Preparation is an illusion. What you thought you were preparing for is what you are doing right now, which is preparing."
"Prince Mishkin, I beg you to wake up and realize who you are."
"You search for an object fixed in your memory like a rock in a shallow pond. Touching, perhaps, but not convincing. Do you think that you still must search? Right now, you may be solving future searches without even knowing it!"
"Here, Mishkin, is the egg you will be looking for!"
"I lost my beloved's shoe under distressing circumstances. But now Mishkin has found it."
"It's right over here, Mishkin — the Holy Grail!"
"Upon my word! He's found the lost city of Atlantis!"
"Shiver me timbers! He's discovered the Lost Dutchman mine!"
"Be damned if he hasn't stumbled across the Holy Sepulchre!"
"This attack upon your purpose is deadly dangerous, but not to be simplemindedly resisted. Some things that devour us enhance us. Sometimes we must stand still and let ourselves be eaten."
"Open the gates! Let Mishkin pass through!"
"I smell memory leakage. Someone around here is not paying attention."
"Mishkin has found the White Goddess!"
"And also the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow; the secret cave where the sirens dwell; the tomb of Charlemagne; the Hall of Barbarossa; the Sibylline Books; the Philosopher's Stone — to name but a few."
Mishkin lived in a nice little house with a nice little wife, a nice little grape arbour.
Almost everything he had was nice and little. There were exceptions, of course: specifically, a nice big dog, and a not nice big chair, and a not nice little car. Still, almost everything else was as nice as you could get it and as little as you could hope for.
One day FUTUREFLASH!
At first glance he seemed an old man: his white hair, palsied walk, dribbly lower lip, faded eye, and blotched hand all argued that he was on the wrong side of seventy. What a surprise, then, to discover that his actual chronological age was a mere twenty-three.
"A single event did harrow me thus," quavered the oldster.
"It must have been exceptionally heavy," Mishkin remarked.
"It will be," the old man said. "You see, due to a faulty relay in the space-time continuum, I remembered an event that I will only experience in the future. The verb tenses get a little tricky, but I'm sure you know what I mean."
"I think so," Mishkin said. "But what is or was or will be this experience that you will have and that has already altered you so drastically?"
"Young man," said the old man, "I was there when Earth fought its last and greatest fight against the Black Hell Creatures from Far Arcturus."
"Tell me about it," Mishkin said.
"I was just about to," the old man said and made himself as comfortable as he could, considering the brittleness of his bones.
23. Earth versus the Black Hell Creatures from Far Arcturus
Captain John McRoy's Superdreadnaught-class XK-12X spaceship, on picket duty out beyond the Southern Ridge Belt Stars, was the first to pick up the signal that all Terra was soon to know and to dread. But this was at the beginning, and the first hint of anything wrong came when Radioman 2nd Class Rip Halliday came to the captain's cabin with a worried look on his homely, freckled face.
"Take a pew, Rip," the captain boomed. "Drink? Lee Pan Hao, our friendly Cantonese cook, has brewed up some high-energy cocoa that really does the trick. Or how about some tollhouse cookies made with real Martian chocolate?"
"No, thanks, Captain, nothing right now."
"Then slouch back in that easy chair and let's hear what's on your mind."
Rip Halliday slouched back but with a hint of respectful attentiveness. In that age, when a perfect classlessness was observed by all superiors, the utmost informality prevailed. The system worked because inferiors never presumed above their station and always maintained a perfect measure of respect.
"Well, sir, I was…"
"Please, Rip, no «sirs» in this cabin. Just call me John."
"Well, sir, John, I was doing a routine sweep of the 6B2 radio bands, but this time I was using a zero-beat random selector just to see how it worked. If you remember the Thalberg-Martin equations, sir, they postulate…"
The captain grinned and held up a broad, muscular pink hand. "Radio's your field, Rip. I'm just an intergalactic truck driver. I've never gotten beyond the sigma series transformations. So put it into plain English — what did you pick up?"
"A signal," Rip answered promptly. "It came across loud enough to dent my ear before the AFC cut in."
The captain nodded. "No cause for alarm, is there? I suppose it was a radio star effect?"
Halliday shook his head. "None in the vicinity."
"Deflection reading?"
"Not possible, given our present speed and coordinates."
"No chance it was a mechanically produced static effect — maybe caused by a concentration of cosmic debris grinding together?"
"No chance, sir. The configuration pattern is completely different. And what's more, the signal I got was frequency-modulated ."
The captain whistled softly. "No natural discharge could account for that!"
"No, sir, John. Intelligent life produced those patterns."
"Um," said the captain.
"Any chance it might be a ship of ours broadcasting?" Rip asked hopefully.
The captain shook his head. "The nearest Terran patrol ship is clear on the other side of Fiona II."
Rip whistled softly. "I was afraid of that!"
The captain nodded. "It means that we've just contacted alien intelligent life of a type completely unknown to us, and we're closing with them fast.
"This is Earth's first contact with alien intelligent life," the captain said softly to Rip. "I think you'd better tell Marv Painter that we need a translation of those alien impulses, pronto."
Rip Halliday's freckles stood out darker against the sudden pallor of his face. "I'm on my way, John. Sir, I mean."
The door dilated to allow the red-haired radioman to pass. Alone, the captain sat and stared at the stereographs of his wife and three sons. He drank a glass of Gatorade in complete silence. Then he pushed the intercom button.
He told the crew that, unless proven otherwise, they would proceed upon the assumption that they had contacted alien life of unknown intentions. But he did not tell them about the Rand-Orey equations that predicted an unfriendly first contact at 98.7 per cent probable. His orders were not to disclose this until intention had been indicated clearly. Anticipation of disaster would have impaired the efficiency of the smoothly functioning machine that was the crew.
Engineer Duff McDermott paced stumpily along the lower catwalk, then stopped to inspect the drive gauges for the twentieth time in an hour. The needles hung placidly in the green, as McDermott knew they would. But he couldn't stop himself from looking at them since he knew that contact moment was only 2.0045 hours away.
"Waddya think they'll look like?" asked Andy Tompkins, second assistant engineer's mate, his prominent adam's apple bouncing below his good-humoured, absentminded face.
"Like something out of hell," McDermott replied. He was to remember that answer later and to wonder if there wasn't something to the discredited notion of stress-induced prescience.
"Marv," the captain asked, "how is it going?"
"Pretty good," said Marv Painter, the shy, skinny, red-haired cybernetic genius. "We should have an intelligible readout as soon as I splice in this zero-null regenerative impulse rejector into the image repro circuit and cross-tie the translator bank into the computer's second-stage input bank."
"You mean we'll be able to understand them?" Captain McRoy asked.
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