<h2>18</h2>
<p>All the rest of that day, and throughout the following, Cal and Tom
worked with Jed in trying to round up the colonists, get them
living together again.</p>
<p>By agreement, Ahmed and Dirk stayed with the small band of
colonists that had overcome their fears enough to mingle together
again. Louie frankly deserted his shipmates, and spent all his
time with the colonists. Frank, as if reverting to his childhood
farming days, occupied himself with trying to round up the stock.
He tried to keep the cows separated from their calves so the
colonists would have milk to drink, but without ropes or corrals
it was hopeless. He finally gave up his attempt to husband the
stock, and he too seemed content then to mingle with the colonists.</p>
<p>The marked change in Louie could not be ignored, for he was
not idling away his time in lazy feeding and sleeping. He had
dropped his lifelong pose of superficial complaint that the fates
always gave him the dirty end of the stick, and now he spent
his time preaching to the little band of colonists. Or wandering
through the forests and undergrowth calling, praying, comforting.</p>
<p>Cal felt no condemnation for him. He was not the first man,
seemingly dedicated to science, who, confronted with mysteries
beyond his power to comprehend, reverted to childlike superstitious
awe for an explanation. In the face of mystery or catastrophe,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
it takes a faith beyond the capacity of most to continue believing
that the universe has a rational order to its laws that can be
comprehended if man persists. It is temptingly easy for man to
revert back to the irresponsibility of childhood, assuming that the
control of phenomena is in the hands of those stronger, wiser
than he. It takes a strength, in the face of this temptation, to go on
believing that man <i>can</i> know, that it is not morally wrong for
him to know.</p>
<p>No blame then for Louie.</p>
<p>Tom was torn in his loyalties. He frequently remembered that
away from E.H.Q. the crew become the E's attendants, and that
their first duty is always to the E. But separation from the other
two men of his crew was like the loss of a part of himself. To
these also he had a duty. He tried to solve his problem by
alternating his time, spending part of it with Cal, the remainder
with his crew.</p>
<p>Cal and Jed made a trip the following morning across the ridge,
and found the dissident group huddled together in abject terror.
They had seen the ship coming down through the atmosphere
and, all together, they had climbed the ridge, where one of their
scouts had recently gone, to watch the ship's landing—and its
disappearance.</p>
<p>Once they were found, it took little persuasion to convince
them they should return to the other colonists, that differences
of opinion meant nothing now as against the need of human
beings to cling together in the face of catastrophe.</p>
<p>But they too were having trouble thinking in a straight line,
and even though they first appeared eager to join the other
colonists, it took some doing to keep them all together and moving
forward to cross the ridge, to come down the other side, to
assemble again at the site of the village with the others.</p>
<p>And yet, within minutes, neither band seemed to remember
that they had ever been separated.</p>
<p>By the time they had returned, it was apparent that Louie was
succeeding where Jed had failed in finding the colonists. In the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
few hours that had elapsed, the nucleus had tripled in size.
Louie's wandering through the brush, calling, pleading with them
to follow him, promising there was no danger if they would
allow him to watch over them, intercede for them with Those who
had caused all this, had indeed coaxed them from their hiding
places, calmed their fears.</p>
<p>And still through the day he toiled, finding them, bringing
them back into the fold, one and two and three at a time, until,
at last, by Jed's count, all were there, no more missing.</p>
<p>And yet, in spite of his success, there was a kind of hurt and
disappointment in Louie's eyes. For once back, they not only forgot
their fears, they seemed also to forget him. They coalesced
into a placid herd, without memory of their panic. Without
memory of the shepherd who had found the lost sheep and returned
them to the fold.</p>
<p>They wandered among the trees and bushes, picking fruit and
nuts, eating leaves and stems and flowers of plants. They wandered
down to the river to lie prone on the sand, dip their faces
into the clear cold water to drink. During the heat of the day
they bathed in the river, and as they lay on white sand or grassy
slopes to dry, they slept contentedly.</p>
<p>The phenomenon was not as startling to Cal as it might have
seemed to others.</p>
<p>On Earth, gradually learned through trial and error, experimental
colonists were not picked for their jobs because of flexible,
incisive, or brilliant minds. Quite the contrary. The basic test of
a successful colonist was endurance—the endurance of hardship,
privation, the stoic indifference to conditions of discomfort,
monotony, pain, uncleanliness, immodesty—conditions which
would send a more imaginative or sensitive temperament into
a downward-spiraling syndrome of failure. They were the kind
of men and women who, on Earth in an earlier time, had been
able to endure the harshness of the sea, of arctic cold, jungle disease,
desert heat; to make those first steps in taming a hostile
environment, so that men with less endurance, but with more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
delicately poised and sensitive minds, following them might then
endure.</p>
<p>It was characteristic of such men and women, even under
Earth conditions, that they seldom questioned their reasons for
these things. They simply went, and endured, and tamed. Even
on Earth, when the taming had been done, they moved on. This
was the stuff of the experimental colonist.</p>
<p>Now, here, that temperament still persisted. They had fled in
panic, but now they had returned to their original purpose—to
endure. It was enough.</p>
<p>Louie was to learn, in disappointment, that failure to be curious
about scientific reasoning was usually accompanied by an equal
failure to be curious about philosophical implications. They
listened idly to his exhortations, but their eyes did not light with
fire nor cloud with doubt. They simply wandered away after
a time and ate or slept.</p>
<p>In the evening of that second day, Cal sat with Tom and Jed
down by the bank of the river where the sky was clear and the
stars beginning to shine. They were talking quietly of home, of
Eden, of the colonists who, more and more, seemed to take on
the character of a contented herd of animals. So far there had
been no attempt of the old males to drive the young ones out of
the herd, destroy them, but that might come in time; as surely
as the old males on Earth by tacit agreement on both sides, were
always able to work up a war for the purpose of weeding out
and destroying lusty young male competition.</p>
<p>They were talking of the curious fact that all three of them
seemed able to continue thinking in a straight line, hold their
minds to a subject, while all the rest grew more vague, less
retentive, more content to live from moment to moment, without
concern for past or future.</p>
<p>Except Louie. He too seemed able to hold his thinking in a
straight line, one tangential to theirs. He seemed, in these hours,
to have turned wholly mystical, to a stronger belief that they
were being watched and cared for by some higher power, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
that this was for a purpose. Yet not so tangential, for Cal had
come to the same conclusion, although his interpretation differed.</p>
<p>"I can't doubt that there is an intelligent direction of this
peculiar co-ordinate system," he said to Tom and Jed. "But I
must doubt it is supernatural in the way Louie interprets. Anything
appears to be magic when we don't understand how it
happens, and becomes science when we do."</p>
<p>He paused, and looked at his companions' faces in the starshine.
They were quiet, reposed, listening.</p>
<p>"Ever since man got up off the bottom of his ocean of air," he
said, "and out into space, we've been prepared to run into some
form of intelligence which doesn't behave the way we do. Not
prepared to do anything about it, you understand," he said with
a shrug. "Just theoretically prepared that it might happen. It was
a possibility. Now it does seem to have happened. E McGinnis
asked me, before I left Earth, if I thought Eden was an alluring
trap, especially baited to catch some human beings. It begins to
appear that it is."</p>
<p>"I've caught many a wild animal in my day," Jed said slowly,
thoughtfully. "I've pinned 'em up in cages, watched how they
behaved. I guess scientists do that all the time. Don't want to
hurt 'em, fact make 'em as comfortable as they can—just want to
know about 'em. Sometimes, after I watched them awhile I'd
turn 'em aloose and watch 'em scoot back to their natural world.
That could happen to us. Sometimes they'd die, and I wouldn't
know why. That could happen. Some animals won't bear young
in captivity. We can't because of an operation. Maybe whatever's
holdin' us don't know that, and might turn us aloose when, after
a time, we don't bear any young."</p>
<p>He paused and looked even more thoughtful.</p>
<p>"Sometimes," he added slowly, "after I studied 'em, found out
how they would behave no matter what, I had to kill 'em, because
they was too dangerous to let run around among humans. That
could happen."</p>
<p>"I haven't done much trapping," Tom said. "But in zoos I've<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
watched animals in cages. The thought always came to me that
if they could think the way we do, they could just open their
cages and walk away."</p>
<p>"Now you take turkeys," Jed answered. "Pin 'em up with a high
fence, they'll back up, take off and fly over it. But pin 'em with
a low fence, and they won't. Seems like they know they have to
fly over a high obstruction, but don't figger on it for a low one.
