<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="bk1"><div class="bk2">
<h2><small>By FRITZ LEIBER</small></h2>
<h1><big>THE<br/> BIG<br/> TIME</big></h1></div>
</div>
<div class="bk3">
<div class="rgt"><b><small>Illustrated by FINLAY</small></b></div>
<div class="bk4"><p><i><big><b>You can't know there's a war on—for the Snakes
coil and Spiders weave to keep you from knowing
it's being fought over your live and dead body!</b></big></i></p>
</div>
</div>
<h2>CHAPTER 1</h2>
<div class="poem" style="width: 14em;"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">When shall we three meet again<br/></span>
<span class="i0">In thunder, lightning, or in rain?<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">When the hurlyburly's done.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">When the battle's lost and won.<br/></span></div>
<div class="rgt">—Macbeth</div>
</div>
<h3>ENTER THREE HUSSARS</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">My</span> name is Greta Forzane.
Twenty-nine and a party
girl would describe
me. I was born in Chicago, of
Scandinavian parents, but now I
operate chiefly outside space and
time—not in Heaven or Hell, if
there are such places, but not in
the cosmos or universe you know
either.</p>
<p>I am not as romantically entrancing
as the immortal film star
who also bears my first name, but
I have a rough-and-ready charm of
my own. I need it, for my job is
to nurse back to health and kid
back to sanity Soldiers badly
roughed up in the biggest war going.
This war is the Change War,
a war of time travelers—in fact, our
private name for being in this war
is being on the Big Time. Our
Soldiers fight by going back to
change the past, or even ahead to
change the future, in ways to help
our side win the final victory a
billion or more years from now.
A long killing business, believe
me.</p>
<p>You don't know about the
Change War, but it's influencing
your lives all the time and maybe
you've had hints of it without
realizing.</p>
<p>Have you ever worried about
your memory, because it doesn't
seem to be bringing you exactly
the same picture of the past from
one day to the next? Have you
ever been afraid that your personality
was changing because of
forces beyond your knowledge or
control? Have you ever felt sure
that sudden death was about to
jump you from nowhere? Have
you ever been scared of Ghosts—not
the story-book kind, but the
billions of beings who were once
so real and strong it's hard to believe
they'll just sleep harmlessly
forever? Have you ever wondered
about those things you may call
devils or Demons—spirits able to
range through all time and space,
through the hot hearts of stars
and the cold skeleton of space between
the galaxies? Have you ever
thought that the whole universe
might be a crazy, mixed-up dream?
If you have, you've had hints of
the Change War.</p>
<p>How I got recruited into the
Change War, how it's conducted,
what the two sides are, why you
don't consciously know about it,
what I really think about it—you'll
learn in due course.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">The</span> place outside the cosmos
where I and my pals do our
nursing job I simply call the Place.
A lot of my nursing consists of
amusing and humanizing Soldiers
fresh back from raids into time.
In fact, my formal title is Entertainer
and I've got my silly
side, as you'll find out.</p>
<p>My pals are two other gals and
three guys from quite an assortment
of times and places. We're
a pretty good team, and with Sid
bossing, we run a pretty good Recuperation
Station, though we have
our family troubles. But most of
our troubles come slamming into
the Place with the beat-up Soldiers,
who've generally just been
going through hell and want to
raise some of their own. As a matter
of fact, it was three newly arrived
Soldiers who started this
thing I'm going to tell you about,
this thing that showed me so much
about myself and everything.</p>
<p>When it started, I had been on
the Big Time for a thousand sleeps
and two thousand nightmares, and
working in the Place for five hundred-one
thousand. This two-nightmares
routine every time you lay
down your dizzy little head is
rough, but you pretend to get used
to it because being on the Big
Time is supposed to be worth it.</p>
<p>The Place is midway in size
and atmosphere between a large
nightclub where the Entertainers
sleep in and a small Zeppelin hangar
decorated for a party, though
a Zeppelin is one thing we haven't
had yet. You go out of the Place,
but not often if you have any sense
and if you are an Entertainer like
me, into the cold light of a morning
filled with anything from the
earlier dinosaurs to the later spacemen,
who look strangely similar
except for size.</p>
<p>Solely on doctor's orders, I have
been on cosmic leave six times
since coming to work at the Place,
meaning I have had six brief vacations,
if you care to call them
that, for believe me they are busman's
holidays, considering what
goes on in the Place all the time.
The last one I spent in Renaissance
Rome, where I got a crush
on Cesare Borgia, but I got over
it. Vacations are for the birds, anyway,
because they have to be fitted
by the Spiders into serious operations
of the Change War, and you
can imagine how restful that
makes them.</p>
<p>"See those Soldiers changing the
past? You stick along with them.
Don't go too far up front, though,
but don't wander off either. Relax
and enjoy yourself."</p>
<p>Ha! Now the kind of recuperation
Soldiers get when they come
to the Place is a horse of a far
brighter color, simply dazzling by
comparison. Entertainment is our
business and we give them a bang-up
time and send them staggering
happily back into action, though
once in a great while something
may happen to throw a wee
shadow on the party.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I am</span> dead in some ways, but
don't let that bother you—I
am lively enough in others. If you
met me in the cosmos, you would
be more apt to yak with me or try
to pick me up than to ask a cop
to do same or a father to douse
me with holy water, unless you
are one of those hard-boiled reformer
types. But you are not likely
to meet me in the cosmos, because
(bar Basin Street and the
Prater) 15th Century Italy and
Augustan Rome—until they spoiled
it—are my favorite (Ha!) vacation
spots and, as I have said, I
stick as close to the Place as I can.
It is really the nicest Place in the
whole Change World. (Crisis! I
even <i>think</i> of it capitalized!)</p>
<p>Anyhoo, when this thing started,
I was twiddling my thumbs on
the couch nearest the piano and
thinking it was too late to do my
fingernails and whoever came in
probably wouldn't notice them anyway.</p>
<p>The Place was jumpy like it
always is on an approach and the
gray velvet of the Void around
us was curdled with the uneasy
lights you see when you close your
eyes in the dark.</p>
<p>Sid was tuning the Maintainers
for the pick-up and the right shoulder
of his gold-worked gray doublet
was streaked where he'd been wiping
his face on it with quick ducks
of his head.</p>
<p>Beauregard was leaning as close
as he could over Sid's other shoulder,
one white-trousered knee
neatly indenting the rose plush of
the control divan, and he wasn't
missing a single flicker of Sid's old
fingers on the dials; Beau's co-pilot
besides piano player. Beau's face
had that dead blank look it must
have had when every double eagle
he owned and more he didn't were
riding on the next card to be
turned in the gambling saloon on
one of those wedding-cake Mississippi
steamboats.</p>
<p>Doc was soused as usual, sitting
at the bar with his top hat pushed
back and his knitted shawl pulled
around him, his wide eyes seeing
whatever horrors a life in Nazi-occupied
Czarist Russia can add
to being a drunk Demon in the
Change World.</p>
<p>Maud, who is the Old Girl, and
Lili—the New Girl, of course—were
telling the big beads of their
identical pearl necklaces.</p>
<p>You might say that all us Entertainers
were a bit edgy; being
Demons doesn't automatically
make us brave.</p>
<p>Then the red telltale on the
Major Maintainer went out and
the Door began to darken in the
Void facing Sid and Beau, and
I felt Change Winds blowing hard
and my heart missed a couple of
beats, and the next thing three
Soldiers had stepped out of the
cosmos and into the Place, their
first three steps hitting the floor
hard as they changed times and
weights.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">They</span> were dressed as officers
of hussars, as we'd been advised,
and—praise the Bonny Dew!—I
saw that the first of them was
Erich, my own dear little commandant,
the pride of the von Hohenwalds
and the Terror of the
Snakes. Behind him was some
hard-faced Roman or other, and
beside Erich and shouldering into
him as they stamped forward was
a new boy, blond, with a face like
a Greek god who's just been touring
a Christian hell.</p>
<p>They were uniformed exactly
alike in black—shakos, fur-edged
pelisses, boots, and so forth—with
white skull emblems on the shakos.
The only difference between them
was that Erich had a Caller on his
wrist and the New Boy had a
black-gauntleted glove on his left
hand and was clenching the mate
in it, his right hand being bare like
both of Erich's and the Roman's.</p>
<p>"You've made it, lads, hearts of
gold," Sid boomed at them, and
Beau twitched a smile and murmured
something courtly and
Maud began to chant, "Shut the
Door!" and the New Girl copied
her and I joined in because the
Change Winds do blow like crazy
when the Door is open, even
though it can't ever be shut tight
enough to keep them from leaking
through.</p>
<p>"Shut it before it blows wrinkles
in our faces," Maud called in her
gamin voice to break the ice, looking
like a skinny teen-ager in the
tight, knee-length frock she'd
copied from the New Girl.</p>
<p>But the three Soldiers weren't
paying attention. The Roman—I
remembered his name was Mark—was
blundering forward stiffly
as if there were something wrong
with his eyes, while Erich and the
New Boy were yelling at each
other about a kid and Einstein and
a summer palace and a bloody
glove and the Snakes having
booby-trapped Saint Petersburg.
Erich had that taut sadistic smile
he gets when he wants to hit me.</p>
<p>The New Boy was in a tearing
rage. "Why'd you pull us out so
bloody fast? We fair chewed the
Nevsky Prospekt to pieces galloping
away."</p>
<p>"Didn't you feel their stun guns,
<i>Dummkopf</i>, when they sprung the
trap—too soon, <i>Gott sei Dank</i>?"
Erich demanded.</p>
<p>"I did," the New Boy told him.
"Not enough to numb a cat. Why
didn't you show us action?"</p>
<p>"Shut up. I'm your leader. I'll
show you action enough."</p>
<p>"You won't. You're a filthy Nazi
coward."</p>
<p>"<i>Weibischer Engländer!</i>"</p>
<p>"Bloody Hun!"</p>
<p>"<i>Schlange!</i>"</p>
<p>The blond lad knew enough
German to understand that last
crack. He threw back his sable-edged
pelisse to clear his sword
arm and he swung away from
Erich, which bumped him into
Beau. At the first sign of the quarrel,
Beau had raised himself from
the divan as quickly and silently
as a—no, I won't use that word—and
slithered over to them.</p>
<p>"Sirs, you forget yourselves," he
said sharply, off balance, supporting
himself on the New Boy's upraised
arm. "This is Sidney Lessingham's
Place of Entertainment
and Recuperation. There are
ladies—"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">With</span> a contemptuous snarl,
the New Boy shoved him
off and snatched with his bare
hand for his saber. Beau reeled
against the divan, it caught him
in the shins and he fell toward
the Maintainers. Sid whisked them
out of the way as if they were a
couple of beach radios—simply
nothing in the Place is nailed down—and
had them back on the coffee
table before Beau hit the floor.
Meanwhile, Erich had his saber
out and had parried the New
Boy's first wild slash and lunged
in return, and I heard the scream
of steel and the rutch of his boot
on the diamond-studded pavement.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Beau</span> rolled over and came up
pulling from the ruffles of his
shirt bosom a derringer I knew
was some other weapon in disguise—a
stun gun or even an Atropos.
Besides scaring me damp for Erich
and everybody, that brought me
up short: us Entertainers' nerves
must be getting as naked as the
Soldiers', probably starting when
the Spiders canceled all cosmic
leaves twenty sleeps back.</p>
<p>Sid shot Beau his look of command,
rapped out, "I'll handle this,
you whoreson firebrand," and
turned to the Minor Maintainer. I
noticed that the telltale on the
Major was glowing a reassuring
red again, and I found a moment
to thank Mamma Devi that the
Door was shut.</p>
<p>Maud was jumping up and
down, cheering I don't know which—nor
did she, I bet—and the New
Girl was white and I saw that the
sabers were working more businesslike.
Erich's flicked, flicked,
flicked again and came away from
the blond lad's cheek spilling a
couple of red drops. The blond lad
lunged fiercely, Erich jumped back,
and the next moment they were
both floating helplessly in the air,
twisting like they had cramps.</p>
<p>I realized quick enough that
Sid had shut off gravity in the
Door and Stores sectors of the
Place, leaving the rest of us firm
on our feet in the Refresher and
Surgery sectors. The Place has
sectional gravity to suit our Extraterrestrial
buddies—those crazy
ETs sometimes come whooping in
for recuperation in very mixed
batches.</p>
<p>From his central position, Sid
called out, kindly enough but taking
no nonsense, "All right, lads,
you've had your fun. Now sheathe
those swords."</p>
<p>For a second or so, the two
black hussars drifted and contorted.
Erich laughed harshly and neatly
obeyed—the commandant is used
to free fall. The blond lad stopped
writhing, hesitated while he glared
upside down at Erich and managed
to get his saber into its scabbard,
although he turned a slow
somersault doing it. Then Sid
switched on their gravity, slow
enough so they wouldn't get
sprained landing.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Erich</span> laughed, lightly this
time, and stepped out briskly
toward us. He stopped to clap the
New Boy firmly on the shoulder
and look him in the face.</p>
<p>"So, now you get a good scar,"
he said.</p>
<p>The other didn't pull away,
but he didn't look up and Erich
came on. Sid was hurrying toward
the New Boy, and as he passed
Erich, he wagged a finger at him
and gayly said, "You rogue." Next
thing I was giving Erich my "Man,
you're home" hug and he was kissing
me and cracking my ribs and
saying, "<i>Liebchen! Doppchen!</i>"—which
was fine with me because
I do love him and I'm a good lover
and as much a Doubleganger as
he is.</p>
<p>We had just pulled back from
each other to get a breath—his
blue eyes looked so sweet in his
worn face—when there was a
thud behind us. With the snapping
of the tension, Doc had fallen off
his bar stool and his top hat was
over his eyes. As we turned to
chuckle at him, Maud squeaked
and we saw that the Roman had
walked straight up against the
Void and was marching along there
steadily without gaining a foot, like
it does happen, his black uniform
melting into that inside-your-head
gray.</p>
<p>Maud and Beau rushed over to
fish him back, which can be tricky.
