Spaces:
Sleeping
Sleeping
| Produced by Greg Weeks and the Online Distributed | |
| Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net | |
| Transcriber's Note: | |
| This etext was produced from Galaxy Science Fiction May 1954. | |
| Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. | |
| copyright on this publication was renewed. | |
| Back to Julie | |
| By RICHARD WILSON | |
| Illustrated by VIDMER | |
| _The side-shuffle is no dance step. It's the choice between making time | |
| ... and doing time!_ | |
| You can't go shooting off to _that_ dimension for peanuts. I don't | |
| want to give you the impression that peanuts are in short supply here, | |
| or that our economy is in the fix of having to import them sidewise. | |
| What I'm trying to convey is that, if you're one of the rare ones | |
| functionally equipped to do the side-shuffle, you ought to be well | |
| paid for it--in any coin. | |
| That's what I told Krasnow. And he wasn't after peanuts. "I'll do it," | |
| I said, "if you'll make it worth my while." | |
| "I'd hardly expect you to do it for nothing," he replied | |
| reproachfully. "How much do you want?" | |
| I told him. The amount shook him up, but only briefly. | |
| "Okay," he said grudgingly. "I suppose I'll have to give it to you. | |
| But the stuff had better be good." | |
| "Oh, it is," I assured him. "And you don't have to be afraid, because | |
| I couldn't possibly skip with the loot. I'll have to travel naked. I | |
| can't get there with so much as a sandal on one foot or a filling in a | |
| single tooth. Fortunately, my teeth are perfect." | |
| Sweat poured off Krasnow's florid face as he worked the combination of | |
| his office safe. His fat jowls quivered unhappily around his cigar | |
| while he counted out the bills. Ten per cent was cash in advance, and | |
| the rest went into a bank account in my name. I paid off a batch of | |
| bills, then stripped and did my off-to-Buffalo. | |
| * * * * * | |
| "Honest" John Krasnow was a crooked District Attorney who wanted to be | |
| Governor and then President. He had the Machine, but he didn't have | |
| the People. And, because he needed the People, he needed me. I had | |
| been to this other dimension--the one on the farthest branch of the | |
| time-tree--and I could give him what he wanted. | |
| Krasnow found out about it after I was hauled up in front of him on a | |
| check-kiting charge. I'd had something of a reputation before I got | |
| into difficulties and, in trying to live up to the reputation, I had | |
| done some plain and fancy financing. Nothing that fifteen to twenty | |
| grand wouldn't have fixed--but while I scrounged around, trying to get | |
| cash, I kited a few checks. They pyramided me right into the D.A.'s | |
| office, where Krasnow was properly sympathetic. | |
| "How," he asked, "could a man of your standing in the scientific world | |
| stoop so low?" It developed into quite a lecture and, even coming from | |
| Krasnow, it made me feel pretty low. | |
| So I began explaining. I told him where I was born, and where I went | |
| to school, and where I had taken my sabbaticals--including this other | |
| dimension. And Krasnow believed me. I can't account for it, except | |
| possibly because he knew he was a crook and knew I wasn't | |
| one--exactly. Anyway, he believed me, and we made the deal and I did | |
| the side-shuffle, as agreed. | |
| The journey to that other dimension is not a pleasant one. It does | |
| disturbing things to the stomach, and you see everything thin and | |
| elongated, as if you're sitting too far to the side in a movie | |
| theater. | |
| I got there, however, and waited for the hiccups to subside. _Hiccupi | |
| laterali_, I had called them when I considered writing an article for | |
| the _Medical Journal_ after my first trip. With the hiccupi gone, I | |
| stole some clothing--which was one of the riskiest parts of the | |
| program--and waited for morning. I didn't have any money, of course, | |
| so I had to hitchhike into town. | |
| I could have stolen myself a better fit, but people aren't | |
| clothes-conscious in that dimension. They're more interested in what | |
| you are and what you can do. The driver of the car that gave me a lift | |
| asked, "And what is your field of endeavor?" | |
| I told him, "I am able to eliminate the long wait in ivory production | |
| by accelerating the growth cycle of elephants." | |
