Saturday, August 24, 2013

The Conjuring

The Conjuring is a 2013 American supernatural horror film directed by James Wan.[4] The film, starring Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson as Ed and Lorraine Warren, is based on a true story,[5] and follows paranormal investigators who come to the assistance of the Perron family (Ron Livingston and Lili Taylor), who are experiencing increasingly disturbing events in their farmhouse in Harrisville, Rhode Island in 1971.[6]
The Conjuring was released in the United States and Canada on July 19, 2013, and in the United Kingdom and India on August 2, 2013.

In 1971, Carolyn and Roger Perron move into a dilapidated old farmhouse in Harrisville, Rhode Island with their five daughters. During the first day, the family moves in smoothly, though their dog, Sadie, refuses to enter the house and one of the daughters finds a boarded up entrance to a cellar.
The next morning, Carolyn wakes up with a mysterious bruise and to find Sadie lying dead outside the house. Over the next several days, various instances of paranormal activity occur. The activity culminates one night while Roger is away in Florida, as Carolyn is locked in the cellar while a spirit that looks like an elderly woman attacks one of her daughters.
Carolyn contacts noted paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren for help. The Warrens conduct an initial investigation and conclude that the house may require an exorcism, though this cannot be done without further evidence and authorization from the Catholic Church.
While researching the house's history, Ed and Lorraine discover that the house once belonged to an accused witch, Bathsheba, who tried to sacrifice her children to the devil and killed herself after cursing all who would take her land. The property was once 200+ acres but has since been divided up into smaller parcels. They find reports of numerous murders and suicides in houses that have since been built upon parcels that were once part of the property.
Ed and Lorraine return to the house in an attempt to gather evidence to receive authorization for an exorcism. One of the daughters, Cindy sleepwalks into her sister's room and reveals a secret passage behind a wardrobe. Lorraine enters the passage and falls through the floorboards into the cellar, where she sees the spirits of people whom Bathsheba has possessed. All are mothers whom Bathsheba used to kill their children. Another of the Perron children is violently attacked and dragged along the floor by an unseen force.
Lorraine and Ed take their evidence to the Church to organize an exorcism while the Perron family takes refuge at a hotel. Ed and Lorraine's daughter is attacked in their own home by the spirits from the Perron house.
Carolyn, who was earlier possessed by the spirit of Bathsheba, takes two of her daughters, Christine and April, and drives back to the house. Ed, Lorraine, two of their assistants and Roger rush to the house where they find Carolyn trying to stab Christine. After subduing Carolyn, Ed decides to perform the exorcism himself, though Carolyn escapes and again attempts to kill her other daughter, April. Lorraine is able to temporarily distract the possessed Carolyn from killing her daughter by reminding her of a special memory she shared with her family, allowing Ed to complete the exorcism, saving Carolyn and her daughter.

Friday, August 16, 2013

The Songs of Distance Earth

Beneath the trees Lora waited, watching the sea. She could just see Clyde's boat on the horizon,
and soon it grew bigger and bigger as it came quickly over the calm blue water towards her.
`Where are you, Lora?' Clyde's voice asked crossly from the wrist radio he had given her when she
agreed to marry him. `Come and help me − we've got a lot of fish to bring home.'
So! Lora thought; that's why he asked me to hurry down to the beach. To punish him a little, she
did not reply to his repeated calls on the radio, but when his boat arrived, she came out from the
shadows under the great trees and walked slowly down the beach to meet him.
Clyde jumped out, smiling, and gave Lora a big kiss. Together, they began to empty the boat of its
many kilos of fish. They were not true fish, of course; in the sea of this young planet it would be a
hundred million years before nature made real fish. But they were good enough to eat, and they were
called by the old names that the first colonists had brought with them from Earth.
Soon Clyde and Lora were driving the catch home, but they had made only half the short journey
when the simple, carefree world they had known all their young lives came suddenly to its end.
High above them, they heard a sound their world had not known for centuries − the thin scream of
a starship coming in from outer space, leaving a long white tail like smoke across the clear blue sky.
Clyde and Lora looked at each other in wonder. After three hundred years of silence, Earth had
reached out once more to touch Thalassa . . .
Why? Lora asked herself. What had happened, after all these years, to bring a starship from Earth
to this quiet, peaceful world? There was no room for more colonists here on Thalassa, and Earth knew
that well enough. It was a young planet − still only a single large island in a huge, encircling sea. In time
new land would rise up out of the sea, but not for many millions of years.
When the first colonists came to Thalassa, they had worked hard to make a new life − making
farms and growing food, building towns and factories. In later years, with rich farming land and seas
full of fish, the colonists' descendants enjoyed an easy, comfortable life. They worked as much as
necessary (but no more), happy to dream fondly of Earth, and to let the future take care of itself.
When Lora and Clyde arrived back at the village, there was great excitement. The starship, people
said, seemed to be coming in to land, and it would probably come down in the hills where the first
colonists had landed.
Soon everybody who could find a bicycle or a car was moving out of the village on the road to the
west. Lora's father, who was the Mayor of Palm Bay village with its 572 people, proudly led the way,
silently repeating to himself suitable words of welcome for the visitors.
The ship came in silently, with no sound of engines, and landed softly on the green grass. It looked,
thought Lora, like a great silver egg, waiting to bring something new and strange into the peaceful world
of Thalassa.
`It's so small!' someone whispered behind her. `Did they come from Earth in that thing?'
`Of course not,' someone whispered back. `That's only a little space bus. The real starship's up
there in space−'
`Sshh! They're coming out!'
One moment the sides of the silver egg were smooth and unbroken; and then, a second later, there
was a round doorway, with steps coming down to the ground. Then the visitors appeared, shading their
eyes against the bright light of a new sun. There were seven of them − all men − tall and thin, with
white faces.
They came down to the ground and Lora's father stepped forward. Words of welcome were spoken,
hands were shaken, but Lora saw and heard none of it, because in that moment, she saw Leon for the
first time.
He came out of the ship a little after the other seven − a man with deep, dark eyes in a strong face,
eyes that had looked on sights that Lora could not even imagine. He was not handsome, and his face
looked serious, even worried, but Lora knew a feeling of both fear and wonder, a feeling that her life would never be the same again.
He looked around the crowd and saw Lora. Their eyes locked together, bridging time and space
and experience. The worry slowly disappeared from Leon's face; and presently, he smiled.
* * *
It was late evening by the time all the welcoming parties had finished. Leon was very tired, but he
could not sleep; his mind was still too busy with the problems of the starship. After the worry of the last
few weeks, when he and the other engineers had been woken by the scream of alarm bells and had
fought to save the wounded starship, it was hard to realize that they were safe at last. What luck that this
planet had been so close! Now they could probably repair the ship and complete the two centuries of
travelling that still lay before them. And if not, they would be able to find a new home here, among
people of their own kind.
The night was cool and calm, and the sky bright with unknown stars. Still too restless to sleep,
Leon left the simple resthouse that had been prepared for the visitors and walked out into the single
street of Palm Bay. The villagers all seemed to be in bed and asleep, which suited Leon, who wanted
only to be left alone until he felt ready to sleep.
In the quietness of the night he could hear the soft whisper of the sea, and he left the street and
turned his steps towards the beach. Soon he was under the dark shadows of trees, but the smaller of
Thalassa's two moons was high in the south and its thin yellow light was enough to show him the way.
He came out from the trees on to the beach and stood looking at the fishing boats along the water's edge.
For a moment he wished he was not a starship engineer, but could enjoy the simple, peaceful life of a
fisherman on this quiet planet.
He put the dream quickly out of his mind and began to walk along by the sea's edge, and as he
walked, Selene, the second moon, rose above the horizon, filling the beach with golden light.
And in that sudden brightness, Leon saw that he was not alone.
The girl was sitting on one of the boats, about fifty metres further along the beach, and staring out
to sea. Leon hesitated. She was probably waiting for someone; perhaps he should turn quietly back to
the village.
He had decided too late, because then the girl looked up and saw him. Unhurriedly, she rose to her
feet, and Leon walked slowly on towards her. He stopped a few metres away from her and smiled.
`Hello,' he said. `I was just taking a late walk − I hope I haven't frightened you.'
`Of course not,' Lora answered, trying to keep her voice calm and expressionless. She could not
really believe that she was doing this − meeting a complete stranger on a lonely beach at night. All day
she had been unable to put the young engineer out of her mind. She had found out his name, had
watched and planned, and hurried to the beach ahead of him when she saw him leave the resthouse and
walk towards the trees. Now she felt suddenly afraid, but it was too late to turn back.
Leon began to speak again, then stopped, suddenly recognizing her and realizing what she was
doing here. This was the girl who had smiled at him when he came out of the ship − no, that was not
right; he had smiled at her . . .
They stared at each other wordlessly, wondering what strange chance of time and space had
brought them together.
This is crazy, Leon told himself. What am I doing here? I should apologize and go − and leave this
girl to the peaceful world that she has always known.
But he did not leave. `What's your name?' he said. `I'm Lora,' she answered, in the soft voice of the
islanders.
`And I'm Leon Carrell, Assistant Rocket Engineer, Starship Magellan.'
She smiled a little and he saw at once that she already knew his name. Then she spoke again:
`How long do you think you will be here, on Thalassa?'
`I'm not sure,' he replied, truthfully enough. He could see that his answer was important to her. `It
depends how long it takes to do our repairs. We have to make a new starship shield, you see, as the old
one was destroyed when something big hit us out in space.'
`And you think you can make a new one here?'
`We hope so. The main problem is how to lift about a million tonnes of water up to the Magellan.'
`Water?' Lora looked puzzled. `I don't understand.'
`Well, you know that a starship travels through space at almost the speed of light. Unfortunately,
space is full of bits and pieces of rock and other things, and at that speed anything that hits us would
burn up the ship immediately. So we carry a shield about a kilometre ahead of us, and let that get burned
up instead.'
`And you can make a new one out of water?'
`Yes. It's the cheapest building material in the universe. We freeze it into a huge piece of ice that
travels ahead of us. What could be simpler than that?'
Lora did not answer, and seemed to be thinking of something else. Presently she said, a little sadly:
`And you left Earth a hundred years ago.'
`A hundred and four. It seems like only a few weeks because we were deep−sleeping until the
alarms woke us engineers. The ship is flown by automatic controls, of course, and all the other colonists
are still in suspended animation. They don't know that anything has happened.'
`And soon you'll join them again, and sleep your way on to the stars for another two hundred years.'
`That's right,' said Leon, not looking at her.
Lora looked round at the island behind them. `It's strange to think that your sleeping friends up
there will never know anything of all this. I feel sorry for them.'
`Yes, only we fifty engineers will remember Thalassa.' He looked at Lora's face and saw sadness in
her eyes. `Why does that make you unhappy?'
Lora shook her head, unable to answer. She felt a great loneliness, a horror at the huge emptiness
of space and that three−hundred−year journey through the emptiness. Suddenly she wanted to be at
home, in her own room, in the world she knew and understood. She wished she had never come on this
mad adventure − and she thought of Clyde, and felt ashamed.
`What's the matter?' asked Leon. `Are you cold?' He held out his hand to her and their fingers
touched, but she pulled her hand away at once.
`It's late,' she said, almost angrily. `I must go home. Goodbye.'
She turned and walked quickly away, leaving Leon staring after her, puzzled and a little hurt. What
had he said to annoy her? Then he called after her:
`Will I see you again?'
If she answered, the words were lost in the noise of the sea, but Leon knew, as surely as the sun
would rise tomorrow, that they would meet again.

