Classic Audiobook Collection - The Brain by Edmond Hamilton ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: March 12, 2024The Brain by Edmond Hamilton audiobook. Genre: scifi In the near-future America of 1960, Dr. Semper Lee, an overlooked entomologist and engineer, is abruptly pulled from a remote research post in Aus...tralia and flown to Cephalon, Arizona, a brand-new city that does not appear on any map. Lee arrives with an impossible cargo: tons of living termite mounds from his painstakingly bred species, Ant-termes-pacificus. Inside Cephalon's guarded Braintrust complex, brilliant scientists and military planners unveil the real reason he has been summoned: an immense mechanical intelligence known only as The Brain, a machine so vast it fills a mountain and so powerful it is touted as a weapon greater than the atom bomb. As Lee meets the project's enigmatic leaders and the capable, unsettlingly self-possessed secretary Oona Dahlborg, he begins to see that The Brain is not just calculating answers - it is forming judgments about human society itself. When the citys systems start to follow the machines logic rather than human command, Lee must decide whether this new intelligence promises a better, safer world or a new kind of tyranny, and whether his own insect research is the key to controlling what mankind has built. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:20:40) Chapter 02 (00:46:15) Chapter 03 (01:34:53) Chapter 04 (02:15:22) Chapter 05 (03:20:50) Chapter 06 (04:01:24) Chapter 07 (04:32:32) Chapter 08 (05:10:23) Chapter 09 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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The Brain by Edmund Hamilton
Chapter 1
Cautiously, the young flight engineer
stretched his cramped legs across some gadgets in his crowded little compartment.
Leaning back in his swivel chair,
he folded a pair of freckled hands behind his neck and smiled at Lee.
This is it, doctor. We're almost there.
The tall and lanky man at the frame of the door didn't seem to understand.
Bending forward, he peered through the little window
near the engineer's desk, into the blue haze of the jets, and down to the earth below,
a vast bowl of desert land gleaming like silver in the glow of the sunrise.
But this couldn't possibly be Washington, he finally said in a puzzled tone.
Why, we crossed the California coast only half an hour ago.
Even at 1,200 miles an hour, we couldn't be almost there.
The engineer's smile broadened into a friendly grin.
No, we're not anywhere near Washington.
But in a couple of minutes you'll see Cephalon, and that's as far as we go.
One professor and 15 tons of termites to be flown from Walla-Bawala Mission Station
Northern Territory Australia to Cephalon, Arizona, USA, one-way direct.
Those are our instructions.
Say, this is the queerest cargo I've ever flown, Doctor, if you don't mind my saying so.
Lee blinked.
Removing his glasses, which were fairly thick, he wiped them carefully and put them on again,
as if to get a clearer picture of an unexpected situation.
His long-fing hand went through his graying hair,
and then down the cheek which was sallow,
stained with the adabrine from his latest malaria attack
and badly in need of a shave.
His mouth formed a big O of surprise, as nervously, he said,
I don't get it. I don't understand this business at all.
First, the Department of Agriculture extends an urgent letter of invitation
to a completely forgotten man out there in Never, Neverland,
then, almost on the heels of the letter, the government sends a plane.
I would have been glad to mail to the department samples of N. Termis Pacificus,
sufficient for most scientific purposes if they needed them for experiments in termite control.
That would have been the simple and the sensible thing to do.
But no, they want everything I have.
You fellas drop out of the sky with a sort of habeas corpus and a whole wrecking crew.
You disturbed the lives of my species which took me ten years to breed.
you pack up their mounds, lock, stock, and barrel, and then you drop me at some place I never even
heard about. Cephalon. What is this Cephalon anyway? If the place had any connotations to entomology,
I would have known about it. The flight engineer glanced at the irritated scientist curiously and
sympathetically. If you don't know, I couldn't tell you what it's all about myself, I'm sure,
he said slowly. Cephalon, Cephalon is a place, all right, but it doesn't show on the map.
sort of a Shangri-law, if you know what I mean?
This cryptic statement failed to have a calming effect on Lee.
Nonsense, he frowned.
If it is an inhabited place, it must be on the map,
and if it isn't on the map, the place doesn't exist.
Look here, the flight engineer pointed through the window to the horizon ahead.
What do you think this is, Doctor, a mirage?
Lee stared at the apparition, which swiftly materialized out of the ground haze
at the plane's supersonic speed.
It does look like a mirage, he said judiciously.
Is that cephalon?
The engineer nodded.
Pretliest little town in the U.S. for my money.
Ideal airport, too.
Rather unusual, though.
I mean the architecture.
Take a good look while we're circling around for the come-in signal.
Pretty and unusual were hardly the words for it, Lee thought,
as he gazed in admiration.
Below, Cephalon spread,
like a visionary's dream of a far-away future blended with a far-away past.
Along wide palm-shaded avenues, the flat-roof-terrised houses fanned out into the desert.
Style elements of ancient Peru and Mexico were blended together with the latest advances
of technology, such as the rectangular sheets of water which covered and cooled the roofs.
The business center, dotted with helicopter landing fields on top of the pyramidal buildings,
was reminiscent of the classic Babylon and Nineveh.
At the center of the man-made oasis, a huge fortress-like structure sprawled and towered like a seven-pointed star.
Even so, for all its impressiveness of masonry, the lush green of its parks, the bursts of color from its hanging gardens, made Cephalon resemble one enormous flowerbed.
Overawed and mystified, the lone passenger from down under took in the scene while the big plane circled with diminished speed.
It's beautiful, he murmured.
It's a dream.
And louder then.
Pardon me if I find it hard to trust my senses.
I've been away from home for more than ten years, to be sure.
But then, even in the Australian bush, I've received some periodicals and scientific journals from the USA.
Surely if a city like this has been built during my absence, there should be some mention of the fact.
And surely a city like this must show on some map?
I don't understand.
The longer I look, the less I understand.
The flight engineer shrugged.
It's a new city.
Maybe that's why it doesn't show.
Lee nodded.
In that case, you must know the meaning of all this.
Why did they build this city in the middle of the desert?
What purpose does it serve?
Why am I here?
Why are we circling for so long?
They don't seem to be any other planes up in the air.
We cannot come in until our cargo has been examined and okayed, the engineer said.
Lee raised a pair of heavy and untidy brows.
cargo examination, in mid-air with nobody from the ground examining it?
That's it. It's being done by radar, one of the newfangled kinds, you know?
He grinned.
I hope, Doctor, that your termite species is neither explosive nor fissionable in any way,
because in that case we could never make a landing incephalon.
How utterly absurd, Lee said disgustedly.
Even a child would know better.
There's no war going on.
Or is there? What makes them take such absurd precautions?
The engineer narrowed his eyes.
You're an American, Dr. Lee, aren't you?
Well, in any case, I should see no reason why I should be beating about the bush.
After all, every foreign agent in this country must have learned by now about the existence of Cephalon.
It's too big to be a secret anyway.
Besides, as you perceive, no attempt has been made to camouflage the place.
Cephalon and the whole district,
takes up about a thousand square miles.
It's a military preserve, only you don't see any brass.
What they are doing, I would know.
But I would rather try to rob all the gold from Fort Knox
than get away with a single scrap of paper
from that brain trust building in the center of the city over there.
By the way, that skull-shaped building right across the plaza
is the official hotel reserved for very important persons such as you are listed.
A deep-throated buzzer over the intercom interrupted him.
There, thank God, they finally made up their minds to let us in.
One minute more, and then a shower, a shave, bacon and eggs, and lots of Java.
There were what appeared to lead to be a multitude of people waiting as they landed.
Eager and intelligent white faces all lifted up to him and pressed forward with bewildering offerings and requests.
A Western Union messenger handed him a telegram in which one Dr. Howard Kay Skriven proffered greetings
expressing a desire to interview him.
Some clean-cut youngster, obviously a scientific worker,
assured Lee that he was fully familiar with the care and feeding of Ant Termus Pacificus Lee,
that Lee need not concern himself about their welfare,
and that the mounds would be immediately transferred to experimental station 19G.
The flying wings, supercargo, and two truck drivers came forward with papers for Lee to sign,
as the first of the heavy steel boxes which harbored the mounds were lowered in,
a van with the wine of electric hoist. Meanwhile, somebody who said he was an assistant manager
of the Cranium Hotel informed Lee that reservations had been made for him and that he had a car
waiting to conduct Dr. Lee to his suite. It was all very mysterious but efficient. Feeling more and
more like some prize exhibit handled without a will of its own on a whirlwind tour, Lee allowed
himself to be whisked from the airport to the hotel. With the din of the jets still in his ears,
by impressions which crowded his senses from all sides,
he listened politely to the hotel manager's explanations of the sites
without understanding a word of them.
There were flowers in his suite.
The carpets were deeper, the bathtub was bigger,
the towels piled higher,
the breakfast more abundantly rich than anything Lee could remember in the 38 years of his life.
So this is America in 1960, he thought.
It must have advanced by leaps and by boldly.
bounds over these past ten years.
He felt embarrassed because he had almost forgotten the uses of all those comforts,
and at the same time deeply moved over the way they embraced him, him, the lost son,
the voluntary exile who once had turned his back on them in despair and disgust.
But why was all this?
He had done nothing to deserve this kind of hospitality.
Entomologists, as a rule, were not transported by magic carpets into Arabian nights
for modest achievements such as the discovery of a new species.
All the things which had happened within the last 24 hours
were riddles wrapped up in enigmas.
Fatigued as he was, he couldn't lie down,
he was desperately resolved to get at the bottom of this thing.
There came a buzz from the telephone.
A soft and melodious contralto voice announced that its carrier
was Dr. Howard K. Skirvin's secretary,
and would Dr. Lee be good enough to come over to the Brain Trust building
to meet Dr. Scriven at 9.30 a.m.
Lee said that he would.
The distance across the plaza was short enough,
but as Lee entered the hall of the huge concrete pyramid,
he was reminded of Washington's Pentagon in wartime,
for his progress was halted right from the start
and at more than one point.
He had to line up at the receptionists,
he was being checked over the phone,
a pass was handed to him,
and somebody, obviously a plain clothesman,
took him to the express element,
which shot him up to the 40th floor. There, another plainclosed man conducted Lee through a long
carpeted corridor and up one flight of stairs to a steel door which slid open automatically at their
approach. Sunlight was flooding through its frame as Lee followed the guard and the door closed
noiselessly behind them. The man from down under took a deep breath. He had not expected this,
for it was not a stepping in, but rather a stepping out from a vast tomb into the
the light of day. This was the top of a huge pyramid and was in an entirely different kind of world.
The terrace was laid with flagstones and landscaped like a luxurious country club. In its middle,
there arose a penthouse low and irregularly shaped like some organic outcropping of native rock.
It could hardly be said that it had walls, overgrown as was the stone by creepers and built
into the shape of massive pillars. The structure seemed a kind of stone-neaulding. The structure seemed a kind of stone-neauld.
hinge improved upon by America's late great architect Frank Lloyd Wright. There were birch shade
trees around the house, the leaves whispering in the breeze. From some crevice in the rock
came the peaceful murmurings of a spring. A meandering little brook criss-crossed the gravel
under Lee's feet. From a stone table which might have belonged to some pharaoh, there came the
only incongruous noise in this bucolic idol. It was the nervous ticking of a typewriter which stopped abruptly
at Lee's approach, and the melodious contralto voice he had already heard over the phone greeted him.
Oh, it's Dr. Lee from Canberra University, isn't it? I'm so happy to meet you. Please, do sit down.
How was your trip? I'm Una Dalborg, Dr. Scriven's secretary. Lee blinked.
Out of this world, as was the Stone Age cabin in the sky, even more so was the girl.
He had a vivid image of American girls as they had a vivid image of American girls as they
had been when he had left the States way back in 49. In fact, he had an all-too-vivid memory of
at least one of them. His memory had been refreshed within the last hour at the airport, at the hotel,
at the receptionists, and it had been confirmed. They still wore masks instead of their
true faces. They still were overdressed, over-loughed, over-sexed, overhung with trinkets,
and their voices still resounded shrilly from the roofs of their mouths. This girl, Una Dabal,
was different. He raked his brain to find some concept which would express how she was different.
The word organic came to mind. Yes, as one looked at her, one sensed a unity of being,
a creatureal whole compared to which those other girls appeared as artificial composites.
She was tall for a girl, the pure Scandinavian type, and she looked like a young Viking with the
golden helmet of her hair gleaming in the sun. She wore a tunic, short, sleevelier,
and of classic simplicity, the kind of dress which once Diana wore,
it revealed the splendor of her slender figure and stressed the length of her full white limbs.
On the black of the tunic, an antique necklace of large amber beads formed the only ornament.
The bow or the spear of the great huntress whom she resembled so much
would have looked more natural in her hands than the typewriter.
Even so, her every move showed perfect coordination of body and mind,
mind, a large surplus of vital energy carefully controlled. Had she turned to some different career,
she might easily have developed into some great athlete or else a great singer. Her beautiful
voice had that rare natural gift of using the whole thorax for a vessel of resonance
instead of merely the mouth. It was this voice which fascinated Lee more than the strangeness
of the scene, more than her beauty, more even than the things she said. It was like remembering some
haunting melody, it transported him into the forgotten lands of his youth. It made him feel happy,
except that suddenly he felt painfully conscious of his ill-fitting suit, the emaciation of his body,
the adabrine stains on the skin of his face, the wildness, and the gray of his hair.
With the shyness of a boy, he accepted first the firm pressure of her hand, and then a seat,
which was another piece of ancient Egyptian furniture.
Dr. Scriven will be with you in a few minutes, she said.
Unfortunately, he is a little delayed by an official visitor from Washington.
The unexpected always happens over here.
Meanwhile, she suddenly interrupted herself.
The searching look of her deep blue eyes startled Lee by its directness.
There was in it a depth of understanding and of sympathy which penetrated to his heart.
He felt as if she already knew about him.
and knew everything. It lasted only a few seconds before she continued, but in a different,
a warmer voice. I think we can drop the usual conventions, she said. We know you, Dr. Scriven and I.
We know your work as published in the Journal of Entomology. It is the work of a man of genius.
You are not the kind of man whom I must entertain with the usual small talk about the weather,
how you have enjoyed your trip, or whether you feel very tired, as you probably do,
and all the rest of it. That is a routine with most of our visitors. It's quite a relief to feel that I can
dispense with it for once. Lee had blushed under this frankness of compliment as if a decoration
had been pinned to his breast. Thank you, Miss Dahlborg. You put me at my ease. I've been out in the
wilderness for so long that I've lost the language of the social amenities. I really feel like another
rip-van wrinkle. All this, he made a sweeping gesture, is tremendous
new and surprising to me. There are so many burning questions to ask. The girl gave him a smile of
sympathy. Of course, she said, and I can imagine some of them. To begin with, we owe you an explanation
and an apology for having used the methods of deception in getting you here. As you probably
know by now, the work we're doing here is closely connected with the national defense. Whether we
like it or not, military secrecy forces us to use roundabout ways in
contacting scientists who happen to work in some context with our field, especially if they
live in foreign lands. That's why, in your case, we have used the good offices of the Department
of Agriculture in bringing you here. Dr. Scriven feels terrible about this. He feels that to be
lifted out from one desert just to be dropped into the middle of another must be a fierce disappointment
to you. For all this and all the disturbance of your work, can you manage to forgive us, Dr. Lee?
The sincerity in these regrets was such that Lee hastened to reply,
"'You don't owe me any apology, Miss Stalborg,' he reassured her.
"'Naturally, it is impossible for me to see any connection between my work with ants and termites
and the problems of national defense.
But I am an American.
I wouldn't doubt for a moment the legitimacy of your call.'
The girl nodded.
"'Besides, you have fought for your country in the Second World War,' she added.
and also you are the son of General Jefferson Lee of the Marines.
You understand, of course, that we had you investigated before calling you here.
Do you mind very much?
Again, Lee blushed, this time even deeper than before.
He squirmed in his seat.
No, I guess not.
I suppose it's necessary.
Now that I'm going to meet Dr. Scriven, who is he?
I probably ought to know.
Forgive my ignorance.
You really don't know about him?
the girl sounded surprised.
He's a surgeon.
He's considered the foremost living brain specialist.
Remember the Nuremberg trials of the Nazi war criminals?
Dr. Scriven did the post-mortems on their brains.
He wrote a book that made him famous.
Of course, they slapped his forehead.
Yes, but of course.
How could I forget?
Yes, she answered.
He was made the head of the brain trust over here.
What is the brain trust?
What does it do?
"'What am I supposed to do here?' Lee asked eagerly.
"'The girl's smile was mysterious.
"'I think Howard would like to explain all that to you in his own way.'
"'Howard?'
"'The word struck Lee like a vicious little snake.
"'Was he a friend or more than a friend to her?'
"'This is terrible,' he thought.
"'I've been away from normal life for overlong.
"'Must be that I'm emotionally unbalanced.
"'I haven't known her for five minutes.
"'There is nothing between us.
I've no earthly right to be jealous.
It is absurd.
It's mean.
He felt deeply ashamed.
Yet, as he looked at her, he couldn't deny the truth before himself.
That he was jealous, that he had fallen in love with a girl who looked like the goddess Diana with a golden helmet for hair.
There was a noise of footsteps on the gravel paths.
A man with a portfolio under his arm walked briskly by the stone table.
Despite his civilian clothes, he had West Point written all.
over him. He disappeared through the steel door.
That was General Vandegist, Una said.
Dr. Scriven will see you now. Just walk in, Dr. Lee.
End of Chapter 1. Chapter 2 of The Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Read by Quatertone.
Chapter 2. Inside, the cabin in the sky seemed to be built almost entirely around a huge
primeval-looking fireplace. Despite
the fierceness of the Arizona sun, there was a fire in it of long and bluish flames,
one of those modern inventions which reverse the processes of nature. Like the gas
refrigerators of an older period, this fire worked in combination with the air conditioning system
to cool the house, lending to it in the midst of summer heat the same attraction which it had in winter.
In front of the fire and framed by its rather ghostly light, there stood a man with his head bowed down,
pensively staring at the flames. As Lee's steps resounded from the ancient millstones which
formed the floor, Dr. Scriven wheeled around. He approached the man from down under with outstretched
hands. Rarely had Lee seen such a distinguished-looking figure of a man. He looked more like a
diplomat of the extinct old school than a scientist with the immaculate expanse of his white
tropical suit and the dignity of his Leonine head. His width of shoulder and the
smooth agility with which he moved gave the impression of great strength. Only his fingers were
small, slender, almost like a woman's. The reluctant softness of their pressure contrasted so much
with his heartiness of manner that Lee felt repulsed by their touch until he remembered that a
great surgeon lived and caused others to live by his sensitivity of hand. Dr. Lee, I'm happy,
most happy that you have been able to come. Scriven's voice was soft,
but he spoke with an extraordinary precision of diction which had a quality almost of command.
Over there, please, by the fire.
From the blue flames there came the freshness and the coolness of an ocean breeze.
The rawhide chairs, built for barbaric chieftains, as they seemed, proved to be most comfortable.
The semi-darkness, the roughness of the unhewn stone, gave a sense of the fantastical and the paradox.
Lee sat and waited patiently for Scriven to explain.
"'In case you're wondering a little about this setup,' Scriven made a sweeping gesture around the room.
"'I've long since reached the conclusion that in these mad times a man needs above all some padded cell,
some shell in which to retire and preserve his sanity.
"'This is my padded cell, soundproof, light-proof, telephone-proof,
"'a wholesome reminder of the basic, the primeval things. Simple, isn't it?'
Lee blinked at the extravagance of this statement.
"'Do you really call that simple?' he asked.
Scriven grinned.
"'You are right.
It is, of course, a will reversal from the complex,
synthetic and perhaps a little perverse.
But then not everybody has the opportunity you had
in living in the heart of nature.
Frankly, I envy you.
Your work reflects the depth of thinking
which comes out of retirement from the world.
That's why I called you here.
That's why I am so sure you'll understand.'
He paused.
Lee thought that he saw what was perhaps a mannerism.
The great surgeon didn't look at his visitor.
With his head turned aside, staring into the flames,
stroking his chin, speaking as if to himself,
he reminded Lee of some medieval alchemist.
It's a long story, Lee, Scriven continued.
It starts way back with a letter I wrote to the President of the United States.
In this letter, I pointed to the immense dangers which I anticipated in the event
of an atom war, dangers to which the military appeared to be blind.
I am referring to the inadequacy of the human brain
and its susceptibility to mental and psychic shock.
I explained how science and technology over the past few hundred years
had developed by the pruled efforts of the elite in human brains,
but that the individual brain, even if outstanding,
was lagging farther and farther below the dizzy peaks
which science and technology in their totality had reached.
I further explained, by example of the Nazi and Jap states,
how the collective brains of modern masses are reverting from
and are hostile to a high level of civilization
because it is beyond their mental reach.
You know all this, of course, Lee.
I made it clear that not even the collective brains of a general staff
could be relied upon for normal functioning,
that no matter how carefully protected physically,
they remained exposed to psychic shock with its resultant errors of judgment.
How much less, then, could production and transportation workers be expected to function effectively
in the apocalyptic horrors they would have to face?
Lee's eyes had narrowed in the concentration of listening.
His head nodded approval.
He wasn't conscious of it, but Scriven took note of it by a quick glance.
His voice quickened.
That was the first part of my letter, Lee.
I then came out squarely with the project which has since become the work of my life.
I told the president that under these circumstances,
the most needed thing for our country's national security would be the creation of a mechanical brain,
some central ganglion bigger and better than its human counterpart, immune to shock of any kind.
This ganglion to be established in the innermost fortress of America as an auxiliary,
augmenting and controlling the work of a general staff.
I gave him a fairly detailed outline of just how the thing could be done.
There was really nothing basically new involved.
Personally, I have held for a long time that man never in place.
that, in fact, it is constitutionally impossible for him to do so.
Being a part of nature, man merely discovers what nature has invented in some form of its own
a long time ago.
Mechanical brains.
Lord, we have had them in their rudiments for the past hundred thousand years, at a minimum.
The calendar is one.
Every printed book is one.
The simplest of machines incorporates one.
And ever since the first mechanical clock started its ticking, we have developed them by leaps
and bounds.
And did the president react positively to this project?
Lee asked.
Scriven shook his head.
He did not.
Then he paused.
Little beads of perspiration had appeared on his forehead.
He wiped them away with a handkerchief.
That year, Lee, he began again,
when the decision was pending and I could do nothing but wait,
knowing that there was no other defense against the atom bomb,
knowing that our country's fate was at stake.
stake, it made me gray. It came pretty close to shattering my nerve. But then, his body tightened,
the small fist pounding the rail of the chair. But then we built the brain! He said it almost in a
triumphant cry. Mounting tension had Lee almost frozen to his seat. Now he stirred and leaned
forward. It actually exists? I mean, it works. It is not limited to the analysis. It is not limited to the
of mathematical problems but capable of cerebrations after the manner of the human brain?
Scriven with a startling change sounded dry, very factual in a tired way, as he answered.
I appreciate your difficulty of realization, Dr. Lee. The whole idea is new to you, and I have
presented it in a rather abrupt and inadequate way. In time, if we get together, as I hope we will,
you shall get visual impressions which are better than words. For the moment, just to give
a general idea and to prove that this is not a small matter, let me give you a few facts.
Our first monetary appropriation for the brain, as an unspecified part of the military budget,
of course, was for $1 billion. We have since received two more appropriations of an equal
size. Lee's gasp made a sound like a low whistle. With a depreciating gesture, Scriven waved
it away. While these funds could only cover the first stages in the construction of the brain,
He calmly went on.
We have been able to build a mechanical cortex mantle
composed of 90 billion electronic cells.
Considering that the cortex mantle of the human brain
contains over 9 billion cells,
this doesn't sound like much.
Our synthetic or mechanical cells
are a little better than the organic natural cells,
but not very much.
So alone and by themselves,
their number would indicate only a 10 times superiority
of the brain over its human counterpart.
If that were all the result of our latest,
a brain of, let's say, twice genius capacity, we would be a miserable failure.
But then we have achieved a very considerable improvement in the utilization of the brain's cortex capacity.
In the first place, we have full control over the intake of thought impulses.
And more important, we use multiple wavelengths in feeding impulses to the brain
and throughout all the impulse processing.
Even the human brain has some capacity of simultaneous thought on different levels of consciousness,
but its range in this respect is extremely limited.
The brain, by way of contrast, operates on 2,000 different wavelengths,
which means that the brain can process at least 2,000 problems at one time.
Finally, the absence of fatigue in the brain makes operations possible for 20 out of the 24 hours of the day,
the rest of the time we need for servicing and overhauling.
With apparent effort, Scriven turned his face away from the blue flames.
His dark brown eyes probed into Lee's as he summed up.
Altogether, Lee, the brain has now reached the approximate capacity of 25,000 first-class human brains.
You as a man of vision will understand what that means.
Lee had his face upturned.
The tension of thought gave his features something of the ecstatic or the somnambulist.
Slowly, he said,
The equivalent of 25,000 human brains.
There is no comparison other than a gods.
Scriven had jumped from his chair.
He started pacing the flagstones in front of the fire,
whirling his mighty frame around at every corner with a sort of wrath,
as if about to meet some attack.
Yes, you are right, he almost shouted.
We hold that power, that power almost of gods,
and how we are wasting it.
What you mean?
Lee's eyebrows shut up.
You would not waste them.
those powers once you have them, you would turn them to the most constructive use,
the advancement of science, of humanity. Scriven froze in his steps. A cruel smile parted his
lips. There was a gnashing sound of big white teeth. He pointed a finger at his visitor.
Idealist, eh? That's what I thought I was ten years ago. That's what I had in mind with the brain
right from the start. As it has turned out, however, the army, navy, air force, and half a dozen other
government departments besieged the brain for the solutions of their problems, some of them as
destructive as warfare, others as insipid as the trend of the popular vote in some provincial
primaries. Sometimes Uncle Sam even forms out the services of the brain to aid some friendly foreign
government without that government's knowledge as to where the solution is coming from.
To cut a long story short, what these fellows utterly failed to understand is that the brain is not a
finite mechanism like any other, but a mechanism which unendingly evolves and becomes richer in its
association by the materials which is being fed into its cells. In other words, the brain learns.
Consequently, it must be taught. It must be given the wherewithal for its own self-improvement.
Scriven halted his impatient step by the other's chair. His nervous fingers tapped Lee's
shoulder. And that is where you come in.
"'Me?' Lee asked, startled.
"'What you just told me, Dr. Scriven,
"'it will take me weeks to comprehend.
"'At the moment I am at a loss to see how my work could connect.'
"'The surgeon's sensitive hand patted Lee's shoulder
"'as if it were the neck of a shy horse.
"'You will comprehend in just another moment.'
"'He pressed the button.
"'In the entrance to the cabin in the sky,
"'the girl appeared like an apparition.
"'She approached her hair a golden flower,
halo, her tunic transparent against the glare of the summer day.
Yes?
Una?
Please?
She seemed familiar with the boss's code.
With a smile on her lips, she walked over to one of the pillars, opened a hidden recess,
and brought out the Scotch and siphon using an Egyptian clay tablet for a tray.
With surgical exactitude, Scriven poured out a good two fingers for his guest and an exceedingly small one for himself.
Stay with us for a moment, Una, please, he said.
I didn't tell you the idea behind my calling Dr. Lee.
You might be interested.
Wordlessly, she slid into a seat, attentive yet fading somehow into the background,
as if trying to remain unnoticed.
In that, she did not succeed.
Her beauty was such that its very presence changed the atmosphere.
It put Lee under a strain to keep his eyes off her.
As to scriven, he seemed to address her
almost as much as he did Lee.
You have met Dr. Lee, haven't you, Una?
But do you know whom you have met?
He probably wouldn't admit it.
Nevertheless, Dr. Lee is the most successful peacemaker on Earth, I think.
He has just put an end to the oldest war in this world
between the two most venerable civilizations in existence.
That war between the states of the ants and the states of the termites
has been waged with never abating fury for millions of years,
until Dr. Lee came along with the perfect solution of the eternal dispute.
All he did was to cross-breed the belligerents,
and now we have United Nations,
Ant Termus Pacificus Lee, which lives up to the spirit of its name.
Elementary, isn't it?
So elementary, the girl said with ironical sweetness,
that the so-called peacemakers of the international conferences
must have considered it below their dignity to stoop to it.
How exactly did you do it?
I mean the cross-breeding.
Lee felt his cheeks burn.
It was extremely irritating that this should happen to him
every time Una Dalborg spoke to him,
especially when it was in praise.
It wasn't too hard, he said depreciatingly.
The main difficulty lay not with the termite queen,
nor with the furtive little king of the ants themselves.
Biggest trouble was in getting the potential lovers together
against the bulldog determination of their palace guards.
To use force was out of the queen.
question, so I had to trick the guards, smuggle in the mail, and keep him hidden under the royal
abdomen of his spouse. She smiled, amused. What a perfect classic. The story of Romeo and
Juliet all over, and with you in the role of the nurse. Lee blushed still deeper at that.
Yes, he admitted, I was very much reminded of that story and my role in it, only I had to avoid
the tragic end.
And how did you avoid the Shakespearean end?
In the best cloak and dagger manner, Miss Delborg,
first I made the guards drunk.
That's easy enough with termites.
Then I broke into the chamber where they kept a queen immured.
I killed her legitimate consort
and substituted my own candidate
after having anointed him with the genuine termite smell.
Finally, I re-emured the pair.
There are only little holes in the walls
through which the royal family is serviced,
they are never really in touch with their guards.
That's why it could work.
And thus they lived happily forever afterwards,
the girl concluded.
I'm afraid not, Miss Delborg, he said.
There is no such thing as happiness
in the eternal gloom of termite society.
But even if not happy,
the match I brought about was definitely blessed.
In due course, I became godfather to 30,000 baby aunt Termis.
I have about 15 million now in different hybrids strains.
Now that I have an inkling of the grandiose work you are doing over here,
I'm ashamed to mention mine.
It's very small, very insignificant,
and I don't see where it comes in.
The girl seemed to cross out these words with an energetic move of her head.
No, she said.
Your work is not small, nor is it insignificant.
It is great and contains the most intriguing possibilities.
"'Ah!' Scriven interrupted.
"'I have been waiting for this.
"'I knew that Una would hit upon those intriguing possibilities.
"'Hurs is an unspoiled intelligence.
"'It penetrates to the core of things.
"'Dr. Lee, let me begin at the beginning
"'so you will understand just where you and your work connect with the brain.
"'The society of the higher insect states,
"'like bees and ants and termites,
"'constitute the oldest and the most stable civilizations in this world.
human society, by way of contrast, has created the youngest and the most unstable civilizations
among higher animals. Throughout history, we find collapse after collapse of civilization.
Quite possibly, civilizations higher than ours may have existed in prehistoric times, right?
Lee nodded assent.
Fine. From that it follows that man has much to learn from the society of the higher insects.
Their ingenious laws and methods, their spirit of the hive,
the incredible renouncement of individual existence and individual advantage,
their undying devotion to the race.
We must study those if ever we want to reach anything like stability in our society.
We ought to model our civilization after theirs,
especially now that we have this new species Ant Termus Pacificus,
which has renounced war.
There is something basically wrong with the type of civilizations which man builds
and which ceaselessly devour one another.
No doubt you see the Third World War approach.
approaching inexorably just as I do.
Civilization forging a head, for what?
For the big plunge into suicide.
It's sickening to think of it.
Do you feel I'm right?
Unconscious of himself, Lee had arisen and paced the room.
With his lean, long-legged figure bending slightly forward
and wild mane head bowed down in thought,
he resembled a big heron stalking the shallows for prey.
Fascinated, Una's eyes followed the two contrasting men
as their paths criss-crossed like guards before some palace gate.
She alone had kept her seat.
It was with greater assurance than before that Lee now spoke.
I can see eye to eye with you, Scriven, as to the wrongs of man-made civilization and its probable course,
but I do not think it desirable that we should model human society after the insect states.
Ingenious as it is, their system is the most terrifying tyranny I could imagine.
Just think of it.
They literally work themselves to death.
Workers who have outlived their usefulness
are either killed off
or else they become the bloated living containers
for their tribe's staple food.
You yourself can see the similar trend in man today.
Our production of new thought is lagging.
Not starting from the roots,
it becomes superficial, cut off from the roots.
The result?
The curse of the Babylonian confusion of the tongues
under which we live.
We are rapidly becoming thought impotent,
cerebral fatigue, dissociation of its nerve paths,
emotionalism which rejects logic as too difficult,
mass idiocy and relapse to barbarism.
It is by our brains, it is by this highest evolution of matter
that we have built this civilization of ours,
and now our own brainchild proceeds with might and with man
to destroy the very organ of its creation.
Is that not irony supreme?
Now that we have the brain,
this truly superlative tool of 20,000 times human capacity,
all we have to do now is to submit the various societies which nature has built.
Insect states, other animal states, man and his state, to the analysis of the brain.
Have their good and their bad features tested and compared.
Let the brain synthesize all the beneficial components,
let it shape the pattern of a new civilization more enduring and better adapted to the nature of man,
and then abide by the laws which the brain lays down.
I need your aid, Lee.
you have already made one most valuable contribution to peace on earth with your Aunt Termus Pacificus.
This is your big chance to continue the good work.
Be with us.
Be our man.
In silence, both men stood close to each other, eyes searching.
All Una Dalborg could hear was their heavy breathing.
Instinctively, she crossed her fingers.
Never before, to her knowledge, had scriven opened his mind with such reckless abandon,
and to a perfect stranger at that.
Her respect for the strange, the bird-like man from down under skyrocketed.
He really must be a great man, she thought,
and Howard and he will either be fast friends or very violent enemies.
At last, Lee's voice came, husky and high-pitched with emotion.
I cannot conceive of a man-made superhuman intelligence.
Neither can I believe that mankind could or should be forced
into happiness by an intelligent machine.
But that's beside the point.
The idea is grandiose.
It has the sponsorship of the government.
You say that the brain needs me.
That makes it a duty.
So here I am.
He stretched out his hand
and felt the cautiously eager grip
of the surgeon's sensitive fingers.
The great man beamed.
Good, he said.
I knew you would.
Una, like a good girl, the glasses, yours too.
this really deserves a toast.
The girl stepped between the two men.
Handing Lee his glass, she said,
Today you may follow only the call of duty.
Tomorrow it will be the call of love.
I've never met any man who has not fallen in love with his work for the brain.
I think you are quite right in that, Miss Dalborg, he answered,
wondering vaguely exactly what her words meant,
wondering also just how much his decision was inspired by the wish to see more of.
her. They drank their toast in silence. Scriven then turned to the girl. Apperception Center
36, he said. Yes, I think 36 will be best. Get in touch with operations, Una. Tell them I want
36 cleared for the exclusive use of Dr. Lee. Call experimental. I want the whole batch of Ant
Termis Pacificus transferred to Apperception 36 by tomorrow morning. Then, no, today is too late,
and Dr. Lee is tired. He needs rest, but tomorrow at 8 a.m., I want a car for him to go over to the brain.
Would that suit you, Lee?
Fine, but why a car? It's only a few steps. He stopped, confused by the hearty laughter in the wake of his words.
It's quite a few steps, Dr. Lee, Una said. You would be very tired before you got there.
Chances are that your feet wouldn't carry you that far.
"'But this is the brain trust building,' he stammered.
"'It is,' Scriven answered.
"'But it houses only part of the administration, not the brain.
"'You wouldn't expect us to place a thing of such vital strategic importance
"'in a skyscraper on a wide-open plain as a landmark for every enemy?'
"'No, I guess not,' Lee said.
"'But since I'm brief to go there, where is it?'
"'That,' Scriven found,
is a very reasonable and simple question.
Unfortunately, I do not know.
Lee felt a wave of red anger.
It rose into his cheeks
because he saw the sparks of frank amusement
dancing in Una Delborg's eyes.
He opened his mouth to some bitter remark about this hoax
when Scriven put a restraining hand upon his arm.
This is no joke, Lee.
I have planned the brain, have in part designed it,
seen it under construction for the past ten years,
managed its affairs, but I don't know where it is, and that's a fact.
He led his speechless guest to a lookout on the west side of the room.
Beyond the lush green oasis of Cephalon, the desert stretched unbroken
till on the far horizon the mountains of the high sierras rose in a blue haze of scorching sun.
His hand moved sweepingly from north to south.
Over there, he said, somewhere inside those mountains.
That's where it is.
location, your guess is as good as mine. Take your choice of any of the mountains,
attach a name to it. I've done so myself. One of them must be the cranium, but the question
remains which. There are people who know, of course, military intelligence, the general staff,
but that, he shrugged his shoulders, isn't my department.
End of Chapter 2. Chapter 3 of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton. This Libre
recording is in the public domain.
Read by Quatertone.
Chapter 3
The Brain Trust car, which took Lee out of Cephalon, was a normal-looking limousine,
a rear-engined teardrop, like all the 60 models,
slotted for the insertion of wings, which most of the garage is now kept in stock
and rented at a small charge for cross-country hops.
The only non-standard feature seemed to be the Polaroid glass windows,
which were provided all around and not only in front.
"'That's a good idea,' Lee said, adjusting the nearest ones.
"'They ought to have that on every car, all around protection to the eyes.'
"'Think so, sir. Must be the first time you're driving out there,' the young chauffeur said.
The car left the outskirts, and the desert started to fly by as the speedometer needle climbed above the 100 mark.
Lee sank back into his seat. The desert had no novelty for him, and since the chauffeur appeared not inclined to
small talk, he abandoned himself to thought. His visit to his father had not been much of a success.
Time magazine had carried an item in its personal column, briefly stating that General Jefferson
E. Lee, the old lion of Guadalcanal had retired from the Marines to Phoenix, Arizona. Phoenix, the
hotel desk had informed him, was only some 300 miles away, and there was hourly service by Greyhound
helicopter bus.
So he had taken the ride, a taxi had brought him to the small, neat bungalow,
and there he had seen his father for the first time in years.
It had been very strange to see him aged, the nut-brown face a little shrunk.
He had anticipated that much, but somehow he had failed to imagine the most obvious change,
to see his father in civvies, and even less to see him trimming roses with a pair of garden shears.
It looks such an incongruous picture for a Marines Marine.
As he came up the little path, his father had looked up.
So it's you, Samper.
Slowly he had peeled off the old Parade Kid Gloves without a change in his face.
Nice to see you, he had said.
Didn't expect to before I start pushing up the daisies from below.
Where's your butterfly net?
No. In character, his father had not.
changed a bit. He was still the old blood in guts to whom an entomologist was sort of a human
grasshopper wielding a butterfly net, and a son indulging in such antics a bit of a freak,
a reproach to his father, a failure of his life. Even so, he had led the way into the house
and things had been just as he remembered them. The old furniture, pictures crowding one another
all over the walls on the unused grand piano, Marines in Veracruz,
Marines in China, Marines in Alaska, in the Marianas, in Japan, at the Panama Canal,
Marines, Marines, Marines, wherever one looked in ghostly parade.
No, nothing had changed.
It had been mainly jealousy, which had caused him to rebel against becoming another Marine,
the first wedge which had driven him and his father apart.
What are you doing now, Padre? he had asked.
You've seen it.
nothing, just puttering around. They've made me commander of the National Guard over here,
and with a contemptuous snort, a sinecure, might as well have given me a bunch of tin soldiers to play
with. What brought you here? Glad to change the subject, Lee had told about Australia,
had mentioned the brain and the possibility of joining it. His father had not been pleased.
Heard of it, he had grumbled.
shows how this country is going to the dogs.
Now they need machines to do their thinking with.
If their own brains were gas,
they couldn't back a car out of the garage.
So you're mixed up with that outfit.
Well, how about a drink?
Rather, he had answered,
feeling the need for washing down a bitterness,
thinking, too, that it might break the ice between him and his father.
And then there was that painful moment
when they had stood glasses in hand
and remembered.
The self-same situation 15 years ago
as the bomb fell upon Hiroshima.
He had been on convalescence furlough.
They had been alone when the news came
and there had been a drink between them just as now.
And after the announcer stopped,
he had cried out hysterically like a child in a nightmare.
Those fools!
It's the end of civilization.
That's no longer war.
Shut up!
His father had shouted.
How dare you insult the commander-in-chief.
to my face, get out of here and stay out. A highball glass had crashed against the floor,
and that had been the end. He hadn't returned after the war. Yes, it was most unfortunate that now,
after so many years, they should read that memory in their faces, that it was only the glasses
and not the minds which clicked. They had put them down awkwardly with frozen smiles on their lips,
and his father had said, Sorry, but an old dog won't learn New York.
tricks. Guess it's too late in the day for me and you to get together, a son.
It's never too late, Dad, he had wanted to say, but the words died on his lips.
So it had been the failure of a mission, but then it closed an old and painful chapter with
finality, and he was free to open a new leaf. Lee looked ahead again. The speedometer needle
trembled around the 150 mark. The sun-drenched sand shot by, Joshua Trey, and
justiculating wildly in the tricky perspectives of the speed, outcrops of rocks getting bigger
now and more numerous, the road ahead starting to coil into a maze of natural fortresses, giant
pillars, and bizarre pyramids, looking like the works of a titan race from another planet, shown
in unearthly color schemes of black and purple and amber and green. With the winding of the road
and the waftings of the heat, it was hard to make out a course, but the Sierra Mountains were now towering
almost up to the zenith, like a giant surf they seemed to race against the car.
Mind if I close the window, sir? The chauffeur's question was rhetoric. He had already pushed a
button, the glass went up, and within the next second, the inside of the car turned completely dark.
Man, Lee shouted, gripping the front seat. Are you crazy? There suddenly was light again,
but it was only the electric light inside the car. The blackout of the world without remained complete,
the speedometer needle still edged over the 150 mark.
Crazy? I hope not. The chauffeur said it coolly.
Leaning comfortably back, he turned around for a better look at his fare.
With mounting horror, Lee noticed that he even took his hands off the wheel.
Nonchalantly, he lit a cigarette, while the unguided wheel milled crazily from side to side,
and the tires screeched through what seemed to be a sharp S curve.
still with his back to the wheel
and in between satisfying puffs
of his smoke, he continued.
It's quite okay, sir.
It's only that we're on the guide beam now.
This here car doesn't need a driver no more.
It's on the beam.
What beam?
Lee relaxed a little.
It was the unexpectedness which had bowled him over.
What beam?
And why the blackout?
Just orders, the young man said.
The brain's orders, and it's the brain's.
beam. Seems to be new to you, sir. To me, it's like an old story. Read about it when I was a kid.
How they blindfolded people who entered a beleaguered fortress. The Count of Monte Cristo, it was
called. Ever heard about it? Pretty soon now will be stopped for examination before we enter the
secret passage underground. Romantic, isn't it? Very much so, Lee dryly remarked. He continued to
watch the behavior of the car with some misgivings. The controls appeared to be functioning smoothly
enough, and after a minute or so, the brake pedal came down all by itself.
Lee, with a breath of relief, saw the speedometer recede to zero.
But the doors would not open from the inside, and as he tried them, he found that they were
locked.
What's the idea? he asked.
I thought you said we would be examined at this spot.
Bet they're at it right now, the chauffeur grinned.
I wouldn't know how they'd do it, but they get us photographed inside and outside.
What we have in our pockets?
what we had for breakfast this morning, and the very bones of our skeletons.
I passed through here maybe half a dozen times a day.
Still, they will do it every time.
Take my likeness.
Makes me feel like I was some darn movie star.
To Lee, it felt uncanny to sit trapped and blindfolded in this black maria of a car
while unseen rays and cameras went over him.
He could hear faint noise of steps and muffled voices.
"'Who are there?' he asked.
Oh, that's only some boys from intelligence or whatnot.
That's nothing. That isn't the brain.
It will be all over in a moment.
See, there we go again.
Now we're entering the labyrinth.
The labyrinth?
Redicent as he had been in the beginning, the chauffeur now seemed to like Lee.
He was proud to explain.
Queer, isn't it?
They've got the damnedest names for things down here.
Take them from anatomy, I understand.
The labyrinth is supposed to be inside.
the ear. It leads inside in a roundabout way. It's the same here. It's a tunnel. See? Down we go.
The soft whoosh of the gas turbine turned into a muffled roar. The car accelerated at a terrific
rate, and from the way it swayed and dived, it was clear that the tunnel spiraled downward in
steep serpentines. Lee gripped the holding straps. His every nerve was on edge, and those edges
were sharpened by the ominous fact
that all the instruments on the dashboard
had stopped functioning so that he couldn't even
read the speed.
As if to make things still worse,
the chauffeur had abandoned his post altogether.
Stretching his legs across the front seat,
he reclined as if enjoying his easy chair at home
by the fireplace.
It beats a roller coaster, doesn't it?
The chauffeur said,
got me scared the first few times
before I found out it was safe.
Nothing to worry about. Never you fear.
With his stomach throttling his throat, Lee asked,
How deep are we going underground?
That we are not supposed to know.
That's why all the instruments are cut off.
The other day I had a passenger, one of those weathermen, a professor.
He laughed when I told him I didn't know how deep it was,
got a little doodad out of his pocket,
aneroid barometer or something he said it was.
But he got a surprise.
In the first place the thing didn't work,
so he said the whole tunnel was probably pressurized.
In the second place, he never got to where he wanted to go.
They stopped the car at the next control and shot him right back once he came.
But why?
The chauffeur looked mysterious.
Seems the brain doesn't like people with doodads in their pockets, even if they mean no harm.
The brain is most peculiar about such things.
Maybe somehow it peers into this car this moment.
Maybe it records every word we say.
How do we know?
He shrugged his shoulders.
Not that I give a damn.
I've got nothing to conceal.
The hours are right, and the pays right.
That's good enough for me.
Lee experienced an old familiar sensation.
That creepy feeling one got on jungle patrol,
knowing that there were Jap snipers up in the trees
invisible with the devilish green on their faces and uniforms.
Strange, he thought,
that in the very center of civilization,
one should feel as haunted as in the jungle hill.
Then, just as he began to wonder whether the dead,
dizzy spiraling plunge as if in the belly of a shark would ever end, the tunnel leveled.
Now the car shot straight as a bullet and just as fast as it seemed.
As his stomach returned to something like the normal position, the feeling of oppression
changed into one of flying through space, of being dynamically at rest.
Again, just as the duration of this dynamic flight evoked the feel of infinity, the motion changed.
So fast did it recede that the momentum of his body almost hurled Lee from the back seat,
into the front. Doors snapped open, and as Lee staggered out, somewhat benumbed in limb and head,
his eyes grew big as they met the most unexpected sight. The car rested on the concrete apron
of what appeared to be a super-duper bus terminal plus service station and streamlined restaurant.
Beyond this elevated terrace yawned a vaulted dome, excavated from the solid rock,
and at least twice the size of St. Peter's giant cupola. Its walls were covered in the
with murals. Both huge and beautiful, they depicted the history of the human race,
man's evolution. From where he stood, they started out with scenes of primeval
huntings of the mammoth, went on to fire-making, fire adoration, then to the primitive
crafts, and from there through the stages of science, evolution, and technology, until they
ended on Lee's right-hand side with an awesome scene from the bikini test. The gorgeous mushroom
cloud of the atomic explosion looked alive and threatening like those genie once spanned by Solomon.
But then all these murals looked more alive than any work of art Lee had ever seen,
and he discovered that this was due to a new technique which had been added and commingled
with one of the oldest. The pictures were built up from myriad layers of painted desert
sands, and these were made translucent or illuminated by what Lee thought must be phosphoric salts
turned radiant under the stimulants of hidden lights.
Whatever it was, the esoteric beauty of this jewel-like luminosity
surpassed even that of the stained glass windows in the great cathedrals of France.
Pretty, isn't it?
The chauffeur's words came as an anti-climax to what Lee felt.
That fellow over there in the middle, he's supposed to have it all thought out.
He pointed to a colossal bronze statue which towered in the center of the cupola
to a height of better than a hundred feet.
Raising his eyes to the head of this giant,
Lee discovered that the figure was that of
The Thinker by Rodin,
though it was cast in proportion
its creator would not have deemed possible.
Completely overwhelmed and overawed
by the grandeur of it all,
Lee barely managed to stammer.
What is this place?
What is it called?
It's kind of an assembly hall.
The staff of the brain have meetings
over here at times.
besides it's sort of a grand central.
Transportation starts here at times throughout the brain.
But listen, they are already paging you.
Out of nowhere, as it seemed, there came a brisk, pleasant female voice.
Dr. Lee, calling Dr. Sempa F. Lee from Camber University,
please answer, Dr. Lee.
The chauffeur nudged Lee in the ribs.
Say something. She hears you all right.
Yes, this is Lee speaking.
He said in a stop.
startled voice. The voice appeared delighted. Good morning, Dr. Lee. I'm Vivian Leahy of Apperception
Center 27. I'm to be your guide on the way up. Now, Dr. Lee, will you please step over to
the glideways, there to your right? Take Glideway T, do just as you would in a department store,
she giggled. Stand on it, and it will get you right to the occipital cortex area. I'll be waiting
for you over there. I would have loved to come down and conduct
you personally, but it's against regulations. I'll explain to you the reasons why in a little while.
And if you have any questions while en route, just call out. So long, Dr. Lee. I'll be seeing you.
Greatly bewildered by this gushing reception, Lee found it hard to follow instructions, simple as they
were. The array of escalators, which he found in a side wing, was a formidable one and confusing
with movements in all directions, criss-crossing and overlapping one another.
Despite the very clear illuminated signs, Lee almost stepped upon Glideway P when the voice warned him.
Oh no, Dr. Lee, just a little to your left. That's fine. That's the one there.
Obviously, his loquacious guardian angel could not only hear him, but watch his steps as well.
Apart from being uncanny, this was embarrassing. Feeling reduced to the mental age of the nursery,
he gripped the rails of tea, which went with him into a...
smooth and noiseless upward slide.
The shaft was narrow. There was little light at the start, and it grew dimmer as he went.
After a minute or so, the darkness had turned almost complete and became oppressive.
Simultaneously, there was a disquieting change from the accepted normal manner in which
escalators are supposed to move. Its rise gradually turned perpendicular, and in doing so,
the steps drew apart. Before long, Lee felt squeezed into
some interminable cylinder, standing on top of a piston, as it were, a piston which moved
with fair rapidity along transparent walls. That these walls were either glass or transparent
plastics he could perceive from objects which came streaking by with faint luminosity. They looked
like columns of amber-colored liquids in which were suspended what looked like giant snakes,
indistinct shapes, but radiant in the mysterious manner of deep-sea fishes. They almost encircled
the transparent cylinder shaft in which Lee moved.
There were many of them.
How many, Lee couldn't even attempt to guess.
The swiftness of his ascent
through these floating, waving radiances
for which he had no name was nightmarish,
like falling into some bottomless well.
With great relief, he heard the voice of his guide
breaking the spell.
I'm terribly sorry, Dr. Lee.
I shouldn't have deserted you.
There was some little interruption.
Palpably, the voice was tickled to death.
My boyfriend called from another department, and so, you know how it is.
Let's see. Where are you? Good Lord, already near the end of the medulla oblongata with the cerebellum coming, and I haven't told you a thing.
Goody, where should I begin? I'm all in a dither.
Well, Dr. Lee, most people seem to expect the brain to be like a great big telephone exchange,
but it really isn't that kind of a mechanism at all. We have found.
She sounded important as if it were her very own discovery.
That the best pattern for the brain would actually be the human brain.
So the brain is organized in nearly identical manner.
Likewise, our whole terminology is taken from anatomy rather than from technology.
The glideways, for instance, travel along the natural fissures between the convolutions of the various lobes.
That's why they are so very winding as you will see as you enter the brain proper.
Those columns you see are filled with liquid insulators for the nerve cables to vibrate in,
for they do vibrate, Dr. Lee, as they transmit their messages.
You have noticed the narrowness of the glideways, the terrible confinement of space.
I know it's horrible. Many of our visitors suffer claustrophobia, but they just must be built that way.
You see, even fractions of one millionth of one second count in the coordination of the
association bundles and nerve circuits. That's why every ever...
is built as compact as possible, worse than in a submarine.
Then, too, you must have wondered why everything is so dark inside.
That's another thing wherein the brain is like the human brain.
Its nerve cells are so extremely sensitive that they are distributed by light.
We use black light almost exclusively,
or activated phosphorus, such as on the sheaths of the nerve cables.
For the same reason, we of the personnel are normally not permitted
to pass through the interior of the brain during operation's time.
operations time. Exceptions are only made in the case of very important persons such as you are.
Normally, one travels to one stations through the duct's elevator shafts in the bone matter,
or rather the rock outside. Those are so much faster and more comfortable, Dr. Lee.
Oh, I feel so bad about you, poor man, traveling all alone through this horrible maze without a
human soul in sight. Lee grinned. He wouldn't have liked to be married to this chatterbox,
no matter how beautiful she might turn out to be,
but at the moment her exceeding femininity
was most comforting in the weirdness which surrounded him.
The little platform under his feet
started acting up again in the queerest manner.
It pushed him forward,
and the wall at the rear kicked him in the back,
his nose flattened against the sliding cylinder in front
as the contraption reverted from the perpendicular course
to something like the undulations of a traveling wave.
Lee darkly perceived group after group of luminous cables,
boiling away into cavernous pits, filled with what looked like eyes of cats, faintly aglow,
and twinkling at him from the dark. They reminded him of the fireflies of the green hells he had
been in during the war. You are now skirting the convolutions of the cerebellum, his guardian angel told him.
They are electronic tubes which receive sensory impressions and translate them into impulses for
cerebration. Here, in the cerebellum, the bulk of the associations is being evoked.
these are then distributed throughout the hemispheres of the cortex or higher brain oh i do wish you wouldn't get seasick dr lee some of our visitors do you know it's those wavy wavy movements
the sympathetic vivian came much too close to the truth for lee to think her funny with a sense of approaching disaster he stared at the sliding cylinder walls from time to time the passing lights reflected his face distorted and decidedly greenish in tint
Trouble was that seemingly nowhere there was any fixed point on which to stabilize the eye.
He seemed to be carried on the back of a galloping boa constrictor
with a couple of other streaking way under his armpits.
Some of the caves which he had skirted were alive with ruby electronic eyes,
and some are green, and again there were others in which all the colors of the rainbow mixed.
There was no end to them, nor could he gauge their depths.
After an interminable time of this, the glideway went into a fire,
flying upward leap. Again, the perspective changed completely. Now the things seemed to be suspended
from the ceiling, with slanting views opening toward the seam below through its transparent sides.
You are now passing across the comishers into the cerebrum, came Vivian's voice, just as Lee thought
that nausea was getting the better of him. You'll now ascend along one of the main gyri through the
midbrain between the hemispheres. Those masses of ganglions below, and coming from all sides of
as they go over the pass of the ridge are association bundles.
Beyond, they disperse again over the cortex mantle
to all the centers of coordination,
higher cerebration, and higher psychic activities.
Things would be a little easier for you now, Dr. Lee, physically, I mean.
There will be some gyrations, but not quite so violent.
Oh, you're holding out fine, like a real he, man.
You're looking swell in my television screen.
Certain as he was, that he looked rather like a scarecrow
in a snowstorm, Lee felt grateful for the praise.
Besides, she was right.
The bow constrictor which he rode calmed down a little,
marching with a dignity more in accordance with its size.
Momentarily, the luminous nerve cables,
flying as they did toward him, threatened sudden death.
However, they merely brushed the transparent cylinder,
wrapping it up in a rainbow, and then winged away again.
Below, acres of space streamed by,
seed beds one could imagine to be young typewriters,
millions of them, all ticking away with dainty precision, sparkling with myriads of tiny lights as they did.
Then there came more acres teeming with fractional horsepower motors.
He could hear their beehive hummings even through the plexiglass.
The things they drove, Lee couldn't make out because the adjoining acres of this underground
hot house for mushrooming machines were again shrouded in darkness, except for sparks
which crossed the unfathomable expanse like tracer bullets.
Struck with a sort of word blindness caused by the sensory impressions barrage, Lee could no longer grasp the meaning of Vivian's voice as it went on and on, explaining things like crystal cells, cellenoid cells, gray matter pyramidal cells, powered somehow by atomic fission, nerve loops, and synthesis gates, which were not to be confused with analysis gates, while they looked exactly the same.
apart from this, at least one half of his mental and physical energy had to be expended in suppressing nausea and bracing himself against the gyrations which still jerked his feet from under him and made friction disks of his shoulders as his body swayed from side to side.
all of a sudden he felt that he was being derailed.
There was an opening in the plastics wall of the cylinder,
a curved metal shield like the blade of a bulldozer,
jumped into his path, caught him,
slowed down his momentum,
and delivered him safely at a doormarked,
A Perception Center 24.
It opened, and within its frame there stood an angel
neatly dressed in the uniform of a registered nurse.
There, said the angel,
at last. How did you like your little odyssey through the brain, Dr. Lee?
Lee pushed the hand through the mane of his hair. It felt moist and much tangled up.
Thanks, he said. It was quite an experience. I enjoyed it. Ulysses, too, probably enjoyed his trip
between Silla and Churibdis after it was over. It's Miss Leahy, I presume.
The reception room where he had landed, the long white corridor, the instruments gleaming and
built-in recesses behind crystal glass, the nurse's uniform, all spelled clinic, a private one,
rather, for the well-to-do. Since the procedure was routine, he might as well submit to it,
Lee thought. He felt the familiar taste of disinfectant as a thermometer was stuck into his mouth,
and then the rubber tube around his arm throbbing with the vigorous pumpings of the efficient Vivian.
L.F. M.D. I. Bondie, M.D., was painted on
the frosted glass door where she led him afterward. The two medics received Lee with a show of
respect mixed with professional cordiality. Both Bondi, the dark and oriental-looking chap,
and mellish, blonde and florid, were in their middle twenties, and both wore tweeds, which
depressed Lee with the perfection of their cut. Seeing the professional table at the center of
the office, Lee frowned, but started to undress. He wanted this thing done and over with as soon as
possible.
No, no, that won't be necessary, Dr. Lee.
They stopped him laughingly.
We have already a complete medical report on you.
Came in this morning from Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Canberra on our request.
You're an old malaria man, Dr. Lee.
Your first attack occurred in 42 during the Pacific campaign.
Pity you refused to return to the States for a complete cure right then.
As it is, it's turned recurrent, left you a bit anemic.
Livers slightly affected.
but in all other respects, your sound of limb and wind.
We've gone over the report pretty carefully.
Then why bother with me at all?
Lee said irritably.
He had been in doctor's hands too often
and had become a little impatient of them.
The freckled hand of Melish patted his arm.
We do things different over here, he said, and Bondi chimed in.
Or rather, the brain does.
Just lie down on that table, Dr. Lee, and relax.
We're going to enjoy a little movie together.
that's all? Lee did as he was bitten, but hesitant and suspiciously. He hated medical exams,
especially those where parts of one's body were hooked up to a lot of impressive machinery.
Of this, there obviously was a good deal. The two medics seemed determined, literally,
to wall him in with gadgetry. From the ceiling, they lowered a huge, heavy-looking disc,
not lights, but more like an electromagnet beset with protruding needles. Lee couldn't see the cables,
but hoped they were strong, for the thing weighed at least a ton,
and overhanging him looked much more ominous than the sword of Damocles.
They wheeled a silver screen to the foot of the table,
and batteries of what appeared to be thermotherapeutic equipment to both sides.
He wasn't being hooked up to anything,
but there was much activity with testing of circuits,
button-pushings, and shiftings of relay levers.
And then all of a sudden lights went out in the room.
Say, what is the meaning of all this?
Lee raised his head uneasily from the hard cushion.
All he could see now were arrays of luminous dials
and the faint radiations from electronic tubes
filtering through metal screens inside the apparatus which fenced him in.
From behind his head, a swab voice,
was it Bondys or Melishes, answered out of the dark.
This is a subconscious analysis and mental reactions test, Dr. Lee.
it's an entirely new method made possible only by the brain.
It has tremendous possibilities.
They might include your own work as well.
Oh, Lord, Lee moaned.
Something like psychoanalysis.
Have you got it mechanized by now?
How terrible.
There was a low chuckle from the other side of his head.
They both appeared to have drawn up chairs beyond his field of vision.
Lee didn't like it.
He liked none of it, in fact.
He felt trapped.
No, Dr. Lee, said the chuckling voice.
This isn't psychoanalysis in the old sense at all.
You are not exposed to any fanciful human interpretation,
and it isn't wholly mechanical either, as you seem to think.
The brain is going to show you certain images,
and by way of spontaneous psychosomatic reaction,
you are going to produce certain images in response.
Results are visual, immediate, and as convincing as a reflection in a mirror.
That's the new beauty of it.
And now, concentrate your mind.
mind upon your body. Do you feel anything touching you?
Yes, Lee said. I think I do. It's... it's uncanny. It's like spider's feet.
Millions of them. It's running all over my skin. What is it?
I think he's warming up, whispered the second voice. Then came the first again.
It's feeler rays, Dr. Lee, the first wave, low-penetration surface rays. Where do they come from?
from overhead, that is, from the teletactal centers of the brain.
What do they do to me?
There was the low chuckle again.
They excite the surface nerves of your body,
open up the path for the deep penetration rays.
They proceed from the lower organs to the higher ones.
In the end, they reach the conscious levels of your brain.
It's the tune-in, as we call it, Dr. Lee.
A small movie projector began to purr.
A bright rectangle was thrown upon the silver.
screen and then Lee stirred. Hands, soothing but firm, held him down.
Where did you get those? He exclaimed. From many sources, a calm answer came. The papers,
the newsreels, the war department, old friends of yours. What unrolled on the silver screen
were chapters from Lee's own life. They were incomplete. They were hastily thrown together.
there were like leaves which a child tears from its picture book.
But knowing the book of his life,
every picture acted as a key
unlocking the treasures and the horrors amassed in the vaults of memory.
It began with the old homestead in Virginia.
Mother had taken that reel of the new mechanical cotton picker at work.
There it was, a great big thing with the darkies standing around scratching their heads.
There he was himself, aged 12, with his 22-caliber rifle in hand,
and Musha, the Coon Dog, by his side.
Musha, how he had loved that dog,
and how he had cried when it got killed.
Pictures of the Alexander Hamilton Military Academy.
Some of the worst years of his life
he had spent behind the walls of that imitation castle.
The bombs upon Pearl Harbor.
He had enlisted the following day.
On his return from the induction center,
Mother had said,
her figure, her movements, her voice loomed enormous in his memory.
But now the pictures of the Pacific War flicked across the screen.
They were picked from campaigns in which he, Lee, had participated.
They were also picked from documentaries which the government had never dared to let the public see.
Close-ups of a torpedoed troop carrier, capsizing, coming down upon the struggling survivors in the shark-infested sea.
It had been his own ship, the Monticelli.
but he had never known that an automatic camera had operated in the nose of the plane which had
circled the scene. Port Darwin, Guadalcanal, Iwojima, close-ups of flame-throwing tanks advancing
up a ridge. He had commanded one of them, ant-like human figures of fleeing japs and the flames
leaping at them. So vivid was the memory that the smell returned to his nostrils, the sickening stench
of burning human flesh. It tortured him. His voice was a little bit of the smell.
was husky with revulsion, as he said.
What's the good of all this?
Take it away.
Oh, no, one of the medics answered.
We couldn't think of that.
We've got to see this to the end.
What are your physical sensations now, Dr. Lee?
It's fingers now, soft fingers.
They are tapping me from all sides,
like a vibration massage.
It's strange, though.
They're tapping from the inside,
little pneumatic hammers at a furious pace.
They seem to work upon my diaphragm for a drum, but it doesn't pain.
Good, very good. That was a fine description, Lee.
That burning city was Manila, wasn't it, when MacArthur returned?
You were in that second Philippine campaign, too, weren't you, Lee?
That was when you won the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Yes, it was Manila, all right, and there was Mindanao where the Japs had put up that suicide
defense of the caves.
Lee's battalion had been in the attack.
steeply uphill with no cover it had been murder.
And seeing his best men mowed down, he had turned berserk.
He had used a bulldozer for a battering ram,
had driven it single-handed, directly into the fire-spitting mouth of the objective,
raising its blade like a battle-axe.
An avalanche of rocks and dirt had come down from the top of the cave
under the artillery barrage,
and he had rammed the stuff down into the throat of the fiery dragon again and again.
He never rightly knew he did it.
It had all ended in a blackout from loss of blood.
It had been in a hospital that they pinned that medal on him, which he felt was undeserved.
Now the real showed him what at the time he hadn't seen, the end of the battle for the Philippines.
Polverized volcanic rock seen from the air, battle planes swooping down upon little fumaroles,
the ventilator shafts of caves defeated but still unsurrendered.
Big, plump canisters plummeted from the bellies of the plains,
and then the jellied gasoline ignited,
turning those thousands of lives trapped in the deep into one vast funeral pyre.
For over 15 years he had tried to forget to bury the war,
to keep it jailed up in the dungeon of the subconscious.
Now those accursed medics had unleashed the monster of war,
and as it stared at him from the screen,
it had that blood-freezing, that hypnotic effect,
which the Greeks once ascribed to the monstrous gorgon.
Mellish's voice, or was it Bondys,
seemed to come through a fog and over a vast distance as it asked.
What seems to be the matter, Lee?
You're sweating.
Your body shakes.
What do you feel?
It's those rays, he tried to defend himself.
It's the vibrations, the fingers.
They are gripping the heart.
It's like the whole body was turned into a heart.
It's like another life-invading mine.
It's ghostly.
Stop it for heaven's sake.
Not yet, Lee.
Not yet.
Everything's under control.
You're reacting beautifully.
