When I abandoned the
strip in the late 1960s, the main character’s surname stuck, so it seemed
appropriate for me to use it for one of my early short story sales. I renamed
Amber Aurelia…
THE LOST
Nik Morton
Sun-arrows glinted on his polarized visor as Commander
Rhodes led the recce-party down the slippery purple-stone scree of the giant
plateau. Behind them he glimpsed their starship Aphelion.
Below, emerging from a grey
ethereal mist, he spotted six half-naked humanoids. Instinctively, his gloved
hand closed on the laser-gun.
But the alien reception-committee
appeared weaponless. 'Leave your guns alone!' he barked to the four scientists
accompanying him. 'They could be friendly.'
Unfortunately,
Mineralogist Copenacre's initial reactions were too swift. He fired.
'Hell!'
Chopping the gun from Copenacre's grip, Rhodes swore as one of the aliens
jacknifed backwards. A plaintive shriek crossed grimacing lips.
'Ship to
Recce-One! What's happening down there?'
Rhodes
ignored the call.
'Jenkins,
break out the surgical kit, fast!' he commanded the smallest of the team.
'Ship to
Recce-One! Communicate, please! Who's been hurt?'
'Recce-One
to Ship - don't worry! One of our group got trigger-happy.' He pointedly eyed
Copenacre. 'Everything's under control now.'
He knew from past experience that
staying on board during a reconnaissance was the hardest part. Listening over
the transmitter, the slightest problem had a tendency to grow out of all
proportion. The women onboard would still be anxious, regardless of all his
reassurances; and that included his wife, Aurelia.
He knelt
beside the stricken alien.
The biggest
advantage with a low-keyed laser-wound was that it cut cleanly, cauterizing as
it hit. Provided vital organs were undamaged and the victim survived the
massive shock, recovery was very likely.
There was
no blood, just a charred, fleshy hole in the creature's side. Yellow-brown
contusions already bulged around the wound.
Rhodes
stood up and levelled his ice-blue eyes on Copenacre. 'Let me do the reacting
next time, okay?'
The
mineralogist's narrow face was chalk-white. 'I'm sorry, sir. I'd pressed the
button before your words-'
'You didn't
think!' Rhodes snapped. 'All right, forget it - it's done now.' He sighed.
'Let's hope this doesn't create trouble...'
Turning to
face the silently watching aliens, he added, 'Why haven't they turned hostile?
It must be damned obvious what a kill-crazy bunch we are after your
exhibition!'
'I've done
all I can,' interrupted Jenkins. 'He should pull through.' He rose, eyes
mirroring amazement. 'I've never known anything like it, Commander,' he
whispered.
'Like
what?'
'As far as
I can tell, that creature's built like us - inside and out.'
'You're
sure about this?'
'Positive,
sir.'
The odds
against finding creatures of their own terrestrial structure were astounding.
They could be on the verge of discovering a new civilization in its infancy!
The prospect sent his body-sensors hammering.
With the
gyroscopes malfunctioning, it was imperative to know which planet they had been
forced to land on in their search for fissionable material to replace the
power-core that had fractured during a whiplash in space.
Directing
the antenna of his portable intercom-transmitter at the apparent leader of the
primitives, Rhodes depressed the transmit button. 'Where,' he stammered, 'where
- are - we?'
The
ancient-white eyebrows of the bearded leader arched. 'Arrgh.'
'Recce-One
to Ship - decode, please.' The leader's reply would now be flashing through the
Aphelion's onboard computer translator.
Rhodes
persevered: 'Who - are - you?' He spread his arms to encompass the entire group
of primitives as he repeated, 'Who - are - you?'
'Gha Qzkg,'
came the answer. Rhodes noticed that the Leader's two upturned hands possessed
five digits each. Even the texture of their wrinkled leathery skins seemed
earthly...
'Decode
that.' Again, another question: 'Have - you - lived - here - long?'
'Rozyg
udugw warrk.' Broad angular shoulders lifted. Eyes dead, suntanned face
expressionless.
'Decode.'
Strange, this aborigine answered every query posed. Merely by the inflection of
my voice? Rhodes wondered. It didn't jell...
Beads of
sweat ran down his prominent cheekbones; he licked his thin lips nervously.
Even in his cooled lightweight spacesuit he felt hot and flustered.
He decided
on a different tack. 'We're from Earth, the Sun's Third Planet,' he began.
Even if he
was understood, it seemed unlikely that earthly points of reference and names
would mean anything.
'Commander!'
rasped Ship Control. A crackle of static, then: 'We've got it! The code's
broken!'
Rhodes
released a thankful sigh. 'Good. Now, what does Arrgh mean?'
A moment's
hesitation. 'Earth.'
'But that -
that's impossible!' Taking grasp of himself, he added, 'Anyway, who the hell
are they?'
'The Lost.'
It just
didn't make sense, none of it. 'Okay, we'll come back to that. How long have
they lived here?'
'About
fifty years.'
'Pass me
the code, quick!'
Then, for
five seconds, he succumbed to an electronic infusion through his skull into the
mnemonic quadrant of brain. Cranial nerves tingled pleasurably; amethyst
colours sparkled; the whole sensation was exquisite but, alas, transient.
Rhodes could now speak their tongue.
He felt
pretty dumb asking the next question: 'If you're on Earth, how are we from
Earth too?'
'Time,' was
the simple reply.
'A
time-warp?' It had to be... That whiplash, the scatty gyros, the shattered
core...
Suddenly, Rhodes espied an
unnaturally smooth surface protruding from the dissipating mist. Dull metallic
in appearance, with patches of reddish-brown.
The Leader
nodded, pointing to the shipwreck: 'Aphelion...'
At last
Rhodes comprehended. It was as though a searing light had pierced his brain and
stopped both his heart and time: 'We warped into the future?'
A slow
stern nod, that was all.
Wordlessly,
Rhodes directed the recce-party back up the unstable slope. He thought of
Aurelia aboard Aphelion and of
the fate that awaited them all.
Rhodes couldn't
resist one final glance. At his own image fifty years hence, a survivor of some
disaster yet to come.
***
Previously published in
Parade in 1972 as ‘The Natives Are
Friendly’.
Reprinted as ‘The
Lost’ in Costa TV Times, 2010.
Copyright Nik Morton,
2014.
***
If you enjoyed this
story, you might like Spanish Eye,
my
short story collection featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases
published
by Crooked Cat Publishing.
Canada: http://amazon.ca/dp/B00GXK5C6S
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