The Brain
Public Domain
Chapter 1
Cautiously the young flight engineer stretched his cramped legs across some gadgets in his crowded little compartment. Leaning back in his swivel chair he folded a pair of freckled hands behind his neck and smiled at Lee.
“This is it doctor; we’re almost there.”
The tall and lanky man at the frame of the door didn’t seem to understand. Bending forward he peered through the little window near the engineer’s desk, into the blue haze of the jets and down to the earth below, a vast bowl of desert land gleaming like silver in the glow of the sunrise.
“But this couldn’t possibly be Washington,” he finally said in a puzzled tone. “Why, we crossed the California coast only half an hour ago. Even at 1200 miles an hour we couldn’t be almost there.”
The engineer’s smile broadened into a friendly grin: “No, we’re not anywhere near Washington. But in a couple of minutes you’ll see Cephalon and that’s as far as we go. One professor and 15 tons of termites to be flown from Wallabawalla Mission station, Northern Territory, Australia, to Cephalon, Arizona, U.S.A., one way direct. Those are our instructions. Say, this is the queerest cargo I’ve ever flown, doctor, if you don’t mind my saying so.”
Lee blinked. Removing his glasses which were fairly thick, he wiped them carefully and put them on again as if to get a clearer picture of an unexpected situation. His long fingered hand went through his greying hair and then down the cheek which was sallow, stained with the atabrine from his latest malaria attack and badly in need of a shave. His mouth formed a big “O” of surprise as nervously he said:
“I don’t get it. I don’t understand this business at all. First the Department of Agriculture extends an urgent letter of invitation to a completely forgotten man out there in the Never-Never land. Then almost on the heels of the letter the government sends a plane. I would have been glad to mail to the Department samples of “Ant-termes Pacificus” sufficient for most scientific purposes if they needed them for experiments in termite control; that would have been the simple and the sensible thing to do. But no, they want everything I have; you fellows drop out of the sky with a sort of habeas corpus and a whole wrecking crew. You disturb the lives of my species, which took me ten years to breed; you pack up their mounds lock, stock and barrel. And then you drop me at some place I never even heard about--Cephalon. What is this Cephalon, anyway? If the place had any connotations to entomology, I would have known about it...”
The flight engineer glanced at the irritated scientist curiously and sympathetically: “If you don’t know, I couldn’t tell you what it’s all about myself, I’m sure,” he said slowly. “Cephalon--Cephalon is a place alright, but it doesn’t show on the map. Sort of a Shangri-la, if you know what I mean.”
This cryptic statement failed to have a calming effect on Lee. “Nonsense,” he frowned. “If it is an inhabited place it must be on the map and if it isn’t on the map the place doesn’t exist.”
“Look here,” the flight engineer pointed through the window to the horizon ahead. “What do you think this is, doctor, a mirage?”
Lee stared at the apparition which swiftly materialized out of the ground haze at the plane’s supersonic speed. “It does look like a mirage,” he said judiciously. “Is that Cephalon?”
The engineer nodded. “Prettiest little town in the U. S. for my money. Ideal airport, too. Rather unusual though--I mean the architecture. Take a good look while we’re circling around for the come-in signal.”
Pretty and unusual were hardly the words for it, Lee thought, as he gazed in admiration. Below, Cephalon spread like a visionary’s dream of a far-away future blended with a far-away past. Along wide, palm shaded avenues the flat-roofed terraced houses fanned out into the desert. Style elements of ancient Peru and Mexico were blended together with the latest advances of technology, such as the rectangular sheets of water which covered and cooled the roofs. The business center, dotted with helicopter landing fields on top of the pyramidal buildings, was reminiscent of the classic Babylon and Nineveh. At the center of the man-made oasis a huge fortress-like structure sprawled and towered like a seven-pointed star. Even so, for all its impressiveness of masonry, the lush green of its parks, the bursts of color from its hanging gardens, made Cephalon resemble one enormous flower bed.