Sometimes they flutter up against it, or try to push it over, but
most of the time they just walk around and around in the yard
lookin' for an opening."</p>
<p>"Natural survival pattern," Cal commented. "In the woods, in
their natural state, when they came up against a fallen log, it
took more effort to lift their heavy bodies in flight over it than it
took to walk around the log. It became a fixed pattern of behavior
to walk around it."</p>
<p>"That's what they do with a low fence then," Jed said. "They
just keep tryin' to walk around the obstruction. Not enough sense
to treat it like a high fence, because it ain't high, see? No use
tryin' to tell 'em it's high, because they know it ain't. So they
can't solve it. Seems awful stupid, somehow, a little low fence,
all that blue sky above 'em, and they can't figger it out."</p>
<p>"I suspect that's what's happening to us," Cal said. "We've always
argued that wherever there is matter and energy in the
universe, certain natural laws will prevail. We've learned ways
to take advantage of those natural laws, to do certain things that
will make them work for us instead of against us.</p>
<p>"We've always argued that for any kind of intelligence to arise
in the universe it, too, would have to become aware of these
natural laws; that it, too, would have to do these same certain
things to take advantage of those laws; that because the laws
and what to do about them would always be similar man would
have a lot in common with that other intelligence, and a means
of communicating because of that similarity.</p>
<p>"We'd argue that whatever its evolutionary physical shape, this
wasn't so important as its mental evolution—because that mental<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
evolution would follow the same course as ours. They wouldn't
be truly alien, because science would be a common denominator.</p>
<p>"Now it appears we could be wrong. Maybe our concept of
science is too narrow. Maybe we're like the turkey. We've become
so fixed in our pattern of solving a problem we can't change, can't
back off and take another look, see the problem not as it appears
but as it really is."</p>
<p>"But isn't that the science of E?" Tom asked curiously. "To be
able to extrapolate any co-ordinate system? I'm not criticizing,"
he added hastily. "Just asking."</p>
<p>"I suspect even our means of extrapolation are too limited, too
based on the relationship of things and forces to each other, too
set in the notion that only physical tools can affect physical things.
We may be looking at a low fence, calling it a log, and therefore
not able to understand why we can't walk around the
obstruction in the usual manner." He stopped, and added with
a shrug. "Stupid, maybe. Or like the turkey, the yard is so big
that he never gets a picture of it as a whole enclosure. By the
time he's wandered down this side of the fence he's forgot what
he found on the other side. Never can put the whole thing together
in his mind. That's my trouble, anyhow. So far, I'm not able to
put the whole thing together, see it all as one piece.</p>
<p>"When I do, if I do, then maybe like a caged animal I'll see
how to unlock an opening, or maybe realize the only way out is
to fly."</p>
<p>There beside the softly flowing river, where water was obeying
natural law without any trouble, the three men broke off their
discussion when they saw a bright flash high in the sky above
them. All three knew what it meant.</p>
<p>Another E ship had arrived.</p>
<p>No doubt the ship would expect light signals from the colonists
in acknowledgment of their space flare.</p>
<p>If the ship had come while this portion of the planet was still
in daylight, they would have seen there was no village, no ship,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
no equipment for direct communication. They may even have
reasoned there was no means of signaling with artificial light.</p>
<p>But there was nothing to tell them that those on Eden could
not build a fire.</p>
<p>As if they were present on the ship themselves, the three men
could anticipate what must be happening there. Right now they
would be anxiously waiting for signal flares to light up, to spring
up like signal fires on a lonely island where a marooned man has,
at last, sighted a ship on the horizon.</p>
<p>The colonists were no longer hiding, but were freely wandering
in open spaces. If the ship had arrived before dusk they would
have seen the men and women in the viewscopes. If after dusk,
they still might have spotted them in the infrared viewers which
picked up the heat differentials and gave a fair approximation of
shapes.</p>
<p>The men on the ship would be waiting and looking at their
watches. How long, they would be asking, does it take those
colonists, that E down there, to get a signal fire going?</p>
<p>About five minutes passed, and another flare lighted the
heavens.</p>
<p>"Get off the dime down there!" it seemed to say. "Acknowledge
us!"</p>
<p>Cal took the chance that they might have an infrared viewscope
directly on him, and he waved his arms above his head.
But apparently they had not spotted him, for there was no
answering flare.</p>
<p>At intervals of five minutes at first, then later cut to fifteen
minutes, throughout the long night the flares continued to light
the sky.</p>
<p>"Talk to us," the flares begged. "Surely you were expecting us.
