Baldwin moved in with a practiced ring shuffle and swung his open palm against the side of Barker's head.
The agent cried out and nursed the burning cheek. Baldwin would never know how close he came that moment to a broken back….
He collapsed limply into the chair and felt it mould to him almost like a living thing. Plates slid under his thighs and behind his shoulder blades, accommodating themselves to his body.
'Just to show you nobody's fooling,' Baldwin said grimly. He pressed a button on the chair and again something indescribably painful happened, wringing his bones and muscles to jelly for a timeless instant of torment. He did not faint; it was there and gone too quickly for the vascular system to make such an adjustment. He slumped in the chair, gasping.
Baldwin said: 'Take hold of the two handles.' He was surprised to find that he could move. He took hold of two spherical handles. They were cold and slimy-dry. Baldwin said: 'You have to make the handles turn rough, like abrasive paper. You do it different ways. I can't tell you how.
Everybody has a different way. Some people just concentrate on the handles. Other people just try to make their minds a blank and that works for them. You just find your own way and do it when we tell you to. Or you get the pain again. That's all.'
Barker heard him move down the line and repeat the speech in substantially the same words to the Stosses.
Baldwin was no puzzle. He was just a turncoat bastard. The wrecked, ragged men and women with lackluster eyes sitting around him were no puzzle. Not after the pain. Baldwin's boss, the cyclops—
How long had this been going on? Since Homer?
He bore down on the spherical handles. Amazingly they went from silk-smooth to paper-coarse and then to sandstone-gritty. Baldwin was back, peering to look at an indicator of some unimaginable kind.
'That's very good,' the big man said. 'You keep that up and some day you'll get out of the chair like me.'
Not like you, you bastard. Not like you. He choked down the thought. If the boss were here it would have undone him.
There were mechanical squeals and buzzers. Those who were sleeping in their chairs awoke instantly, with panic on their faces, visible even in the dim red light.
'All right,' Baldwin was shouting. 'Give, you bastards! Five seconds and we cut you in. Give, Morgan, or it's the Pain! Silver, make it move! I ain't forgetting anything, Silver—next time it's three jolts. Give, you bastards! Give!'
Barker gave in a frenzy of concentration. Under his sweaty palms the globes became abrasive. In five seconds there was a thudding shock through his body that left him limp. The globes went smooth and Baldwin was standing over him: 'Make it go, Oliver, or it's the Pain.
Make it go.' Somehow, he did.
It seemed to go on for hours while the world rocked and reeled about him, whether subjectively or objectively he could not tell. And at last there was the roar: 'Let it go now. Everybody off.'
Racking vibration ceased and he let his head nod forward limply.
From the chair in front of him came an exhausted whisper: 'He's gone now. Some day I'm going to—'
'Can we talk?' Barker asked weakly.
'Talk, sing, anything you want.' There was a muttering and stirring through the big room. From the chair in front, hopefully: 'You happen to be from Rupp City? My family—'
'No,' Barker said. 'I'm sorry. What is all this? What are we doing?'
The exhausted whisper said: 'All this is an armed merchantman of the A'rkhovYar. We're running it. We're galley slaves.'
CHAPTER V
THREE FEEDINGS LATER the man from Rupp City leaped from his chair, howling, and threw himself on a tangle of machinery in the center aisle. He was instantly electrocuted.
Before he died he had told Barker in rambling, formless conversations that he had it figured out; the star-people simply knew how to amplify psychokinetic energy. He thought he could trace eighteen stages of amplification through the drive machinery. The death was—a welcome break in the monotony. Barker was horrified to discover that was his principal reaction to it, but he was not alone.
They were fed water and moist yellow cakes that tasted like spoiled pork. Normally they worked three shifts in rotation. Only now and then were they all summoned for a terrific surge; usually they had only to keep steerage way on the vessel. But eight hours spent bearing down on the spherical handles, concentrating, was an endless agony of boredom and effort. If your attention wandered, you got the Pain. Barker got it five times in fifteen feedings. Others got it ten or twelve. Ginny Stoss was flighty of mind; she got it twenty times, and after that, never. She mumbled continuously after that and spent all her time in practice, fingering the handles and peering into the bad light with dim, monomaniac eyes.
There was an efficient four-holer latrine, used without regard to sex or privacy. Sex was a zero in their lives, despite the mingling of men and women. When they slept in their chairs, they slept. The Pain and then death were the penalties for mating, and also their energy was low. The men were not handsome and the women were not beautiful. Hair and beards grew and straggled — why not? Their masters ignored them as far as clothing went. If the things they wore when they came aboard fell apart, very well, they fell apart. They weren't going any place.
It was approximately eight hours working the globular handles, eight hours sleeping, and eight hours spent in rambling talk about the past, with many lies told of riches and fame. Nobody ever challenged a lie; why should they?
Bull-necked Mr. Baldwin appeared for feedings, but he did not eat with them. The feedings were shift-change time, and he spent them in harangues and threats.
Barker sucked up to Baldwin disgustingly, earning the hatred of all the other 'units.' But they knew next to nothing, and what he desperately needed was information. All they knew was that they had been taken aboard—a year ago? Six years ago? A month ago? They could only guess.
It was impossible to keep track of time within the changeless walls of the room. Some of them had been taken directly aboard. Some had been conveyed in a large craft with many others and then put aboard.
Some had served in other vessels, with propulsion rooms that were larger or smaller, and then put aboard. They had been told at one time or another that they were in the A'rkhov-Yar fleet, and disputed feebly about the meaning and pronunciation. It was more of a rumor than a fact.
Barker picked a thread from his tie each day to mark the days, and sucked up to Baldwin.
Baldwin liked to be liked, and pitied himself. 'You think,' he asked plaintively, 'I'm inhuman? You think I want to drive the units like I do?
I'm as friendly as the next guy, but it's dog eat dog, isn't it? If I wasn't driving I'd be in a chair getting driven, wouldn't I?'
'I can see that, Mr. Baldwin. And it takes character to be a leader like you are.'
'You're Goddamned right it does. And if the truth was known, I'm the best friend you people have. If it wasn't me it'd be somebody else who'd be worse. Lakhrut said to me once that I'm too easy on the units and I stood right up to him and said there wasn't any sense to wearing them out and not having any drive when the going gets hot.'
'I think it's amazing, Mr. Baldwin, the way you picked up the language.
That takes brains.'
Baldwin beamed modestly. 'Oh, it ain't too hard. For instance—'
INSTRUCTION BEGAN. It was not too hard, because Baldwin's vocabulary consisted of perhaps four hundred words, all severely restricted to his duties. The language was uninflected; it could have been an old and stable speech. The grammar was merely the word-order of logic: subject, verb, object. Outstandingly, it was a gutteral speech. There were remnants of 'tonality' in it. Apparently it had once been a sung language like Chinese, but had