Overawed and mystified the lone passenger from Down-Under took in the scene while the big plane circled with diminished speed. “It’s beautiful,” he murmered. “It’s a dream.” And louder then: “Pardon me if I find it hard to trust my senses. I’ve been away from home for more than ten years, to be sure. But then, even in the Australian bush I’ve received some periodicals and scientific journals from the U.S.A. Surely if a city like this has been built during my absence there should have been mention of the fact. And surely a city like this must show on some map. I don’t understand. The longer I look the less I understand...”
The flight engineer shrugged. “It’s a new city, maybe that’s why it doesn’t show.”
Lee nodded. “In that case you must know the meaning of all this. Why did they build this city in the middle of the desert? What purpose does it serve? Why am I here? Why are we circling for so long? There don’t seem to be any other planes up in the air.”
“We cannot come in until our cargo has been examined and okayed,” the engineer said.
Lee raised a pair of heavy and untidy brows: “Cargo examination? In mid-air and with nobody from the ground examining it?”
“That’s it. It’s being done by Radar, one of the new fangled kinds, you know.” He grinned: “I hope, doctor, that your termite species is neither explosive nor fissionable in any way. Because in that case we could never make a landing in Cephalon.”
“How utterly absurd,” Lee said disgustedly. “Even a child would know better. There is no war going on--or is there? What makes them take such absurd precautions?”
The engineer narrowed his eyes. “You’re an American, Dr. Lee, aren’t you? Well, in any case, I can see no reason why I should be beating about the bush. After all, every foreign agent in this country must have learned by now about the existence of Cephalon. It’s too big to be secret anyway. Besides, as you perceive, no attempt has been made to camouflage the place. Cephalon and the whole district takes up about a thousand square miles. It’s a military preserve. Only you don’t see any Brass. What they are doing, I wouldn’t know, but I would rather try to rob all the gold from Fort Knox than get away with a single scrap of paper from that Braintrust Building in the center of the city over there. By the way, that skull shaped building right across the Plaza is the official hotel reserved for very important persons, such as you are listed.”
A deep-throated buzz over the intercom interrupted him. “There, thank God, they finally made up their minds to let us in. One minute more and then a shower, a shave, bacon and eggs, and lots of Java!”
There were what appeared to Lee to be a multitude of people waiting as they landed. Eager and intelligent white faces all lifted up to him and pressed forward with bewildering offerings and requests. A Western Union messenger handed him a telegram in which one Dr. Howard K. Scriven proffered greetings, expressing a desire to interview him. Some cleancut youngster, obviously a scientific worker, assured Lee that he was fully familiar with the care and feeding of “Ant-termes-pacificus-Lee“, that Lee need not concern himself about their welfare, that the mounds would be immediately transferred to Experimental Station 19 G. The “Flying Wing’s” supercargo and two truck-drivers came forward with papers for Lee to sign, as the first of the heavy steelboxes which harbored the mounds were lowered into a van with the whine of an electric hoist. Meanwhile somebody who said he was an assistant manager of the Cranium hotel informed Lee that reservations had been made for him and that he had a car waiting to conduct Dr. Lee to his suite. It was all very mysterious, but efficient. Feeling more and more like some prize exhibit handled without a will of its own on a whirlwind tour, Lee allowed himself to be whisked from the airport to the hotel. With the din of the jets still in his ears, overpowered by impressions which crowded his senses from all sides, he listened politely to the hotel manager’s explanations of the sights without understanding a word of them.
There were flowers in his suite, the carpets were deeper, the bathtub was bigger, the towels piled higher, the breakfast more abundantly rich than anything Lee could remember in the 38 years of his life. “So this is America in 1960,” he thought. “It must have advanced by leaps and by bounds over these past ten years.”
He felt embarrassed because he had almost forgotten the uses of all those comforts, and at the same time deeply moved over the way they embraced him, him, the lost son, the voluntary exile who once had turned his back on them in despair and disgust. But why was all this? He had done nothing to deserve this kind of hospitality. Entomologists as a rule were not transported by magic carpets into Arabian Nights for modest achievements such as the discovery of a new species. All the things which had happened within the last 24 hours were riddles wrapped up in enigmas. Fatigued as he was he couldn’t lie down, he was desperately resolved to get at the bottom of this thing.
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