<h2>17</h2>
<p>Jed looked quickly at Cal when he told him how the colonists had
spooked, bolted in panic. As if he expected disbelief.</p>
<p>"Maybe that seems funny to you," he commented. "After taking
so much we'd spook like crazy animals and hightail for the woods
over not making footprints."</p>
<p>"Pretty fundamental thing," Cal said with a shrug. "Animals are
aware of spoor long before they are aware of tools. It hit deep
down into fundamental being, a thing like that."</p>
<p>Jed looked relieved. Hussein and Van Tassel exchanged glances,
as if confirming their belief that an E would understand their
problems. Cal appreciated the confidence expressed in that
glance, but did not feel it was justified. It was now pretty obvious
that this was some alien co-ordinate system, never before encountered
by man. But how to get hold of it? How to reconcile with it?
Coexist with it?</p>
<p>Never before encountered by man? What if the myths of early
man be true? And too authentic the legends of his being a pawn
to the will of the gods? Could there have been some factual basis
for the gods? And not, as was supposed, rationalizations dreamed
up by man to account for the control of phenomena at a level
beyond his own power to control?</p>
<p>"It's been bad since then," Jed continued. "Seems like once they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
got the wind up, the whole thing hit them all over again. Like
cattle in a stampede, they didn't have a lick of sense. They
didn't even stay together. They scattered in all directions, hid out
in the bushes from each other.</p>
<p>"You could hunt for 'em, call for 'em, yell your lungs out. You
could pass within ten feet of one of 'em, callin', pleadin', and they
wouldn't say a word. Just stand there and watch you like a
hunted animal, not even breathin' lest you discover them.</p>
<p>"After a couple of days, some of us kind of pulled ourselves
together—me and Martha, Ahmed and Dirk here. Maybe a dozen
of us now have got together again. Funny thing though, even so,
all we want is to hide. Can't get over hidin', somehow. That's
why you didn't see us from the air. We was hidin' from you.</p>
<p>"Martha, couple other womenfolks, they practically had to
push us out of the woods to come greet you, lead you to us. They
wouldn't come themselves, being naked and all. They told us,
first thing was to get some clothes for them from the ship.</p>
<p>"We was countin' on the arrival of your ship to bring the rest
of the colonists back to their senses. Some ain't been found yet,
not since the footprint thing. If they were watchin' you from
hidin' places, if they also saw your ship disappear—well now, I
just don't know."</p>
<p>"There'll be another ship from Earth," Cal said. "In a matter of
fifteen or twenty hours at most. We were communicating at the
time. They'll know we didn't cut out through choice."</p>
<p>"Yes," Tom Lynwood confirmed. "As I remember, I got cut off
in the middle of a sentence. They'll know something was wrong."</p>
<p>"There's another ship out there right now," Cal added. "Not
an E.H.Q. ship, but one that would have seen what happened.
We'll not count on anything from them, but an E.H.Q. ship will
be here soon, probably with an E on board—McGinnis."</p>
<p>"Don't know what good it would do," Jed said despondently.
"That ship might disappear, too, soon as it landed. And the next,
and the next."</p>
<p>"I don't plan to let it land," Cal told them. "You'll notice nothing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
happened to us until we touched ground. I'll find a way to talk
to the ship, keep it from landing until we've got a line on
whatever this is."</p>
<p>"You figger to solve this one?" Jed asked curiously, unbelieving.</p>
<p>"I'm going to try," Cal said with more confidence than he felt.
"It's what I'm here for. Maybe I can't solve it, but I can try."</p>
<p>"I don't know how you're going to start," Dirk spoke up. "We're
just like animals here. We can't use tools."</p>
<p>"But animals do use tools," Cal answered after a moment.
"Materials, anyway. Birds build nests using sticks, grass, clay.
