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Archive name: stand.txt (M-robot, sci-fi, parody)
Authors name: Marcia R. Hooper (marciar26@aol.com)
Story title : Standing Still
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Copyright 2004. As the author, I claim all rights under
international copyright laws. This work is not intended
for sale, but please feel free to post this story to
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Standing Still
by Marcia R. Hooper (marciar26@aol.com)
***
Clea discovers that the giant robot Gort (from THE DAY
THE EARTH STOOD STILL), is playing possum with her. At
night he's been moving around and getting up to no
good. Clea decides to investigate. Join her in this 15
page misadventure and find out how she makes out. (M-
robot, sci-fi)
***
This is a work of fiction and is not meant to portray
any person living or dead, nor any known situation. It
is meant for adults only and is not to be read by
person's under the age of 18, or the legal age in the
county/state/country in which the reader resides.
If you would like a Microsoft Word version of this
story (a much easier read), please contact me at
MarciaR26@aol.com.
This story is adapted from the short story, "FAREWELL
TO THE MASTER" by Harry Bates. It was originally
published in 1946 and was made into the movie THE DAY
THE EARTH STOOD STILL. The character in the original
story was male but mine is female. Also, this story has
no sex, but I hope you'll enjoy it anyway.
Clea discovers that the giant robot Gort (from THE DAY
THE EARTH STOOD STILL), is playing possum with her. At
night he's been moving around and getting up to no
good. Clea decides to investigate. Join her in this 15
page misadventure and find out how she makes out.
***
STANDING STILL
by
Marcia R. Hooper
(MarciaR26@aol.com)
Based on the Short Story:
FAREWELL TO THE MASTER
by HARRY BATES
First Published in 1946
ONE
From my perch high atop a scaffold above the museum
floor, I carefully studied each line and shadow of the
giant robot, then turned and looked thoughtfully down
at the rush of visitors come from all over the country-
-the world, really--to see Gort and the spaceship for
themselves. And to hear once again their amazing,
tragic story.
I myself had begun to develop an almost proprietary
attachment toward the exhibit, and with good reason. I
had been the only professional photographer on the
Capitol grounds when the ship from the Unknown had
arrived; I shot eight full rolls as the vessel hovered
ominously above the great Capitol dome, and then as it
had landed. I had witnessed first hand every event of
the next few bustling--and maddening--days. I had
photographed many hundreds of times the enigmatic
eight-foot robot, the ship, the slain ambassador,
Klaatu, and his imposing tomb out in the center of the
Tidal Basin; tragic as it was, it was still the news
event of the century.
This time I was after a shot depicting Gort as
incomprehensible and menacing. The shots I'd taken the
day before had not given the effect I wanted; it seemed
inexplicably difficult to capture the feel of menace
you experienced from observing the metal automaton
firsthand. It was as though the dull silver curves of
the robot's skin, his patina itself, gave off a
metaphysical radiation of some kind--mental-radiation.
It sent shivers up and down my spine sometimes, just
being near the thing.
The last of the current admission of tourists crowded
in, exclaiming at the great bulk of the domed
spaceship, then completely forgetting the ship at sight
of the awesome figure of the eight-foot tall Gort.
Robots of crude, human-like appearance were familiar
enough--Japan seemed to have the developing market all
to itself these days--but never had any human laid eyes
on one like this.
Gort was not the Hollywood stereotype of robot design--
man-like, in other words--but a seamless, impenetrable
stick-figure of silvery metal reminiscent of a robot in
a fifties-era sci-fi flick. The immense figure had two
arms, two legs and a head, to be sure, but the
appendages ended in feet that were formless rectangular
blocks, hands that were nothing but round, grapefruit-
sized clubs, and the head a mouth-less, ear-less,
anything-less globe atop a thick shaft of neck. The
only human-like feature of the giant was the wrap-
around sunglasses effect created by its weapons cover.
And those who looked up at him did not make jokes or
idle remarks about Gort--if they spoke at all.
A slight crackle came from the speakers hidden in the
spaceframe above, then an introductory soundtrack of
low music. At once the sound of the crowd lessened. The
recorded lecture was about to begin. I sighed. I knew
the thing by heart, had even been present when the
recording was made, and had met the speaker, a young
man named David Stillwell.
"Ladies and gentlemen," began his clear and well-
modulated voice--but I was no longer hearing. The
shadows across Gort's head and figure were deeper and I
needed to take my shots. I picked up and examined the
proofs of yesterday's session and compared them with
the subject below. Wait a minute, I thought. Am I
imagining things?
Something about Gort had changed. Its pose was
identical to the one in the photographs, I thought,
every detail on comparison seemingly the same, but
nevertheless the feeling persisted. I took up the
camera and used its telephoto lens to more carefully
compared every line of the robot to the robot in the
photographs. It was then that I saw there was a
difference.
With sudden excitement--and a sudden feeling of dread--
I snapped two photos at different exposures. I knew I
should wait a time and take others, but I was so sure
of what I saw that I had to get going. Quickly stowing
my camera and accessory equipment, I made my way across
the scaffold to the structural column down at its end,
descended the ladder hung unobtrusively on the
backside, and made my way out of the gallery. Ten
minutes later, consumed with uneasiness, I developed
the two new shots in my basement-level darkroom. What I
saw comparing the negatives taken yesterday with the
shots taken today, made my scalp crawl. The robot had
moved. Gort had moved! And apparently, I was the only
one that knew!
What I had just discovered would make the front page of
every newspaper in the country, but was after all, only
a lead. The real story, I knew, was what had happened
overnight, and was what really needed to be found out.
Grabbing a small, very fast infrared camera and two
extra rolls of film, I hurried back upstairs to the
exhibition floor. I would have to secrete myself in the
building someplace and stay there overnight. I would
never get official permission, of course, not with
something like this at stake, but there were always
ways around the rules.
Behind the ship was a laboratory. The scientists often
worked there late at night and sometimes, because I was
a pretty girl and a fixture around the place, the
guards let me stick around until the scientists left,
usually no questions asked. It's how I supplemented my
meager income, smuggling out shots of Gort. Walking up
to a guard named Willy, stationed at the passageway
leading to the lab, I flashed him a brilliant smile
(oh, what those eyes of his said that he'd like to do
to me) and said: "Hey there, Willy!"
"How's it going, prof."
That was an old joke, calling me prof. Even to myself I
looked more like a high school cheerleader (or pompom
girl) than a twenty-eight year old professional woman.
I both hated, and cherished the impression at the same
time. I had never once, in all my the times in bars and
restaurants, not been asked for an ID.
"Still after Caroline Vance?" I asked.
Willy, white teeth huge in his jet black face, grinned
wolfishly. "Until I get after you, girl."
I felt myself blush. Willy made me so hot. Not hot
because I had a thing for him or anything (which, yes,
of course I did) but because he made me all squirmy
inside. I had heard tales about his massive endowment.
I had heard tales about what he wanted to do to me with
that massive endowment. And I suspected those tales
were true.
"I have to go see Dr. Martino," I said, shrinking a
little and pointing idiotically toward the lab. I felt
like a five year old pleading to go to the bathroom.
For a moment Willy hesitated and I feared he either
knew I was up to something, or intended to ask me out.
I don't know which option scared me more. I had to
force myself not to fidget from foot to foot. Finally
he just nodded and I hurried my little butt down the
hallway, fighting not to look back. I had never been
with a black guy before; the natural curiosity of what
interracial sex would be like was there, and so was my
attraction to the man. I forced him and his legendary
cock out of my mind.
The lab was a large area roughly partitioned off. Here
the scientists engaged in breaking their way into the
ship, and it was full of a confusion of massive and
heavy objects--electron microscopes and molecular
analyzer's, pallets of chemicals, insulative sheeting,
compressors, and a great deal of smaller equipment
common to a metallurgical lab. Three white-smocked
scientists were deeply engrossed in an experiment at
the far end of the room; awaiting a good moment, I
slipped inside and hid myself under a table half-buried
with supplies. I felt reasonably safe from detection
there. Very soon, I hoped, the scientists would be
going home for the night.
From beyond the ship I could hear another group of
tourists filing into the display--the last of the day,
I hoped. I settled myself as comfortably as I could,
awaiting the taped lecture. I had to smile, thinking of
one thing the recording would say.
The foot scrapings and whispers of the crowd died away;
I could hear every word in spite of the great bulk of
the ship lying interposed.
"Ladies and gentlemen," began the familiar words, "the
Smithsonian Institution welcomes you to its new
Interplanetary Wing, and to the marvelous exhibits
presented here for you." A slight pause. "All of you
must remember the incredible events of just three
months ago. A little after 5:00 p.m. on September 16th,
visitors to the U.S. Capitol thronged the area right
where you are standing now. The day was warm and clear.
A steady stream of people were leaving the museums
along The Mall, homeward bound, no doubt tired from
hours on their feet. And then it happened.
"I silvery object appeared from over the eastern
horizon, traveling directly toward where you now stand.
It had entered our atmosphere approximately one hundred
miles west of the Rock of Gibraltar, crossing the
Atlantic Ocean at speeds in excess of thirty-thousand
miles per hour--faster than the Space Shuttle reenters
the Earth's atmosphere. Its speed slowed precipitously
as it approached the east coast, finally dropping to an
almost leisurely thousand miles per hour, then to
virtually walking sped as it crossed the Washington
Beltway. Then, almost as though on a sightseeing trip
itself, the spaceship then settled to the ground with a
deep, vibrating hum. It hummed for a short period of
time thereafter, then fell silent.
"The people nearest the ship were, of course, stricken
with panic and fell back. U.S. Capitol Police quickly
arrived on the scene and set up a cordon around the
ship, later expanded to one hundred feet by the
Metropolitan Police and the U.S. Park Service Police.
Excitement spread over the Washington area--indeed, the
world--in a tidal wave. Radio, television, and the news
services rushed here at once. Army units from Ft.
Belvoir appeared within the hour and trained guns upon
it. The direst calamity was feared. 'Our own
Independence Day?' the newspapers asked.
"And then, anti-climactically, the ship just sat here.
No one emerged, and there was no sign that it even
contained life. That, as much as any single thing,
caused rumor-mongering to sky-rocket. Was the ship some
kind of buzz-bomb, sent here to detonate once enough
dignitaries had assembled to confront it? If not, who,
or what, was inside? Were they hostile or friendly?
Where did the ship come from? How did it arrive with no
apparent means of locomotion? And why didn't they show
themselves?
"For two days the ship remained absolutely quite.
Scientists and the news media alike began to speculate
that the ship was an unmanned probe, similar to the
probes we ourselves have sent to Mars, Venus and the
other planets. And like so many of NASA's failures of
the past, this one had simply failed to deploy. A
rather human-like irony, considering the vessel may
have traveled from the farthest corner of the galaxy.
"Regardless of its origin-slash-mission, tension over
the enigmatic spacecraft grew to monumental levels.
Scientists and the military personnel who dared
approach the ship reported no visible means of entry.
There were no ports, no airlocks, not the slightest
seam marring the perfect smoothness of the ship's
surface.
The irony of the situation was perfectly expressed when
a delegation of high-ranking officials knocked upon the
silvery hull hoping for a response. Although receiving
none, this helped break the tension and some semblance
of life as normal returned to the nation's capital.
Life went on. The standard eight hour workday resumed.
Daytime dramas, that staple of American life, resumed
after four days, although in most cases with the
ubiquitous ticker tape running across the bottom of the
screen. Crowds around the space ship fell from the
hundreds of thousands to the mere thousands.
"And then, ten days and twenty-two hours after the
dramatic landing, in full view of tens of thousands of
weekend visitors, under the muzzles of some of the
military's heaviest weapons, an opening appeared in the
side of the ship. A ramp slid down, and out stepped a
man, human-like in appearance, clothed in a silvery
metal suit, a strange helmet with no faceplate covering
his head.
He stood there several moments at the top of the ramp,
allowing the crowd--and the military--time to grow
accustomed to his presence. Then he descended the ramp
and crossed halfway to the barricades, where he
stopped, removed the helmet from his head and raised
both his hands in the universal gesture of peace. 'I am
Klaatu,' he said in perfect, unaccented English.
"At once, a large contingent of high-ranking government
officials and army officers advanced to greet the
visitor. With graciousness and dignity, the man pointed
to himself, then to his ship behind him, and said, 'We
have come from far away on a mission of peace. My
companion is Gort. We--'
"And then occurred the incident witnessed by an
estimated three billion people around the world. An
event unlike any since November 22nd, 1963 in Dallas,
Texas. From a rooftop a hundred yards away came a wink
of flame and smoke and Klaatu fell. The assembled crowd
stood for a moment stunned, not comprehending what had
happened. Then, appearing in much the same way as the
harbinger of death must have appeared to the assassin
in his dreams, the robot emerged from the ship. Eight
feet tall and constructed from the same silvery metal
as the ship, the huge robot stood at the top of the
ramp, appearing to survey the situation.
The cowl wrapping the upper portion of its face raised
up out of the way, revealing a single, pulsating white
eye, and then the machine set loose a weapon of
unimaginable destruction. Whatever the beam of energy
struck... tanks, rocket launchers, artillery pieces,
even M-16 rifles in the hands of individual soldiers...
began to melt. Anything and everything of a military
nature was struck.
"Pandemonium was upon us. Thousands of onlookers
attempted to flee at once, resulting in a stampede of
horrendous proportions. Hundreds of men, women and
children were trampled underfoot--many dying right
there at the scene, many others at local area
hospitals.
"Klaatu, meanwhile, mortally wounded but still alive,
beckoned to his companion to stop. The immense robot
stopped his reign of destruction, descended the ramp
and took up position beside Klaatu as you see him now.
He has not moved since that day.
"Klaatu, although obviously dying, was rushed to the
nearest hospital. He died en route. Confused and
frightened crowds milled about the Capitol grounds the
rest of the afternoon and much of that night. The ship
remained as silent and motionless as before, closed up
tight. No one at all, fearing further reprisals,
attempted to approach it.
"When the mausoleum in the Tidal Basin was completed,
two weeks later, Klaatu's burial services took place.
It was attended by the highest dignitaries of all the
great countries of Earth. If there were other living
creatures in the spaceship, as seemed possible at that
time, they needed to be impressed by our devout sorrow
at what had occurred.
"During the two weeks leading up to the ceremony, and
during the ceremony itself, the giant robot stood as
you see him now, never moving. He stood silently
watching as his master was floated out to the mausoleum
and given up to the centuries, along with a tragically
short record of his historic visit. And so he has stood
so ever since, never moving nor showing any sign that
he was aware of what had gone on.
"After the interment, when it was discovered that both
the spaceship and the robot were rooted to this spot by
some unexplainable force, this latest addition to the
Smithsonian Institution was constructed around them.
"You have undoubtedly heard that our scientists have
been attempting to break into the ship ... and have met
with complete failure. Its incredible metal shell, as
has that of the robot, has proved inviolate. Not only
are we unable to get in, but we cannot even determine
the exact location from which Klaatu and the robot
emerged. The indicator arrows seen on the hull are only
our best approximation.
"A note of caution. Although we know that visitors to
the exhibit will show no disrespect in this building,
neither to the robot nor the alien ship, it may be that
the unknown and unthinkably powerful civilization from
which Klaatu and his bodyguard were dispatched may send
other emissaries to investigate their whereabouts. We
can only pray that any future encounters with our
interstellar guests transpire in a more acceptable
manner than the first.
"You will be allowed to remain an additional five
minutes in the display. At the end of that time, please
exit promptly via the two indicated exits. The
attendants accompanying your group will answer any
questions you may have."
The recording ended and I, carefully stretching my
cramped limbs, waited for the group to depart. The
narrator was wrong. In one of the photographs I had
taken yesterday, the robot's right foot had covered the
middle portion of a decorative grid-line in the
flooring. Today, that line had been completely covered.
Gort had moved.
A moment after the big gong above the entrance doors
rang out the five o'clock hour, the three scientists,
as if on cue, hurriedly washed their hands, changed
into their street clothes and disappeared down the
partitioned corridor, oblivious to the girl hidden
under their table. The sounds from the exhibition floor
rapidly decreased, until at last there were only the
steps of Willy and the other guard walking from one
point to another. For just a moment, one of them, I'm
not sure which, glanced in the doorway of the
laboratory, then he went about his business of
battening the place down; five minutes later the doors
of the exhibit shut, and there was silence.
I waited several minutes, then carefully poked my way
out from under the table. As I straightened up, a faint
tinkling crash sounded between my feet. Carefully
stooping, I found the shattered remains of a thin glass
pipette. I had knocked it off the table.
That brought the point home: The robot had moved last
night, and might be moving again tonight and might be
extremely dangerous. I would have to be very careful.
The building was arrayed roughly east to west, with the
ship laying nearest the southern wall; Gort stood
nearest the northeast corner of the exhibition and at
the opposite end of the room from both the entrance to
the exhibit and the passageway leading to the
laboratory. By retracing my steps, I would come out on
the floor at the point farthest removed from the robot.
On the other side of the entrance, on a low platform,
stood a lectern. This apparatus was the only object in
the room behind which I could lie concealed, while
watching what might happen. There were no other large
objects in the room.
I cautiously tiptoed out of the laboratory and down the
passageway. It was dark out there; the late-December
sun had already set. Very carefully, I edged forward
and peered around the curve of the ship at Gort. The
position of the robot's head did not seem to have
changed, nor had its body. It gleamed dully in the weak
light. Probably everything was all right, but I wished
I didn't have to cross the end of the room with the
feeling that the robot's eyes--or whatever it used for
eyes--were following me.
I drew back and sat down and waited. It would have to
be totally dark before I dared the trip to the lectern.
I wondered about this foolhardy plan.
Half an hour later, when the faint streamers of light
emanating from outside began to illuminate the room
with a soft glow, I got up and peeped around the ship.
The robot's head seemed to be pointed directly at me,
an effect no doubt, of the murky light. Still, I felt
chilled. Did Gort know I was there? What was it
thinking? Did it consider me a threat?