The thin gambler was all courtly
efficiency again. Sid supervised
from a distance.</p>
<p>"What's wrong with him?" I
asked Erich.</p>
<p>He shrugged. "Overdue for
Change Shock. And he was nearest
the stun guns. His horse almost
threw him. <i>Mein Gott</i>, you should
have seen Saint Petersburg, <i>Liebchen</i>:
the Nevsky Prospekt, the
canals flying by like reception carpets
of blue sky, a cavalry troop
in blue and gold that blundered
across our escape, fine women in
furs and ostrich plumes, a monk
with a big tripod and his head under
a hood—it gave me the horrors
seeing all those Zombies flashing
past and staring at me in that
sick unawakened way they have,
and knowing that some of them,
say the photographer, might be
Snakes."</p>
<p>Our side in the Change War is
the Spiders, the other side is the
Snakes, though all of us—Spiders
and Snakes alike—are Doublegangers
and Demons too, because
we're cut out of our lifelines in
the cosmos. Your lifeline is all of
you from birth to death. We're
Doublegangers because we can
operate both in the cosmos and
outside of it, and Demons because
we act reasonably alive while doing
so—which the Ghosts don't.
Entertainers and Soldiers are all
Demon-Doublegangers, whichever
side they're on—though they say
the Snake Places are simply ghastly.
Zombies are dead people whose
lifelines lie in the so-called past.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">"What</span> were you doing in
Saint Petersburg before the
ambush?" I asked Erich. "That is,
if you can talk about it."</p>
<p>"Why not? We were kidnapping
the infant Einstein back from the
Snakes in 1883. Yes, the Snakes
got him, <i>Liebchen</i>, only a few
sleeps back, endangering the West's
whole victory over Russia—"</p>
<p>"—which gave your dear little
Hitler the world on a platter for
fifty years and got me loved to
death by your sterling troops in
the Liberation of Chicago—"</p>
<p>"—but which leads to the ultimate
victory of the Spiders and
the West over the Snakes and
Communism, <i>Liebchen</i>, remember
that. Anyway, our counter-snatch
didn't work. The Snakes had
guards posted—most unusual and
we weren't warned. The whole
thing was a great mess. No wonder
Bruce lost his head—not that
it excuses him."</p>
<p>"The New Boy?" I asked. Sid
hadn't got to him and he was still
standing with hooded eyes where
Erich had left him, a dark pillar
of shame and rage.</p>
<p>"<i>Ja</i>, a lieutenant from World
War One. An Englishman."</p>
<p>"I gathered that," I told Erich.
"Is he really effeminate?"</p>
<p>"<i>Weibischer?</i>" He smiled. "I had
to call him something when he
said I was a coward. He'll make
a fine Soldier—only needs a little
more shaping."</p>
<p>"You men are so original when
you spat." I lowered my voice.
"But you shouldn't have gone on
and called him a Snake, Erich
mine."</p>
<p>"<i>Schlange?</i>" The smile got
crooked. "Who knows—about any
of us? As Saint Petersburg showed
me, the Snakes' spies are getting
cleverer than ours." The blue eyes
didn't look sweet now. "Are you,
<i>Liebchen</i>, really nothing more than
a good loyal Spider?"</p>
<p>"Erich!"</p>
<p>"All right, I went too far—with
Bruce and with you too. We're
all hacked these days, riding with
one leg over the breaking edge."</p>
<p>Maud and Beau were supporting
the Roman to a couch, Maud
taking most of his weight, with Sid
still supervising and the New Boy
still sulking by himself. The New
Girl should have been with him,
of course, but I couldn't see her
anywhere and I decided she was
probably having a nervous breakdown
in the Refresher, the little
jerk.</p>
<p>"The Roman looks pretty bad,
Erich," I said.</p>
<p>"Ah, Mark's tough. Got virtue,
as his people say. And our little
starship girl will bring him back
to life if anybody can and if ..."</p>
<p>"... you call this living," I filled
in dutifully.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">He</span> was right. Maud had fifty-odd
years of psychomedical
experience, 23rd Century at that.
It should have been Doc's job, but
that was fifty drunks back.</p>
<p>"Maud and Mark, that will be
an interesting experiment," Erich
said. "Reminiscent of Goering's
with the frozen men and the naked
gypsy girls."</p>
<p>"You are a filthy Nazi. She'll be
using electrophoresis and deep suggestion,
if I know anything."</p>
<p>"How will you be able to know
anything, <i>Liebchen</i>, if she switches
on the couch curtains, as I perceive
she is preparing to do?"</p>
<p>"Filthy Nazi I said and meant."</p>
<p>"Precisely." He clicked his heels
and bowed a millimeter. "Erich
Friederich von Hohenwald, <i>Oberleutnant</i>
in the army of the Third
Reich. Fell at Narvik, where he
was Recruited by the Spiders. Lifeline
lengthened by a Big Change
after his first death and at latest
report Commandant of Toronto,
where he maintains extensive baby
farms to provide him with breakfast
meat, if you believe the handbills
of the <i>voyageurs</i> underground.
At your service."</p>
<p>"Oh, Erich, it's all so lousy," I
said, touching his hand, reminded
that he was one of the unfortunates
Resurrected from a point in their
lifelines well before their deaths—in
his case, because the date of
his death had been shifted forward
by a Big Change after his Resurrection.
And as every Demon finds
out, if he can't imagine it beforehand,
it is pure hell to remember
your future, and the shorter the
time between your Resurrection
and your death back in the cosmos,
the better. Mine, bless Bab-ed-Din,
was only an action-packed ten
minutes on North Clark Street.</p>
<p>Erich put his other hand lightly
over mine. "Fortunes of the Change
War, <i>Liebchen</i>. At least I'm a
Soldier and sometimes assigned
to future operations—though why
we should have this monomania
about our future personalities back
there, I don't know. Mine is a
stupid <i>Oberst</i>, thin as paper—and
frightfully indignant at the <i>voyageurs</i>!
But it helps me a little if I
see him in perspective and at least
I get back to the cosmos pretty
regularly, <i>Gott sei Dank</i>, so I'm
better off than you Entertainers."</p>
<p>I didn't say aloud that a Changing
cosmos is worse than none, but
I found myself sending a prayer to
the Bonny Dew for my father's
repose, that the Change Winds
would blow lightly across the lifeline
of Anton A. Forzane, professor
of physiology, born in Norway
and buried in Chicago. Woodlawn
Cemetery is a nice gray spot.</p>
<p>"That's all right, Erich," I said.
"We Entertainers Got Mittens too."</p>
<p>He scowled around at me suspiciously,
as if he were wondering
whether I had all my buttons on.</p>
<p>"Mittens?" he said. "What do
you mean? I'm not wearing any.
Are you trying to say something
about Bruce's gloves—which incidentally
seem to annoy him for
some reason. No, seriously, Greta,
why do you Entertainers need
mittens?"</p>
<p>"Because we get cold feet sometimes.
At least I do. Got Mittens,
as I say."</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">A sickly</span> light dawned in his
Prussian puss. He muttered,
"Got mittens ... <i>Gott mit uns</i> ...
God with us," and roared softly,
"Greta, I don't know how I put up
with you, the way you murder
a great language for cheap laughs."</p>
<p>"You've got to take me as I am,"
I told him, "mittens and all, thank
the Bonny Dew—" and hastily explained,
"That's French—<i>le bon
Dieu</i>—the good God—don't hit
me. I'm not going to tell you any
more of my secrets."</p>
<p>He laughed feebly, like he was
dying.</p>
<p>"Cheer up," I said. "I won't be
here forever, and there are worse
places than the Place."</p>
<p>He nodded grudgingly, looking
around. "You know what, Greta,
if you'll promise not to make some
dreadful joke out of it: on operations,
I pretend I'll soon be going
backstage to court the world-famous
ballerina Greta Forzane."</p>
<p>He was right about the backstage
part. The Place is a regular
theater-in-the-round with the Void
for an audience, the Void's gray
hardly disturbed by the screens
masking Surgery (Ugh!), Refresher
and Stores. Between the
last two are the bar and kitchen
and Beau's piano. Between Surgery
and the sector where the
Door usually appears are the
shelves and taborets of the Art
Gallery. The control divan is stage
center. Spaced around at a fair
distance are six big low couches—one
with its curtains now shooting
up into the gray—and a few small
tables. It is like a ballet set and
the crazy costumes and characters
that turn up don't ruin the illusion.
By no means. Diaghilev would
have hired most of them for the
Ballet Russe on first sight, without
even asking them whether they
could keep time to music.</p>
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