<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<br/>
<br/>
<h1>THE<br/> PLANET<br/> SAVERS</h1>
<h3>By</h3>
<h3>MARION ZIMMER BRADLEY</h3>
<br/>
<p><span class="dropcap">B</span><span class="upper">y</span> the time I got myself all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></SPAN></span>
the way awake I thought I
was alone. I was lying on a
leather couch in a bare white
room with huge windows, alternate
glass-brick and clear glass.
Beyond the clear windows was a
view of snow-peaked mountains
which turned to pale shadows in
the glass-brick.</p>
<p>Habit and memory fitted
names to all these; the bare office,
the orange flare of the great
sun, the names of the dimming
mountains. But beyond a polished
glass desk, a man sat watching
me. And I had never seen the
man before.</p>
<p>He was chubby, and not
young, and had ginger-colored
eyebrows and a fringe of ginger-colored
hair around the edges of
a forehead which was otherwise
quite pink and bald. He was
wearing a white uniform coat,
and the intertwined caduceus on
the pocket and on the sleeve proclaimed
him a member of the
Medical Service attached to the
Civilian HQ of the Terran Trade
City.</p>
<p>I didn't stop to make all
these evaluations consciously, of
course. They were just part of
my world when I woke up and
found it taking shape around me.
The familiar mountains, the
familiar sun, the strange man.
But he spoke to me in a friendly
way, as if it were an ordinary
thing to find a perfect stranger
sprawled out taking a siesta in
here.</p>
<p>"Could I trouble you to tell me
your name?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></SPAN></span></p>
<br/>
<div class="image">
<ANTIMG src="images/i085.jpg" width-obs="320" height-obs="470" alt="" title="" /><br/></div>
<div class="caption">The man in the mirror was a stranger.</div>
<br/>
<p>That was reasonable enough.
If I found somebody making
himself at home in my office—if
I had an office—I'd ask him his
name, too. I started to swing my
legs to the floor, and had to stop<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></SPAN></span>
and steady myself with one
hand while the room drifted in
giddy circles around me.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't try to sit up just
yet," he remarked, while the
floor calmed down again. Then
he repeated, politely but insistently,
"Your name?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. My name." It was—I
fumbled through layers of
what felt like gray fuzz, trying
to lay my tongue on the most
familiar of all sounds, my own
name. It was—why, it was—I
said, on a high rising note,
"This is damn silly," and swallowed.
And swallowed again.
Hard.</p>
<p>"Calm down," the chubby man
said soothingly. That was easier
said than done. I stared at him
in growing panic and demanded,
"But, but, have I had amnesia
or something?"</p>
<p>"Or something."</p>
<p>"What's my <i>name</i>?"</p>
<p>"Now, now, take it easy! I'm
sure you'll remember it soon
enough. You can answer other
questions, I'm sure. How old are
you?"</p>
<p>I answered eagerly and quickly,
"Twenty-two."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>The chubby man scribbled
something on a card. "Interesting.
In-ter-est-ing. Do you know
where we are?"</p>
<p>I looked around the office. "In
the Terran Headquarters. From
your uniform, I'd say we were
on Floor 8—Medical."</p>
<p>He nodded and scribbled
again, pursing his lips. "Can
you—uh—tell me what planet we
are on?"</p>
<p>I had to laugh. "Darkover," I
chuckled, "I hope! And if you
want the names of the moons,
or the date of the founding of
the Trade City, or something—"</p>
<p>He gave in, laughing with me.
"Remember where you were
born?"</p>
<p>"On Samarra. I came here
when I was three years old—my
father was in Mapping and Exploring—"
I stopped short, in
shock. "He's dead!"</p>
<p>"Can you tell me your father's
name?"</p>
<p>"Same as mine. Jay—Jason—"
the flash of memory closed
down in the middle of a word.
It had been a good try, but it
hadn't quite worked. The doctor
said soothingly, "We're doing
very well."</p>
<p>"You haven't told me anything,"
I accused. "Who are
you? Why are you asking me all
these questions?"</p>
<p>He pointed to a sign on his
desk. I scowled and spelled out
the letters. "Randall ... Forth
... Director ... Department
..." and Dr. Forth made a note.
I said aloud, "It is—<i>Doctor</i>
Forth, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Don't you know?"</p>
<p>I looked down at myself, and
shook my head. "Maybe <i>I'm</i> Doctor
Forth," I said, noticing for
the first time that I was also
wearing a white coat with the
caduceus emblem of Medical.
