City at World's End by Edmond Hamilton (free ebook reader for ipad .txt) đź“•
He stopped, again, as though he could not quite muster up the courage to voice the certainty that was in him. He gestured at the dusky sky.
"That's our Sun, our own Sun-- but it's old now, very old. And that Earth we see out there is old too, barren and eroded and dying. And the stars.... You looked at the stars, Ken, but you didn't see them. They're different, the constellations distorted by the motions of the stars, as only millions of years could distort them."
Kenniston whispered, "Millions of years? Then you think that the bomb..." He stopped, and he knew now how Hubble had felt. How did you sa
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Kenniston ran up to him. “Get the people started out at once, to the ridge of the hills. Only the sick and old to go in cars— the rest must walk. We can’t risk a traffic tangle now!”
“Yes,” gasped the Mayor. “Yes, right away.” He caught Kenniston’s arm, looking past him at the black ovoid bulk of the bomb. As though ashamed to show the terror he felt, Garris stammered, “How much danger is there, Kenniston?”
Kenniston gave him a reassuring shake. “Don’t worry. Go along and get those people out of the city!” He wished he could find reassurance himself.
The next hours were nightmarish. Working under pressure, grudging every second, it seemed that everything conspired against them. The metal, the mechanisms, the very tools seemed determined to betray them.
And yet, at last, the dark shape of the energy bomb swung it its rack over the mouth of the shaft. The last of the timers was set, and it was done.
“Get your equipment ready,” Kenniston told them tautly. “Let’s go. There’s still a lot to be done.”
He went out with Hubble and Arnol and the rest. The city was as he had first seen it— empty, still, lifeless. The people had gone. As he passed out the portal he could see the dark, trailing mass of them already far across the plain, the thousands streaming slowly up the slope of the distant ridge.
Anxiously he scanned the sky. There was no sign yet of the Control Squadron.
Arnold sent his technical crew ahead to the ridge, with the remote control mechanisms and recording instruments. Gorr Holl and Margo and Hubble went with them. Then Kenniston and Arnol ran toward the starcruiser.
There was a little knot of people standing beside it in the dust and cold— the Middletowners who were leaving Earth.
Kenniston stared at them in amazement. Out of the two hundred, only a score had actually come to the cruiser.
Arnol told them curtly, “You can come aboard now.”
A few of them picked up their bundles and stood irresolutely glancing from their companions to Kenniston and back, wanting to speak. Then they turned and went aboard.
Kenniston counted. Two men, three women, and a child.
“Well,” he snapped at those who were left, “what are you waiting for? Get aboard!”
“I guess,” said one man, and then stopped to clear his throat. “I guess I’d rather stay with all the rest.”
He grabbed his bundle and started away, hurrying after the distant crowd.
Another and another followed him until all were gone, a small hastening group in the immense desolation of the plain.
Arnol smiled. “Among your people, Kenniston, even the cowards are brave. It must be even harder, in some ways, for those who have decided to go.”
They entered the cruiser, and released Mathis and Norden Lund and Varn Allan from their locked cabins. Varn Allan did not speak, but the Coordinator said icily, “So you are really going to do it?”
“We are,” said Arnol. “My chief pilot is about to take this ship off. You’ll be safe.”
Norden Lund said bitterly, “I hope it blows you all to fragments! But even if it doesn’t, even if it succeeds, you won’t win. You’ll still have Federation law to face. We’ll see to that!”
“I don’t doubt it. And now we must go.”
He turned, but Kenniston paused, still looking at Varn Allan. Her face was a little pale but in it was no such anger as Lund’s. She was looking at him with a searching, level gaze.
He wanted to speak to her, he wanted to voice something that was in him, but he could find no words. He could only say, finally, “I’m sorry things had to be this way, Varn. Goodbye—”
“Wait, Kenniston.”
He stopped, and she came up to him, pale and calm, her blue eyes very steady on his face. She said, “I’m staying here, while you do this thing.”
He stared at her, dumb with astonishment. And he heard Mathis exclaim, “Are you mad? What are you thinking of?”
She told Mathis slowly, “I am Administrator of this world’s sector. If my mistakes have caused this crisis, I will not evade its consequences. I will stay.”
Lund cried to Mathis, “She’s not thinking of her responsibility! She’s thinking of this primitive, this Kenniston!”
She turned, as though to make furious reply. But she did not speak. She looked instead at Kenniston, her face white and strained.
Mathis was saying to her coldly, “I will not order you to come with us. But be sure that your conduct will be remembered when your fitness for office is re-examined.”
She bowed silently to that, and turned and went out of the ship. And Kenniston, following her, felt a wondering, incredulous emotion that he dared not let himself recognize.
They stepped out into the red sunlight, and with a soft humming the starcruiser mounted into the sky and was lost to view.
The last, dark, trailing mass of people was disappearing over the ridge, as Kenniston and Varn Allan and Arnol started that way.
“Hurry!” urged Arnol. “Even yet, we might be too late—”
When they reached the ridge, Gorr Holl and Margo and Hubble were waiting there with the young technicians and their apparatus. And Gorr Holl uttered a rumbling exclamation when he saw them.
“I thought you’d stay, Varn!”
Her head went up and she said half angrily, “But why should you—” She stopped abruptly, and was silent a moment, then asked, “How soon?”
“We’re all set now,” the big Capellan answered. Kenniston saw that the radio control box and the panels of strange instruments were ready. He glanced at Arnol.
The scientist’s face was filmed with sweat. All the color had gone from it, and his hands shook. In this moment, he was facing the climax of his whole life, all the years and the pain and the effort
He said in a strangely toneless voice, “You’d better warn them, Kenniston. Now.”
Below them, on the far slope of the ridge, waited the thousands of Middletown’s people.
Kenniston went down toward them. He cried out to them, and his voice carried thin and unreal on the chill wind, across the dead rocks and the dust.
“Keep down behind the ridge! Pass the word to keep down! We’re going to blow it!”
They looked toward him, all the massed white faces pale in the dim light of the Sun— the dying Sun that watched them with its red uncaring eye.
A great silence fell upon them. By ones and twos, and then by hundreds, they knelt to pray. And others, by the hundreds, stood unspeaking, looking solemnly upward to the crest of the ridge. Here and there, a child began to cry.
Slowly, gripped as in a strange and fateful dream, Kenniston mounted again to where Arnol and the others stood. Far beyond them he saw the dome of the city, still glowing with light as they had left it, lonely in the vast barrenness of the plain.
He thought of the black thing waiting alone in the city to make its nightmare plunge, and a deep tremor shook him. He reached out and took Varn Allan’s hand.
In that last minute before Arnol’s fingers pressed the final pattern on the control board, Varn Allan looked past Kenniston, down at the silent, waiting thousands who were the last of all the races of old Earth.
“I see now,” she whispered, “that in spite of all we have gained since your day, we have lost something, too. A courage, a blind, brave something— I’m glad I stayed!” Arnol drew a sharp and painful breath. “It is done,” he said.
For a long, eternal moment, the dead Earth lay unstirring. Then Kenniston felt the ridge leap under his feet— once, twice, four times. The sharp grinding shocks of the capper bombs, sealing the great shaft.
Arnol watched the quivering needles of the dials. He had ceased his trembling now. It was too late for anything, even emotion.
Deep, deep within the buried core of the Earth a trembling was born, a dilating shudder that came slowly upward to the barren rocks and touched them and was gone.
It was as though a dead heart had suddenly started to beat again. To beat strongly, exultantly, a planet reborn…
The pointers on the panel of dials had gone quite mad. Gradually they quivered back to normal. All but one row of them, at which Arnol and his crew stared with intensity.
Kenniston could bear the terrible silence no longer.
“Has it…” His voice trailed away into hoarseness.
Arnol turned very slowly toward him. He said, as though it was difficult for him to speak. “Yes. The reaction is begun. There is a great flame of warmth and life inside Earth now. It will take weeks for that warmth and life to creep up to the surface, but it will come.”
He turned his back then, on Kenniston, on all of them. What he had to say was for the tired, waiting young men who had labored with him so long.
He said to them, “Here on this little Earth, long ago, one of our savage ancestors kindled a world. And there are all the others, all the cold, dying worlds out there…”
Kenniston heard no more. A babel had broken loose. Varn Allan was clinging to him, and Gorr Holl was shouting deafeningly, and he heard the stammering questions of Mayor Garris and Hubble’s shaking voice.
Over all came the surge of thousands of feet The thousands of Middletown were coming up the slope, scrambling, running, a life-or-death question on their white faces.
“Tell them, Ken,” said Hubble, his voice thick.
Kenniston stood upon the ridge, and the crowd below froze tensely silent as he shouted down to them. “It has succeeded! All danger is over, and in weeks the heat of the core will begin to reach the surface…”
He stopped. These were not the words that could reach their hearts. Then he found those words, and called them to the thousands.
“It has been chill winter on Earth, for a million years. But now, soon, spring is coming back to Earth. Spring!”
They could understand that. They began to laugh, and to weep, and then to shout and shout.
They were still shouting when the great Control cruisers came humming swiftly down from the sky.
Slowly, slowly, during all these weeks, the spring had come. It was not the spring of old Earth, but every day the wind blew a little more softly and now at last the first blades of grass were pushing upward, touching the ocher plains with green.
But only by hearsay did Kenniston know of that. Confined with the others in a building of New Middletown, it had seemed to him that the time would never end. The weeks of waiting for the special Committee of Governors to come from Vega, the weeks of the hearing itself, the slow gathering of testimony and careful sifting of motives. And now, the days they had waited for the final verdict.
Arnol was not worried. He was a happy man. He said very little, but he had had a triumph in his eyes all through the hearing. His lifework was justified, and he was content.
Nor were Gorr Holl and Magro worried. The big Capellan, even now when they awaited the decision, was still jubilant.
“Hell, what can they do?” he said to Kenniston, for the twentieth time. “The thing’s done. The Arnol process is proved practicable, and by now the whole galaxy knows of it. They can’t refuse now to let the humanoids’ dying worlds make use of it. They wouldn’t dare!”
Magro added, “Nor can they force your people to evacuate Earth
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