Ray Bradbury. Dark They were, And Golden Eyed

Даниил Серебряный
                Ray Bradbury
                http://blogs.myspace.com/mysteryal

             Dark They were, And Golden Eyed (The Naming of Names)
                1949

     The  rocket's metal cooled in the meadow winds. Its lid gave a bulging pop.
From  its  clock  interior stepped a man, a woman, and three children. The other
passengers whispered away across the Martian meadow, leaving the man alone among
his family.
     The  man felt his hair flutter and the tissues of his body draw tight as if
he  were standing at the centre of a vacuum. His wife, before him, trembled. The
children,  small  seeds, might at any instant be sown to all the Martian climes.
The  children  looked  up  at  him. His face was cold. "What's wrong?" asked his
wife. "Let's get back on the rocket." "Go back to Earth?" "Yes! Listen!"
     The  wind  blew, whining. At any moment the Martian air might draw his soul
from him, as marrow comes from a white bone.
     He  looked  at Martian hills that time had worn with a crushing pressure of
years.  He  saw  the  old  cities, lost and lying like children's delicate bones
among the blowing lakes of grass.
     "Chin  up,  Harry,"  said  his  wife.  "It's  too late. We've come at least
sixty-five million miles or more."
     The  children  with  their yellow hair hollered at the deep dome of Martian
sky. There was no answer but the racing hiss of wind through the stiff grass.
     He  picked  up the luggage in his cold hands. "Here we go," he said - a man
standing on the edge of a sea, ready to wade in and be drowned.
     They walked into town.
     Their  name  was Bittering. Harry and his wife Cora; Tim, Laura, and David.
They built a small white cottage and ate good breakfasts there, but the fear was
never gone. It lay with Mr.Bittering and Mrs.Bittering, a third unbidden partner
at every midnight talk, at every dawn awakening.
     "I  feel  like a salt crystal," he often said, "in a mountain stream, being
washed  away.  We  don't  belong  here. We're Earth people. This is Mars. It was
meant for Martians. For heaven's sake, Cora, let's buy tickets for home!"
     But  she  only  shook her head. "One day the atom bomb will fix Earth. Then
we'll be safe here." "Safe and insane!"
     Tick-took,  seven  o'clock  sang  the voice clock; time to get up. And they
did.
     Something  made  him  check  everything  each morning - warm hearth, potted
blood-geraniums - precisely as if he expected something to be amiss. The morning
paper  was  toast-warm  from  the  six  a.m. Earth rocket. He broke its seal and
tilted it at his breakfast plate. He forced himself to be convivial.
     "Colonial days all over again," he declared. "Why, in another year there'll
be a million Earthmen on Mars. Big cities, everything! They said we'd fail. Said
the  Martians  would  resent  our  invasion. But did we find any Martians? Not a
living soul! Oh, we found their empty cities, but no one in them. Right?"
     A  river  of  wind  submerged  the house. When the windows ceased rattling,
Mr.Bittering swallowed and looked at the children.
     "I  don't  know," said David. "Maybe there're Martians around we don't see.
Sometimes nights I think I hear 'em. I hear the wind. The sand hits my window. I
get  scared.  And  I  see those towns way up in the mountains where the Martians
lived  a long ago. And I think I see things moving around those towns, Papa. And
I  wonder  if  those  Martians  mind  us  living here. I wonder if they won't do
something to us for coming here."
     "Nonsense!"  Mr.Bittering  looked  out of the windows. "We're clean, decent
people." He looked at his children. "All dead cities have some kind of ghosts in
them.  Memories,  I  mean." He stared at the hills. "You see a staircase and you
wonder  what Martians looked like climbing it. You see Martian paintings and you
wonder  what  the  painter  was  like.  You  make a little ghost in your mind, a
memory. It's quite natural. Imagination." He stopped. "You haven't been prowling
up in those ruins, have you?"
     "No, Papa." David looked at his shoes.
     "See that you stay away from them. Pass the jam."
     "Just the same," said little David, "I bet something happens."