But it had the wrong feel, as if
I were dressed in somebody else's
clothes. <i>I</i> was no doctor, was I?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></SPAN></span>
I pushed back one sleeve slightly,
exposing a long, triangular scar
under the cuff. Dr. Forth—by
now I was sure <i>he</i> was Dr. Forth—followed
the direction of my
eyes.</p>
<p>"Where did you get the scar?"</p>
<p>"Knife fight. One of the bands
of those-who-may-not-enter-cities
caught us on the slopes,
and we—" the memory thinned
out again, and I said despairingly,
"It's all confused! What's the
matter? Why am I up on Medical?
Have I had an accident?
Amnesia?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly. I'll explain."</p>
<p>I got up and walked to the
window, unsteadily because my
feet wanted to walk slowly while
I felt like bursting through some
invisible net and striding there
at one bound. Once I got to the
window the room stayed put
while I gulped down great
breaths of warm sweetish air. I
said, "I could use a drink."</p>
<p>"Good idea. Though I don't
usually recommend it." Forth
reached into a drawer for a flat
bottle; poured tea-colored liquid
into a throwaway cup. After a
minute he poured more for himself.
"Here. And sit down, man.
You make me nervous, hovering
like that."</p>
<p>I didn't sit down. I strode to
the door and flung it open.
Forth's voice was low and unhurried.</p>
<p>"What's the matter? You can
go out, if you want to, but won't
you sit down and talk to me for
a minute? Anyway, where do
you want to go?"</p>
<p>The question made me uncomfortable.
I took a couple of long
breaths and came back into the
room. Forth said, "Drink this,"
and I poured it down. He refilled
the cup unasked, and I
swallowed that too and felt the
hard lump in my middle begin
to loosen up and dissolve.</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Forth said, "Claustrophobia
too. Typical," and scribbled on
the card some more. I was getting
tired of that performance.
I turned on him to tell him so,
then suddenly felt amused—or
maybe it was the liquor working
in me. He seemed such a funny
little man, shutting himself up
inside an office like this and talking
about claustrophobia and
watching me as if I were a big
bug. I tossed the cup into a disposal.</p>
<p>"Isn't it about time for a few
of those explanations?"</p>
<p>"If you think you can take it.
How do you feel now?"</p>
<p>"Fine." I sat down on the
couch again, leaning back and
stretching out my long legs comfortably.
"What did you put in
that drink?"</p>
<p>He chuckled. "Trade secret.
Now; the easiest way to explain
would be to let you watch a film
we made yesterday."</p>
<p>"To watch—" I stopped. "It's
your time we're wasting."</p>
<p>He punched a button on the
desk, spoke into a mouthpiece.
"Surveillance? Give us a monitor
on—" he spoke a string of
incomprehensible numbers, while
I lounged at ease on the couch.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></SPAN></span>
Forth waited for an answer,
then touched another button and
steel louvers closed noiselessly
over the windows, blacking them
out. I rose in sudden panic, then
relaxed as the room went dark.
The darkness felt oddly more
normal than the light, and I
leaned back and watched the
flickers clear as one wall of the
office became a large visionscreen.
Forth came and sat beside
me on the leather couch, but
in the picture Forth was there,
sitting at his desk, watching another
man, a stranger, walk into
the office.</p>
<p>Like Forth, the newcomer
wore a white coat with the caduceus
emblems. I disliked the
man on sight. He was tall and
lean and composed, with a dour
face set in thin lines. I guessed
that he was somewhere in his
thirties. Dr.-Forth-in-the-film
said, "Sit down, Doctor," and I
drew a long breath, overwhelmed
by a curious, certain sensation.</p>
<p><i>I have been here before. I
have seen this happen before.</i></p>
<p>(And curiously formless I felt.
I sat and watched, and I knew I
was watching, and sitting. But
it was in that dreamlike fashion,
where the dreamer at once
watches his visions and participates
in them....)</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>"Sit down, Doctor," Forth said,
"did you bring in the reports?"</p>
<p>Jay Allison carefully took the
indicated seat, poised nervously
on the edge of the chair. He sat
very straight, leaning forward
only a little to hand a thick folder
of papers across the desk.
Forth took it, but didn't open it.
