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    The Lonely Ones

    By Edward W. Ludwig

    Illustrated by PAUL ORBAN

    _The line between noble dreams and madness is thin, and
    loneliness can push men past it...._


Onward sped the _Wanderer_, onward through cold, silent infinity, on and
on, an insignificant pencil of silver lost in the terrible, brooding
blackness.

But even more awful than the blackness was the loneliness of the six men
who inhabited the silver rocket. They moved in loneliness as fish move
in water. Their lives revolved in loneliness as planets revolve in space
and time. They bore their loneliness like a shroud, and it was as much a
part of them as sight in their eyes. Loneliness was both their brother
and their god.

Yet, like a tiny flame in the darkness, there was hope, a savage,
desperate hope that grew with the passing of each day, each month, and
each year.

And at last....

"Lord," breathed Captain Sam Wiley.

Lieutenant Gunderson nodded. "It’s a big one, isn’t it?"

"It’s a big one," repeated Captain Wiley.

They stared at the image in the _Wanderer’s_ forward visi-screen, at the
great, shining gray ball. They stared hard, for it was like an
enchanted, God-given fruit handed them on a star-flecked platter of
midnight. It was like the answer to a thousand prayers, a shining symbol
of hope which could mean the end of loneliness.

"It’s ten times as big as Earth," mused Lieutenant Gunderson. "Do you
think this’ll be it, Captain?"

"I’m afraid to think."

A thoughtful silence.

"Captain."

"Yes?"

"Do you hear my heart pounding?"

Captain Wiley smiled. "No. No, of course not."

"It seems like everybody should be hearing it. But we shouldn’t get
excited, should we? We mustn’t hope too hard." He bit his lip. "But
there _should_ be life there, don’t you think, Captain?"

"There may be."

"Nine years, Captain. Think of it. It’s taken us nine years to get here.
There’s _got_ to be life."

"Prepare for deceleration, Lieutenant."

Lieutenant Gunderson’s tall, slim body sagged for an instant. Then his
eyes brightened.

"Yes, sir!"

                                  ————

Captain Sam Wiley continued to stare at the beautiful gray globe in the
visi-screen. He was not like Gunderson, with boyish eagerness and
anxiety flowing out of him in a ceaseless babble. His emotion was as
great, or greater, but it was imprisoned within him, like swirling,
foaming liquid inside a corked jug.

It wouldn’t do to encourage the men too much. Because, if they were
disappointed....

He shook his silver-thatched head. There it was, he thought. A new
world. A world that, perhaps, held life.

Life. It was a word uttered only with reverence, for throughout the
Solar System, with the exception of on Earth, there had been only death.

First it was the Moon, airless and lifeless. That had been expected, of
course.

But Mars. For centuries men had dreamed of Mars and written of Mars with
its canals and dead cities, with its ancient men and strange animals.
Everyone _knew_ there was or had been life on Mars.

The flaming rockets reached Mars, and the canals became volcanic
crevices, and the dead cities became jagged peaks of red stone, and the
endless sands were smooth, smooth, smooth, untouched by feet of living
creatures. There was plant-life, a species of green-red lichen in the
Polar regions. But nowhere was there real life.

Then Venus, with its dust and wind. No life there. Not even the stars to
make one think of home. Only the dust and wind, a dark veil of death
screaming eternally over hot dry land.

And Jupiter, with its seas of ice; and hot Mercury, a cracked, withered
mummy of a planet, baked as hard and dry as an ancient walnut in a
furnace.

Next, the airless, rocky asteroids, and frozen Saturn with its swirling
ammonia snows. And last, the white, silent worlds, Uranus, Neptune, and
Pluto.

World after world, all dead, with no sign of life, no reminder of life,
and no promise of life.

Thus the loneliness had grown. It was not a child of Earth. It was not
born in the hearts of those who scurried along city pavements or of
those in the green fields or of those in the cool, clean houses.

It was a child of the incredible distances, of the infinite night, of
emptiness and silence. It was born in the hearts of the slit-eyed men,
the oldish young men, the spacemen.

For without life on other worlds, where was the sky’s challenge? Why go
on and on to discover only worlds of death?

The dream of the spacemen turned from the planets to the stars.
Somewhere in the galaxy or in other galaxies there _had_ to be life.
Life was a wonderful and precious thing. It wasn’t right that it should
be confined to a single, tiny planet. If it were, then life would seem
meaningless. Mankind would be a freak, a cosmic accident.

And now the _Wanderer_ was on the first interstellar flight, hurtling
through the dark spaces to Proxima Centauri. Moving silently, as if
motionless, yet at a speed of 160,000 miles a second. And ahead loomed
the great, gray planet, the only planet of the sun, growing larger,
larger, each instant....

                                  ————

A gentle, murmuring hum filled the ship. The indicator lights on the
control panel glowed like a swarm of pink eyes.

"Deceleration compensator adjusted for 12 G’s, sir," reported Lieutenant
Gunderson.

Captain Wiley nodded, still studying the image of the planet.

"There—there’s something else, Captain."

"Yes?"

"It’s Brown, sir. He’s drunk."

Captain Wiley turned, a scowl on his hard, lined face. "Drunk? Where’d
he get the stuff?"

"He saved it, sir, saved it for nine years. Said he was going to drink
it when we discovered life."

"We haven’t discovered life yet."

"I know. He said he wouldn’t set foot on the planet if he was sober.
Said if there isn’t life there, he couldn’t take it—unless he was
drunk."

Captain Wiley grunted. "All right."

They looked at the world.

"Wouldn’t it be wonderful, Captain? Just think—to meet another race. It
wouldn’t matter what they were like, would it? If they were primitive,
we could teach them things. If they were ahead of us, they could teach
us. You know what I’d like? To have someone meet us, to gather around
us. It wouldn’t matter if they were afraid of us or even if they tried
to kill us. We’d know that we aren’t alone."

"I know what you mean," said Captain Wiley. Some of his emotion
overflowed the prison of his body. "There’s no thrill in landing on dead
worlds. If no one’s there to see you, you don’t feel like a hero."

"That’s it, Captain! That’s why I came on this crazy trip. I guess
that’s why we all came. I...."

Captain Wiley cleared his throat. "Lieutenant, commence deceleration. 6
G’s."

"Yes, sir!"

The planet grew bigger, filling the entire visi-screen.

Someone coughed behind Captain Wiley.

"Sir, the men would like to look at the screen. They can’t see the
planet out of the ports yet." The speaker was Doyle, the ship’s
Engineer, a dry, tight-skinned little man.

"Sure." Captain Wiley stepped aside.

Doyle looked, then Parker and Fong. Just three of them, for Watkins had
sliced his wrists the fourth year out. And Brown was drunk.

As they looked, a realization came to Captain Wiley. The men were
getting old. The years had passed so gradually that he’d never really
noticed it before. Lieutenant Gunderson had been a kid just out of Space
Academy. Parker and Doyle and Fong, too, had been in their twenties.
They had been boys. And now something was gone—the sharp eyes and sure
movements of youth, the smooth skin and thick, soft hair.

Now they had become men. And yet for a few moments, as they gazed at the
screen, they seemed like happy, expectant children.

"I wish Brown could see this," Doyle murmured. "He says now he isn’t
going to get off his couch till we land and discover life. Says he won’t
dare look for himself."

"The planet’s right for life," said Fong, the dark-faced
astro-physicist. "Atmosphere forty per cent oxygen, lots of water vapor.
No poisonous gases, according to spectroscopic analyses. It should be
ideal for life."

"There _is_ life there," said Parker, the radarman. "You know why?
Because we’ve given up eighteen years of our lives. Nine years to get
here, nine to get back. I’m thirty now. I was twenty-one when we left
Earth. I gave up all those good years. They say that you can have
something if you pay enough for it. Well, we’ve paid for this. There has
to be a—a sort of universal justice. That’s why I know there’s life
here, life that moves and thinks—maybe even life we can talk to."

"You need a drink," said Fong.

"It’s getting bigger," murmured Lieutenant Gunderson.

"The Centaurians," mused Doyle, half to himself. "What’ll they be like?
Monsters or men? If Parker’s right about universal justice, they’ll be
men."

"Hey, where there’s men, there’s women!" yelled Parker. "A Centaurian
woman! Say!"

"Look at those clouds!" exclaimed Doyle. "Damn it, we can’t see the
surface."

"Hey, there! Look there, to the right! See it? It’s silver, down in a
hole in the clouds. It’s like a city!"

"Maybe it’s just water."

"No, it’s a city!"

"Bring ’er down, Captain. God, Captain, bring ’er down fast!"

"Drag Brown in here! He ought to see this!"

"Can’t you bring ’er down faster, Captain?"

"Damn it, it _is_ a city!"

"Why doesn’t someone get Brown?"

"Take to your couches, men," said Captain Wiley. "Landing’s apt to be a
bit bumpy. Better strap yourselves in."

                                  ————

Down went the rocket, more slowly now, great plumes of scarlet
thundering from its forward braking jets. Down, down into soft,
cotton-like clouds, the whiteness sliding silently past the ports.

Suddenly, a droning voice:

"To those in the ship from the planet called Earth: Please refrain from
landing at this moment. You will await landing instructions."

Parker leaped off his couch, grasping a stanchion for support. "That
voice! It was human!"

Captain Wiley’s trembling hand moved over the jet-control panel. The
ship slowed in its descent. The clouds outside the portholes became
motionless, a milky whiteness pressed against the ship.

"The voice!" Parker cried again. "Am I crazy? Did everyone hear it?"

Captain Wiley turned away from the panel. "We heard it, Parker. It was
in our minds. Telepathy."

He smiled. "Yes, the planet is inhabited. There are intelligent beings
on it. Perhaps they’re more intelligent than we are."

It was strange. The men had hoped, dreamed, prayed for this moment. Now
they sat stunned, unable to comprehend, their tongues frozen.

"We’ll see them very soon," said Captain Wiley, his voice quivering.
"We’ll wait for their directions."

Breathlessly, they waited.

Captain Wiley’s fingers drummed nervously on the base of the control
panel. Lieutenant Gunderson rose from his couch, stood in the center of
the cabin, then returned to his couch.

Silence, save for the constant, rumbling roar of the jets which held the
ship aloft.

"I wonder how long it’ll be," murmured Fong at last.

"It seems like a long time!" burst Parker.

"We’ve waited nine years," said Captain Wiley. "We can wait a few more
minutes."

They waited.

"Good Lord!" said Parker. "How long is it going to be? What time is it?
We’ve been waiting an hour! What kind of people are they down there?"

"Maybe they’ve forgotten about us," said Fong.

"That’s it!" cried Parker. "They’ve forgotten about us! Hey, you! Down
there—you that talked to us! We’re still here, damn it! We want to
land!"

"Parker," said Captain Wiley, sternly.

Parker sat down on his couch, his lips quivering.

Then came the voice:

"We regret that a landing is impossible at this moment. Our field is
overcrowded, and your vessel is without priority. You must wait your
turn."

Captain Wiley stared forward at nothing. "Whoever you are," he
whispered, "please understand that we have come a long way to reach your
planet. Our trip...."

"We do not wish to discuss your trip. You will be notified when landing
space is available."

Captain Wiley’s body shook. "Wait, tell us who you are. What do you look
like? Tell us...."

"Talking to you is quite difficult. We must form our thoughts so as to
form word-patterns in your minds. You will be notified."

"Wait a minute!" called Captain Wiley.

No answer.

Captain Wiley straightened in an effort to maintain dignity.

They waited....

                                  ————

It was night.

The darkness was an impenetrable blanket, a solid thing, like thick
black velvet glued over the ports. It was worse than the darkness of
space.

Captain Wiley sat before the control panel, slowly beating his fists
against the arms of his chair, a human metronome ticking off the slow
seconds.

Parker stood before a porthole.

"Hey, look, Captain! There’s a streak of red, like a meteor. And there’s
another!"