I checked the infrared camera, transferred it to the
inner pocket of my jacket for safekeeping, then went
down on all fours. I moved carefully to the edge of the
entrance wall, fitting myself as closely as possible
into the angle made by it with the floor. I started
inching forward.
Never pausing, not risking a glance at Gort's unnerving
bulk, moving an inch at a time, I snaked along the
wall. It took ten minutes to cross the space of a
hundred feet. I was soaked with perspiration and
shaking uncontrollably when my fingers at last touched
the one-foot rise of the metal platform. Silently as a
shadow, I made my way over the edge and melted behind
the protection of the lectern. At last I was there.
I relaxed for a moment, then, anxious to know whether I
had been seen, carefully turned and peered around the
side of the lectern.
Gort's gaze was now full on me! Or so it seemed.
Against the general darkness, the robot loomed a
mysterious and still darker shadow that, for all his
being a hundred and fifty feet away, seemed to dominate
the room. I could not tell whether the position of his
body was changed or not.
The cautious trip had taken a great deal out of me--my
elbows, palms and knees ached and my slacks and blazer
were no doubt ruined. But these were tiny things. If
Gort so much as moved an inch, and I could catch him at
it with my infrared camera, I would have a story worth
a hundred suits of clothing. And if I could learn the
purpose of his nighttime movement--provided there was a
purpose--that story would set the world on its ear.
I settled down to wait; there was no telling when Gort
might move, if indeed he moved at all. My eyes had
become adjusted to the dark and I could make out the
larger objects well enough. From time to time I peered
out at the robot--peered long and hard--until his
outlines wavered and I had to blink my eyes to be sure
any movement wasn't my imagination.
First once, and then a second time, the minute hand of
my watch crept around the dial. The inactivity made me
careless, and for longer and longer periods I kept my
head back out of sight behind the lectern. I probably
even dozed. And so it was that when Gort did move, I
was frightened half out of my wits. I looked around and
found him out on the floor, halfway in my direction.
Scarcely breathing, half-paralyzed, I watched the
robot. He was as still as a cat stalking a mouse. His
head--his entire body, it seemed--were pointed in my
direction.
My thoughts tumbled. What were his intentions? Why had
he stopped so still? Was I being stalked?
In the heavy darkness, Gort moved forward again. The
almost imperceptible sound of his footfalls fell on my
ears. Frozen with fear, utterly incapable of fleeing, I
lay where I was as the monster with the fiery pulsing
eye came on.
For a moment I all but fainted. My five foot and one-
half inch, one-hundred and two pound body quivered like
a tree in an earthquake. When I opened my eyes, Gort
was towering above me, legs almost within reach. He was
bent slightly forward, observing me with whatever
hidden sensors he used to see the outside world. I
prayed the cover over his hideous weapon would remain
closed.
For an eternity, it seemed, Gort scrutinized me without
moving. Each second of that eternity, I expected
annihilation, sudden, quick, complete. I trembled like
a cornered mouse. And then suddenly and unexpectedly it
was over. Gort's body straightened and he stepped back.
And then, with an almost fluid motion so incongruous in
a huge shape, he started back toward the ship.
I could not believe what had just happened. Gort could
have crushed me like a twig--yet he had only turned
around and gone back to the ship. Why? Could it be that
a machine was capable of human emotions, like
curiosity?
Or mercy?
At a certain place along the spaceship's hull the robot
stopped and made a curious succession of sounds. At
once I saw an opening, blacker than the gloom of the
building, appear in the vessel's side. It was followed
by a slight hissing sound as the ramp slid out and
touched the floor. Gort walked up the ramp and,
stooping a little, disappeared inside the ship.
"Dammit!" I whispered, remembering the camera. Gort had
moved, and I had not caught him at it! Whatever
happened later, I could at least get a shot of the ramp
and the opened dome, as well as Gort's hitherto
occupied space. I twisted the camera into position, set
it for the proper exposure, and took a series of shots.
A long time passed. Gort did not come out. Some of my
courage had returned and I toyed with the idea of
sneaking over and peeping through the port, but found I
lacked the courage for that. Gort had spared me this
once; there was no telling how far his tolerance would
go.
An hour passed, then another. What the hell was he
doing inside? If it had been a human being rather than
a damned machine, I might have sneaked a look--or so I
told myself--but he was too much of an unknown.
Everything that Earth's best scientists had done to
discover his inner workings had left them totally
baffled; they hadn't even marred his surface. Hell,
they couldn't even find the entrance to the ship. And
although he had all the features of a marshmallow with
legs, he could see perfectly well in the dark. There
was no telling what other means he had to sense my
position.
More time passed. Then, some time after two o'clock in
the morning, a simple but extraordinary thing happened,
a thing so unexpected that for a moment it all but
destroyed my equilibrium. Suddenly, there was a faint
whir of wings, followed by the piercing, sweet song of
a bird. Hidden in the gloom of the building, clear and
full-throated, its notes reverberating delightfully in
echoes, this bird sang a dozen little songs,
interspersed with short insistent calls, twirrings,
coaxings and cooings--the spring love song of perhaps
the finest warbler in the world--the mocking bird.
Then, as suddenly as it began, the voice fell silent.
If an invading army had poured out of the spaceship, I
could not have been more surprised. It was only
December; even in Florida, my birthplace, mocking birds
had not yet begun to sing. How had one gotten into this
tight, gloomy museum building? And why was it singing
here?
I waited, full of curiosity. Then suddenly I was aware
of Gort, standing just outside the dome. He stood
absolutely still, his unseen gaze turned squarely in my
direction. For a moment the hush in the museum seemed
to deepen, then it was broken by a soft thud on the
floor near where I sat.
I waited. Gort started his queerly fluid walk down the
ramp and headed in my direction. When just a few short
yards away, the robot stopped, bent over, and picked up
something off the floor. Five digits--you couldn't
rightly call them fingers, no more than you could call
his arms, arms, or his legs, legs--protruded from the
club of his hand and in them he held the object. For
some time he stood there without moving. I knew what
was in his hand, even though I could not see it. It was
the mocking bird. Its body rather, for I was sure that
it had sung its last song. Gort then turned, and
without a glance back at in my direction, walked back
to the spaceship and again went inside.
Hours passed while I waited for some sequel to this odd
sequence of events. During that time my fear of the
robot began to lessen. If the machine was hostile, I
thought, if it intended me any harm, it would have
finished me off long ago, when it had such a perfect
opportunity. I began to steal myself for a sneak up to
the port. I must get a picture. It was the reason I was
there.
Taking off my shoes, and in my stockinged feet, I moved
swiftly to a position beside the ship, then paused for
some sign that Gort knew I was there. Sensing none, I
slipped along the hull and paused again. Bolder now, I
made it the rest of the way to the ramp in one spurt.
And there I met with bitter disappointment. There was
not a peep of light visible from within the ship, only
an inky darkness ... and silence. I cursed softly. This
was not my night. Still, I had better get the picture;
infrared film might reveal features I couldn't see with
my eyes. I raised the camera, focused it on the dark
opening, and gave the shot a comparatively long
exposure. Then I stood there, at a loss what to do
next.
Animal noises--first scrapings and pantings, punctuated
by several sharp clicks, emanated from within the ship.
It sounded as if a struggle of some kind were going on.
Then suddenly, before I could even decide to run back
to the lectern, a low, wide, dark shape bounded out of
the ship and down the ramp. Immediately it turned and
rose to the height of a man and I shrieked as it
bellowed in rage. It was a gorilla!
And a huge one!
It would have come after me, I'm sure, but in that
instant Gort appeared on the ramp and descended with
amazing speed. As he advanced, the gorilla slowly
backed away for a few feet, then it stood its ground.
Its thick arms rose up from its sides and began
pounding on its chest; from its throat came a roar of
defiance more terrifying to me than even its bellow of
rage. I adhered to the side of the ship, trying to
become part of that indestructible metal.
The gorilla backed away. Gort kept advancing on it,
closing the distance until less than half a dozen feet
separated the two. Then the gorilla charged forward,
snarling in rage, and I would not have guessed that
anything could move so fast. It was too dark to see the
details of what happened; all I knew was that the two
great shapes, the titanic metal robot and the squat but
terrifically strong gorilla, merged for a moment and
then the gorilla was flung far back and away. But the
gorilla wasn't through. It at once rose to its full
seven foot height and roared deafeningly.
Gort advanced.
The gorilla began to fall back down the length of the
building, suddenly darted at a boxlike shape against
the wall and with one rapid side movement it dashed an
interactive, computerized information station to the
floor, shattering it.
Rigid with fear, I crouched at the side of the ship,
thanking Heaven that Gort was between me and the
gorilla, and was continuing his advance. The gorilla
backed farther away, darted suddenly at the next
station in line, and with strength almost unbelievable
tore it out by the roots and hurled it at Gort. There
was a sharp metallic clang and the wreckage of the
station bounced off to one side and tumbled to a halt
against the wall. Gort might not even have noticed the
impact.
I cursed myself for it afterward, but again I had
completely forgotten the camera. The gorilla kept
falling back down the building, demolishing with
terrific bursts of rage every object that it passed and
throwing the pieces at the implacable Gort. Soon they
arrived opposite the lectern; I now thanked my lucky
stars that I had stayed away. There followed a brief
silence, during which I could not make out exactly what
was going on, but I ascertained that the gorilla had
reached the corner of the exhibit and was trapped.
If it was, it was only for a moment. The silence was
suddenly shattered by another terrific roar, and the
thick, squat shape of the animal came bounding toward
me down the room. He passed me by at a full gallop and
stopped just short of the ramp. I prayed frantically
for Gort to come and rescue me again, for there was now
only the curvature of the hull between myself and the
dangerous beast. Out of the dimness Gort did appear.
The gorilla rose to its full height and again began to
beat its chest and roar its challenge and then a
strange thing happened. It fell abruptly on all fours
and slowly rolled over on its side. Then, panting,
making frightening noises, it forced itself again to
its feet and faced the oncoming machine. As it waited,
its eye finally caught sight of me, shrunk close beside
the ship and with a surge of terrible destructive rage,
it waddled side ward toward me. Even through my panic,
I saw that the animal moved only with extreme
difficulty, apparently severely wounded. I jumped back
just in time; the gorilla crashed its massive forearms
against the side of the ship with a hollow clang and
that was its last effort. It dropped heavily on one
side, rocked back and forth a few times, and fell to
twitching. Then it lay still and never moved again.
THREE
I awoke slowly, at first not realizing that the images
tumbling around my head were real memories and not a
fantastic dream. It was recollection of the pictures
waiting to be developed that brought me to my feet. I
went and found the camera and went to my darkroom in
the spare bedroom. It was two p.m.
Following the death of the gorilla, as the first pale
light of dawn seeped into the exhibit, I crawled from
my position beside the ship to the nearest corner. I
watched the great robot from there. He stood over the
dead gorilla, head down, looking down at him with what
in a human might have been called sadness. I saw this
clearly; Gort needed no features to convey his
distress. For some moments he just stood there, then,
as might a father with his sick child, he leaned over,
lifted the great animal in his thick metal arms and
carried it tenderly into the ship.
I was absolutely done in. I had peed my pants. I flew
back to the entrance, flung open the double doors and
on quavering knees made it way back to the laboratory
and hid under the desk. I prayed for full daylight and
other human beings. My thoughts were chaotic. Rapidly,
one after another, my mind churned up the amazing
events of the night. It seemed there could be no
rational explanation for any of them. The bird. A
gorilla? Gort's sad expression and his tenderness? What
could account for that!
Gradually full daylight came. A long time passed. I
began to believe I might yet get out of that place
alive. At 8:30 a.m. there were noises at the entrance,
and the beautiful sound of human voices. I crept out
from beneath the table and tiptoed to the passageway.
The noises stopped suddenly and there was a frightened
exclamation and then the sound of running feet. Then
silence. Stealthily, I sneaked down the narrow
passageway and peeped fearfully around the ship.
Gort was in his accustomed place, in the identical pose
he had taken upon the death of his master. The
spaceship was once again closed up tight and the room
was a shambles. The entrance doors stood open and,
heart in my mouth, I ran out them.
* * *
All the shots turned out well. The first three clearly
showed the ramp leading up to the open port. The second
three, of the open port itself, were as much a
disappointment as looking into the ship had been; a
blank wall just beyond the opening cut off all view of
the interior. No wonder no light had escaped from the
ship. Assuming Gort required light for whatever he did.
I was suddenly ashamed of myself. Some photographer I
was, coming back with this load of crap. I had had a
score of opportunities to get real ones, good ones--
shots of Gort in action: his fight with the gorilla--
even his holding the dead mocking bird in fingers no
one knew existed... spine-tingling stuff! And all I had
brought back were two sets of stills of a ramp and a
stupid doorway.
Quickly, I showered and changed my clothes, then took a
cab to a nearby restaurant. Sitting alone at the bar, I
spotted a friend.
"Hi, Stu," I said, taking the stool at his side.
"Well, what do you think?" asked my friend. A half-
eaten chili dog was in one hand, a condiment-smeared
napkin was in the other.
"I don't think anything until I've had breakfast," I
answered.
"At four o'clock in the afternoon?"
"It's only three," I corrected him.
He only grumbled.
Ordering from the menu, I asked as level-toned as a
could: "What's going on? Anything interesting?"
"You haven't heard?"
"Heard what?"
"Some news dog you are," my friend grumbled. "When
something really big happens, you lay asleep in your
fucking bed." But then he told me what had been
discovered that morning in the museum, and of the
world-wide excitement at the news.
I did three things at once, successfully--wolfed down a
substantial plate of scrambled eggs and home-fries,
kept thanking my stars that nothing new had transpired,
and showed continuous surprise. Still chewing, I said
goodbye to my friend and hurried out of the building
for a cab.
At the museum, backlogged at the door, was a huge
crowd. People gawped in every window and fanned out
around the perimeter. With my credentials, I had no
trouble getting inside and found Gort and the ship just
as I had left them. The floor had been cleared of
debris and the remains of the demolished information
stations were being replaced by others. Several friends
of mine were there.
"I was home," I said. "Missed the whole thing. What's
supposed to have happened, anyway?"
"Ask something easy," said Penelope Martin--known
better as Pepper. "Nobody knows. They think maybe
something came out of the ship last night, maybe
another robot, like Gort, but..." Here she blinked
slowly, as though the coming words were just too weird
to comprehend. "They say they found animal fur, Clee.
Animal fur," she repeated. "Long black course stuff
like from a gorilla." She shuddered. "Say... where have
you been, anyway?"
"I was asleep," I said.
Pepper gave a slight flair of the eyebrows and a tilt
of the head that invited clarification of that unlikely
statement, then went on when I didn't answer. "Better
catch up, girl. Several billion bipedal creatures are
scared shitless right now, and I for one, am among
them."
"No Earth invasion theories," I said, hoping for an
admonishing tone. "At least not from inside the
spaceship. It's not big enough for that."
I excused myself and walked slowly over toward Gort. I
couldn't decide what to do about this story. The press
services would bid heavily for my photos--with, or
without Gort in them--but that would take any further
initiative out of my hands. In the back of my mind I
wanted to stay in the exhibit again overnight, but--
well, I simply was afraid. And security would never
allow it. The place would be packed with guards
tonight.
I looked a long time at the robot. No one would ever
have guessed that he had moved last night, or that
there had rested on his blank metal face a look of
sadness. He could see, I knew, just as clearly as I saw
myself. Probably much clearer than I did. He might be
looking at me now. Was he angry with me? I thought not.
Gort had had me at his mercy half a dozen times--and
had just walked away.
I walked about the room, thinking it over. I felt sure
Gort would move again tonight. A nine-milimeter Glock
would protect me from another gorilla or anything else
of that ilk--I could get one from my father easily
enough--but that meant being here again tonight and
that was ridiculous. Would I dare? Would security
arrangements allow it?
Incredible as it seemed, as the day gave over to dusk
and the rest of the work force prepared to go home, I
found no evidence of additional security being put in
place. It seemed absurd. Finally, I asked my admirer
Willy about it and got a negative response. No money,
honey, he said. Budgetary constraints. I was
dumbfounded.
And so, armed with only my infrared camera, I once
again hid myself away under the table in the laboratory
and waited for the gong above the metal doors to clang,
locking me in for the night.
This time I would get my story all right--and the
pictures.
If no guard was posted inside!
I listened hard for a long time for any sound
indicating a guard had been left, but the silence
within the building was complete. I was thankful for
that--but not quite completely. The gathering darkness
and the realization that I was now irrevocably
committed made the thought of a companion not
altogether unpleasant.
About an hour after it reached maximum darkness, I took
off my shoes and stole quietly down the passageway to
where it opened into the exhibition area. All seemed as
it had been the preceding night. Gort was an ominous,
indistinct shadow at the far end of the room; I felt
his gaze boring in on me as I peeped around the corner.
And, as on the previous night, but even more carefully
this time, I went down on my stomach in the angle
formed by the wall and slowly snaked across to the low
platform on which stood the lectern. Once in its
shelter, I placed my shoes in the right hand pocket of
my coat, and brought out my camera. This time, I told
myself, I would get my pictures.
I settled down to wait, keeping Gort in full sight
every minute. My vision reached maximum adjustment to
the darkness and eventually, I began to feel lonely and
a little afraid. Gort's unseen eyes were getting on my
nerves; I had to keep assuring myself that the robot
would not harm me. I had little doubt that I was being
watched.
Hours slowly passed. From time to time I heard slight
noises at the entrance, on the outside--a guard,
perhaps, or maybe curious visitors.
At about nine o'clock I saw Gort move. First his head
alone; it turned so that the weapons cover was pointed
fully in my direction. For a moment that was all; then
the dark metal form stirred slightly and began moving
forward--straight toward my position. I had thought I
would not be afraid--much--but now my heart stood
still. What would happen now?
With amazing silence, Gort drew nearer, until he
towered, an ominous shadow, over the spot where I lay.
For a long time his massive head just hung there; I
trembled all over. This was even worse than before.
Before I knew it, I found myself speaking to the thing.
"You wouldn't hurt me, would you?" I pleaded. "I only
wanted to see what's going on. It's my job, you know?
Can you understand me?" I held out my little camera as
if in explanation. "I wouldn't harm you or bother you,
Gort . . . even if I wanted to. Please!"
The robot never moved. I couldn't guess whether my
words had been understood or even heard. When I felt I
couldn't bear the suspense any longer, Gort turned away
and retraced his steps back toward the ship. I
collapsed back against the lectern in relief. Again the
robot had spared my life!
Beginning then, I lost much of my fear. I felt sure now
that Gort would do me no harm. Twice he had had me in
his power, and each time he had only looked at me and
quietly moved away. I watched with intense curiosity to
see what would happen next.
As he had done the night before, Gort went straight to
the side of the ship and made the peculiar sequence of
sounds that opened the port; when the ramp slid out he
went inside. After that I was alone in the darkness for
a very long time, probably two hours. Not a sound came
from inside the ship. When finally a sound did break
the silence, it caught me by complete surprise.
"Ladies and gentlemen," rang out a familiar voice, "the
Smithsonian Institution welcomes you to its new
Interplanetary Wing, and and to the marvelous exhibits
presented here for you."
It was the introductory recording by David Stillwell.
But it was not coming through the speaker system
overhead, but from within the ship!
After a slight pause it went on:
"All of you must... must--" Here the voice on the
recording stammered and came to a stop. My hair stood
on end. That stammering was not on the tape!
For just a moment there was silence; then came a
scream, a hoarse, man's scream, from somewhere within
the ship. It was followed by a series of muted gasps
and cries, as from a man in great fright or distress. I
watched the port with every nerve alight, praying that
being here tonight was not the madness my pumping heart
told me it was. Then, out through the open port flew
the shadow of a human being. Gasping and half-
stumbling, he made it down the ramp then ran straight
down the room in my direction. When he twenty feet
away, the great shadow of Gort emerged from the port.
I watched, breathless. The man--it was Stillwell, I saw
now-- came straight for the lectern behind which I hid.
When only a few feet away, his knees buckled and he
dropped to the floor. He appeared very ill, but kept
making spasmodic futile efforts to creep on to the
protection of the lectern. Gort came and stood over
him, but Stillwell seemed not to be aware. "Help me,"
he muttered. "Please!"
Having been seen, there was need to remain quiet. "Are
you all right?" I called out. "Be still, okay? I don't
think he means to hurt you. He's just standing there."
Clutching at my presence like a drowning man a life
preserver, Stillwell gasped out: "Help me! Gort...
Gort--" He seemed unable to go on.
"Gort what?" I called out, feeling stupid. I wanted to
help the man, knew the man needed assistance badly, but
was unable to summon the courage to move with the robot
looming above him like that. "He won't hurt you, David.
I'm sure he won't hurt you. He hasn't hurt me. Can you
tell me what's the matter with you?"
Stillwell struggled onto an elbow. "Where am I?" he
pleaded hoarsely.
"In the Interplanetary Building," I answered. "Don't
you know?"
Only Stillwell's hard breathing was heard for a moment.
Then, weakly, he asked: "How did I get here?"
"I don't know," I said truthfully.
"I was home working on a speech," Stillwell said, "when
suddenly I found myself here... I mean in there--"
He broke off in a coughing fit.
"Then what?" I asked gently.
"I was in some kind of box, a clear-sided contraption--
and above me, for God's sakes, was Gort, the robot. How
did I get here?"
"Easy," I cautioned. "I don't think Gort will hurt
you."
Stillwell fell back on the floor.
"I'm very weak," he moaned. "Something... inside...
Will you get a doctor?" He seemed utterly unaware that
towering above him, unseen eyes boring down at him
through the darkness, was the robot he feared so much.
As I hesitated, at a loss what to do next, the man's
breath began coming in short, harsh gasps. This broke
my fear and, slipping out from the lectern and moving
over to the dying man on my hands and knees, I took
both of his hands in mine. "It's okay," I soothed.
"Don't fight it."
His gasps weakened and became spasmodic, then suddenly
he was completely silent and still. I felt for his
pulse, then looked up to the shape in the shadow above
me.
"He's dead," I whispered.
The robot seemed to understand, or at least to hear. He
bent forward and regarded the still figure.
"What are you doing, Gort?" I asked the robot suddenly.
"Somehow, I don't believe you are the terrible,
revenge-seeking monster people make you out to be. I
don't believe you killed this man. But what happened to
him? Can you understand me? Can you speak? What is it
you're trying to do?"
Gort made no sound or motion, but only loomed there
above me. On the robot's smooth, featureless face, I
nonetheless sensed a look of sad contemplation.
Gort stood quiet several minutes, then he bent lower,
took the limp form carefully--even gently, I thought--
in his mighty arms, and carried him to the place along
the wall where the unassembled pieces of the new
information stations lay. Carefully he laid him by
their side. Then he went back into the ship.
Without fear now, I got up and strode across the room
to where Stillwell lay. As I stood looking thoughtfully
down at the body, Gort emerged again from the side of
the ship. He bore a shape that looked like another
body, a larger one. He cradled it in one arm and placed
it carefully by the body of Stillwell. In the hand of
his other arm he held something that I could not make
out, and this he placed at the side of the body he had
just put down. Then he went back to the ship and
returned once more with a shape which he laid gently by
the others; when this last trip was over he looked down
at them all for a moment, then turned slowly back to
the ship and stood motionless, as if in deep thought.
I was becoming unnerved. I passed a hand down the side
of my face and then placed it against my mouth,
unbreathing. My eyes felt huge and I could not swallow.
Beside the body of Stillwell was the great shapeless
furry mass of the dead gorilla--the one from the night
before. Next to the gorilla lay the tiny form of the
mocking bird. These last two had remained in the ship
all night, and Gort, for all his surprising gentleness
in handling them, was only cleaning house. But it was
the fourth body that had me holding my breath and
trying not to panic. I moved closer and bent very low
to look.
My blood ran cold. The first body was that of
Stillwell, but the last in the row was Stillwell, too;
there were two bodies of Stillwell, both exactly alike,
both dead.
I backed away with a cry, and then panic took me and I
ran down the room away from Gort and yelled and beat
wildly on the entrance door. There was a noise on the
outside.
"Let me out!" I screamed in terror. "Let me out! Let me
out! Please!"
A crack opened between the two doors and I forced my
way through like a wild animal and ran all the way down
to the street. A belated couple on a nearby path stared
at me with amazement, and this brought some return of
sense; I slowed down and came to a halt. I was still in
my stocking feet. Breathing heavily, I removed my shoes
and slipped them on. I stood looking at the building,
trying to pull myself together. What an incredible
fuck-up! The dead Stillwell--the two dead Stillwell's--
the dead gorilla, and the dead mocking bird--all dying
before my very eyes. The second dead Stillwell I had
not seen die, I corrected myself, but there were still
two of them there. Somehow, I doubted they were twins.
And Gort's strange gentleness, the sad expression I had
twice sensed on his face?
The grounds about the building had come to sudden life.
Several people has collected at the door of the museum-
-the alarm was blaring incessantly and a police
helicopter circled above my head, spearing the area
with light. In the middle distance I heard one, then a
second, then a whole cacophony of approaching sirens.
The police helicopter landed on the lawn between the
street and the museum, blasting the grass flat with its
prop wash and whipping my hair and clothing about.
Jesus, I thought. I ought to get out of here. But even
as I began to turn away the lights of the museum sprang
to life, and I was caught up by a sudden, almost
irresistible need to see what happened next. I walked
numbly back up the sidewalk to the entrance.
I had left Gort standing motionless at the side of the
ramp. He was motionless still, but back again in his
old familiar pose, as if he had never moved. The ship's
port was closed, and the ramp was gone. But the bodies,
the four strangely assorted bodies, were still lying by
the west wall.
I was startled by a shout from behind me.
"That's her!" a uniformed guard shouted. "When I opened
the door this bitch forced her way out and ran like the
devil was after her!"
Police officers converged on me from every direction.
Excuse, me, I thought. Bitch?
"Who are you? What is all this about?" one of the
policemen asked me roughly.
"I'm Clea Sutherland, I work here," I answered calmly.
"I was working late and got spooked really bad and ran
away, just as the guard says."
"You were working late?" the officer asked, tone
skeptical. "What were you doing? And what the hell's
with these bodies?"
I took a deep breath. "I'd tell you gladly, if I knew
what it was myself. But I don't. There's been some
really weird goings on in this building tonight, some
of which I saw myself--" I tried out a smile. "--but I
should probably keep my mouth shut until I've talked to
my boss... and maybe an attorney. I will tell you one
thing though--" Here I paused, glanced sideways at
Gort. "The robot's been moving around and been inside
the ship too. I'd keep a watch on him if I were you. I
close watch."
Then I found myself confronted by a camera crew and
half a dozen reporters.
FIVE
I stayed out of jail that night--barely--but at eight
a.m. the next morning found myself en route to the J.
Edgar Hoover Building downtown.
"A few people would like to talk to you downtown," said
the man in the blue pinstriped suit who had gotten me
out of bed at seven a.m. He had declined to answer any
of my questions.
Fully, thirty-five high-ranking Federal officials and
"big name" politicians were waiting for me in an
imposing conference room on the sixth floor. Facing me
around the huge oval table were the president's chief-
of-staff, the Undersecretary of State, the
Undersecretary of Defense, scientists, a plethora of
colonels and two or three generals, executives,
department heads, and ranking "G" men. An old gray-
haired gentleman, who I eventually found out was
Geoffrey Sanders, director of the FBI, was presiding.
I told my story, leaving nothing out, then told it all
over again, and then, in parts, half a dozen more
times--not because they didn't believe me, I think, but
because they kept hoping to elicit some new fact,
something which would cast significant light on the
mystery of Gort's behavior and the happenings of the
last two nights. Patiently, I racked my brains for
every detail.
Director Sanders asked most of the questions. After
more than an hour, when I thought they had finished,
Sanders asked me several more, all involving my
personal opinions of what had happened.
"Do you think Gort acted hostile in any way; were his
actions belligerent?"
"I don't think so, no sir."
"Do you think he can see?"
"I'm sure he can see, or at least has some sense that
is equivalent."
"Do you think he can hear?"
"Yes, sir. That time when I whispered to him that
Stillwell was dead, he bent lower, as if to see for
himself. I wouldn't be surprised if he understood what
I said."
"At any time did he speak, except making those sounds
to open the ship?"
"No, sir, not a word. At least nothing I could
understand."
One of the scientists asked: "In your opinion, was his
strength responsible for the death of any of the uh...
test subjects?"
I shrugged. "I told you how easily he handled the
gorilla. When the gorilla attacked, Gort threw it back
ten feet or more, after which it retreated all the way
down the room, afraid of him." I didn't tell them that
I wasn't so sure now, in light of his further actions,
that the ape hadn't simply leapt out of Gort's arms,
that Gort had, in fact, been trying to help the
gorilla--or at least to restrain it.
"How would you explain the fact that our autopsies
disclosed no mortal wound, no cause of death, in any of
the bodies--gorilla, mocking bird, or the two identical
Stillwells?"--this from a medical examiner.
"I can't."
"You don't think Gort is dangerous?"--from Sanders.
"I don't really know. He didn't hurt me."
"Would you risk staying in the building alone another
night?"
"Not for anything in the world!" I exclaimed. There
were smiles.
"Did you get any pictures of what happened last night?"
"No, sir," I said, holding onto my composure with an
effort. I found a butt-filled ashtray on the conference
room table suddenly very interesting.
A man hitherto silent rescued me by saying: "A while
ago you used the word 'purposeful' in connection with
Gort's actions. Can you explain that a little better?"
"Well, that was one of the things that struck me about
Gort: He never seemed to waste a motion. He can move
with surprising speed when he wants to; I saw that when
he wrestled the gorilla, but most of the time he walks
around as if methodically completing some task. It's as
if his scale of time is somehow different from ours.
This might account for his long periods of immobility."
"That's very interesting," said one of the scientists.
"How would you account for the fact that he moves only
at night?"
I should have thought that was obvious, I didn't say.
"Maybe he's doing something he doesn't want anyone to
know about. Night is the only time he's alone."
"But he went ahead even after finding you there."
"I know. I have no explanation for that, other than he
considered me harmless or unable to stop him--which was
certainly the case."
"Before you arrived, we were considering encasing him
in a large block of Glasstex. That's a high-density,
aluminum-polycarbonate alloy just recently developed.
Very tough stuff. Has the molecular strength of
aluminum and the transparency of glass. Do you think
he'd permit it?"
"I don't know. Probably he would. I don't have any
illusions that your miracle substance would hold him,
though." I paused, uncertain how I should say this.
"The truth is, sir, I think he's like one of your
nuclear submarines: smooth and harmless looking on the
outside, packed with awful weapons and all the latest
electronics inside. If you intend to render him
immobile, you better be ready to duck and run for
cover. And it had better be done in the daytime; night
seems to be the time he likes."
That seemed to be all they could think of to ask me.
Sanders slapped his hand on the table.
"Well, I guess that's all Ms. Sutherland," he said.
"Thank you for your help, and let me congratulate you
for being a very foolish, stubborn, brave young woman."
He smiled very faintly. "You can go now, but don't be
surprised if we ask you back."
"May I remain while you decide about the Glasstex?" I
asked. "Or have you already decided?"
Sanders smiled wryly. "The encasement will be started
at once. If you have anything important to convey to
your friend the robot..." Still smiling wryly, he left
the remainder unsaid.
I shifted uncomfortably. Cautiously I asked: "In that
case, would you authorize me to be present outside the
building tonight? Just outside. I have a feeling
something's going to happen."
"Another scoop, huh," said Sanders, not unkindly, "I
don't know. I'll tell you what. All the news services
will want people there tonight, and we can't have that.
If you'll agree to represent them, it's a go. Nothing's
going to happen, but your presence may help keep the
hysterical ones quiet. I'll call the appropriate people
and let you know."
I thanked him and was ushered out, wondering who the
appropriate people were. In the metropolitan area there
must be a dozen television stations, a hundred radio
stations, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC, and every wire service on
the map. Not to mention the newspapers. How Sanders
could hope for cooperation--much less expect it--from a
press corps generally hostile to government officials
was beyond me.
I went shopping for some badly needed groceries and
then went home. As I was pouring vinaigrette dressing
over my Romaine salad, the telephone rang. It was
arranged the caller said; I should try and catch some
sleep, get to the museum around eight o'clock. I hung
up, feeling both stupefied and dismayed. I sat down at
the dinette table, wondering what kind of emergency
powers there were that could so efficiently muzzle the
press--and so quickly. It left me feeling stupid.
Unable to sleep, and not willing to just hang around my
apartment till the appointed time, I left for the
museum. The place was surrounded by thousands of
onlookers now, held far back by a strong cordon of
police. At first I could not get through; then finally
someone looked at my ID and I was permitted to cross
the line. People recognized me at once and began to
bombard me with questions: Had I seen the robot move?
Had the thing actually carried me inside and shown me
the workings of the ship? What did I think of the fact
that David Stillwell--the real David Stillwell--was
considering a lawsuit against the museum for the
wrongful death of his two clones? Or that PETA--People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals--threatened to do
the same on behalf of the gorilla and bird?
Eyes shut and shaking my head in disgust, I banged my
palm against the flat surface of the huge metal door.
My eyes fell upon Gort. An odd feeling went through me,
one almost of pity. Although he stood exactly as he had
always stood, the right foot advanced just a little,
facing the ship, now there was something more. He was
solidly encased in a huge block of transparent
Glasstex. From the floor to three feet above his head,
and for an equal distance in each direction, he was
locked in a water-clear prison which confined every
inch of his body and would prevent the slightest twitch
of even his amazing muscles.
It was absurd, no doubt, to feel sorry for a machine, a
man-made robot, but I had come to think of him as being
really alive. He showed purpose and will; he performed
complicated and resourceful acts; he had been gentle
with the mocking bird, gorilla and the other two
Stillwell's--he had twice refrained from crunching me.
I didn't doubt for a minute that he was alive, whatever
that "alive" might mean.
I spoke briefly with representatives of the major news
networks, newswire services and the papers. I inspected
and accepted four pieces of equipment: a minicam
outfitted with night-vision lenses, an infrared camera,
a pair of infrared binoculars and a networked
transceiver for staying in touch with the news pool. I
also retrieved my Sony Watchman from my darkroom
downstairs, to keep in touch with the world. An hour
later I sat alone fifteen feet off the ground, on a
scaffold erected on the walkway around the building. It
commanded a clear view of the upper part of Gort's body
through an upper window.
Far back in a great circle stood a multitude of the
curious--and the fearful. Would the Glasstex hold Gort?
If it did not, would he come out thirsting for revenge?
Millions at their television sets were jittery; those
in the distance hoped nothing awful would happen, yet
they hoped something would, and they were prepared to
run.
In carefully selected spots not far away from the
building but discreetly out of my line of sight, were
National Guard positions; in a cul-de-sac well to my
right, hidden around the corner of the adjacent
building, was a huge Abrams M1/A1 tank. A row of
smaller, faster Bradley Fighting Vehicles stood ready
fifty yards directly north. Their fifty-caliber machine
guns were aimed at the door. I wondered how any assault
on the museum could possibly be limited enough to not
cause extreme damage and loss of life to some other
part of the sprawling city. The Supreme Court building,
and the Capitol, for God's sake, were just a block
away.
Dusk fell; out streamed the last of the museum
personnel, military personnel, politicians and other
privileged guests; the great metal doors of the museum
clanged shut and were locked for the night. Soon I was
alone, except for the watchers scattered around me.
Hours passed. The moon came out. From time to time I
reported to the pool that all was quiet. My unaided
eyes could now see nothing of Gort but a faint gleam
off his polished metal skull. Through the infrared
binoculars he stood out as clearly as if in broad
daylight from only ten feet away. There was no evidence
that he was doing anything untoward.