* * * * * * * ** * *

The life of the island now centred around the huge wounded starship two thousand kilometres out
in space. In the early morning and late evening, the Magellan could be seen as a bright star in the sky
above. And even when it could not be seen, people were thinking and talking about it. It was the most
exciting thing that had happened to Thalassa in centuries.
The starship's engineers seemed to be busy all the time, hurrying around the island, digging deep
holes in the ground to study the rocks, using strange scientific tools that the islanders had never seen
before. Most people, in fact, had no idea at all what the engineers were doing, and the engineers,
although friendly, had no time to explain.
It was two days before Lora spoke to Leon again. From time to time she saw him as he hurried
around the village, but they were only able to smile at each other in passing. But this was enough to make Lora's heart beat wildly, and to make her sharp and unfriendly with Clyde. She had been so sure
that she loved Clyde, and would marry him. Now she was not sure of anything, except her desperate,
burning wish to be with Leon every minute of the day. Why this had happened to her, she did not know.
She knew only that she had fallen in love with a man who had come into her life from nowhere, and
who must leave again in a few weeks.
By the end of the first day, only her family knew about her feelings; by the end of the second day,
everyone she passed gave her a knowing smile. It was impossible in a small place like Palm Bay to keep
anything secret.
Her second meeting with Leon was in the Mayor's office. Lora was helping her father with the
paperwork that the Earthmen's visit had caused when the door opened and Leon walked in, asking to see
the Mayor. Lora's younger sister hurried away to fetch him, and Leon sat tiredly down in a chair by the
door. Then he saw Lora watching him silently from the other side of the room, and jumped to his feet.
`Hello − I didn't know you worked here.'
`I live here. My father's the Mayor.'
Leon walked over to her desk and picked up a book that was lying there. He said something about
it and Lora replied politely, but there were unspoken questions in her mind. When can we meet again?
And does he really like me, or is he just making polite conversation?
Then the Mayor hurried in to see his visitor, who had brought a message from the starship's
captain. Lora pretended to work but she understood not one word of the papers she was reading.
When Leon had left, the Mayor walked over to his daughter and picked up some of the papers on
her desk.
`He seems a nice young man,' he said, `but is it a good idea to get too fond of him?'
`I don't know what you mean,' said Lora.
`Now, Lora! I am your father, and I do have eyes in my head, you know.'
`He's not' − and here Lora's voice shook a little − `a bit interested in me.'
`Are you interested in him?'
`I don't know. Oh, Daddy, I'm so unhappy!'
The Mayor was not a brave man, so there was only one thing he could do. He gave Lora his
handkerchief, and ran back into his office.