"What do you think, Dr. Allison?"</p>
<p>"There is no possible room for
doubt." Jay Allison spoke precisely,
in a rather high-pitched
and emphatic tone. "It follows
the statistical pattern for all recorded
attacks of 48-year fever
... by the way, sir, haven't we
any better name than that for
this particular disease? The
term '48-year fever' connotes a
fever of 48 years duration,
rather than a pandemic recurring
every 48 years."</p>
<p>"A fever that lasted 48 years
would be quite a fever," Dr.
Forth said with the shadow of a
grim smile. "Nevertheless that's
the only name we have so far.
Name it and you can have it.
Allison's disease?"</p>
<p>Jay Allison greeted this pleasantry
with a repressive frown.
"As I understand it, the disease
cycle seems to be connected
somehow with the once-every-48-years
conjunction of the four
moons, which explains why the
Darkovans are so superstitious
about it. The moons have remarkably
eccentric orbits—I
don't know anything about that
part, I'm quoting Dr. Moore. If
there's an animal vector to the
disease, we've never discovered
it. The pattern runs like this; a
few cases in the mountain districts,
the next month a hundred-odd
cases all over this part
of the planet. Then it skips exactly
three months without increase.
The next upswing puts<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></SPAN></span>
the number of reported cases in
the thousands, and three months
after <i>that</i>, it reaches real pandemic
proportions and decimates
the entire human population of
Darkover."</p>
<p>"That's about it," Forth admitted.
They bent together over
the folder, Jay Allison drawing
back slightly to avoid touching
the other man.</p>
<p>Forth said, "We Terrans have
had a Trade compact on Darkover
for a hundred and fifty-two
years. The first outbreak of this
48-year fever killed all but a
dozen men out of three hundred.
The Darkovans were worse off
than we were. The last outbreak
wasn't quite so bad, but it was
bad enough, I've heard. It has
an 87 per cent mortality—for
humans, that is. I understand the
trailmen don't die of it."</p>
<p>"The Darkovans call it the
trailmen's fever, Dr. Forth, because
the trailmen are virtually
immune to it. It remains in their
midst as a mild ailment taken by
children. When it breaks out
into the virulent form every 48
years, most of the trailmen are
already immune. I took the disease
myself as a child—maybe
you heard?"</p>
<p>Forth nodded. "You may be
the only Terran ever to contract
the disease and survive."</p>
<p>"The trailmen incubate the
disease," Jay Allison said. "I
should think the logical thing
would be to drop a couple of
hydrogen bombs on the trail
cities—and wipe it out for good
and all."</p>
<p>(Sitting on the Sofa in Forth's
dark office, I stiffened with such
fury that he shook my shoulder
and muttered, "Easy, there,
man!")</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Dr. Forth, on the screen, looked
annoyed, and Jay Allison
said, with a grimace of distaste,
"I didn't mean that literally. But
the trailmen are not human. It
wouldn't be genocide, just an exterminator's
job. A public health
measure."</p>
<p>Forth looked shocked as he
realized that the younger man
meant what he was saying. He
said, "Galactic center would
have to rule on whether they're
dumb animals or intelligent non-humans,
and whether they're
entitled to the status of a civilization.
All precedent on Darkover
is toward recognizing them
as men—and good God, Jay,
you'd probably be called as a witness
for the defense! How can
you say they're not human after
your experience with them?
Anyway, by the time their status
was finally decided, half of the
recognizable humans on Darkover
would be dead. We need a
better solution than that."</p>
<p>He pushed his chair back and
looked out the window.</p>
<p>"I won't go into the political
situation," he said, "you aren't
interested in Terran Empire
politics, and I'm no expert either.
But you'd have to be deaf, dumb
and blind not to know that Darkover's
been playing the immovable
object to the irresistible
force. The Darkovans are more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></SPAN></span>
advanced in some of the non-causative
sciences than we are,
and until now, they wouldn't admit
that Terra had a thing to
contribute. However—and this is
the big however—they do know,
and they're willing to admit, that
our medical sciences are better
than theirs."</p>
<p>"Theirs being practically non-existent."</p>
<p>"Exactly—and this could be
the first crack in the barrier.
