Frank Herbert - The Green Brain

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THE MILLION-IN-ONE MAN The extermination engineers had erected barriers between the Red and the Green zones. In the Green, the men had done their work well—no useless insects survived. But they still had to clear the way in the Red zone, to destroy insect life there—a lower form of life which was presenting a threat to mankind.
The Indian waited at the barrier to be let into the Green zone; he simulated the servility which would identify him as a primitive from the deep Brazilian interior—from the Red zone.
At the barrier he was almost overcome with the repellants sprayed at him. But the brilliant facets of his eyes, the tiny scales of his skin were not detected. The weave of furry separate cells did not become unraveled.
The million-in-one man penetrated the uninfested Green.

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“God go with you, Jefe,” Vierho said.

Joao turned, looked to the river about five hundred meters away across the savannah. He could just glimpse the beach of the opposite shore, the wild growth there illuminated by the afternoon sun. The jungle lifted there in steady waves of color, its bold lines standing out in the flat light. The growth was a deep blue-green at the bottom, a sun-bleached sage at the top, and with flecks of yellow, red and ochre between. Above the green towered a candello tree with bat-falcon nests cluttering the forks of its branches. A twisted screen of lianas partly obscured a wall of mata-polo trees to the left.

“Fifteen minutes of fuel in the pod and that’s all?” Joao asked.

“Maybe a minute more, Jefe.”

We’ll never make it with nothing but that river’s current to move us , Joao thought.

“Jefe, sometimes there’s a wind on the river,” Vierho said.

Christ, he doesn’t expect us to sail that thing, does he? Joao wondered. He looked at Vierho, saw the deep weariness in the man’s face, the scarecrow emaciation.

“That wind could cause trouble, Jefe,” Vierho said. “I have used one of the pod’s grapnel anchors to make a thing that will float just under the surface and provide some drag. It is called a sea anchor. It’ll keep the nose of the pod into the wind.”

“That’s a clever idea, Padre,” Joao said.

And he wondered: Why do we play out this farce? We’re going to die here, all of us… either here or somewhere down that river . There were seven or eight hundred kilometers of that river—rapids, chasms, waterfalls—and the rainy season was almost on them. The river would become a torrential hell. And if it didn’t get them, there were always the new insects, the creatures of acid and sophisticated poisons.

“You better inspect it one more time yourself, Jefe,” Vierho said. He gestured at the pod.

Yes, anything to keep busy, to keep from thinking , Joao thought. He’d already been over it once, but another look wouldn’t hurt anything. After all, their lives would depend on it… for awhile.

Our lives!

Joao allowed himself to wonder then if escape were possible, if there were any hope at all. This was, after all, the pod of a jungle airtruck. It could be sealed against most insects. It was designed to take abuse.

I mustn’t allow myself to hope , he thought.

But he set himself to another inspection of the pod… just in case.

The white bandeirante paint of its exterior had been washed away in patches, streaked and etched by acid. The float skids, normally long and faired extrusions of the pod’s bottom curve, had been cranked out manually and locked in position. They formed a flat step up to the stub wings and into the cabin. The entire pod was just short of five and a half meters long with two meters at the rear taken up by the rocket motors. The motor complex which had nested into the discarded rear truck section was cut off flat on both sides. The pod itself was roughly oval in cross section. This left two flat half-moon surfaces which opened into the rear bulkhead of the pod’s cabin. The left-side half-moon was a maze of male and female connectors which once had linked the pod to the truck section. The right side was sealed by a hatch which now opened from the cabin and down to one of the float skids.

Joao inspected the hatch, made certain the connectors had all been sealed off, looked at the right-side float skid. A jagged rent in the side of the float had been patched with butyl and fabric.

He could smell rocket fuel, and he knelt to peer up at the belly tank section. Vierho had siphoned out the fuel, applied a chemical hotpatch on the outside and spray-tank sealant inside, then replaced the fuel.

“It should hold all right if you don’t hit anything,” Vierho said.

Joao nodded, worked his way around, climbed up on the left stub wing and looked down into the cabin. Dual control seats forward and the padded gig-box in the rear. Spray stains were all over the interior. The interior formed a space about two meters square and two and a half meters deep. Windows in front looked down over the rounded nose. Side windows stopped at the wings forward, dipped deeper in the rear. A single transparent panel of polarizing plastic ran over the top to the rear bulkhead.

Joao let himself down into the command seat on the left, checked the manual controls. They felt loose and sluggish. New fuel-monitoring and firing controls had been installed with crude, hand-lettered labels. Vierho spoke at his shoulder.

“I had to use whatever was available, Jefe. There was not much. I’m glad these IEO people were such fools.”

“Hmmm?” Joao spoke absently as he continued his examination.

“When they left their truck, they took tents. I would’ve taken more weapons. But the tents gave me the new guy cables and fabric for patches.”

Joao finished tracing the fuel controls. “No automatic demand valves on the fuel lines,” he said.

“They couldn’t be repaired, Jefe—but you don’t have much fuel anyway.”

“Enough to blow us all to hell… or run away with us if it gets out of hand.”

“That’s why I put the big knob there, Jefe; I told you about that. On and off in short bursts—no problem.”

“Unless I accidentally give it too big a drink.”

“Underneath there, Jefe: the piece of wood, that’s the stop I put in. I tested it with containers under the fuel injectors. You won’t have a very fast ship… but it’s enough.”

“Fifteen minutes,” Joao mused.

“That’s just a guess, Jefe.”

“I know—maybe a hundred and fifty kilometers if everything works as it’s supposed to; a hundred and fifty meters with us spread all over if it doesn’t.”

“A hundred and fifty kilometers,” Vierho said. “You wouldn’t even be halfway to civilization.”

“No argument,” Joao said. “I was just thinking out loud.”

“Well, is everything ready to go?” Chen-Lhu’s voice boomed up at them full of false heartiness. Joao looked down to see the man standing near the tip of the left wing, his body bent over with the appearance of weakness. Joao had just about decided Chen-Lhu’s weakness was appearance only.

He was the first to recover , Joao thought. He’s had more time to regain his strength. But… he was closer to death. Maybe I’m just imagining things .

“Is it ready or isn’t it?” Chen-Lhu asked.

“I hope so,” Joao said.

“There’s danger?”

“It’ll be like a Sunday ride in the park,” Joao said.

“Is it time to come aboard?”

Joao looked at the shadows stretching out from the tents, the orange cast of the sunlight. He found he was having difficulty breathing, knew this for tension. Joao took a deep breath, found a level of hesitant calm within himself; not relaxed, certainly, but with fear held at bay.

Vierho answered for Joao: “Twenty minutes, more or less, Senhor Doctor.” He patted Joao’s shoulder. “Jefe, my prayers go with you.”

“You sure you wouldn’t rather take my place, Padre?”

“We will not discuss it, Jefe.” Vierho stepped down off the float skid.

Rhin Kelly emerged from her lab tent with a small bag in her left hand, crossed to stand beside Chen-Lhu.

“About twenty minutes, my dear,” Chen-Lhu said.

“I’m not at all sure I should have a place in that thing,” she said. “One of the others might give you a…”

“It has been decided,” Chen-Lhu said, and he put angry sharpness in his voice. The fool woman! Why can’t she let well enough alone? “No one will permit you to stay,” he said. Besides, my dear Rhin, I may need you to sway that Brazilian. This Joao Martinho will have to be played very carefully. A woman sometimes can do that better than a man .

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