facilities and equipment, do you suppose you could get together a regiment-sized body of officers and men who would be willing to invest six months in a complete retraining program—if I could guarantee them that at the end of that time they’d be able to find employment at half again their present pay?”
Eachan stared. “Six months is a long time for a professional soldier to live on subsistence,” he said, after a moment. “But after Two Rivers, I think it just might be done. It’s not just the hope of better pay, much as that means to a lot of these people who’ve got families back on the Dorsai. It’s the better chance of staying alive to get back to the families that you might be able to give them. Want me to see about it?”
“I’d appreciate it,” said Cletus. “All right,” said Eachan. “But where’s the money to come from for all this?”
Cletus smiled. “I’ve got some people in mind,” he said. “I’ll let you know about that later. You can tell the officers and the men you contact that it’s all conditional on my having the funds, of course.”
“Of course.” Eachan fingered his mustache. “Melly’s outside.”
“Is she?” asked Cletus.
“Yes. I asked her to wait while I had a word with you on some private matters first, before she came in … ” Eachan hesitated. Cletus waited.
Eachan’s back was as stiffly upright as a surveyor’s rod. His jaw was clamped and the akin of his face was like stamped metal.
“Why don’t you marry her?” he said, gruffly.
“Eachan … ” Cletus checked himself and paused. “What makes you think Melissa would want to marry me, anyway?”
“She likes you,” said Eachan. “You like her. You’d make a good team. She’s mostly heart and you’re nearly all head. I know you both better than you know each other.”
Cletus shook his head slowly, for once finding no words ready to his tongue.
“Oh, I know she acts as if she knows all the answers when she doesn’t, and acts like she wants to run my life, and yours, and everybody else’s for them,” went on Eachan. “But she can’t help it. She does feel for people, you know—I mean, feel for what they’re actually like, at core. Like her mother in that. And she’s young. She feels something’s so about someone and can’t see why they don’t do exactly what she thinks they ought to do, being who they really are. But she’ll learn.”
Cletus shook his head again. “And me?” he said. “What makes you think I’d learn?”
“Try it. Find out,” retorted Eachan.
“And what if I made a mess of it?” Cletus looked up at him with more than a touch of grimness.
“Then at least you’ll have saved her from deCastries,” said Eachan, bluntly. “She’ll go to him to make me follow her—to Earth. I will, too, to pick up the pieces. Because that’s all that’ll be left of her afterward—pieces. With some women it wouldn’t matter, but I know my Melly. Do you want deCastries to have her?”
“No,” said Cletus, suddenly quiet. “And he won’t. I can promise you that, anyway.”
“Maybe,” said Eachan, getting to his feet. He swung about on his heel. “I’ll send her in now,” he said, and went out.
A moment or two later, Melissa appeared in the doorway. She smiled wholeheartedly at Cletus and came in to seat herself in the same chair Eachan had just vacated.
“They’re going to fix your knee,” she said. “I’m glad.”
He watched her smile. And for a second there was an actual physical sensation in his chest, as though his heart had actually moved at the sight of her. For a second what Eachan had said trembled in his ears, and the guarded distance that life and people had taught him to keep about him threatened to dissolve.
“So am I,” he heard himself saying.
“I was talking to Arvid today … ” Her voice ran down. He saw her blue eyes locked with his, as if hypnotized and he became aware that he had captured her with his own relentless stare.
“Melissa,” he said slowly, “what would you say if I asked you to marry me?”
“Please … ” It was barely a whisper. He shifted his gaze, releasing her; she turned her head away.
“You know I’ve got Dad to think about, Cletus,” she said, in a low voice.
“Yes,” he said. “Of course.”
She looked back, suddenly, flashing her smile at him, and put a hand on one of his hands, where it lay on the sheet.
“But I wanted to talk to you about all sorts of other things,” she said. “You really are a remarkable man, you know.”
“I am, am I?” he said, and summoned up a smile.
“You know you are,” she said. “You’ve done everything just the way you said you would. You’ve won the war for Bakhalla, and done it all in just a few weeks with no one’s help but the Dorsai troops. And now you’re going to be a Dorsai yourself. There’s nothing to stop you from writing your books now. It’s all over.” Pain touched his inner self—and the guarded distance closed back around him. He was once more alone among people who did not understand.
“I’m afraid not,” he said. “It’s not over. Only the first act’s finished. Actually, now it really begins.”
She stared at him. “Begins?” she echoed. “But Dow’s going back to Earth tonight. He won’t be coming out here again.”
“I’m afraid he will,” said Cletus.
“He will? Why should he?”
“Because he’s an ambitious man,” said Cletus, “and because I’m going to show him how to further that ambition.”
“Ambition!” Her voice rang with disbelief. “He’s already one of the five Prime Secretaries of the Coalition Supreme Council. It’s only a year or two, inevitably, until he’ll get a seat on the Council itself. What else could he want? Look at what he’s got already!”
“You don’t quench ambition by feeding it any more than you quench a fire the same way,” said Cletus. “To an ambitious man, what he already has is nothing. It’s what he doesn’t have that counts.”
“But what doesn’t he have?” She was genuinely perplexed.