| He was deeply impressed and tipped me handsomely. I was less impressed | |
| with his talent for growing cobless corn, and therefore had to return | |
| only a small part of the sum he gave me. | |
| The world of this dimension had developed some remarkable parallels to | |
| Earth. I mean our Earth, which falls into what I have designated | |
| Timeline One Point One, since it's the Earth with which I am most | |
| familiar. Every other world that has a language calls itself Earth, | |
| too. I had to visit briefly hundreds of the lateral worlds, hovering | |
| over primordial swamps, limitless oceans, insect kingdoms and | |
| radioactive planetoids, before I found the one that was truly | |
| parallel. | |
| It existed in Timeline Seventeen Point Zero Eight, and it had | |
| refrigerators, platinum blondes, automobiles, airplanes, apple pie, | |
| tabloids, television, scotch and soda--just about everything we think | |
| makes life worthwhile. But it had its little differences, which was | |
| only to be expected in a timeline where the bionomics could create a | |
| new world each time someone changed his mind. | |
| Thus, the cobless-corn man was driving what looked to me like a | |
| Chevrolet, but which was a Morton in his world. He let me off near a | |
| downtown restaurant where, thanks to our little exchange of talent | |
| talk, I had enough money for breakfast. It was considered unethical to | |
| swap talent talk outside the limits of certain rigidly defined groups, | |
| so I didn't try to out-impress the waitress. | |
| * * * * * | |
| Fed, and filling my stolen clothes a bit better, I walked to the | |
| recorder's office and spent the rest of the morning looking up old | |
| documents. There was nothing there for Krasnow, as I had expected. But | |
| for me there was a very pretty file clerk. Talking to her, I verified | |
| my impression that human instincts and relationships were much the | |
| same in this dimension as in my own--except in the one basic respect | |
| that interested Krasnow, of course. | |
| The file clerk and I lunched together and then I spent the afternoon | |
| in the library. But I didn't find anything there, either, and then I | |
| had dinner with her. She said her name was Julie. I told her mine was | |
| Heck, for Hector, which it is. She thought this was "awfully cute" and | |
| we got along fine. | |
| [Illustration] | |
| Julie had a delightful apartment and a matching sense of hospitality. | |
| The following day, when she went to work, I stayed home and washed the | |
| dishes and made the bed and used the telephone. | |
| I ran up quite a bill with my long-distance calls, but I found out | |
| what I needed to know. I impressed a lot of people with my elephant | |
| story and pretended to be impressed hardly at all with what they told | |
| me they did--although often I was, very much. | |
| The trouble with these people is that they no longer know how to lie, | |
| if that can be listed as trouble. I don't think it can. Neither did | |
| Krasnow, obviously. He'd never have sent me off on my expensive | |
| side-trip if he had. | |
| Of course, Krasnow looked at it objectively. What he wanted from | |
| Timeline Seventeen Point Zero Eight was not for himself. It was for | |
| everybody else. He wanted the formula for the truth gas these people | |
| had developed long ago and loosed upon their world to put a stop to | |
| wars. | |
| They had been in a bad way, although no worse than the sort of problem | |
| we were up against. Their trans-ocean squabbles and power politics | |
| seemed to have settled into a pattern of a war or two per generation. | |
| Just like us. Hence, the man who invented the truth gas became a | |
| global hero, after a certain amount of cynicism and skepticism. All | |
| the doubts vanished, naturally, once the gas got to working. And so | |
| did war. | |
| [Illustration] | |
| You can't do much plotting and scheming if, every time you open your | |
| mouth to tell a lie, you stammer, sweat, turn red and gasp for breath. | |
| It's a dead giveaway. Nobody tries it more than once. | |
| One or two men had tried to nullify the gas or work out a local | |
| antidote, either as a pure research project or through power-madness. | |
| But, because they had had to state their purposes as soon as they | |
| thought of them, they were put away. Neat. Very neat. | |
| What I wanted was the formula for the truth gas. Its location wasn't | |
| exactly a secret in this land of complete candor, but it wasn't writ | |
