Zelazny, Roger - SS - Go Starless in the Night.pdf

(67 KB) Pobierz
667961612 UNPDF
Go Starless InThe Night
Roger Zelazny
Darkness and silence all about, and nothing, nothing, nothing within it.
Me?
The first thought came unbidden, welling up from some black pool. Me? That's
all.
Me?he thought.Then, Who? What . . .?
Nothing answered.
Something like panic followed, without the customary physical accompaunnents .
When this wave had passed, he listened, striving to capture the slightest sound.
He realized that he had already given up on seeing.
There was nothing to hear. Not even the smallest noises of life - breathing,
heartbeat, the rasping of a tired joint - came to him. It was only then that he
realizedhe lacked all bodily sensations.
But this time he fought the panic.Death?he wondered. A bodiless, dark sentence
beyondeverything? The stillness . . .
Where? What point in spacetime did he occupy? He would have shaken his head. . .
Page 1
 
He recalled that he had been a man - and it seemed that there were memories
somewherethat he could not reach. No name answered his summons, no view of his
pastcame to him. Yet he knew that there had been a past. He felt that it lay
justbelow some dim horizon of recall.
He strove for a timeless interval to summon some recollection of what had gone
before.Amnesia?Brain damage?Dream?he finally asked himself, after failing to
pushbeyond a certain feeling of lurking images.
A body then . . . Start with that.
He remembered what bodies were. Arrns , legs, head, torso . . . An intellectual
visionof sex passed momentarily through his consciousness. Bodies, then . . .
He thought of his arms, felt nothing.Tried to move them. There was no sense of
theirexistence, let alone movement.
Breathing . . . He attempted to draw a deep breath. Nothing came into him. There
wasno indication of any boundary whatsoever between himself and the darkness
andsilence.
A buzzing tone began, directionless. It oscillated in volume. It rose in pitch,
droppedto a rumble, returned to a buzz. Abruptly then, it shifted again, to
worklike appro- ximations he could not quite decipher.
There was a pause, as if for some adjustment. Then "Hello?" came clearly to him.
He felt a rush of relief mingled with fear. The word filled his mind, followed
byimmediate concern as to whether he had actually heard it.
"Hello?"
Again, then.The fear faded. Something close to joy replaced it. He felt an
immediateneed to respond.
"Yes? Hello? Who-"
His answer broke. How had he managed it? He felt the presence of no vocal
Page 2
 
mechanism. Yet he seemed to hear a faint echoing of his own reply, feedbacklike ,
tinny. Where? Its source was not localized.
It seemed then that several voices were conversing - hurried, soft,distant . He
couldnot follow the rush of their words.
Then, "Hello again.Please respond one time more. We are adjusting the speaker.
How well do you hearwe ?"
"Clearly now," he answered. "Where am I? What has happened?"
"How much do you remember?"
"Nothing!"
"Panic not, Ernest Dawkins. Do you remember that your name is Ernest Dawkins?
From your file, we have it."
"Now I do."
The simple statement of his name brought forth a series of images - his own
face, his wife's, his two daughters', his apartment, the laboratory where he
worked, his car, a sunny day at the beach.
That day at the beach . . . That was when he had first felt the pain in his left
side- a dull ache at first, increasing over ensuing weeks. He had never been
withoutit after that - until now, he suddenly realized.
"I - it's coming back - my memory," he said. "It's as if a dam had broken . . .
Give me a minute."
"Take your time."
He shied away from the thought of the pain. He had been ill, very ill,
hospitalized, operated upon, drugged . . . He thought instead of his life, his
family, his work. He thought of school and love and politics and research. He
thoughtof the growing world tensions, and of his childhood, and-
Page 3
 
"Are you right all, Ernest Dawkins?"
He had lost track of time, but that question caused him to produce something
likea laugh, from somewhere.
"Hard to tell," he said. "I've been remembering - things. But as to whether I'm
allright - Where the hell am I? What's happened?"
"Then you have remembered not everything?"
He noted odd inflections in the questioning voice, possibly even an accent that
hecould not place.
"I guess not."
"You were quite unwell."
"I remember that much."
"Dying, in fact.As they say."
He forced himself to return to the pain, to look beyond it. "Yes," he
acknowledged. "I remember."
. . . And it was all there. He saw his last days in the hospital as his
conditionworse- ned , passing the point of no return, the faces of his family,
friendsand relatives wearing this realization. He recalled his decision to go
throughwith an earlier resolution, long since set into motion. Money had never
beena problem. It seemed it had always been there, in his family - his, by
earlyinheritance - as ubiquitous as his attitude toward death after his
parents' passing. Enough to have himself frozen for the long winter, to drop off
dreamingof some distant spring . . .
"I recall my condition," he said. "I know what must finally have occurred."
"Yes,"came the reply. "That is what happened."
"How much time has passed?"
"Considerable."
Page 4
 
He would have licked his lips. He settled for the mental equivalent.
"My family?" he flnally inquired.
"It has been too long."
"I see."
The other gave him time to consider this information. Then, "You had, of course,
consideredthis possibility?"
"Yes. I prepared myself - as much as a man can - for such a state of affairs."
"It has been long. Very long . . ."
"How long?"
"Allow us to proceed in our fashion, please."
"All right.You know your business best."
"We are glad that you are so reasonable a being."
"Being?"
"Person.Excusewe ."
"I must ask something, though - not having to do with the passage of time: Is
English now spoken as you speak it? Or is it not your native language?"
There was a sudden consultation, just beyond the range of distinguishability .
There followed a high-pitched artifact . Then, "Also let us reserve that
question," the reply finally came.
"As you would.Then will you tell me about my situation? I am more than a little
concerned. I can't see or feel anything."
"We are aware of this. It is unfortunate, but there is no point in
misrepresentingto you. The time has not yet come for your full arouse."
"I do not understand. Do you mean that there is no cure for my condition yet?"
"We mean that there is no means of thawing you without doing great damage."
Page 5
 
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin