<p>The shoonoon had been watching
the fighting in the viewscreens. Then
somebody noticed that the spot of
light on the navigational globe was
approaching a coastline, and they all
rushed forward for a look.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Travis and Edith slept for a while;
when they returned to relieve him,
Alpha was rising to the east of Bluelake,
and the fighting in the city was
still going on. The shoonoon were
still wakeful and interested; Kwanns
could go without sleep for much
longer periods than Terrans. The lack
of any fixed cycle of daylight and
darkness on their planet had left
them unconditioned to any regular
sleeping-and-waking rhythm.</p>
<p>"I just called in," Travis said.
"Things aren't good, at all. Most of
the natives in the evacuee cantonments
have gotten into the native
city, now, and they've gotten hold of
a lot of firearms somehow. And
they're getting nasty in the west, beyond
where Gonzales is occupying,
and in the northeast, and we only
have about half enough troops to cope
with everything. The general wants to
know how you're making out with the
shoonoon."</p>
<p>"I'll call him before I get in the
sack."</p>
<p>He went up on the bridge and
made the call. General Maith looked
as sleepy as he felt; they both yawned
as they greeted each other. There
wasn't much he could tell the general,
and it sounded like the glib reassurances
one gets from a hospital about
a friend's condition.</p>
<p>"We'll check in with you as soon as
we get back and get our shoonoon
put away. We understand what's motivating
these frenzies, now, and in
about twenty-five to thirty hours we'll
be able to start doing something
about it."</p>
<p>The general, in the screen, grimaced.</p>
<p>"That's a long time, Mr. Gilbert.
Longer than we can afford to take,
I'm afraid. You're not cruising at full
speed now, are you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, general. We're just trying
to keep Alpha level on the horizon."
He thought for a moment. "We don't
need to keep down to that. It may
make an even bigger impression if
we speed up."</p>
<p>He went back to the observation
deck, picked up the PA-phone, and
called for attention.</p>
<p>"You have seen, now, that we can
travel around the world, so fast that
we keep up with the Sky Fire and it is
not seen to set. Now we will travel
even faster, and I will show you a new
wonder. I will show you the Sky Fire
rising in the west; it and the Always-Same
will seem to go backward in the
sky. This will not be for real; it will
only be seen so because we will be<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>
traveling faster. Watch, now, and see."
He called the bridge for full speed,
and then told them to look at the
Sky-Fire and then see in the screens
where it stood over Bluelake.</p>
<p>That was even better; now they
were racing with the Sky-Fire and
catching up to it. After half an hour
he left them still excited and whooping
gleefully over the steady gain.
Five hours later, when he came back
after a nap and a hasty breakfast, they
were still whooping. Edith Shaw was
excited, too; the shoonoon were trying
to estimate how soon they would
be back to Bluelake by comparing the
position of the Sky Fire with its position
in the screen.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>General Maith received them in his
private office at Army HQ; Foxx
Travis mixed drinks for the four of
them while the general checked the
microphones to make sure they had
privacy.</p>
<p>"I blame myself for not having
forced martial rule on them hundreds
of hours ago," he said. "I have
three brigades; the one General Gonzales
had here originally, and the two
I brought with me when I took over
here. We have to keep at least half
a brigade in the south, to keep the
tribes there from starting any more
forest fires. I can't hold Bluelake with
anything less than half a brigade.
Gonzales has his hands full in his
area. He had a nasty business while
you were off on that world cruise—natives
in one village caught the men
stationed there off guard and wiped
them out, and then started another
frenzy. It spread to two other villages
before he got it stopped. And we
need the Third Brigade in the northeast;
there are three quarters of a
million natives up there, inhabiting
close to a million square miles. And
if anything really breaks loose here,
and what's been going on in the last
few days is nothing even approaching
what a real outbreak could be like,
we'll have to pull in troops from everywhere.
We must save the Terran-type
crops and the carniculture
plants. If we don't, we all starve."</p>
<p>Miles nodded. There wasn't anything
he could think of saying to that.</p>
<p>"How soon can you begin to show
results with those shoonoon, Mr. Gilbert?"
the general asked. "You said
from twenty-five to thirty hours. Can
you cut that any? In twenty-five hours,
all hell could be loose all over the
continent."</p>
<p>Miles shook his head. "So far, I
haven't accomplished anything positive,"
he said. "All I did with this trip
around the world was convince them
that I was telling the truth when I
told them there was no Dark Place
under the World, where Alpha and
Beta go at night." He hastened, as the
general began swearing, to add: "I
know, that doesn't sound like much.