You may not realize the significance
of this, but the Legate received
an offer from the Hasturs
themselves."</p>
<p>Jay Allison murmured, "I'm
to be impressed?"</p>
<p>"On Darkover you'd damn well
better be impressed when the
Hasturs sit up and take notice."</p>
<p>"I understand they're telepaths
or something—"</p>
<p>"Telepaths, psychokinetics,
parapsychs, just about anything
else. For all practical purposes
they're the Gods of Darkover.
And one of the Hasturs—a
rather young and unimportant
one, I'll admit, the old man's
grandson—came to the Legate's
office, in person, mind you. He
offered, if the Terran Medical
would help Darkover lick the
trailmen's fever, to coach selected
Terran men in matrix mechanics."</p>
<p>"Good Lord," Jay said. It was
a concession beyond Terra's
wildest dreams; for a hundred
years they had tried to beg, buy
or steal some knowledge of the
mysterious science of matrix
mechanics—that curious discipline
which could turn matter
into raw energy, and vice versa,
without any intermediate stages
and without fission by-products.
Matrix mechanics had made the
Darkovans virtually immune to
the lure of Terra's advanced
technologies.</p>
<p>Jay said, "Personally I think
Darkovan science is over-rated.
But I can see the propaganda
angle—"</p>
<p>"Not to mention the humanitarian
angle of healing—"</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Jay Allison gave one of his
cold shrugs. "The real angle
seems to be this; <i>can</i> we cure
the 48-year fever?"</p>
<p>"Not yet. But we have a lead.
During the last epidemic, a Terran
scientist discovered a blood
fraction containing antibodies
against the fever—in the trailmen.
Isolated to a serum, it
might reduce the virulent 48-year
epidemic form to the mild
form again. Unfortunately, he
died himself in the epidemic,
without finishing his work, and
his notebooks were overlooked
until this year. We have 18,000
men, and their families, on Darkover
now, Jay. Frankly, if we
lose too many of them, we're going
to have to pull out of Darkover—the
big brass on Terra
will write off the loss of a garrison
of professional traders, but
not of a whole Trade City colony.
That's not even mentioning the
prestige we'll lose if our much-vaunted
Terran medical sciences
can't save Darkover from an
epidemic. We've got exactly five<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></SPAN></span>
months. We can't synthesize a
serum in that time. We've got
to appeal to the trailmen. And
that's why I called you up here.
You know more about the trailmen
than any living Terran.
You ought to. You spent eight
years in a Nest."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>(In Forth's darkened office I
sat up straighter, with a flash
of returning memory. Jay Allison,
I judged, was several years
older than I, but we had one
thing in common; this cold fish
of a man shared with myself that
experience of marvelous years
spent in an alien world!)</p>
<p>Jay Allison scowled, displeased.
"That was years ago. I was
hardly more than a baby. My
father crashed on a Mapping
expedition over the Hellers—God
only knows what possessed
him to try and take a light plane
over those crosswinds. I survived
the crash by the merest chance,
and lived with the trailmen—so
I'm told—until I was thirteen or
fourteen. I don't remember much
about it. Children aren't particularly
observant."</p>
<p>Forth leaned over the desk,
staring. "You speak their language,
don't you?"</p>
<p>"I used to. I might remember
it under hypnosis, I suppose.
Why? Do you want me to translate
something?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly. We were thinking
of sending you on an expedition
to the trailmen themselves."</p>
<p>(In the darkened office, watching
Jay's startled face, I
thought; God, what an adventure!
I wonder—I wonder if
they want me to go with him?)</p>
<p>Forth was explaining: "It
would be a difficult trek. You
know what the Hellers are like.
Still, you used to climb mountains,
as a hobby, before you
went into Medical—"</p>
<p>"I outgrew the childishness of
hobbies many years ago, sir,"
Jay said stiffly.</p>
<p>"We'd get you the best guides
we could, Terran and Darkovan.
But they couldn't do the one
thing you can do. You <i>know</i> the
trailmen, Jay. You might be able
to persuade them to do the one
thing they've never done before."</p>
<p>"What's that?" Jay Allison
sounded suspicious.</p>
<p>"Come out of the mountains.