Another hour passed. Now and again I thumbed the levels
of my Watchman--the battery was running low, and had to
be used sparingly. The air was full of Gort and my own
face and my own name, and once the tiny LCD screen
showed the scaffold on which I was sitting. Squinting,
I could even see myself. It gave me a funny feeling.
Suddenly, I saw something and quickly raised the
binoculars. Gort was softly glowing; at least the
intensity of the light emanating from the
polycarbonate-aluminum alloy block varied. It was as if
someone were illuminating his metal skin with
flashlight beams; the spots of light moved aimlessly
around his body .
Apprehensive, I opened the feed and began to describe
the phenomenon to the pool. I could imagine millions
glued to my words. Could Gort break out of that
terrible prison?
Minutes passed, the light flashes continued, but I
could discern no movement or attempted movement of the
robot's body. In brief snatches I described what I saw.
Gort was clearly alive; there could be no doubt he was
straining against the transparent prison; but unless he
could crack it, no motion should show.
I lowered the binoculars--and started. My unaided eye,
looking at Gort shrouded in darkness, saw an
astonishing thing not visible through the optics. The
faint glow was spreading over the robot's body, and it
was turning red. With trembling fingers I raised the
binoculars back to my eyes, but even as I did so the
glow grew in intensity. It looked as if Gort's body was
being heated to incandescence!
I described it in breathless fragments, attempting to
control my fear as Gort passed from dull red to a red-
hot brilliance that threatened to overwhelm the
binocular's optics. And then he moved! Unmistakably he
moved!
He was exploiting the one limitation of the plastic in
which he was locked. For Glasstex, I remembered from my
briefing, was a thermoplastic; even alloyed with
aluminum for durability and strength, it still had the
inherent weakness of plastic: get it hot enough, and it
would melt. Gort was melting his way out!
In three-word snatches, I described what I saw. The
robot became cherry-red, and the whole structure began
to sag. The process accelerated until the robot's body
moved freely within the plastic shell. The top of the
block lowered to the crown of his head, then to his
neck, then his waist, which was as far as I could see.
And then, still cherry-red, he moved forward out of
sight!
Standing on my tiptoes, I strained my eyes and ears,
but caught nothing but the distant roar of the watchers
beyond the police lines and a few low, sharp commands
from the batteries posted around me. They, too, had
heard, and perhaps seen on their monitors, and were
waiting .
Several minutes passed. Then there was a sharp, ringing
clang and the great metal doors of the museum flew
open. Gort was still faintly glowing. He stood stock
still, his single white eye pulsing. It appeared to
scan side to side through the darkness, ready to
strike.
A voice in the dark bellowed orders and in a twinkling
Gort was bathed in crisscrossing beams of dazzling
white light. Behind him the metal doors began to
shudder and throw off sparks as bullets ricocheted in
all directions. If Gort was affected by the onslaught
of heavy caliber slugs he didn't show it. Then the
world seemed to come to an end as everything around me
exploded in smoke and chaos. The scaffold whipped to
one side so that I was nearly thrown off. Pieces of
debris rained down. The tank had fired, and Gort, I was
sure, had been hit.
I held on tight and peered into the haze. As it cleared
I made out a stirring among the debris at the door, and
then dimly but unmistakably I saw the great form of
Gort stride forward two short steps. There was no sign
on his flawless metal skin that the shell had even
struck him. Before the tank could fire again, a deadly
stab of energy emanated from Gort's pulsing white eye
and struck the barrel halfway down, turning it
instantly white. The front half of the barrel sagged
and the muzzle struck the ground.
A second stab of energy silenced the fifty-caliber
machine gun trained forward out of the turret and then
a quick succession of other stabs silenced the weapons
of the Bradley Fighting Vehicles up the street. There
was then only the sound of small arms fire and even
this tapered off as the various law enforcement and
military personnel ran for shelter. It was apparent
that nothing short of a nuclear weapon would stop the
robot. Then Gort turned and looked directly at me.
"Oh, no," I whimpered. "Please, no."
He moved toward me, and in a moment was under the
scaffold. I moved as far away as I could get on the
wooden platform, looking desperately for a way down.
There was none. Then Gort raised one club-fisted arm
and struck the scaffold a mighty blow and the uprights
kicked out from beneath it. Gort caught me with almost
deftless ease as the scaffold crashed down on its side.
"Noooo!" I trilled, struggling ineffectively against
the robot's iron grip. "Let me go!"
Gort did not hurt me but neither did he let me go. He
held me out at arm's length for a moment, as though
determining if I were injured, then placed me in the
crook of his right arm, as I might carry an infant.
Incredibly, the texture of his skin was almost like
that of human flesh, it was even warm. Lowering the
cowl over his deadly pulsing eye, he then turned and
without hesitation started down the path which led
westward away from the building.
I rode helplessly with him. Out over the lawns I saw
the muzzles of a hundred rifles move as they tracked
Gort--and myself--but they did not fire. Gort, by
placing me in the crook of his arm, had secured himself
against that--at least I hoped so. I also understood,
on some deep, instinctual level, that it wasn't for
Gort's protection that he did this. Neither was it for
mine. I had an almost unshakable belief that Gort, if
fired upon, would have no choice but to fire back. And
since the effects of such an exchange would be so one-
sided, what he was doing, in effect, was protecting his
attackers. So far, Gort had shown amazing reserve in
the extent of his reprisals.
The robot bore straight toward the Tidal Basin. Dozens
of soldiers hurriedly kept pace. Far back, I saw a dark
tide of confusion roll into the cleared area around the
building--the police lines had broken. Ahead, the
onlookers thinned rapidly off to the sides; rolling in
behind us again as we passed. Few people ventured
nearer than fifty yards.
Gort paid them no attention. He moved along with swift,
graceful motion. I was as comfortable in his grip as I
would be tucked into my favorite chair. I felt what
could almost be considered the movement of underlying
muscles as he took each step. To me, this metal
musculature became a vivid wonder.
Over paths, across lawns and through thin rows of
trees, Gort bore on toward the Tidal Basin, the murmur
of thousands of people following close by. Above
circled helicopters with their spotlights stabbing down
on us; I could see police cruisers lining up along
every curb I could see. Every police officer in the
city must have been mobilized, I thought.
Just ahead lay our destination: the still, cold waters
of the Tidal Basin. At its center reposed the simple
marble tomb of the slain ambassador, Klaatu. It gleamed
black and cold in the light of the dozen searchlights
always trained on it at night. Was this a rendezvous
with the dead?
Without an instant's hesitation, Gort strode down the
bank and entered the water. It rose to his knees, then
waist; I had to raise my feet to keep them from being
immersed. The robot made his inevitable way straight
through the dark waters toward the tomb of Klaatu, the
dark square mass of gleaming marble rising higher as we
neared it. Then we were at the rising pyramid of steps,
climbing them, and in a moment we were at the top, on
the narrow platform in the middle of which rested the
simple oblong tomb.
Stark in the blinding searchlights, the giant robot
walked once around the tomb, then, bending, he braced
himself and gave a mighty push against the top. The
marble cracked; the thick cover slid askew and crashed
down with a deafening noise on the far side. Gort bent
over and looked within, holding me well up over the
edge.
Inside, in sharp shadow against the converging beams of
the searchlights, lay a transparent plastic coffin,
thick walled and sealed against the centuries. It
contained the mortal remains of Klaatu, unspoken
visitor from the great Unknown. Inside, he lay as if
asleep, on his face a look of godlike nobility. He wore
the suit in which he had arrived. There were no faded
flowers, no jewelry, no ornaments; they would have
seemed profane. At the foot of the coffin lay a small
sealed box, also of transparent plastic, which
contained a complete but accordingly small record of
his visit--many of the pictures I had snapped were
inside.
I sat very still, wishing I could read the thoughts of
the robot. Gort did not move from his position of
almost reverent contemplation--not for a long time.
There on the brilliantly lighted platform, under the
eyes of a fearful, tumultuous multitude, Gort paid
final respect to his beautiful and adored master.
Suddenly, it was over. Gort reached out and took the
little box of records in his left hand, rose to his
full eight foot height and started down the steps. Back
through the water he went, straight across lawns and
paths as before, back to the museum. Before him the
chaotic ring of people melted away; behind they
followed as close as they dared, trampling each other
in their efforts to keep him in sight. A thousand
digital recorders documented his journey.
As we drew near the building, I saw that the tank's
deflected projectile had made a hole nearly twenty feet
wide in the museum's facade. The door on the right hung
drunkenly from its bottom hinge; the one on the right
had been reduced to flotsam. Gort, hardly varying his
fluid motion, made his way over the debris and went
straight for the port end of the ship. I wondered if I
would be set free.
I was. The robot set me down on my feet and pointed
toward the exit; then, turning, he made the sounds that
opened the ship and the ramp slid down with its soft
hiss. He climbed the ramp and entered the ship.
Then I did the mad, courageous thing which made me
famous for a generation. Just as the ramp started
sliding back into the ship, I dashed up it and through
the port. As it closed the world behind me held its
collective breath and waited.
