Clifford Simak - Time is the Simplest Thing

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Time is the Simplest Thing: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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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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“You forgot that I’m a parry.”

“So was Lambert Finn — at one time.”

“There’s too much hate,” Blaine said wearily. “There are too many derogatory labels. The reformers call the paranormal people parries, and the parries call the reformers reefers. And you don’t give a damn. You don’t care which way it goes. You wouldn’t go out and hunt someone to his death. But you’ll write about it. You’ll spread the blood across the page. And you don’t care where it comes from, just so it is blood.”

“For the love of God, Shep . . .”

“So I will give you something. You can say that Finn hasn’t anything to show, not a word to say. You can say that he is scared. You can say he stubbed his toe. . . .”

“Shep, you’re kidding me!”

“He won’t dare show you what he’s got.”

“What is it that he’s got?”

“Something that, if he showed it, would make him out a fool. I tell you, he won’t dare to show it. Tomorrow morning Lambert Finn will be the most frightened man the world has ever known.”

“I can’t write that. You know I can’t. . . .”

“Tomorrow noon,” Blaine told him, “everyone will be writing it. If you start right now, you can catch the last morning editions. You’ll scoop the world — if you’ve got the guts to do it.”

“You’re giving me straight dope? You’re—”

“Make up your mind,” said Blaine. “It’s true, every word of it. It is up to you. Now I’ve got to get along.”

Collins hesitated. “Thanks, Shep,” he said. “Thanks an awful lot.”

Blaine left him standing there, went past the elevator and turned up the stairs.

He came to the second floor and there, at the end of the left-hand corridor a man sat in a chair tilted back against the wall.

Blaine paced purposefully down the corridor. As he came closer, the guard tilted forward in his chair and came to his feet.

He put his hand out against Blaine’s chest.

“Just a minute, mister.”

“It’s urgent I see Finn.”

“He ain’t seeing no one, mister.”

“You’ll give him a message?”

“Not at this hour, I won’t.”

“Tell him I’m from Stone.”

“But Stone—”

“Just tell him I’m from Stone.”

The man stood undecided. Then he let his arm drop.

“You wait right here,” he said. “I’ll go in and ask him. Don’t try no funny stuff.”

“That’s all right. I’ll wait.”

He waited, wondering just how smart he was to wait. In the half-dark, rancid corridor he felt the ancient doubt. Maybe, he told himself, he should simply turn around and walk rapidly away.

The man came out.

“Stand still,” he commanded. “I’ve got to run you down.”

Expert hands went over Blaine, seeking knife or gun.

The man nodded, satisfied. “You’re clean,” he said. “You can go on in. I’ll be right outside the door.”

“I understand,” Blaine told him.

The guard opened the door, and Blaine went through it. The room was furnished as a living room. Beyond it was a bedroom.

There was a desk across the room, and a man stood behind the desk. He was clad in funeral black with a white scarf at this throat and he was tall. His face was long and bony and made one think of a winter-gaunted horse, but there was a hard, stern purpose to him that was somehow frightening.

Blaine walked steadily forward until he reached the desk.

“You are Finn,” he said.

“Lambert Finn,” said the man in a hollow voice, the tone of an accomplished orator who never can quite stop being an orator even when at rest.

Blaine brought his hands out of his pockets and rested his knuckles on the desk. He saw Finn looking at the blood and dirt.

“Your name,” said Finn, “is Shepherd Blaine and I know all about you.”

“Including that someday I intend to kill you?”

“Including that,” said Finn. “Or at least a suspicion of it.”

“But not tonight,” said Blaine, “because I want to see your face tomorrow. I want to see if you can take it as well as dish it out.”

“And that’s why you came to see me? That’s what you have to tell me?”

“It’s a funny thing,” Blaine told him, “but at this particular moment, I can think of no other reason. I actually can’t tell why I bothered to come up.”

“To make a bargain, maybe?”

“I hadn’t thought of that. There’s nothing that I want that you can give me.”

“Perhaps not, Mr. Blaine, but you have something that I want. Something for which I’d pay most handsomely.”

Blaine stared at him, not answering.

“You were in on the deal with the star machine,” said Finn. “You could provide the aims and motives. You could connect up the pieces. You could tell the story. It would be good evidence.”

Blaine chuckled at him. “You had me once,” he said. “You let me get away.”

“It was that sniveling doctor,” Finn said ferociously. “He was concerned there would be a rumpus and his hospital would somehow get bad publicity.”

“You should pick your people better, Finn.”

Finn growled. “You haven’t answered me.”

“About the deal, you mean? It would come high. It would come awfully high.”

“I am prepared to pay,” said Finn. “And you need the money. You are running naked with Fishhook at your heels.”

“Just an hour ago,” Blaine told him, “Fishhook had me trussed up for the kill.”

“So you got away,” Finn said, nodding. “Maybe the next time, too. And the time after that as well. But Fishhook never quits. As the situation stands, you haven’t got a chance.”

“Me especially, you mean? Or just anyone? How about yourself?”

“You especially,” said Finn. “You know a Harriet Quimby?”

“Very well,” said Blaine.

“She,” Finn said, levelly, “is a Fishhook spy.”

“You’re staring mad!” yelled Blaine.

“Stop and think of it,” said Finn. “I think you will agree.”

They stood looking at one another across the space of desk, and the silence was a live thing, a third presence in the room.

The red thought rose up inside Blaine’s brain: Why not kill him now?

For the killing would come easy. He was an easy man to hate. Not on principle alone, but personally, clear down to his guts.

All one had to do was think of the hate that rode throughout the land. All one had to do was close one’s eyes and see the slowly turning body, half masked by the leaves; the deserted camp with the propped-up quilts for shelters and the fish for dinner laid out in the pan; the flame-scarred chimney stark against the sky.

He half lifted his hands off the table, then put them down again.

Then he did a thing quite involuntarily, without thinking of it, without a second’s planning or an instant’s thought. And even as he did it, he knew it was not he who did it, but the other one, the lurker in the skull.

For he could not have done it. He could not have thought of doing it. No human being could.

Blaine said, very calmly: “I trade with you my mind.”

TWENTY-SEVEN

The moon rode high above the knobby bluffs that hemmed in the river valley, and down in the valley a dismal owl was hooting and chuckling to himself in between the hoots. The chuckling of the owl carried clearly in the sharp night air that held the hint of frost.

Blaine halted at the edge of the clump of scraggly cedars that hugged the ground like gnarled and bent old men, and stood tense and listening. But there was nothing except the chuckling of the owl and the faint sound of the stubborn leaves still clinging to a cottonwood downhill from him, and another sound so faint that one wondered if one really heard it — the remote and faery murmur which was the voice of the mighty river flowing stolidly below the face of the moonlit bluffs.

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