Clifford Simak - Time is the Simplest Thing

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Without setting foot on another planet, people like Shep Blaine were reaching out to the stars with their minds, telepathically contacting strange beings on other worlds. But even Blaine was unprepared for what happened when he communed with the soul of an utterly alien being light years from Earth. After recovering from his experience, he becomes a dangerous man: not only has he gained startling new powers — but he now understands that humankind must share the stars.
Hunted through time and space by those who he used to trust, Blaine undergoes a unique odyssey that takes him through a nightmarish version of small-town America as he seeks to find others who share his vision of a humane future. Blaine has mastered death and time. Now he must master the fear and ignorance that threatened to destroy him!
Serialized in
as
in 1961. Later published by Doubleday as 
.
Nominated for Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1962.

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“Certainly. Why not? Just a voice saying that a man has been killed in unit number ten out at The Plainsman. Then hang up real quick.”

“To put us on the spot?”

“To put whoever was with Godfrey on the spot. They maybe even know exactly who we are. That doctor—”

“I don’t know,” said Blaine. “He may have.”

“Listen, Shep, I’m positive from all that’s happened that Finn is in Belmont.”

“Belmont?”

“That town we found you in.”

“So that’s the name of it.”

“There’s something happening,” she said. “Something happening right here. Something important going on. There was Riley and the truck and—”

“But what are we to do?”

“We can’t let them find Godfrey here.”

“We could pull the car out back and take him out the back door.”

“There’s probably someone watching. Then they’d have us cold.”

She beat her hands together in exasperation.

“If Finn has a free hand now,” she said, “he probably can pull off whatever he is planning. We can’t let him put us out of action. We have got to stop him.”

“We?”

“You and I. You step into Godfrey’s shoes. Now it’s up to you.”

“But I—”

Her eyes blazed suddenly. “You were his friend. You heard his story. You told him you were with him.”

“Sure I did,” said Blaine. “But I am starting cold. I don’t know the score.”

“Stop Finn,” she said. “Find out what he’s doing and stop him in his tracks. Fight a delaying action. . . .”

“You and your military thinking. Your delaying actions and your lines of retreat laid out.” (A very female general with enormous jackboots and a flock of medals pendant from very spearlike breasts.)

Cut that out!

A newspaper gal. And you are objective.

“Shep,” she said, “shut up. How can I be objective? I believed in Godfrey. I believed in what he was doing.”

“I suppose that I do, too. But it is all so new, so quick. . . .”

“Maybe we should just cut and run.”

“No! Wait a minute. If we cut and run, we’d be out of it as surely as if they caught us here.”

“But, Shep, there is no way.”

“There just might be,” he told her. “Is there a town around here by the name of Hamilton?”

“Why, yes, just a mile or two away. Down by the river.”

He sprang to his feet and glanced about the room.

The phone sat on the night table between the single beds.

“What—”

“A friend,” said Blaine. “Someone that I met. Someone who might help us. A mile or two away?”

“Yes, Hamilton is. If that is what—”

“It is,” said Blaine.

He stepped swiftly across the room and picked the hand-piece out of the cradle. He dialed for operator.

“I want to get a number in Hamilton. How do I go about it?”

“What is the number, sir?’

“I will ring it for you.”

He turned his head toward Harriet. “Is it getting dark outside?”

“It was getting dark when I closed the shutters.”

He heard the purring of the signal on the wire.

“They’ll need some darkness,” he said. “They couldn’t come in—”

“I don’t know,” said Harriet, “what you could be up to.”

“Hello,” said a voice in the phone.

“Is Anita there?”

“Right here,” said the voice. “Just a moment.” Anita, for you. A man.

And that was impossible, Blaine thought wildly. You simply couldn’t do it. Perhaps he’d imagined it.

“Hello,” said Anita Andrews. “Who is this?”

Blaine. Shepherd Blaine. Remember? I was with the man who had the shotgun. With the silver shot.

Yes, 1 remember you.

And it was true, he thought. He had not imagined it. You could use telepathy on the telephone!

You said that if I ever needed help.

Yes, I told you that.

I need help now. A body on the floor: police car coming down the road, red light flashing, siren howling; a speedometer and clock that had sprouted legs and were racing for a tape; the sign that said The Plainsman, the unit number on the door.) I swear to you, Anita. This is on the level. I can’t explain right now. But this is on the level. I can’t let them find him here.

We’ll take him off your hands.

On faith?

On faith alone. You were square with us that night.

Hurry!

Right away. I’ll bring some others.

Thanks, Anita. But she was already gone.

He stood there, holding the receiver out from his face, staring at it, then slowly put it in the cradle.

“I caught part of that,” said Harriet. “It isn’t possible.”

“Of course it’s not,” said Blaine. “Telly transmission on a wire. You don’t have to tell me.”

He stared down at the man lying on the floor. “It’s one of the things he talked about. Greater than Fishhook could ever be, he said.”

Harriet didn’t answer.

“I wonder how much else they have?” said Blaine.

“She said they’d come for Godfrey. How will they come for him? How soon?”

There was a hint of hysteria in her voice.

“They fly,” he told her. “They are levitators. Witches.”

He made a bitter laugh.

“But you—”

“How did I know them? They ambushed us one night. Just out to raise some hell. Riley had a shotgun. . . .”

“Riley!”

“The man in the hospital room, remember? The man who died. He was in an accident.”

“But, Shep, were you with Riley? How did you come to be with him?”

“I hitched a ride. He was scared at night. He wanted someone with him. We nursed that ramshackle truck . . .”

She was staring at him, a startled look about her.

“Wait a minute,” he said. “You said something back there in the hospital. You said you were—”

“Looking for him. Godfrey had hired him and he was late and—”

“But . . .”

“What is it, Shep?”

“I talked to him just before he died. He tried to give me a message, but he couldn’t get it out. The message was for Finn. That was the first I heard of Finn.”

“Everything went wrong,” said Harriet. “Every blessed thing. There was the star machine . . .”

She stopped what she was saying and came across the room to stand beside him. “But you don’t know about the star machine. Or do you?”

He shook his head. “Like the ones in Fishhook? The ones that helped us to the stars?”

She nodded. “That’s what Riley was hauling in his truck. Godfrey had arranged to get it and he had to get it moved to Pierre somehow. So he hired Riley. . . .”

“A bootleg star machine!” said Blaine, a little awed. “You know that every nation in the world has laws against possessing them. They’re only legal if they are in Fishhook.”

“Godfrey knew all that. But he needed one. He tried to build one, but he couldn’t. There aren’t any blueprints.”

“You bet your life there aren’t.”

“Shep, what is wrong with you?”

“I don’t know. There’s really nothing wrong. A bit confused, perhaps. At how, all along the line, I was pitchforked into this.”

“You can always run.”

“Harriet, you know better. I am through with running. There’s no place for me to go.”

“You could always approach some business group. They’d be glad to have you. They’d give you a job, pay you plenty for what you know of Fishhook.”

He shook his head, thinking back to Charline’s party, with Dalton sitting there, long legs outstretched, his hair a rumpled mouse nest, his mouth mangling the cigar. And Dalton saying: “In a consultive capacity you’d be worth a lot of money.”

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