Send us volunteers—blood donors—we
might, if we had enough
blood to work on, be able to isolate
the right fraction, and
synthesize it, in time to prevent
the epidemic from really taking
hold. Jay, it's a tough mission
and it's dangerous as all hell, but
somebody's got to do it, and I'm
afraid you're the only qualified
man."</p>
<p>"I like my first suggestion
better. Bomb the trailmen—and
the Hellers—right off the
planet." Jay's face was set in
lines of loathing, which he controlled
after a minute, and said,
"I—I didn't mean that. Theoretically
I can see the necessity,
only—" he stopped and swallowed.</p>
<p>"Please say what you were going
to say."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I wonder if I am as well
qualified as you think? No—don't
interrupt—I find the natives
of Darkover distasteful,
even the humans. As for the
trailmen—"</p>
<p>(I was getting mad and impatient.
I whispered to Forth in
the darkness, "Shut the damn
film off! You couldn't send <i>that</i>
guy on an errand like <i>that</i>! I'd
rather—"</p>
<p>(Forth snapped, "Shut up and
listen!"</p>
<p>(I shut up and the film continued
to repeat.)</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Jay Allison was not acting. He
was pained and disgusted. Forth
wouldn't let him finish his explanation
of why he had refused
even to teach in the Medical college
established for Darkovans
by the Terran empire. He interrupted,
and he sounded irritated.</p>
<p>"We know all that. It evidently
never occurred to you, Jay,
that it's an inconvenience to us—that
all this vital knowledge
should lie, purely by accident, in
the hands of the one man who's
too damned stubborn to use it?"</p>
<p>Jay didn't move an eyelash,
where I would have squirmed,
"I have always been aware of
that, Doctor."</p>
<p>Forth drew a long breath. "I'll
concede you're not suitable at
the moment, Jay. But what do
you know of applied psychodynamics?"</p>
<p>"Very little, I'm sorry to say."
Allison didn't sound sorry,
though. He sounded bored to
death with the whole conversation.</p>
<p>"May I be blunt—and personal?"</p>
<p>"Please do. I'm not at all sensitive."</p>
<p>"Basically, then, Doctor Allison,
a person as contained and
repressed as yourself usually has
a clearly defined subsidiary personality.
In neurotic individuals
this complex of personality traits
sometimes splits off, and we get
a syndrome known as multiple,
or alternate personality."</p>
<p>"I've scanned a few of the
classic cases. Wasn't there a
woman with four separate personalities?"</p>
<p>"Exactly. However, you aren't
neurotic, and ordinarily there
would not be the slightest chance
of your repressed alternate taking
over your personality."</p>
<p>"Thank you," Jay murmured
ironically, "I'd be losing sleep
over that."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless I presume you
<i>do</i> have such a subsidiary personality,
although he would
normally never manifest. This
subsidiary—let's call him Jay<sub>2</sub>—would
embody all the characteristics
which you repress. He
would be gregarious, where you
are retiring and studious; adventurous
where you are cautious;
talkative while you are
taciturn; he would perhaps enjoy
action for its own sake,
while you exercise faithfully in
the gymnasium only for your
health's sake; and he might even
remember the trailmen with
pleasure rather than dislike."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"In short—a blend of all the
undesirable characteristics?"</p>
<p>"One could put it that way.
Certainly he would be a blend of
all the characteristics which you,
Jay<sub>1</sub>, <i>consider</i> undesirable. But—if
released by hypnotism and
suggestion, he might be suitable
for the job in hand."</p>
<p>"But how do you know I actually
have such an—alternate?"</p>
<p>"I don't. But it's a good guess.
Most repressed—" Forth coughed
and amended, "most <i>disciplined</i>
personalities possess such
a suppressed secondary personality.
Don't you occasionally—rather
rarely—find yourself doing
things which are entirely out
of character for you?"</p>
<p>I could almost feel Allison taking
it in, as he confessed, "Well—yes.
For instance—the other
day—although I dress conservatively
at all times—" he glanced
at his uniform coat, "I found
myself buying—" he stopped
again and his face went an unlovely
terra-cotta color as he finally
mumbled, "a flowered red
sports shirt."</p>
<p>Sitting in the dark I felt
vaguely sorry for the poor gawk,
disturbed by, ashamed of the
only human impulses he ever
had. On the screen Allison
frowned fiercely, "A crazy impulse."</p>
<p>"You could say that, or say it
was an action of the suppressed
Jay<sub>2</sub>. How about it, Allison? You
may be the only Terran on Darkover,
maybe the only human,
who could get into a trailman's
Nest without being murdered."</p>
<p>"Sir—as a citizen of the Empire,
I don't have any choice, do
I?"</p>
<p>"Jay, look," Forth said, and I
felt him trying to reach through
the barricade and touch, really
touch that cold contained young
man, "we couldn't <i>order</i> any man
to do anything like this. Aside
from the ordinary dangers, it
could destroy your personal balance,
maybe permanently. I'm
asking you to volunteer something
above and beyond the call
of duty. Man to man—what do
you say?"</p>
<p>I would have been moved by
his words. Even at secondhand
I was moved by them. Jay Allison
looked at the floor, and I saw
him twist his long well-kept
surgeon's hands and crack the
knuckles with an odd gesture.
Finally he said, "I haven't any
choice either way, Doctor. I'll
take the chance. I'll go to the
trailmen."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>The screen went dark again
and Forth flicked the light on.
He said, "Well?"</p>
<p>I gave it back, in his own intonation,
"Well?" and was exasperated
to find that I was
twisting my own knuckles in the
nervous gesture of Allison's
painful decision. I jerked them
apart and got up.</p>
<p>"I suppose it didn't work,
with that cold fish, and you decided
to come to me instead?
Sure, <i>I'll</i> go to the trailmen for
you. Not with that Allison—I
wouldn't go anywhere with that
guy—but I speak the trailmen's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></SPAN></span>
language, and without hypnosis
either."</p>
<p>Forth was staring at me. "So
you've remembered that?"</p>
<p>"Hell, yes," I said, "my dad
crashed in the Hellers, and a
band of trailmen found me, half
dead. I lived there until I was
about fifteen, then their Old-One
decided I was too human for
them, and they took me out
through Dammerung Pass and
arranged to have me brought
here. Sure, it's all coming back
now. I spent five years in the
Spacemen's Orphanage, then I
went to work taking Terran
tourists on hunting parties and
so on, because I liked being
around the mountains. I—" I
stopped. Forth was staring at
me.</p>
<p>"You think you'd like this
job?"</p>
<p>"It would be tough," I said,
considering. "The People of the
Sky—" (using the trailmen's
name for themselves) "—don't
like outsiders, but they might be
persuaded. The worst part would
be getting there. The plane, or
the 'copter, isn't built that can
get through the crosswinds
around the Hellers and land inside
them. We'd have to go on
foot, all the way from Carthon.
I'd need professional climbers—mountaineers."</p>
<p>"Then you don't share Allison's
attitude?"</p>
<p>"Dammit, don't insult me!" I
discovered that I was on my feet
again, pacing the office restlessly.
Forth stared and mused
aloud, "What's personality anyway?
A mask of emotions, superimposed
on the body and the intellect.
Change the point of
view, change the emotions and
desires, and even with the same
body and the same past experiences,
you have a new man."</p>
<p>I swung round in mid-step. A
new and terrible suspicion, too
monstrous to name, was creeping
up on me. Forth touched a
button and the face of Jay Allison,
immobile, appeared on the
visionscreen. Forth put a mirror
in my hand. He said, "Jason Allison,
look at yourself."</p>
<p>I looked.</p>
<p>"No," I said. And again, "No.
No. No."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Forth didn't argue. He pointed,
with a stubby finger. "Look—"
he moved the finger as he
spoke, "height of forehead. Set
of cheekbones. Your eyebrows
look different, and your mouth,
because the expression is different.
But bony structure—the
nose, the chin—"</p>
<p>I heard myself make a queer
sound; dashed the mirror to the
floor. He grabbed my forearm.
"Steady, man!"</p>
<p>I found a scrap of my voice.
It didn't sound like Allison's.
"Then I'm—Jay<sub>2</sub>? Jay Allison
with amnesia?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly." Forth mopped
his forehead with an immaculate
sleeve and it came away damp
with sweat, "No—<i>not</i> Jay Allison
as I know him!" He drew a
long breath. "And sit down.
Whoever you are, sit <i>down</i>!"</p>
<p>I sat. Gingerly. Not sure.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But the man Jay might have
been, given a different temperamental
bias. I'd say—the man
Jay Allison started out to be.
The man he <i>refused</i> to be. Within
his subconscious, he built up
barriers against a whole series
of memories, and the subliminal
threshold—"</p>
<p>"Doc, I don't understand the
psycho talk."</p>
<p>Forth stared. "And you do remember
the trailmen's language.
I thought so. Allison's
personality is suppressed in you,
as yours was in him."</p>
<p>"One thing, Doc. I don't
know a thing about blood fractions
or epidemics. My half of
the personality didn't study
medicine." I took up the mirror
again and broodingly studied
the face there. The high thin
cheeks, high forehead shaded by
coarse dark hair which Jay Allison
had slicked down now heavily
rumpled. I still didn't think I
looked anything like the doctor.
Our voices were nothing alike
either; his had been pitched
rather high, falsetto. My own,
as nearly as I could judge, was a
full octave deeper, and more
resonant. Yet they issued from
the same vocal chords, unless
Forth was having a reasonless,
macabre joke.</p>
<p>"Did I honest-to-God study
medicine? It's the last thing I'd
think about. It's an honest trade,
I guess, but I've never been that
intellectual."</p>
<p>"You—or rather, Jay Allison
is a specialist in Darkovan parasitology,
as well as a very competent
surgeon." Forth was sitting
with his chin in his hands,
watching me intently. He scowled
and said, "If anything, the
physical change is more startling
than the other. I wouldn't have
recognized you."</p>
<p>"That tallies with me. I don't
recognize myself." I added, "—and
the queer thing is, I didn't
even <i>like</i> Jay Allison, to put it
mildly. If he—I can't say <i>he</i>,
can I?"</p>
<p>"I don't know why not.
You're no more Jay Allison than
I am. For one thing, you're
younger. Ten years younger. I
doubt if any of his friends—if
he had any—would recognize
you. You—it's ridiculous to go
on calling you Jay<sub>2</sub>. What should
I call you?"</p>
<p>"Why should I care? Call me
Jason."</p>
<p>"Suits you," Forth said enigmatically.
"Look, then, Jason.
I'd like to give you a few days
to readjust to your new personality,
but we are really pressed
for time. Can you fly to Carthon
tonight? I've hand-picked a good
crew for you, and sent them on
ahead. You'll meet them there.
You'll find them competent."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>I stared at him. Suddenly the
room oppressed me and I found
it hard to breathe. I said in
wonder, "You were pretty sure
of yourself, weren't you?"</p>
<p>Forth just looked at me, for
what seemed a long time. Then
he said, in a very quiet voice,
"No. I wasn't sure at all. But if
you didn't turn up, and I couldn't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></SPAN></span>
talk Jay into it, I'd have had to
try it myself."</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Jason Allison, Junior, was
listed on the directory of the
Terran HQ as "Suite 1214, Medical
Residence Corridor." I found
the rooms without any trouble,
though an elderly doctor stared
at me rather curiously as I barged
along the quiet hallway. The
suite—bedroom, minuscule sitting-room,
compact bath—depressed
me; clean, closed-in and
neutral as the man who owned
them, I rummaged them restlessly,
trying to find some scrap of
familiarity to indicate that I had
lived here for the past eleven
years.</p>
<p>Jay Allison was thirty-four
years old. I had given my age,
without hesitation, as 22. There
were no obvious blanks in my
memory; from the moment Jay
Allison had spoken of the trailmen,
my past had rushed back
and stood, complete to yesterday's
supper (only had I eaten
that supper twelve years ago)?
I remembered my father, a
lined silent man who had liked
to fly solitary, taking photograph
after photograph from his plane
for the meticulous work of Mapping
and Exploration. He'd liked
to have me fly with him and I'd
flown over virtually every inch
of the planet. No one else had
ever dared fly over the Hellers,
except the big commercial spacecraft
that kept to a safe altitude.
I vaguely remembered the crash
and the strange hands pulling
me out of the wreckage and the
weeks I'd spent, broken-bodied
and delirious, gently tended by
one of the red-eyed, twittering
women of the trailmen. In all I
had spent eight years in the
Nest, which was not a nest at
all but a vast sprawling city
built in the branches of enormous
trees. With the small and
delicate humanoids who had
been my playfellows, I had gathered
the nuts and buds and
trapped the small arboreal animals
they used for food, taken
my share at weaving clothing
from the fibres of parasite plants
cultivated on the stems, and in
all those eight years I had set
foot on the ground less than a
dozen times, even though I had
travelled for miles through the
tree-roads high above the forest
floor.</p>
<p>Then the Old-One's painful decision
that I was too alien for
them, and the difficult and dangerous
journey my trailmen foster-parents
and foster-brothers
had undertaken, to help me out
of the Hellers and arrange for
me to be taken to the Trade
City. After two years of physically
painful and mentally
rebellious readjustment to daytime
living, the owl-eyed trailmen
saw best, and lived largely,
by moonlight, I had found a
niche for myself, and settled
down. But all of the later years
(after Jay Allison had taken
over, I supposed, from a basic
pattern of memory common to
both of us) had vanished into the
limbo of the subconscious.</p>
<p>A bookrack was crammed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></SPAN></span>
with large microcards; I slipped
one into the viewer, with a queer
sense of spying, and found myself
listening apprehensively to
hear that measured step and Jay
Allison's falsetto voice demanding
what the hell I was doing,
meddling with his possessions.
