âGet real,' someone said at the back of the group. âWe're lemmings.'
Â
âWell?' Martha demanded. âYou were on the phone a long time.'
âHm?'
âI said you were on the phone a long time.What did they say?'
âShe,' Kevin replied.
âWhat?'
âShe. It was a girl.' Kevin looked away, frowning. âShe said she'd call me back as soon as she'd found out what to do.'
Martha was about to say something when an inflection in Kevin's voice echoed off the back wall of her mind. It was the way he'd said
she
.
âKevin,' she said.
âHm?'
âKevin, look at me when I'm talking to you. When you said it was a girl . . .'
âYes?'
âWhat kind of girl?'
The brusqueness in Kevin's manner struck her as being defensive, not to mention embarrassed. âJust a girl, I dunno. Don't know all that much about girls, do I? Never had the chance . . . What does it matter what kind of girl, anyway? Can't really see what that's got to do with anything.'
âAnd she's going to ring you back?'
âThat's right. Can we get on now, please? I thought you were supposed to be helping me sort out this mess, rather than standing there cross-examining me about girls.'
It occurred to Martha that if her diagnosis was correct, the business with the computer was going to be the least of their worries when the Boss got back. On the other hand, pressing the point now didn't seem to be quite the right thing to do. And besides, she reasoned, if the worst comes to the worst, there's nothing that makes people forget their woes quite like a nice Royal wedding.
âYou go on up, then,' she said soothingly. âI'll be with you in a tick. Just going to get myself a nice cup of tea.'
Now in Heaven there is nothing but Truth; and once Kevin had left the staff canteen Martha did indeed get herself a cup of tea. Then she sat down by the telephone and dialled a number.
âHello?' she said. âIs that the Kawaguchiya Helpline? Oh, it's busy. Yes, I'll hold.'
Â
âHello. I come in peace. Take me to your leader.'
No reply. Patiently, Zxprxp tried again. And again. Either
Homo sapiens
doesn't believe in speaking on the first date, or this wasn't a
Homo sapiens
. It did look quite like the spy-camera pictures of humans he'd seen in the university library; mind you, since they'd been magnified over nine million times, the same could be said of quite a few things, including the ship he'd come in, the planet itself, and his grandmother.
âHello,' he said once more. âI come in peace. I wish to learn more about you and your kind.'
At this point, the cow he'd been talking to swished its tail, mooed gently and walked away, nearly treading on Zxprxp's third left pseudopod in the process. Shrugging some of his nearside shoulders, he gave up and slithered away.
Funny old planet, this; lots of apparently pointless open spaces between things. It took him three point seven four standard time units before he managed to slither his way across the empty green-carpeted bit to the black-carpeted bit where his tentacle-held sensor had detected rapid movement. He took up a position in the middle of the black strip, which was well over 1.925
xztvwqy
wide and of an indefinite length, and waited to see what would happen.
On the sensor's dial, the needle flickered. Ah. Somebody coming.
âHello. I come in peace. Take me to your
aaaaagh!
'
The glancing blow from the edge of the fast-moving thing's head deposited him in what appeared to be a long, narrow forest of thick-stemmed vegetation, which included lots of prickles. By the time he'd managed to haul himself out again, the fast-moving thing was hardly visible in the distance and moving fast. He hadn't been in the optimum position to notice whether it had made any sort of reply to his message of friendship, but if its actions were anything to go by, he hoped very much it hadn't been a human being, because if it was, they weren't very friendly. Chances were, he rationalised, that it was some kind of vehicle, implying that the black strip was an area set aside exclusively for vehicular use. Neat idea, he mused, and one we could learn from.You see? Only been here a few STUs and already I've justified the trip.