“Everything,” said Cletus. “A united Earth, under him, controlling all the Outworlds, again under him.”
She stared at him. “The Alliance and the Coalition combine?” she said. “But that’s impossible. No one knows that better than Dow.”
“I’m planning to prove to him it is possible,” said Cletus.
A little flush of anger colored her cheeks. “You’re planning—” She broke off. “You must think I’m some kind of a fool, to sit and listen to this!”
“No,” he said, a little sadly, “no more than anyone else. I’d just hoped that for once you’d take me on faith.”
“Take you on faith!” Suddenly, almost to her own surprise, she was blindingly furious. “I was right when I first met you and I said you’re just like Dad. Everybody thinks he’s all leather and guns and nothing else, and the truth of the matter is, those things don’t matter to him at all. Nearly everybody thinks you’re all cold metal and calculation and no nerves. Well, let me tell you something—you don’t fool everybody. You don’t fool Dad, and you don’t fool Arvid. Most of all, you don’t fool me! It’s people you care about, just like it’s tradition Dad cares about—the tradition of honor and courage and truth and all those things nobody thinks we have any more. That’s what they took away from him, back on Earth, and that’s what I’m going to get back for him, when I get him back there, if I have to do it by main force—because he’s just like you. He has to be made to take care of himself and get what he really wants.”
“Did you ever stop to think,” said Cletus, quietly, when she finished, “that perhaps he’s found tradition all over again on the Dorsai?”
“Tradition? The Dorsai?” Scorn put a jagged edge on her voice. “A world full of a collection of ex-soldiers gambling their lives in other people’s little wars for hardly more pay than a tool programmer gets! You can find tradition in that?”
“Tradition to come,” said Cletus. “I think Eachan sees into the future further than you do, Melissa.”
“What do I care about the future?” She was on her feet now, looking down at him where he lay in the bed. “I want him happy. He can take care of anyone but himself. I have to take care of him. When I was a little girl and my mother died she asked me—me—to be sure and take care of him. And I will.”
She whirled about and went toward the door. “And he’s all I’m going to take care of,” she cried, stopping and turning again at the door. “If you think I’m going to take care of you, too, you’ve got another think coming! So go ahead, gamble yourself twice over on some high principle or another, when you could be settling down and doing some real good, writing and working, person to person, the way you’re built to do!”
She went out. The door was too well engineered to slam behind her, but that was all that saved it from slamming.
Cletus lay back against his pillows and gazed at the empty, white and unresponsive wall opposite. The hospital room felt emptier than it had ever felt before.
He had still one more visitor, however, before the day was out. This was Dow deCastries, preceded into Cletus’ hospital room by Wefer Linet.
“Look who I’ve got with me, Cletus!” said Wefer, cheerfully. “I ran into the secretary here at the Officers’ Club, where he was having lunch with some of the Exotics, and he told me to bring you his congratulations for abstract military excellence—as opposed to anything affecting the Neuland-Bakhalla situation. I asked him why he didn’t come along and give you the congratulations himself. And here he is!”
He stepped aside and back, letting Dow come forward. Behind the taller man’s back Wefer winked broadly at Cletus. “Got to run an errand here in the hospital,” said Wefer. “Back in a minute.”
He ducked out of the room, closing the door behind him. Dow looked at Cletus.
“Did you have to use Wefer as an excuse?” Cletus asked.
“He was convenient.” Dow shrugged, dismissing the matter. “My congratulations, of course.”
“Of course,” said Cletus. “Thank you. Sit down, why don’t you?”
“I prefer standing,” said Dow. “They tell me you’re going off to bury yourself on the Dorsai now. You’ll be getting down to the writing of your books then?”
“Not just yet,” said Cletus.
Dow raised his eyebrows. “There’s something else for you to do?”
“There’re half a dozen worlds and a few billion people to be freed first,” said Cletus.
“Free them?” Dow smiled. “From the Coalition?”
“From Earth.”
Dow shook his head. His smile became ironic. “I wish you luck,” he said. “All this, in order to write a few volumes?”
Cletus said nothing. He sat upright in his bed, as if waiting. Dow’s smile went away.
“You’re quite right,” Dow said, in a different tone, though Cletus still had not spoken. “Time is growing short, and I’m headed back to Earth this afternoon. Perhaps I’ll see you there—say in six months?”
“I’m afraid not,” said Cletus. “But I expect I’ll see you out here—among the new worlds. Say, inside two years?”
Dow’s black eyes grew cold. “You badly misunderstand me, Cletus,” he said. “I was never built to be a follower.”
“Neither was I,” said Cletus.
“Yes,” said Dow, slowly, “I see. We probably will meet after all then”—his smile returned, suddenly and thinly—“at Phillippi.”
“There never was any other place we could meet,” said Cletus.
“I believe you’re right. Fair enough,” said Dow. He stepped backward and opened the door. “I’ll wish you a good recovery with that leg of yours.”
“And you, a safe trip to Earth,” said Cletus.
Dow turned and went out. Several minutes later the door opened again and Wefer’s head appeared in the opening.
“DeCastries gone?” Wefer asked. “He didn’t talk long at all then.”
“We said what we had to say,” answered Cletus. “There wasn’t much point in his staying, once we’d done that.”