But it was necessary. I have to convince
them that there will be no Last
Hot Time, and then—"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The shoonoon, on their drum-shaped
cushions, stared at him in silence,
aghast. All the happiness over
the wonderful trip in the ship, when
they had chased the Sky Fire around<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span>
the World and caught it over Bluelake,
and even their pleasure in the
frozen delicacies they had just eaten,
was gone.</p>
<p><i>"No—Last—Hot—Time?"</i></p>
<p>"Mailsh Heelbare, this is not real!
It cannot be!"</p>
<p>"The Gone Ones—"</p>
<p>"The Always-Cool Time, when
there will be no more hunger or hard
work or death; it cannot be real that
this will never come!"</p>
<p>He rose, holding up his hands; his
action stopped the clamor.</p>
<p>"Why should the Gone Ones want
to return to this poor world that they
have gladly left?" he asked. "Have
they not a better place in the middle
of the Sky Fire, where it is always
cool? And why should you want them
to come back to this world? Will not
each one of you pass, sooner or later,
to the middle of the Sky Fire; will
you not there be given new bodies
and join the Gone Ones? There is the
Always-Cool; there the crops grow
without planting and without the
work of women; there the game come
into the villages to be killed in the
gathering-places, without hunting.
There you will talk with the other
Gone Ones, your fathers and your
fathers' fathers, as I talk with you.
Why do you think this must come to
the World of People? Can you not
wait to join the Gone Ones in the Sky
Fire?"</p>
<p>Then he sat down and folded his
arms. They were looking at him in
amazement; evidently they all saw the
logic, but none of them had ever
thought of it before. Now they would
have to turn it over in their minds
and accustom themselves to the new
viewpoint. They began whooshing
among themselves. At length, old
Shatresh, who had seen the Hot Time
before, spoke:</p>
<p>"Mailsh Heelbare, we trust you," he
said. "You have told us of wonders,
and you have shown us that they were
real. But do you know this for real?"</p>
<p>"Do you tell me that you do not?"
he demanded in surprise. "You have
had fathers, and fathers' fathers.
They have gone to join the Gone
Ones. Why should you not, also? And
why should the Gone Ones come
back and destroy the World of People?
Then your children will have no
more children, and your children's
children will never be. It is in the
World of People that the People are
born; it is in the World that they
grow and gain wisdom to fit themselves
to live in the Place of the Gone
Ones when they are through with the
bodies they use in the World. You
should be happy that there will be no
Last Hot Time, and that the line of
your begettings will go on and not
be cut short."</p>
<p>There were murmurs of agreement
with this. Most of them were beginning
to be relieved that there wouldn't
be a Last Hot Time, after all.
Then one of the class asked:</p>
<p>"Do the Terrans also go to the
Place of the Gone Ones, or have they
a place of their own?"</p>
<p>He was silent for a long time, looking
down at the floor. Then he raised
his head.</p>
<p>"I had hoped that I would not have<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN></span>
to speak of this," he said. "But, since
you have asked, it is right that I
should tell you." He hesitated again,
until the Kwanns in front of him had
begun to fidget. Then he asked old
Shatresh: "Speak of the beliefs of the
People about how the World was
made."</p>
<p>"The great Spirit made the world."
He held up his carven obscenity. "He
made the World out of himself. This
is a <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'makelike'. Hyphenated to correspond to majority usage.">make-like</ins> to show it."</p>
<p>"The Great Spirit made many
worlds. The stars which you see in
dark-time are all worlds, each with
many smaller worlds around it. The
Great Spirit made them all at one
time, and made people on many of
them. The Great Spirit made the
World of People, and made the Always-Same
and the Sky Fire, and inside
the Sky Fire he made the Place of the
Gone Ones. And when he made the
Place of the Gone Ones, he put an
Oomphel-Mother inside it, to bring
forth oomphel."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>This created a brief sensation. An
Oomphel-Mother was something they
had never thought of before, but now
they were wondering why they hadn't.
Of course there'd be an Oomphel-Mother;
how else would there be
oomphel?</p>
<p>"The World of the Terrans is far
away from the World of People, as
we have always told you. When the
Great Spirit made it He gave it only
an Always-Same, and no Sky Fire.
Since there was no Sky Fire, there was
no place to put a Place of the Gone
Ones, so the Great Spirit made the
Terrans so that they would not die,
but live forever in their own bodies.
The Oomphel-Mother for the World
of the Terrans the Great Spirit hid
in a cave under a great mountain.</p>
<p>"The Terrans whom the Great
Spirit made lived for a long time,
and then, one day, a man and a
woman found a crack in a rock, and
went inside, and they found the cave
of the Oomphel-Mother, and the
Oomphel-Mother in it. So they called
all the other Terrans, and they brought
the Oomphel-Mother out, and the
Oomphel-Mother began to bring
forth Oomphel. The Oomphel-Mother
brought forth metal, and cloth, and
glass, and plastic; knives, and axes and
guns and clothing—" He went on,
cataloguing the products of human
technology, the shoonoon staring more
and more wide-eyed at him. "And
oomphel to make oomphel, and oomphel
to teach wisdom," he finished.
"They became very wise and very rich.</p>
<p>"Then the Great Spirit saw what
the Terrans had done, and became angry,
for it was not meant for the Terrans
to do this, and the Great Spirit
cursed the Terrans with a curse of
death. It was not death as you know
it. Because the Terrans had sinned by
laying hands on the Oomphel-Mother,
not only their bodies must die, but
their spirits also. A Terran has a short
life in the body, after that no life."</p>
<p>"This, then, is the Oomphel Secret.
The last skin of the fooshkoot has
been peeled away; behold the bitter
nut, upon which we Terrans have
chewed for more time than anybody
can count. Happy people! When you<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></SPAN></span>
die or are slain, you go to the Place
of the Gone Ones, to join your fathers
and your fathers' fathers and to
await your children and children's
children. When we die or are slain,
that is the end of us."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-035.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="330" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>"But you have brought your oomphel
into this world; have you not
brought the curse with it?" somebody
asked, frightened.</p>
<p>"No. The People did not sin
against the Great Spirit; they have
not laid hands on an Oomphel-Mother
as we did. The oomphel we bring you
will do no harm; do you think we
would be so wicked as to bring the
curse upon you? It will be good for
you to learn about oomphel here; in
your Place of the Gone Ones there is
much oomphel."</p>
<p>"Why did your people come to this
world, Mailsh Heelbare?" old Shatresh
asked. "Was it to try to hide
from the curse?"</p>
<p>"There is no hiding from the curse
of the Great Spirit, but we Terrans
are not a people who submit without
strife to any fate. From the time of the
Curse of Death on, we have been
trying to make spirits for ourselves."</p>
<p>"But how can you do that?"</p>
<p>"We do not know. The oomphel
will not teach us that, though it
teaches everything else. We have
only learned many ways in which it
cannot be done. It cannot be done
with oomphel, or with anything that
is in our own world. But the Oomphel-Mother
made us ships to go to
other worlds, and we have gone to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN></span>
many of them, this one among them,
seeking things from which we try to
make spirits. We are trying to make
spirits for ourselves from the crystals
that grow in the klooba plants; we
may fail with them, too. But I say
this; I may die, and all the other Terrans
now living may die, and be as
though they had never been, but
someday we will not fail. Someday
our children, or our children's children,
will make spirits for themselves
and live forever, as you do."</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-036.png" width-obs="300" height-obs="382" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>"Why were we not told this before,
Mailsh Heelbare?"</p>
<p>"We were ashamed to have you
know it. We are ashamed to be people
without spirits."</p>
<p>"Can we help you and your people?
Maybe our magic might help."</p>
<p>"It well might. It would be worth
trying. But first, you must help yourselves.
You and your people are sinning
against the Great Spirit as grievously
as did the Terrans of old. Be
warned in time, lest you answer it as
grievously."</p>
<p>"What do you mean, Mailsh Heelbare?"
Old Shatresh was frightened.</p>
<p>"You are making magic to bring
the Sky Fire to the World. Do you
know what will happen? The World
of People will pass whole into the
place of the Gone Ones, and both
will be destroyed. The World of People
is a world of death; everything
that lives on it must die. The Place
of the Gone Ones is a world of life;
everything in it lives forever. The
two will strive against each other,
and will destroy one another, and
there will be nothing in the Sky Fire
or the World but fire. This is wisdom
which our oomphel teaches us. We
know this secret, and with it we make
weapons of great destruction." He
looked over the seated shoonoon,
picking out those who wore the flame-colored
cloaks of the fire-dance. "You—and
you—and you," he said. "You
have been making this dreadful magic,
and leading your people in it.
And which among the rest of you
have not been guilty?"</p>
<p>"We did not know," one of them
said. "Mailsh Heelbare, have we yet
time to keep this from happening?"</p>
<p>"Yes. There is only a little time,
but there is time. You have until the
Always-Same passes across the face of
the Sky-Fire." That would be seven
hundred and fifty hours. "If this happens,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN></span>
all is safe. If the Sky Fire blots
Out the Always Same, we are all lost
together. You must go among your
people and tell them what madness
they are doing, and command them
to stop. You must command them to
lay down their arms and cease fighting.
And you must tell them of the
awful curse that was put upon the
Terrans in the long-ago time, for a
lesser sin than they are now committing."</p>
<p>"If we say that Mailsh Heelbare
told us this, the people may not believe
us. He is not known to all, and
some would take no Terran's word,
not even his."</p>
<p>"Would anybody tell a secret of
this sort, about his own people, if it
were not real?"</p>
<p>"We had better say nothing about
Mailsh Heelbare. We will say that the
Gone Ones told us in dreams."</p>
<p>"Let us say that the Great Spirit
sent a dream of warning to each of
us," another shoonoo said. "There has
been too much talk about dreams
from the Gone Ones already."</p>
<p>"But the Great Spirit has never
sent a dream—"</p>
<p>"Nothing like this has ever happened
before, either."</p>
<p>He rose, and they were silent. "Go
to your living-place, now," he told
them. "Talk of how best you may
warn your people." He pointed to the
clock. "You have an oomphel like
that in your living-place; when the
shorter spear has moved three places,
I will speak with you again, and then
you will be sent in air cars to your
people to speak to them."</p>
<p>They went up the escalator and
down the hall to Miles' office on the
third floor without talking. Foxx Travis
was singing softly, almost inaudibly:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0"><i>"You will eeeeat ... in the sweeeet ... bye-and-bye,</i><br/></span>
<span class="i0"><i>You'll get oooom ... phel in the sky ... when you die!"</i><br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Inside, Edith Shaw slumped dispiritedly
in a chair. Foxx Travis went to
the coffee-maker and started it. Miles
snapped on the communication screen
and punched the combination of
General Maith's headquarters. As soon
as the uniformed girl who appeared
in it saw him, her hands moved
quickly; the screen flickered, and the
general appeared in it.</p>
<p>"We have it made, general. They're
sold; we're ready to start them out in
three hours."</p>
<p>Maith's thin, weary face suddenly
lighted. "You mean they are going to
co-operate?"</p>
<p>He shook his head. "They think
they're saving the world; they think
we're co-operating with them."</p>
<p>The general laughed. "That's even
better! How do you want them sent
out?"</p>
<p>"The ones in the Bluelake area
first. Better have some picked K.N.I.
in native costume, with pistols, to go
with them. They'll need protection,
till they're able to get a hearing for
themselves. After they're all out, the
ones from Gonzales' area can be
started." He thought for a moment.
"I'll want four or five of them left
here to help me when you start bringing
more shoonoon in from other<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN></span>
areas. How soon do you think you'll
have another class for me?"</p>
<p>"Two or three days, if everything
goes all right. We have the villages
and plantations in the south under
pretty tight control now; we can
start gathering them up right away.
As soon as we get things stabilized
here, we can send reinforcements to
the north. We'll have transport for
you in three hours."</p>
<p>The general blanked out. He turned
from the screen. Travis was laughing
happily.</p>
<p>"Miles, did anybody ever tell you
you were a genius?" he asked. "That
last jolt you gave them was perfect.
Why didn't you tell us about it in advance?"</p>
<p>"I didn't know about it in advance;
I didn't think of it till I'd started talking
to them. No cream or sugar for
me."</p>
<p>"Cream," Edith said, lifelessly.
"Why did you do it? Why didn't you
just tell them the truth?"</p>
<p>Travis asked her to define the term.
She started to say something bitter
about Jesting Pilate. Miles interrupted.</p>
<p>"In spite of Lord Beacon, Pilate
wasn't jesting," he said. "And he
didn't stay for an answer because he
knew he'd die of old age waiting for
one. What kind of truth should I
have told them?"</p>
<p>"Why, what you started to tell
them. That Beta moves in a fixed
orbit and can't get any closer to
Alpha—"</p>
<p>"There's been some work done on
the question since Pilate's time," Travis
said. "My semantics prof at Command
College had the start of an answer.
He defined truth as a statement
having a practical correspondence
with reality on the physical levels of
structure and observation and the
verbal order of abstraction under consideration."</p>
<p>"He defined truth as a statement.
A statement exists only in the mind
of the person making it, and the
mind of the person to whom it is
made. If the person to whom it is
made can't understand or accept it, it
isn't the truth."</p>
<p>"They understood when you
showed them that the planet is round,
and they understood that tri-dimensional
model of the system. Why
didn't you let it go at that?"</p>
<p>"They accepted it intellectually.