* * * * ** * *

It was the most difficult problem that Clyde had ever had in his life. Lora belonged to him −
everyone knew that. With another villager, or a man from any other part of Thalassa, Clyde knew
exactly what he would do. And because Clyde was a tall, strong young man, there had never been any
trouble at those other times when he had politely advised the man to leave his girl alone. But Leon was
an Earthman, an important visitor. It was not easy to offer that kind of advice to him, however politely.
During his long hours at sea, Clyde played with the idea of a short, sharp fight with Leon. But he
knew that he was stronger than the Earthman, so it wouldn't be a fair fight.
And anyway, was he really sure that he had a reason to fight Leon? It was true that Leon seemed to
be at the Mayor's house every time that Clyde called, but that could mean everything − or nothing.
Jealousy was new to Clyde, and he did not like it at all.
He was still very angry indeed about the dance. It had been the biggest, grandest party for years −
with the President of Thalassa, all the important people on the island, and fifty visitors from Earth, all at
the same time.
Clyde was a good dancer, but he had little chance to show it that night. Leon had been showing
everyone the latest dances from Earth (well, from a hundred years before, anyway) and in Clyde's
opinion the dances were ugly and Leon was an awful dancer. He had been foolish enough to tell Lora
that during one of their few dances together, and that had been his last dance with Lora that evening.
From that moment on Lora neither looked at nor spoke to him, and Clyde had soon gone off to the bar to
get drunk as quickly as possible. In this he was successful, and it was only the next morning that he
learnt what he had missed.
The dancing had ended early. Then the President introduced the captain of the starship, who, he
said, had a little surprise for everyone.
Captain Gold spoke for a short while first. He wanted, he said, to thank Thalassa for its warm
welcome to the visitors from Earth. He spoke of the peace and beauty of the island, and the kindness of
its people. He hoped that he and his companions would make the world that was waiting at the end of
their journey as happy a home for human beings as Thalassa was. Then he went on:
`Much has happened on Earth in the three centuries since the first colonists came to Thalassa, and
this is one way in which we can show our thanks to you. When we go, we can leave behind for you all
the information and scientific discoveries of those years, to enrich your world in the future. But as well
as science, we can leave you other things, things to delight the ear, and the heart. Listen, now, to the
music from our mother Earth.'
The lights had been turned down; the music had begun. No one who was there that night ever
forgot that moment, when the first strange and beautiful sounds filled the hall. Lora stood, lost in
wonder, not even remembering that Leon stood by her side, holding her hand in his.
It was a music that she had never known − the sound of things that belonged to Earth, and to Earth
alone. The slow beat of deep bells, the songs of patient boatmen rowing home, of armies marching into
battles long ago, the whisper of ten million voices rising from the great cities, the sound of winds
dancing over endless seas of ice. All these things she heard in the music, and more − the songs of distant
Earth, carried to her across the light−years . . .
Then a clear high voice, rising like a bird into the sky, singing a song that went straight to every
heart. It was a song for all loves lost in the loneliness of space, for friends and homes that would never
be seen again, that would be forgotten for ever in years to come.
As the music died away into the darkness, the people of Thalassa, avoiding words, had gone slowly
to their homes. But Lora had not gone to hers; for the loneliness that filled her heart, there was only one
answer. And presently she had found it, in the warm night of the forest, as Leon's arms closed around
her in the moonlight. And while the fire of love burned, they were safe from the shadows of the night
and the loneliness of the stars.
* * *
To Leon, it was never wholly real. Sometimes he thought that at his journey's end Thalassa would
seem like a dream that had come in his long sleep. This wild and desperate love, for example; he had not
asked for it, but there it was.
When he could escape from work, he took long walks with Lora in the fields far from the village,
where only machines worked on the land. For hours Lora would question him about Earth, wanting to
know everything about the `home' she had never seen with her own eyes.
She was very disappointed to hear that there were no longer great cities like Chandrigar or
Astrograd on Earth, and that life there had changed so much since the old stories that she knew.
`But what happened to the cities?' she asked Leon.
`They disappeared for a number of reasons really,' Leon explained. `When it became easy to see
and talk to other people anywhere on Earth just by pushing a button on a computer, most of the need for
cities was gone. Then we learnt how to turn off the pull of gravity, and once you can control gravity,
you can move anything heavy, even houses, through the sky without difficulty. So all movement and
travel became really simple. After that, people started to live where they liked, and the cities just slowly
disappeared.'
Lora was lying on the grass, looking up at the sky. `Do you suppose,' she said, `that we'll ever break through the speed of light?'
`I don't think so,' he said smiling, knowing what she was thinking. `We have to travel the slow way
because that's how the universe is made, and there's nothing we can do about it.'
`It would be wonderful,' Lora said dreamily, `to be able to travel back to Earth, to see what it was
like, without spending hundreds of years on the journey.' But the wish would never come true, and with
Leon beside her, it did not seem important. He was here; Earth and the stars were far away. And so also
was tomorrow, with whatever unhappiness it would bring . . .
By the end of the week the engineers had built a strong metal pyramid on land that looked out over
the sea. Lora, with the 571 other Palm Bay villagers and several thousand other Thalassans, came to
watch the first test. Many of the islanders were nervous about the strange science of the visitors. Did the
Earthmen know what they were doing? What if something went wrong? And what were they doing,
anyway?
Lora knew that Leon was there inside the machine with his companions, preparing for the test.
Then the engineers came out and walked to a high place where they stood, staring out to sea.
Two kilometres out, something strange was happening to the water. It looked like a storm, but a
storm just in one small place. The waves grew higher and higher, then as tall as mountains, crashing
wildly into each other. Suddenly, the movement changed. The waves came together, higher and thinner,
and soon − to the amazement and fear of the watching Thalassans − a long river of sea water was rising
up into the sky, climbing a hundred metres, then two, higher and higher, until it disappeared into the
clouds above. Huge drops of water, escaping from the edge of the rising river, fell back down into the
sea in a heavy rainstorm, but the river itself went on climbing up into space towards the starship
Magellan.
Slowly the crowd moved away, forgetting their first amazement and fright. Humans had been able
to control gravity for many years; now they had seen it with their own eyes. A million tonnes of water
from Thalassa's sea was on its way out into space, where the engineers would freeze it and shape it, and
turn it into a travelling shield for the starship. In a few days the ship would be ready to leave.
Up until the last minute, Lora had hoped that they would fail. With fear in her heart, she watched
the river of water rising smoothly into the sky. It meant only one thing to her; soon she must say
goodbye to Leon. She walked slowly towards the group of Earthmen, trying to stay calm. Leon saw her
and came to meet her, the happiness on his face turning to worry as he saw her expression.
`Well,' he said, `we've done it.' He sounded almost ashamed, and avoided meeting her eyes.
`And now − how long will you be here?'
`Oh, about three days − perhaps four.'
Lora had expected this. She tried to speak calmly, but the words came out as a desperate cry.
`You can't leave! Stay here on Thalassa!'
Leon took her hands and said gently, `No, Lora − this isn't my world. I've spent half my life
training for the work I'm doing now. There is no work for me here, and I would be bored to death in a
month.'
`Then take me with you! I would go anywhere, do anything, if we could be together!'
`You don't really mean that. You know that you would be more out of place in my world than I
would be in yours.'
But as he looked into her eyes he saw that she did mean it, and for the first time he felt ashamed of
himself. He had never meant to hurt her; he was very fond of her and would always remember her. Now
he was discovering, as so many men before him had done, that it was not always easy to say goodbye.
There was only one thing to do. Better a short, sharp pain than a long unhappiness.
`Come with me, Lora,' he said. `I have something to show you.'
They did not speak as Leon led the way to the Magellan's space bus, that great silver egg that had
first brought the visitors down to Thalassa. After a short argument with another engineer there, Leon
took Lora inside the bus and seconds later it had taken off, lifting smoothly into the air with no feeling
of movement, no whisper of sound. Already Lora was in a world she had never known before − a world
of scientific wonders that Thalassa had never needed or wanted for its life and happiness.
As Lora watched, Thalassa became just a misty curve of blue below, and soon, out of the blackness
of space, the starship Magellan came into view. The sight of it took Lora's breath away − an endless
curving wall of metal, perhaps as much as four kilometres long.
The bus found its own way home and locked itself into an entrance gate in the side of the ship.
Lora followed Leon through the doors of the airlock, then stepped on to a long, moving walkway which
carried them smoothly and silently into the heart of the ship.
For an hour Leon showed Lora the Magellan. They travelled along endless fast−moving walkways,
upwards through tunnels where there was no gravity, in and out of every part of the great ship − through
the engine room a kilometre long, past long rows of mysterious computers and strange machines,
through huge libraries filled with every piece of information that anyone could want. The Magellan was
a man−made and self−contained world, waiting to bring human life to a young planet far away in space.
And Lora knew that Leon was showing her just how different his life was from hers.
Now they came to a great white door which slid silently open as they came near it. Inside were
rows of long warm coats. Leon helped Lora to climb into one of these, and put one on himself. Then he
opened a glass door in the floor, turned to her and said, `There's no gravity down here, so keep close to
me and do exactly as I say.'
Through the open door a cloud of freezing cold air was rising. Lora trembled in fear and wonder,
and Leon took her arm. `Don't worry,' he said. `You won't notice the cold.' Then he went down through
the door and Lora followed him.
Without the pull of gravity, Lora felt she was swimming, but through air rather than water. All
around her, in this frozen white universe, were rows and rows of shining glass boxes, each box large
enough to hold a human being.
And each box did. There they were, the thousands, tens of thousands of colonists on their way to a
new world, sleeping in suspended animation until the day of their arrival. What were they dreaming in
their three−hundred− year sleep? Did they dream at all in that half−world between life and death?
Overhead there were moving belts with handholds every few metres. Leon took hold of one of
these and it pulled him and Lora along past the endless rows of glass boxes. They went on and on,
changing from one moving belt to another, until at last Leon let go and they came to a stop beside one
box no different from all the thousands of others.
But as Lora saw Leon's expression, she knew why he had brought her here, and knew that her
battle was already lost.
For a long time, unconscious of the cold, Lora stared down at the sleeping woman in her glass box,
a woman who would only wake long after Lora was dead. It was not a beautiful face, but it was strong,
intelligent, full of character − the face of somebody able to build a new Earth beyond the stars. At last
Lora spoke, her voice a whisper in the frozen stillness.
`Is she your wife?'
`Yes. I'm sorry, Lora. I never meant to hurt you . . .'
`It doesn't matter now. It was my fault, too.' She paused and looked more closely at the sleeping
woman. `And your child as well?'
`Yes. It will be born three months after we land.'
How strange, Lora thought, to carry a child inside you for nine months and three hundred years!
But that was just another part of this strange world, Leon's world, a world that had no place for her. She
knew that now, and knew that the coldness that had entered her heart would stay with her long after she
had left this frozen place.
She remembered nothing of the journey back to the space bus. Leon did something to the controls,
and turned to her.
`Goodbye, Lora,' he said. `My work is done. It would be better if I stayed here on the starship.'
There were no more words to say, and Lora could not even see his face through her tears.
He took her hands in his and held them hard. `Oh Lora,' he whispered. Then he was gone.
After what seemed like a lifetime later, Lora heard an automatic voice coming from the control
board. `We have landed; please leave by the front doors.' The doors opened and Lora went through them and down the steps outside.
Surprisingly, a small crowd was watching her arrival with interest. For a moment she did not
understand why; then Clyde's voice shouted, `Where is he?' He jumped forward, his face red with anger,
and caught Lora by the arm. `Tell him to come out and meet me like a man.'
Lora shook her head tiredly. `He's not here. I've said goodbye to him. I'll never see him again.'
Clyde stared at her disbelievingly, then saw that she spoke the truth. In the same moment Lora
threw herself into his arms, crying her heart out in her pain and misery. Clyde held her close; she
belonged to him again, and all his anger disappeared like morning mist in the sunshine.
* * *
For almost fifty hours the river of water thundered upwards out of the sea into space. All the island
watched, through television cameras, the making of the great ice shield that would ride ahead of the
Magellan on its way to the stars.
The last day came and went. The Earthmen said their final goodbyes, and the silver space bus lifted
off and climbed up into space. Some time later the night sky exploded into light, as the starship's great
engines began to burn with the fire of a thousand suns.
Lora turned her face away from the sky and hid it against Clyde's shoulder. This was where she
belonged. Clyde held her gently, loving her without words, but he knew that all the days of his life, the
ghost of Leon would come between him and Lora − the ghost of a man who would be not one day older
when they lay dead and buried.
Already the Magellan was moving across the sky along its lonely and unreturning road. The white
fire of its engines seemed to burn less brightly, and now the soft golden light of the moon Selene could
be seen again in the sky. A few moments later the Magellan was only a distant point of light, then even
that disappeared into the long emptiness of space.
Lora now looked up at the empty sky. Leon had been right. The life of the starship was not for her.
Her life was here, on this quiet island. The colonists of the Magellan belonged to the future. Leon and
his companions would be moving seas, levelling mountains, and fighting unknown dangers, when her
descendants in two hundred years' time would still be dreaming on the peaceful beaches of Thalassa.
And which was better, who could say?
-------------------------------------------- * * * * *----------------------------