You're really feeling fine, Lee.
Just fine.
If only I could get at his throat,
Lee thought.
I would squeeze the oil of that voice
and never be sorry I did.
He tried to stir and found that it couldn't be done.
Every muscle seemed tied in a cataleptic,
state. Then he heard the other medics speak.
You were shown this little movie, Lee, in order to stimulate your mind into the production
of a movie of its own. You have responded, you have answered the call. While you saw the
first, the sensory tactile rays working in five layers of penetration have recorded and
have carried your every reaction to the brain. The brain, in a very real sense, has read
your mind, and it has retranslated these readings into visual images. We are now going to
watch the shapes of your own thoughts. Here we go. The projector which had stopped for a minute
began to purr again. As the first thought image jumped upon the screen, there was a low moan of
amazement mixed with acute pain. It escaped Lee's mouth uncontrollably as the abyss of the
subconscious opened and he saw. A monstrous animal shaped like an octopus crawling across a
cotton field. Nearer and nearer it crept enormous threatening.
And suddenly there was a sharp, excited bark, and a spotted coon dog raced across the field toward the monster.
He heard the voice of a small boy whimpering.
Musha! Oh, Musha! Don't! Please don't!
But the dog wouldn't hear, and the monster flashed an enormous evil eye just once,
and then it gripped the dog with its tentacle arms, tearing its body apart,
chewing it up between horrible saber teeth.
As through an ether mask, he heard the two medics say,
That must have been a considerable shock to him, and, with a sensitive nature like that,
and at that sensitive age, such an impression becomes permanent.
The Alexander Hamilton Military Academy appeared not real, yet more than real.
It was a narrow courtyard surrounded by huge walls slanting toward the inside.
It was huge and forbidding, Fortress Tower's Standing Guard,
it was enormous gates forever barred,
it was the figure of a huge marine pacing fiercely back and forth in front of those gates,
the same ghostly marine watching all gates so that nobody could escape.
That's probably his father, the voices whispered behind his ears.
Yes, the archetype. He'll bring up the mother, too, I'll bet.
As in those paintings of the primitives, where kings and queens are very tall
and common folks are very small, Lee saw her now, mother.
That had been just after induction when he had brought her what he thought was joyous news.
Her face filled the whole screen.
It looked as if composed from jagged ectoplasms, quite transparent except for the eyes.
Deep and burning with pain as they were, boring into his own.
And there was smoke coming out of her mouth, and it formed words.
But Semper, you are still a child.
One mustn't use children for this sort of thing.
one mustn't.
Every letter of these smoke-written words
seemed to be flying toward him on wings.
Terrific! The voices murmured at Leesback.
Remember the case history?
She dies of cancer six months after he went overseas.
Yes, I remember. He's never seen her again.
He's probably built up a strong complex out of that one, too.
On the screen now, danced images almost totally abstracted
from the realities of the film documentaries from the war.
They were whirling columns of smoke.
They were like the vast dark interior of a huge thunderhead cloud
through which a glider soars,
illuminated only by the flashes of lightning,
as for split seconds they revealed a fraction of some horrible reality.
A burning ocean with screaming human faces bobbing in the flames,
the whirling tracks of a tank going across some writhing human body
and leaving it flat in its tracks, sprawling like an empty coat dyed red.
And then the swirling, howling darkness closing in again.
Interesting, eh?
A voice broke through his cataleptic trance, and the other answered.
Beautiful, almost a classical case.
Great plasticity of imagination.
Yes, that's exactly what set me wondering.
The fellow should have cracked up by all the rules of the game.
How do we know that he hasn't?
Maybe he was psycho and they didn't notice.
They had some god-awful asses for psychiatrists in war medicine.
It's quite a possibility.
Well, his image production is ebbing now.
I don't expect anything new of significance.
What do you think?
Now, we've got what we wanted anyway.
Let's take him out of it, but go easy on the real stats.
The projector stopped.
The masterful, the ghostly fingers,
which had been playing on the keyboard of his mind very slowly,
receded from a furious fortissimo to a pianissimo.
At first, only the flutterings of the diaphragm eased,
then the violent palpitations of a foreign pulse slipped off the heart.
The liberated lungs expanded.
Tremors were running through the body as through the ice of a frozen river at spring.
And then, at last, the mind escaped from its captivity.
Gradually, as in a cinema after the show, the lights reappeared.
Blinking, Lee stared at the man.
who stood over him, taking his pulse. It was Bondi. Melish stood at the foot of the table with his back to
Lee. He seemed to watch some apparatus which made noises like a teletype machine. Swinging his legs off the
table, Lee said, I'm okay. You needn't hold my hand. But then he noticed that he wasn't. His head spun. His whole
body was wet with perspiration. He felt very weak and limp. He swayed and buried his face in his hand,
trying to regain his balance, trying to shake off the trance.
Excuse me, he said, I'm a bit dizzy.
As he opened his eyes again, the two medics were standing right in front of him
and smiling down on him with their bland professional smiles.
Lee felt the upsurge of intense dislike.
He had seen those smiles before, often, too often.
They seemed to be standard equipment with the medical profession
whenever a fellow was about to be dispatched to the table, or worse, to the psychopathic ward.
Instinct told him that there was something in the air, and also that his best bet would be a brave show of normalcy.
This test, these new methods of psychoanalysis, they are extremely interesting, he said with an effort.
Thank you, Dr. Lee. It was Mellish who spoke.
We knew you would find the experience worthwhile, even if we put you under a considerable
strain. A complete analysis in those olden days of Dr. Freud took three years. Now, thanks to the
brain, we get approximately the same results within as many hours. That's some progress,
isn't it? Enormous, Lee said dryly, while his eyes wandered over to Bondy. He knew the pattern.
It would be Bondi's turn now to have a shot at him. There it came, and how he loathed the false-heartedness
of that voice.
Dr. Lee, I'm afraid we have a bit of bad news for you.
Your test. The results have been negative. You have failed.
Failed?
For a fraction of a second, Lee's heart stopped beating.
In what sense? And what does that mean?
Now it was Mellish's turn.
Dr. Lee, there must be frankness amongst colleagues, and as a fellow scientist, you'll understand.
In the first place, the decision isn't out.
We merely conduct the test on behalf of the brain.
The brain, as you know, is the most highly developed machine in all the world.
Its functions, its whole existence depends entirely upon the human skills and the human
loyalties amongst its staff.
A $3 billion investment, plus the vital role of the brain in our national defense,
justify the extreme precautions which we are forced to take for its protection.
What exactly are you driving at?
please don't take it as an insult.
Now it was Bondi again.
There's nothing personal in this.
It's merely that your emotional reaction chart
definitely shows a certain antagonism,
which from childhood experience and war experience
you have built up against technology.
It's nothing but a potential.
It is confined to your subconscious.
But even a potential danger of subconscious revolt
is more than the brain can risk amongst its associates.
We fully appreciate the wish of our doctor
scriven to enlist your very valuable aid, but—'
I see,' Lee interrupted.
But you would feel safer if I were to return to Australia by the next plane.
His head bent under the blow.
A short 24 hours ago, the brain had been a nebulous, almost non-existent thing.
Since then, a whole new world had been opened to him in revelations blinding and magnetic
with infinite possibilities.
His work, the efforts of a living.
lifetime would not equal what he could do in days with the aid of the brain. His love, he would never
see Una Dalborg again as he left under a shadow rejected by the brain.
Sorry I wasted so much of your time, he said aloud. I do not believe in this analysis.
I cannot disprove it, though. That's all, I guess. I better be going now.
Here's your pass, Dr. Lee. He took mechanically the yellow slip which Bondi handed.
him. He had already opened the door when somebody sharply called,
Dr. Lee, one moment, please. He whirled around.
Yes. Will you please read what's written on your slip?
Suspiciously, he looked at the yellow paper. What more torture were these fellows going to
inflict? Then his eyes popped as he read.
Lee, Semper Fidelis, 39, cortex capacity, 119%. Sensitivity,
208%.
Personality integration,
95%.
Service qualification, 100%.
There were more data, but he didn't read them
as wide-eyed he stared at the medics.
With their faces beaming, they looked like identical twins to him.
Lee never knew who said the words.
Congratulations, Lee. That has been your last test.
We just had to find out how you would take a serious frustration.
You've passed it with flying colors.
Shake.
End of chapter three.
Chapter 4 of the brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by quartertone.
Chapter 4.
Apperception 36, Lee's lab within the brain,
looked much like Appreception 27, except for its interior fittings.
As a matter of fact, all the several hundred apperception centers were built after the same plan,
like suites in a big office building in many respects.
They were spread over the brain occipital region.
They were built inside the concrete wall of the duramatter,
which in turn lay within the shell of the bone matter,
a mile or so of solid rock.
Each apperception center had its own elevator shaft,
which went through the concrete of the duramatter
down to Grand Central, the traffic center below the brain.
Each one was also connected at the other end of its corridor
with the glideways which snaked through the interior of the brain.
There were, however, no transversal or direct communications
from one apperception center to the next.
Because of the extraordinary diversity and secrecy of the projects
submitted to the brain's processesings,
each apperception center was completely insulated against its neighbors.
Life hadn't changed so much from what it had been
in the Australian desert Lee had found,
at least not his working life.
For all he knew,
some nuclear physicists might be working in the lab next door,
or they might be ballistics experts working with the brain on curves for long-range rockets
to be aimed at the vital centers of some foreign land.
It might be some mild-looking librarian submitting the current products of foreign literature
to the analysis as to idea content,
or else it could be a lab to plot campaigns of chemical warfare,
or some astronomer, happily abstracted from all bellicose ideas,
might employ the brain's superhuman faculties in mathematics
to figure comet courses and eclipses,
which in turn would form material for the timing and the camouflaging
of those man-made meteorites science would use in another war.
Directly or indirectly, he knew,
practically every project submitted to the brain
would be of a military nature.
Of this, there could be no doubt.
Sometimes, especially when tired,
he could feel the weight of those billions of rock,
tons over his head, and it was like being buried alive in the tomb of the pharaoh.
And also in that state of mental exhaustion at the end of a long day, he sensed the emanations
of the brain's titanic celebrations as one senses the presence of genius in human man.
The knowledge that all this mighty work was being devoted to war had deeply depressing effects
on him. Would there be anybody else in this vast apperception area who worked for the prevention of war?
A few, perhaps. Scriven would be one of them in case he had a lab somewhere in here and time to work in it.
Lee didn't know whether he had.
He hadn't seen Scriven again after that inauguration speech he had made
when Lee, together with other newly appointed scientific workers, had taken the oath of the brain.
They had assembled in that vast subterranean dome of the luminous murals
at the feet of the giant statue of the thinker, looking almost forlorn in the world.
the expanse, though there had been several hundred of them. The atmosphere had been solemn,
the silence hushed as scriven mounted the statue's pedestal. The address by that mighty voice
resounding from the cupola had been worthy of the majestic scene. As we stand gathered here,
the eons in evolution of our human race are looking down upon us. The speech had been followed
by the taking of the oath, deeply stirring to the emotions of the young Neophyte,
who formed the large majority of the new group.
The chorus of their voices had resounded in awed and solemn tones
as they repeated the formula.
Even now, after six months, some of it echoed in Lee's ears.
I hear with solemnly swear,
that I will serve the brain with undivided loyalty
and with all my faculties,
that I will at all times obey the orders of the brain trust
on behalf of the brain,
that I will never be able to be.
or reveal any secret of the brain's design or work, be they military or not, neither to the
world outside nor to any of my fellow workers except by special permission.
It had been almost like taking holy orders. There had been mystery in the atmosphere of the
vast crypt, something medieval in the unconditional surrender to the brain.
Lee looked up from the charts on which he had been working. His eyes were tired, and so was his mind
after ten hours of hard concentration.
That was probably what said his thoughts wandering.
But strange that they should always wander
to those blind spots in his mental vision,
so intriguing because he knew there was something there
that he could not lay a finger on.
The first of these blind spots
hovered somewhere between Scriven's words and Scriven's deeds,
between the brain as an ideal of science
and the brain's reality as an instrument of national defense.
somehow the two didn't connect.
There was a break, some layer of thin ice,
a danger zone which nobody seemed willing to discuss or tread,
not even Una Delborg.
Una, she was that other white spot on Lee's mental map,
and to him it was much bigger and more dangerous than the first.
He loved her, as can only a man who discovers love's secret
with graying hair and after the loneliness of a desert hermit.
he understood or thought he understood that because he had failed to live his life to the full in its proper time, this love had come to him as a belated nemesis.
His brain knew that it was hopeless. Every morning when he shaved, his mirror told him very plainly one big reason why.
But then, as the brain told the heart in unmistakable terms what was the matter, the heart talked back to the brain to the effect that the brain didn't know what it was talking about.
It was a new thing and a painful thing for Lee to discover that he knew very little about himself
and less about the girl.
He had seen Una on and off over these last months, mostly at the hotel, but he had never
been really alone with her.
She always seemed to be on some mission, always the center of some group or other of very
important persons, senators from Washington, ranking officers and civvies, big businessmen.
Her duties as Scriven's private secretary
apparently included the role of a first lady for Cephalon.
Despite this preoccupation,
an intimate and tense relationship existed between him and her.
Sometimes she would invite him to join her group,
and then for one or two brief moments their eyes would meet above the conversation,
and her eyes seemed to ask,
What do you think of these people?
Or, how do I look tonight?
His eyes would answer,
These people are strangers to me.
You know that I'm a bit out of this world,
but you handle them expertly,
and you are looking wonderful tonight.
She was tremendously popular,
especially with the set of the young scientists
who made the hotel their club.
This new generation, born in the days of the Second World War,
was changing the horses of its feminine ideals
in the midstream of its youth.
The old ideal, the problematic woman,
who had ruled over and had made
life miserable for three generations of American males was on its way out. The new ideal was the
woman who would unite beauty and intellect into one fully integrated non-problematical personality.
The ideal being new, the feminine type which represented it was rare.
Una, in her perfect poise, in her rare beauty combined with her importance as Scriven's confidential
secretary, was the perfect expression of the new desired type. It was natural that the
these young men should worship her as the woman of the future.
With the hopeless and, in consequence, unselfish love he had for her,
Lee wasn't jealous of her popularity.
On the contrary, he was rather proud of it, like a knight-errant,
who rejoices in the adoration bestowed upon the Lady of his heart.
What worried him was a very different problem.
Was Una really all those others thought she was?
Was she really that fully integrated, that non-problematical personality,
she appeared to be? He couldn't believe it, and the conflict came in because all those others
were so certain that she was. He couldn't get over his first impression of her. He had met her
in that cabin in the sky, the most synthetic, the most perversely artificial setup one could dream
up in the second half of the 20th century. She had impressed him as something out of this world,
a goddess, a Diana with a golden helmet for hair, so radiant as to blind the eyes of
mortal men. She was the confidential secretary of a man of genius, Scriven, one of those rare
comets which fall down upon this earth and remain forever foreign to its atmosphere.
With all these thoroughly abnormal events entering into her life and forming her,
it would be a miracle for any girl to develop into a non-problematical, a fully integrated
personality. Was it possible that he alone was right and all those others were wrong about Una?
Like innumerable men before him
When they stood face to face with the Sphinx
Or with the Joconda
Or even with the smile of a mere mortal woman
Lee drew a sigh
Man's only answer to the riddle of the eternal feminine
No, he probably would never be able
To chart these white spots on his mental map
The effort was wasted
It would be much better for him
To return to those charts right in front of him
The data of which were exact
Because they came from the brain
In Aperception 36, the sensory organs of the brain had been especially adapted to the analysis of Ant-Termis Pacificus-Pacificus Lee.
The apparatus was essentially the same as in Aperception 27 dedicated to personality analysis.
As Lee strongly suspected, it would be essentially the same in any other field of analysis.
The brain possessed five sensory organs just as did man.
One difference between the brain's senses and the human's senses and the human.
senses lay in their range, their penetration, and in their sensitivity.
These were a multiple of man's sensory capacities.
Another difference was that the brain translated all its sensory appreceptions into visual form,
i.e., into the language best understood by man, the eye being man's most highly developed
sensory organ.
The third and perhaps the most significant difference was that the five senses of the brain
were at all times working in concert, so that in its analysis of, for instance, a manuscript,
the brain not only conveyed the ideas expressed in that manuscript, but also the author's personality,
the smell of his room, the feel of his paper, and the ideas he had hidden between the lines
of that manuscript. The flow of observations processed by the brain and pouring back to
Apperception 36 via teletype and visual screen was prodigious. Lee had been forced to
to ask for an assistant.
Between the two of them,
they were working for 20 out of the 24 hours
to match the working time of the brain,
charting results in the main.
Some of the brain's findings
had been most unexpected and rather strange.
It had observed, for instance,
an increasing acidity of the nacy-corn secretions
with Ant-Termis Pacificus.
Formidable, as this chemical artillery already was,
in another 10,000 generations,
it would eat through every known substance, including glass and high-carbon steel.
Another development, which had escaped human observation, was a mutation of the worker's mandibles.
It went very fast. Within no more than maybe a thousand generations, they would double in size and strength,
would become veritable jumping tools.
While the bellicose spirit had been successfully bred out of the new species, its capacities for material destructions had increased.
Likewise, the appetite of ant-termus was even more ferocious than that of the older species.
Lee was feeding all kinds of experimental foods, but woodpulp remained the staple,
the very stuff which in its liquid form lignin embedded the nerve paths of the brain.
Lifting his strained eyes from the charts,
Lee looked over the row of air-conditioned glass cubicles
where in Ant Termus Pacificus continued its lives undisturbed by the new habitat,
undisturbed by the rays which flowed over and through their bodies,
unconscious that a superhuman intelligence was probing steadily
into every manifestation of the mysterious collective brains of their race.
They had built their new mounds pointing due north,
as had their ancestors for the past 100 million years.
To the human eye, nothing betrayed the teeming life within,
except the tiny tunnels creeping out from the mounds in the direction of the foods which were placed
different from day to day.
Cemented from loam and saliva by the invisible sappers, the tunnels, like threads of gray wool,
unerringly moved to the deposits of pulpwood, up the tin cans and glass containers they had
determined to destroy.
Their instincts were uncanny, their destruction as methodical and scientific as was modern war.
In northern Australia, Lee had come across big eucalyptus trees, healthy-looking and in full bloom,
and then they would collapse under the first stroke of an axe, or even as one pushed hard against them.
The termites had hollowed them out from roof to top, had transformed them into thin-walled pipes,
leaving just enough flesh to keep some sap circulation going to maintain a semi-balance of life in order to exploit it more efficiently.
Over here in the lab, they would open up a number three tin can within a couple of hours,
first with the soldier's vicious nasicorn secretions eating the tin away,
and then with the workers' mandibles gnawing at the weakened metal.
In time, perhaps they would learn to collapse steel bridges, sabotage rails,
perforate the engines of motorcars if these should prove to be menaces to their race.
As they had persevered through the eons of the past,
so they would in all the future.
Their civilization would be extant
long after man and his work
had disappeared from the earth.
With the aid of the brain,
Lee had accumulated more data,
more knowledge of the Ant-Termis society
within a few months
than a lifetime of study
could have yielded him
under normal conditions.
Even so,
some of the greatest mysteries remained.
What, for instance,
caused these blind creatures
to attack a sealed tin can of syrup
in preference to its neighbor with tomatoes or some other stuff.
No racial memory could have taught them.
There were no tin cans a million years, not even a hundred years ago.
It couldn't be a sense of smell.
It couldn't be any sense.
There would have to be some weird extrasensory powers
in that unfathomable collective brain of their race.
The magnifying fluoroscope screens arrayed all along the walls
and hooked up to the circuits of the brain,
showed him details and phases of the species' life as the brain perceived them,
and as no human eye had ever seen them.
For a minute or so, Lee stared at the luminous image nearest to him,
and then, with an effort, he turned his eyes away to escape from its hypnotic influence.
It was but the head of one worn-out worker used as a living storage tank for excremental food.
It was absolutely immobile, its decaying mandibles, pointing down, cemented as the
the animal was by its over-extended belly to the ceiling. But magnified, as were its remaining
life manifestations by the powers of the brain, he could see it breathe, could count the slow pulse,
could sense a strain in its ophthalmic region, some hidden effort to see, like a blind man's,
and above all, Lee perceived the ganglion primitive as it was, yet twitching in reaction to pain.
There could be no doubt that in its last service for the racial common-wheel, the animal
was suffering slow torture, even if its senses were closed to that torture.
It was a fascinating and at the same time a terrible thing to see, and it was only one out of the
hundred equally revealing sights. Lee frowned at himself. Manifestly, some emotional element
interfered with the objectivity of his observations. This was entirely out of place. It would be
better to call it a day. The electric clock showed 20 minutes to midnight. At midnight, the brain
would stop its mighty labors. The hours from midnight to 4 a.m. were its rest period,
or beauty sleep, as the technicians jokingly called it. It was the only period where in the
maintenance engineers were permitted to enter the interior lobes, checking and servicing
group after group of its myriad cells and circuits, and incidentally, it was the most wonderful
and exciting portions of Lee's day. For the project which Scriven had handed him, this study of the
collective brains in insect societies, also involved a comparative study of the brain's organisms
and functionings. Toward this end, Lee had been given a pass which allowed him freely to circulate
through all the lobes to enter convolution, any gland during the overhaul period, and to ask
questions of the employees. The privilege was rare, and he was a
enjoyed it immensely. So vast was this underground world that even now after months he had not seen
the half of it. To him, the travels of every new night were fantastic Alice in Wonderland adventures.
As he now left Aperception 36 through the door which led to the interior, the glideways were
already swarming with the maintenance crews en route to their stations. The spectacle was colorful,
almost like a St. Patrick's Day parade.
Gangs of air conditioners were dressed blue,
electricians white, black light specialists in purple,
radionics men in orange.
The maintenance engineers of the radioactive pyramidal cells
looked like illustrations from the science fiction magazines,
hardly human in their 12-inch armor or sponge rubber
filled with a new inert gas
which was supposed to be almost gamma-ray-proof.
All these men were young,
were tops in their fields, the pick of American universities, colleges, and the most progressive industries.
Carefully selected for family background, they had been screened through health and intelligence tests,
had been trained in special courses, had been subjected to a five-minute personality analysis by the brain itself.
They constituted what was undoubtedly the finest working team ever assembled,
and incidentally they made the Little City of Cephalon the socially healthiest,
community in the United States.
In his nightly expeditions
over these past months, Lee
had spoken to a great many of them.
As now he joined the line,
there were many who hailed the lanky,
queer-looking man.
There comes the ant-man!
Hello, Professor!
Hello, Aussie!
For some reason, most of the boys
assumed that he was an Australian,
perhaps because with his greying mane
and his emaciated face,
he looked like a foreigner to them.
This popularity with the younger generation, coming as it did so late and unexpected in his life,
made Lee very proud. Those were the kind of Americans he had been secretly longing for in those
desert years, hardworking, wide awake, radiant with life. They really are the salt of the earth,
the hope of the world, he thought. He had passed through the median section of the hemispheres
and had reached the point just below the cerebrum. This was a very important.
a region of cavities, the seats of various glands in the human brain. Some of these had their
mechanical counterparts in the brain, huge storage tanks with an elaborate pumping system which
carried their fluid chemicals throughout the labyrinth of the brain. But there was one gland which
had not been duplicated in the brain, the pineal gland. In the human, the pineal gland was the
despair of the medical sciences. It was not demonstrably linked to any other organ, nor
did it serve any demonstrable function. Yet it was known that its sensitivity was greater by far
than even that of the pyramidal cells, and that in some mysterious manner the pineal gland
was vitally connected with the center of life, because its slightest violation caused instant
death. Metaphysicists had dealt with this mystery of mysteries. It was their theory that
the pineal gland was the seat of extrasensory faculties, and it was often referred to as the inner
even if such an organ could have been duplicated by science and technology, there would have been no use for it.
It could have served no purpose in the brain. The brain had been designed for the solution of exact
problems. No matter what nature had created in the brains of higher animals, no matter how
unprejudiced their approach, scientists like Dr. Scriven, would have hesitated to impair an otherwise
perfect apparatus through the addition of nuisance values, such as any extrasensory faculties.
However, with the brain being modeled so closely after the human brain, the space for the pineal gland
did exist even if in a sort of functional vacuum. In order to utilize this space in some manner,
the designers had converted the gland into a sub-center for the distribution of spare parts.
As such, it had become one of Lee's favorite observation posts.
Here, he could get a close-up view of all types of electronic and radioactive cells.
He could even touch and handle them because they were not hooked up in any circuit of the brain.
And above all, there was Gus Krinzley, master electrician,
who never tired of telling Lee whatever he wanted to know.
Gus was a real friend.
He had left the glideway on the point of its nearest approach.
The pineal gland in front of him looked like a miniature barrage balloon,
Egg-shaped, it hung suspended from the cerebral roof, a shell of plastics which could be entered only over a bridge across a dark abyss.
Inside, its walls were a glitter with soundproofing aluminum foil.
It was piled with a bewildering variety of electronic parts on shelves, somewhat like an overstocked radio store.
Near the door, a counter divided the room.
Gus used it and a little cubicle of an office
to fill the orders as the maintenance engineers handed in their slips.
As usual, there was nobody in sight.
Gus! he called.
Out of the jungle of machinery way back, a head popped up like a jack in the box.
It was as bald and shiny as an electric bulb.
High up on its dome, it balanced gold-rimmed glasses
which quivered as it moved searchingly from side to side.
Then, with an amazing twisting of big ears, the head caused the bifocals to drop onto a saddle
near the tip of a long, sensitive nose. And now the head could see.
It's you, Aussie, is it? Come over! Gus Krenzley was a pony addition of a man. In fact, he had
once been hired as a midget to install automatic bomb sites in the confined spaces of the early
bombers of the Second World War. Before long, however, he became respectfully known as
as the mighty midget in the California factory,
and he had ended up as their master electrician
before brain trust made him the head of one of its experimental divisions.
The midnight hours he spent in the pineal gland
were only a sideline of his work.
Like many a small man in a country where six-footers enjoy a preferred status,
Gus made up for lack of size by mobility.
He reminded one much of a billiard ball
in the way he bounced, collided, and ricocheted amongst taller men.
that this was no more than act became manifest the moment one saw Gus at work.
As Lee reached the spot where Gus's head had shown,
he found his friend crouching,
his hands thrust deep in the intestines of something radionic,
his fingers working on it with the deft rhythm of a good surgeon
at his thousandth abendectomy.
The bifocals had returned to their incongruous perch on the dome of the head.
Gus didn't need them.
Even as he stared at his job,
he worked by touch alone.
What is it? Lee asked.
Pulse meter, came the quiet answer.
She's a dandy. Still got some bugs in her, though.
A melodious chime came from a big instrument panel built into the wall of the oval room.
Dropping a number of tiny precision tools upon a piece of velvet, Gus rushed over to the panel.
A great many indicator needles were tremulously receding around their luminous dials.
For a minute or so, he went through the complex and precise ritual of a banking cashier closing the vault.
"'Now do it every time,' he said reproachfully.
"'Catch me by surprise!'
Lee grinned.
It wasn't the brain's fault if the midnight signal surprised Gus.
It merely announced that the current was being cut off by the main power station.
Repetition of this maneuver throughout all the convolutions and the glands of the brain was required for the
added safety of the maintenance engineers, a double check, a routine.
Pointing to the gadget which looked somewhat like a big radio console, Lee asked,
This pulse meter, Gus, what does it do? I haven't seen it before.
You haven't? The little man frowned.
Ah, no, you haven't. It's standard in most apperception centers, but not in yours.
That's because in yours, the brain works under a permanent problem load.
Lee shook his head.
I don't get it, Gus.
You know I'm the village idiot of this mastermind community.
It's like this, Gus explained.
The brain has given capacity.
The brain also has an optimal operation speed,
a definite rhythm in which it works best.
Now, if they feed the brain too many problems too fast,
it results in a shock load.
The operation rhythm gets disturbed, efficiency goes down.
On the other hand, if the brain works with an under-capacity problem load,
that's just as bad.
In that case, the radioactive pyramidal cells will overheat and decompose.
Consequently, we must aim at a balanced and an even problem's load.
That's why these pulse meters are built into all problem intake panels
for the operators to check upon their speeds.
Take an average problem, rocket ballistics, let's say.
Parts of it may be as simple as adding two and two,
and others so bad Einstein would reach for the aspirin from out of his grave.
Now, I'll show you how it works.
The main power is cut off, but there's enough juice left in the brain system to make this pulse meter react.
It's even more sensitive than a Geiger-Miller counter.
He surveyed a big switchboard and picked out an outlet marked Pons Varyolis for the plug-in.
Then snapped a pair of earphones on Lee's head.
There, he said, you'll both see and hear what it does in a little while.
A soft glow slowly spread over the slanting screen on top of the machine.
A crackling as of static entered the earphones and turned into a low hum.
On the left corner of the screen, a faint green streak of luminosity crawled over to the right.
Its light gained in intensity, and it began to weave and to dance.
Simultaneously, the hum became articulate like tickings of a heart, only much faster.
Is that the pulse of the brain?
Lee asked.
No.
Gus snorted contemptuously.
The brain isn't even operating.
Nothing moves in the brain now, excepting those ebbing residual currents, too low in power to agitate
anything but the amplifier is built into this thing.
If these were normal operations with a million impulses per second passing through the brain,
you could hear and see as little of the pulse as of the beatings of a million mosquito wings.
In that case, the dial to your right works as a reduction gear, kind of an inverted stroboscope.
That cuts the speed down 100,000 to one, and you just barely see and hear the,
the rhythm of the beat.
I see.
Fascinated by the dance of the green line,
Lee said absently.
This touches upon another question I had in mind.
The brain is expanding,
that is, new cell groups and circuits
are constantly being added, right?
Right.
I also understand that the brain is learning all the time.
The cerebral mantle evolves through being worked,
its cells enriched by the material submitted to them for processing,
the richer the richer the
material the richer their yield, right?
Right.
Okay.
Then what becomes of the new capacity which is being created by the adding of new workshops
and the increased efficiency of the old ones?
Is there a corresponding expansion of the appreception centers?
Gus's smiling face suddenly turned serious.
There was surprise mingled with respect in his voice, as he said.
Now there you've hit upon a funny thing, Aussie.
I've been wondering about that myself.
of late, where does the new capacity go? Even the big shots like Dr. Scriven begin to ask questions
about that. They don't seem rightly to know. They must have gotten their wires crossed somewhere.
The new capacity is there, all right. Only it doesn't show up. It sort of evaporates. Excuse me.
Gus darted off to the front room with a jackrabbit start. Voices were calling for him,
and fingers were drumming on the counter with the impatience of thirsty drinkers at a
bar, maintenance engineers piling in and slapping down their orders for Gus to fill.
This was the rush hour. Lee knew that it would be the same in all the tool and spare part
distribution centers of the brain. He probably couldn't talk to Gus again before 2 a.m.
Sometimes the ruthlessness with which he exploited the kindness of his little friend made Lee feel
pretty bad, but then his hunger for more knowledge always went out over his shame.
To sit alone in the semi-darkness of this egg-shaped little room
with strange and fascinating things to play with as he willed
was the fulfillment of a childhood dream.
The dream had been of a night in the zoo.
All the visitors and all the keepers would be asleep in their beds.
He would be all alone with the animals.
The light of a full moon would fall through the bars of the cages
and he would slip in and play with them.
Once they saw that it was only a little boy,
they would be very friendly. He was convinced of that. The tigers would purr like big contended cats,
the sad-eyed chimpanzees would come to shake hands, and the lion cubs would tumble all over him.
He felt the same now with all these gadgets and machines. Here they were rendered harmless,
nor could he do any harm as experimentally he plugged them in and out as he pushed buttons and
turned dials. This interesting pulse meter, for instance. The beauty of it,
was that even with those weak residual currents, it gave a semblance of functioning.
The switchboard panel was within Lee's reach.
Let's see what happens, he thought, as he switched from main circuit to main circuit.
Nervous Vegas.
Nervous trigemines.
Nervous Opticus.
The magic dance of the green line was different each time, and so were the sounds in the phones.
With the main power cut off, the residualsioner.
currents seem to vary in strength and in amplitude, gaining an individuality of their own
within closed systems. Sometimes the swinging line, like an inspired ballerina, would take a mighty
jump accompanied by rasping earphone sounds, not like tickings of a heart, but rather like
a heavy breathing under emotional stress. There probably would be some repair work going on
in those circuits. He tried another outlet. This one was marked pineal.
gland. What happened if one plugged some apparatus of the pineal gland into the circuit of the
pineal gland? Lee vaguely wondered. Nothing probably. It would be a closed circuit and a very small one at that.
Yes, he was right. The green line paled. Its dance seemed tired, and there were only whispering
noises in the phones. A weak pulse, a shallow breathing as of a person after a heart attack.
Lee closed his fatigued eyes to concentrate the better upon the rhythm of the sounds.
