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Authors: Margaret St. Clair

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"... Try," I said. An instant later I heard her
get
to her
feet and run out of the room, and an instant after that I heard somebody come in. There was the sound of heavy breathing beside me.
One—maybe two—men.
All the male Russian Gulchers were heavy breathers, and if one couldn't smell them, one could always hear them.

 

             
Somebody picked up my right arm and jabbed
a
needle into it. The needle felt
hot,
and about as big as a railroad spike, and yet Gee-Gee's warning hadn't really been necessary. The needle hurt, but it didn't hurt
me;
what the Russian Gulchers had wanted to achieve with me had very nearly happened. I had been reduced to
a
body that no especial or consistent personality inhabited.

 

             
My arm was let drop. "He's had it, I guess," somebody said. "Wonder if he can respond to a simple command."

 

             
"Try it and find out," the other man said. He had
a
light, precise way of talking that left all the syllables separate and distinct. It wasn't at all like the slurred,
slobby
way the R. Gulchers talked.

 

             
"OK." The hard-breathing one pushed and prodded me into a sitting position and then bellowed into my ear, "Wake up, Boyle!"

 

             
Boyle? Why was he calling me that? I'd been Bennet, hadn't I? I let my eyelids flutter an instant before I opened them.

 

             
Two men, just as I'd thought. The bellowing, hard-breathing one I'd seen before. He'd chased me or attacked me or guarded me—I couldn't remember clearly. The other, the precise e-nun-ci-a-tor, was new to me.

 

             
"Get to your feet, Burke!" the bellower bellowed.

 

             
I didn't know whether I ought to obey or not. Finally I said, only a little more confused than I actually felt, "I thought my name was Scottish.
A name with 'Mac'."

 

             
"Never mind that," the precise man said. "You're whoever we say you are. Get to your feet."

 

             
Stumblingly I obeyed. I stood swaying, my head down, wondering whether I oughtn't to just lie down again. If I lay down, I might be able to decide who I was. The vapors of confusion had risen around me blindingly, perhaps because of my precise-spoken jailer's denial of my right to any one name, and I felt I had a whole
beanpot
full of identities to choose from. There were not only the lives I had actually lived—Alvin Biggs and Bennet—and the assimilation with the cadaver of Alice—but a broad spectrum of possibilities, most of which weren't even names. Who did I want to be? I didn't know. And I didn't know who was wondering about it.

 

             
The bigger man began to push me toward the door, propelling me knowingly with his fists and knees. "What a lot of trouble this asshole from Noyo has been," he said. "If we'd only thrown him in the water, we'd of been lots better off. But your sensitive chemical conscience
wouldn
' let you."

 

             
"I don't see why you mock me for having a
chemical
conscience," the precise man said. "It's certainly better to have one's ethical considerations activated by chemical than not to have them activated at all."

 

             
"Ethical!" The other man made a snorting noise. "Why, you've done things that would
disgus
' a skunk.
The kids, to mention one.
Don't talk to me about your
fuckin
' ethics."

 

             
"Ask
yourself
what I'd have been like
without
my chemical conscience," the other man said between his teeth. "I might just forget to go in for my shot some month, and prefer to settle with you. Watch yourself."

 

             
I heard all this without really comprehending it. I knew, of course, that the California Republic had elected to deal with its most troublesome criminals by means of the "chemical conscience." But I was preoccupied with trying to sort out what began to feel like my identity from Bennet's.
And what about Bennet himself?
Had the visionary scene on the seacoast with Kate Wimbold been as veridical as the interview in the cabin with O'Hare? Both had been lived by me as Bennet; but had the historical Bennet actually lived both of them? (I was
unshakeably
sure that Bennet's last few hours—Bennet, whose concealment of his disease had been responsible for the deaths of millions—had been as I had lived them. Strange sidelight on history! And O'Hare had grown the Dancers from Bennet's oral cells.)

 

             
They were propelling me up the slope from the gulch to the road. "On your way, Jack," my jailer said when I reached the top. He gave me a parting shove.

 

             
I turned north. In my fuddled condition, I was convinced I could deal with the Dancer at Noyo by appealing to the covenants the girl in the scuba suit had mentioned to Bennet. Why walk a long way down the coast, hunting an ally or trying to have the Grail Vision, when I could get rid of the unnatural creature so immediately?
And after him, all the other Dancers.
It would be as easy as swatting flies on a garbage heap.

 

             
"He's headed north," my hard-breathing jailer said. "Shall we let him go?"

 

             
"No, I think not," the precise man said reflectively. "He still looks a little too intelligent, a little too normal, to me. Turn him to face south. He can use a little more processing."

 

             
I was turned around as neatly as a cable car on a turntable (Jade Moon took me on a visit to San Fran once, when I was about five and she was in one of her fits of being convinced I really was her child.) Docilely I began walking south. I didn't mind abandoning my plan particularly. It was like a dream in which I was convinced that whatever happened, it was all for the best.

 

             
The men watched me in silence, hands on their hips.
"He sure is confused," the heavy-breather said.

 

             
"Fine," said the other. "Ideally, he shouldn't be able to tell his own butt from ours. Brotherly told us not to let him go unless we were sure he'd never come out of it. I don't think he ever will. But he could use a little more processing, and he'll get that on south."

 

             
I was being discussed as if I weren't present. I felt a dim irritation, but I kept my head down and made no sign. I had gone a fair distance—three or four hundred feet—when I heard a voice behind me.

 

             
"
Tham
,
Tham
, oh,
Tham
!
Tham
McGregor! You forgot your
patheth
!
Tham
!"
It was Gee-Gee, and she was carrying my sheaf of wooden passes in her hand.

 

             
Involuntarily I turned around and took the passes she was holding out to me. An instant later I realized that I had betrayed myself, that my captors would realize I was somewhat less zonked than they thought.

 

             
It was too late. The next minute the two men were after me with thudding feet. I began to run, still feeling poorly connected with my body. But I was connected enough to be pretty frightened. I knew that if they caught me they wouldn't let me go until I was crazy for good.

 

             
They were gaining on me. Panting and rubber-legged, sweating heavily, I struggled on. Then a car stopped beside me. It was a rancher in a truck, headed south.

 

             
Bless that man. Bless his monogamous, beer-drinking, flag-saluting
squareness
. For a moment he looked from wild-eyed me to my angry pursuers. Then he opened the truck cab door. "Want a lift?" he said.

 

             
"You bet."

 

             
"Get in." I got in with alacrity, and we drove off. The truck was a gas-burner, but it accelerated well.

 

             
"Thanks. Thanks a million," I said when I had got my breath back. Through the rear window I could see the
two men standing in the road, looking sore and glum.

 

             
"That's OK," the rancher said, waving his pipe (he was smoking, which shows how square he was). "I don't like those people. Anybody they're chasing must be all right"

 

             
"Thanks," I said again. We were silent. I wondered whether I was wise to be going south. Had the idea that I could deal with the Noyo Dancer by invoking some dreamy
convenant
been accurate? Probably not; and yet I was convinced that my experiences as Bennet held the key to getting rid of the Dancers' tyranny.

 

             
I was to forget this intuition, and remember it only later. Yet it was truthful and accurate.

 

-

 

Chapter
VIII

 

             
The artist's house bothered me. I had scarcely crossed the threshold when I began to feel uneasy, so that I found myself sniffing and turning my head from side to side, trying to locate the source of my distress.

 

             
The artist—he said his name was Farnsworth—had picked me up just above Mendocino town after the rancher, who had grown a little too inquisitive, had turned off for his cousin's place. I had been glad of the lift, for no sooner had I parted from the rancher than I began to feel a sort of shudder, like the aura of epilepsy, between my shoulders. It hadn't happened before, but I knew immediately what it meant. I was in for another extra-life.

 

             
"Life" isn't quite the word, for I was pretty sure
I
wasn't going to be human this time.
A tree, a clod, something marine—anyhow, something pretty far down in the vital scale.
What was left of my ego was itching with fear. I hoped the company of another person
might
help ward off an experience that I knew I couldn't return from. I got into Farnsworth's Mercedes eagerly.

 

             
He was a slim man in his middle-thirties, with slim well-drawn eyebrows and a fine-featured, smooth, flesh-less face. His hands were big. We went bumping along
past the town (the highway around Mendocino town has been blown up several times by dynamiters who didn't approve of quite so much concrete on a scenic route), and when we got to the southern outskirts
Farnsworth asked me if I'd like to come up to his place for a drink. I accepted this offer eagerly too, since I dreaded being alone. Farnsworth was not the most pleasant companion in the world; but the extra-life I feared hadn't materialized. With him, I had stayed myself.

 

             
We drove up a glittering driveway and stopped between two Monterey pines in front of a low redwood shack. "Like my drive?" Farnsworth said as we got out. "It's made of ground-up glass bottles. I do them in a tumbling barrel myself."

 

             
"Fine idea," I said, fighting down the desire to start dancing along the strip of glittering glass. "Good ecology.
"
...
Well, it was better fighting down the wish to dance than it would have been feeling my roots wandering around looking for water or my shell being forced open by a knife.

 

             
We went into the house. As I said before, it made me uneasy, and I didn't like the artist much better than his house, though he exuded kindliness and goodwill. He reminded me of somebody, but I couldn't think who. Finally I placed it. He reminded me of the e-nun-ci-at-or at Russian Gulch.

 

             
When he came back with the drinks—red wine from the Italian-Swiss colony at Asti near Cloverdale—I said, "Excuse me,
uhn
, but are you,
uhn
, having what they call the chemical conscience?" I was so apologetic because I was, in essence, accusing him of being at least a murderer; the "chemical conscience" has never been administered for anything except really serious felonies.

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