No Morning After

But this is terrible!' said the Great Scientist. `Surely there is something we can do!'
`Yes, Your Highness, but it will be extremely difficult. The planet is more than five hundred
light−years away, and it is hard to make contact. However, we believe we can do it, but there is another
problem. So far, we have been quite unable to communicate with these people − they do not seem to be
telepathic in any way. And if we cannot talk to them, we cannot help them.'
There was a long silence while the Great Scientist thought about the problem, and arrived, as he
always did, at the right answer.
`Any intelligent beings must have some telepathic people among them. We must send out hundreds
of searchers, ready to catch the smallest thought. When you find a single open mind, work as hard as
you can on it. We must get our message through.'
`Very good, Your Highness. We will begin at once.' Across the huge emptiness of space, which
light itself took half a thousand years to cross, the brains of the planet Thaar sent out their long lines of
thought, searching desperately for a single human being whose mind could receive their message. And
they were lucky − they found Bill Cross.
At least, they thought it was luck at the time, though later they were not so sure. And it was only
chance that opened Bill's mind to them for a few seconds − a chance that was not likely to happen again
for many centuries.
There were three reasons for this chance happening. First, at that moment in the Earth's movement
around its sun, Bill was well placed to receive a message from Thaar. So, of course, were millions of  other people on the same part of the Earth's surface, but then they were not rocket engineers; they had
not spent years thinking and dreaming about space and space travel.
And they were not, as Bill was, very, very drunk, on the edge of unconsciousness, trying to escape
from reality into the world of dreams, where there were no disappointments.
Of course, Bill could understand the army's opinion.
`You are paid, Dr Cross,' his boss had told him sharply, `to make rockets which can carry bombs.
You are not paid to invent spaceships, or to use the computers here for your own purposes. So this must
now stop.'
Bill knew that he wouldn't lose his job; he was too valuable to the army for that. But did he want
the job anyway? He wasn't sure of anything except that he felt angry and miserable − and that Brenda
had finally gone off with Johny Gardner.
w He put his chin in his hands, stared dully at the white wall on the other side of the table, and
emptied his mind of thought . . .
At that moment, several thousand brains on Thaar gave a soundless cry of delight, and the wall in
front of Bill disappeared into a kind of mist. He seemed to be looking down a tunnel that had no end.
And in fact, he was.
Bill stared at it with interest, but he was used to seeing hallucinations when he was drunk, and he
had seen more exciting ones than this. And when the voice started to speak in his mind, he did not reply
at first. Even when drunk, he didn't like having conversations with himself.
`Bill,' the voice began, `listen carefully. We have had great difficulty contacting you, and this is
extremely important. We are speaking to you from a very distant planet. You are the only human being
we have been able to contact, so you must understand what we are saying.'
Bill felt a little worried. How serious was it, he wondered, when you started to hear voices? Well, it
was best not to get excited.
`OK,' he said, sounding bored. `Go ahead and talk to me. I won't mind − if it's interesting.'
There was a pause. Then the voice continued, still in a friendly way, but now rather worried as well.
`But our message isn't just interesting. It means life or death for all human beings.'
`I'm listening,' said Bill. `It'll help to pass the time.'
Five hundred light−years away, the Thaarns talked hurriedly among themselves. Something
seemed to be wrong, but they could not decide exactly what. They had certainly made contact, but this
was not the kind of reply they had expected. Well, they could only carry on and hope for the best.
`Listen, Bill,' they continued. `Our scientists have just discovered that your sun is going to explode
three days from now − in seventy−four hours, to be exact. Nothing can stop it. But don't be alarmed. We
can save you, if you do what we say.'
`Go on,' said Bill. This hallucination was certainly unusual.
`We can make what we call a bridge − it's a kind of tunnel through space, like the one you're
looking into now. It's difficult to explain, even to one of your mathematicians.'
`Just a minute,' argued Bill. `I am a mathematician, and a good one, drunk or not drunk. I suppose
you're talking about some kind of short cut through a higher dimension of space. That's an old idea −
before Albert Einstein.'
A feeling of surprise entered Bill's mind.
`We had no idea you knew so much about science,' said the Thaarns. `But there's no time to discuss
that. The important thing is this − if you stepped into that tunnel in front of you, you'd find yourself
immediately on another planet. It's a short cut, as you said, but through the thirty− seventh dimension.'
`And it leads to your world?'
`On no − you couldn't live here. But there are plenty of planets like Earth in the universe, and
we've found one that will suit human beings. We'll make bridges like this all over Earth, so your people
can just walk through them and escape. They'll have to start from the beginning on the new planet, of
course, but it's their only hope. You must pass on this message, and tell them what to do.'
`But no one's going to listen to me,' Bill said. `Why don't you talk to the president?'
`Because yours was the only mind we could contact. Others seemed closed to us; we don't

