Children of Tomorrow by Arthur Leo Zagat (little readers .TXT) đź“•
Marilee's fingers were cold on Dikar's arm, but her laugh rippled like a little stream running over pebbles in its bed. They walked slowly away from the fire reached the shadowy edge of the woods, were closed around by the forest darkness.
"Now!" Dikar said, and he was flitting through the forest night, Marilee a silent shadow behind him. It was like her to stay close behind, like her to ask no questions as he ran through the woods to the cave again.
At the cave-mouth Dikar stopped a moment, sniffing the air. "Yes," he said, more to himself than to Marilee. "I can still smell the smoke of the fire-stick. The wet night air holds smells a long time." Then he was moving again, following the sharp tang of smoke in the air, following it away from the cave and away from the clearing.
The scent-trail led him downhill. Soon the laugh of a streamlet came to his ears and then Dikar pushed through tangling bushes and came out into starli
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But it was at the fourth wall at which Dikar stared longest. A narrow table along the full width of this. Under the table were a lot of small black boxes, and on top of it was a jumble of wires and black boards standing up and lying down, and round things marked with little white lines, and a lot of shining things like what hung from the ceiling and made light in the room. In the middle of the wall above the table was something that Dikar recognized.
It was from a thing like it that the Voice in Dikar’s dream had come, the Voice that had spoken about the dusk that had come to America, and the tomorrow that might never be. Dikar remembered the name of this thing, and said it aloud.
“A radio,” he said.
“Yes,” John said. “And now you know that you’re in one of the stations of the Secret Net.” His hands went wide. “The oldest of them, my friend. Five years I’ve operated it from here, five long years since I escaped from a concentration camp and in all the five years I have not seen the sun. In those five years I have had from that loud speaker”—he pointed to the thing on the wall that Dikar had recognized—“news of the unearthing of hundreds of our stations, news of the death of hundreds of our co-workers. Time and time again that speaker has brought me word that we were almost ready to rise against the invaders, and time and time again it has brought me word that they had found our leaders and hung them, and that all the work was to be done over again.
“Yes,” John said. “This is the oldest of the stations, now that at last Ed Stone’s gone, and I am the luckiest of the agents of the Secret Net, but tonight, my friend, I somehow have a feeling that my luck has run out. Perhaps that is only because I am tired and hungry, for Martha dares not bring me food until dark. They do not, I know, suspect that I am here, but they know I am alive, somewhere, and always they keep a sentry, out there in the woods, watching my wife and waiting for me to contact her.” He smiled, and his smile was bitter. “That is why they have permitted her so long to live on here, unmolested. But I must hear your story. I thought that the prison camps were now too well guarded for anyone to escape from them. How did you and your wife manage it? What camp do you come from?”
Dikar shook his head. “We come from no camp. I don’t even know what you mean by that word, camp.”
“You—you don’t-! You’re American, aren’t you?”
“Yes,” Dikar said. “We are American.” He knew, without just knowing how, that he could talk to this man freely and that it was important that he talk to him. “We come from the Mountain, off there beyond those woods.”
And then Dikar went on to tell John about the Bunch, and about how they came to live on the Mountain, and about their life there.
John listened without interrupting, except to ask a low-toned question or two, when Dikar stopped, and soon after Dikar started talking, Martha came in and listened too, while she tended Marilee. Dikar told about his dream, and how he had come down into this far land and seen what went on here, and how he had gone back to the Mountain.
“I knew then that somehow, sometime, I must lead the Bunch down off the Mountain and try to take back this land for America,” he came near the end of his story. “But I could not think how we few could do anything against the black and yellow men when you who are so many could do nothin’ against them. Perhaps you can tell me, John?”
“Perhaps I can,” John said, his eyes shining. “I must think. But you did come down again to us, Dikar.” (Dikar had told them his name.) “And without any plans. Why did you do that?”
Dikar told him about Tomball, and what Tomball had done, and how Tomball died.
“There you are,” John turned to Martha. “There’s the innate depravity of human nature for you. Here are these youngsters who were isolated from the world when the oldest of them was only eight, who grew up together in such an ideal communion as man has not known since Eden, and yet a renegade turns up among them who would sacrifice them all because his personal ambitions were thwarted. Doesn’t that make you despair, my dear?”
“No!” Martha answered, her hands still busy with Marilee. “No, John. Because if Dikar’s story has in it one black-souled renegade, it also has in it forty who have worked for one another and lived for one another, sweetly and unselfishly, from childhood to young man—and womanhood. Because it has in it courage and loyalty and self-sacrifice and love that was not taught out of books. Despair, John? No. Dikar’s story gives me new hope, new courage.”
John moved to Martha, where she knelt by Marilee’s bedside, and laid his hand on her head. “I’m wrong, Martha. You are wiser than I. Far wiser—” Just then Marilee stirred, and her eyes opened.
