Read i e4a5a8edf2d8eda0 Online
Authors: Unknown
dull their mind powers. The Human Purity League hacked off the tendrils of the advocates,
then hung the victims from lamp posts or trees as an example “for all good humans to follow.”
These terrifying acts drove many slans into hiding. Slans went to back-alley clinics to have
their tendrils surgically removed so they could live quietly among human society. Entire
networks and underground railroads sprang up to give these “neutered” slans new identities in
safe places.
Saddest of all, Anthea thought, was one small article reporting (with no particular
significance) that a large percentage of those shamed slans who had chosen the illicit
tendril-amputation surgery exhibited an extremely high incidence of suicide afterward.
Approximately eighty percent of those desperate enough to take such measures chose not to
survive with dulled senses and mental blindness; they killed themselves within months.
The Human Purity League began to sport clean-shaven heads as proof of their tendril-free
scalps. Flagrantly bragging about their actions, the Purity League insisted that anyone with long
hair—male or female—had to be hiding something. Their thugs knocked down people in the
streets and forcibly shaved their heads. Very few of their targets turned out to have tendrils,
but this did not stop their antics.
Anthea felt a tightening in her gut as she continued reading. She already knew how history
would turn out, and now she could see the events escalating toward a full-scale war between
slans and normal humans.
Pushed into a corner, slan activists began to fight back more aggressively. They formed
support groups and protective societies. They met openly where they thought their large
numbers would guarantee them safety. But in a particularly appalling incident, the Human
Purity League surrounded one such hall where they claimed the evil slans were plotting the
overthrow of Earth. They barricaded the doors, barred the windows, then set the whole
building on fire, burning to death over three hundred slans.
That had been the tipping point that turned slans entirely against their human persecutors.
From there, it had only grown worse and worse.
Trembling with all she had learned, Anthea realized that very few people alive knew this
truth. Humans still exhibited an undiminished hatred toward the mutant race. No wonder the
true slans (if any of them still remained) lived in desperate hiding.
Weary of the sickening reports, Anthea stretched her legs and moved along the shelves,
pulling down boxes and poking among the other paraphernalia. She found dusty devices,
strange laboratory equipment that looked antique while at the same time futuristic. The sealed
items were labeled merely “unknown slan weapon” or “dangerous slan mind-control device.”
In one cabinet she found an old-fashioned video viewer and canisters of tapes. “S. Lann
recordings: Original statements. Highest Security Access.” Doctor Samuel Lann, the first
investigator—some said the
creator
—of the slans! She knew she had to watch the tapes.
She lifted the viewer and brought it back to the table where the baby still lay, wide awake.
She spent several minutes deciphering the player and loading the old and brittle tapes. She
feared the tape might snap as it rattled through the viewing mechanism, but she had to learn
what Samuel Lann had said in his own words.
Once she activated the power switch and heard the wheels clattering, jumpy images began
to flicker on the screen. She saw a handsome man with dark-brown hair, wide-set eyes, high
cheekbones, and a square jaw that denoted confidence and trustworthiness. He seemed defiant
yet patient as he faced his questioners. She realized that this was Lann and that these were
interrogation tapes. Even back before the Slan Wars, there must have been an organization
equivalent to the secret police and the slan hunters.
“Why do you fear my children?” Lann said. “I love them. Two fine daughters and a
son—triplets—who happen to have been born with an unusual birth defect. They’re no threat
to you.”
The interrogator said in a gruff voice, “Anyone with powers such as theirs is a threat to us.
Anyone who has the ability to control minds must themselves be controlled before they harm
our government or our population.”
“But they’re just children, barely fifteen,” Lann said mildly. Even Anthea could tell he was
hiding something.
“They are
weapons
, living weapons that could be turned against us if we do not control
them.”
Another voice, a woman’s, spoke up from outside the field of view, “And how many others
like this are there, Dr. Lann? How many children have tendrils? We’ve heard reports from
other countries—countries that
you
visited. Wouldn’t you like us to bring together these other
mutants, just so we can give them proper medical care?”
Lann wasn’t falling for it. “Ask the other parents. How can I judge how many have been
born?”
“Born? Or
created
, Dr. Lann?” said the male voice.
“What are you suggesting?”
“In your laboratory we found and confiscated many devices, strange machines that had the
ability to alter human brains.”
The woman continued in a soothing voice, “Your research is well-known, Doctor. You are
quite prominent in the field of mental enhancement.”
“Yes, I have made a career of studying the nature of the human mind, of memories and
knowledge. My dream is to record and share those components that make up a person’s
history and personality.”
The male interrogator seized on the comment. “And did those diabolical machines also
expand the brains of your children, mutate them into these powerful creatures who can
manipulate thoughts? You could be manufacturing enhanced humans, putting your own
fingerprints on the evolution of the race.”
“Don’t be absurd.” Lann laughed at first, then saw that the others were serious.
“We know you have the capability,” the woman added.
“No one has that capability. I may be a genius in my field, but not even my children—who
are far smarter and more imaginative than I am—could concoct such a bizarre conspiracy of
using mind machines to produce a whole new race of human beings. Surely you can see that’s
ridiculous?”
“What we see, Dr. Lann, is that your three children have powers we do not understand.
We’ve already received reports from our counterpart agencies that an alarming number of
others just like them have begun popping up in the most unlikely places. Children born with
tendrils—”
The woman interjected, harsher now, “Or perhaps innocent babies were exposed to
unusual rays produced by your machines, which caused the tendrils to grow. Are you seeding
them around the world, Dr. Lann, trying to create a quiet revolution?”
“Of course not.”
There was a long silence, and finally the interrogators decided to let him go. “You watch
yourself, Dr. Lann—because we’ll certainly be watching you.”
With a shudder, Anthea removed the tape and put in the next one. Beside her, the baby
was fully alert. When she looked at her little boy, she experienced a poignant understanding of
how Dr. Lann must have felt upon seeing his own three children born with strange tendrils.
Was he surprised, or intrigued?
There was no record of the woman who had been mother to those first three slan children.
Had the mother been normal, or a secret slan all along? Maybe the race had existed far longer
than anyone suspected. Had that long-forgotten woman—or Dr. Lann himself—been exposed
to some strange chemical or mutagen? She doubted she would ever know.
In the next interrogation tape, Dr. Lann looked haggard. Purple bruises surrounded one
eye, and a bandage covered his forehead. His clothes were rumpled, even torn, but his face
held a murderously defiant spark that hadn’t been there before.
“By being so outspoken, you call attention to yourself, Doctor,” said the interrogator, a
different one than before. “If you don’t want to be singled out for our special attentions, then
you shouldn’t speak on the behalf of these dangerous mutants.”
“Someone has to,” Lann snapped back. “Someone needs to be the voice of reason.
Obviously, it won’t come from your new secret police organization.” A stiff gloved hand struck
him across the face. Lann spat a mouthful of blood and saliva at his interrogator. “You have no
right to hold me here. I have committed no crime.”
“You have attempted to destroy the human race. That’s a significant crime in our book.
Mutants are cropping up everywhere—it’s a veritable plague! I doubt we could possibly stop
the spread now, even if we exterminated all of them before they have a chance to breed. They
keep appearing even from seemingly normal parents.”
“I have nothing to do with that,” Lann said. “It’s the next step in evolution. Why fight it?
Embrace it, for the betterment of the human race.”
“There’s nothing natural about it. Everyone knows of your machine for transforming
babies into telepathic monsters. You use your rays on pregnant mothers and newborn infants,
causing them to develop tendrils.”
“That is absurd propaganda. Everyone ‘knows’ about it only because of the lies you and
your organization have spread.” Another slap across his face. Dr. Lann didn’t even seem
rattled.
“We know your son and daughters have barricaded themselves inside your fortress lab.
One can only guess what they’re doing in there. Is it true both daughters are pregnant? Who is
the father?”
“None of your business. We have done nothing wrong.”
“Then why won’t they let us come in and inspect?”
Lann sneered at the interrogators. “Because you’ve already proved yourselves to be
prejudiced oafs. You wouldn’t understand what you find. You could easily plant evidence.”
“If you cooperate, Dr. Lann, perhaps we’ll be merciful.”
“I think this interview is over.” Lann struggled to stand up, but the gloved hands shoved
him back down into the chair.
“It’s over when we finish asking you questions.”
But Lann clenched his jaws, crossed his arms over his chest, and refused to say another
word. The tape ran for several long minutes. The interrogator prodded and provoked him, but
he would not answer. Finally the recording ended.
Anthea could only stare. This information had been kept from the public! How could the
government have sealed away such details from everyone? It was as if someone—someone in
control—
wanted
the slans to remain hated.
«
^
»
While the chicken was roasting in the oven, sending savory smells throughout the house,
Granny showed the fugitives their separate rooms and allowed them to clean up and rest. But
she had other business with Jommy.
As he followed the old woman, he suspected that she had a scheme up her sleeve. Even
though he had worked to adjust her corrupt attitudes over the years, she could easily have
reverted to her villainous old self. At the moment, however, he had few other choices.
Spry with eagerness, Granny walked around to the back of the house, where she pulled up
the wooden door to the root cellar. Instead of the traditional smells of dirt, cobwebs, and old
vegetables, Jommy saw bright lights, tiled walls, and metal stairs leading to one of his
underground chambers. “I thought you might like to see this—I salvaged a few scraps.
Important scraps.” Her eyes glittered. “I’m sure it’s worth something to you.”
Jommy looked around in amazement and confusion. “But I triggered the self-destruct
myself, just before I led the tendrilless away from here on a wild-goose chase! I gave you a
hypnotic instruction.”
“Yes, you did, but Granny’s mind found a way around it.” She propped her hands on her
bony hips. “And I had a devil of a time saving some of your papers and blueprints and designs.
I had burns and blisters on my face and hands for weeks!”
“But why would you do that? It was dangerous, and foolish.” He stepped ahead, amazed to
see so many intact boxes and shelves. He had expected it all to be destroyed, and he couldn’t
keep the appreciation and admiration out of his voice. “You saved so much of my work.”