The Walls of Darkness

Many and strange are the universes that sail like ships upon the River of Time. Most move with the
water, but some− a very few − move against it. And just one or two lie for ever beyond its reach,
knowing nothing of the future or of the past.
Shervane's small universe was strange in a different way. It held one world only − the planet of
Shervane's people− and a single star, the great sun Trilorne that brought it heat and light.
Shervane knew nothing of night, as the sun Trilorne was always high above the horizon, dropping
down closer to it only in the long months of winter. In the Shadow Land, it was true, there came a
season when Trilorne disappeared below the edge of the world, and a darkness fell in which nothing
could live. But even then the darkness was not absolute.
Alone in its little universe, turning the same face always towards its lonely sun, Shervane's world
was the last and the strangest joke of the Maker of the Stars.
As he looked across his father's lands, Shervane, like any human child, wondered what mysteries
and excitements lay beyond the horizons. When he turned to the north, with Trilorne shining full on his
face, he could see the long line of mountains, which ran from north to south until they disappeared into
the Shadow Land. One day, he knew, he would cross those mountains to the great lands of the East.
To the west, not far away, was the sea, and sometimes Shervane could hear the thunder of the
waves from the house. No one knew how far the sea reached. Ships had sailed northward but had always
had to turn back when the heat of Trilorne became too great. Old stories spoke of the distant Fire Lands,
and once, people said, there had been fast metal ships able to cross the sea even under the burning eye of
Trilorne.
All the lived−in countries of Shervane's world lay in the narrow strip between burning heat and
terrible cold. In every country, the far north was destroyed by the fire of Trilorne, and in the far south
lay the endless, grey Shadow Land, where Trilorne was no more than a faint circle on the horizon.
All these things Shervane knew, and while he was a child, he was happy to stay in his father's wide
country between the mountains and the sea. The farmland was good, and the whole land was rich in
flowers and trees and clear rivers.
But time passes, even in Shervane's strange universe, and he grew older. He had learned much
from his father, Sherval, but also much from his teacher, Grayle, who had taught his father and his
father's father. Now the time had come for Shervane to travel east across the mountains to continue his
studies.
Before he left, his father took him on a journey around his own country. They rode, on animals
which we can call horses, first west, then south, until Trilorne was quite close to the horizon and it was
better to turn east again. Shervane stared out across the empty Shadow Land.
`Father,' he said. `If you went south in a straight line, right across the Shadow Land, would you reach the other side of the world?'
His father smiled. `People have asked that question for centuries,' he said, `and there are two
reasons why they will never know the answer.'
`What are they?'
`The first, of course, is the darkness and the cold. Even here, on the edge of the Shadow Land,
nothing can live during the winter months. But there is a better reason. Come − I have something to
show you.'
They turned away from their route east, and for several hours rode once more with their backs to
the sun. At last they came to the top of a steep hill where Sherval stopped and pointed to the far south.
`It is not easy to see,' he said quietly. `My father showed it to me from this same hill, many years
before you were born.'
Shervane stared into the shadowy distance. The southern sky was dark, almost black, and it came
down to meet the edge of the world. But not quite black, because along the horizon, between the land
and the sky but belonging to neither, was a line of deeper darkness, black as the night which Shervane
had never known.
He stared at it for a long time, and after a while he suddenly felt that the darkness was alive and
waiting. He did not understand this feeling, but he knew that nothing would ever be the same again.
And so, for the first time in his life, Shervane saw the Wall.
In the early spring he said goodbye to his people and travelled over the mountains into the great
lands of the eastern world. Here he continued his studies, and in the places of learning he made friends
with boys who had come from lands even farther to the east. One of these boys, Brayldon, was studying
to be an architect, and he and Shervane spent many hours discussing their ideas and dreams for the
future.
Between them they took the world to pieces and rebuilt it to their own plan. Brayldon dreamed of
cities whose wide streets and beautiful buildings would be the wonders of the world, but Shervane was
more interested in the people who would live in these cities, and how they would order their lives.
They often spoke of the Wall, which Brayldon knew about but had never seen. Far to the south of
every country, rising huge and black into the grey sky, the Wall ran in an unbroken line across the
Shadow Land, never pausing even when it reached the sea. Travellers on those lonely coasts had
reported how the dark shadow of the Wall marched out into the waves and beyond the horizon. In
summer it was possible to make the journey to the Wall, though only with difficulty, but nowhere was
there any way of passing it, and no one knew what lay beyond.
`One of my uncles,' said Brayldon, `reached the Wall when he was a young man. He rode for ten
days before he came beneath it. I think it frightened him − it was so huge and cold. He could not tell
whether it was made of metal or stone, and when he shouted, his voice died away at once and there was
no echo at all. My people believe it is the end of the world, and there is nothing beyond.'
`My people believe it was built by men,' said Shervane, `perhaps by the engineers of the First Age,
who made so many wonderful things − even, people say, ships that could fly.'
`That may be true,' said Brayldon, `but we will still never know why they built it, or what lies
beyond it.'
But Shervane could not accept that there were no answers to these questions, and he went on
asking them. Before he came east, Grayle, his old teacher at home, had told him:
`There is only one thing beyond the Wall, so I have heard. And that is madness.'
Artex, one of the great teachers in the east, had given Shervane a different answer:
`The Maker built the Wall in the third day of making the world. What is beyond, we shall discover
when we die, as that is where the dead go.'
But Irgan, who lived in the same city, gave a different answer again:
`Behind the Wall is the land where we lived before we were born. If we could remember that far
back, we would know the answers to your questions.'
Shervane did not not know who to believe. The truth was that no one knew the answers, and perhaps
had never known.
Soon Shervane's year of study came to an end. He said goodbye to Brayldon and began the long,
dangerous journey home across the great mountains, where walls of ice rose high into the sky. As he
came to the last and highest part of the road, he could see, far below in the valley, the line of shadow
that was his own country. He went on down to the last bridge, looking forward to his homecoming and
journey's end.
But the bridge was gone, destroyed by the storms and rockfalls of early spring, and now lay in
pieces in the river three hundred metres below. It would take a year to rebuild it, Shervane realized
sadly, and he turned his horse and rode back to the east.
* * *
Brayldon was still in the city when Shervane returned. He was surprised and pleased to see his
friend again, and together they made plans for the year ahead.
It was Shervane's idea, and though many people shook their heads doubtfully and advised them not
to do it, by summer the two friends were ready to begin their journey. First they rode east, to lands that
Brayldon knew, then turned south and rode, for day after day; across the grey Shadow Land. The Wall
never seemed to get any nearer, and it was only when they were standing at its foot, staring up at its
huge, endless blackness, that they realized they had arrived.
It was even stranger than travellers' stories had prepared them for. It felt neither hard nor soft, and
was cold − too cold, even for something in a land untouched by the sun. Strangest of all was the silence:
every word, every sound died away with unnatural quickness.
Brayldon took out some tools, but he soon found that nothing could cut or even mark the Wall's
surface in any way. The Wall was not just hard; it was almost untouchable. At last Brayldon took out a
perfectly straight piece of metal and held its edge hard against the Wall, but when he looked carefully
along the line of contact, a very narrow line of light showed unbroken between the two surfaces.
Brayldon looked thoughtfully at his friend.
`Shervane,' he said. `I don't believe the Wall is made of anything known to our science.' He put
away his useless cutting tools and took out a theodolite. `If I can do nothing else,' he said with a smile,
`at least I can find out how high it is!'
When they rode away and looked back for their last view of the Wall, Shervane decided that there
was nothing more he could learn. He must forget this foolish dream, this wish to find out the Wall's
secret. Perhaps there was no secret at all. Perhaps beyond the Wall the Shadow Land just continued
round the curve of the world until it met the same Wall again on the other side. But then why. . .?
Angrily, he put it out of his mind and rode north into the light of Trilorne.
* * *
When Shervane took the road across the mountains again, he had been away for two years and he
was full of happiness to be going home again. As he rode down into the valley, he saw a line of
horsemen coming towards him, and he hurried on, hoping that his father Sherval had come to meet him.
But it was Grayle who rode up to him, and put his hand on Shervane's shoulder, then turned his
head away, unable to speak.
And presently Shervane learned that the storms of the year before had destroyed more than the
mountain bridge. The lightning in that storm had hit his home, burning the great house to the ground and
killing all his family in one terrible night.
In a single moment of time all the land had passed to Shervane, and he was now the richest man his
country had known. But it meant nothing to Shervane. He would give everything, he thought, to look again into the calm grey eyes of the father he would see no more.
* * *
Years passed and Trilorne rose and fell in the sky many times before Shervane thought again of the
Wall. He had taken good care of all his farms and land, and now he had time once more in which to
dream. More than that − he had the riches to make his dreams come true. And what was the use of
riches unless they could be used to shape one's dreams?
So Shervane wrote to Brayldon, now an architect famous in many lands for his wonderful
buildings, and asked him to join in his old friend's dream − and his plan.
Early the next summer Brayldon came and the two men were soon deep in discussions, studying
the drawings and the architect's plans that Brayldon had already prepared. Before Shervane finally
decided, he took his friend to see Grayle.
Grayle was now very old but his advice was always ready when it was needed, and it was always
wise. Brayldon put out the plans and drawings, and Grayle studied them in silence. The largest drawing
showed the Wall, with a great stairway rising along its side from the ground beneath. At six places on
the stairway there was a wide platform; the last one was only a short distance below the top of the Wall.
At last Grayle spoke. `I always knew you would want to do something like this one day, Shervane.
But how much will it cost?'
Brayldon told him, and the old man's eyes opened wide in surprise.
`That's because,' the architect said quickly, `we have to build as well a road across the Shadow
Land and a small town for the workmen to live in during the building of the stairway. We will have to
make our own building materials in the Shadow Land, you see; it would be even more expensive to
carry them across the mountains.'
Grayle looked more closely at the drawing. `Why have you stopped short of the top?'
`I want to be the only one to go all the way up,' replied Shervane. `There will be a lifting machine
on the highest platform. There may be danger; that is why I am going alone.'
It was not the only reason, but it was a good one. Behind the Wall, so Grayle had once said, lay
madness. If that were true, no one else need face it.
`'That is good,' said Grayle quietly. `If the Wall was built to keep something from our world, it will
still be impassable from the other side.'
`And,' added Brayldon, `we can, if necessary, destroy the stairway in seconds by explosives
already built in at certain places.'
* * *
It was seven years before the last stones were in place on the great stairway. Work could only
continue during the summer months while Trilorne was above the horizon, and there was always the
worry that the winter storms would destroy the work of the summer before. But Brayldon had built well
and each year the stairway grew slowly higher.
At last came the time when Shervane knew that his dream would soon become real. Standing two
kilometres away, so that he could see the whole stairway, he remembered the day when, as a boy at his
father's side, he had first seen the Wall and felt it was alive and waiting for him.
The top platform was so high above the ground that Shervane did not care to go near its edge. With
Brayldon's help, he got into the lifting machine that would take him the last ten metres to the top, then
turned to his friend.
`I shall only be gone a few minutes,' he said, more calmly than he felt. `Whatever I find, I'll return immediately.'
How could he guess that there would be little for him to choose or decide?
* * *
Grayle's eyesight had almost gone during the seven years of building, but his hearing was still
sharp and he recognized Brayldon's footsteps before his visitor had time to speak.
`Ah, Brayldon, I'm glad you came,' he said. `I've been thinking of everything you have told me
about the Wall, and I believe I know the truth at last.' He paused for a moment. `Perhaps you have
guessed it already.'
`No,' said Brayldon. `I have been afraid to think of it.'
The old man smiled a little.
`Why should one be afraid of something just because it is strange? The Wall is wonderful, yes −
but there is no need to fear it, for those who understand its secret.
`So many stories have been told about the Wall, Brayldon. But I think I can now see the ones that
are true. Long ago, during the First Age, Trilorne was hotter than it is now and it was possible to live
and farm in the Shadow Land. People could go as far southward as they wanted, because there was no
Wall to stop them. What happened to Shervane happened to them also, and so the scientists of the First
Age built the Wall to stop people going mad. Stories say− though I cannot believe this − that the Wall
was built in a single day, out of a cloud that encircled the world.'
He fell silent, and for a moment Brayldon was silent too, trying to imagine that distant world of the
past.
* * *
As the lifting machine took him up to the top of the Wall, Shervane tried to bury his fear deep
inside him. But it was hard. What if, after all, the Wall had been built to keep some horror from the
world? Then, suddenly, he was there, staring out at something he did not at first understand.
Then he realized that he was looking across an unbroken black sheet, which disappeared into the
distance. He stepped onto the Wall and began to walk carefully forward, keeping his back to Trilorne.
There was something wrong: it was growing darker with every footstep he took. Afraid, he turned
around and saw that Trilorne had now become faint and shadowy, like a light seen through a darkened
glass. Then his fear grew greater, as he realized that was not all − Trilorne was smaller than the sun he
had known all his life. He shook his head angrily; he was imagining it. A thing like that couldn't
possibly be true. He walked on bravely, with only the occasional look at the sun behind him.
Soon the darkness was all around him, and Trilorne had almost disappeared, leaving only a faint
light in the sky to mark its place. A wise man would turn back now, he thought, but still he went on.
Then he saw, far ahead of him, a second light appearing in the sky. Behind him, Trilorne had now
disappeared completely, but as he walked on, he saw that this new light was another sun, growing
bigger by the minute, just as Trilorne had grown smaller. Amazement took hold of him. Did his world
have two suns, one shining on it from either side?
Now at last he could see, faintly through the darkness, the black line that marked the Wall's other
edge. Soon he would be the first man in thousands of years, perhaps ever, to look upon the lands on the
other side of the wall. Would there be people in those lands, and what kind of people would they be?
He had no idea − how could he? − who they were, and that they were waiting for him.
                                                                         * * *
Grayle put out his hand to the table beside him and found a large piece of paper that was lying on
it. Brayldon watched him in silence, and the old man continued.
`People have always argued about the universe − how big it is, where it ends, whether it ends at all,
or goes on for ever. It is difficult for our minds to imagine something that has no end. There have been
many answers given to these questions, and some of them may be true of other universes − if there are
other universes − but for our universe the answer is rather different.
`Along the line of the Wall, Brayldon, our universe comes to an end − and yet does not. Before the
Wall was built, there was nothing to prevent people going onwards. The Wall itself is only a man−made
thing, but it has the same strangeness as the space it now fills.'
He held the piece of paper towards Brayldon and slowly turned it round and round.
`Here,' he said, `is a simple piece of paper. It has, of course, two sides. Can you imagine one that
has not?'
Brayldon stared at him in amazement.
`That's impossible − quite impossible!'
`But is it?' said Grayle softly. On the table his hand searched for and found a long, thin strip of
paper. He ran his fingers along the paper strip, then joined the two ends together so that the strip had the
shape of a circle.
`The scientists of the First Age,' he went on, `had minds that could understand this fully, but this
simple example may help to show you the truth. Watch. I run my finger around the inside, so − and now
along the outside. The two surfaces are quite separate; you can go from one to the other only by moving
through the thickness of the strip. Do you agree?'
`Of course,' said Brayldon, still puzzled. `But what does it prove?'
`Nothing,' said Grayle. `But now watch. . .'
                                                                       * * *
This sun, Shervane thought, was exactly the same as Trilorne. The darkness had now lifted
completely, and he no longer had the feeling that he was walking endlessly into nothingness. He began
to walk more slowly, afraid of coming too suddenly to the Wall's edge, and in a while he could see a
distant horizon of low hills, as grey and lifeless as those he had left behind. But he was not
disappointed; the Shadow Land of his own world would look no better than this.
So he walked on. And when presently an icy hand fastened itself upon his heart, he did not pause
or show any sign of fear. He went bravely on, watching the land in front of him, until he could see the
place where his journey had started, and the great stairway itself, and at last Brayldon's worried, waiting
face.
                                                                     * * *
Again Grayle brought the two ends of the paper strip together, but now he had given it a half−turn
so that the circle of paper had a twist in it. He held it out to Brayldon.
`Run your finger around it now,' he said quietly.
Brayldon did not do so; he could see the old man's meaning.
`I understand,' he said. `You no longer have two separate surfaces. It is now a single continuous
piece of paper − a one−sided surface − something that at first sight seems quite impossible.'
`Yes,' said Grayle softly. `I thought you would understand. A one−sided surface. Of course, a piece
of paper only has two dimensions, but it gives us a simple example of what must happen, in three
dimensions, at the Wall.'
There was a long silence. Then Grayle spoke again:
`Why did you come back before Shervane?' he asked, though he knew the answer well enough.
`We had to do it,' said Brayldon sadly, `but I did not wish to see my work destroyed.'
`I understand,' said Grayle kindly.
* * *
Shervane looked up and down the great stairway on which no feet would ever step again. He did
not feel sad; he had learnt, as much as it was possible to learn.
Slowly he lifted his hand and gave the sign. The explosion seemed to make no sound at all, and the
stones of the great stairway flew outwards and began to fall in a calm, unhurried way that Shervane
would remember all his life. For a moment there came into his mind a picture of another stairway,
watched by another Shervane, falling in just the same slow, gentle way on the far side of the Wall.
But that, he realized, was a foolish thought; as no one knew better than he that the Wall had no
other side.
---------------------------------- * * * * -------------