     Something happened that afternoon.
     Laura stumbled through the settlement, crying. She dashed blindly on to the
porch.
     "Mother,  Father  -  the war, Earth!" she sobbed. "A radio flash just came.
Atom  bombs  hit  New  York!  All the space rockets blown up. No more rockets to
Mars, ever!"
     "Oh, Harry!" The mother held on to her husband and daughter.
     "Are you sure, Laura?" asked the father quietly.
     Laura wept. "We're stranded on Mars, for ever and ever!"
     For a long time there was only the sound of the wind in the late afternoon.
     Alone,  thought Bittering. Only a thousand of us here. No way back. No way.
No  way.  Sweat poured from his face and his hands and his body; he was drenched
in  the hot-ness of his fear. He wanted to strike Laura, cry, "No, you're lying!
The  rockets  will  come back!" Instead, he stroked Laura's head against him and
said, "The rockets will get through, some day."
     "In five years maybe. It takes that long to build one. Father, Father, what
will we do?"
     "Go  about  our  business,  of course. Raise crops and children. Wait. Keep
things going until the war ends and the rockets come again."
     The  two  boys  stepped  out  on to the porch. "Children," he said, sitting
there, looking beyond them, "I've something to tell you." "We know," they said.
     Bittering  wandered  into the garden to stand alone in his fear. As long as
the rockets had spun a silver web across space, he had been able to accept Mars.
For  he had always told himself: 'Tomorrow, if I want, I can buy a ticket and go
back to Earth.'
     But  now:  the web gone, the rockets lying in jigsaw heaps of molten girder
and  unsnaked  wire.  Earth people left to the strangeness of Mars, the cinnamon
dusts and wine airs, to be baked like gingerbread shapes in Martian summers, put
into harvested storage by Martian winters. What would happen to him, the others?
This was the moment Mars had waited for. Now it would eat them.
     He  got  down on his knees in the flower bed, a spade in his nervous hands.
Work, he thought, work and forget.
     He  glanced  up from the garden to the Martian mountains. He thought of the
proud  old  Martian  names that had once been on those peaks. Earthmen, dropping
from  the sky, had gazed upon hills, rivers, Martian seas left nameless in spite
of names. Once Martians had built cities, named cities; climbed mountains, named
mountains;  sailed  seas,  named  seas.  Mountains  melted, seas drained, cities
tumbled.  In  spite of this, the Earthmen had felt a silent guilt at putting new
names to these ancient hills and valleys.
     Nevertheless, man lives by symbol and label. The names were given.
     Mr.Bittering  felt  very  alone  in  his garden under the Martian sun, bent
here, planting Earth flowers in a wild soil.
     Think.  Keep  thinking. Different things. Keep your mind free of Earth, the
atom war, the lost rockets.
     He perspired. He glanced about. No one watching. He removed his tie. Pretty
bold,  he  thought.  First  your  coat off, now your tie. He hung it neatly on a
peach tree he had imported as a sapling from Massachusetts.
     He  returned  to  his  philosophy  of names and mountains. The Earthmen had
changed  names.  Now  there  were  Hormel  Valleys,  Roosevelt Seas, Ford Hills,
Vanderbilt  Plateaus, Rockefeller Rivers, on Mars. It wasn't right. The American
settlers had shown wisdom, using old Indian prairie names: Wisconsin, Minnesota,
Idaho, Ohio, Utah, Milwaukee, Waukegan, Osseo. The old names, the old meanings.
     Staring at the mountains wildly he thought: 'Are you up there? All the dead
ones,  you  Martians? Well, here we are, alone, cut off! Come down, move us out!
We're helpless!'
     The wind blew a shower of peach blossoms.
     He put out his sun-browned hand, gave a small cry. He touched the blossoms,
picked them up. He turned them, be touched them again and again. Then he shouted
for his wife.
     "Cora!"
     She appeared at a window. He ran to her.
     "Cora, these blossoms!"
     She handled them.
     "Do you see? They're different. They've changed! They're not peach blossoms
any more!"