“Dikar,” she whispered. Then, fright in her voice: “Dikar!”
Dikar leaped to her. “It’s all right, Marilee. Everything is all right. We’ve found fr—”
“Hush,” John broke in. “Quiet. Listen.” At once the room was throbbing with silence.
Into that silence, well-muffled, came the sound of men’s voices, shouts. “The patrol’s here,” John said low-voiced. “They’re looking for the sentry you killed. You’d better get downstairs quick, Martha. They might come to ask you about him.”
Martha was on her feet, her face set, her hands trembling. John’s arm went around her, and he was holding her close to him. He was saying something Dikar could not quite make out, and then they were apart and Martha was going toward the door, straight, trembling no longer. The light went out, and the door opened and closed.
“Let’s take a look outside,” Dikar heard John say, and he heard him moving in the darkness. Then there was pale light in the darkness, starlight breaking the blackness of a wall, John’s hand blotching it as it held aside that which hung over the window.
Dikar darted across the floor and was pressed against John, looking out.
Just below was the smaller roof Dikar had seen from the woods, and below that, yellow light lay on the ground. Down at the bottom of the hill, bright lights danced in the yellow grass and on the brush and trees at the edge of the woods. Black against these lights were the forms of men, and it was from these men that the shouting came.
“Look,” John whispered, “there in the wheat.” Dikar saw the black shape of his finder pointing, and looked in the direction the finger pointed.
Where the finger pointed, in the middle of the field, was one man who did not move. The arm held a light, and the light was on his face, and Dikar could see that the face was round and yellow. The mouth of that face was a straight, thin line and the eyes were slanted slits in the yellow skin, and there was a look on the face that made Dikar afraid.
“That’s Captain Li Logo,” John said. “He’s provost for this district. He’s shrewd as a fox and cruel as a tiger. It’s hard luck that he had to come along with the patrol, on this night of all nights.”
Dikar felt Marilee press against him from behind. “Go back to bed, sweet,” he said. “You’ll hurt yourself more.”
“I’m all right, Dikar,” Marilee whispered. “I feel fine. And I want to see too.”
A louder shout came through the window. “They found the body,” John said quietly but, pressed against him, Dikar could feel that now he was trembling.
The lights moved together, clustering at one place just at the edge of the woods. Captain Logo went down to where the lights clustered, and the babble of shouts from there stopped, and all Dikar could hear was a single high-pitched voice.
“I’ll open the window,” John said, “if you’ll let me get at it.” Dikar and Marilee moved back a little.
“Are you sure you’re feelin’ all right?” Dikar whispered under cover of a scraping noise in front of them.
“Sure. The woman gave me something to drink, before I quite woke up, and it’s made me all warm inside, and strong again.”
Cold wind came in on them, and the sounds from outside were louder, the sound of that single high-pitched voice, but Dikar could not understand what it said. Then there was another shout, hoarse like Jubal’s, and a light showed within the edge of the woods, and Captain Logo went in there.
“They’ve found Tomball,” Dikar said. “We’ll soon know if we’ve fooled them.”
Logo’s high voice stopped the shouting again. The other shapes were separating. They were running back and forth in what John had called wheat, their lights shining on the yellow grass, and on their black faces. They were all dressed in green, like Jubal, and had queer round things on their heads, and they all had long guns like Jubal’s.
“There are seven of them,” Marilee said. “I counted.”
One of the lights stopped, suddenly, and the one that carried it bent low, and straightened again, and as a shout came from him Dikar saw what the light shone on.
“Jeeze!” he grunted. “It’s my bow. I forgot all about it. There was one by Tomball, so now they know there was at least one more of us.”
Captain Logo came to the black who had found Dikar’s bow, and he looked at it, and then he put his band to his mouth, and there was shrill sound from him. The blacks all came running to him, and clustered about him a minute, and then they were all running up the hill toward the house, their long guns in their hands, slanted across the front of them, their lights out.
“That’s torn it,” John said, low-toned. “They’re coming to search the house, and they’re certain to find this hideout. My premonition was right. My luck has run out. Well,” he said, pushing back from the window. “There’s only one thing left to do.”
“What?” Dikar asked.
“To let them get inside,” came the answer in John’s tired voice, “and then push a button on this radio table, a button that will blow the house and everyone in it to pieces. If you kids are afraid to die, you can get out by this window and surrender, but I wouldn’t advise it. No,” he sighed. “I would not advise you to surrender to them.”
“Wait,” Dikar said. “Maybe—” He was still looking out and down. They had reached the house, and had stopped in front of it, and Li Logo was saying something to the black men he bossed, was waving his arms around. “Maybe something will happen to save us yet. Maybe they’ll go away without searching the house.”
“Not Logo,” John answered. “Not when he’s on the scent of something. But I’ll wait as long as I dare.”
Down below,
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