Captain Wiley rose, looked out. "They’re rockets. They’re going to land.
These people are highly advanced."

His face became grim. Below them lay a planet, an intelligent race
hidden beneath clouds and darkness. What manner of creatures were they?
How great was their civilization? What marvelous secrets had their
scientists discovered? What was their food like, their women, their
whiskey?

The questions darted endlessly through his mind like teasing
needle-points. All these wondrous things lay below them, and here they
sat, like starving men, their hands tied, gazing upon a steaming but
unobtainable dinner. So near and yet so far.

He trembled. The emotion grew within him until it burst out as water
bursts through the cracked wall of a dam. He became like Parker.

"Why should we wait?" he yelled. "Why must we land in their field?
Parker! Prepare to release flares! We’re going down! We’ll land
anywhere—in a street, in the country. We don’t have to wait for orders!"

Parker bounced off his couch. Someone called, "Brown, we’re going to
land!"

A scurrying of feet, the rush of taut-muscled bodies, the babble of
excited voices.

"We’re going down!"

"_We’re going down!_"

The grumble of the _Wanderer’s_ jets loudened, softened, spluttered,
loudened again. Vibration filled the ship as it sank downward.

Suddenly it lurched upward, like a child’s ball caught in a stream of
rising water. The jolt staggered the men. They seized stanchions and
bulkhead railings to keep their balance.

"What the hell?"

Abruptly, the strange movement ceased. The ship seemed motionless. There
was no vibration.

"Captain," said Lieutenant Gunderson. "There’s no change in altitude.
We’re still at 35,000 feet, no more, no less."

"We _must_ be going down," said Captain Wiley, puzzled. "Kill jets 4 and
6."

The Lieutenant’s hands flicked off two switches. A moment later:
"There’s no change, Captain."

Then came the voice:

"To those in the vessel from the planet Earth: Please do not oppose
orders of the Landing Council. You are the first visitors in the history
of our world whom we have had to restrain with physical force. You will
be notified when landing space is available."

                                  ————

Morning.

The warm sunlight streamed into the clouds, washing away the last
shadows and filtering through the portholes.

The men breakfasted, bathed, shaved, smoked, sat, twisted their fingers,
looked out the ports. They were silent men, with dark shadows about
their eyes and with tight, white-lipped mouths.

Frequently, the clouds near them were cut by swift, dark shapes swooping
downward. The shapes were indistinct in the cotton-like whiteness, but
obviously they were huge, like a dozen _Wanderers_ made into one.

"Those ships are big," someone murmured, without enthusiasm.

"It’s a busy spaceport," grumbled Captain Wiley.

Thoughts, words, movements came so slowly it was like walking under
water. Enthusiasm was dead. The men were automatons, sitting, waiting,
eating, sitting, waiting.

A day passed, and a night.

"Maybe they’ve forgotten us," said Fong.

No one answered. The thought had been voiced before, a hundred times.

Then, at last, the droning words:

"To those in the vessel from the planet Earth: You will now land. We
will carry you directly over the field. Then you will descend straight
down. The atmosphere is suitable to your type of life and is free of
germs. You will not need protection."

The men stared at one another.

"Hey," Doyle said, "did you hear that? He says we can go down."

The men blinked. Captain Wiley swallowed hard. He rose with a stiff,
slow, nervous hesitancy.

"We’re going down," he mumbled, as if repeating the words over and over
in his mind and trying to believe them.

The men stirred as realization sprouted and grew. They stirred like
lethargic animals aroused from the long, dreamless sleep of hibernation.

"We’re going to land," breathed Parker, unbelievingly.

The _Wanderer_ moved as though caught in the grip of a giant, invisible
hand.

The voice said:

"You may now descend."

Captain Wiley moved to the jet-control panel. "Lieutenant!" he snapped.
"Wake up. Let’s go!"

The ship sank downward through the thick sea of clouds. The men walked
to the ports. A tenseness, an excitement grew in their faces, like dying
flame being fanned into its former brilliancy.

Out of the clouds loomed monstrous, shining, silver spires and towers,
Cyclopean bridges, gigantic lake-like mirrors, immense golden spheres.
It was a nightmare world, a jungle of fantastic shape and color.

The men gasped, whispered, murmured, the flame of their excitement
growing, growing.

"The whole planet is a city!" breathed Parker.

                                  ————

Thump!

The _Wanderer_ came to rest on a broad landing field of light blue
stone. The jets coughed, spluttered, died. The ship quivered, then lay
still, its interior charged with an electric, pregnant silence.

"You first, Captain." Lieutenant Gunderson’s voice cracked, and his face
was flushed. "You be the first to go outside."

Captain Wiley stepped through the airlock, his heart pounding. It was
over now—all the bewilderment, the numbness.

And his eyes were shining. He’d waited so long that it was hard to
believe the waiting was over. But it was, he told himself. The journey
was over, and the waiting, and now the loneliness would soon be over.
Mankind was not alone. It was a good universe after all!

He stepped outside, followed by Lieutenant Gunderson, then by Parker,
Doyle and Fong.

He rubbed his eyes. This couldn’t be! A world like this couldn’t exist!
He shook his head, blinked furiously.

"It—it can’t be true," he mumbled to Lieutenant Gunderson. "We’re still
on the ship—dreaming."

The landing field was huge, perhaps ten miles across, and its sides were
lined with incredible ships, the smallest of which seemed forty times as
large as the _Wanderer_. There were silver ships, golden ships, black
ships, round ships, transparent ships, cigar-shaped ships, flat-topped
ships.

And scattered over the field were—creatures.

A few were the size of men, but most were giants by comparison. Some
were humanoid, some reptilian. Some were naked, some clad in helmeted
suits, some enveloped with a shimmering, water-like luminescence. The
creatures walked, slithered, floated, crawled.

Beyond the ships and the field lay the great city, its web-work of
towers, minarets, spheres and bridges like the peaks of an enormous
mountain range stretching up into space itself. The structures were like
the colors of a rainbow mixed in a cosmic paint pot, molded and
solidified into fantastic shapes by a mad god.

"I—I’m going back to the ship," stammered Parker. The whiteness of death
was in his face. "I’m going to stay with Brown."

He turned, and then he screamed.

"Captain, the ship’s moving!"

Silently, the _Wanderer_ was drifting to the side of the field.

The toneless voice said:

"We are removing your vessel so that other descending ships will not
damage it."

Captain Wiley shouted into the air. "Wait! Don’t go away! Help us! Where
can we see you?"

The voice seemed to hesitate. "It is difficult for us to speak in
thoughts that you understand."

                                  ————

Silence.

Captain Wiley studied the faces of his men. They were not faces of
conquerors or of triumphant spacemen. They were the faces of dazed,
frightened children who had caught a glimpse of Hell. He attempted,
feebly, to smile.

"All right," he said loudly, "so it isn’t like we expected. So no one
came to meet us with brass bands and ten cent flags. We’ve still
succeeded, haven’t we? We’ve found life that’s intelligent beyond our
comprehension. What if our own civilization is insignificant by
comparison? Look at those beings. Think of what we can learn from them.
Why, their ships might have exceeded the speed of light. They might be
from other galaxies!"

"Let’s find out," said Parker.

They strode to the nearest ship, an immense, smooth, bluish sphere. Two
creatures stood before it, shaped like men and yet twice the size of
men. They wore white, skin-tight garments that revealed muscular bodies
like those of gods.

They looked at Captain Wiley and smiled.

One of them pointed toward the _Wanderer_. Their smiles widened and then
they laughed.

They laughed gently, understandingly, but they _laughed_.

And then they turned away.

"Talk to them," Parker urged.

"How?" Beads of perspiration shone on Captain Wiley’s face.

"Any way. Go ahead."

Captain Wiley wiped his forehead. "We are from Earth, the third
planet...."

The two god-like men seemed annoyed. They walked away, ignoring the
Earthmen.

Captain Wiley spat. "All right, so they won’t talk to us. Look at that
city! Think of the things we can see there and tell the folks on Earth
about! Why, we’ll be heroes!"

"Let’s go," said Parker, his voice quavering around the edges.

They walked toward a large, oval opening in a side of the field, a hole
between mountainous, conical structures that seemed like the entrance to
a street.

Suddenly breath exploded from Captain Wiley’s lungs. His body jerked
back. He fell to the blue stone pavement.

Then he scrambled erect, scowling, his hands outstretched. He felt a
soft, rubbery, invisible substance.

"It’s a wall!" he exclaimed.

The voice droned:

"To those of Earth: Beings under the 4th stage of Galactic Development
are restricted to the area of the landing field. We are sorry. In your
primitive stage it would be unwise for you to learn the nature of our
civilization. Knowledge of our science would be abused by your people,
and used for the thing you call war. We hope that you have been inspired
by what you have seen. However, neither we nor the other visitors to our
planet are permitted to hold contact with you. It is suggested that you
and your vessel depart."

"Listen, you!" screamed Parker. "We’ve been nine years getting here! By
Heaven, we won’t leave now! We’re...."

"We have no time to discuss the matter. Beings under the 4th stage of
Galactic...."

"Never mind!" spat Captain Wiley.

Madness flamed in Parker’s eyes. "We won’t go! I tell you, we _won’t_,
we _won’t_!"

His fists streaked through the air as if at an invisible enemy. He ran
toward the wall.

He collided with a jolt that sent him staggering backward, crying,
sobbing, screaming, all at once.

Captain Wiley stepped forward, struck him on the chin. Parker crumpled.

They stood looking at his body, which lay motionless except for the slow
rising and falling of his chest.

"What now, Captain?" asked Lieutenant Gunderson.

Captain Wiley thought for a few seconds.

Then he said, "We’re ignorant country bumpkins, Lieutenant, riding into
the city in a chugging jalopy. We’re stupid savages, trying to discuss
the making of fire with the creators of atomic energy. We’re children
racing a paper glider against an atomic-powered jet. We’re too
ridiculous to be noticed. We’re tolerated—but nothing more."

"Shall we go home?" asked Fong, a weariness in his voice.

Lieutenant Gunderson scratched his neck. "I don’t think I’d want to go
home now. Could you bear to tell the truth about what happened?"

Fong looked wistfully at the shining city. "If we told the truth, they
probably wouldn’t believe us. We’ve failed. It sounds crazy. We reached
Proxima Centauri and found life, and yet somehow we failed. No, I
wouldn’t like to go home."

"Still, we learned something," said Doyle. "We know now that there is
life on worlds beside our own. Somewhere there must be other races like
ours."

They looked at each other, strangely, for a long, long moment.

At last Lieutenant Gunderson asked, "How far is Alpha Centauri?"

Captain Wiley frowned. "_Alpha_ Centauri?" Through his mind swirled
chaotic visions of colossal distances, eternal night, and lonely years.
He sought hard to find a seed of hope in his mind, and yet there was no
seed. There were only a coldness and an emptiness.

Suddenly, the voice:

"Yes, Men of Earth, we suggest that you try Alpha Centauri."

The men stood silent and numb, like bewildered children, as the
implication of those incredible words sifted into their consciousness.

Finally Fong said, "Did—did you hear that? He said..."

Captain Sam Wiley nodded, very slowly. "Yes. Alpha Centauri. _Alpha_
Centauri."

His eyes began to twinkle, and then he smiled....

                                  ————

Onward sped the _Wanderer_, onward through cold, silent infinity, on and
on, an insignificant pencil of silver lost in the terrible, brooding
blackness.

Yet even greater than the blackness was the flaming hope in the six men
who inhabited the silver rocket. They moved in hope as fish move in
water. Their lives revolved in hope as planets revolve in space and
time. They bore their hope like a jeweled crown, and it was as much a
part of them as sight in their eyes. Hope was both their brother and
their god.

And there was no loneliness.

THE END

_Transcribers note_: This etext was produced from Galaxy Science Fiction
July 1953. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
copyright on this publication was renewed.