     "Look all right to me," she said.
     "They're  not.  They're  wrong!  I  can't tell how. An extra petal, a leaf,
something, the colour, the smell!"
     The children ran out in time to see their father hurrying about the garden,
pulling up radishes, onions, and carrots from their beds.
     "Cora, come look!
     They handled the onions, the radishes, the carrots among them.
     "Do they look like carrots?"
     "Yes... No." She hesitated. "I don't know."
     "They're changed."
     "Perhaps."
     "You know they have! Onions but not onions, carrots but not carrots. Taste:
the  same  but  different.  Smell:  not  like  it used to be." He felt his heart
pounding,  and  he  was afraid. He dug his fingers into the earth. "Cora, what's
happening?  What  is  it?  We've  got  to get away from this." He ran across the
garden. Each tree felt his touch. "The roses. The roses. They're turning green!"
     And they stood looking at the green roses.
     And  two days later, Tim came running. "Come see the cow. I was milking her
and I saw it. Come on!"
     They stood in the shed and looked at their one cow.
     It was growing a third horn.
     And  the lawn in front of their house very quietly and slowly was colouring
itself, like spring violets. Seed from Earth but growing up a soft purple.
     "We  must  get  away," said Bittering. "We'll eat this stuff and then we'll
change - who knows to what. I can't let it happen. There's only one thing to do.
Burn this food!"
     "It's not poisoned."
     "But  it  is.  Subtly,  very  subtly.  A  little bit. A very little bit. We
mustn't touch it."
     He  looked  with  dismay  at  their house. "Even the house. The wind's done
something  to  it. The air's burned it. The fog at night. The boards, all warped
out of shape. It's not an Earthman's house any more."
     "Oh, your imagination!"
     He put on his coat and tie. "I'm going into town. We've got to do something
now. I'll be back."
     "Wait, Harry!" his wife cried.
     But he was gone.
     In  town,  on the shadowy step of the grocery store, the men sat with their
hands on their knees, conversing with great leisure and ease.
     Mr.Bittering wanted to fire a pistol in the air.
     What  are  you doing, you fools! he thought. Sitting here! You've heard the
news  - we're stranded on this planet. Well, move! Aren't you frightened? Aren't
you afraid? What are you going to do?
     "Hello, Harry," said everyone.
     "Look,"  he  said  to  them.  "You did hear the news, the other day, didn't
you?"
     They nodded and laughed. "Sure. Sure, Harry."
     "What are you going to do about it?"
     "Do, Harry, do? What can we do?"
     "Build a rocket, that's what!"
     "A rocket, Harry? To go back to all that trouble? Oh, Harry!"
     "But  you  must  want  to go back. Have you noticed the peach blossoms, the
onions, the grass?"
     "Why, yes, Harry, seems we did," said one of the men.
     "Doesn't it scare you?"
     "Can't recall that it did much, Harry."
     "Idiots!"
     "Now, Harry."
     Bittering  wanted  to  cry.  "You've  got to work with me. If we stay here,
we'll  all  change. The air. Don't you smell it? Something in the air. A Martian
virus, maybe; some seed, or a pollen. Listen to me!"
     They stared at him.
     "Sam," he said to one of them.
     "Yes, Harry?"
     "Will you help me build a rocket?"
     "Harry,  I  got a whole load of metal and some blueprints. You want to work
in my metal shop, on a rocket, you're welcome. I'll sell you that metal for five
hundred  dollars.  You  should be able to construct a right pretty rocket if you
work alone, in about thirty years."
     Everyone laughed.
     "Don't laugh."
     Sam looked at him with quiet good humour.
     "Sam," Bittering said. "Your eyes -"
     "What about them, Harry?"
     "Didn't they used to be grey?"
     "Well, now, I don't remember."
     "They were, weren't they?"
     "Why do you ask, Harry?"
     "Because now they're kind of yellow-coloured."
     "Is that so, Harry?" Sam said, casually.
     "And you're taller and thinner -"
     "You might be right, Harry."