| large on any wall for all to see, either. They kept it in their | |
| capital--located about where our Omaha is--on file among the Vital | |
| Statistics. | |
| I took a superjet out there. | |
| * * * * * | |
| I had no trouble posing as a historian entitled to the facts. The gas | |
| didn't work on me, you see, because it was adjusted to the physiology | |
| of that timeline. There was just enough difference between us for it | |
| not to make me stick to the truth. | |
| "We'll write out the formula for you," I was told obligingly. "But | |
| you'll have to sign the usual statement." | |
| "Of course," I said. "Which one is that?" | |
| "The one that says you won't publish it, and will destroy your copy | |
| when it has served your research purpose, without letting anyone else | |
| see it." | |
| "Oh, _that_ statement," I said. | |
| I signed freely, told my elephant story and departed in an aura of | |
| good will. | |
| The jet got me back that same evening. Julie fixed me up a snack, and | |
| we discussed how pretty she was and how nice I was. | |
| I had everything Krasnow wanted now. I felt pretty good about it, | |
| because there was nobody else who could have done the job for him, and | |
| because it wasn't spying, really. Earth One Point One on the Timeline | |
| is world enough for Krasnow, I'm sure. Besides, dimensions don't have | |
| wars with one another. Too many things can go wrong. | |
| Julie was lovely and I hated to leave the next morning, but it was my | |
| job. I told her, "I'm afraid I have to leave town for a bit, dear, but | |
| I'll be back very soon. Business, you know." | |
| Being a Seventeen Point Zero Eight girl, Julie had no reason to doubt | |
| me. "Make it _very_ soon," she whispered, her lips close to my ear. | |
| So I came back, and now Krasnow has what he wants. He's delighted, as | |
| he should be. I've made up the gas for him and adjusted the formula so | |
| that it will work on people of our timeline. It's high-power stuff and | |
| a little will go a long way. I also made up an antidote for him. This | |
| was easy, since I could work on it without feeling any compulsion to | |
| tell everybody what I was doing and why. | |
| Krasnow plans to release the truth gas just before the state | |
| convention. He'll be nominated, of course, and after November he'll | |
| be Governor. With everyone else compelled to tell the truth, it should | |
| be a cinch for him. He's a patient man, Honest John Krasnow is, and | |
| he's willing to wait four years for the Presidency. | |
| I ought to be happy too. With the money Krasnow gave me, I've been | |
| living in the style to which I've always wanted to be accustomed. He | |
| has offered me a place on his staff and, somewhat superfluously, the | |
| use of his antidote. Naturally, the reason he was so magnanimous was | |
| that he doesn't want anyone else around who knows his gimmick and | |
| might have to tell the truth about it. | |
| But I have had enough of this dimension now--now that Krasnow has what | |
| I promised him. He's going to use it tomorrow. And if I know Honest | |
| John--and I do--not even the Presidency will be big enough for him. | |
| So I'm going back to Julie. | |
| * * * * * | |
| There are some obvious questions in your mind, I know, such as: Why | |
| did I get the formula for Krasnow, knowing there was no way for him to | |
| prosecute me while I was in Julie's dimension? And what made me come | |
| back? | |
| In short--what was in it for me? | |
| Let's call it research. Krasnow is a big-time operator; I've always | |
| been, you might say, in the peanut end of the game. He had a great | |
| deal to teach me and I, I'm happy to say, was an apt pupil. You might | |
| speculate on what's in it for you, because, if you ask me, anybody who | |
| can do the side-shuffle should do it before Krasnow becomes President. | |
| However, don't go to Seventeen Point Zero Eight unless you want to | |
| swap one Krasnow for another. The fact is that I've learned I can be | |
| one in Julie's dimension. After all, their formula doesn't work on | |
| me--but I can assure you that it will work on you. | |
| And that elephant story I told on my last visit is, as I've indicated, | |
| in the peanut category. All Krasnow has is a country. I'll have a | |
| whole world. | |
| There's nothing like study under a master, is there? | |
| I should be back to Julie by midnight if I start now. | |
| --RICHARD WILSON | |