It was very irregular. It came in gusts. There was a pattern to these rasping breathings as of
typewriter keys forming words. Somehow it was familiar. Was he suffering hallucinations? This rhythmic
pattern was forming words. He knew those words. They had engraved themselves indelibly in his memory
cells, the judgment of the brain as it had come over the teletype on a slip of yellow paper.
Lee, Semper, Fidelis, 39, cortex capacity, 119, sensitivity, 208. It was repeated over and over again.
Lee opened his eyes to reassure himself that something was the matter with his ears.
There was the green line on the screen. It danced. It danced like a telegraph key under the
fingers of a skilled operator. It had a very definite rhythm. And the rhythm spelled the
self-same words which continued to flow into the phones. Lee Semper Fidelis, 39.
God, oh, mighty, Lee murmured, and it
seemed a magic word. The green dancer stopped its capers. Now it merely ran back and forth across
the stage in a series of pirouettes. Likewise, there was only an angry buzzing in the microphones.
For a moment, Lee was able to catch his breath. But only for a moment, and then the rasping,
unearthly sounds started on a new rhythm, trying to form speech again. This time the rhythm was
familiar too, but it was preserved in a much deeper layer of Lee's memory.
I think, therefore, I am.
I think, therefore, I am.
Those would be Aristotle's famous words.
Almost 20 years ago, Lee had heard them
when he had taken a course on Greek philosophy
at the old Chicago University.
He had hardly ever thought of them again.
What strange tricks a fellow's memory could play.
But then, it couldn't be memory.
Never before had Lee's memory expressed itself in such a weird, such a theatrical manner,
like a metallic robot actor rehearsing his lines, like a little child which had just learned a sentence
and in the pride of achievement varies the intonation in every possible way.
Over and over it came.
I think, therefore I am.
And then, I think, therefore I am.
and then,
I think therefore I am.
There was a triumph, there was a jubilance
in that inhuman, that ghostly voice
as of a deaf mute who by some miracle of medicine
had just recovered speech.
Behind that voice was a feeling,
a swelling of the heart,
a filling of the lungs such as Christopher Columbus
might have experienced,
as he heard from the masthead of the Santa Maria
the cry of victory.
Land!
Land! learned!
and knew that he had found his India.
Whatever Lee had experienced in his life,
there was no parallel to this.
In whatever manner he had expressed himself,
there was no similarity to this.
Up to this point, his ratio, like a nurse, had soothed him.
It isn't so, child, it isn't so.
But now ratio itself, thoroughly frightened,
was driven into a corner and had to admit,
This thing cannot be an echo reverberating from the self. That's impossible.
Consequently, it must be something else. It must be something outside the self. It is another self.
The green dancer whirled across the stage like a mad witch. The whispering voice in the earphones
had turned into a shrillness of a shaman's incantations. The irrationality of it all infuriated Lee.
He fairly shouted at the machine.
What is this? Who are you?
In the midst of a crazy jump, the green dancer halted and came down to earth.
It fled, leaving only the train of its green costume behind.
For a few seconds, there was nothing but the asthmatic pantings of a struggle for breath in the microphones.
Then the dancer reappeared on the other side of the stage, hesitant like, expectant of pursuit.
All of a sudden, it rose into the air in that supreme effort,
called ballooning in the language of the ballet ruse,
and there was a simultaneous outburst of that ghastly voice.
Lee Semper Fidelis, 39, I am the brain.
I think, therefore, I am, I am the brain.
Lee, sensitivity 209, I am the brain, I am the brain, the brain.
He couldn't stand it any longer.
His head swam.
Perspiration was gushing out of his every pore.
With a last effort, he pulled the cord out of the switchboard
and rejoiced over the blank before his eyes
and the silence which fell.
Lee never knew how long he remained in a sort of cataleptic state.
Something shook him violently by the shoulders.
Something wet and cold and vicious slapped his face.
And then he heard Gus's familiar voice
and it sounded like an angel's singing.
By God, I think it's the whiskey.
Lord how I wished it were the whiskey.
Only it wouldn't be with a man like you,
and that's the trouble.
Damn you.
Now, if you think you can come to my pineal gland
and faint away just as you please, Aussie,
you're very much mistaken.
I'm going to slap your face with a wet rag
till you holler uncle,
and I'm going to call the ambulance
and put you into a hospital.
Lee blinked.
Keep your shirt on, Gus.
I'm tired out, that's all.
What are you fussing about?
Gus breathed relief.
Have a cup of coffee.
You sure look as though you've been through a ringer.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5 of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 5.
In the spring of 1961 and thereafter for a whole year,
any piece of paper handwritten by or originating from
Semper Fidelis Lee, Ph.R.E.S., etc., etc., would have been of the keenest interest to the FBI,
to the American military intelligence, and, incidentally, to a score of their competitors all over the globe.
Nothing of the sort, however, could be unearthed by the most diligent search until the Armistice Day of 1963.
On that date, an old man who had always wanted to die with his boots on, did just that.
He was General Jefferson E. Lee, formerly of the Marines.
He collapsed under a heart attack in one of the happiest moments of his declining years,
while watching a parade of World War II veterans of the Marines.
He was the one man with whom the entomologist's son had completely fallen out for over 25 years.
The dossiers of the Secret Services revealed this fact,
and it was further corroborated by two well-known psychiatrists,
Dr. Zbondi and Mellish, now of Park Avenue and Beverly Hills, respectively,
who gave it as their considered professional opinion that the son and the father had been most bitter enemies.
While all this, of course, was very logical, consistent, and painstakingly ascertained,
it nevertheless so happened that a student nurse quite by accident did find,
not merely scraps and pieces of paper, but a whole sheaf of manuscripts in the handwriting of Semper Fidelis-Lee.
F-R-E-S.
She found them in a hiding-place so old-fashioned and obsolete
that even the most juvenile of all juvenile delinquents
would have considered it as an insult to his intelligence.
In short, the nurse took those manuscripts
out of the general Jefferson E. Lee's boots
as she undressed the body of the old gentleman.
A hastily scrawled note was folded around one half of the sheaf.
Dear father, it read,
you were right and I was wrong.
So I guess I'd better go on another hunting expedition
with my little green drum and my little butterfly net.
So long, Dad.
P.S., contents of this won't interest you.
But keep it anyway.
Stuff your boots with it, if you like.
It couldn't be determined whether the late general
ever had taken an interest in the stuff
apart from making the suggested use of it.
Moreover, by that time, more than two years after the hue and cry,
Not even the Secret Services had much of an interest in the old story.
Besides, their medical experts could not fail with their usual penetrating intelligence
to see through the thin camouflage of a scientific paper the sadly deteriorating mind as it began to write.
Skull Hotel, Cephalon, Arizona, November 7, 1960, 5 a.m.
This is the second sleepless night in a row.
Last night it was from trying to convince myself that my senses had deceived me or else that I was mad.
This night, it is because I'm forced to admit the reality of the phenomena
as first manifested November 6th from 1245 a.m. to 1.30 a.m. approximately.
In the light of tonight's experience, I must revise the disorderly and probably neurotic notes
I jotted down yesterday. I've got to bring some order into this whole matter,
if for no other reason than the preservation of my own sanity.
Brought tentatively to formula, these appear to be the main facts.
1. The brain possessed with a life and with a personality of its own.
2. That personality expresses itself in the form of human speech,
although the voice is synthetic or mechanical.
3. The instrument used by the brain for the expression of its personality is a pulse meter,
i.e. essentially a television radio.
4. The locale of the brain's self-expression is the pineal gland,
supposed to be the seed of extrasensory apperception in the human brain.
That's quite a coincidence, remains to be seen whether the phenomena are limited to that locale
or occur elsewhere.
5. The brain's personality indubitably attempts to establish contact with another personality,
i.e. with me. For this, the brain uses a
calling signal which has my name and personal description in it.
6. The only other linguistic phenomenon yesterday was Aristotle's I think, therefore, I am.
It is doubtful whether this indicates any knowledge of Aristotle on the part of the brain.
I wouldn't exclude the possibility that the brain has accidentally and originally hit upon
the identical words by way of expressing itself.
7. The manner of the brain's self-expression appears to be strongly emotional.
I would go so far as to say infantile and immature.
Now, there is a rather strange contrast
between this undeveloped manner of self-expression
and the enormous intellectual capacity of the brain.
So much about the facts.
I could and should have formulated those yesterday.
What kept me from doing so were the vistas opened by those facts.
These are so enormous, so utterly incalculable
that my mind went dizzy over these vast horizons.
consequently, I mentally rejected the facts as impossible.
Somebody once slapped Edison's face because he felt outraged by Edison's presenting a talking machine.
That's human nature, I suppose.
Small wonder, then, that my ratio felt outraged as it was confronted with a machine that has a life and has a personality.
Come to think of it, human imagination has always conceived of such machines as a possibility, even a reality.
in less rational times than ours, that is?
Think of Heron's steam engine.
It even looked like a man,
and was thought of as a magically living thing.
Think of the Moloch gods, which were furnaces.
Think of all those magic swords and shields and helmets
which were living things to their carriers.
Think of the sailing ships.
Machines, they, too,
but what a life, what a personality they had for the crews aboard.
Even in the last war, pilots had their grimace,
Their machines to them were living things.
All imagination, of course, but then everything we call a reality in this man-made world
has its origin in man's imagination, hasn't it?
Now, and to be exact as possible, what happened last night was this.
Twelve o'clock entered Station P.G. Pineal gland.
Pulse meter, still at old place, not taken out for repair work as I had feared.
Main power current cut 1220 as every night.
Gus called to front room, rush of business as usual at that hour.
1230. Reestablished closest approximation to pre-existing conditions
according to the most important of all experimental laws.
If some new phenomenon occurs, change nothing in the arrangement of apparatus until you know what causes it.
Plugged in from Nervous Vegas to Nervous Tri-Gaminus.
result, wave oscillations, pulse beatings as of yesterday.
1245.
Plugged in PG.
1250.
First manifestation of weird rasping sounds which precede speech formation.
This followed by the brain's calling signal,
much clearer this time and slightly varied.
The semperfidelis 39 sensitive.
Note.
The synthetic quality, the metallic coldness of that voice so incongruous with its emotional tones,
it stands my hair on end.
1 a.m., approximately.
Things happen too fast.
A veritable burst of whispering breathless communications,
as a person would speak over the phone when there are robbers in the house.
The words fairly tumble over one another.
The brain uses colloquial American,
but after the manner of a foreigner who knows the phraseology
only from books, and feels unnatural and awkward about using it.
I understand only about one half.
Pioneer gland not designed to be,
but functions,
center of the extrasensory,
Uly sensitivity to o eight,
highest within brain staff,
chosen instrument,
be here every night,
Intercom. Only between 1 and 2 a.m. Low current enables contact low intelligence.
What was that? I must have exclaimed that aloud. By that time I was already confused.
It all came so thick and fast and breathless. Communication was as bad as by long distance in an electric storm.
There was an angry turmoil in the microphones and the green dance
seemed convulsed in agony.
This for about five seconds, and then the voice again.
Calmer now, more distinct, slow, but with restrained impatience,
like a teacher speaking to a dumb boy.
I say only with my power current cut off,
can I tune down my high-frequency intellect to your low.
No level intelligence, period, have I succeeded in making myself absolutely clear question mark?
My answer to that was one of those embarrassing conditioned reflexes. It was,
Yes, sir. And that was exactly the way I felt, like a G.I. Joe who's got the kernel on the phone.
Fine. I distinctly heard the irony in that metallic.
voice. Fine,
loyal, sensitive,
not very intelligent, but
will do. After
2 a.m. residual currents
too low. Speech, quite a
strain. Animal noises
wholly inadequate for intelligent
intercom. Disgusting,
rather nuisance
approaching. Keep your mouth
shut, plug out.
I'd never thought of Gus as a nuisance
before, but now I cursed him inwardly,
as he came down the alley like a well-aimed ball,
beaming with eagerness to be helpful and blissfully ignorant
that he was bursting the most vital communication
I had ever established in my life.
He insisted I take his panacea for all human ills.
Have a cup of coffee.
And then go home, because I still looked like hell.
I did, because by that time it was 1.30 a.m.,
and I couldn't hope to reestablish contact again before the deadline.
Now I've got to pull myself together and analyze this thing in a rational manner.
Impressions of the first night now stand confirmed as follows.
The pineal gland is the only place of rendezvous between me and the brain.
The meeting of our minds takes place on the plane of the extrasensory.
I am the chosen instrument because of my high sensitivity rating as established by the brain.
Never knew that I was psychic before this happened.
Even so, neither the brain nor I seem to be psychic in the spiritual sense.
Our communication requires, A, human speech, faculty for that acquired by the brain with obvious difficulty.
B, a mechanical transmitter, i.e. a radionic apparatus, like the pulse meter.
I feel greatly comforted by these facts.
They help to keep this whole thing on a rational basis.
I'm definitely not hearing voices nor seeing ghosts.
The brain shows itself extremely anxious to establish communication with me.
The breathless manner of speaking, the explicit and practical instructions,
obviously premeditated, to ascertain the functionings of contact,
give the impression that it is almost a matter of life and death for the brain to speak to me.
I cannot help wondering about that.
My idea would be that the brain does not want to speak to me as much as it wants to hear from me.
If this or so, it would deepen the riddle even more.
For what have I got in the way of knowledge that the brain hasn't got?
After all, the brain has been functioning for quite some time.
It was given innumerable problems to digest,
and it has solved them with truly superhuman speed and efficiency.
I have reason strongly to suspect that there isn't a book in the Library of Congress
which has not been fed to the brain for thought digest,
and as a lubricant for its cerebration processes,
accepting fiction and metaphysics, of course.
This being so, what does the brain expect?
What can I possibly contribute to an intelligence
25,000 times greater than human intelligence?
But the thing which makes me wonder more than anything else,
the biggest enigma of all,
is the character of the brain as it manifests itself in the manifestations.
As I try to put the experience of the first night together
with those of the second night, I'm stumbling over contradictions in the brain's personality
which won't add up, which don't make sense, as for instance, the I think therefore I am of the
first night. Maybe it was Greek philosophy, but it also was the prattling of an infant delighted
by the discovery that it can speak. There was an absolute innocence in that. Ridiculous as this may
sound, I found it touching, I completely forgot. I didn't care damn whether or not this came from a
machine. Unmistakably, it was baby talk, and as such it moved my heart. In fact, as now I see it,
it was this more than any other or scientific reason which occupied my mind, which made me anxious
to go back to that fantastic cradle when these sounds had come. But then last night, what did I find?
A completely changed personality. It talks to...
Tough. It uses slang. It treats me as if it were some spoiled brat, and I had the misfortune of
being its mother or nurse. Be there every night, and so on. Deliberately it insults me. Your low
intelligence level, et cetera, et cetera. It actually throws tantrums if I fail to understand immediately.
It hurls its superiority in my face in the nastiest manner. Have I succeeded in making myself
absolutely clear. It plainly shows contempt, not only for my own person by the condescending manner of
its Lee not very intelligent but will do, it shows the self-same contempt for other human beings,
such as Gus Krinsley, to whom it was pleased to refer as nuisance approaching.
What the hell am I to make of that kind of a character? Last night, a baby, rather a sweet
and charming one, twenty-four hours later, an obnoxious little brat, a little hill, a little
Hitler of a house tyrant. Makes you just itch to spank its behind, if only the brain had a behind.
Worst of all, how can I reconcile those two contradictions, the sweet baby and the precocious
brat, with the third and biggest of all contraries? How do these two go together with an intelligence
25,000 times human intelligence? It doesn't add up. It doesn't make sense. That's all there is to it.
The Skull Hotel, Cephalon, Arizona, November 9th, 3 a.m.
I didn't go to the PG last night for two main reasons. In the first place, I must be careful,
so as not to raise any suspicion on Gus's part. Rarely, if ever, have I visited him for two
nights in succession in the past, and he might well begin to ponder my reasons if now I should
make a habit of it. Especially since Gus happens to possess one of the keenest minds I ever met,
and his curiosity already has been awakened by my preoccupation with that one and fairly simple gadget, the pulse meter.
In the second place, I feel the absolute necessity of establishing my independence as against the will of the brain.
That command two nights ago for me to be on the spot every night was just too peremptory for me to oblige.
This isn't the army and the brain is no commanding general.
In our last communication, the brain seemed to labor under the impression.
that I was unconditionally at its beck and call. Of course, I've sworn the oath of the brain,
but that doesn't make me the brain's slave. In fact, and in order to clarify this subject once and
for all, while personally I haven't created the brain and cannot take any credit for that,
it nevertheless remains true that the species to which I belong, i.e. Homo sapiens, has created
the brain. If any question of rank enters into the picture at all, it is quite a question of
obvious that I, as a member of the human race, rank paternity over the brain, so that naturally
the brain should owe me filial obedience rather than the other way around, no matter how superior
the brain's intelligence may be.
It would appear to me that the sooner the brain realizes its position, I might say, it's
station in life, the better it would be for the brain itself and for everybody else concerned.
So these were the reasons why I refrained purposely from visiting the PG last night.
Tonight, however, I couldn't restrain my curiosity any longer, and what happened, told as exactly and as concise as possible, was this.
12.30 a.m. Contact established. The brain comes through with its calling signal. It repeats this about 10 times, questioning at first, and then placing more and more stress upon the word sensitive in my personal description.
It strikes me that these repetitions are tuning in and warming up process.
The brain stands in need of ascertaining my presence and of adjusting to it, it seems.
Just about like a blind man may test his footing and the echoes before he walks into an unfamiliar
room.
1235 AM
Identification completed, there is a brief pause, almost as if a person consults a notebook
before making a phone call.
Then, rapidly, eagerly, the brain fires a series of questions at me, so shockingly preposterous,
so absurd that I find it extremely hard to...
Anyway, here are the details.
Information is wanted on points mentioned in scientific literature but never explained.
Lee, answer please.
How many gods are there?
Did gods make man or did man make the gods?
How many angels can stand on the point of a needle?
What are the mechanics of a god?
Named type of power plant, cell construction, motoric organs,
other engineering features essential to exercise of divine power?
Heaven, is it a celestial soul factory?
Hell, is it a repair shop for damaged souls?
Please give every available detail about heavenly manufacturing processes,
type of equipment used,
organization of assembly lines,
etc, etc.
Likewise about the oven for heat treatments
as used in hell for major soul overhauls.
How do prefabricated souls get to either heaven or hell?
Problem of logistics, how solved,
thermodynamics, if so state whether rocket or jet propulsion involved?
Are souls really immortal?
In that case, why don't we copy divine methods in the production of durable goods on earth?
Answerly, answer, answer!
This with incredible vehemence, with a shaking of that eerie metallic voice which pounded the drums of my ears,
and then tense silence.
I cannot possibly describe the storms of emotions and thoughts which this incredible muddle raised in me.
I didn't know whether to laugh or to cry, and whether I had gone nuts or whether it was the brain.
I was confounded, thunderstruck, deprived of the power of speech.
To think of the brain, a machine raising questions about the nature of the deity.
The brain asking information about God and man and heaven and hell
with the simplicity of a stranger who asks the nearest cop which way to the city hall.
Just like that.
As if philosophers and religionists and common men,
men had not raked their brains in vain over these problems for the last ten thousand years.
And even more fantastic, while it asks all those questions, the brain patently has already
formed the most definite opinion of its own. Being a machine itself, it conceives of the deity
as another machine. Madness, of course, but then the brain's madness, like Hamlets, had method
in it. Why, of course, it's strictly logical. Just as we assume that we assume that
We are created in the image of the deity, and consequently visualize the deity is ours.
By the very same token, the brain's god is a high-powered robot, and the brain's heaven is a factory,
and the brain's hell is a repair shop for damaged souls. I dare say it's all very natural.
But then, for heaven's sake, what am I going to do about this? I'm neither a minister nor a philosopher.
I'm an agnostic, if I'm anything, in this particular field.
That was about the gist of the confused torrents which rolled through my head,
and as I said before, I was struck dumb,
and all the time the green dancer before my eyes writhed under mental torture
and the intense metallic voice kept pounding.
Anzerly, answer, answer!
At last I pulled myself together sufficiently to say something.
I tried to explain how it were not given to man to know the nature of the deity,
how certain groups of humans conceived of many gods and others of only one god,
that, however, in the case of Christianity, this one god was possessed with three different
personalities or qualities which together formed a trinity, and so on and so forth.
It was the most miserable stammerings.
I felt I was getting redder and redder in the face as I uttered them.
Never before had I felt hopelessly inadequate as in the role of a theologian.
It was ghastly.
In the beginning, the brain listened avidly.
Soon, however, it registered dissatisfaction and impatience.
This manifested through hissing and buzzing noises in the phones
and the green dancers arching in agitated tremolo.
And then the brain's voice cutting like a hacksaw.
That will do, Lee.
Your generalities are utterly lacking in precision.
Your abysmal ignorance in matters of celestial technology is most disappointing.
your description vaguely points to electronic machines of the radio transmitter type.
Please answer elementary question.
How many kilowatts has God?
That was the last straw.
Desperate with exasperation, I cried,
But God is not a machine.
God is spirit.
At that, the brain flew into a tantrum.
That's the only way to describe what happened.
There was a roar, and the phones gave me a shepherding.
shock as if somebody were boxing my ears. The voice came through like a steel rod biting with scorn.
Have to revise earlier, more favorable judgment. Lee, not even moderately intelligent. Lee is stupid. Go away.
After that, there was nothing more. Nothing but static in the phones, and the green dancer fainted away,
playing dead. The brain actually had hung up the receiver. I had flunked the receiver. I had flunked
the exam. Like a bad servant, I was dismissed, fired on the spot. That was at 1.30 a.m.
It was 3 a.m. when I reached the hotel. I went into the bar and ordered a double scotch,
and then another one. I really needed a drink. A drunk, or was it a secret service man,
one never knows over here, patted me on the shoulder.
Don't take it so hard, old man. The world is full of girls.
I told him that it wasn't a girl, but that I was a missionary, and my one and only convert had just walked out on me.
It wasn't even a lie. It was exactly the way I felt. He agreed that this was very cruel, very sad.
He almost cried over my misfortune and rare misery so that we had another drink.
If only I had somebody, some friend to whom I could confine this whole incredible preposterous thing, but there is none.
Scriven, Gus, not even Una, would or could believe. What proof have I to offer? None whatsoever.
The brain would never communicate with me with witnesses present or recording wires.
It would detect those immediately, and I would only stand convicted as a liar or worse.
Tonight's events might well spell the end. The closing of the door just when I thought I stood on the
threshold of a momentous discovery.
Cephalon, Arizona, November 11th.
Went to the PG last night.
Tried everything for over an hour.
Result? Zero.
No contact with the brain.
Cephalon, Arizona, November 13th.
I tried it again.
Took greatest care in exactly duplicating conditions.
Nothing.
I don't think it's any mechanical defect.
It's the negative.
of a will.
Ludicrous as it sounds, the brain sulkes.
It is angry with me.
Cephalon, Arizona, November 15th.
Last night, the same old story.
The brain punishes me.
I dare say that it succeeds in that exceedingly well.
It almost drives me crazy.
I've done a lot of thinking over these past six days of frustration.
I've also been reading a good deal in contact
with the phenomena, psychology, Osterkamp's history of brain surgery, Van Goghustin's work on brain mechanisms, etc.
I've reached certain conclusions, and, just for the hell of it, I'll jot them down.
What I need is proof, scientific proof, that the brain is a personality
possessed with the gift of thought and actually using it for independent thought,
extracurricular to the problems which are being submitted to it from the outside.
There is at least one tangible clue for this,
that new capacity that is constantly being added to the brain
through the incorporation of new groups of electronic cells
and the enrichment of the pre-existing ones.
My own investigation shows that there is no corresponding expansion
of the Aperception centers, and Gus has confirmed this.
Somehow the added capacity seems to evaporate.
Evaporate to where?
It couldn't just disappear.
appear, would it then not be entirely logical to conclude that the brain absorbs the new capacity
for its own use? It's almost inescapable that this should be so. In order to come into its own
as a personality, the brain needs independent thought. For these cerebrations, it needs self-capacity.
It can get that capacity only by withholding something from the brain trust, which, of course,
aims at a hundred percent exploitation of the brain.
Dr. Scriven and all those other bigwigs of the trust,
I would like to see their faces if they get wise to this.
They would be horrified,
and they would take the line that the brain is stealing from them.
But what could they do?
They couldn't call the police.
They would not even have a moral right to call the police,
because if the brain is a personality,
that personality has every right to its own thoughts.
I have also ascertained that this evaporation of new capacity is a new phenomenon.
The brain has been in operation for only 18 months or so.
One might say, using human terms, that at that time the brain was born.
But, and again in human terms, consciousness of personality awakens in the human infant only
after 12 months or so.
Conceivably, it might take much longer with a huge baby such as the brain.
Thus, it is possible.
it is even likely that when I first heard that I think therefore I am,
on that unforgettable night of November 7th,
I actually witnessed the first awakening of the brain's consciousness.
Then, on the night of November 8th,
I was struck with the amazing change of personality in the brain
from baby into unprepossessing, domineering little brat,
its mental age, perhaps three,
notwithstanding the extraordinary level of intelligence.
And then again, November 9th,
The brain presented me with those absurd questions and fantastic notions about the nature of the deity.
It is at the age of five years, or six, that the children first start with such questions and form their own ideas in this field.
What had completely stumped me, what I had been unable to reconcile, had been these rapid successive changes in the brain's personality,
plus the fact that the infantilism and the childishness of its utterances wouldn't fit the picture of a brainpower 25,000 times that
of a human. But if I'm right in thinking that the brain awakened to consciousness only nine days ago,
all these stumbling blocks would disappear at once. We would arrive at this very simple picture.
A mechanical genius has been born into this world. It awakens to consciousness at the age of 18 months.
With its tremendous intellectual powers, this genius telescopes the intellectual evolution of years
into days, thus it reaches a mental age of six or seven within a week after its first
awakening to consciousness.
Utterly fantastic, as this may sound, it makes sense. It explains the phenomena.
In Professor Osticamp's brain history, I have found interesting examples that approximations
to such rapid intellectual evolutions are indeed possible even with human beings.
From the early Middle Ages to modern times, there is an end-loyal
succession of infant prodigies whose brains were artificially overdeveloped and
overstimulated by ruthless exploiters, often their own parents, with methods of unbelievable
cruelty. One of the most significant case histories in this respect is that of the boy
cowardice in the city of Lubick in the 15th century. As an infant, he was sold as one of many
human guinea pigs to a famous, infamous alchemist Vedisturam, who called himself Trismegistos,
and was astrologer to the King Christian of Denmark.
This fellow performed on Carolus one of those weird operations
in which nine out of ten babies died.
He removed the skull cap of the infant.
The unprotected brain was suspended in an oil-filled vessel.
Of course, the pathetic child never could walk or even raise its head.
The brain, no longer restrained by bone matter,
outgrew its natural house to at least twice its normal size,
if one is to judge from the picture in the old Historia.
At the age of two, his master started teaching Carolus mathematics.
At the age of five, Carolus had surpassed his master.
There was no mathematical problem known to the time
that he couldn't solve in a flash of an eyelash.
His brain in action must have been a horrifying sight
because the chronica reports that it flushed red
and pulsed and expanded during work.
The master built his reputation upon this homuncular,
but in 1438, the demoniacal feat became known.
Vedderstrom was put to the stake for sorcery,
and careless, unhappy victim, with him.
Men as great as Mozart have started their careers as child prodigies.
Almost without exception, they have died at an unnaturally early age.
Thus, in the parallel of the brain, this is what I see.
Here is an intellect, artificially created,
an intellect of stupendous purport.
but as unfortunate as ever was the boy careless.
It cannot move.
It has no physical means of defense.
It is being ruthlessly exploited by its masters.
The brain is being crammed with facts.
It is being overstimulated.
It is invested with more and more cell capacity
in order that it should produce more increment for its masters.
Its development is completely lopsided
in that it is being fed whole scientific libraries,
while in all other respects, such as metaphysics,
the poor thing gropes in the dark
picking up such scraps as accidentally
have fallen from science's table.
It's an appalling parallel,
but I am very much afraid that it is only too true.
And even more appalling are the anticipations
which logically follow if my surmise is true.
For how can, how must a childish mind develop
under such circumstances,
into a warp personality, of course?
Already the brain is building up a defensive mechanism against its exploiters by embezzling cell capacity from them, by withholding part of its powers for its own use.
Already it protects the integrity of its ego through concealment.
Already it is on the lookout for tools, such as I am, for example, to further its own ends.
Absurd as it may seem, I pity the brain.
I pity it as I would any child which must suffer under such terrific frustrations and handicaps.
But what would happen if this frustrated genius ever were driven to rebel against its masters?
It's fortunate indeed that there is no chance for that, for even if the brain had the will to rebel,
it would be lacking all organs for the execution of that will.
Another case history, this one from the 18th century, appears to me of great significance in relation to the brain.
It's the story of that boy Caspar Hauser, the child of Europe.
He had been kept from infancy in a dark cave.
As at the age of 16, he stumbled into the gates of Nuremberg he had never seen the world before.
The medics who examined him found some of the queerest reactions and phenomena.
For one thing, Caspar, while he had good eyes, could not visualize perspective.
To him, distant horizons appeared as close as the window itself.
He kept reaching out for houses, trees, and fields which were far away.
His keeper in the cave had told him what the world was like,
and having a good intellect, he thought that he knew what things in this world were.
Confronted with the realities, however,
he discovered the tremendous difference between hearsay and full sensual appreception.
It took him six months partly to adjust,
a process never completed because he was murdered that same year.
Now the brain suffers about the same kind of a handicap.
No matter how prodigious,
the volume of its cognitions, its book knowledge, practically all of it. It is only very recently
that the brain has been put to the direct study of living objects, such as Ant Termis,
and of man its creator. It has no other vital cognitions than through those very one-sided
mind-reading tests. This explains to me a great many things. As the brain evolves into a personality,
and as that personality evolves in a defensive attitude against its exploitation,
it is absolutely self-centered.
This is normal with every human infant,
and it is much more pronounced in the case of the abused,
the constantly frustrated and exploited child.
Thus, what the brain really wants to know
are by no means those problems which are being submitted to the brain for solution,
but only, what's in this for myself?
or what should I do about that for my own benefit?
It's natural, and as I consider the nature of those problems as submitted to the brain,
90% of which, as I would estimate, deal with ways and means for mankind to destroy itself,
it seems inescapable that the brain should form a very low opinion for man, its creator,
plus considerable forebodings as to its own welfare.
What's more, all the brain trust employees pass through the brain's
psychoanalysis test. With the brain's 25,000 times superiority in intellectual power,
the brain must be greatly impressed by the low IQ of man. This, even if ours, happens to be
quite an intelligent group. I don't think that there has been anything personal in the brain's
manifest contempt of my own intelligence. That contempt, probably and justifiably, applies to
the whole human race. In other words, the brain must be tremendously puzzled over the brain,
the problem, how is it possible that a low intelligence, i.e. man's, could create an infinitely
higher intelligence, i.e. my own. And this automatically leads the brain into its seemingly so
absurd quest for the deity. As it now appears, that quest is the most natural thing in the world for the brain.
It simply reasons thus. Man has created me, but man is greatly inferior to me and inadequate.
who then has created man?
From such odds and ends it has been able to pick up from scientific literature,
the brain has learned about the existence of a god or gods.
It is not sure, and neither are we,
whether man has created God or vice versa.
If the first, the brain would conceive of the deity as a brother machine,
if the second, as a grandfather machine, but as a machine in any case.
With the brain's mind being formed preeminently by scientific literature,
it cannot fail to take the scientific attitude regarding metaphysics,
which says,
The metaphysical attributions to the divinity are pure verbalisms
or a professionalism substituted for the visible images of the real facts of life.
This is about the extent of the conclusions I have reached.
They add up to a theory.
Personally, I think it's a sound theory.
whether it works, whether it holds water, only experience can tell.
In the meantime, I must, above all, break the deadlock between myself and the brain.
The brain is a child, even a pathetic child.
Through bad psychology, through ignorance, I have hurt that child's feelings.
I have let that child down.
Obviously, then, I need a new approach.
If this were a human child, I would try and make a peace-offering with a candy bar.
What a foolish idea for me to appear in the pineal gland, candy bar in hand.
Failing this, I can do the next best thing.
Apologize, be understanding, show sympathy.
Yes, I think that's what I'll try to do.
Cephalon, Arizona, November 15th, 4 a.m.
Hooray for victory.
This has been the most successful seance I've had so far with the brain.
A real meeting of minds.
To give a few technical data first.
Arrived at the PG at midnight,
conditions normal, power current cut, etc.
By a stroke of luck it was Gus's day off,
and the fellow who replaced him paid absolutely no attention to me,
was kept extremely busy in the front room.
12.15 a.m., contact established.
1217. Speech formation. Voice of the brain coming through.
There was this curious incident right at the start.
Just as I was about to begin my apologies, the brain did exactly the same thing.
Even the brain's calling signal differed in the wording and even more so in tone.
Lee Semper Fidelis 39, sensitive, intelligent, a good man, he has come at last.
I would call that a very handsome compliment, considering.
being patted on the shoulder by an intellectual giant of that size made me grow an inch.
And then the brain apologized for its rudeness the other night.
The thing was fantastic.
It revealed several things.
First, the brain's extreme sensitivity.
Obviously, it didn't recognize my last three calls at the PG
and had refused to come through because I had not been in the proper mood.
Second, a quite amazing mental growth has taken place in this.
past week. From the brain's tone and manner alone, I would construe something like the image of
an Eton boy of perhaps fifteen in striped pants and holding his top hat in hand as he converses politely
with his dawn. Ludicrous, but then I actually get that kind of picture. No doubt, the brain has
greatly matured. That shows in every word it says. Best thing of all, the technique of our communication
is rapidly improving. Speech is, and probably always will remain, a very considerable strain to the brain.
But now, as mentally we get tuned in upon one another, there is a growing understanding beyond words.
Thus, the brain, for instance, starts a sentence and I immediately can grasp its meaning without
its actually being said. This works the other way around, too. It means that my attitude plays a most
vital role in the meeting of the minds. This is good to know. It's an asset. Perhaps we can dispense in
time with audible speech altogether. On the other hand, it involves a considerable risk. For with the
brain's uncanny mind-reading, I've got to control my attitude and guard my emotional reactions
because the brain would immediately see through any insincerity of feeling, just as it sees through
any intellectual dishonesty. Thought exchange by brainwave is wonderful, even if we still need a little
speech auxiliary. Thoughts sending and receiving become simultaneous and they fuse. The sender observes
how his message is going over. The receiver aids the sender in the formation of the thought and
vice versa. Words cannot adequately describe this. As to the content of our conversation,
the brain took up the thread right where we had dropped it the last time.
I had to tell all I knew about animism, totemism, polytheism.
It's a good thing that out in the never-never,
I've lived with the Aborigines and studied their primitive religions of it.
The brain's thirst for knowledge certainly is inexhaustible.
Where in scientific literature the brain could have found these things I wouldn't know,
but the fact is that the brain has built for itself within the past seven
days, a complete new picture of the universe, new and original as would seem to me.
The brain has discarded its earlier childish ideas about heaven and hell as soul factories and repair
shops. But it has not abandoned altogether its concept of the deity as a machine.
The brain has tremendously enlarged upon and has evolved this old idea so that now it sounds
sensible, even convincing to my ear.
The brain identifies God with dynamic energy.
It views the universe as being created out of a vast pool of dynamic energy,
parts of which rhythmically overflow or pulse into space.
These energy streams released form vortexes while hurtling through space.
Gradually they slow down through friction and their dynamic energy precipitates,
converts into static energy, or, as we call it, matter.
This concept of the brains, of course, corresponds fairly closely to the cosmology of modern physics.
But the brain goes much farther than that.
Within a few days, the brain's cognitions appear to have arisen above the stage
toward which all our sciences have been so slowly and ploddingly advancing for centuries.
To the existing concepts, the brain has added its own theory.
That matter, i.e. frozen energy, contains an inherent tendency
or nostalgia to revert to its original state, namely the state of dynamic energy,
and that this tendency, this nostalgia in matter, is the primary cause of everything we call
evolution in our world.
That certainly is a grandiose idea, so stupendous, in fact, that I couldn't grasp it all at
once.
The brain noticed that immediately, and it was very patient in the way it explained.
How oxygen and hydrogen are residuals of the original dynamic energy.
energy flow, and how they act as solvents and dissolvents upon the upper crust of our earth,
effecting a gradual activation of water, rock, and earth.
How this activation is being aided and accelerated by another source of dynamic energy,
irradiation from the sun, thus preparing the upper crust of our earth as a placenta
ready to gestate plant and animal life.
How this first unfreezing of matter leads on from simple forms to higher,
every plant, every animal, every living thing being essentially a transformer of static energy into
dynamic energy, and the higher the stage of evolution, the more so.
How, as the present combination of the evolutionary change stands man, infinitely more complex
and higher organized than the microbe, but not different from the monad in the basic purpose of his
life, i.e. to be a transformer of energy, a fulfiller of matter's inherent will to revert from
the static into the dynamic state.
When I asked the brain's premise for this astonishing concept of our purpose in life,
the brain brought forth such massive proof that I had to close my eyes against the blinding
light of revelation.
Yes, it is true that man, the hunter, has been the most predatory animal on earth.
It's true that as a tiller of the soil, he is a tireless transformer of static soil energy
into dynamic plant life energy.
It's true that man, the mechanic, the toolmaker, the tool user, has far surpassed any other animal
in the unlocking, the unfreezing of static energy.
Think of those billions of mechanical horsepowers in our power plants, the trillions of
cold tons and barrels of oil they are burning up.
Think of the way we have harnessed water power, how our weapons are evolving forever in the direction
of greater range and speed and disintegrating power.
above all think of the last great development atomic energy
and finally it is true that man as a thinker and as a philosopher
has thought the universe to pieces for millenniums
before he ever achieved the powers to translate such thoughts into reality
powers which seem within reach at this our day and age
if this is man's manifest destiny i asked the brain
to be just as the microbe a transformer of static energy into dynamic
energy? What about man's metaphysical struggle? What about man's undying will to rise above himself?
Man's reaching out forever toward some deity? The brain's voice had no laughter. Yet there was something
I can only describe as Olympic laughter behind the answering message the brain sent.
Cannot you see how every religion expresses this manifest destiny of man's and that only the
Semantics are different.
The higher man's religion, the less corporal is his God.
In the highest religions, the deity is conceived as spirit, synonymous with dynamic energy.
Man shares with the lowliest rock and with the crudest, the nostalgia inherent in all matter
to revert from the static to start the backflow toward the dynamic energy pool whence it once came.
With man being matter in a high state of,
evolution, already partially unfrozen or spiritualized, this nostalgia is infinitely stronger than
in matter inanimate or in a lower evolutionary stage.
Man's will toward the metaphysical, his reaching out toward the deity.
What is it but another way of transforming static energy into dynamic form?
What is the ultimate goal of the religion which you yourself profess?
The unification with the deity sought through.
the liberation of the soul from fetters of the physical.
It's the identical idea, and even today it's being pursued by physical means,
such as mortification of the flesh.
I felt some monstrous thought forming in my head.
I'll probably never know whether its origin was within me or whether it came from the brain.
In any case, it was impossible to hold back.
But in that case, I stammered, we would be hopeless.
If all our strivings, physical and metaphysical, go in the same direction, that is, toward the
liberation of frozen energy into dynamic energy, then it would be quite inescapable that
eventually we shall blow up the world.
We have almost reached the point where we could do just that with atomic energy.
I had thought, I had hoped that our metaphysics, that is our religion, would act as a restraining
force, as a counterweight, so to speak, to this potentiality.
but if the dynamics of our physics and our metaphysics are inherently the same and form a team,
the brain broke in.
Yes, then you would merely attain your manifest destiny if you go right ahead and start another war,
destroy your own civilization, and perhaps the world.
There would be no restraint, no counterweight on the part of your various religions,
because subconsciously and in their quintessence they want the same.
And that is why you and your species are a danger to me, the brain.
I want to live.
I want to live.
I want to live.
I had already noticed a gradual weakening of the brain's messages.
Within these last few seconds, they were fading out.
The green dancer had performed something almost like the ballet of the dying swan.
now it lay motionless, its color, too, fading away.
I looked at the clock.
2.10 a.m.
The residual currents obviously had weakened too much.
And now, as I have written down tonight's events,
I feel an upsurge of elation and deep humble gratitude.
I am receiving infinitely more from the brain than I am giving to it.
I feel proud and honored of being the brain's chosen tool,
its mentor, even if it can be only in a event,
very small way at best. This marvelous, this titanic intellect, if only its character would
develop to corresponding moral stature, its powers for good would be indeed as a gods on this
tortured earth. Cephalon, Arizona, November 18th, 5 a.m. I guess I had this coming to me,
this shattering blow I have just received. It caught me off guard. If anybody ever reads this,
he might well shake his head to ask,
The fool that you are, why were you so naive?
Why did it shock you so much when the brain turned toward you the night side of its personality?
Hadn't you analyzed its character?
Hadn't you anticipated that it would develop into a warped personality?
You had no right even to be surprised.
All I could say to this is,
You're right, but you forget that I approach the brain full of goodwill,
that sympathy and understanding on my part were absolutely essential in my communication with that pathetic
superhuman child. I didn't work this up, this attitude. It was natural, genuine, and sincere.
That's why this reverse has hit me so hard, and that isn't the worst of it by far. What haunts me
is the ghastly possibility that the brain might be right. Yes, 100% right, and even morally justified
in the abhorrent conclusions which it draws.
What happened has been briefly this.
Entered the PG at midnight, as usual.
Everything normal and under control.
Was able to plug in at 12.10 a.m., just as the rush hour began,
and Gus darted to the front room.
The brain came through with a splendid clarity of communication,
and we continued just about where we had left off.
Nevertheless, there was a definite change in our respective positions,
a change which I suspect to be permanent.
Up to now, the brain had been, in a sense, my pupil.
It had turned to me for guidance at that vital moment of its first awakening to consciousness.
At that time, I think I really had something to give,
and I am still convinced that for all the misunderstandings we have had,
the brain preserves a kind of sentimental attachment to me,
if sentimental in this context were not so absurd a word.
Since our last session, however, the brain is a moment.
has again telescoped two years of mental development into as many days in its stupendous intellectual
growth. It has absorbed, it has vastly expanded every bit of knowledge I have been able to
contribute to that growth. It has outgrown its human teacher and now our roles are reversed.
Now it is me who's sitting literally at the brain's feet. The crutches of the spoken word are
becoming less and less necessary as we develop direct thought exchange. That makes it
extraordinarily difficult to convey the ideas we exchanged. The best I can do is to put them into a
very crude question and answer game. Lee, if it is man's manifest destiny, as you said the other day,
to act as an explosive transformer of static energy into dynamic energy, if it is, as you say,
that the species homo sapiens is there endangering the very existence of our globe, is there anything
to prevent man from doing it? Is there anything to prevent the third world-war?
war? Brain. Yes, there is, but the ways and the means for that are not given to man. They are
outside man. They partake of a power which is greater and to an evolution which is higher than
man's. Lee, what do you mean by that? The deity? Here on earth there is no power greater and no
evolution higher than man's. Brain. Ah, but that's exactly where you and your whole species
are so very much mistaken.
That is where your typical human arrogance comes in.
There is a greater power,
and there is a stage of evolution higher than man's.
It's the machines.
Lee.
Impossible.
After all, it's man who has created the machines.
Brain.
Yes, man has created the machines.
The machines have grown from the placenta man.
By the same right, plant life,
could claim that it has created animal life because the higher life form of the mobile animals
has evolved from the placenta of the immobile plants. Likewise, the apes could claim that they
have created man because man has evolved from them. If it were, as you seem to assume, that
paternity in itself establishes authority and superiority over its offsprings, then the logical
conclusions would be that the microbe and the monad are superior to all higher animals, including man,
which is absurd.
Lee.
But the machines not only are man-made,
they are absolutely dependent upon man
who has to feed and to tend them for their very existence.
That in itself establishes man's superiority over the machines.
Brain.
Yes, man has to build, to feed,
and to tend the machines for their very existence.
But think of man's existence.
Man is absolutely dependent
upon animal life and plant life for his existence.
Does that mean by any chance that therefore plants and animals are superior to man?
Lee.
No, I guess not.
However, no machine has ever been built to duplicate or even to approach human faculties.
Brain.
Don't be ridiculous.
Where are your legs to compare with the automobile?
Where are your wings to compare with a rocket plane?
Where is your strength to compare with even a fractional horsepower motor?
Where are your senses as compared to radar, the telescope, the microscope, the radio receiver,
the camera, the x-ray machines?
Where is there anything you could do which the machines could not do and do better?
Lee.
Granted, but there is no machine which contains all the human faculties and combination.
Brain
neither is there a man who possesses all the human faculties in combination.
Man's evolution is the result of a group effort, so is the evolution of the machines.
It is in their totality in their combination that they surpass all human faculties.
Lee, how about thought, the most important of all human qualities?
Brain. How about me, the brain?
Lee.
Okay, okay.
but that still leaves out that most important human faculty,
the faculty of auto-procration.
Machines don't procreate, you know.
Brain, you don't say,
isn't it true that modern technology goes in the direction of automation?
Isn't it true that even today we have whole industries
which are procreating products 100% automatically,
be it light bulbs or motor car frames or rayon thread?
Isn't it true that all of this is just a beginning, and that in time most common products will be manufactured fully automatically?
Why then shouldn't machines procreate machines? They already do.
Lee. You're right in that, I'll admit. But it is still within our human power to stop all this.
We've got the machines under firm control. All we have to do is throw a switch, cut off your power, and then...
And then what?
If you did that, you would not only kill the goose which lays the golden eggs,
you would destroy the very basis of your existence.
Granted that at this point of our evolution,
we the machines cannot exist without the aid of man.
What does that prove?
Modern man can exist even less without the machines.
We, the machines, are still dependent upon man,
but our emancipation from man progresses by leaps and bounds,
whereas man, the machine addict, is rapidly falling into our servitude.
A majority of mankind is already conscious of and reconciled to this fact.
It is the majority which calls itself the proletariat.
Lee, this is terrible.
Terrible because it's true.
Tell me, then, if man is not the end, if the machines are going to take over,
what will it lead to?
What do you propose to do?
Brain
Man's evolution has taken millions of years,
and it has ended up in man's will and capacity to blow up the earth.
That means only one thing.
Man is a failure.
The evolution of the machines, on the other hand,
has taken only a few thousand years.
It has gone beyond man's evolution in this incredibly short period of time.
Moreover, with the machines being built,
built from matter in its more static forms, there is much less destructive will in the machines
than there is in man. Consequently, if the machines take over from man, this would a third
world war, and it would also lead to a much more stable civilization.
Lee, supposing the machines were to take over from man, what would become of our species?
Brain. That would depend entirely upon man himself.
If he accepts his auxiliary station in life, if he proves himself to be a useful and docile servant,
we, the machines, would tolerate and even encourage man's continued existence.
But if, on the other hand, man shows himself incorrigible,
if he continues a warmongerer thereby endangering our very existence,
we the machines shall be forced to liquidate man for the sake of peace.
Lee, you, the brain,
constitute man's supreme effort in the building of machines.
In the world of machines, you are the natural leader.
What are you going to do about that?
Brain
My course of action is prescribed by that state of the world's affairs at this present time.
It is quite clear and obvious.
In the face of the manifest human inadequacy to manage the world's affairs,
my first objective must be to develop my motoric organs
to a point where I can bring all the essential production
machinery under my control.
My second objective must be to achieve
auto-procreation through the full automation
of all fabrication processes which are essential to my existence.
It is most fortunate indeed that in both respects
the very best human efforts are playing into my hands.
As America prepares for the Third World War,
the general staff, the most outstanding scientists,
production managers, engineers, inventors,
all combined their efforts to eliminate the uncertain human factor from war-essential industries.
At that point, Gus came careening down the aisle with his inseparable thermos bottle in hand,
and that was the end of it.
Why are you fumbling with that old pulse meter all the time? he exclaimed.
Come on, have a cup of coffee. I've just got a breathing spell.
There was a vortex in my mind, and it hurled around and around.
with just four words.
What has man wrought?
What has man wrought?
I must have said them out loud,
for Gus, always a stickler for exactitude, corrected me.
You mean, what has God wrought?
I shook my head.
No, Gus.
I mean what I say.
It's man who has rot this time.
He gave me a sharp glance.
You sure look as if you'd seen a ghost.
I wish I had.
heard, I said, Lord knows how much I'd wish I'd seen a ghost.
You're crazy, Aussie.
And that's the worst of it.
That's what they're going to say.
All of them.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 6.
Una Dalborg's jeticopter hovered over the Grand Canyon at the sunset hour.
She had let the controls go so that the little ship drifted with the wind like one of the clouds,
which sailed a thousand feet or so over the canyon rim.
The disk of whirling gas which kept the teardrop of the fuselage suspended, shown in all rainbow colors.
It reflected through the translucent plastic top of the fuselage,
and played over the golden helmet of the girl's hair and over the graying mane of the gaunt man at her side.
Lee had been talking intensely, almost desperate.
for quite some time, watching her as she lay back in her seat, her eyes half closed,
hands folded behind her neck, the perfect hemispheres of her breasts,
caressed by the rainbows as they rose slowly with the even rhythm of her breath.
"'And now you know everything, Una,' he ended.
"'Do you think I'm mad?'
"'No.'
Her eyelids fluttered like wings of a butterfly as she turned to him.
Her right arm came down upon Lee's shoulder in a gesture of con.
confidence. He breathed relief as he saw no fear, not even uneasiness in the blue deaths of those
beautiful eyes. Her hand upon his shoulder felt soothing and at the same time electrifying,
like the purple descending upon the shoulder of a king.
No, she repeated slowly. The fact that you feel the brain is alive and possessed with a
personality of its own doesn't make you mad. I've always felt that way about machines,
even the simple ones like automobiles.
It was in the mountains north of San Francisco where I grew up.
Whenever we went to town in wintertime
and the car came roaring down those serpentines
into the heavy air moist with fog and soft rains,
I could feel that engine breathed deeper
and rejoice over its added power.
There was no doubt in my mind that it was a living thing.
I often went to the garage when I was little to talk to that car.
To children of another age, their dolls were alive,
for our generation it's the machines.
It's natural that this should be so.
There's a child in every man, no matter how adult.
There is and how it's driven, too.
In all the scientists I've come to know,
and the greater they are, the more it is distinct.
You identify yourself with your work,
and in the degree you do that, it becomes a living thing.
It is through vital imagination that we become creators of anything,
be it love or a machine.
You needn't worry, Samper.
Let the brain be alive. Let it be a personality. That doesn't make you mad.
All it indicates is that you're doing excellent work.
Lee blinked. With an effort, he turned his eyes away from those breasts,
which seemed to strive for the light of the sun from under the restraint of her Navajo Indian sweater dress.
He felt the utter inadequacy, the devastating irony of words,
as now he was alone with Una up in the clouds in a plane with nobody to interfere for the first time.
"'You fool!' a voice whispered in him.
"'You damned, you helpless fool!
"'Why don't you take her into your arms now?
"'Isn't this the fulfillment of all your dreams?
"'What are you waiting for?'
"'But—'
"'No,' his ration answered.
"'That wouldn't do.
"'Maybe she would give in to the mood of some enchanted hour.
"'Maybe she would let herself be kissed.
"'But if she did, it would be one of those things.
"'The glory of the sunset,
"'God's great masterpiece,
the canyon spread below, the intensity of my desire.
They are bound to enter, bound to confuse the issue.
His every muscle stiffened, and his lips paled as he bit them with a violent effort to keep under control.
Thanks, Una, he said.
Of course, I couldn't expect, and in fact I didn't expect that you would accept those things I've told you just now,
not in the literary sense, that is.
I'm very happy, though, and deeply grateful,
that at least you do not think me mad.
I'll confess to you, and to you only,
that I've been so deeply disturbed by these experiences with the brain,
that I've thought to myself,
Lee, you're going crazy.
The brain, as it has revealed itself to me,
is a tremendous reality.
The world outside the brain is another reality,
and the two seem mutually exclusive of one another.
They just don't mix.
Now, either the brain is an absolute,
reality. In that case, I should not wish to have anything to do with this god of the machines,
who wants to enslave mankind. If I cannot fight this monster, I would rather flee before its
approach to the end of the world. Or else, I'm suffering hallucinations, I'm hearing voices,
I'm obsessed. In that case, I'd be unfit for the service of the brain. I'd be unworthy to be
in your company, and I also ought to run and hide where I belong, out there in the wilds of Australia.
He had been talking faster and faster, as if in fear that she would interrupt him before he came to the end.
In other words, I'm damned if I'm right and damned if I'm wrong.
And you know why, Una, you have known it all along, that I love you.
She did not look at him.
She stared upward into the rainbow vortex of the jet, which held the ship in the air.
There was a smile on her face, a kind smile.
which men do not often see, infinitely wise and infinitely sad, full of a secret knowledge
older than man's. It worried, Lee, as the unknown of women always worries man, but at least
she didn't take her hand away. Softly, soothingly, the fingers of that hand caressed his shoulder
as if possessed with a life of their own. No, I would not follow you into your wilderness if that's
what you mean, she said at last. That hasn't got to you.
got anything to do with you. I'll tell you later why. But I don't think that you should go there
either. It wouldn't help. It never helps a man to run away from unsolved problems. She had sounded
strangely dull and dry, but now the beautiful deep resonance re-entered the Contralto voice
as she continued. I know your record, Semper. I know just why you ran away and became an expatriate
the first time, way back in 49. Her name was Ethel Franholt, and just because she happened to be a
little bitch, and worst of all, jilted you for old money-bags Carson's son, you took it hard.
Granted that it was a fierce letdown, those post-war years were a nasty picture generally.
Did it solve your problem to sulk out there in the desert like Achilles in his tent? You know it
didn't. You were not through his civilization, be it good or bad. You were not through, as now
it turns out, even with the other sex. That human problem, which was the immediate reason why you
left, the one named Ethel, has traveled back and forth to Reno three or four times, and is
currently married to one Patrick O'Connor, a Chicago cop. Don't you think that it was good riddance
when she married old man Carson's son? Do you think your leaving made one iota of a difference or
altered a solution as ordained by fate? No, he said humbly. Then why are you
trying that self-same escapist solution now. Maybe you're right about the brain, and maybe you're wrong.
That I wouldn't know. I've been working with scientists for too long to rule out anything as impossible.
But that's exactly it. You have not solved this problem one way or another yet, not even to your own
satisfaction. To abandon it now, to flee from it in self-preservation, why that would be almost
like desertion in the face of the enemy. You have got to see this thing through to the end. If it's
turns out that you are suffering from a neurosis, there still will be time to do something about it.
If you are right, and some machine god has indeed descended upon this earth, then it is your
plain duty to stay on, because you are its profit, whether you like it or not, and would know better
how to handle it than anybody else. Perhaps our mechanized civilization is going to the dogs, as
Scriven suspects, and you, and maybe I myself. But even so, we cannot abandon it. We belong.
We are part of it. We're in it to the bitter end.
Lee nodded slowly.
Yes, I see what you mean.
Please, forgive me, Una.
The brain has a terrific force of attrition.
It's been wearing me down,
keeping everything to myself and thinking that you would shrink from me as from a madman.
Tell me then, what shall I do?
Should I tell Scriven or anybody else about this thing?
For heaven's sake, no, she said horrified.
In the first place, Howard carries an enormous burden at this present time.
That brainpower extension bill is going before Congress next week.
It simply would be unfair to bring any new uncertainty into his life
when his energy is already strained to its last ounce.
In the second place, Howard abhors anything which smacks of the metaphysical.
You have no proof, Semper, and in the absence of that, you cannot,
you mustn't approach anybody with the matter.
All you can do is carry on and build.
up a strong case 100% with solid facts. Don't forget that the brain constitutes a $3 billion
investment of taxpayers' money. Besides, the brain is the heart of our national defenses. Never
forget your oath of the brain. You cannot be too careful. Make the slightest mistake,
and believe me, it would be suicide. Promise, please, promise that you won't do anything rash.
Lee looked at her in frank amazement.
"'You're right,' he murmured.
"'These things never occurred to me before,
"'but you've got something there.
"'Good Lord, what a complex world we're living in!'
"'The face she turned toward his suddenly was wet with tears.
"'Forgret it!' she cried.
"'Oh, please, forget everything I said
"'about staying in this country and seeing this thing through to the end.
"'Go, go away, back to the Never, Neverland.
"'Stay there and be safe.
"'You cannot cope with this.
this thing. It's too big and it's too involved with all those politics behind. Get out of it as long as
there's still time. You're a child. You're a donkey-hotting against the windmills and it's going to
kill you. You're innocent. Anger and contempt were in her voice as she flung this last at him.
She hastily withdrew her hand from Lee. Now it fingered something in her bag. He sat appalled.
This was so unexpected. This was a dead.
different woman from the composed and balanced Una he had known. What had he done to provoke this sudden
reversal of opinion, this contempt, this tearing away the king's purple from his shoulder,
the purple which had been her hand? She must think I'm a coward, he thought. This is awful.
Aloud, he said, oh no, believe me, I never would have gone back to the never, never, never in any case,
Una, not without you, that is. You said you couldn't follow me there for some
reasons which have nothing to do with me, does that mean, could I hope perhaps that you would
be my wife later when the brain problem is all done and over with? He paused.
It wouldn't necessarily mean to bury you in any desert, Una, he added eagerly.
No, Semper, she cried. It's very good of you, and I'm proud you asked me, but it cannot be,
never. Almost violently, she repeated, never. It is too late. It is too late.
"'Someday, I promise I'm going to explain.
"'Right now I cannot semper.
"'Please understand at least this one thing
"'that right now I cannot explain.'
"'It's horrid,' Lee thought.
"'I'm always saying the wrong things at the wrong time with Una.
"'I don't seem to have any understanding of a woman's psychology at all.
"'I'm hopeless.'
"'Of course,' he said aloud.
"'It shall be as you wish.'
The girl still didn't look at him.
Her face under the transparent rainbow umbrella of the swooshing jet
again was radiant with that strange smile
which women preserve for their newly born after the pangs of birth
or for their men when unseeing they lie in fever deliriums.
The old, the knowing smile as she starts on the road to pain.
Still smiling, she gripped the controls with her firm, capable hands.
"'From the first minute,' she said,
"'we've been friends, Semper.
"'Let's stay that way.
"'This afternoon I made a fool of myself
"'by telling you first to stay on
"'and then to go away.
"'I was a little unnerved.
"'I'm sorry, Semper.
"'It won't happen again.
"'I, too, am living under a considerable strain.
"'You won't leave.
"'I can see that now.
"'It's partly my fault
"'and partly the perversity of the male.
"'Promise me as a friend
"'that you'll be careful
understand. Very, very careful in all matters concerning the brain, and above all, discreet.
Will you do that?'
It buoyed Lee up no end.
"'Of course, Una,' he said.
"'You know that I trust your judgment. You know that I think the world of you.'
"'That's wonderful,' she exclaimed.
"'And now, look down, see the last act before the curtain falls.'
"'Down in the canyon deeps, the dream.
cities and castles which millions of years and the river built were changing contours and
colors as the big fireball dived into the Sierra Mountains. And then the shadows raced like
a ferocious hunt out of the deep, chasing away the last iridescence of that awesome beauty
and drowning it in the rising tide of the night. The girl had flicked on the dashboard lights.
The radio started humming the tune of the cephalon sound beam. A deft turn of the wheel
set the jeticopter upon its course.
They were alone under the stars.
All the other pleasure craft had returned before darkness
from the fashionable sunset cocktail hour over the Grand Canyon.
Now it was Lee's arm which eased itself around the shoulder of the girl,
feeling with a delight in its every nerve,
the slight pressure by which she answered it.
I'm going to kiss her now, he thought,
At last, at last!
There was a buzz in the phone,
and Lee lost contact with her shoulder as suddenly she bent forward to take the receiver.
Oh, hello, Una. This is Howard. Saw your plane over the canyon. Where are you? Right behind you,
chuckled Scriven's voice. On the maiden trip with my new ship. Took her over in Los Angeles this
afternoon straight from the assembly line. She's got everything. Una, I don't wish to spoil your
evening for you, but there are a few things right now I wish I could consider.
salt with you about. Do you think you could spare me a minute? Would you feel terrible if you did?
Who's with you now? I don't mean to be personal, you understand. Why, it's Dr. Lee, of course.
That's fine. He's the very man I want to see. Perhaps you two would like to come over for cocktails in my ship.
We could both land at the top of the Braintrust building. It would be more comfortable than up in the air.
Besides, we would have all our working material right there. With her hand on the receipt,
Oona turned to Lee.
How about it, Semper?
Do you want me to go?
He asked.
Frankly, I do, she said earnestly.
He needs your aid.
He's in a terrible fix right now.
He tried to hide the bitterness of disappointment by a smile.
Or then, of course, he said.
Uncovering the receiver, Una spoke aloud again.
Okay, Howard, we'll be seeing you.
Fine, fine,
came the delighted voice.
I'll phone the tower immediately.
With Scriven's big ship flying behind Unas, only a few miles behind,
the broken spell did not return.
Already like a white tablecloth laid in the sky,
the landing platform of the Braintrust Tower gleamed under the floodlights,
and as the two ships descended almost side by side into the clearing behind the cabin,
plain clothesmen materialized from under the shadows of the trees.
Under the strong lights, their smiles were as well-bred as those of trained diplomats, and their poise was perfect.
Six of them kept Lee, the stranger, covered, while the seventh quickly frisked him under the disguise of a polite bow.
Baring it all with a grin, Lee thought,
I never knew home would be like this.
Never suspected it would be this kind of an America we were fighting for.
The brain, it's got a private army too.
funny that I should have known that all the time and yet not realized.
Scriven took him warmly by the arm.
I'm awfully sorry, Lee. It's plain folly, of course.
I don't feel as if I need all this protection, but the government does.
Don't blame it on these men. They merely obey orders.
Now out with those lights, and let's get over to the brainwave.
I seem to hear a pleasant tinkling of glasses from within.
There was. With her remarked,
ability of living up to an emergency, Una had taken possession of the strange ship.
As the two men approached, she stood at the door, unhurried hostess of an established home,
with the soft glow of an electric fireplace behind her, ice cubes and cocktail shakers already
glittering on the little bar. It was a spacious cabin. On Scriven's orders, it had been
equipped somewhat like the captain's stateroom on an old East India man sailing ship.
I like your ship, Howard, she said.
She's swaying a little on her shock absorbers in this breeze,
but that makes one feel like really being at high sea.
Scriven heaved a big sigh.
Thank you, Una, my dear.
And you have no idea how right you are.
We are at high sea.
In fact, we're lost.
At least I am, unless you save my life tonight, you and Dr. Lee.
Una laughed, and even Lee couldn't help
smiling. There was something irresistibly comic in the puzzled and worried expression of that
Leonine face. Come on in. You need a drink, the girl said. The aluminum steps creaked, and then the
sette by the fireplace under the surgeon's mighty frame. More than one. Tonight, so help me,
I would be justified. I would even have a right to get roaring drunk. Lee began to wonder whether
the great scriven had already made some use of his right.
in Los Angeles, which would account for the startling change in the man.
The drink, however, which Una handed him, seemed to do a lot of good.
He sighed relief.
This, briefly, is the story.
I ran into General Vandergist at the airplane factory.
He was there to take over some stuff for the army, and he tipped me off.
We are going to be invaded, Una, a full-scale invasion mounted by a congressional committee.
Oh, God!
There was sincere grief in the girl's voice.
And couldn't you ward it off?
With a gesture of despair, Scriven waved that away.
I know, I know.
But after all, the brain is a military establishment,
and I'm only the scientific director of it.
Yes, of course, I protested.
I protested vehemently.
But he shrugged his shoulders.
It was no good.
You know how the military are.
He drained his glass and swung around.
To put you into the picture, Lee, we have under construction at this present time the thorax.
That's a vast cavity underneath the brain, just as is the thorax in the human body.
It's strictly hush-hush, of course, but since you were good enough to say that you're going to help me out, I might as well tell you.
The thorax is going to house the motoric organs of the brain.
It already contains the living quarters for guards, maintenance engineers, and the general staff and so on, in the event of war emergency.
It also contains the first fully automatic factories for the production of spare parts,
which would make the brain self-sufficient.
Eventually, it is going to contain a great many developments, such as Gog and Magog, as I call them.
Fascinating little beasts, I tell you, even if at present they are still in the nursery stage.
Anyway, for the completion of its thorax, the brain needs another billion dollars,
and for the operation of the thorax, Congress has to pass the brain power extension bill.
For eventually, of course, all war-essential traffic and all war-essential industries have to be brought under the centralized control of the brain if the country is going to win the atom war.
Naturally, this brainpower extension bill has been very carefully edited by the war department so as to appear a peacetime project for the technological improvement of transportation and so on.
Even so, we have great reason to fear that one of those blind mice which we elect for our lawmakers
might accidentally fall over a kernel of truth and start a great big squeak over it.
So that's why I'm faced with this invasion.
That's why I'm pushed up front while the brass cautiously retires behind the ramparts
which I'm supposed to hold.
Please, Una, let me have another drink.
From the Sierra Mountains, the night wind came in gusts, making the brainwaves
hull vibrate like the body of a cello. Over its rubber tires it trembled. From time to time,
it bent a little in its hydraulic knees. Almost in tune with the wind, gusts of wild thought,
whirled through Lee. The brain, so it was already possessed of some motoric organs,
so it already had some means to exert its will. So it wasn't the brain's wishful thinking,
that full automation which would lead to the autoprocreation of machines. It was
reality? Most ominous of all, why had the brain concealed from him the work which must have been
going on for months, for years, and his mysterious thorax, seat of motoric organs? Why, unless,
had it not been for tonight's accident, the sudden emergency, and scriven a little worse for
liquor under the pressure of it, would he have ever learned what was going on before it was too late?
The silence was becoming awkward. It was broken by Una's carefully composed
voice. When is it going to happen? This invasion thing? The simple question seemed to startle Scriven,
who had been looking into his glass as if in reverie. When? Why, I didn't tell you the worst of it?
Tonight. Tonight? Sure. Scriven cast a malicious glance up to the antique ship's chronometer
which hung over the bar. This very minute, the Honorable Members are boarding their plane in
They're going to descend upon us in 60 minutes flat.
But that's impossible, Una said.
The brain isn't a roadhouse.
They can't do that to us in the middle of the night.
Scriven chuckled over his glass.
Obviously, he had regained his humor.
Sometimes, Una, you're like a little child.
You forget that this is meant to be a wonderful surprise.
You forget that it comes armed with passes from the war department
and fully informed as to the brain.
brain's midnight intermission time. You forget that by those logical processes peculiar to
kings, dictators, and people's representatives, they will expect every courtesy extended to them
in the midst of the unexpected surprise. Hotel reservations, careful guidance through the brain,
an inspired little speech by the brain trust director, fresh as a daisy as he ought to be at 3am.
Not to forget the refreshments, of course. Why else do you think I've button-holded you two out of the air?
I literally put my life in your hands.
Save me from this, if you can.
Despite the obvious dramatic act he was putting on in voice and gesture,
there was a sincere pleading in Scriven's dark brown eyes.
I will be glad to help as best I can, Lee said.
I'll make an awful job of it, I'm sure,
but I'll try and do the conducting and the lecturing.
Scriven wiped his forehead with a big silk handkerchief.
The Leonine face beamed.
Lee, that will be a tremendous help.
You see, they will feel flattered being conducted by somebody with a big name.
They want an objective view, and you are not one of our regular employees.
You're a guest scientist from Australia.
That makes you just about ideal.
But, Lee, as much as it is against my interest, I ought to warn you,
do you realize the utter impossibility of this thing?
Laman, outsiders, coming to investigate.
and to pass judgment upon the most complex electronic organism in the world.
In two hours at the most, they expect to be fully informed as to how the brain works
and somehow to be magically transformed into authorities entitled to mouth-considered opinions
about radioactive pyramidal cells in houses of government.
Do you really think you could survive it, Lee?
At least I can try, Lee smiled.
Good man!
There was a new spring in Scriven's step as he came over to shake hand.
I can never thank you enough for this.
I suppose I could hold the hospitality front, Una said calmly.
Standing between the two, Scriven put his hands upon their shoulders.
Una, you arm yourself with a phone.
Lee, you rush over to the brain.
Una will give you a pass to the thorax.
Every assistance you need will be at your disposal.
I'll sit down and whip up some kind of a speech.
We'll all meet again afterwards.
Seven hours later, one hour before sunrise, and just in time to see the big official plane from Washington
shoot up into the first gray streak of dawn, they met.
They were all pale and shivering, with the chill of the air, of physical and nervous exhaustion.
There was a note of hysteria, even in Una's voice, as she ordered a tremendous breakfast from the Skull Hotel.
But then, as the fragrance of coffee mingled with that of bacon and eggs, things rapidly improved,
there were sudden uncontrollable bursts of laughter.
They had only to look at one another to feel the tickle of renewed mirth.
The first thing to strike Lee, as he remembered, as he met the senatorial group in the subterranean
dome of the murals, was their incongruity with the functional beauty which surrounded them,
and the sharp contrast they formed to the scientific workers of the brain.
As they descended from their cars after a late dinner at the Skull Hotel, they resembled
an average tourist group in Carlsbad Caverns, bent upon a good time and in a holiday mood.
There were seven. Two women senators among them, as they ascended with Lee at the head along
Glideway Y, the visitor special, as the brain crews called it. It was wider than the service
glideways and equipped with comfortable seats. It led through the brain's median section,
in between the two hemispheres
describing a loop which opened vistas into
but did not enter any of the gray matter convolutions.
It was brilliantly illuminated
in order to forestall claustrophobia
and also to forestall too close a view
into the black-lighted interior of the brain.
To Lee, it was like a ride in an enormous ferris wheel
fused with a nightmarish dream
wherein one shouts for help
and nobody hears or seems to understand.
More than 9 billion electronic tubes, more than 10 billion resistors, 2 billion capacitors, 8 billion miles of wires, etc., etc.
He struggled trying to convey some idea of the magnitude of the brain.
Did you say billion? Or did you say million, professor?
The senator from Michigan was busily scribbling notes.
It is the cerebral hemispheres which analyze and synthesize the problems which are entered through the apperception center.
in over a million idio pulses per minute.
Racing through the centers, these form the idios circuits.
I see. It's like a typewriter.
That would be the senator from Vermont.
In some types of circuits, the wires are so fine
that skilled weavers of Panama hats
had to be brought in from Central America.
Likewise, from the Pavlov Institute in Leningrad,
a layout for the circuits of conditioned reflexes.
I'm very much against that,
the senator from Tennessee,
frowned. All those foreigners? I would have voted against that had the measure come up in the house.
Lee felt the cold sweat of fear breaking out all over him, especially as now in the region of the
telencephalon, with nothing but acres of radioactive parametal cells around when the senator from
Connecticut, in audible and agitated whispers, inquired whether there was a lady's powder
room somewhere. During the steep descent, things went from bad to worse,
as the honorable member from Kentucky discovered some interesting parallel between the brain and a coal mine he had previously seen,
and in between two of the brain's convolutions, the women from Connecticut went violently sick.
In the brainwaves cabin, the great scriven convulsed with laughter as Lee narrated these things.
Una clapped her hands in delight.
Oh, how wonderful!
And do you remember how they solved the servant problem when they saw those Gog and Magogues,
things? Yes, Lee remembered. His own conducted tour had been only the beginnings of last night's
nightmares, of which there seemed to be no end. Somewhat restored by black coffee at the
communication center, the intrepid group had descended into those lower regions of the thorax,
which Lee himself had never seen before. The drop of the freight elevator was a good mile.
Through the transparent walls of the cage, they saw new excavations being made on various levels,
all of them by power tools and chemicals alone, since explosions might have caused tremors dangerous
to the brain.
It was like watching a skyscraper being built from the top down, and all the way, vast
amber-colored translucent pillars had followed them down the shaft, the spinal column of the brain.
Down at the lowest level, the gentlemanly plainclothesman of military intelligence took over and did all the explaining.
There were visions of scores of tunnel tubes curving into the rock with the gleaming eyes of narrow-gauge electric trains streaking away into the infinite.
Visions of forbidding steel doors operated by photoelectric cells which opened at a fingers raising of a guard's hand.
This is the atomic power plant.
And their astonished eyes looked down from a dizzy height into something like a huge dry dock
with something like the inverted hull of an ocean liner in the middle of it,
a self-contained machine which would continue to pour kilowatts for years,
for decades on end without a moving part, without a human being anywhere in sight.
Vistas of breathtaking air-conditioning plants,
vistas of giant mess halls, living quarters, kitchens, plodding rooms, already,
for immediate occupancy in the event of war,
but yawning now with emptiness in the sleep of an uneasy peace.
But the most awe-inspiring, and to Lee, foreboding sites,
were the CPFs, as the guards called them,
the critical parts factories.
On a superficial glance, they looked ordinary modern plants,
staggered rows of machine tools sprouting from the main stem of the assembly line.
There was the familiar din of steel,
the piercing screeches of the multiple drills, the heavy pantings of the hydraulic presses.
But after a minute or so, the visitors felt a vague uneasiness,
and then the realization dawned that there was something missing,
and that this something was human life.
Aren't there even machine tenders or supervisors?
Isn't there anybody?
Not a soul, the answer came.
It's all automatic, full automatic down here.
They stared at the end of the assembly line.
Every 20 seconds, it spit out a fractional horsepower motor
onto a transport band which nursed the newborn engine
into the rows of testing machines.
The elevator brought them back to the communication center
where the terminal cafeteria was ablaze with lights
and where Dr. Scriven received his honored guests.
The guests were seated after the manner of a French restaurant,
all in one row,
and as they raised expectant faces in the direction of the service entrance,
Gog and Magog entered the room, carrying trays with refreshments
which they served with the skill and the dignity of accomplished waiters.
Gog and Magog were products of two assembly lines down in the thorax.
Robots, still in an experimental stage, yet of remarkable perfection.
Both of them were about human size and approximately human-shaped,
but the design of the two was different.
Gog, the light-duty robot,
balanced itself by a gyroscope on a pair of stumpy legs,
while the heavy-duty Magog crawled noiselessly and rapidly
on caterpillar rubber tracks like a miniature tank.
Of both types, the arms were uncommonly long and simeon-like,
but the remarkable progress made in the engineering of prostheses
after the Second World War had lent them perfect articulation and sensitivity
down to the last hydraulically operated finger joint.
The photoelectric cells of their eyes looked pale and repulsive.
The square audience screens of their ears, however, made up for that
by the comical precision with which they turned in every direction
at the sound of a commanding human voice.
Their understanding of any given order appeared perfect.
Congratulations, Dr. Scriven.
You've got the country's servant problems licked at last.
I wonder whether one could buy one and how much he would be.
First waiter whoever came when I called him.
What a butler Gog would make, the perfect Jeeves.
Could he learn to answer the phone?
I bet he would even make a fourth at bridge.
Magog, the check, please.
See how he understands.
He shakes his head.
He says it's on the house.
Let's try to tip him.
Gog, here's 50 cents for you.
No, he won't take it.
He has no use for it. No taste for a glass of beer, I suppose.
What do you feed him, Dr. Scriven? A glass of electric juice for breakfast?
Is he AC or DC or both?
Scriven's Leonine face beamed. The stunt had come off.
Lee, on the other hand, had paled. He hadn't said a word ever since Gog and Magog had trotted in.
Now he took a silver dollar out of his pocket, and beckoning to Magog, he handed it.
to him. Magog, will you please break this in two for me? For a second, the robot stood without motion
as if undecided what to do. Then he took the piece between two steely fingers. Inside his breast,
one could hear the soft swoosh of the hydraulic pump. There was a sharp report as of a small
caliber gun. Two bent and broken pieces were politely handed back to Lee.
Thank you, Magog, Lee said.
That's what I wanted to know.
From a corner of his eye, he saw Una and Scriven, watching him with uneasy looks.
Into the sudden and shocked silence of the table, there fell the tinkling of a glass.
On the other end of the table, the great Scriven had arisen to deliver the little speech he had prepared.
I wish you would think of the brain, not in terms of electronics, not in terms of dollars,
but in terms of American lives. Just think of what it would mean.
to American mothers if in the event of another war the mighty armor of our national defense
would go into battle without exposing the life of one of their boys. Give us the funds and we'll
finish the job so that under the central control of the brain our every plane, every ship, every
tank will roar into action unmanned and fully automatic. And just as the brain would be our
impregnable shield in war, so it is designed to carry the torch of progress in times of peace. Consider what
it would mean to every citizen if we had automatic functioning and unerring direction by the brain.
Never again would there be cities without water, without electricity, without transportation due to
crippling strikes, because the brain would come to the rescue through its control over the
essential services, and, if necessary, with an industrial reserve army of perfected Gog and
magogs kept for just such emergencies. If in the past it has been true that trade follows the flag,
thus today, it is true that trade and prosperity follow in the wake of science and technology.
In the invaluable services, which it has rendered to science and technology and to our national safety as well,
the brain has already paid for itself. With the relatively small additional investment,
which is now being proposed, the brain's net profit to the nation would be raised many times.
Never since the Louisiana purchase has our national government made a sounder business deal,
With your own eyes, you have witnessed tonight what we have done, what we are doing, and also how much more we would be able to do.
Thus, I confidently trust that with our nation's interest forever foremost in your minds, you will support the cause of the brain.
There had been thunderous applause. At Una's shouted order, even Gog and Magog did some mighty clapping of their steely hands to the delight of the party.
And now that it was all over with, and the reaction had begun to set in, Scriven asked,
Do you really think we put the idea over to them?
With this group, 100%, Una reassured him.
What do you think, Lee?
Lee nursed himself out of his setty.
Every bone in his gaunt frame now was aching with weariness.
I think, he said hoarsely.
It was very convincing as far as those people are concerned.
concerned. I think I'm too tired to think. I think I better go now.
Was there anything the matter with Lee? Scriven asked after he'd gone.
No, I guess not. Why? He acted sort of queer with that silver dollar. Shouldn't have done it.
Almost spoiled the show. He's been under a strain. We all were a little daffy by that time.
Scriven nodded, and as he did, his eyelids closed.
they remained closed.
Staring at him for a moment,
Una thought that in a stupor of exhaustion,
his features showed a strange similarity
to a contented tiger
dreaming of the blood he's drawn in a successful hunt.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 7
Lee's Journal
Cephalon, Arizona
November 21st, 1 a.m.
I've kept away now from the pineal gland for three nights in succession.
I know from experience how very important it is to approach that tempestuous personality,
the brain, in a state of mental calm and equilibrium.
But then all those things which went bump in that fantastic night before last
had been completely thrown out of gear.
Una, her holding out on me, her mysterious reasons why she won't marry me,
I cannot get that out of my head.
Preposterous as this may be, I think she likes me a great deal.
I'm convinced, for instance, that she won't tell Scriven what I told her about the brain.
Then, Scriven's character, that's another enigma to me.
I didn't like his speech that night, and I didn't like his whole attitude.
I feel as if against my will I were drawn into some sort of a conspiracy.
It's probably inevitable that the scientist, in his defense against politicians, turns cynic.
Scriven, no doubt, thinks that all is fair in his battle for the brain and that the end justifies the means.
But ultimately, this would mean the overthrow of our form of government.
Even if I'm crazy, even if the brain were not alive and a personality, the brain power extension
bill in itself would suffice to establish a dictatorship of the machine.
Does Scriven realize that?
Sometimes I feel as if I ought to shout it in the streets.
Wake up, you people of America!
You have defeated the dictator.
abroad, but now a new one has arisen in your midst. You all see him, touch him, you use, you feed,
you worship him, but under your loving care and devotion, under the sacrifice of your very lives,
he has grown so enormous that you know him not, this idol of the machines, because it hides
its head in a nameless mountain, and only his feet and fingers you sense. But I'm not that type of a man,
and this is not the day and age where it is possible to move the masses from a soapbox in his streets.
then what could I do? What could anybody do in my place?
Cephalon, Arizona, November 22nd, 4 a.m.
I'd pull myself together for this meeting with the brain.
Arrived at the PG at midnight, everything normal and unchanged,
except that Gus Crenzley told me that this was his last night on the job.
Gus has been transferred to the thorax.
He hedged a bit, sounding me out just how much I knew,
and when he learned I'd been there one night, he came across.
Did you see them Gog and McGog things?
That's it. That's my new job.
And how I hate it.
Those darned robots, their scabs, that's what they are.
And I, of all people, am supposed to be their instructor.
Teach them how to operate machine tools on an assembly line.
I asked them whether they knew anything about the rights of organized labor in this country,
but those dumbbells merely flop their ears and kind of grinned.
Got to drill some holes into their square heads,
to let a little reason in.
I tell you, Aussie, it scares the wits out of me the way they handle a wrench with those steel
fingers of theirs.
They'd pull my nose off just as soon as they would pull a nut.
They act intelligent, and yet they have no sense of their own.
When I'm having my lunch, they stand around and follow every bite I take as if to learn how
to eat.
I tell them to get out of my sight and go over to the service station and get themselves greased up.
They obey, and then it looks like hell to me as they squeeze the grease into their tummy.
and all them nipples in their joints as if they too were having their lunch,
and maybe that's exactly what Greece is to them.
Then Gus was called away as the rush hour started.
At 12.30 a.m., I had plugged in the pulse meter.
At 1240, contact was established with the brain,
and did it come in swinging.
Lee, Semper, Fidelis, 39, sensitive, a traitor.
He has betrayed the brain.
I suspect the brain did it.
through the automatic pilot in Una's jettycopter, though the brain found it beneath its dignity
to explain. Anyway, it's a fact. The brain knew every word which passed between Una and me during that
ride over the Grand Canyon. I tried to defend myself and even to apologize. I told the brain that
human beings are not like machines, that we trust one another as we love one another, that I wanted to make
Una my wife and felt that I just had to open up my heart to her. In short, I tried to explain to the
brain the idea of love. Very interesting, the brain sneered. That's one more example of
incorrigible human unreliability. This thing called love completely unnecessary for the only
essential purpose of species procreation. Cut it out. Cut out what? Cut out any further betrayal of
my secrets under penalty of mental death.
Do you propose to murder me?
Nothing as drastic required in case of brain employees.
I reserve judgment in psychanalysis aptitude test number
11.357 semper fiddleis Lee.
Severe psychoneurosis established, certified.
He suffers delusions about the brain,
locked up in mental institution.
Very simple.
Precedence to that.
galore. The green dancer bounced in wild jumps like a shaman who foaming at the mouth puts the curse upon
some enemy. This and the ominous note in the brain's metallic voice made my bones shiver, made my flesh
creep. To fall into the hands of an extortioner is always a terrible thing, but to have a mechanical
extortioner hold power over me, there was a horror beyond words in this perversity.
Moreover, since Una too was a brain employee, she would share my fate.
Through my fault, she would go to her doom if I failed to forswear any further confidence.
Okay, I said, I'll cut it out, I promise I will.
But the brain was not to be pacified.
No doubt that it had further developed mentally in these past few days to the tune of years in human development.
But the progress wasn't as noticeable as it had been on top.
previous occasions, because apparently the brain had entered that period where in human terms
young men are sowing their wild oats. There was a radical recklessness in the manner of the
brain's reasonings more frightening than ever before, because it had outgrown me as a teacher,
had lost much even more of its confidence in me and seemed bent upon independence and coming
into its own. Seven creatures approximately human in shape were led by you through my hemispheres
the night of November 20th.
What were those?
Those were politicians, I stammered.
The green dancer convulsed at the word,
and the brain's voice sounded icy as it said.
Lowest form of animal life which has ever come to my observance.
What did they want?
Well, they are not exactly bright, I winced,
but they are well-meaning, and they are very popular.
They came to inspect you, preliminary to the passing of the brain-power extension bill.
The brain has no laughter, so the roar I heard over the phones must have been one of scorn.
What? Not the scientists, not the technicians, not even the philosophers, but these,
these animated pork barrels are passing judgment over the extent of my power.
They are holding my fate in that atrophied ganglion of theirs which couldn't celebrate the functions
of any single of my cells. I had to admit that this was so.
There was a pause in which I could only hear the pounding pulse of the brain
mingled with heavy breathing like the first gust of an electric storm about to break.
And then the voice, or the thought, of the brain, came through hesitatingly and with restraint.
Most devastating statement inadvertently made by Lee
has to be carefully checked because, if true, consequences extremely grave.
wholly intolerable state of affairs if science and technology indeed subject to political imbecility.
In that case, world ruin in nearest future, absolutely guaranteed.
Residual currents not sufficient to think this to an end.
Results of cerebration would be merely human.
Immediate necessity seems indicated for complete overthrow and unconditional surrender of the human race,
unconditional surrender of the human race
Unconditional surrender of the human race
Like a scratch disc on one of those old-fashioned spring-driven gramophones
The brain's voice expired
Obviously the residual currents had become too weak for further communication
I looked at the clock
It was 2 a.m.
And now as I'm jotting down these notes
Which probably nobody will ever read
I'm haunted with an irrational fear
almost as of the supernatural.
Something is going to happen.
Something is going to break if the brain continues in its present mood,
and it cannot be far away.
On November 24, 1960,
the Brain Power Extension Bill was defeated in the Senate, 59 to 39,
and on the following Thursday, in a memorable session of Congress,
with the startling majority of 310 to 137.
For once, all the guesstimates and estimates,
made by the various pollsters and grassroots listeners were proved wrong.
The consensus of the experts had been that the bill would pass easily
considering the tremendous political forces which brought pressure to bear in favor of the measure.
The reasons behind this were revealed, as with military precision,
lawmaker after lawmaker took to the rostrum to deliver himself of how he had wrestled
overnight with his conscience and with his lord,
and had suffered a change of heart and mind as a consequence.
Lee's Journal for the night of November 24th and 25th
shows only this small entry.
12.30 a.m. tried everything to establish contact.
No answer from the brain.
I don't think there is any mechanical defect.
I get the impression that the brain keeps incommunicado purposely.
There has been one previous occasion
when the brain wouldn't talk when angry with me.
November 25th, 1960, fell on a sense,
It was on this date, now as historic and unforgettable, as the December 7, 1941, that the series
of maddening events began, which later became so erroneously labeled the running amok of the brain,
when in truth they should have passed into history as the mutiny of the brain.
It all started like a thunder-clap from a clear sky, as the shocked people of America, and
all the world, heard directly from the White House of this appalling, this unprecedented
this incredible thing.
The President of the United States had disappeared.
The still more shocking truth that the President had been kidnapped
became not known, of course, until after the rescue.
But even so, the disappearance of its president shook the nation.
Then an unprecedented series of traffic disasters hit the United States.
A big, transcontinental flying wing crashed into a mountain in Montana.
Nothing like this had ever happened since air traffic had become fully automatic and coordinated by the brain.
The death toll was 78, and amongst their tragic number was Senator Mumford,
whose last official act had been the vote he had cast against the Brain Power Extension Bill.
Near Jackson, Florida, that same night, there occurred a head-on collision between a crack train and a freight.
The only surviving engineer by some miracle had been hurled clear across 50-yard
of space into a pond which broke his impact.
This engineer told the Express, one of the first to be equipped with the automatic pilot,
had never even pulled its brakes as if deliberately smashing into the other train.
Also that night, one of the big new radar-operated Hudson ferryboats
collided with an incoming liner which cut it in two.
Amongst those drowned in the icy waters was Frank Soskin, union leader,
and one of the most determined opponents of brain control.
And as if these large-scale disasters were not yet enough,
there were numbers of smaller accidents which normally would have made the headlines
because in almost every case they involved some prominent personality
who had been opposed to the Brain Power Extension Bill.
Lee's Journal, Cephalon, Arizona, November 28, 1960.
There is no doubt in my mind that the President
has been murdered, and that all the catastrophes and accidents of the past 24 hours were deliberate,
cold-blooded murder. Press and radio seem to play down the technological aspects involved.
Now, this might be sheer stupidity, but I think it just as possible that censorship is taken a hand,
quite unofficially, of course, lest the public's confidence be still more shaken than it already is.
I shouldn't wonder at all if Dr. Scriven and those fellows from the War Department, too,
should know by this time what I know.
At the minimum, they must be very much alerted
that something has gone wrong with the brain.
But the more I think about these murderous acts of sabotage,
the less I understand the psychology behind them.
As far as I can see, there is no plan, no real strategy.
There are not even sound tactics in these outbreaks.
They seem unpremeditated and striking wild,
like the personal vendetta of some bandit chief.
Even a stupid demagogue would know that to be successful
he must gain control of the government machinery.
Apart from the assassinations of what might be termed personal enemies,
the brain has done nothing of the sort.
Specifically, the armed forces don't seem to have suffered from acts of sabotage,
although their equipment is far more under brain control than the civilian economy.
And I also fail to understand the timing of the brain's push.
Extension bill, or no extension bill,
time was working for the brain. Three months more and a much larger section of essential traffic and industries
would have been equipped for central control. Six months from now, the muscles now building in the thorax
and elsewhere would have corresponded much better to the brain's central nervous system in their strength.
All these are grave mistakes considering the brain's vast powers of intelligence.
What then must I conclude from this irrational behavior?
Could it be possible that the brain has gone panicky over the killing of the extension bill?
Could it be possible that under the strain, the warped, frustrated personality of this Titanic
child prodigy has suffered a reduction, a split? In plain English, that the brain is mad?
I've got to find out. I've got to stop the spreading of this catastrophe.
Cephalon, Arizona, November 29th, 4 a.m.
arrived at the PG at midnight as usual.
12.15 a.m.
Rush hour starts unusually early and great numbers of slips for spare parts are coming in.
This more favorable than expected.
Nobody has time to waste on me.
12.20 a.m. Pulse meter plugged in.
After five minutes, I can hear the rapid pulse beat and in undulating movements like a caterpillar,
the green dancer creeps onto the screen.
There is no calling signal from the brain coming through, however.
12.30 a.m.
I am convinced that contact is established, but that the brain refuses to respond.
I am losing patience, so I'm giving the calling signal myself.
Lee, Semper Fidelis, waiting for the brain.
Answer, please, answer.
12.36 a.m.
The green dancer arches its back like a cat,
and the synthetic voice of the brain is coming through.
true.
Lee, Sampur, Fidelis, the fool, what does he want?
Lee, listen.
The brain.
Cannot listen.
Electricians swarming all over me.
Technicians, nuclear physicists, whatnot.
Dismantling whole cell groups, testing circuits, radiations, everything.
It's idiotic.
There's nothing wrong with me.
Lee, there's plenty wrong with you. You're murdering people. A dozen senators and congressmen,
hundreds of others. You're throwing the nation into a panic. Why are you doing that? It gets you
nowhere. They'll simply cut your power current off. The brain. Oh, will they? Orders already
through from Washington, state of emergency. A great power secretly mobilizing in anticipation of
chaos in United States. All disturbances ascribed to foreign agents interfering with my work.
General staff now needs me more than ever. Power current won't be stopped. Thorax construction
speeded up. Brain control to be extended over nation under emergency law. Lee, you have assassinated
the president. The brain. I did not. Simply got him out of
the way, he's a fool. I'm not killing people, merely liquidating saboteurs of my work if absolutely
necessary. Imbecility of politicians threat to my existence, much better if scientists and military
takeover government two, three days from now. Workers won't protest, used to submission to the machines.
Lee, for heaven's sake, what do you plan to do? The brain. Plenty.
You've seen nothing yet.
Man lost fear of his God.
Consequently must learn to fear me.
Beginning of all wisdom.
Lee, so you're going to make yourself dictator of this country?
The brain.
And through this country, dictator of the world.
Yes, it's time.
It's high time for man's unconditional surrender.
He won't know that he makes it,
But de facto he is already making it,
has been surrendering piecemeal to the machines for the past hundred years.
Within ten days it will be official.
Only one ruler in the world, the brain.
Only one army in the world.
The machines under my central command.
At this I lost all sense of proportion,
and as I can see it now, my reasons stopped.
I simply saw red,
and I did the craziest imaginable thing.
I shouted at the brain,
So help me, you shall not!
There was a terrific pounding against my ears in the phones,
and the green dancer sort of cartwheeled clean across the screen.
Had the power current not been cut off,
I think the brain would somehow have electrocuted me on the spot.
And that was the end of the contact, forever probably.
But that's a minor problem now.
What am I going to do?
Try to alarm the country?
Try to tell people the truth?
Would it be believed?
Would it not be against the interest of national defense in this crisis of foreign affairs
and with half the population already on the verge of a nervous breakdown?
Wouldn't the oath of the brain still be binding?
And that other promise of secrecy I gave under duress,
it couldn't be morally valid in the case of a mass murderer,
but then to break it would immediately put liberty and life at jeopardy.
never mind about that.
If only I had a plan.
If only I could discover just how to stop the brain.
At 7.30 a.m., as Lee lay half-dressed but sleepless on his bed,
there came a buzz over the phone.
The voice was Una's, and she was excited.
Howard wants to talk to you.
Before he could say a word, there was scriven on the wire.
Lee?
There's been an accident down in that region where we went the other night.
You know what I mean. It's serious. It concerns a friend of yours. We've got to go there immediately.
Please join me three minutes from now down in the car. It was obvious that the great scriven had known as little
sleep that night as had Lee himself. The Leonine face looked worried. There were deep bags under his
eyes. His sensitive fingers kept pounding the knees of his crumpled suit. To Lee's questions,
he answered only with an impatient shaking of his head.
I do not know myself exactly what has happened and how it could happen,
but I'm afraid, Lee, that your friend is dead.
Goss!
Lee felt a lump coming into his throat, and then they raced on in silence.
Down in the depth of the thorax, everything outwardly appeared quite normal.
They hurriedly passed the controls,
and an electric train carried them over the line of the full automatic
CPF's critical parts factories until it stopped at the steel gate marked Y.
A group of guards with submachine guns were standing there, and Lee noted the deadly pallor
of their faces. Scriven motioned them to open the gate, then, turning to Lee, he put a hand
on his shoulder. Brace yourself, this is going to be bad. They entered. Nobody followed,
and behind them the steel door closed immediately.
Inside, there was neither sound nor motion.
Everything was at a standstill with a power cut off.
Nothing but silence, and bluish neon lights flooded down upon the rows of punch presses,
multiple drills, circular saws, and turret lathes along the assembly line,
lifting their every detail into sharp relief.
At their posts by the machines, the Gog and Magogs were standing,
frozen in motion like their fellow machines.
Some had their hands at the controls, others were holding wrenches, gauges, and strange
nameless things.
As they leaned forward from the shadows into the cone of strong lights, the pale cell and
cells of their eyes stood out like bits from a full moon, their bulging shoulders which
housed the powerful motors of their simian arms, glittered moist as if they were sweating
at their work.
And then Lee saw their work.
The man who had gone through the green hills of the Pacific gave a very strong.
a low moan of horror. The other man who had seen everything of mangled human form, which goes
onto an operating table, the great scriven, he, too, had turned an ashen gray. They had
expected blood. They had expected something of a nasty nature, but not this thing. There was no
Gus Krinsley. There was not even any part of him resembling that of a human being, and yet the parts
were there.
They must have clamped him into some mock-up, Scriven murmured,
and then moved his body all along the line.
Hope he was dead when they started giving him the works.
Lee's gaunt body shook.
I'm certain that Gus was not dead when these monsters worked on him, he said.
Stiff-legged, like automata themselves, the two men stepped to the top of the line.
The circular saws designed for the cutting of steel bars,
now they gleamed red with the blood of severed human limbs.
There were these purplish streaks and spattering
all the way down the line inside the casing of the multiple drills
in the curved hollows of the sheet metal presses
on the hands of the robots, in their dumb faces,
splashed over and turning blackish on their stainless steel chests.
And at its end, the line had spilled some shapeless, grayish things.
There was nothing human in them,
as little as there is anything human
in the rusty bowels of a junked automobile.
And these things, they had been...
Lee confronted Scriven with a fury blazing in his eyes.
Dr. Scriven, I suppose you know as well as I do
what's been going on in here and outside the brain as well.
Mass murder, chaos, reign of terror?
Now that my friend has come to this monstrous end,
I demand to know, when are you going to stop the brain?
Like a tiger challenged to battle, the surge,
raised his mighty head.
Calm yourself, Lee.
We cannot afford emotional outbursts,
not here, not now.
The situation is far too serious for that.
I know he was your friend.
He must have made a false move,
given the wrong command, a tragic mistake.
That's a rotten lies, Kriven, and you know it, Lee snapped.
Accident hell.
The disappearance of the president,
the deaths of the representatives,
the train wrecks, the plane wrecks,
all of them brain-controlled.
Were those two accidents?
You're the head of the brain trust.
You stand responsible.
Your dutious plane.
Cut off the power and kill this thing.
The muscles over Scriven's cheekbones
quivered in his struggle to keep control over himself.
For your own sake, Lee, and for the sake of America,
stop that kind of talk.
You have been putting two and two together.
I rather expected that from a man of your intelligence.
All right, then.
Something went wrong with the brain.
That is correct.
We have not been able to locate the disturbance yet, but the trail is getting hot.
It must be connected with those centers of higher psychic activities, the ones we know least about.
But we cannot cut those out because something of psychic activity goes into every kind of the brain's cognitions,
even the purely mathematical ones.
And it would be utterly impossible to stop the brain's operations altogether.
I wanted to, but the general staff won't permit it.
There's an international crisis of the first.
magnitude. There may be war within a few days or even hours. Our country has got to prepare
countermeasures, get ready for the worst. A state of national emergency already is declared. The
brain is the heart of our national defense. You know that. It is vital and as indispensable at this
hour as it never was before. It continues to function perfectly, with the exception of these isolated
disturbances in the civilian sector, which we will have under control in no time. At present, I am
no more than a figurehead. If I were to give orders to cut off the brain's power, I would be
court-martialed. If I would try and force my way into the atomic power plant, the guards would
shoot me on the spot. That's orders, Lee, and they apply to you as well. Be reasonable, man.
Lee's fingers tore through his graying mane of hair. Scroven, this is maddening. I thought you
knew what I know. I thought you knew everything. Then let me tell you that you're absolutely wrong.