But when I told them that there
wasn't any chance of Kwannon getting
any closer to Alpha, they rebelled
emotionally. It doesn't matter how
conclusively you prove anything, if
the person to whom you prove it can't
accept your proof emotionally, it's
still false. Not-real."</p>
<p>"They had all their emotional capital
invested in this Always-Cool
Time," Travis told her. "They couldn't
let Miles wipe that out for them.
So he shifted it from this world to the
next, and convinced them that they
were getting a better deal that way.
You saw how quickly they picked it
up. And he didn't have the sin of telling
children there is no Easter Bunny
on his conscience, either."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"But why did you tell them that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN></span>
story about the Oomphel Mother?"
she insisted. "Now they'll go out and
tell all the other natives, and they'll
believe it."</p>
<p>"Would they have believed it if I'd
told them about Terran scientific
technology? Your people have been
doing that for close to half a century.
You see what impression it's made."</p>
<p>"But you told them—You told
them that Terrans have no souls!"</p>
<p>"Can you prove that was a lie?"
Travis asked. "Let's see yours. Draw—<i>soul</i>!
Inspection—<i>soul</i>!"</p>
<p>Naturally. Foxx Travis would expect
a soul to be carried in a holster.</p>
<p>"But they'll look down on us, now.
They'll say we're just like animals,"
Edith almost wailed.</p>
<p>"Now it comes out," Travis said.
"We won't be the lordly Terrans, any
more, helping the poor benighted
Kwanns out of the goodness of our
hearts, scattering largess, bearing the
Terran's Burden—new model, a give-away
instead of a gun. Now <i>they'll</i>
pity <i>us</i>; they'll think <i>we're</i> inferior
beings."</p>
<p>"I don't think the natives are inferior
beings!" She was almost in
tears.</p>
<p>"If you don't, why did you come all
the way to Kwannon to try to make
them more like Terrans?"</p>
<p>"Knock it off, Foxx; stop heckling
her." Travis looked faintly surprised.
Maybe he hadn't realized, before,
that a boss newsman learns to talk
like a commanding officer. "You remember
what Ramón Gonzales was
saying, out at Sanders', about the inferior's
hatred for the superior as superior?
It's no wonder these Kwanns
resent us. They have a right to; we've
done them all an unforgivable injury.
We've let them see us doing things
they can't do. Of course they resent
us. But now I've given them something
to feel superior about. When
they die, they'll go to the Place of the
Gone Ones, and have oomphel in the
sky, and they will live forever in new
bodies, but when we die, we just die,
period. So they'll pity us and politely
try to hide their condescension toward
us.</p>
<p>"And because they feel superior to
us, they'll want to help us. They'll
work hard on the plantations, so that
we can have plenty of biocrystals,
and their shoonoon will work magic
for us, to help us poor benighted Terrans
to grow souls for ourselves, so
that we can almost be like them. Of
course, they'll have a chance to exploit
us, and get oomphel from us, too, but
the important thing will be to help
the poor Terrans. Maybe they'll even
organize a Spiritual and Magical Assistance
Agency."</p>
<h3>THE END</h3>
<div class="bbox"><h4 style="margin-top:0">Transcriber's Note & Errata</h4>
<p>The original page numbers from Analog Science Fact—Science
Fiction have been retained.</p>
<p>The following typographical errors have been corrected</p>
<div class='center'>
<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr style="font-weight:bold"><td align='left'>Page</td><td align='left'>Error</td><td align='left'>Correction</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>129</td><td align='left'>radiaion</td><td align='left'>radiation</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>132</td><td align='left'>plan</td><td align='left'>planet</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>133</td><td align='left'>Biocrysal</td><td align='left'>Biocrystal</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>133</td><td align='left'>Trans-Sapce</td><td align='left'>Trans-Space</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>137</td><td align='left'>institigation</td><td align='left'>instigation</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>140</td><td align='left'>then</td><td align='left'>than</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>144</td><td align='left'>phalic</td><td align='left'>phallic</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>144</td><td align='left'>no</td><td align='left'>not</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>146</td><td align='left'>tide-innundated</td><td align='left'>tide-inundated</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>146</td><td align='left'>ox-planet</td><td align='left'>off-planet</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>149</td><td align='left'>infinitesmally</td><td align='left'>infinitesimally</td></tr>
<tr><td align='right'>153</td><td align='left'>makelike</td><td align='left'>make-like</td></tr>
</table></div>
</div>
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