The Secret

Henry Cooper had been on the Moon for almost two weeks before he discovered that something
was wrong. At first he just had a kind of strange feeling that he couldn't explain, but he was a sensible
science reporter so he didn't worry about it too much.
The reason he was here, after all, was because the United Nations Space Administration had asked
him to come. UNSA always liked to get sensible, responsible people to send the Moon news back to Earth. It was even more important these days, when an overcrowded world was screaming for more
roads and schools and sea farms, and getting angry about all the money that was spent on space research.
So here he was, on his second visit to the Moon, and sending back reports of two thousand words a
day. The Moon no longer felt strange to him, but there remained the mystery and wonder of a world as
big as Africa, and still almost completely unknown. Just a stone's throw away from the enclosed Plato
City was a great, silent emptiness that would test human cleverness for centuries to come.
Cooper had already visited and written about the famous place where the first men had landed on
the Moon. But that now belonged to the past, like Columbus's voyage to America, and the Wright
brothers, who built and flew successfully the first plane with an engine. What interested Cooper now
was the future.
When he had landed at Archimedes Spaceport, everyone had been very glad to see him. Everything
was arranged for his tour, and he could go where he liked, ask any questions he wanted. UNSA had
always been friendly towards him because the reports and stories he sent back to Earth were accurate.
But something was wrong somewhere, and he was going to find out what it was.
He reached for the phone and said, `Please get me the Police Office. I want to speak to the Chief
Inspector.'
* * * * * * ** * *

He met Chandra Coomaraswamy next day in the little park that Plato City was so proud of. It was
early in the morning (by clock time, that is, as one Moon day was as long as twenty−eight Earth days),
and there was no one around. Cooper had known the Police Chief for many years and for a while they
talked about old friends and old times.
Then Cooper said, `You know everything that's happening on the Moon, Chandra. And you know
that I'm here to do a number of reports for UNSA. So why are people trying to hide things from me?'
It was impossible to hurry Chandra. He just went on smoking his pipe until he was ready to answer.
`What people?' he asked at last.
`You really don't know?'
The Chief Inspector shook his head. `Not an idea,' he said; and Cooper knew that he was telling the
truth. Chandra might be silent, but he would not lie.
`Well, the main thing that I've noticed − and it frightens me a lot − is that the Medical Research
Group is avoiding me. Last time I was here, everyone was very friendly, and gave me some fine stories.
But now, I can't even meet the research boss. He's always too busy, or on the other side of the Moon.
What kind of man is he?'
`Dr Hastings? A difficult man. Very clever, but not easy to work with.'
`What could he be trying to hide?'
`Oh, I'm just a simple policeman. But I'm sure a news reporter like you has some interesting ideas
about it.'
`Well,' said Cooper, `it can't be anything criminal − not in these times. So that leaves one big
worry, which really frightens me. Some kind of new, killer disease. Suppose that a spaceship has come
back from Mars or somewhere, carrying some really terrible disease − and the doctors can't do anything
about it?'
There was a long silence. Then Chandra said, `I'll start asking some questions. I don't like it either,
because here's something that you probably don't know. There were three nervous breakdowns in the
Medical Group last month− and that's very, very unusual.'