Monkeys and apes throw sticks and stones. Even insects use
materials. Basic difference between man and the rest is that man
gives special shapes to tools, where mainly the rest use whatever
falls to hand. But all higher, organized protoplasmic life uses
tools in one form or another."</p>
<p>"We ain't allowed to," Jed said emphatically. "Not even what's
at hand. Somebody, or somethin', is bound and determined we
ain't goin' to."</p>
<p>At that moment Cal felt close to a solution, or at least an
understanding of the nature of the problem, which is the first
step toward solution. But like the specter seen in twilight from the
corner of the eye, as soon as he tried to focus on the problem, the
concept disappeared. Something about protoplasmic life using
materials. Non-protoplasmic life? Could there be, and still meet
the definitions of what constitute life? As compared with our
evolution, from its earliest beginning finding some other approach
to the manipulation of the physical universe? A totally alien kind
of science? Come to think of it, the use of material to affect other
material was a cumbersome, indirect, awkward way of going
about it, as compared with ...</p>
<p>Compared with what?</p>
<p>The concept would not yet allow him full focus upon it. He
filed it away for future contemplation.</p>
<p>He saw Dawkins and the other colonists looking at him defiantly,
as if interpreting his silence to be doubt of their veracity about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
the taboo on tools. Their eyes challenged him to disbelieve them,
to find out for himself.</p>
<p>"Other than the feeling of being watched," he said carefully,
"have you had any sign, any other evidence or indication of
somebody, or something? I know about the feeling, because I feel
it too. And very strongly, right now. But any specific evidence?"</p>
<p>Jed Dawkins looked relieved at the confession.</p>
<p>"Everything's the evidence. Everything that's happened. What
more evidence would you want?" he said.</p>
<p>"One of the strongest arguments in favor of something, or some
kind of intelligence," Cal said slowly, "is that nobody's been hurt.
All natural law hasn't been canceled. We still have light radiation,
heat radiation, gravity, water still flows, the planet still turns.
Trees still grow and fruit still ripens. We can talk and be understood,
using our tongues and minds as tools. We can still eat and
drink. We can still know.</p>
<p>"This is no chaotic co-ordinate system that defies all natural law.
This is a deliberate manipulation of some natural laws to get a
result. Man manipulates natural laws by the use of tools and
materials, but he doesn't suspend them. Here, apparently without
tools, at least tools we can perceive, natural law is manipulated,
but not suspended.</p>
<p>"When the village disappeared, no one was hurt. A lot of
people were caught in awkward positions and fell, some of them
several feet. There should have been at least a few broken bones,
pulled ligaments. There weren't. Our ship landed safely. We were
a long time in the atmosphere of Eden, and for a few minutes
there on the ground we were still using tools of a high order.
It was only when danger of real harm to us was past that the ship
disappeared."</p>
<p>"I reckon it's comfortin' to know we ain't meant to be hurt," Jed
said, and looked at his two companions. "I guess it is," he repeated
doubtfully. "Maybe it ain't something as nice and familiar as a
cyclone, or a den of rattlesnakes, something you could understand,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
but you got to admit we ain't been hurt yet." It was as if he were
arguing the point with his companions.</p>
<p>"Something I've been noting, Jed," Ahmed spoke up. "A
discrepancy of a sort that has me puzzled. Sun reckoning, we've
been able to keep our minds on this subject for over two hours
now. As if, whatever this is manipulating natural laws can also
manipulate the way our minds work."</p>
<p>"Yeah," Jed admitted slowly, his face thoughtful. He turned to
Cal. "Like I said at the start. Our minds have sort of wandered of
late. Start to do something, and first thing y'know, we're doin'
something else. Can't keep our minds on one thing very long—like
animals."</p>
<p>"That might be no more than the aftermath of deep shock,"
Cal said.</p>
<p>"It's for a purpose!"</p>
<p>Startled at the outburst, they all turned and looked at Louie.</p>
<p>"It's for a purpose," Louie repeated in a kind of rapture. "They
want us to understand we are being watched over, cared for.
That colonist you all laughed at was right. This is the first Garden
of Eden, where man lived in complete innocence. Now man has
been returned to it, to live again in complete innocence. You do
not think straight because there is no reason. You will be cared
for. Woe unto him who seeks to despoil it again by seeking vain
knowledge!"</p>
<p>His eyes were wild, his face contorted with a mixture of
exaltation and condemnation.</p>
<p>"Shut up, Louie," Tom said in a low, firm voice.</p>
<p>"We understand," Jed said tolerantly. "Some of the colonists
are talkin' the same way. He's got plenty of company."</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span></p>
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