Authors: Keith Laumer,Eric Flint
Tags: #Science fiction, #Adventure, #General, #Science Fiction - General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Space Opera, #Short stories, #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #High Tech, #Science Fiction - Short Stories
"Johnny, hi; home already?" Curlene smiled at her husband.
"The robe, Curl," Professor Dimpleby said. He gave the young man an apologetic grin. "Curl was raised in Samoa; her folks were missionaries, you know. She never quite grasped the concept that the female bosom is a secret."
Curlene tucked the robe up around her neck. "Golly," she said. "I'm sorry if I offended, Mr . . . .?"
"On the contrary," the young man said, rising and giving his host a slight bow. "Professor Dimpleby, my name is, er, Lucifer."
Dimpleby put out his hand. "Lucifer, hey? Nothing wrong with that. Means 'Light-bearer.' But it's not a name you run into very often. It takes some gumption to flaunt the old taboos."
"Mr. Lucifer came to fix the lights," Curlene said.
"Ah—not really," the young man said quickly. "Actually, I came to, er, ask for help, Professor. Your help."
"Oh, really?" Dimpleby seated himself and stirred sugar into Curlene's cup and took a noisy sip. "Well, how can I be of service?"
"But first, before I impose on you any further, I need to be sure you understand that I really
am
Lucifer. I mean I don't want to get by on false pretenses." He looked at Curlene anxiously. "I would have told you I wasn't really an electrician, er, Mrs.—"
"Just call me Curl. Sure you would have."
"If you say your name's Lucifer, why should I doubt it?" Dimpleby asked with a smile.
"Well, the point is—I'm
the
Lucifer. You know. The, er, the Devil."
Dimpleby raised his eyebrows. Curlene made a sound of distressed sympathy.
"Of course the latter designation has all sorts of negative connotations," Lucifer hurried on. "But I assure you that most of what you've heard is grossly exaggerated. That is to say, I'm not really as bad as all that. I mean, there are different kinds of, er, badness. There's the real evil, and then there's sin. I'm, ah, associated with sin."
"The distinction seems a subtle one, Mr., ah, Lucifer—"
"Not really, Professor. We all sense instinctively what true
evil
is. Sin is merely
statutory
evil—things that are regarded as wrong simply because there's a rule against them. Like, ah, smoking cigarettes and drinking liquor and going to movies on Sunday, or wearing lipstick and silk hose, or eating pork, or swatting flies—depending on which set of rules you're going by. They're corollaries to ritual virtues such as lighting candles or spinning prayer wheels or wearing out-of-date styles."
Dimpleby leaned back and steepled his fingers. "Hmmm. Whereas genuine evil . . . ?"
"Murder, violence, lying, cheating, theft," Lucifer enumerated. "Sin, on the other hand, essentially includes anything that looks like it might be fun."
"Come to think of it, I've never heard anything in praise of fun from the anti-sin people," Curl said thoughtfully.
"Nor from any ecclesiastic with a good head for fund-raising," Dimpleby conceded.
"It's all due to human laziness, I'm afraid," Lucifer said sadly. "It seems so much easier and more convenient to observe a few ritual prohibitions than to actually give up normal business practices."
"Hey," Curlene said. "Let's not wander off into one of those academic discussions. What about you being," she smiled, "the Devil?"
"It's quite true."
"Prove it," Curlene said promptly.
"What? I mean, er, how?" Lucifer inquired.
"Do something. You know, summon up a demon; or transform pebbles into jewels; or give me three wishes; or—"
"Gosh, Mrs. Dimpleby—"
"Curl."
"Curl. You've got some erroneous preconceptions—"
"When they start using four-syllable words, I always know they're stalling," Curl said blandly.
Lucifer swallowed. "This isn't a good idea," he said. "Suppose somebody walked in?"
"They won't."
"Now, Curl, you're embarrassing our guest again," Dimpleby said mildly.
"No, it's all right, Professor," Lucifer said worriedly. "She's quite right. After all, I'm supposed to be a sort of, ahem, mythic figure. Why should she believe in me without proof?"
"Especially when you blush so easily," Curl said.
"Well . . . " Lucifer looked around the room. His eye fell on the aquarium tank which occupied several square feet of wall space under a bookcase. He nodded almost imperceptibly. Something flickered at the bottom of the tank. Curl jumped up and went over. Lucifer followed.
"The gravel," she gasped. "It looks different!"
"Diamond, ruby, emerald, and macaroni," Lucifer said. "Sorry about the macaroni. I'm out of practice."
"Do something else!" Curl smiled in eager expectation.
Lucifer frowned in concentration. He snapped his fingers and with a soft
blop!
a small, dark purple, bulbous-bellied, wrinkle-skinned creature appeared in the center of the rug. He was some forty inches in height, totally naked, extravagantly male, with immense feet.
"Hey, for crying out loud, you could give a guy a little warning! I'm just getting ready to climb in the tub, yet!" the small being's bulging red eye fell on Lucifer. He grinned, showing a large crescent of teeth. "Oh, it's you, Nick! Howza boy? Long time no see. Anything I can do for ya?"
"Oops, sorry, Freddy." Lucifer snapped his fingers and the imp disappeared with a sharp
plop!
"So that's a demon," Curl said. "How come his name is Freddy?"
"My apologies, Curl. He's usually most tastefully clad. Freddy is short for something longer."
"Know any more?"
"Er . . . " He pointed at Curl and made a quick flick of the wrist. In her place stood a tall, wide, huge-eyed coal-black woman in swirls of coarse, unevenly dyed cloth under which bare feet showed. Cheap-looking jewelry hung thick on her wrists, draped her vast bosom, winked on her tapered fingers and in her ears.
Lucifer flicked his fingers again, and a slim, olive-skinned girl with blue-black hair and a hooked nose replaced the buxom Sheban queen. She wore a skirt apparently made from an old gauze curtain and an ornate off-the-bosom vest of colored beads. A golden snake encircled her forehead.
Lucifer motioned again. The Egyptian empress dissolved into a nebulous cloud of pastel-colored gas in which clotted star-dust winked and writhed, to the accompaniment of massed voices humming nostalgic chords amid an odor of magnolia blossoms. Another gesture, and Curl stood again before them, looking slightly dazed.
"Hey, what was that last one?" she cried.
"Sorry, that was Scarlett O'Hara. I forgot she was a figment of the imagination. Those are always a little insubstantial."
"Remarkable," Dimpleby said. "I'll have to concede that you can either perform miracles or accomplish the same result by some other means."
"Gee, I guess you're genuine, all right," Curlene exclaimed. "But somehow I expected a much
older
man."
"I'm not actually a man, strictly speaking, Ma'am—Curl. And agewise, well, since I'm immortal, why should I look middle-aged rather than just mature?"
"Tell me," Curlene said seriously. "I've always wondered: what do you want people's souls for?"
"Frankly, Ma'am—Curl, that is—I haven't the remotest interest in anyone's soul."
"Really?"
"Really and truly; cross my heart. That's just another of those rumors
they
started."
"Are you sure you're really the Devil and not someone else with the same name?"
Lucifer spread his hands appealingly. "You saw Freddy. And those
are
noodles in the fish tank."
"But—no horns, no hooves, no tail—"
Lucifer sighed. "That idea comes from confusing me with Pan. Since he was a jolly sort of sex-god, naturally he was equated with sin."
"I've always wondered," Curlene said, "just what you did to get evicted from Heaven."
"Please," Lucifer said. "It . . . all dates back to an incident when I was still an angel." He held up a forestalling hand as Curl opened her mouth. "No, I
didn't
have wings. Humans added those when they saw us levitating, on the theory that anything that flies must have wings. If we were to appear today, they'd probably give us jets."
"Assuming you are, er, what you claim to be," Dimpleby said, "what's this about your needing help?"
"I do," Lucifer said. "Desperately. Frankly, I'm up against something I simply can't handle alone."
"I can't imagine what
I
could do, if you, with your, ah, special talents are helpless," Dimpleby said perplexedly.
"This is something totally unprecedented. It's a threat on a scale I can't begin to describe.
"Well, try," Curl urged.
"Stated in its simplest terms," Lucifer said, "the, ah, plane of existence I usually occupy—"
"Hell, you mean," Curl supplied.
"Well, that's another of those loaded terms. It really isn't a bad place at all, you know—"
"But what about it?" Dimpleby prompted. "What about Hell?"
"It's about to be invaded," Lucifer said solemnly. "By alien demons from another world."
It was an hour later. Lucifer, Curlene, and Professor Dimpleby were comfortably ensconced behind large pewter mugs of musty ale at a corner table in the Sam Johnson Room at the Faculty Club.
"Well, now," Dimpleby said affably, raising his tankard in salute, "alien demons, eh? An interesting concept, Mr. Lucifer. Tell us more."
"I've never believed in devils," Curlene said, "or monsters from another planet either. Now all of a sudden I'm supposed to believe in both at once. If it weren't for that Freddy . . . "
"Granted the basic premise, it's logical enough," Dimpleby said. "If earthly imps exist, why not space sprites?"
"Professor, this is more than a bunch of syllogisms," Lucifer said earnestly. "These fellows mean business. They have some extremely potent powers. Fortunately, I have powers they don't know about, too; that's the only way I've held them in check so far—"
"You mean—they're already
here?"
Curlene looked searchingly about the room.
"No—I mean, yes, they're here, but not precisely
here."
Lucifer clarified. "Look, I'd better fill in a little background for you. You see, Hell is actually a superior plane of existence—"
Curlene choked on her ale in a ladylike way.
"I mean—not
superior
, but, ah, at another level, you understand. Different physical laws, and so on—"
"Dirac levels," Dimpleby said, signaling for refills.
"Right!" Lucifer nodded eagerly. "There's an entire continuum of them, stretching away on both sides; there's an energy state higher on the scale than Hell—Heaven, it's called, for some reason—and one lower than your plane; that's the one Freddy comes from, by the way—"
"Oh, tell me about Heaven," Curlene urged.
Lucifer sighed, "Sometimes I miss the old place, in spite of . . . but never mind that."
"Tell me, Mr. Lucifer," Dimpleby said thoughtfully, "how is it you're able to travel at will among these levels?" As he spoke he pulled an envelope from his pocket and uncapped a ballpoint. "It appears to me that there's an insurmountable difficulty here, in terms of atomic and molecular spectral energy distribution; the specific heat involved . . . " he jotted busily, murmuring to himself.
"You're absolutely right, Professor," Lucifer said, sampling the fresh tankard just placed before him. "Heat used to be a real problem. I'd always arrive in a cloud of smoke and sulphur fumes. I finally solved it by working out a trick of emitting a packet of magnetic energy to carry off the excess."
"Hmmm. How did you go about dissipating this magnetism?"
"I fired it off in a tight beam; got rid of it."
"Beamed magnetism?" Dimpleby scribbled furiously. "Hmmm. Possibly . . . "
"Hey, fellas," Curlene protested. "Let's not talk shop, OK?" She turned a fascinated gaze on Lucifer. "You were just telling me about Heaven."
"You wouldn't like it, Curl," he said, almost curtly. "Now, Professor, all through history—at least as far as I remember it, and that covers a considerable period—the different energy states were completely separate and self-sufficient. Then, a few thousand years back, one of our boys—Yahway, his name is—got to poking around and discovered a way to move around from one level to another. The first place he discovered was Hell. Well, he's something of a bluenose, frankly, and he didn't much like what he found there: all kinds of dead warriors from Greece and Norway and such places sitting around juicing it and singing it, and fighting in a friendly sort of way."
"You mean—Valhalla really exists?" Curlene gasped. "And the Elysian Fields?"
Lucifer made a disclaiming wave of the hand. "There've always been humans with more than their share of vital energy. Instead of dying, they just switch levels. I have a private theory that there's a certain percentage of, er, individuals in any level who really belong in the next one up—or down. Anyway, Yahway didn't like what he saw. He was always a great one for discipline, getting up early, regular calisthenics—you know. He tried telling these fellows the error of their ways, but they just laughed him off the podium. So he dropped down one more level, which put him here; a much simpler proposition, nothing but a few tribesmen herding goats. Naturally they were impressed by a few simple miracles." Lucifer paused to quaff deeply. He sighed.
"Yes. Well, he's been meddling around down here ever since, and frankly—but I'm wandering." He hiccuped sternly. "I admit, I never could drink very much without losing my perspective. Where was I?"
"The invasion," Dimpleby reminded him.
"Oh, yes. Well, they hit us without any warning. There we were, just sitting around the mead hall taking it easy, or strolling in the gardens striking our lutes or whatever we felt like, when all of a sudden—" Lucifer shook his head bemusedly. "Professor, did you ever have one of those days when nothing seemed to go right?"
Dimpleby pursed his lips. "Hmmm. You mean like having the first flat tire in a year during the worst rainstorm of the year while on your way to the most important meeting of the year?"
"Or," Curlene said, "like when you're just having a quick martini to brace yourself for the afternoon and you spill it on your new dress and when you try to wash it out, the water's turned off, and when you try to phone to report
that
, the phone's out, and just then Mrs. Trundle from next door drops in to talk, only you're late for the Faculty Wives?"