SEVEN
It was pitch dark, and the silence was absolute. I did
not move. I felt that Gort was close by, just ahead,
and wondered what he would do. I didn't have long to
wonder.
"Oh!" I gasped as a hand took me gently by the waist
and guided me along a corridor. "You won't hurt me?" I
wanted to say to the immense shape hovering somewhere
above me. I had never felt so small and so helpless.
Then unseen light sources suddenly bathed the
surroundings with bluish light and I felt better.
I entered a room through a doorway which had not
existed one moment and then did the next, and was
guided safely into one corner. Gort stepped back and
stood looking down at me. I already regretted my rash
action, but the robot, with its always unfathomable
featureless face, did not seem angry. He pointed to a
stool and I quickly sat down.
I was in a small laboratory of some kind. Complicated
apparatus lined the walls and covered several small
tables; I did not recognize or guess the function of a
single piece. Dominating the center of the room was a
long metal table on whose top lay a large metal box, (a
coffin, my stunned mind insisted), connected by a thick
round conduit to a complicated apparatus at the far
end. It was illuminated by a device that seem not to
have any light source, but nonetheless blanketed the
box in glaring, white light.
One item, sitting on a nearby table, seemed very much
out of place. From where I sat it looked to be a brief
case--an ordinary business person's brief case--made of
fine, hand-tooled leather. A combination lock set just
below the handle--and a set of gold-impressed initials
in the leather, D.A.S.it read--confirmed its
incongruity.
Gort paid me no further attention. With the knife-like
edge of a buzzing yellow tool, he sliced the lid off
the box of records. He lifted out the shiny disk of a
recorded DVD and spent fully half an hour adjusting it
within the apparatus at the end of the big table. I
watched, fascinated, wondering at the skill with which
the robot used his thick, stubby metal fingers. This
done, Gort worked for a long time over some accessory
apparatus on an adjoining table, then, pausing
thoughtfully a moment, he pushed forward a long metal
rod.
A deep, thrumming rumble started up in the deck beneath
my feet--no, it seemed to emanate from everywhere at
once: the walls, the ceiling, the very air I was
breathing--and rose through ever higher and higher
octaves, not stopping until everything in the room--
including my fillings--vibrated in harmony. It became
so load and so high pitched that I stumbled off the
stool and jammed myself back into the corner, hands
over my ears and my mouth flung wide open, shrieking in
agony. Just when I thought I would go mad from the
onslaught of noise... it ceased.
A voice came from the coffin like box--the voice of the
slain ambassador.
"I am Klaatu," it said. "We have come from far away on
a mission of peace. My companion is Gort. We--"
I was the first and only words the ambassador had
spoken! But, then, in the very next instant I saw that
it was not a recording--a man stirred within the box
and sat up. It was Klaatu.
"Oh, my God," I mumbled and pressed even harder into
the corner. My eyes flicked back and forth between
robot and man. I made strange noises in my throat.
Klaatu, looking confused and disoriented, blinked
rapidly half a dozen times, stared uncomprehendingly at
me. Then he spoke quickly in an unknown tongue to Gort.
Gort, to my amazement, spoke in answer. His syllables
flowed forth as from a human tongue, and the expression
on Klaatu's face changed from surprise to wonder. They
talked for several more minutes, then Klaatu,
apparently fatigued, and with Gort's assistance,
extricated himself from the box.
"Gort has told me everything," he said in a low, gentle
voice. He looked at me for a moment in silence, then
broke into a faint, tired smile.
I had a hundred questions to ask, a thousand, but for a
moment dared not open my mouth. Nothing would have come
out but a stammer.
"I am not the Klaatu that was in the tomb," the space
traveler said. "You understand that."
I managed to nod.
"When our ship first landed and the person you knew as
Klaatu was--" He paused here, searching for the right
words. "--rendered unliving, Gort was at a loss on how
to proceed. He has great powers but feared using them
lest your civilization be sent into a panic. He
debilitated only those weapons close enough to pose a
threat to the open ship, then immobilized himself once
the ramp was withdrawn and the port closed. He remained
immobile whenever in the presence of your kind.
"When the museum was built and the lectures began, he
formulated a course of action. The interactive booths
you have outside are connected to a great worldwide
network you call the Internet. Through it he assembled
much of the apparatus you see before you, ordering it
online and having it delivered to the laboratory built
to examine this ship." He smiled wryly. "Much of it was
billed directly to your own institution . . . the
Smithsonian, I believe you call it?"
I nodded, unable to help smiling myself.
"The DNA required for my reformation was, of course,
available aboard the ship. Gort had only to perfect the
means of exacting that reformation, which he did
through experimentation over the past few days. That
technology is ready available where we come from, but
of course can not included aboard due to the obvious
limitations of space." He looked wonderingly at Gort.
"The technical requirements to execute my revival have
been, to say the least, enormous."
"What about the crypt?" I asked. "What was the purpose
of going there?"
"Gort believed that the recordings chronicling our
arrival might be of help in easing me back into life,
and besides," he said, looking with a peculiar mixture
of admonishment and affection towards the robot, "I
believe he wanted to see me one last time before he
left."
I nodded thoughtfully. Then, remembering the way Gort
had so carefully lined up the row of dead bodies along
the museum wall, asked sadly: "How long will you live?"
Klaatu shrugged. "I don't know. Gort doesn't know. The
process is only as good as the equipment used to
perform it, and unfortunately . . ."
There was no need to complete the thought. I could well
imagine trying to perform a delicate brain procedure in
the filth and squalor of the eighteenth century. I
nodded toward the leather briefcase on the table. "That
belongs to David Stillwell?"
Klaatu nodded."It had samples of not only his own DNA,
but those of a bird and a large vertibrate-primate. It
appears the gentleman had dealings with many aspects of
your institution."
I remembered one of the scientist's telling me that
Stillwell wrote and recorded many of the narratives
used throughout the museums. That probably included the
Museum of Natural History and possibly even the
National Zoo, either of which might offer fragments of
DNA. All it would take would be a strand of hair or a
particle of dermis adhering to the surface of his
briefcase.
"Will you be returning?" I asked.
"Myself, no. Gort possibly, sometime in the future. Our
imperative right now is to return to our home port at
the greatest dispatch. Only there can my life-essence
be reconstituted suitably. In the meantime," he said,
smiling kindly, "I'm certain you have no desire to
leave your home world behind. It is a long trip and I
have very little time left so please, accept my thanks
and depart."
I stood before the dying ambassador, tears stinging my
eyes. I thought of the woeful reception the man had
received from Planet Earth, and the miserable salute he
might receive leaving. There was no telling what stupid
act might follow my exit from the ship. On impulse, I
leaned forward and kissed the ambassador full on the
mouth. 'There," I said, my voice cracking, "that's to
show you that we're not all stupid jerks here on
Earth." Then I kissed him again. "Goodbye, Ambassador."
"Goodbye," Klaatu muttered. He looked almost stricken.
He touched his lips. "And thank you, Clea. For myself,
and for Gort."
I looked up at the robot. "I'd kiss him too, but he's a
little out of my range." Instead, I squeezed the
mammoth robot's forearm. "Goodbye, Gort," I said.
Gort said nothing.
Without a word, the robot conducted me back to the
port. He made the sounds that unlocked it and, as it
opened, a noisy crowd of onlookers outside trampled
each other in a sudden scramble to get out of the
building. The wing was lighted with hi-intensity
strobes. I stepped onto the ramp.
"Gort," I said on impulse, turning back as the ramp
started to withdraw, "Will you do one thing for me? I
know Klaatu won't make it back to your home world and
I'm sorry for that. I'm also sorry for all the stupid
things that happened here to you and for my part in
that too. Would you please tell your master--the one
you'll resurrect when you get where you're going--that
what happened to him was an accident, for which all
Earth is immeasurably sorry--even if it really isn't?
Will you do that for me?"
"I have known that all along, Clea Sutherland," the
robot answered gently.
"But will you promise to tell your master--just in
those very words--as soon as he is revived?"
"You misunderstand," said Gort, still gently, stepping
back as the port began to close. I hurried down the
ramp, jumping the final foot and a half to the floor as
the ramp disappeared from beneath my feet.
When I recovered I stared at the vanished port in
stunned disbelief. A deep thrumming sound began to grow
in the air. When it was apparent what it was that sound
meant, I scrambled back out of the way, then ran full
out for the ruined front entrance, dashing outside. I
didn't stop until I reached the abandoned police
barricade at the street. There, while the robot's final
words rang in my ears like the tolling of a powerful
bell, I watched the great spaceship lift out of sight
into the recesses of the high museum roof, then
effortlessly tear that roof asunder. As large pieces of
the structure crashed back to earth and the shape of
the spacecraft quickly receded into the void of the
night sky and then finally disappeared, I vowed never
to disclose those final words. Not to the day I died.
"You misunderstand," the mighty robot had said. "I am
the master."
THE END
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Please keep this story, and all erotic stories out of
the hands of children. They should be outside playing
in the sunshine, not thinking about adult situations.
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Kristen's collection - TV, Sitcom & Movie Archive