* * * * * * * * * * 
The call came two weeks later, in the middle of the night− the real Moon night. By Plato City time,
it was Sunday morning.
`Henry? Chandra here. Can you meet me in half an hour at Airlock Five? Good. I'll see you there.'
This was it, Cooper knew. Airlock Five meant that they were going outside the city. Chandra had
found something.
As the Moon car drove along the rough road from the city, Cooper could see the Earth, low in the
southern sky. It was almost full, and threw a bright blue−green light over the hard, ugly land of the
Moon. It was difficult, Cooper told himself, to see how the Moon could ever be a welcoming place. But
if humans wanted to know nature's secrets, it was to places like these that they must come.
The car turned off on to another road and in a while came to a shining glass building standing
alone. There was another Moon car, with a red cross on its side, parked by the entrance. Soon they had
passed through the airlock, and Cooper was following Chandra down a long hall, past laboratories and
computer rooms, all empty on this Sunday morning. At last they came into a large round room in the
centre of the building, which was filled with all kinds of plants and small animals from Earth. Waiting
there, was a short, grey−haired man, looking very worried, and very unhappy.
`Dr Hastings,' said Coomaraswamy, `meet Mr Cooper.' He turned to Cooper and added, `I've
persuaded the doctor that there's only one way to keep you quiet − and that's to tell you everything.'
The scientist was not interested in shaking hands or making polite conversation. He walked over to
one of the containers, took out a small brown animal, and held it out towards Cooper.
`Do you know what this is?' he asked, unsmiling.
`Of course,' said Cooper. `A hamster − used in laboratories everywhere.'
`Yes,' said Hastings. `A perfectly normal golden hamster. Except that this one is five years old −
like all the others in this container.'
`Well? What's strange about that?'
`Oh, nothing, nothing at all... except for the unimportant fact that hamsters live for only two years.
And we have some here that are nearly ten years old.'
For a moment no one spoke, but the room was not silent. It was full of the sounds of the
movements and cries of small animals. Then Cooper whispered, `My God − you've found a way to
make life longer!'
`Oh no,' Hastings said. `We've not found it. The Moon has given it to us. . . and the reason has been
right under our noses all the time.' He seemed calmer now, and more in control of himself. `On Earth,'
he went on, `we spend our whole lives fighting gravity. Every step we take, every movement we make,
is hard work for our bodies. In seventy years, how much blood does the heart lift through how many
kilometres? But here on the Moon, where an eighty− kilo human weighs only about thirteen kilos, a
body has to do only a sixth of that work.'
`I see,' said Cooper slowly. `Ten years for a hamster− and how long for a human?'
`It's not a simple scientific law,' answered Hastings. `It depends on a number of things, and a
month ago we really didn't know. But now we're quite certain: on the Moon, a human life will last at
least two hundred years.'
`And you've been trying to keep it secret!'
`You fool! Don't you understand?'
`Take it easy, Doctor − take it easy,' said Chandra softly.
Hastings took a deep breath and got himself under control again. He began to speak with icy
calmness, and his words fell like freezing raindrops into Cooper's mind.
`Think of them up there,' he said, waving his hand upwards to the unseen Earth. `Six billion of
them, packed on to land which isn't big enough to hold them all. Already they're crowding over into the
sea beds. And here, there are only a hundred thousand of us, on an almost empty world. But a world
where we need years and years of scientific and engineering work just to make life possible; a world
where only a few of the brightest and most intelligent scientists can get a job.
`And now we find that we can live for two hundred years. Imagine how they're going to feel about that news! This is your problem now, Mr Newsman; you've asked for it, and you've got it. Tell me this,
please − I'd really be interested to know − just how are you going to tell them?'
He waited, and waited. Cooper opened his mouth, then closed it again, unable to think of anything
to say.
In the far corner of the room, one of the baby animals began to cry.
____________________________* * * * *___________________________

The Nine Billion Names Of Allah

“This is rather unusual,“ said Dr Wagner, trying very hard to hide his amazement. “I think this
must be the first time that anyone has been asked to send an Automatic Sequence Computer to a
monastery in Tibet. I don't wish to seem impolite, but I do wonder what use your − er − organization has
for a machine like this. Could you explain just what you plan to do with it?“
“Gladly,“ replied the lama, carefully putting away his little notebook. “Your Mark 5 Computer can
do all kinds of routine mathematical work which involves up to ten figures. However, for our work we
are interested in letters, not numbers. For this reason we wish you to change the machine so that it prints
out lists of words, not figures.“
“I don't quite understand. . .“
“We have been doing this work for the last three centuries − since the monastery first began, in
fact. It is a little foreign to your way of thought, so I hope you will listen with an open mind while I
explain it.“
“Naturally.“
“It is really quite simple. We have been making a list which will contain all the possible names of
God.“
Dr Wagner's eyes opened very wide.
“We have reason to believe,“ continued the lama calmly, “that all these names can be written with
not more than nine letters in an alphabet we have invented.“
“And you have been doing this for three centuries?“
“Yes. We expected it would take us about fifteen thousand years to finish the list.“
“Oh,“ Dr Wagner said slowly. “Yes, I can see why you want one of our machines. But what
exactly is your purpose in making this list?“
The lama hesitated for a second, and Dr Wagner wondered if the question had annoyed him. But
the reply came with the same calm politeness as before.
“It is a very important part of what we believe. All the many names of the Great Being − God,
Allah, Jehovah, and so on − are just names invented by humans. There are certain problems in these
ideas which I do not wish to discuss here. But we believe that somewhere among all the possible arrangements of letters are what we can call the real names of God. By going through every possible
arrangement of letters, we have been trying to list them all.“
“I see. You've been starting at AAAAAAA. . . and working through to ZZZZZZZ. . .“
“Exactly − though we use a special alphabet of our own. I'm afraid it would take too long to
explain all the details, as you don't understand our language.“
“I'm sure it would,“ said Dr Wagner hurriedly.
“Luckily, it will be quite easy to make the necessary changes to your Automatic Sequence
Computer so that it will do this work for us and print out the names. Instead of fifteen thousand years,
we shall be able to finish the list in a hundred days.“
Dr Wagner could hear the sounds of the New York streets far below his office, but he felt that he
was in a different world. High up in their distant, lonely mountains these lamas had been patiently at
work, year after year, making their lists of meaningless words. Was there no end to the foolishness of
human beings? But he must not show what he was thinking. The customer was always right. . .
“There's no doubt,“ Dr Wagner said, “that we can change the Mark 5 to print lists of this kind. I'm
much more worried about the problems of making sure your computer is in good working condition
when it arrives. And getting things out to Tibet, in these days, is not easy.“
“We can arrange that. The various parts of the computer are small enough to travel by air. If you
can get them to India, we will collect them from there.“
“And you want to hire two of our engineers?“
“Yes, for the three months that the work should take.“
“There's no problem about that.“ Dr Wagner wrote a note to remind himself. “There are two more
things. . .“
Before he could finish, the lama had passed him a piece of paper. “This is from our bank and is
signed, as you will see, by the manager.“
“Thank you,“ Dr Wagner said, looking at the figures. “That seems to be − er − adequate. The
second question may seem a little strange, but sometimes these simple things get forgotten. There is
electricity available. . .?“
“Yes, we brought in machinery for making electricity about five years ago and it works very well.
It's made life at the monastery much more comfortable, but the main reason for bringing it in, of course,
was to have motors to drive the prayer wheels.“
“Of course,' echoed Dr Wagner. “Why didn't I think of that?“