Surely you would not all be sleeping so soundly that our light
could not rouse you."</p>
<p>Several times the three men stood up and waved their arms,
but it brought no answer from the ship. In the darkness perhaps<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
the equipment wasn't good enough. Perhaps in the night breeze
bushes and trees also swayed with movement.</p>
<p>Once there was a rustle in the brush, and in the starlight they
recognized the figure of Louie approaching them.</p>
<p>"This has got to stop," he said worriedly as he came up to
them. "That light is an unnatural thing. It will anger Them. It
is not meant for the peace of Eden to be disturbed by any
artificial thing. And if They should turn Their wrath upon us—woe,
woe!"</p>
<p>His face was stricken in the light of a new flare, and as suddenly
as he had come to object, he left, plunged back under the trees
to seek his people, be beside them, comforting them when
disaster struck down.</p>
<p>After a time the three men gave up trying to wave their
acknowledgment of the flares in darkness. They watched for an
hour or so, and then tried to sleep. The periodic flares continued
to come throughout the long night, as if now no longer pleading
for acknowledgment, but rather reassuring men in such deep distress
that they could not answer. Reassuring them that help was
at hand and morning would come.</p>
<p>They tried to sleep, and although fitfully disturbed by the
continuing flares, they did sleep. But at the first hint of dawn,
Cal awoke and aroused his two companions, and by the time
there was enough light for the ship to see clear detail upon the
ground, the three men were ready for a better attempt at answering
the ship's signal.</p>
<p>They went up to the village site, where the colonists were sleeping
in the way a herd is bedded down together. They awoke
Frank and Martha, Ahmed and Dirk, and told them of their
plan. Louie, too, awoke, heard the plan, and tried to warn them
against it. Any attempt, he said, to communicate with those not
on Eden would surely increase the wrath of Those who wanted
only the natural state here—a wrath still withheld because of
superhuman mercy, but which must not be tried too far.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In spite of his warnings, Cal, and those co-operating with him,
got together enough colonists to carry out his plan.</p>
<p>Good-naturedly, the colonists did as they were told, but with
the attitude that it was something amusing, that there was nothing
they'd rather be doing at the moment. Any sense of urgency
about communicating with home seemed to have been washed
from their minds.</p>
<p>In a clear space, on the soft grass, Cal got the colonists to sit
or lie in certain positions. Checked against Tom's knowledge of
ancient signal patterns, those certain positions took the shape of
space-navy patterns.</p>
<p>Three men lay in a triangle. Next to that, six men sat in a
circle, and last three more men lay in another triangle. Cal hoped
someone on the ship would be able to read the ancient message.</p>
<p>"Keep clear of me. I am maneuvering with difficulty."</p>
<p>The signal had no more than formed when there was a flash
from the ship so bright that it could be seen in the morning sky.
They had read his signal, and now they began a series of flashes,
of questions. "What's going on down there?" was the essence of
their questioning.</p>
<p>It was well the ship had caught the first signal, for the colonists
lost all interest in the game which had no point. They simply
stood up and wandered away in search of their breakfasts from
the trees and bushes.</p>
<p>Louie, who had stood to one side glowering, now took charge
of them again and shepherded them to a grove of trees where
the fruit seemed especially large and succulent.</p>
<p>But now that the ship had spotted him, Cal could signal alone.
He lay down on the ground, himself, to move his arms in
semaphore positions. But even as he lay back, he became conscious
that he, too, could hardly care less. With a detached interest
that amounted to amusement at such childish, primitive
things, he watched his arms spell out one more message.</p>
<p>"Keep off! No mechanical science allowed in this co-ordinate
system."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He stood up then, and made a farewell gesture toward the
ship.</p>
<p>At that instant he felt strangely that he had passed into another
stage of growth, completed a task, cut himself off from an environment
that had held him back. What the ship did, in response to
his warnings, no longer mattered. If it landed, its personnel too
would join the colonists. If it obeyed the request of an E, it might
circle there indefinitely.</p>
<p>Indefinitely watching the turkeys circle inside their low fence,
unable to aid them, release them.</p>
<p>He did not particularly care what they did.</p>
<p>They could go on, spluttering out their signals, trying to
question him. He didn't even try to read their messages. It didn't
matter. Their science had nothing to do with him, nothing to
offer him. Through it he could not reach a solution.</p>
<p>Somehow he knew that already.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />