World Out of Mind
world out of mind
BY J. T. McINTOSH
a division of F+W Media, Inc.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Book One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Book Two
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Book Three
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Also Available
Copyright
book one
chapter one
THE SWING DOORS OPENED AND TWO MEN AND A WOMAN came into the foyer. At the far end of a long passage Raigmore moved away from the list of theater shows which he had been scanning and went slowly toward the elevators, not looking up. Out of the corner of his eye he saw the two men sit down by the swing doors and the woman come towards the elevator, toward him.
He looked up at her when it was natural to look at her, and stared frankly because that was natural too. Anything else would have been unnatural. She was twenty-three and obviously somebody. The mere fact that she wore no badge, coming straight off the street, would have been sufficient reason for him to stare at her. Her beauty was another, and the probability that he had recognized her as Alison Hever was a third.
So as they came together, Raigmore ambling casually and Alison walking briskly, she had no reason to notice him specially, despite his obvious interest in her, until it became clear that he was also going up in the elevator. She checked her stride slightly so that she could take the elevator he didn’t, for no reason except that White Stars generally avoided even the most fleeting personal contact with strangers who might know or guess that they were White Stars. There was no obstinacy about it; when Raigmore also checked himself and bowed her into the elevator in front of him she smiled pleasantly and stepped inside without hesitation.
Raigmore raised his eyebrows inquiringly as the doors slid shut. “Fourteenth,” she said. She had noticed his black badge now. Even in her, the sight of the badge produced caution and a certain distrust. Who could trust a Black?
The caution was understandable. Who could trust a Black? Nobody. Not even another Black.
As the elevator moved smoothly upward, Raigmore said abruptly: “I’m Eldin Raigmore. I suggest you remember the name, Alison, because one day you’ll marry me.”
It was the kind of thing that was only to be expected of a Black. Alison wasn’t surprised. She smiled faintly but did nothing and said nothing. Only when she stepped out on the fourteenth floor did she acknowledge Raigmore’s existence again.
“I liked the way you said that and nothing more,” she admitted. Her manner was easy and pleasant, with only a hint of ironic amusement. “It suggested an understanding of tactics that’s lost in a Black. Why not take the Tests, Raigmore?” Her voice, inevitably, became more ironic as she went on: “If you should turn out to be a White Star — why, then, what you said is probably correct.”
She walked along the corridor, but at the corner she paused for a moment and looked back at him over her shoulder, curiously. There was something about the way she did it that showed that curiosity was one of her main characteristics. She was curious about everything, interested in everything. Even Eldin Raigmore.
He knew what she was doing in the hotel. She was going to visit Gloria Clarke, a friend of hers — and, as any friend of a White Star was likely to be, high in the Test ranks. Gloria was a Yellow Star, three grades below Alison — but still in the top one per cent of one per cent of one per cent.
Raigmore went down in the elevator again. That was all he intended to do for the moment. Eldin Raigmore now existed. After all, one didn’t have to prove existence. A White Star knew Eldin Raigmore existed, and that, for the moment, was good enough.
Later it would seem strange that no record of Eldin Raigmore existed before two days ago — May 23. That was something which still had to be dealt with, a problem to which a solution had to be found.
He met Fred Salter in the foyer. Like Alison, Salter didn’t know him from Adam. In his two days of reconnoitering Raigmore had made sure that no one who mattered or might matter, like Alison or Salter, had had a chance to notice him. Now he was ready. It was time for them to notice him.
He made sure he got in Salter’s way so that they had to be conventionally polite, apologizing and stepping aside, and Salter had to look at him.
“Sorry,” said Salter. “My fault for not looking where you were going.”
Raigmore knew that was meant to be humor, but he wasn’t sure enough of what humor actually was to attempt to answer in the same vein. He grinned instead, knowing that was a natural reaction when anyone made a joke, and stepped past Salter.
Salter had seen someone outwardly not unlike himself — a tall man of about twenty-five, dark-haired, blue-eyed. The likeness was not startling and quite fortuitous; still, Salter would remember him.
Salter, presumably, was also going up to see Gloria Clarke, who was either a girl friend or a relative of his. Raigmore didn’t know which. If Salter hadn’t met Alison Hever before, he would meet her now. Possibly Alison would mention her encounter with Raigmore and they would discuss him. All the better.
Raigmore looked curiously at the two men who waited by the doors. He did it so that they became interested enough to examine him.
They were not exactly a bodyguard, these two. Senseless crime was rare these days. Theft, no — it wasn’t senseless to steal when you thought you could get away with it. Shoplifting, safebreaking, car stealing — these things were still done, though they weren’t the flourishing professions they had once been, and had to be done much more carefully. But murder was another thing. To have anything to gain from murder you had to have a lot to lose. And these days you were practically certain to lose it.