*********

The view from the monastery took one's breath away at first, but in time one gets used to anything.
After three months, George Hanley didn't really notice the seven− hundred−metre drop, straight down
into the valley below. He was standing by the wind−smoothed stones of the low wall that ran round the
outside of the main building, and staring miserably at the distant mountains. He had never been
interested enough to learn their names.
This job, thought George, was the craziest thing that had ever happened to him. For weeks now the
Mark 5 had been pushing out paper covered with meaningless rubbish. Patiently, endlessly, the
computer had been rearranging letters in every possible way. As the sheets of paper had come out of the
printers, the lamas had carefully cut them up and put them into great books. One more week, thank God,
and it would be finished. George didn't know why the lamas had decided it wasn't necessary to go on to
words of ten letters, or even more. His worst fear was that there would be a change of plan, and that the
high lama (whom they called Sam, because it was easier than his real name) would suddenly say that the
work had to go on until AD 2060.
George heard the heavy wooden door bang in the wind as Chuck came out to join him by the wall.
As usual, Chuck was smoking one of the cigars that made him so popular with the lamas − who were quite willing to enjoy most of the good things in life. That was something to be thankful for, anyway.
They were certainly crazy, but at least they were prepared to enjoy themselves as well.
“Listen, George,“ said Chuck seriously. “I've learned something that means trouble.“
“What's wrong? Isn't the computer behaving?“ That was the worst thing that George could
imagine. It might delay his return, and nothing could he more terrible than that. He wished desperately
that he could be at home again.
“No, it's nothing like that.“ Chuck sat on the low wall, which was unusual because normally he
was frightened of the steep drop down to the valley. “I've just learned what all this is about.“
“What d'you mean? I thought we knew.“
“Sure. We know what the lamas are trying to do. But we didn't know why. It's the craziest thing –“
“Tell me something new,“ said George crossly.
“ − but old Sam's just told me the reason. He's getting a bit excited now that we're getting close to
the end of the list. You see, they believe that when they have listed all His names − and they think that
there are about nine billion of them − God's purpose in making the world will be finished. There will be
nothing more for human beings to do, and indeed, no further reason for humans to go on living.“
“Then what do they expect us to do?“ said George. “All go away and kill ourselves?“
“There's no need for that. When the list's completed, God steps in and simply closes everything
down. . . bang!“
“Oh, I get it. When we finish our job, it will be the end of the world.“
Chuck gave a nervous little laugh. “That's just what I said to Sam. And do you know what
happened? He looked at me in a very strange way, and said, "It's nothing as small and unimportant as
that".“
George thought about this for a moment. “That's what I call taking the Wide View,“ he said at last.
“But what do you suppose we should do about it? I don't see that it makes any difference to us. After all,
we already knew that they were crazy.“
“Yes − but don't you see what may happen? When the list's complete and God doesn't ring the final
bell − or whatever it is they expect − we may be in trouble. It's our machine they've been using. I don't
like the situation one little bit.“
“Yeah,“ said George slowly, “I see what you mean. But this kind of thing's happened before, you
know. When I was a child down in Louisiana, we had a crazy churchman who once said the world was
going to end next Sunday. Hundreds of people believed him − even sold their homes. But when nothing
happened, they didn't get angry, as you'd expect. They just decided that he'd made a mistake in his
timing, and went on believing. I guess some of them still do.“
“Well, this isn't Louisiana, in case you hadn't noticed. There are just two of us and hundreds of
these lamas. I like them, and I'll be sorry for old Sam when his life's work comes to nothing. But I still
wish I was somewhere else.“ “I've been wishing that for weeks. But there's nothing we can do until the
job's finished and the plane arrives to fly us out.“
“Of course,“ said Chuck thoughtfully, “we could always arrange for the computer to break down.“
“Not on your life! That would make things worse.“
“No, I mean like this. The machine will finish the job four days from now, and the plane calls in a
week. OK− all we have to do is to find a little problem during one of our routine checks. We'll fix it, of
course, but not too quickly. If we get the timing right, we can be down at the airfield when the last name
comes out of the printers. They won't be able to catch us then.“
“I don't like it,“ said George. “It will be the first time I ever walked out on a job. Anyway, they
might start to suspect something. No, I'll hold on and take what comes.“
“I still don't like it,“ he said, seven days later, as the tough little mountain horses carried them  down the steep road. “And don't think I'm running away because I'm afraid. I'm just sorry for those poor
old men up there, and I don't want to be around when they find out how stupid they've been. I wonder
how Sam will feel about it.“
“When I said goodbye to him,“ said Chuck, “I got the idea he knew we were walking out on him −
and that he didn't care because he knew the computer was running smoothly and that the job would soon
be finished. After that − well, of course, for him there just isn't any After That. . .“
George turned and stared back up the mountain road. This was the last place from which one could
get a clear view of the monastery. The low, square buildings were dark against the evening sky; here
and there, lights shone out from the narrow windows. What would happen, George wondered, when the
list was finished? Would the lamas destroy the computer in their anger and disappointment? Or would
they just sit down quietly and think out the problem all over again?
He knew exactly what was happening up on the mountain at this very moment. The high lama and
his assistants were sitting quietly, looking carefully at the long sheets of paper as the younger lamas
carried them away from the printers and put them into the great books. Nobody was speaking. The only
sound was the endless noise of the printers as the computer did its work in complete silence. Three
months of this, George thought, was enough to drive anyone mad.
“There it is!“ called Chuck, looking down into the valley. “Isn't that a beautiful sight!“
It certainly was, thought George. The small plane lay at the end of the airfield like a little silver
cross. In two hours it would carry them away, back to the real, sensible world. It was a very comfortable
thought.
Night falls quickly in the high Himalayas and darkness was already closing round them.
Fortunately, the road was good and there was nothing dangerous about their journey at all. It was just
very, very cold. The sky overhead was perfectly clear, and bright with the usual friendly stars. There
would be no problem, thought George, about the pilot not being able to take off because of bad weather.
That had been his only remaining worry.
He began to sing, but stopped after a while. His voice sounded rather small and lost among these
great, silent mountains, shining like white ghosts on every side. They rode quietly on, and then George
looked at his watch.
“We'll be there in an hour,“ he called back over his shoulder to Chuck. Then he added, suddenly
remembering, “Wonder if the computer's finished the list. It should be just about now.“
Chuck didn't reply, so George turned his head to look back at him. He could just see Chuck's face,
a white shape turned towards the sky.
“Look,“ whispered Chuck, and George lifted his eyes to the sky. (There is always a last time for
everything.)
Overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out.
(by Arthur C. Clark)
-------------------------------------******----------------------------------

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Les-Miserables

Download Free eBookSo long as there shall exist, by virtue of law and custom, decrees of damnation pronounced by society, artificially creating hells amid the civilization of earth, and adding the element of human fate to divine destiny; so long as the three great problems of the century— the degradation of man through pauperism, the corruption of woman through hunger, the crippling of children through lack of light— are unsolved; so long as social asphyxia is possible in any part of the world;—in other words, and with a still wider significance, so long as ignorance and poverty exist on earth, books of the nature of Les Miserables cannot fail to be of use.
HAUTEVILLE HOUSE, 1862.

FANTINE






CHAPTER I
M. MYRIEL
In 1815, M. Charles-Francois-Bienvenu Myriel was Bishop of D—— He was an old man of about seventy-five years of age; he had occupied the see of D—— since 1806.
Although this detail has no connection whatever with the real substance of what we are about to relate, it will not be superfluous, if merely for the sake of exactness in all points, to mention here the various rumors and remarks which had been in circulation about him from the very moment when he arrived in the diocese. True or false, that which is said of men often occupies as important a place in their lives, and above all in their destinies, as that which they do. M. Myriel was the son of a councillor of the Parliament of Aix; hence he belonged to the nobility of the bar. It was said that his father, destining him to be the heir of his own post, had married him at a very early age, eighteen or twenty, in accordance with a custom which is rather widely prevalent in parliamentary families. In spite of this marriage, however, it was said that Charles Myriel created a great deal of talk. He was well formed, though rather short in stature, elegant, graceful, intelligent; the whole of the first portion of his life had been devoted to the world and to gallantry.

The Revolution came; events succeeded each other with precipitation; the parliamentary families, decimated, pursued, hunted down, were dispersed. M. Charles Myriel emigrated to Italy at the very beginning of the Revolution. There his wife died of a malady of the chest, from which she had long suffered. He had no children. What took place next in the fate of M. Myriel? The ruin of the French society of the olden days, the fall of his own family, the tragic spectacles of ‘93, which were, perhaps, even more alarming to the emigrants who viewed them from a distance, with the magnifying powers of terror,—did these cause the ideas of renunciation and solitude to germinate in him? Was he, in the midst of these distractions, these affections which absorbed his life, suddenly smitten with one of those mysterious and terrible blows which sometimes overwhelm, by striking to his heart, a man whom public catastrophes would not shake, by striking at his existence and his fortune? No one could have told: all that was known was, that when he returned from Italy he was a priest.

In 1804, M. Myriel was the Cure of B—— [Brignolles]. He was already advanced in years, and lived in a very retired manner.
About the epoch of the coronation, some petty affair connected with his curacy—just what, is not precisely known—took him to Paris. Among other powerful persons to whom he went to solicit aid for his parishioners was M. le Cardinal Fesch. One day, when the Emperor had come to visit his uncle, the worthy Cure, who was waiting in the anteroom, found himself present when His Majesty passed. Napoleon, on finding himself observed with a certain curiosity by this old man, turned round and said abruptly:—
‘Who is this good man who is staring at me?’
‘Sire,’ said M. Myriel, ‘you are looking at a good man, and I at a great man. Each of us can profit by it.’
That very evening, the Emperor asked the Cardinal the name of the Cure, and some time afterwards M. Myriel was utterly astonished to learn that he had been appointed Bishop of D——
What truth was there, after all, in the stories which were invented as to the early portion of M. Myriel’s life? No one knew. Very few families had been acquainted with the Myriel family before the Revolution.
M. Myriel had to undergo the fate of every newcomer in a little town, where there are many mouths which talk, and very few heads which think. He was obliged to undergo it although he was a bishop, and because he was a bishop. But after all, the rumors with which his name was connected were rumors only,—noise, sayings, words; less than words— palabres, as the energetic language of the South expresses it.
However that may be, after nine years of episcopal power and of residence in D——, all the stories and subjects of conversation which engross petty towns and petty people at the outset had fallen into profound oblivion. No one would have dared to mention them; no one would have dared to recall them.
M. Myriel had arrived at D—— accompanied by an elderly spinster, Mademoiselle Baptistine, who was his sister, and ten years his junior.
Their only domestic was a female servant of the same age as Mademoiselle Baptistine, and named Madame Magloire, who, after having been the servant of M. le Cure, now assumed the double title of maid to Mademoiselle and housekeeper to Monseigneur.
Mademoiselle Baptistine was a long, pale, thin, gentle creature; she realized the ideal expressed by the word ‘respectable”; for it seems that a woman must needs be a mother in order to be venerable. She had never been pretty; her whole life, which had been nothing but a succession of holy deeds, had finally conferred upon her a sort of pallor and transparency; and as she advanced in years she had acquired what may be called the beauty of goodness. What had been leanness in her youth had become transparency in her maturity; and this diaphaneity allowed the angel to be seen. She was a soul rather than a virgin. Her person seemed made of a shadow; there was hardly sufficient body to provide for sex; a little matter enclosing a light; large eyes forever drooping;— a mere pretext for a soul’s remaining on the earth.
Madame Magloire was a little, fat, white old woman, corpulent and bustling; always out of breath,—in the first place, because of her activity, and in the next, because of her asthma.
On his arrival, M. Myriel was installed in the episcopal palace with the honors required by the Imperial decrees, which class a bishop immediately after a major-general. The mayor and the president paid the first call on him, and he, in turn, paid the first call on the general and the prefect.
The installation over, the town waited to see its bishop at work. Click here continue reading.....