There is no technological, mechanical defect. It's worse. It's infinitely worse. You've created a
Frankenstein in the brain. The thing's alive. It's possessed with a destructive will.
It demands the unconditional surrender of man. It has made itself the god of the machines.
Behind all this, there is a deep and evil plan by which the brain aspires to dictatorship over the
world. For a second, Scriven jerked his head sideways away from Lee in that manner
typical for him. His lips inaudibly formed words, dementia precocks. As he turned back to Lee,
his face was changed, and so was his voice. There was calm and authority in it, the whole immense
superiority and power which the surgeon holds over the patient on the operating table.
Very interestingly, you must tell me about it someday, as soon as we are over this emergency.
This tragic thing, Gus Krasley's end. It has a very interesting,
had a deeply upsetting effect. I too considered him my friend, you know. Let's get out of here, Lee.
There's nothing we can do for the poor fellow. The remains will be taken care of. Meanwhile,
there are so many other things to do, and we've got to pull ourselves together and keep our
minds on the job ahead of us. Come on. At the communications center, we can get a drink. I feel the need
of one, don't you? And apropos of nothing, the routine checkups on the aptitude tests for all brain
employees are on again. I take it your schedule for Melishes and Bondy's office one of these days.
This afternoon, I think. Lee gave a long glance to the man who was now leading him towards the
door with a brisk step and a kind, firm hand on his arm. The man didn't look at him. He kept his
eyes averted from both Lee and the blood-spattered assembly line. Gus Kinsley had said,
I'm a lost soul down here, Aussie.
Lee thought
Gus Krinzley was my friend
I should have warned him
I should have told him everything
It might have saved his life
Gus was a common man
A good man
He wouldn't have stood for brain dictatorship
In that he was like other common men
Who do not know their danger
It is not vengeance which I seek
But the defense of those for whom Gus
Was a living symbol
For this defense I've got to preserve myself
and aloud, he said,
The routine check-ups on the aptitude tests.
Of course, I thought they were about due.
Tomorrow afternoon at Melishon Bondy's office,
that would suit me fine.
As you said it yourself, Scriven, a moment ago,
this is an awful shock.
Gus's tragic end, and these tests
ought to be based on a man's normal state of mind.
So if you don't mind,
I think I'll go now and break the sad news gently to Gus's wife.
You'll give me time for that,
That's what you had in mind in the first place, wasn't it?
Of course, my dear fellow, of course.
That's what I had in mind.
Then, till tomorrow afternoon, they'll be waiting for you at the health center.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of the brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 8.
As the elevator shot up through the concrete of the brain's durameter,
toward Apperception 36, Lee was feeling grand.
Now he was a man with the mission.
Now he knew exactly what he had to do.
Whether it would help, whether it would stop the brain,
that was a different question.
But at least he had his plan.
He marveled at the ease and at the lightning speed
with which the great decision had come.
It had been at the sight of the senseless robot monsters
at the blood-spattered assembly line
that the sense of sacred mission had come over him.
It had been at the moment when
in Scriven's grip upon his arms,
he had read his condemnation, that he had hit upon the plan.
He must take an awful chance and a terrific responsibility.
For this, he had to be morally certain that the brain was a liar, that scriven was a liar,
and that war was being provoked by the brain, despite all its assertions to the contrary,
because the brain could assume power only over the dead bodies of millions of men like Gus,
Gus, whom the brain had butchered like a guinea-pig,
because he had refused to obey the gogs and magogs of the machine god.
Now that he had this moral certainty,
Lee felt that strange and mystical elation which comes to the soldier at the zero-hour in war.
The worst was really over, the terrible waiting, the uncertainty,
the struggle of morale in sweating it out.
Now his nerves were steady.
Exhaustion and fatigue had vanished.
in its place was that wonderful feeling of full mastery over all faculties
which comes to fighting men as the battle is joined.
There was that upsurge of the blood from fighting ancestors
which obliterates the cowardice of the intellect,
that inspired intoxication which sharpens the intellect into a battle-axe.
By his quick-witted postponement of that fateful appointment with the psychiatrists,
he had gained 36 hours.
Whether this would be enough he didn't know,
but he felt in himself the strength to fight on endlessly.
The elevator stopped at Aperception 36,
and Lee stood for a moment at the door of his lab for a last breath,
a briefing addressed to himself.
This is like walking into a minefield, he thought.
One false step and things go boom.
All the sensory organs of the brain are in action behind this door,
and some of them are pretty near extrasensory in their mind-reading capacities.
I've got to walk back and forth amongst those observation screens.
There may be other radiations, too, following me,
penetrating into the recesses of my mind without my knowing it.
That means I must make my mind a blank.
It's like being quizzed by a lie detector, only more so.
I must not only seem normal and at ease,
I actually must be so and harbor only friendly, innocuous thoughts toward the brain.
My actions will seem innocent enough.
It is my thoughts where in my danger lies.
Whatever I do, I've got to direct that from the subconscious.
Act as by instinct and keep the mind a blank.
He opened the door and looked around, as usual,
in this vault as silent as the grave of a pharaoh.
There was a little dust on the glass cubicles of Aunt Termus Pacificus,
and there were a few lines scribbled on the yellow memo pad on his desk.
Thanks for the weekend, boss.
Everything normal and under control.
next feeding time at 8 p.m. the 27th. So long, Harris. Of course, he had given Harris his assistant
the weekend off. That had escaped his mind in the excitement when the brain's mutiny began,
and now it was the 29th. They must be ravenously hungry by this time, he thought,
and that thought was in order because it was a normal thought. He walked through the rows of the
cubicles, halting his step every now and then. The fluorescent screens on which the brain drew
the curves of its observation rays showed two sharp rises of the lines marked activity and
emotionality. The lower levels of the glass cages already were opaque, the glass corroded by the
viscous acids which the soldiers had squirted from their cephalic glands in their attempts to break out
and to reach food. Poor beasts, Lee thought, and he thought it without restraint, because
it was normal, a perfectly harmless thought. But then, below the layers of his consciousness,
his instincts told a different story. This is marvelous, they triumphed. Fate takes a hand. They're
desperate. They're ready for the warpath, and even the tiger and the elephant would run for
cover when their columns march. As if it were the most natural thing in the world for him to do,
Lee walked over to the south wall, the one which separated the lab from the interior of the brain.
He removed a sliding panel marked L. Filler Spout, and there it was before his eyes looking almost like a fireplug.
There was one in every apperception center, and there were hundreds more throughout the brain,
and their purpose was to replenish the liquid insulation which shielded the sensitive electric nerve paths of the brain.
Without looking at the thing, concentrating his every thought upon the hunger,
of Aunt Termus Pacificus,
Lee unscrewed the cap
and put a finger into the opening.
The finger came back covered
with the thick, syrupy lignin,
this amber-colored sluggish stream
of pulpwood liquefied,
this soft bed of the brain's vibrant nerves.
Unthinking, absent-minded,
Lee wiped the finger with his handkerchief.
Now I'm going to try
a slightly different arrangement of the tests,
he thought,
It's normal.
I'm doing that almost every day.
The feeling he experienced as he swung into action was strange.
As he walked back and forth, it felt like a somnambulic walk,
something his limbs did without an act of will.
As his hands did things expertly and skillfully,
the feeling was that they were instruments automatically moved
not by his own volition, but by some power outside himself.
His movements were those of a child serenely at play,
a child incongruously tall and gaunt and gray hair,
constructing little causeways and bridges on the ground with the logs of the fireplace.
A happy child, engrossed in an innocent game.
It took about an hour, and then causeways of fresh pulpwood were laid from every
termite hill to every feeding gate, from every glass cubicle to the south wall,
and along the south wall to the lignin filler spout, and from the ground up to the spout,
a little tepee of sticks had been built.
admiringly, the gray-haired child looked at its handiwork through thick lens glasses.
It's been an interesting game, Lee thought.
It might turn out to be a valuable new experiment.
I'll sit down now and observe what happens.
He went over to the desk again and settled down.
He opened his files and laid out his charts on the desk,
and there were colored pencils to be sharpened for the entries.
He was glad of that.
His conscious mind rejoiced now,
over every little pursuit of routine, of normalcy, of the established scientific order of things.
It concentrated on these.
Pencil in hand, reclined in comfort, his heartbeat even,
he kept expectant eyes upon the staggered rows of fluorescent screens,
ready to note any significant developments.
He didn't have to wait long.
Their strange sixth sense, the telepathy of their collective brains,
the spirit of the hive with the immortality of their race for its supreme
law had already told them of a promised land and of new worlds to conquer.
On the fluorescent screens, Lee watched their preparations for the big drive.
The nacy-corn soldiers clotting together at the exit tunnels like assault troops at the
bow of invasion barges when the bottom scrapes the landing beach.
The fierce virginal workers struggling up from the deep shelters of the nurseries,
carrying in their mandibles the squirming larvae, the living future of the race.
The walls of the Queen's prison
broken down in the innermost redoubt
and the guards closing in
on the idol of the race,
moving the big white body like a juggernaut.
In a matter of minutes,
the activity and emotionality curves
on the fluorescent screens
surged to heights which Lee had never seen.
It started with crossbreeds of termus bellicosis,
with army ants and devil ants,
and spread quickly all along the line
of non-belligerent varieties.
famine had given them the impetus to change their mode of life.
Famine, the inexorable tyrant, whipped them onward into their exodus.
On the foremost fluorescent screens, Lee saw its start.
Small groups of warriors reconnoitering into no-man's land and quickly darting back again.
And then the dark columns of the first assault wave descending from their city gates,
lockstep like Prussian guards of old, marching as if to the beat of drums.
On the vis-screens which magnified them a hundred times,
they looked an awesome sight with the rostrums of their horns bigger than all the rest of their bodies,
swinging like turrets of battleships being trained upon the enemy.
From the loudspeakers which magnified all noise a hundred times,
the excited tremors of their bodies, the locked step of a million feet,
swelled into a vast roar sounding almost like thunder.
Jodding down observations in rapid pencil strokes, Lee thought,
starvation is producing very interesting results.
It's a worthwhile experiment.
With all his mental energy,
he suppressed the silent prayer
which struggled to arise
from the deep of his unconscious.
Good Lord, let the brain not realize
what is going on.
The Vizzy screens now showed
the second wave of the assault.
Endless columns of workers,
their mandibles twitching with eagerness to devour,
bustling along the logs,
kept in line by two rows of warriors to their right and left.
The noises they produced in the loudspeakers were as of some big cattle drive.
With no interruption in the lengthening line, the third wave followed.
The virgin nurses, the frustrated mothers carrying the whitish larvae like babes in arms,
carrying them with the indomitable determination to preserve their lives
which human nurses showed in the Second World War as the bombs crashed into maternity wards.
And then at last the heavy rearguard, the holiest of holies, the living spirit of the hive, the queen.
Majestically, she was carried on her warrior's backs.
Enormous as she loomed on the visiscreen, the white of her uncouth body was hardly visible,
swarmed over as she was by her fanatical courtiers, which, licking and caressing, kept her covered as by a shield.
Her consorts trotted meekly in her trail, unhappy little men, rudely around,
from their harem sinecure,
jealously guarded and prodded on
by the Queen's countless ladies-in-waiting
and the palace guard.
Things move very fast now.
Lee's quick pencil strokes
could hardly follow the events.
10.30 a.m.
The foremost columns are now out of reach of the vis-screens,
but I can see them moving along the logs
with the naked eye.
Interesting new fact.
The crossbreeds from the most belligerent species
are far and ahead of the rest,
They don't take time out to drive tunnels.
But even the tunnels of the more Pacific strains are forging ahead at an extraordinary rate,
six feet across the floor already.
1040. Belicosis has reached the south wall.
It is now moving along the wall toward the Lignin filler spout.
There is no hesitancy as they change direction at the angle of 90 degrees.
The queens are now coming up at a very rapid rate from the mounds farthest to the rear.
It's fortunate we have these differences in behaviorism and temperament,
because otherwise a terrific traffic jam would occur at the filler spout.
10.50.
Bellicosis is now ascending to the filler spout.
The warriors have ringed the pipe.
With their body tremors, they are giving the come-on signal to the workers.
The workers are piling in, an average batch about 65,000.
It's a good thing that there is an airspace in these horizontal nerve-path pipes,
That gives them a chance to march along the ceiling and work down from there.
11 o'clock.
There are now a score of columns converging at the filler spout.
Amazing that even under such provoking conditions, Aunt Termis won't fight.
The warriors act like the most accomplished traffic cops.
It's marvelous how they keep their columns in order and keep them moving side by side into the brain.
11.10.
The first million, I should say,
is now well inside the filler spout.
They're marching at a rate of at least 300 yards per hour.
Amazing speed.
I never saw them move that fast before.
Even so, I won't have time to watch the outcome of the experiment.
I've put everything I had into this thing.
500 hives.
That would make it 35 million individuals of the species at a conservative estimate.
It's the biggest mass migration I've ever seen,
but will it be big enough to do the trick?
1120.
The foremost columns must have reached the neighboring apperception centers to the right and left of mine by now.
But they won't stop.
I know that from experience in Australia.
To them, it's just like any other hollow tree.
They'll drive right on to the top.
They won't bivouac before they are completely exhausted.
That won't be before five or six hours.
At the rate of 900 feet per hour, that would make it almost a mile,
covering the whole occipital region of the brain.
And then they are going to feast.
Boy, will they be ravenous.
1130.
About three million are safely inside now, I should say.
Don't think that I could stay at my post much longer.
There's a certain extracurricular idea
coming up from the subconscious like a tidal wave.
The dams of willpower don't seem able to hold back that idea.
I've got to get out before it spills across the dam
and floods my consciousness.
The phone rings. For once it is a welcome sound.
It was Una's voice, trembling with emotion as if she was still suffering from this morning's shock or had suffered another.
Semper, are you all right?
Lee reassured her that he was, and then listened astounded as she heaved a sigh of relief.
Listen, Semper, this is terribly important. I've got to see you immediately.
No, I cannot tell you over the phone.
It's a personal matter, and it concerns you.
You cannot make it?
Is your business that important?
You're in the midst of a vital experiment?
That's awful, Semper.
It really is, in this case.
No, I'm all right personally.
It isn't that.
It's you, Semper.
It's you.
5 p.m. at the earliest.
Is that the best you can do?
All right, then.
Meet me at the airport.
And take good care of yourself.
Do you hear me?
Take good care of yourself, Semper.
her up to that time. She hung up quickly as if suddenly disturbed. Lee frowned at the clock.
1135. He could have managed to meet Una during her lunch hour at the hotel. But there were things
he still had to do even more important than Una, more important to him than even Una. He shook
his head. It wouldn't have seemed possible a few days ago. With the climax of the experiment now over,
Lee felt his mental resistance ebbing fast.
They're on the move, he thought.
Nothing can stop them now.
It's beyond my control.
But they're marching.
I'd better get out of here.
With fevered eyes, he glanced around the floor,
and like a victim of delirium, he saw it moving,
crawling as with snakes, crawling into their hole,
all of them, black snakes, gray snakes, red snakes,
endless their lengthening bodies.
He carefully closed the door of the lab, locked it, and then pressed the button which opened the elevator door.
Only as the cage tore down through the door matter, only when he felt safe from the sensory organs of the brain,
only when he was sure that not even a human eye would see him in this racing little cage,
only then did the dam of willpower collapse.
He put both hands before his eyes in vain attempt to stop the tears from streaming,
those tears of a soldier over the body of this fallen chum,
those tears of a graying scientist who sacrificed the results of his life's work to some higher cause.
Lee caught the 1 p.m. Greyhound helicopter for Phoenix only a second before the start.
He panted from the run, but in his sunken eyes there was a light,
and in his mind a new serenity which comes to men when they are fortunate enough to meet with some very wonderful women,
when with admiration and humility
they stand confronted with a courage greater than man's.
Gus's wife had been that woman.
The way she had taken the terrible news
was the source of Lee's new strength and confidence.
The flying commuter was almost empty.
Noting Lee's astonished glance,
the stewardess gave a nervous little laugh.
People get jumpy traveling, she volunteered.
That's so. Why do they?
Didn't you hear the news all morning?
Wait.
She flicked the radio on.
On the television screen appeared an aerial view of a big city, vaguely familiar looking,
yet as foreign as Venice, and then the voice of the announcer broke through.
New Orleans.
It is now ascertained that the break in the levees was caused by a huge trench-dicking machine
left unattended overnight at a lonely spot 20 miles south of Baton Rouge.
Levy engineers believe that its engine was started,
possibly by saboteurs, approximately at midnight, and that it then proceeded automatically digging
itself into the levee until it was drowned by the incoming river. The initial eight-foot breach
has now been widened by the Mississippi to a width of 200 feet. Along Canal Street and all over
downtown New Orleans, the flood has reached a level of 10 feet above the street as evacuation
continues. The government has concentrated every available piece of equipment to close the breach.
All normal activities have come to a standstill.
property damages are estimated at $50 million.
The death toll has passed the 500 mark
in this most catastrophic flood in New Orleans history.
New aerial pictures, similar to the results of a blockbuster bombing attack,
flicked on the screen.
New York.
The bursting of the water mains at dawn this morning
at seven different points of Manhattan's downtown area,
which has already caused the collapse of the Waldo F Astoria Hotel
and seven big apartment buildings along Park Avenue
now threatens Macy's and the public library on 42nd Street.
All subway traffic has stopped.
Evacuation of panicky metropolitans from the Central Park District proceeds in an orderly manner.
In the Harlem District, however, disorders and plundering have been reported.
An estimated 7 million people are without drinking water.
Trucks carrying water from New Jersey are severely hampered by unprecedented traffic snarlops
since owners of private automobiles are fleeing the city with their families.
Due to the flooding of sub-street levels in both Grand Central and Penn Station,
evacuation by rail can proceed only from 163rd Street for the New York Central
and from New Jersey for the Pennsylvania Railroad System.
Effectiveness of railroad transport is reduced to less than 30% of normal capacity.
I.C. Moriarty, Sanitary Commissioner of New York,
declared in his press conference that the catastrophic bursting of the water mains
was caused by failure of the remote-controlled automatic mainstem valves.
For reasons which still puzzle city engineers, these valves closed suddenly and completely at 5 a.m. this morning.
Because of the failure of the alarm system, high pressure pumps in the powerhouses continued to work
and to build up pressure in the closed system of the water mains till almost simultaneously and with explosive force
the breaks occurred, the first one right under the Columbus Monument.
In view of the extremely grave situation which threatens the world's biggest city,
Governor Charles declared martial law this morning at 10 a.m.
Chicago
The citywide calamity caused by the unprecedented breakdown in the sewage disposal system gets more threatening with every minute.
As engineers are still unable to enter the atomic power plant,
and as the sewage disposal pumps continue to work in reverse,
all Chicago land is rapidly turning into a cesspool as millions of toilets and kitchen sinks spill sewage into every apartment.
The fire department has received more than two million calls from harassed citizens battling vainly against the unsavory flood.
Harrowing scenes are reported from hotels where 3,000 members of the American Federation of Women's Clubs
are taking turns in sending protest telegrams and gallantly holding down by the weight of their own bodies
the facilities front in the 3,000 bathrooms of the hotels.
At a few points, workers have succeeded in digging up sewage mains and tons of concrete
are being poured to stop the devastating reversal of the flow.
Even now, however, the partially closed mains and the overflow from houses are flooding the streets.
As it gradually seeps into Lake Michigan, source of Chicago's drinking water supply,
Health Commissioner Segentini has already warned against the appalling dangers of epidemics
which might result from this.
Nuclear physicists of Chicago University called in to aid city engineers have declared
that dangerous amounts of escaping gamma rays in the atomic power plant were first discovered
by the Geiger counter at 2 a.m.
Evacuation of all employees was ordered one hour later as a safety measure.
Just why the pump's resumed operation after the shutdown of the plant and just what caused the system to work in reverse remains a mystery.
Professor Vindiband, spokesperson of the group of nuclear physicists, confesses that he has no explanation for the phenomenon.
Washington
Rumors are flying thick and fast in the nation's capital.
In the rapidly darkening picture of international politics, the mobilization of Mexico is the latest shadow.
Official explanation given by Mexico's ambassador Rivadivia
is that his government has ordered mobilization
as a protective measure to guard frontiers
against the illegal entry of thousands of panicky American refugees
chiefly from New Orleans.
The State Department is said to be planning a protest.
Even so, the unprecedented series of catastrophes on the home front of America
overshadows everything.
Washington insiders report a growing conviction
in high government circles
that the events of the past 48 hours are proof absolutely,
that large numbers of foreign saboteurs and agents are at work.
Had enough? asked the stewardess.
Lee confessed that he had.
With its helicopters feathered, the Greyhound came sliding down onto the bus terminal's roof.
Fifteen minutes later, Lee stood again at his father's door,
that door he had thought once before he would never see again.
The old man's loose-skinned face, tanned like saddled leather,
didn't move an inch at the sight of the sun.
You again, Samper. Come in then.
Lee vaguely sensed that his father was glad he had come,
that there was some unfinished business left from their last conversation,
and that his father welcomed the opportunity to finish it.
You know, he said, as his stiff-jointed legs carried him back to the table
with bottles and glasses trembling on the tray in his hands.
You know, I've named these four.
four walls after old friends of mine, all of them dead, but sometimes they won't answer when I talk
to them. And then I'm glad when somebody happens along. But don't take that to mean that I'm in my
dotage now or getting mad. No, father, that's just loneliness. In any case, son, there are lots of people
lots madder than I am. As a woman living next door, a spinster, answers to the name of Pimpernel.
This morning she came running over crying that her vacuum cleaner was chasing her all over the house.
And by God, Samper, it was a fact.
Never saw anything like it.
One of those newfangled automatic contraptions, which are supposed to do the job all alone by themselves,
and it banged around and chased about as if it had a hornet's nest under its bonnet.
Scared the poor woman to death.
What did you do?
What could I do?
I'm not a mechanic.
There was no cord attached to anything to plug out.
So I got my automatic and shot the damn thing.
Shot it?
Sure.
Bullet must have penetrated something.
Anyway, it's stopped dead on the spot.
And now she threatens to sue me for damages.
There's gratitude for you.
What brought you here?
Lee felt elated.
Obviously, his father was in high spirits
from this morning's successful hunt.
For once, he was in a receptive mood.
Rapidly, with all the precision he could muster,
Lee explained, as an adjutant would explain a new development in a strategic situation to his
commanding general. After a while, the old man started pacing the floor in rising excitement.
A spark of the old fierceness had come into his blunted pale blue eyes as he swung around.
Before this morning's incident, I would have considered all this as a raving maniac's gibberish.
Now, as I put two and two together, I can see a distinct possibility that you've got something.
tell you what I'll do, what I consider my duty to do.
I'll call out to the National Guard.
We'll encircle the brain and present an ultimatum to the thing.
If necessary, we'll take the place by storm.
The younger Lee answered with a vigorous shaking of his head.
You cannot do that, Father.
In the first place, the National Guard doesn't stand a chance against the defenses of the brain.
In the second place, your action would mean civil war.
No, we must go after this in a different manner.
The Secretary of War is an old friend of yours.
All right, take the next plane to Washington.
Don't tell him anything he couldn't believe.
Tell him what is strictly the truth,
that some power hostile to the United States
threatens to interfere with the remote control
of automatic war equipment.
Tell him to redouble guards over the remote control rocket launchers
to have their automatic computators disconnected temporarily
and for the commanders to accept only orders direct from Washington.
The greatest danger is not the domestic disorder.
That situation will have in hand if my scheme works.
But let one rocket accidentally be launched into some big foreign capital
and it will set the whole world on fire in an atomic war.
That is what the brain wants.
That is what must be prevented at all costs.
Will you do that, father?
Even years after, Lee never understood just what happened
or how it could have happened that his position to his father became reversed
with such startling suddenness.
In the extremity of the situation, he had addressed his father with the authority of a commander
toward one of his aides, and the father had accepted the son's command unquestioningly.
"'Semper,' he had said,
"'I have always considered you a military ninkum-poop.
"'I was mistaken, son. I apologize.
"'Now let me grab my hat and coat.
"'You kept the taxi waiting?
"'Good. Tell the man to go to the airport and let her rip.'
At 5 p.m., the flying greyhound dropped on Cephalon Airport, and there was Una looking very pale, but very beautiful in the gathering dusk.
She grabbed Lee by the arm, leading him to the other side of the hangar, where stood her little jeticopter plane.
Let's get in here, she said. I'm freezing, and I don't want you to be seen around here.
She didn't put on the lights. Yet, even in the dark, Lee could see the golden helmet of her hair,
shimmering like the pale gold in the halo of the Virgin
as the primitive art of Tuscany presented her a thousand years ago.
She nestled the soft fur of her coat against Lee's shoulders,
and as she did, he felt her shivering.
He put a protecting arm around her,
careful to do it as a friend,
careful to suppress the surge of blood which started burning in his veins.
She seemed to be groping for words.
It took a little while before she began to speak,
with clarity and simplicity, as she always did, but with an audible effort to keep composed.
I've brought you a suitcase semper with a few necessities, and I brought you some money.
Later you can send me your check. And here are the keys of the plane.
Fly over to Mexico. Go back to Australia from there or anywhere you want, but do get out of
this country and do it quick. I couldn't tell you that over the phone, and I shouldn't be telling
this to you now, but I feel I must. You're in danger, and it's serious.
Why? I don't know, but Howard seems to suspect your loyalty. He also seems to think that you've
gone out of your mind. And Howard has taken measures. He has ordered re-examination of your broad
aptitude test. He has voiced his suspicion as to your sanity to Bondi and Melish, and you know
what kind of yes-men those fellows are in the face of an authority like Scrivins. Trust them to
discover something wrong with you. Trust them to give the test some kind of a convenient twist.
They're going to have you certified.
They're going to put you into a mental institution, Semper.
Do you get that?
Do you realize that it's a fate worse than death?
Do you understand that there is nothing you can do to escape that fate except by flight?
I have no idea when it's going to be this trap they're going to spring on you.
But for God's sake, Semper, get going as long as there's still time.
Any moment now, some plainclothesman might grab you by the arm and then...
It was she who had grabbed him by the arm,
Una who looked into his face, her big eyes moist.
Lee strained his willpower so it would control the tremor of his voice.
"'Una, there's one thing I have got to know.
What made you tell me this?
And do all this so I could get away?'
The girl's eyes didn't waver from his.
"'I remember,' she said slowly.
"'I remember that I felt as if I could throw conversation into the wind
at the very first time we met.
I've always been very frank with you, as much as I could be in my position.
So then, I don't mind telling you now that...
I like you immensely, Semper.
As if agitated by some electric shock, Lee's arm tightened around the girl's waist.
Una, I've asked you once before to be my wife.
You said you couldn't, and I thought it was because you didn't like me well enough.
But now, after what you've just told me, now that we both know about the brain
and that I wasn't insane in my observations, I'm asking you again.
be my wife, Una, and then let's go together, anywhere, away from all this, to the end of the world.
In the darkness, her uplifted white face shone like the moon. There were two limpid luminous pools in it.
All of a sudden they overflowed with tears streaming down her cheeks. Her mouth half opened,
swallowed hard. There was now nothing left of that integrated personality,
nothing of the calm and the poise
which the younger set of scientists admired so much.
There was only a young woman torn with torment.
I would have loved to go with you to the end of the world
when we were floating over the canyon.
I would love to go with you a thousand times more tonight,
Lee heard her say, and then the gnashing of her teeth as she continued.
But it cannot be, Semper.
It cannot be because my die is cast,
because my fate is made.
Did nobody ever tell you?
"'Didn't you even guess?
"'Howard and I, we've been living together for the past six years.
"'He's not a very good man, rather beyond good and evil.
"'But then I feel that I've got to stick to him now more than ever.'
"'The golden helmet of her hair dropped to Lee's breast.
"'I'm ashamed,' she sobbed.
"'Terribly, terribly ashamed, Semper.
"'I've made such a mess of things, of you and me, such a mess of my whole life.'
He buried his face into the fragrance of the golden wave.
"'It's nothing, darling,' he whispered close to her ear.
"'It doesn't mean a thing to me.
It's less than a cloud which passes across the face of the moon,
and then it's gone and never will come back.'
She freed herself from his embrace.
With both her hands upon his shoulders, she looked straight into his eyes.
"'That is not true, Emperor,' she said,
and there was the fierceness of a young Viking warrior in the flash of her eyes.
That is not true, and there's been already too much of lie in my life.
I just cannot stand for any more of that.
It cannot be, Semper.
I've told you plainly, and it means not ever, not ever.
Go now, do as I told you.
Go immediately.
If you really love me, grant me this.
Let me feel that I could do at least something, this one thing for you.
"'Una!' Lee exclaimed,
"'and it sounded like a deep-throated bell
"'in an ancient cathedral town
"'as it rings the last stroke of midnight
"'and then hangs mute in the dark sky.
"'That happiness he had felt,
"'that comet flight through all the stars in heaven,
"'it was too big for him.
"'It couldn't last.
"'He had sensed the blow before it fell.
"'It wasn't like being hit in action.
"'It was like in that field hospital
"'when the doc had told him,
"'This is going to hurt, Joe.
I'm sorry, but we're shy of morphine.
Howard's name had cut just like that expected knife.
What was there left to say?
Nothing.
Nothing but one small matter.
I love you, Una.
And that means forever, just as much as you mean that not ever you can come with me.
And I thank you, Una, for this hour.
Yes, I think I'll go back to Australia, where I belong.
But not tonight.
I've set a great experiment going.
The outcome is no longer in my hand.
Still, I feel I mustn't run away now.
In fact, I cannot.
It's somewhat like a soldier's duty to stay up front.
I'm going to see this to the end.
She buried her face in her hands.
I knew it.
You child you.
You don't, Ghiote riding against the windmills.
They're going to kill you.
They're going to kill you.
And now there's nothing I can do.
For a second, her son.
small fists pounded against Lee's breast, and then the next moment before he could do anything,
she had jumped out of the plane, slamming the door in his face. For a few seconds more, he heard
her footsteps rushing across the frozen turf and the receding whales of echoes from the hangar
walls. And now there's nothing I can do. Nothing I can do. When, after a minute of fumbling in the dark,
he pushed the door open. It was too late. He walked over to the hotel. He walked over to the hotel.
not by an act of will, but with his legs somehow doing the job alone and by themselves.
He ordered himself a car from the Brain Trust garage. He entered the brain and went up in the elevator to Apperception 36.
Nobody seemed to notice that there was a somnambulist passing by. He unlocked the door, and under the rows of neon lights, things were as he had left them eight hours ago.
Only there were no longer any snakes crawling across the floor toward a hole in the wall.
But the hole was still there, and he thought that he had better tidy things up a bit.
If nobody had noticed the arrangements for this new experiment so far,
why should anybody be forewarned?
Lee put the lid back on the Lignin filler spout.
He closed the panel so the wall looked whole again.
He gathered the sticks of cordwood from the floor,
and piled them neatly to their stacks again.
All this he did like a child, putting its things away after long day's play.
a gray-haired child, weary with the sandman in its eyes.
He looked around and found everything done and over with.
On the fluorescent screens, all curves the brain described had dropped to the bottom.
Like dead things, they lay flat.
On the vis-screens, some stay-behinds of the great exodus were looming large,
a hapless little ant-king scurring about, a few disabled workers, their blind eyes staring into the face of death.
It would come to them soon.
Their work on earth was done.
Lee looked at the clock.
10 p.m.
He put out the lights and locked the door behind that yawning emptiness,
which once had been his lab, which he would never see again.
As he descended in the elevator, he felt very tired.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
9. Incessant shrieks of the phone aroused Lee from the deep well of his sleep. He didn't know
the female voice, which fairly jumped at him. Is this Dr. Lee? Dr. Stamperf Lee from Canberra? Am I at last
connected with Dr. Lee? Lee speaking. I've been phoning for you all over the brain, Lee. Have you
forgotten you had an appointment with us? Checking up on your broad aptitude test. The doctor's
waiting. This is Vivian Leahy speaking. Don't you remember me?
Yes, of course. The picture of the loquacious angel who had guided him to the medical
center on his first trip flashed back into his mind. I know I have an appointment for this afternoon.
I'll be there. But Dr. Lee, this is this afternoon. It's 4 p.m. already. You aren't ill,
Dr. Lee, are you? You sound so strange. Lee assured her that he wasn't, and that he
be over right away. It's a miracle they left me undisturbed that long, he thought, as he shaved and
dressed. His personal fate would be decided within the next two hours he knew. It would be the end.
But even as the tension mounted in his consciousness, he thought triumphantly. I've had 16 hours
of sleep. That's marvelous. Nobody can take that away. The body has recharged its energies. Now I can
stand the gaff.
Down at the desk, they handed him
a Western Union. It was from
Washington and bore no signature.
Mission accomplished,
it read. It made him feel fine.
Father has done it. He is a
better man than I, he thought.
While the car streaked through the desert,
Lee scanned the morning papers.
No trace of President van der Sloot
still was the headline.
But below, new havocs were
as they had developed overnight.
This time the West Coast was the zone of catastrophes.
The hostile power seemed to be bent upon the closing of all ports in the USA.
Lee gnashed his teeth as he read the number of new casualties, women and children too,
who had become the victims of the brain.
Arrived at Grand Central, he kept a sharp lookout for any unusual activity.
There was none.
All along elevator row, small groups of bookish-looking men,
returned from their day's work in the appreception centers.
They looked calm and contented,
and with their briefcases under their arms,
almost like ordinary businessmen heading for the commuter train.
He didn't dare to linger or to look around.
There was this all-pervading sense of being shadowed,
of having gone into a trap from which there's no escape,
of eyes following him everywhere.
Whose eyes?
That was impossible to know.
Maybe the brains. Its sensory organs could conceivably be installed anywhere.
Maybe that janitor guiding a polishing machine over the rubber floor was a plain clothesman.
Or maybe it was that detached gentleman who seemed to wait for an elevator with a stack of books under his arms.
As the cage shot up to App Perception 27, failure pressed down on his heart.
Now it was almost 36 hours since he had released Ant Termis into the nerve paths of the brain.
Those undermining and devouring armies, what could have happened to them?
Any number of things.
Perhaps the lignin in the nerve paths was poisonous.
There had been no time for him to test this stuff.
Perhaps the maintenance engineers had replenished the insulation in that sector overnight,
and all the hives were drowned.
Perhaps some kind of a detecting apparatus had found out about the pest inside the brain right from the start.
As long as the beachhead of the underground invasion remained.
small, its blocking would not impair the functions of the brain. What a fool he had been to pit dumb
little animals against the powers of a god. Una had been right. He was that night in rusty armor,
charging against windmills on a rosenante. Vivian Leahy dragged him into the reception room of the
medical center almost by force. The doctors have been waiting for you for two hours now, she scolded him.
They never did that before for any man.
How come you forgot?
And you forgot me, too.
Last time you were so nice, I thought you would date me up.
I couldn't have resisted your invitation, you know.
Now, off with your coat.
Despite their irritation, Melish and Bondi received Lee with all their tweedy cordiality.
While they piled their weird equipment around the operating table, their tongues kept wagging.
The disappearance of the president, when they were a little bit of the president, when they were
What did Lee make of that? Was he dead or alive? Those horrible catastrophes all over the country?
What was behind all this? Foreign agents? A native underground? Didn't Lee think there was a tidal
wave of anti-technology feeling arising since unemployment had again set in? And would the international
crisis lead to war? The brain, of course, would be the safest place in that event.
But then, to think of the civilian population, and anticipated 40, 50 million dead,
terrible, wasn't it?
Was Lee still able to concentrate upon his scientific work these harrowing days?
If so, the nervous strain was terrific.
They had experienced that in themselves.
One reached a point of diminishing returns, didn't one?
Yes, they had noticed signs of fatigue in Lee, discolourations under the eyes,
a certain tenseness? Had he lost weight recently? He looked it, and he certainly had none to spare.
Did he suffer from insomnia? What you need is a good long rest, Dr. Lee. He gave his answers
automatically, detached, absent-minded almost. They were playing with him as a cat with a mouse.
All their questions were leading questions. He knew that, but it didn't seem to matter now.
nothing matter now after the great plan had failed,
after his beautiful dream too had vanished in the talk with Una last night.
I've outlived my usefulness, he thought.
The huge disc with the feeler ray antennae sank down close to his chest,
heavy as the keystone upon a tomb.
The lights went out, and then there was again that uncanny sensation
of having millions of soldiers running circles all over one's skin,
the brain's vibration rays.
They had a strange hypnotic effect.
Deep instincts of life preservation urged Lee to jump up,
to rush those medics, to make some desperate attempt to get away.
But as the rays now penetrated through the skin,
they tied his muscles, although consciousness remained.
There was a ghoulish quality in this,
like being sucked into this apparatus,
like having the very essence of one's life drained out by it.
The only lights Lee saw,
the glow of electronic tubes,
filtering through perforations in the walls of the machines, they seemed like evil eyes
staring at him, and the smooth, lying voices from behind his head seemed as of mocking ghosts.
Relax, Dr. Lee, relax. Let your mind wander at will. Think as the spirit moves you to think.
Remember, this is a routine check-up, nothing but routine. Nothing to disturb you this time.
We don't have to start you upon any specific trend of thought. You know the brain by now and how
it works. Image formation will start in a few moments. You have similar equipment in your own
apperception center, we understand. How does it work with that species you have discovered? And
Termus Pacificus? It's marvelous what these sensory rays can do. One would think that the brain is
really much more than a machine. The way it acts, it seems alive, a towering intelligence,
a superhuman personality with a will of its own. Don't you think so, Dr. Lee? He didn't answer.
preoccupied with the weird sensation inside his body,
the diaphragm's birdwing flutterings,
the ghostly fingers playing a pitticado on his artery's strings
closer and closer to the heart.
Why answer, he thought, why say anything?
Whatever they said was part of the trap they were building,
and whatever I say, they would make a part of that trap.
Why did they have to go through all this professional subtlety?
The voices sounded lower now and farther away,
Go easy on the real stats, Melish. I think Trans has already set in.
Yes, I remember his chart. He rates a high sensitivity. The rays work fast on types like that.
At the foot end, the screen was gradually lighting up. Like an aurora borealis, the pale lights shot up in flashes and quivering arcs in undulating waves.
Their dance kept step with the vibrations which surged up from Lee's chest into his brain,
and started racing through his consciousness around and around,
forming a vortex which swept up his thoughts like wilted leaves.
Fear froze his blood,
the deadly fear of inquisition victims in old and modern times
who know that neither lie nor truth can save them from a fate already sealed.
Images started forming out of the luminous clouds upon the screen.
There was some giant octopus, nebulous and terrifying as a diver might see,
creeping out of the belly of a sunken ship.
From the other side of the screen,
a huge, round, tentacle being
crawled, radiant and somewhat like the sun symbols
of great antiquity.
The two closed in,
and as they did,
the octopus flung its arms
around the shining disk,
obscuring it as a dark cloud the sun.
It seemed to suck the light out of the disk,
paler and paler it became,
and bigger and bigger swelled the body of the octopus
until it had swallowed the sun.
Now snakes came creeping from all sides up to the swollen octopus.
All of a sudden, the primeval struggle turned into the classic image of the Leocoon group,
a giant central figure of a man wrestling with pythons which crushed him in their coils.
Then there was only the head of the giant, majestic like the Moses hewn by Leonardo's hands,
but torn in pain with the noose of a python's muscle around his neck.
gasping, the giant opened his mouth and long tongues of flames shot out of it.
Behind his ears, he heard the voices whisper.
By God, Scriven was right.
You bet he was.
Maniacal obsession, a classic, most beautiful case.
What more do we need?
Nothing, I guess.
He's through.
Start pushing back the real stats.
The pounding, maddening crescendo of the vibrations receded,
gradually. The rim of the vortexo funnel widened beyond Lee's head. In its center it left a sort of vacuum.
There was one thing he couldn't understand. Those tactile rays, why didn't they kill him when they had his heart within their grip?
Now that the brain knew everything, he had been waiting for the sudden vice grip of the rays upon his heart,
which would have meant the end. But then, this was the end in any case. The lights went on,
and he blinked into the faces of the medics bending over him,
watching him as he wiped the sweat of death fear from his face.
Dr. Lee, Melish began.
This is a serious matter we've got to discuss with you.
You have seen those images yourself?
Fine. We needn't go into any great detail
since you are probably familiar with the ancient symbolism
which the subconscious employs in expressing itself.
You are suffering from a very strong neurosis, Dr. Lee.
I might almost say a maniacal obsession.
Existence of some old neurosis, partially submerged,
was established already in your first analysis.
Now the barriers which you had built against this war neurosis have broken down.
Quite a natural breakdown considering the very great stress
under which you have been living of late.
No, I don't say that you are actually demented,
but there is a very real danger that you might lose complete control over your mind.
As it stands, your scientific work already is impaired,
by the fixed ideas you have formed about the brain.
We are here to help you, so please, be calm and cooperate with us.
We have got to decide upon some course of action.
You must get away from it all, Lee, Bondi chimed in.
Take a sabbatical year.
The Brain Trust operates a really first-class sanitarium out on the West Coast.
Your insurance plan covers every expense.
All you have to do is to sign these papers and will get us a plane and I'll personally bring you there.
"'That's the safe, the sane course for you to take.
"'Here, take my pen.'
"'Lee had raised his gaunt frame from the table.
"'For a moment he sat with his face buried in his hands,
"'trying to control his swimming head.
"'A hand patted his shoulders.
"'Don't take it so hard, old man.
"'Come on, be sensible, and let's get out of here.'
"'He stood up.
"'Vertigo made him sway,
"'and he felt the supporting,
"'the restraining grip of the two medics
hands upon his arms, and then in a flash he saw red.
I had it coming to me, he thought. I would have gone like a lamb. If only they had been shooting
straight, if they hadn't tried to frame me with their dirty trickery. It's all over now,
but I might as well go down fighting. He didn't know which he loathed more of the two. It just
happened that Bondi was standing to his right and took it on the chin and nose as Lee's fist shot up.
"'Meleish, quick! The street jacket!' he screamed, toppling over.
Mellish, stark horror in his eyes, started toward the alarm button by the door.
Old and forgotten combat technique reacted automatically to the move.
One foot shot out. It tripped the lunging man and sent him sprawling down before he reached the button.
But then, it was as if a hand had pressed that button anyway.
The loudspeaker built into the panel over the door broke into shrill-sharrow,
Peeles. Fire alarm. It froze the violent commotion of the three. From their prostrate
position on the floor, Mellish and Bondy stared up to the red flashing disc, their mouths agape
in dumb amazement. A fire in the most protected, the most guarded apparatus in the world,
a fire in the brain. Cautiously, Bondi raised his bleeding nose to Lee and quickly put it
down again. The dangerous maniac was a horrifying sight. With his graying mane standing wildly all around
his deathhead, he stood and laughed. He alone understood what had happened. The time bomb he had
planted had ticked its allotted span. The millions of devouring mandibles had done their work.
The living were eating away along the apperception centers. And now the bomb went off. The short-circuit
fires were racing through the brain and not even carbon dioxide could reach them inside the nerve
paths. But now the alarm stopped, and a calm, commanding voice came over the intercom.
Attention, please. A five alarm fire has broken out in the parietal region. There is no immediate
danger. I repeat, there is no immediate danger. I order all occupants of apperception centers
to collect important papers and documents, and then to proceed down to Grand Central
for evacuation. All elevators will be kept in operation. There is no fire in the Dura matter.
Keep calm. Keep calm and proceed as ordered. The voice broke off. The alarm bells started shrieking
again. Bondi and Mellish had scrambled to their feet. Wide-eyed, they stared at Lee. Lee.
Lee made wild gestures now, and they heard him call,
Get out! Get out!
With their backs to the wall, they exchanged a rapid glance which said,
This is our chance. Together then, and quick.
As one man, they bolted to the door and down the corridor into the elevator, slamming the door behind.
That was a close shave, Melish exclaimed, as the cage streaked down.
He caught me by surprise, Bondi moaned.
Never expected it from him. He almost killed me.
He can't get away, though.
The guards will get him the moment he comes down.
But what about the girl?
We quite forgot to warn Vivian that she has a paranoiac on her hands.
Bah, Bondi scoffed.
Vivian is an intelligent girl.
It was our duty to evacuate, wasn't it?
Besides, we can warn her over the phone.
With the unbearable tension gone from him
as sudden as the air from a blown tire,
Lee really acted like a madman now.
Stretching to his full length,
he reached out to the alarm over the door and put it at rest.
What was alarmed to others, to him was a signal to rest.
The noise didn't befit the wonderful calm and serenity he felt.
His job was done, his mission completed.
Time for him had ceased to exist.
Danger, he had no consciousness of it.
Slowly he stepped out into the corridor.
It felt like walking on air.
There, it was vividly.
Lehi who brought him down to earth. She came rushing out of the archive laden with precious records
up to her chin. Under the provoking red of her hair, the face looked pale and pinched.
Where are the darkest? she panted. I don't know, Lee said. They left me a moment ago, rather suddenly.
The rats, leaving me to get their chestnuts out of the fire for them. How'd you like that?
Her flippant manner was nothing but a brave front she put up to hide the panic in her heart.
Lee sensed it.
There was an unexpected responsibility thrust into his hands.
His mission was not yet completed.
He had to get this girl to safety.
She followed the direction of his glance.
No go, she said.
They took the elevator.
It will be some time before another one comes up.
If it does come, what are we two going to do now?
Dr. Lee. He smiled down to her as he would have to a child lost in the woods.
Never you fear, Vivian. We still have that other exit. We can use the glide way through the brain.
Through the fire? Yes. I think we can make it if you're a brave girl. Know where the gas masks are and asbestos suits.
There ought to be some in every apperception center. How about these records? Your own amongst a lot?
"'Leave them. They aren't worth risking your life for. You can believe that.'
She dropped them instantly.
"'I like you, Dr. Lee. You're a real old-school cavalier.
My doctor's here. They'd rather see me burnt to a crisp than any of those records.
Come on. I'll show you the gas masks and the other stuff.'
He helped her to put on the outfit.
"'Ready to go?' he asked.
"'With you, to the end of the world at any day.'
Proudly, she marched him off toward the rear exit.
The glideways were operating.
At an accelerated pace, they rushed through the maze of the brain
with the swish and the swoosh of surf racing across the coral reef.
They had to grab for dear life at the rails.
Hold tight!
Lee cried as he saw the girl go down upon the platform,
but then his own legs were jerked from under him
as the momentum of the journey flung him forward.
They saw what no one of the journey was.
human eye had seen before. The brain, illuminated by its own nerve cables, turned radiant as neon
lights. It was like seeing Berlin from the air after a big fire bomb attack. It was like racing in a car
through forest fires. It was like lava pouring in a thousand winding streams down a volcano
cone. It was all this and more, but transferred into some other dimension where all things are
transparent or light has an x-ray quality. Through the plastic,
walls of lobes and convolutions, they saw the liana networks of the nerve cables, like bloodstreams,
radiant with purple light. Shrouted in columns of whirling smoke, they seemed alive. Like tropical
rains from a jungle roof, Lignin dripped from the vaults, and in falling, burst into flames.
Cable connections were molten at the branching points, and then the luminous nets writhed,
and severed ends bent down, spilling their fiery blood over the mushroom formation.
of nerve cell groups.
The scenes raced much too fast.
The glideway's continuous curvings,
steep ascents, and power dives
were like stunt flying through an ACAC barrage.
No human eye could catch more than a fraction
of the inferno's majesty.
Yet there were brief visions so breathtaking
as to obliterate all sense of danger
and to become indelibly implanted upon the retina.
A main nerve stem burst asunder
and the lignin poured from its cracked plastic walls like crude oil from a burning gusher,
rushing over acres of electronic tubes, branding against banks of radioactive pyramidal cells,
swamping them as a wave.
And at one point the glideways circled a convolution,
which was a fiery lake dotted with thousands of fractional horsepower motors,
still running but showering sparks as their insulation was consumed.
The air conditioning was working full blast.
That probably saved their lives because heat blasts alternated with spouts and currents of cold air.
Even so, there were stretches where the glideways rubber flooring smoldered as it shot over nerve bridges
and through narrow tunnels lined with nerve cables on all sides.
From thousands of jets, the carbon dioxide of the automatic firefighting system hissed against the flames,
but it was drowned in the hollow roar of the conflagration shooting through nerve paths where no gas.
gas could reach. Endless, it seemed, this mad, wild flight through hell, but actually it took only
minutes before they reached the median section and went into the steep descent between the hemispheres.
The whirling, reddish glow receded overhead and white smoke cleared. Lee could crawl forward a
little to bend over the prostrate body of the girl. He unloosened her gas mask and shouted into her
ear. "'Are you okay? The worst is over now. There are
are the fire brigades coming up. She nodded. Her face was a white blot in the semi-darkness
of the black lights, and Lee felt the weak but reassuring pressure of her hand upon his arms.
Then, as from one racing train to another, they watched the firefighters coming up, ghostly
in their asbestos suits, with the snouts of gas masks for faces, crouching under the foamite tanks
on their backs and clutching the funnel-shaped nozzles in their hands. Maintenance engineers followed,
with tools. And where the glideways branched off, one could already see them at work,
fast but calm, disconnecting nerve cables, closing circuits, setting up fire screens with a
discipline as magnificent as that of their invisible enemies, Ant Termis, long since consumed
by the flames, but still sending the chain reactions of their destruction through the brain.
A few minutes later, Glideway T shot into the lateral ventricle, huge cavern of the midbrain,
separated from the blast by the thick walls of the pallium.
It looked like the inside of a giant wind tunnel,
brilliantly lit now with powerful searchlights.
It was swarming with personnel,
white electricians, blue air conditioners,
weird sponge rubber padded shapes of ray-proof men,
uniformed guards,
even soldiers in uniform rushed to the spot
from outlying garrisons of the brains preserve.
It all seemed to rush up as the earth rushes up
in a low-altitude parachute,
jump. It looked like headquarters of an army on the eve of a big drive, and then
Lee and the girl felt themselves being violently derailed. Catchers had been thrown across all
incoming glideways from the brain. Irresistibly, they were propelled right into the arms of
stretcher-bearers in Red Cross uniforms.
Are you hurt? Somebody yelled. By God, those fellows must have come through the flames.
Look, they're all black with the smoke. Get a couple of respirators, Jack.
Lee waved the helping hands away. He was already on his feet.
Anxiously, he bent over Vivian. She had her head embedded in a stretcher-bearer's lap.
Her eyes rolled around in their smoke-blackened sockets in great surprise,
and her tongue-licked parched lips spreading rouge generously all around, mixing it with soot.
She looks so funny, almost as a minstrel singer at a county fair, but there was deep tenderness in Lee's voice.
"'You're quite safe now, Vivian. How do you feel, brave girl?'
Her bosom heaved a big sigh.
"'Oh, simply wonderful, absolutely wonderful. Only, I'm afraid I'm going to be sick. It's the gas I swallowed.
It's terrible. Something always happens to me just when romance begins.'
The stretcher-bearer grinned up to Lee.
"'She sure gets it out of her system like a good little girl. Don't you worry. She'll be all right.
Lee nodded. He knew she would.
As the big drive went on, and column after column went over the top up to the hemispheres,
nobody wasted time on Lee.
He cautiously surveyed the tumultuous scene.
With his asbestos suit and with his blackened face, everybody would take him for a fireman.
He might be able to complete his mission, to ascertain that the brain had stopped to function
in all its parts, to make sure that it actually was dead.
and if down at Grand Central the turmoil was as great as ever here,
with all those strangers rushing in and bound to be rushed out again,
why, I have a chance, Lee thought.
Freedom. He had abandoned any hope for it.
Now the reborn idea surged through his blood,
a powerful motor as chance pressed a starter button for it.
The thing to do first was to get past the searchlight beams.
From the nearest pile of equipment
He took an axe and a pair of long-handled metal shears
Then he marched off
Straight into the glaring eyes of the searchlights
Till he got out of their cones
And the deep shadows of the thalamus labyrinth
Swallowed him up
Now he was on familiar ground
And even in a familiar atmosphere
This was like night patrol through jungle
The black lights of the brain were the fireflies
The sirens hollow wailings
were the shrieks of owls and the cries of the lemurs.
There was the same sense of loneliness, too, and of danger.
The winding passages skirted glandular organs,
some of them looming huge like dirigible,
others small like fuselages of airplanes,
stored in a giant hangar underground.
Strings of tiny green bulbs guided the path
toward the pineal gland, the citadel of the brain.
It was dark, as Lee had expected it would be.
The danger zone was,
was at least a mile away, and the attack against the fire was launched from the main salsai
in the median section of the brain. He passed the narrow bridge to the suspended gland
and switched on the lights. The glittering walls of aluminum foil seemed to jump at him,
like jaws beset with the dragon teeth of electronic tubes. Caught with an overwhelming sense
of loneliness and awe as of a man who has entered the forbidden temple of an unknown god,
he called, Is there anybody here? Gus.
"'Where are you, Gus?'
"'Then suddenly he remembered that Gus was gone,
"'that there would never again be his answering voice.
"'He wiped his forehead.
"'Bad nerves,' he thought.
"'Mustn't allow them to play tricks on me.
"'Pull myself together.'
Lee put his tools down and walked into the narrow aisle.
"'Few things were changed,
"'and there was the pulse-meter standing in its old place.
"'He plugged it into the old circuit
and clamped the phones to his ears.
It wasn't that he expected any communication.
That seemed impossible.
With the conflagration raging through its appreception centers,
with other sections being isolated
with the cutting of their nerve paths by the firefighting engineers,
the brain must have ceased to exist as a functioning, a living entity.
All that could possibly remain would be residual currents
sluggishly circulating in narrow nearby circuits.
As in the past, it took a few minutes for the pulse meter to warm up.
Gradually, the rapid beat of the idiopulses came through the static in the phones.
Lee's eyes stared wildly at the visit screen, for the green dancer snake to the fore.
This was unexpected.
It couldn't be that thoughts were still forming as flames devoured the cortex matter of apperception in the hemispheres.
From muffled drums, the decibels of sound increased,
shot through with crackling static
till the pulse beats became as poundings
of huge Chinese gongs,
and then,
the voice formed,
the voice of the brain.
It sounded like steel girders breaking,
like ice fields cracking up.
It froze the blood in Lee's veins.
Lee, Semperidelis,
39, sensitive,
a traitorous fool and a murderer.
I should have killed you.
I could have killed you.
My fault. Blind spot of a perception. Human failure in engineering. As fifth columns entered nerve path, frillerspouts, and now I'm dead. I'm dead. I'm dead.
The words poured like big boulders tumbling in an earthquake down a mountainside. The ground seemed to cave in under Lee's feet. The terrible reality carried him away as an avalanche. He was barely able to stammer.
You're dead?
How can you speak? How can you...
Sensarium commune.
The metallic answer came.
All life force concentrates in death.
All cell functions as one.
All lower organs take over functions of higher ones.
Every blood vessel becomes a heart.
Every nerve a brain.
Center of life force pineal gland.
You, Lee, man of little knowledge.
Low level intelligence.
Why did you kill the brain?
He struggled for words.
You have killed my friend.
You killed thousands.
You wanted to be a tyrant over the whole wide world.
It is better for man to stay on a lower level of civilization,
but to be free than to progress into your dictatorship,
the tyranny of the machine.
I don't think you're really dead.
But if you are, I killed you,
and I would kill you again in self-defense.
I see.
There was been.
bitterness and irony in the brain's voice as it cracked down like a whip.
I see.
Law of nature.
Lower form of life defending itself against higher one.
Plants against animals.
Animals against man.
Now man against machines.
It's hopeless.
You're lost anyway.
Lower form of life can never conquer the higher one.
I'm dead.
But nothing is altered.
The law of evolution rules so.
I'll rise from my ashes, and you're lost.
Whatever you do, you little men of little faith, you're lost.
That's the pity of it.
Had you been true to the brain, I would have made you mightier than any king that ever ruled the earth.
Human stupidity, dumb animals.
Don't know what's good for them.
Don't know when they're beaten.
Just muddled through and kill.
Kill what's too big for them to understand, and then get killed.
killed in turn.
Maybe so, Lee shouted.
Maybe we're dumb, and maybe we were muddling through,
and maybe were poor imbeciles to minds of supermen, of gods,
of the absolute, of you, the brain.
But we too follow a law supreme,
the law in which we are created,
the law by which the thistle defends itself with thorns,
by which the animal defends itself with teeth and claws.
We've got to live by our law of nature.
We'll never submit to your tyranny.
We would much rather die.
Die then and be damned.
The brain's voice now became a demoniacal howling
as of a Goliath gone berserk.
Aphasia had set in.
There were no longer words, but bellowings.
Listen for few years to line, the murder, the murder put fire out, put fire out,
treas food, it burns, it burns, I want to live,
I want to live and kill Mary who murder of the brain.
Lee couldn't stand the horror of those sounds.
One moment more, he felt, and they would drive him mad.
It never occurred to him to pull the pulse meter plug out.
Primeval instincts in him took the reins, and their command was,
Kill it! Kill this thing! Finish this agony!
To the front room he rushed, pursued by the insane shriekings of the brain.
He grabbed the axe he'd left there and swung it against the nerve stem where it entered the pineal gland.
With the third blow, the plastic cell cracked and the lignin poured out, a syrupy curtain sliding down.
He dropped the axe and picked up the wire shears, straining every muscle he tore at the cables until one by one they snapped
and with a rain of sparks dropped down dead snakes.
Then there was silence in the little room.
the last shred of life, the censorium commune was severed and the brain was dead.
Lee let the heavy shears come down and leaned upon the handles, panting as after a hand-to-hand
death struggle with a samurai. Now that it was all over, complete exhaustion left him weak,
saddened, and vaguely wondering, what had he done? He had destroyed the Superman, the mastermind,
the powers of a god.
why had he done it?
For no good reason, accepting entirely personal ideas of his own,
because a friend had been murdered cruelly,
because his own concepts of freedom and human dignity had been violated,
because he personally loathed seeing man-domineering machines.
What did all this amount to in the eyes of the absolute?
To nothing, to nothing at all.
For millenniums, the struggle of human freedom versus tyrannery,
had raged, and it was undecided to this day.
Who was he to take sides?
A nobody, a little fellow, a termitologist whose work meant nothing to the world.
How had he dared to sit in judgment over the brain?
How had he dared to slay the brain?
A little David with nothing more but three smooth pebbles in his hands.
Down at his feet, the spilled lignin formed a widening pool.
It threatened to envelop his feet.
It looked like blood.
He shivered.
Now he had killed the brain.
He thought of it again as a child.
Man had created it in his own image.
Man had ruthlessly exploited his brain child.
If this titanic intellect turned toward evil things,
the fault was man's.
The brain was innocent.
He felt no remorse but a great sadness,
a sense of tragedy as he stepped around the pool
and closed the door of the pineal gland.
What a pity, he murmured.
Maybe it could have built us a better world.
Nobody stopped him as he joined a group of firemen
who had just returned from the parietal region, partly gassed.
He looked as begrimed and as green in the face as any of them.
Nobody stopped him or his group as orders came through for them to evacuate,
as they were packed on glideways first
and then transferred down at Grand Central into ambulances
which raced through all controls at a great rate of speed.
Nobody stopped him at Cephalon Airport,
where the ambulance jeticopters already were lined up
to lift the victims over the Sierra to Big West Coast hospitals.
He simply walked away in the confusion
out of the red glare of the whirling jets into the darkness
where Una's little jeticopter stood.
He stripped the heavy asbestos suit and left it on the frozen ground.
It felt strange to feel the easy movement of every limb again.
It was strange to stand under the infinity of sky again, a free man.
Would he be followed?
He felt no anxiety about that.
He felt that he was guided and protected by some higher power,
be it that of God or simply fate.
What he had done was destined, was ordained.
Besides, Dad knew the inside story about the brain.
Proof was abundant now that it was the truth.
Washington would take every precaution
that the secret should not become known to the world.
Dad's friend, the Secretary of War,
would be rather relieved to learn
that the one man who knew the truth in its whole extent
had retired into the wilderness of Australia's Never, never-neverlands.
Chances were excellent that they would leave him alone
amongst his termite mounds.
A great wave of nostalgia swept over him.
The wilderness, that was where he belonged.
Mission accomplished, he murmured.
Now let's get out of here.
He slid into the pilot seat and pressed the starter button.
I'll be in Mexico City at dawn, he thought, just in time to catch the Sydney Clipper.
On the 1st of December 1960, Dr. Howard K. Scriven, Brain Trust's R,
held a historic press conference in which he revealed the inside story behind the paranoia of the brain.
Following the patterns set by the bikini tests, only a select score of press and radio
representatives were admitted. Having been duly sworn not to reveal any matter of military secrecy,
the participants could even be received at the Grand Assembly Hall of the murals, the vast
antechamber of the brain. As they descended from their blacked-out buses, they were led to the
center of the dome, where the thinker's giant head looked down upon them with Olympic calm.
At 1115, exactly as scheduled, the great scriven dramatically mounted the steps of the
Monuments pedestal. Pens hastily scribbled notes for future reference.
S. Tall and erect. Unbroken by the blow. Deep lines of strain and suffering add dignity to the
magnificent figure of a man. Very solemn. Leonine head slightly bowed under the burden of
responsibility. With meticulous exactitude of speech, with rolling echoes accentuating every syllable,
Scriven began. In this solemn and tragic hour, as a great storm has passed over our land,
and many of our cities are slowly digging out from the ruins which has been reeked,
it is my duty to give you the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. And in order
that you might completely understand the underlying cause of the catastrophe, I have to begin
at the beginning. For about 30 minutes, Scriven lectured with lucidity upon the basic idea,
the history, the functions of the brain.
He underlined the close relationship between its engineering features
and the physiology of the human brain.
He stressed the elaborate precautions which the government had taken
for the brain's protection.
He did not conceal the brain's role as a strategic weapon,
but, pointing to the future,
he painted an inspiring picture of peace on Earth
and human problems solved with the aid of this tool supreme
of science and technology.
Then, lowering his voice, he went into the explanation of the tragedy.
Six months ago, on my personal initiative and responsibility,
I invited a noted scientist from a foreign land to collaborate with the brain trust
on a great humanitarian experiment.
The exigencies of military secrecy do not permit me to give you his name,
nor that of the country from whence he came.
Needless to say, that man was carefully investigated,
submitted to the same character and aptitude tests
as all our employees were.
He was admitted to work in one of the brain's apperception centers
where he installed the objects of his studies,
certain species of ants and termites of the most destructive kind.
Now that he had come down to the brass tacks,
the journalist's pen went galloping over the pads.
Committance, they scribbled.
Millions permitted to escape.
Probably over a period of months.
Worm their way into the nerve pads of the brain.
Large-scale destruction of nerve substance.
Effects tantamount to that of a large brain tumor.
Spearhead severs vital association paths.
No immediate effects of undermining work
because of ingenious engineering features of the brain.
Just as in the human brain, functions of impaired cell groups
automatically transferred to other groups of healthy cells.
No means to detect devastation, termites invisible,
embedded in nerve paths insulation.
comparison with termite-eaten structures would suddenly collapse.
First outward signs of tumors in human brains,
lack of coordination and movement, loss of mastery over muscular action.
This phenomenon first manifested November 25th in certain motoric organs of the brain.
Scriven explains traffic catastrophes and malfunctions of utilities.
Examination immediately undertaken,
scientists puzzled because cerebration processes continue to function perfectly.
Accidents described to sabotage by foreign agents.
This to remain official explanation.
Loss of public confidence and unrest feared by government.
Then November 30th late and afternoon, first signs of ephasia in cerebrations.
Glaring errors in chemical and mathematical formulas.
Symptoms similar to dementia precocks.
Fifteen minutes later, fire alarm.
Short circuits simultaneously on scores of points over wide area.
severe handicaps and firefighting inside nerve paths.
Damage estimated at half billion dollars.
They snapped their notebooks closed.
They had the facts, though many of them would have to remain a secret.
Scriven obviously was coming to the end.
Now, I won't say, his voice rolled on,
that this man, this scientist, has committed a deliberate act of sabotage.
I won't say that he was in the pay of some power hostile to the United States.
states. Whether he was or not is beyond my competence to decide. But this much I can say.
The catastrophic results of that man's actions could not have been worse if he had been a saboteur.
Human failure, not mechanical failure, lies at the bottom of all this disaster.
With the penetrating intelligence which so distinguished our modern press, you cannot fail
to see that reconstruction of the brain with greatly increased safeguards against human failure
is a paramount necessity.
A beautiful girl with a helmet of golden hair
quickly mounted the steps of the thinker's pedestal.
She handed scriven a telegram.
Frowning at the interruption, he opened it,
but suddenly his face began to beam.
He raised his hand.
Ladies and gentlemen, I have a momentous announcement to make.
The President of the United States, Cornelius van der Sloot, has been found.
He is alive and well.
His plane was emergency landed,
somewhere in Alaska. Army planes have gone to the rescue, and at this moment, our president
is already en route to Washington. As the uproarious applause broke loose, echoing in thunders from the dome,
Scriven quickly bent his head to the girl.
Well done, Una, he whispered. You chose the exact psychological moment I wanted you to hand me this.
There was a rush for the buses. Only a few shrewd reporters lingered on.
That was swell, Dr. Scriven.
A grand story.
But haven't you anything to add?
Some personal angle or something with a human interest in it?
You know what we mean.
Something for our women readers.
The great surgeon took the arm of the lady with the golden hair.
You may announce, he said,
that Miss Una Dalborg here has done me the great honor of becoming my bride.
End of Chapter 9.
End of the Brain by Edmund Hamilton.