Having no concrete game plan in mind, he shuffled a few hundred
xztvwqy
along the side of the strip, keeping a dozen or so whiskers peeled for oncoming vehicles. As he did so, he recorded a little basic data. Ground surface generally solid and lukewarm, atmosphere breathable, plentiful supply of carbon dioxide and monoxide, strong readings of airborne particles of lead, chlorine and sulphur, almost adequate level of background radiation; pretty well everything you needed for a healthy life. Obviously
Homo sapiens
had got the problem of environmental pollution taped in a way that put his own species to shame. Indeed, when Zxprxp thought of the ecological shambles he'd come from - oceans of H
2
O with nothing in it but salt and the odd jellyfish, intact ozone layer, complete absence of beneficial greenhouse effect - he cringed for the follies of his race. Oh well; bang goes any chance of persuading them to agree to a mutual exchange of colonists. Who in their right mind would want to leave an idyllic, globally warmed paradise like this and go and live on a virtually untouched world like his own? You'd have to be crazy.
Thoughts like these so prepossessed his mind that the life form was dead ahead of him before he noticed the bleeping of his sensor. Indeed, if the life form hadn't screamed, he might easily have slithered on by and not even noticed it. Fortunately, he pulled himself together in time and cleared his throats politely.
âHello,' he said. âI come in peace. Take me to your leader.'
The life form seemed to be staring at him; that is to say, the two oblong slits in the top front of its roughly circular upper section were wide open. It was also making little faint gurgling noises which suggested unease, or even panic; and that, Zxprxp felt, was definitely an example of the
t'krptz
calling the
skz'shrplt
pink. It's axiomatic in xenobiological circles that the one thing you must never, ever do on encountering an outlandish alien life form is to allow your instinctive disgust to show, and Zxprxp was doing his very best, even though the four-limbed, fibre-topped, dry-skinned
thing
was about as repulsive an object as he could possibly imagine. He was doing his bit for good manners and civilised behaviour; a pity that, out of the two of them, he was apparently the only one.
Nevertheless. âI am aware,' he said, as pleasantly as he could, âthat you might find my appearance disconcerting, or even distasteful. Please be reassured that I mean you no harm. I am here simply in order to carry out some preliminary research into your species, in the interests ofâ'
âEeeeeek!' replied the life form. âEeek eeeek!'
The situation was, Zxprxp felt, in grave danger of getting out of tentacle. Therefore, with infinite regret and many misgivings, he extended his mental probe for a brief telepathic contact. Not supposed to do this under any but the most extreme circumstances; and when he got home and his memory was played back, he was going to have to face some pretty hostile debriefing on this point. On the other hand, he was going to have to do something fairly drastic if this was the sort of reaction he could expect wherever he went.
It's all right
, he transmitted, in a minor key of pink.
I'm nice really
.
The life form stopped weebling and looked at him again, and he immediately disconnected the probe before it became obvious what he was doing. âHello,' he said. âI come in peace.'
âAh,' replied the life form. âThat's all right, then. Only you read things in the papers.'
âWell, of course,' Zxprxp replied, as he scanned this apparently meaningless phrase with the IdiomCheck facility. âStands to reason, really.'
âI mean, you're an alien, aren't you?' the life form continued. âOnly you look like you're more the sort that phones home than the ones that jump out of people's tummies.'
Zxprxp took a while to digest that one. It was, he reflected, a small consolation that his IdiomCheck was still under warranty, because if it was faulty and he complained when he got home, all he'd get would be a refund of the purchase price. âRest assured,' he said, hoping that that meant what he thought it did. âYou can't tell a book by its cover,' he added, wishing that he knew what he was saying. âAnyhow,' he went on, âwould you please be kind enough to take me to your leader?'
âHuh?'
âYour leader. If I could just trouble you to take me to him/her/it/them, that would be awfully sweet.'
âI haven't got a leader.'
Zxprxp restrained his irritation a little. It was infuriating to have come all this way to establish first contact with a semi-legendary species, only to find out that he apparently knew more about them than they did. âI think you're wrong there,' he said. âWith respect,' he added. â
Homo sapiens
tends to congregate in basically hierarchical social units.' He paused, scanned IdiomCheck again and tried a variant form.
âI demand to see the manager,' he said.
âHuh?'
What to do? A second telepathic contact would probably result in his being drummed out of the university for good and reassigned to a menial job in the plankton refinery. Saying the same thing again, only louder and more slowly, would apparently be in keeping with what
Homo sapiens
himself would do in this situation, but logic suggested that that was only because
Homo sapiens
wasn't necessarily very bright. âThe person who's in charge of your social group,' he said patiently. âI would very much like to meet him, if you could point me in the right direction.'
There was a long silence, long enough for a lame glacier to take a leisurely stroll round the block. âYou mean the Prime Minister?' the life form hazarded.
âYes,' Zxprxp said decisively, on the offchance that the life form had finally got the message. âWhich way, please?'
âTen Downing Street.'
âSorry?'
âWhere the Prime Minister lives. Ten Downing Street, London.' Pause. âIt's sort of over that way, about two hundred and seventy miles.'
âOh. Is that far?'
âDunno. Depends, really.' The life form did something with the joints connecting its upper limbs to its middle section. âSorry,' it added.
Suddenly Zxprxp felt that he'd had quite enough of this conversation. It hadn't been the way he'd anticipated. What he'd had in mind was something a bit more formal and dignified, like sitting at opposite ends of a large valley flashing lights and playing bits of music at each other. This was somehow . . . â That's all right,' he said. âI'll find it. I expect I'll just follow my nose, huh?'
The life form looked at him, with particular reference to his whiskers and secondary gills, and shuddered. Maybe the effect of the telepathic contact was wearing off; at any rate, it made a shrill giggling noise, put one of its flippers over the lower slit in its upper section and ran away.
Funny creature, Zxprxp reflected, floppeting back to his ship and programming the co-ordinates he'd been given into the AutoNav. Or maybe it was something I said.
Â
Just when he thought he was safe, Len sneezed.
One tiny speck of dust - it could only have been one, because that damned robot had rounded up all the others - hidden away under the workbench, and he had to breathe it in, with the inevitable result that he would be found. Filthy rotten luck.
âOh there you are,' warbled the robot, a moment or so later. âI've been looking for you.'
âNo kidding.'
âOh yes.' The robot looked at him; that is to say, its magnificently engineered sensory array located his body heat, ran a brief series of elimination tests to confirm that the subject was humanoid, cross-checked with data storage to correlate known characteristics of the humanoid Len with those of the subject (result ninety-nine point eight per cent positive), accessed logic centres to ascertain whether ninety-nine point eight was within approved tolerances to satisfy identification routines, received a positive answer, operated failsafe and backup identification procedures via the video link, olfactory analysis and voice pattern scan, and triumphantly presented its findings to the mainframe. The whole process took just under a thousandth of a second, causing the ongoing time-and-motion assessment systems to file an âadequate but could do better' report with the automated self-maintenance circuits. âWhat're you doing under the bench?' it asked politely.
âLooking for something,' Len replied awkwardly. âI thought I, um, dropped a 4BA grubscrew.'
Three small red lights on the sides of the robot's head flashed greedily. âHere,' it said, âallow me. I'm good at finding things.'
âNo, it's all right, honest . . .'
âI exist,' said the robot determinedly, âonly to serve. Budge up.'
A few minutes later, the burnished steel head popped out from under the bench and turned towards him. âYou're sure you dropped it here?'
âNo,' Len replied wretchedly. âIn fact, I'm pretty sure I dropped it, er, somewhere else.'
Pause. Flashing lights. Faint whirr as an automatic cooling fan cut in for a second or so. Bleep. âThen why were you looking under here?'
âDunno. More light under there, I guess.'
Flink. Bleep. âThat sounds improbable. Cross-reference with archive material also indicates strong resemblance between your answer and a very old humanoid joke about the drunk and the policeman. You were hiding.'