     "Sam, you shouldn't have yellow eyes."
     "Harry, what colour eyes have you got?" Sam said.
     "My eyes? They're blue, of course."
     "Here  you  are,  Harry."  Sam  handed him a pocket mirror. "Take a look at
yourself."
     Mr.Bittering hesitated, and then raised the mirror to his face.
     There  were little, very dim flecks of new gold captured in the blue of his
eyes.
     "Now  look  what  you've done," said Sam, a moment later. "You've broken my
mirror."
     Harry  Bittering  moved  into the metal shop and began to build the rocket.
Men  stood  in  the open door and talked and joked without raising their voices.
Once  in a while they gave him a hand on lifting something. But mostly they just
idled and watched him with their yellowing eyes.
     "It's supper-time, Harry," they said.
     His wife appeared with his supper in a wicker basket.
     "I  won't touch it," he said. "I'll eat only food from our deepfreeze. Food
that came from Earth. Nothing from our garden."
     His wife stood watching him. "You can't build a rocket."
     "I  worked  in  a shop once, when I was twenty. I know metal. Once I get it
started,  the  others  will  help,"  he said, not looking at her, laying out the
blueprints.
     "Harry, Harry," she said, helplessly.
     "We've got to get away, Cora. We've got to!"
     The  nights  were full of wind that blew down the empty moonlit sea-meadows
past the little white chess cities lying for their twelve-thousandth year in the
shallows. In the Earthmen's settlement, the Bittering house shook with a feeling
of change.
     Lying  abed, Mr.Bittering felt his bones shifted, shaped, melted like gold.
His  wife,  lying beside him, was dark from many sunny afternoons. Dark she was,
and  golden,  burnt almost black by the sun, sleeping, and the children metallic
in  their  beds, and the wind roaring forlorn and changing through the old peach
trees, violet grass, shaking out green rose petals.
     The fear would not be stopped. It had his throat and heart. It dripped in a
wetness of the arm and the temple and the trembling palm.
     A green star rose in the east.
     A strange word emerged from Mr.Bittering's lips.
     "Iorrt. Iorrt." He repeated it.
     It was a Martian word. He knew no Martian.
     In  the middle of the night he arose and dialled a call through to Simpson,
the archaeologist.
     "Simpson, what does the word 'Iorrt' mean?"
     "Why that's the old Martian word for our planet Earth. Why?"
     "No special reason."
     The telephone slipped from his hand.
     "Hello, hello, hello, hello," it kept saying while he sat gazing out at the
green star. "Bittering? Harry, are you there?"
     The days were full of metal sound. He laid the frame of the rocket with the
reluctant help of three indifferent men. He grew very tired in an hour or so and
had to sit down.
     "The altitude," laughed a man.
     "Are you eating, Harry?" asked another.
     "I'm eating," he said, angrily,
     "From your deep-freeze?"
     "Yes!"
     "You're getting thinner, Harry."
     "I'm not!"
     "And taller."
     "Liar!"
     His wife took him aside a few days later. "Harry, I've used up all the food
in  the  deep-freeze.  There's  nothing left. I'll have to make sandwiches using
food grown on Mars."
     He sat down heavily.
     "You must eat," she said. "You're weak."
     "Yes," he said.
     He took a sandwich, opened it, looked at it, and began to nibble at it.
     "And  take the rest of the day off," she said. "It's hot. The children want
to swim in the canals and hike. Please come along."
     "I  can't  waste time. This is a crisis!" "Just for an hour," she urged. "A
swim'll  do you good." He rose, sweating. "All right, all right. Leave me alone.
I'll come."
     "Good for you, Harry."
     The sun was hot, the day quiet. There was only an immense staring burn upon
the  land.  They  moved  along  the  canal,  the  father, the mother, the racing
children  in their swimsuits. They stopped and ate meat sandwiches. He saw their
skin  baking  brown.  And  he  saw the yellow eyes of his wife and his children,
their  eyes  that were never yellow before. A few tremblings shook him, but were
carried  off in waves of pleasant heat as he lay in the sun. He was too tired to
be afraid.
     "Cora, how long have your eyes been yellow?" She was bewildered. "Always, I
guess." "They didn't change from brown in the last three months?"
     She bit her lips. "No. Why do you ask?" "Nevermind." They sat there.
     "The  children's  eyes," he said. "They're yellow, too." "Sometimes growing
children's  eyes  change  colour." "Maybe we're children, too. At least to Mars.
That's a thought." He laughed. "Think I'll swim."
     They  leaped into the canal water, and he let himself sink down and down to
the  bottom  like a golden statue and lie there in green silence. All was water,
quiet  and  deep,  all  was  peace.  He  felt the steady, slow current drift him
easily.
     If  I lie here long enough, he thought, the water will work and eat away my
flesh until the bones show like coral. Just my skeleton left. And then the water
can build on that skeleton - green things, deep-water things, red things, yellow
things.  Change. Change. Slow, deep, silent change. And isn't that what it is up
there!
     He  saw the sky submerged above him, the sun made Martian by atmosphere and
time and space.
     Up there, a big river, he thought, a Martian river, all of us lying deep in
it,  in  our  pebble houses, in our sunken boulder houses, like crayfish hidden,
and the water washing away our old bodies and lengthening the bones and -
     He let himself drift up through the soft light.
     Tim sat on the edge of the canal, regarding his father seriously.
     "Utha," he said.
     "What?" asked his father.
     The boy smiled. "You know. Utha's the Martian word for 'father'."
     "Where did you learn it?"
     "I don't know. Around. Utha!"
     "What do you want?"
     The boy hesitated. "I - I want to change my name."
     "Change it?"
     "Yes."
     His mother swam over. "What's wrong with Tim for a name?"
     Tim  fidgeted. "The other day you called Tim, Tim, Tim. I didn't even hear.
I said to myself, That's not my name. I've a new name I want to use."
     Mr.Bittering  held  to  the  side of the canal, his body cold and his heart
pounding  slowly. "What is this new name?" "Linnl. Isn't that a good name? Can I
use it? Can I, please?"
     Mr.Bittering  put  his  hand to his head. He thought of the rocket, himself
working alone, himself alone even among his family, so alone.
     He  heard  his wife say, "Why not?" He heard himself say, "Yes, you can use
it."  "Yaaa!" screamed the boy. "I'm Linnl, Linnl!" Racing down the meadowlands,
he danced and shouted. Mr.Bittering looked at his wife. "Why did we do that?" "I
don't know," she said. "It just seemed like a good idea."
     They  walked  into  the  hills.  They  strolled on old mosaic paths, beside
still-pumping  fountains.  The paths were covered with a thin film of cool water
all  summer  long.  You  kept your bare feet cool all the day, splashing as in a
creek, wading.
     They came to a small deserted Martian villa with a good view of the valley.
It  was  on  top of a hill. Blue-marble halls, large murals, a swimming-pool. It
was  refreshing  in  this hot summer-time. The Martians hadn't believed in large
cities.
     "How  nice,"  said  Mrs.Bittering, "if you could move up here to this villa
for the summer."
     "Come  on,"  he said. "We're going back to town. There's work to be done on
the rocket."
     But  as  he  worked  that  night,  the thought of the cool bluemarble villa
entered his mind. As the hours passed, the rocket seemed less important.
     In  the  flow  of  days and weeks, the rocket receded and dwindled. The old
fever  was  gone.  It  frightened  him to think he had let it slip this way. But
somehow  the  heat, the air, the working conditions - he heard the men murmuring
on the porch of his metal shop.
     "Everyone's going. You heard?"
     "All right. That's right."
     Bittering  came  out. "Going where?" He saw a couple of trucks, loaded with
children and furniture, drive down the dusty street.
     "Up to the villa," said the man.
     "Yeah, Harry. I'm going. So is Sam. Aren't you, Sam?"
     "That's right, Harry. What about you?"
     "I've got work to do here."
     "Work! You can finish that rocket in the autumn, when it's cooler."