So these men weren’t around to guard Alison against assassins. Except in a police state, assassination is always very easy for a competent killer. They were there because a White Star, and particularly Alison Hever, the only living White Star under forty, often needed protection from her admirers.
Having stared at the men and made them notice him, Raigmore went through the swing doors into the street. His task proper was begun.
• • •
When he was well clear of the building, on his way back to the modest hotel at which he was staying, a girl who had been waiting detached herself from a wall and fell into step beside him. Raigmore paid no attention. He had never seen her before.
“No, you don’t know me,” the girl agreed with his unspoken thought. “I’m supposed to contact you. And take orders from you.”
She was a tiny blonde, as beautiful as Alison in a mass-produced sort of way, but without a suggestion of the qualities that made Alison a White Star. She wore the Purple Cross. That was her rating for life. Being a Purple Cross, she could be absolutely free in her manner, her dress, her talk, her attitude to life. She wore a plastic dress over a lopsided slip that was all modesty on the right and immodest to the current limit on the left.
As a Purple Cross she was above the Browns and Blacks and Grays and Purple Circles — above most of the population of the world, in fact — and yet not so high in the Test hierarchy that she had to be careful about what she did, or care much what people thought about her. She was high enough to be proud and free, but not high enough to be fettered again by the natural responsibility of all leaders of men and women.
Raigmore remained silent.
“May 23,” said the girl. “Four miles from Millo. A wood. I was there, watching, but I’d been told not to identify myself to you at once. Only to follow you around, get in touch with you when you seemed ready, and do anything you say.”
“You did it well,” Raigmore remarked. “While I was watching others I never suspected that I was being watched myself.”
“You had to find things out. I didn’t. I only had to see where you went.”
Raigmore decided to accept her on her own valuation. He had known there would be others but that he was the leader. Acceptance didn’t mean much. There was no need to tell her anything.
“You will do anything I say,” he observed. “With what limitations?”
“None,” she replied emotionlessly. “And with no questions.”
“Murder?” he asked casually.
“Of course.”
“Do you know of any others?”
“Yes. A woman and a man. But they will introduce themselves to you. They don’t concern me. I take orders from you, unless you tell me I am to take them from someone else.”
It was all very cold and businesslike. A
nd therefore, somehow wrong. Dimly, hazily, Raigmore recognized the missing factor.
“We have been talking,” he said evenly, “as if we didn’t belong to this planet. Or to this race.”
She hesitated, then nodded. “So we have.”
“What’s your name?”
“Peach Railton.”
“Well, Peach, the part you seem to have chosen looks right. From now on, play it. All the time. Even when you’re alone with me. Understand?”
She understood. She obeyed. There was a subtle, immediate change in the way she held her body, in the glints in her eyes. She had become what she looked, with the consummate precision of the trained spy of any race — first observing, then imitating.
There was still something missing, but Raigmore couldn’t tell her about that. He didn’t know about it. It was missing in him too.
He knew a lot, and he was rapidly learning more from books, novels, newspapers and his own observation. He knew all about all the emotions — anything about them that could be written down.
But he had never experienced emotion. So he didn’t see, as Alison or Salter might have seen, that while Peach acted her part flawlessly there wasn’t a shadow of feeling behind it.
chapter two
THE TESTS WERE TRUSTED. THEY WERE NEARLY PERFECT — most people thought they were perfect. But perfection is incapable of improvement, and the Tests were still changing and being improved, if but slightly. Any test of human capacities can be trustworthy only to a little less than the current limit of human capacity, and it was not until many Whites had passed through the Tests, and each produced his thesis on the system, that the top limits of the Test territory began to approach the lower regions in completeness and efficiency.
Fred Salter was still In Test, for he had come to Earth from Mars only fairly recently, and Mars so far had no Test facilities. Raigmore went to the same Tests Depot as Salter, without any concrete plan for making use of the circumstance. He might meet Salter again, but that would be left to chance.
A girl attendant was reading a magazine as he entered. She laid it down and stood up. On the desk in front of her was a little stand with her name on a card — Sally Morris. She didn’t ask what he wanted. There was only one thing he could want. She was going to ask “What stage?” but then Raigmore turned so that she could see his black badge.
She looked faintly surprised. She was an intelligent-looking girl. All Test operators had to be intelligent, but most of them were unambitious and patient. She wore a plain white coat, like a doctor. It bore no badge. She had to tell people who were In Test what to do. It might be a little awkward if she was wearing, say, a purple star and ordering about Orange Circles.
