Shock Wave. Walt Richmond

Shock Wave - Walt Richmond


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data was telling him it would be quite useless to argue the point. On some subjects these customs computer sections were quite obdurate, and one such subject was the emission of any type of random or spurious electro-magnetic signal in or near such a computer arrangement. It had not been made clear to him exactly what his transmitter could do, but that its use in this vicinity could quite possibly derange the computer was obvious. And a deranged computer, he realized with a shudder, was nothing he wanted to tackle at this time.

      Nonetheless, he clutched the little transmitter closer to him instinctively. It was his last link to his own world. “This is all very well,” he said, grinning as he always did when a joke had gone far enough, “but I want to get back to Berkeley.”

      “The citizen’s desire is unclear.”

      “Don’t you understand? I’m lost and I want to stamp my feet on good old terra firma, and I want to do it right now!”

      There was a pause that was more than a pause. Total silence set in. A red light went on in the far wall. A wave of fear swept away the momentary homesickness, as the new data in his own head calmly informed him that the next thing that would happen would be a “restraining paralysis for the subject’s own good.”

      “Psycho!” said the computer.

      “No, no, no,” cried Terry. “It’s more like, ah, poetry. Look in your Latin banks! Terra firma is solid ground. I’m perfectly oriented but I must retain the transmitter. It’s the only link I have with the planet I just arrived from. Anyhow, you have no authority to confiscate outworld scientific data or objects from a qualified explorer.”

      The computer resumed buzzing, busily. And the feeling of imminent disaster disappeared as the red light on the wall blinked off. The silence stretched on and on.

      Finally, with the effect of a baffled policeman returning to the real issue, the computer said, “Illegal electronics equipment.”

      Terry felt his hand tremble a little, but made no reply.

      “The citizen is, of course, entitled to the possession and use of standard items of Galactic Citizen’s gear, which will be issued on a loan basis by this terminal, since the citizen appears to have lost all the essentials. In addition the citizen will realize that possession of other equipment is dependent upon the classification level of achievement of the citizen as determined by due testing processes. Whenever the citizen can produce evidence to indicate a knowledge of the use and restrictions of use of this instrument within Galactic territory and according to Galactic law, the instrument will be returned. The citizen is now requested to place the electronic device in the slot on the left-hand wall, and follow the directional arrows to the stores area, where new equipment will be issued.”

      Reluctantly, Terry turned and placed the little transmitter in the slot as directed. He must, he decided, play the game on the computer’s terms. It rankled, but the darn thing had all the cards on its side now. The transmitter was not only useless to him on his Quarantine World, but dangerous as well—Quarantine? Even as he wondered how he knew he realized how he knew. The orientation had been quite good.

      The thought crossed his mind to double talk the computer into returning him, but he rejected the thought. It wouldn’t do. Another indication of “psychotic” behavior would result in “restraint for the subject’s own good” until a Galactic Supervisor intervened, and, he realized, that might be a long time. There hadn’t been anyone of that level here in nearly four hundred galactic years.

      With a grin and a shrug he turned to find the arrow trail—and that was when the habit of talking to himself tripped him up. “Just wait until I get a meter on your insides. . . .” he found himself muttering.

      He staved off the silence even as it was falling. “Oh, for Pete’s sake,” he said, “it’s only wishful thinking. Aren’t Galactic Citizens allowed to wish? Anyhow, you talk to yourself, too. I heard you.”

      It was a full second before the intense silence lessened and the light humming of the computer resumed, and Terry realized that any conversation he held, with himself or with the computer, would be taken literally in computer-style and could be as dangerous to him as any possible signal from the little transmitter might have been for the computer. The kind of bantering half-humor that he was used to “thinking aloud” while working would be translated in context and not in intent by the humorless machine and would inevitably cause it to classify him as deranged. He shuddered and made a point of not expressing his next thought aloud.

      Well, there was much he now knew that he hadn’t known before, and the vistas of unknown information that stretched beyond the brief orientation were dizzying to contemplate. For each bit of data he had received, there were a thousand channels of speculation opening in front of him.

      In the meantime, the machine was waiting; not politely, just impassively. He turned again—quietly this time—and followed the arrows away from the orientation room and farther into the huge building.

      He now knew the structure was an outpost Galactic receiving station. And he suddenly realized that it was not capable of returning him to his native world, nor did he even know where Earth was in relation to this world.

      Terry Ferman was a Galactic Citizen, like it or not.

      III

      THE STORES AREA proved to hold few fascinations. Outside of more suitable light slacks, shirt and sandals to replace his cumbersome cold weather clothing, only five items of equipment were issued. Terry was able to recognize each item from his orientation training.

      The first, so far as he could tell, was probably the most useless: a combination translator and personal telephone. It was a small device designed to be worn around the neck, capable of three thousand language sets. It could, theoretically, put him in communication with anyone on the planet. So far as Terry knew, and he knew it with a cold inner certitude, he was the only human being on the planet.

      The most useful device in case of danger was a small stunner. It was not standard citizenry equipment but a device issued only on primitive worlds or frontier outposts, capable of rendering unconscious any life form having an electronic nervous system, from human to mobile robot.

      Then there was a pair of sunglasses; at least, that’s how Terry thought of them. They were capable of a wide range of focus from microscopic to telescopic, and they could also be used simply as glare filters against the bright sunshine that was found on some outpost worlds. But the filter effect was reversible. Quantities of light too dim to see by or of the wrong frequency could be amplified. Cat-eyes, Terry thought, and indeed they were, for even in the total absence of light these lenses could let him see by his own reflected body heat.

      A chronograph with a simple numeric read-out face presented a standard Galactic time and local time and included an adjustment rate so that it could be set precisely to the rotation of an individual planet, as well as an indication around the circumference that was graduated to show days, parts of years, and years, all to the base twelve—curiously, the same base twelve system that men used for time, but also curiously different in that the Galactic Standard day seemed to be thirty-six hours in length.

      And twelve months to a year, Terry thought, and then realized—not twelve months; not twelve months as he knew them at all. Galactic years—Terry lost himself in computation for a moment. Here the system of comparison broke down. The galactic year was by no means an Earth year; and the twelve parts that one would think of as months of that galactic year were a much longer period of time than an Earth year.

      The thirty-six hour day was combined by fives into what one could think of as a week; and there were sixty of these weeks in the galactic month; and twelve galactic months in the galactic year. The galactic year, then, was 3600 galactic days, or 5400 Earth days. The galactic week of five galactic days was a 180-hour week, as compared with the 24-hour day, seven-day week of Earth, which added up to only 168 hours per week. Surprisingly the galactic hour seemed to be quite similar if not the same as the Earth hour, and from there on down the divisions went by 60’s, in the same manner as the familiar minutes and seconds back on Earth.


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