Eye to the viewer, I read briefly
at random, something about
the management of compound
fracture, then realized I had understood
exactly three words in
a paragraph. I put my fist
against my forehead and heard
the words echoing there emptily;
"laceration ... primary efflusion
... serum and lymph ...
granulation tissue...." I presumed
that the words meant
something and that I once had
known what. But if I had a medical
education, I didn't recall a
syllable of it. I didn't know a
fracture from a fraction.</p>
<p>In a sudden frenzy of impatience
I stripped off the white
coat and put on the first shirt I
came to, a crimson thing that
hung in the line of white coats
like an exotic bird in snow country.
I went back to rummaging
the drawers and bureaus. Carelessly
shoved in a pigeonhole I
found another microcard that
looked familiar; and when I
slipped it mechanically into the
viewer it turned out to be a book
on mountaineering which, oddly
enough, I remembered buying as
a youngster. It dispelled my last,
lingering doubts. Evidently I
had bought it before the personalities
had forked so sharply
apart and separated, Jason from
Jay. I was beginning to believe.
Not to accept. Just to believe it
had happened. The book looked
well-thumbed, and had been
handled so much I had to baby
it into the slot of the viewer.</p>
<p>Under a folded pile of clean
underwear I found a flat half-empty
bottle of whiskey. I remembered
Forth's words that
he'd never seen Jay Allison
drink, and suddenly I thought,
"The fool!" I fixed myself a
drink and sat down, idly scanning
over the mountaineering
book.</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<p>Not till I'd entered medical
school, I suspected, did the two
halves of me fork so strongly
apart ... so strongly that there
had been days and weeks and, I
suspected, years where Jay Allison
had kept me prisoner. I tried
to juggle dates in my mind, looked
at a calendar, and got such a
mental jolt that I put it face-down
to think about when I was
a little drunker.</p>
<p>I wondered if my detailed
memories of my teens and early
twenties were the same memories
Jay Allison looked back on.
I didn't think so. People forget
and remember selectively. Week
by week, then, and year by year,
the dominant personality of Jay
had crowded me out; so that the
young rowdy, more than half
Darkovan, loving the mountains,
half-homesick for a non-human
world, had been drowned in the
chilly, austere young medical
student who lost himself in his
work. But I, Jason—I had al<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></SPAN></span>ways
been the watcher behind,
the person Jay Allison dared not
be? Why was he past thirty—and
I just 22?</p>
<p>A ringing shattered the silence;
I had to hunt for the intercom
on the bedroom wall. I
said, "Who is it?" and an unfamiliar
voice demanded, "Dr. Allison?"</p>
<p>I said automatically, "Nobody
here by that name," and started
to put back the mouthpiece.
Then I stopped and gulped and
asked, "Is that you, Dr. Forth?"</p>
<p>It was, and I breathed again.
I didn't even want to think
about what I'd say if somebody
else had demanded to know why
in the devil I was answering Dr.
Allison's private telephone.
When Forth had finished, I went
to the mirror, and stared, trying
to see behind my face the sharp
features of that stranger, <i>Doctor</i>
Jason Allison. I delayed, even
while I was wondering what few
things I should pack for a trip
into the mountains and the habit
of hunting parties was making
mental lists about heat-socks and
windbreakers. The face that
looked at me was a young face,
unlined and faintly freckled, the
same face as always except that
I'd lost my suntan; Jay Allison
had kept me indoors too long.
Suddenly I struck the mirror
lightly with my fist.</p>
<p>"The hell with you, Dr. Allison,"
I said, and went to see if
he had kept any clothes fit to
pack.</p>
<hr class="hr2" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />