"A. E. Van Vogt - The Players of Null-A" - читать интересную книгу автора (Van Vogt A E)

the future. (2) He can achieve according to his capabilities. (3) His behavior is suited to his environment.

Gosseyn arrived at the mountain take-off point a few minutes before eleven o'clock. The air at this height was briskly
cool, and the effect was of exhilaration. He stood for a while near the high fence beyond which the spaceship lay on its
cradle. The first step, he thought, was to get through the fence.
That was basically easy. The area swarmed with people, and one more, once he got inside, would scarcely be
noticed. The problem was to get in without anyone observing him materialize.
He felt no regrets, now that he had made up his mind. The slight delay caused by the accident--he'd escaped from the
elevator by the simple process of similarizing himself back into his hotel room--had brought a keen awareness of how
little time remained to him. He had a picture of himself trying to obtain a certificate of admission from the Institute of
Emigration at this final day. The visualization was all he needed. The time for legality was past.
He selected a spot on the other side of the fence behind some packing cases, memorized it, stepped behind a truck--
and a moment later walked out from behind the packing cases and headed towards the ship. Nobody tried to stop him.
Nobody gave him more than a passing glance. The fact that he was inside the fence was credential enough, apparently.
He walked aboard and spent his first ten minutes memorizing a dozen floor areas with his extra-brain--and that was
that. During the take-off, he lay comfortably on the bed of one of the finest suites on the ship. About an hour later, a
key rattled in the lock. Swiftly, Gosseyn attuned to a memorized area, and swiftly he was transported to it.
He'd chosen his materialization positions skillfully. The three men who saw him step out from behind a heavy girder
obviously took it for granted that he had been there for several minutes, for they scarcely glanced at him. He walked
easily to the rear of the ship, and stood before the great plexiglass port gazing down at Earth.
The planet was vast below him. It was an immense world that still showed color. As he watched, it slowly turned a
grayish dark, and looked rounder every minute. It began to contract sharply, and for the first time he saw it as a great
misty ball floating in black space.
Somehow it looked unreal.
He stayed that first night in one of the many unoccupied cabins. Sleep came slowly, for his thoughts were restless.
Two weeks had passed since the death of the mighty Thorson, and he hadn't heard a word from Eldred Crang or
Patricia Hardie. All his attempts to contact them through the Institute of Emigration had met with the unvarying reply,
'Our Venusian office reports your message undeliverable.’ He'd thought once or twice that Janasen, the Institute
official, took a personal satisfaction in giving him the bad news, but that seemed hardly possible.
There was no question, so it seemed to Gosseyn, that Crang had seized control of the galactic army on the very day
Thorson died. The papers'd been full of the news of the withdrawal of the invaders from the cities of non-Aristotelian
Venus. There was confusion as to the reason for the mass retreat, and the editors did not seem to be clear as to what
was happening. Only to him who knew what had preceded the enormous defeat was the situation understandable.
Crang was in control. Crang was shipping the galactic soldiers out of the solar system as fast as his two-mile-long
similarity powered ships could carry them--before Enro the Red, military overlord of the Greatest Empire, discovered
that his invasion was being sabotaged.
But that didn't explain why Crang had not delegated someone to get in touch with Gilbert Gosseyn who, by killing
Thorson, had made all this possible.
Gosseyn slept uneasily on that thought. For though the desperate danger of the invasion was temporarily averted, his
own personal problem was unsolved--Gilbert Gosseyn, who possessed a trained extra brain, who had died, yet lived
again in a highly similar body. His own purpose must be to find out about himself and his strange and tremendous
method of immortality. Whatever the game that was being played around him, he seemed to be one of the important
and powerful figures in it. He must have been tensed by the long strain he'd been under and by the hideous fight with
Torson's armored guard, or he would have realized sooner that, like it or not, for better or for worse, he was above the
law. He should never have wasted his time with the Institute of Emigration.
Nobody questioned him. When officers came towards him, he stepped out of sight, and vanished to one of his
memorized areas. Three days and two nights after the start, the ship eased down through the misty skies of Venus. He
had glimpses of colossal trees, and then a city grew onto the horizon. Gosseyn came down the gangplank with the rest
of the four hundred passengers. From his place in the fast moving line he watched the process of landing. Each person
stepped up to a lie detector, spoke into it, was confirmed, and passed through a turnstile into the main part of