“How much do you want to do today?” she asked.
“Just the first Test.”
“Very well.” She led him to a small booth with a thick, soundproof door. It contained nothing but a chair and a keyboard with a blank screen behind it.
“Your name is …?”
Raigmore gave it. She didn’t ask for his address. Later more details would be wanted, but the first Test didn’t call for them.
It was supposed to be impossible to fool the Tests. He could have come in wearing any badge he liked, plus the green, and said he wanted to start at the appropriate stage; but the results would show the fraud.
The girl held out her hand. It took him a second or two to realize what she wanted. Then he reached to his lapel and removed the black badge. He was no longer a Black — no longer Untested. He would never wear the black again.
“When the screen lights up,” the girl told him, “you will press any of these buttons, as you wish, one at a time. Your score will show in the screen. Watching it, you will attempt to increase it by operating the buttons. At the end of ten minutes you’ll hear a buzzer and the screen will register your final score. That’s all.”
She gave him a card containing in detail what she had said. Then she turned to the door.
“You have five minutes now to think about this Test,” she said. “Then the screen will light up.”
She went out quietly and closed the door.
Raigmore had a certain theoretical knowledge of the Tests, that was all. It was confined to what one could read about them in an encyclopedia. There was a lot in the encyclopedia, but nothing that would help anyone to do the Tests better than he would in ignorance.
He considered the first Test. It must be principally an estimate of intelligence. He thought it was likely that he could pass the entire series with high distinction, and he had already decided he must be full out from the beginning. It might surprise the operator that a man who had no previous Test record and was obviously at least twenty-five should make an astonishingly high score in this preliminary Test, but that couldn’t be helped. Knowing as little as he did about the Tests, he could not afford to try to double-cross them, doing well but not too well.
Sooner or later as he proceeded with the Tests the authorities would want to know about his past record, as he climbed higher and higher. He would have to do something very soon to build up some sort of history behind him. The fact that his life had begun on May 23 was inadmissible.
Presumably Peach Railton had also had a short history, though not quite as short as his. But it didn’t matter much that the previous history of a Purple Cross was shrouded in mystery. A Purple Cross didn’t have such talent that her past must be outstanding or even very interesting.
Raigmore’s trump card was the way the Tests were trusted. On that his whole strategy rested. If it were a question of believing the Tests or almost anything else, the Tests were to be believed.
But the screen had lit up, and now all that concerned him was how to perform his Test.
Before him was a block of buttons arranged in a square, fifteen to a side — 225 of them. He pressed the button at the bottom right-hand corner, knowing a system must emerge. The screen showed the figure 10. He touched the button immediately above, and the figure changed to 9. The button above that dropped the score to 8.
Pressing buttons at random would obviously result in a low score. The purpose was to find a system. Any system was better than none, despite the screen’s warnings. He touched the fourth button in the row. The screen showed 11.
Rapidly he repeated the series from that point. The score dropped twice and then jumped three, as before. He could plod on with the same system, and no doubt many people did.
But the challenge of the Tests was that they were no easier the second time. That must mean that each Test was unique, and that instruction by someone who had taken the Test would not help. The pauses must be measured, and there must be something measuring mental effort, so that if anyone tried to perform the Test by rote it would immediately be obvious. The light seemed normal, but perhaps encephalographic patterns were being computed as he sat there.
He tried various series. He discovered rapidly that the more complicated a series the higher it scored. At the same time, a simple series continued to afford results, but the more subtle ones refused to register after two or three repetitions.
He tried two buttons at once to check a theory that breaking the simple rules would count against him. On the contrary, his score mounted. He tried again, with the same result. Thereafter he went back to one button at a time. Obviously on the third or fourth breach of the rule, or possibly just at the end, his score would drop. It was legitimate to test every possibility, but not to follow it out in defiance of the rules. If that were legitimate, the Test itself would be a fraud.
He was wholly concentrated on the struggle with the machine when the buzzer sounded. The score was 3964 — his final, irrevocable score, if the Test was to be trusted. Certainly if he took the Test again, at some other center and under a different name, he could operate the buttons more effectively. But then, apparently, the machine would discover by his encephalographic pattern that he had taken the Test before or had been instructed by someone who had. It was an interesting problem.
The girl came in almost immediately and surveyed the score. Raigmore watched her intently. It was perfectly possible that he had achieved a score hitherto regarded as purely theoretical. On the other hand, it was possible that he had done very badly. But if that was the case, he had been set to do an impossible task, lacking the necessary mental equipment.