here and there.
The vidscreen clicked. Ryan halted the scanner and swung to catch the call.
‘Ryan.’
The League monitor appeared on the screen. The call was coming through League cables. ‘Emergency call.’
Ryan froze. ‘Put it through.’
The monitor faded. After a moment an old face appeared, florid and lined. ‘Ryan—’
‘What’s happened?’
‘You had better come home. As soon as you can.’
‘What is it?’
‘Jon.’
Ryan forced himself to be calm. ‘Another attack?’ His voice was thick.
‘Yes.’
‘Like the others?’
‘Exactly like the others.’
Ryan’s hand jerked to the cut-off switch. ‘All right. I’ll be home at once. Don’t let anyone in. Try to keep him quiet. Don’t let him out of his room. Double the guard, if necessary.’
Ryan broke the circuit. A moment later he was on his way to the roof, toward his inter-city ship parked above him, at the roof field of the building.
His inter-city ship rushed above the unending gray ash, automatic grapples guiding it toward City Four. Ryan stared blankly out the port, only half-seeing the sight below.
He was between cities. The surface was wasted, endless heaps of slag and ash as far as the eye could see. Cities rose up like occasional toadstools, separated by miles of gray. Toadstools here and there, towers and buildings, men and women working. Gradually the surface was being reclaimed. Supplies and equipment were being brought down from the Lunar Base.
During the war human beings had left Terra and gone to the moon. Terra was devasted. Nothing but a globe of ruin and ash. Men had come back gradually, when the war was over.
Actually there had been two wars. The first was man against man. The second was man against the claws - complex robots that had been created as a war weapon. The claws had turned on their makers, designing their own new types and equipment.
Ryan’s ship began to descend. He was over City Four. Presently the ship came to rest on the roof of his massive private residence at the center of the city. Ryan leaped quickly out and crossed the roof to the lift.
A moment later he entered his quarters and made his way toward Jon’s room.
He found the old man watching Jon through the glass side of the room, his face grave. Jon’s room was partly in darkness. Jon was sitting on the edge of his bed, his hands clasped tightly together. His eyes were shut. His mouth was open a little, and from time to time his tongue came out, stiff and rigid.
‘How long has he been like that?’ Ryan said to the old man beside him.
‘About an hour.’
‘The other attacks followed the same pattern?’
‘This is more severe. Each has been more severe.’
‘No one has seen him but you?’
‘Just the two of us. I called you when I was certain. It’s almost over. He’s coming out of it.’
On the other side of the glass Jon stood up and walked away from his bed, his arms folded. His blond hair hung down raggedly in his face. His eyes were still shut. His face was pale and set. His lips twitched.
‘He was completely unconscious at first. I had left him alone for awhile. I was in another part of the building. When I came back I found him lying on the floor. He had been reading. The spools were scattered all around him. His face was blue. His breathing was irregular. There were repeated muscular spasms, as before.’
‘What did you do?’
‘I entered the room and carried him to the bed. He was rigid at first, but after a few minutes he began to relax. His body became limp. I tested his pulse. It was very slow. Breathing was coming more easily. And then it began.’
‘It?’
‘The talk.’
‘Oh.’ Ryan nodded.
‘I wish you could have been here. He talked more than ever before. On and on. Streams of it. Without pause. As if he couldn’t stop.’
‘Was - was it the same talk as before?’
‘Exactly the same as it’s always been. And his face was lit up. Glowing. As before.’
Ryan considered. ‘Is it all