     He took a breath. "1 got the frame all set up."
     "In the autumn is better." Their voices were lazy in the heat.
     "Got to work," he said.
     "Autumn," they reasoned. And they sounded so sensible, so right.
     "Autumn would be best," he thought. "Plenty of time, then."
     No!  cried part of himself, deep down, put away, locked tight, suffocating.
No! No! "In the autumn," he said. "Come on, Harry," they all said.
     "Yes,"  he  said,  feeling  his flesh melt in the hot liquid air. "Yes, the
autumn.  I'll begin work again then." "I got a villa near the Tirra Canal," said
someone.  "You  mean  the  Roosevelt  Canal, don't you?" "Tirra. The old Martian
name."
     "But on the map -"
     "Forget  the  map.  It's  Tirra  now.  Now  I  found  a place in the Pillan
mountains -"
     "You mean the Rockefeller range," said Bittering.
     "I mean the Pillan mountains," said Sam.
     "Yes,"  said  Bittering,  buried  in  the  hot,  swarming  air. "The Pillan
mountains."
     Everyone  worked  at  loading  the truck in the hot, still afternoon of the
next day.
     Laura,  Tim, and David carried packages. Or, as they preferred to be known,
Ttil, Linnl, and Werr carried packages.
     The furniture was abandoned in the little white cottage.
     "It looked just fine in Boston," said the mother. "And here in the cottage.
But up at the villa? No. We'll get it when we come back in the autumn."
     Bittering himself was quiet.
     "I've  some ideas on furniture for the villa," he said, after a time. "Big,
lazy furniture."
     "What about your Encyclopedia! You're taking it along, surely?"
     Mr.Bittering glanced away. "I'll come and get it next week."
     They turned to their daughter. "What about your New York dresses?"
     The bewildered girl stared. "Why, I don't want them any more."
     They  shut  off  the gas, the water, they locked the doors and walked away.
Father peered into the truck.
     "Gosh,  we're  not  taking  much,"  he said. "Considering all we brought to
Mars, this is only a handful!"
     He started the truck.
     Looking  at the small white cottage for a long moment, he was filled with a
desire  to  rush  to  it, touch it, say goodbye to it, for he felt as if he were
going  away  on  a long journey, leaving something to which he could never quite
return, never understand again.
     Just then Sam and his family drove by in another truck.
     "Hi, Bittering! Here we go!"
     The  truck  swung  down  the  ancient highway out of town. There were sixty
others  travelling the same direction. The town filled with a silent, heavy dust
from their passage. The canal waters lay blue in the sun, and a quiet wind moved
in the strange trees.
     "Good-bye, town!" said Mr.Bittering.
     "Good-bye, good-bye," said the family, waving to it.
     They did not look back again.
     Summer  burned the canals dry. Summer moved like flame upon the meadows. In
the  empty  Earth settlement, the painted houses flaked and peeled. Rubber tyres
upon  which  children  had swung in back yards hung suspended like stopped clock
pendulums in the blazing air.
     At the metal shop, the rocket frame began to rust.
     In  the  quiet autumn, Mr.Bittering stood, very dark now, very golden-eyed,
upon the slope above his villa, looking at the valley.
     "It's time to go back," said Cora.
     "Yes,  but  we're  not going," he said, quietly. "There's nothing there any
more."
     "Your books," she said. "Your fine clothes."
     "Your Illes and your fine ior uele rre," she said.
     "The  town's  empty.  No one's going back," he said. "There's no reason to,
none at all."
     The  daughter  wove  tapestries and the sons played songs on ancient flutes
and pipes, their laughter echoing in the marble villa.
     Mr.Bittering  gazed  at  the  Earth  settlement far away in the low valley.
"Such odd, such ridiculous houses the Earth people built."
     "They  didn't know any better," his wife mused. "Such ugly People. I'm glad
they've gone."
     They  both  looked  at  each  other, startled by all they had just finished
saying. They laughed.
     "Where  did  they  go?" he wondered. He glanced at his wife. She was golden
and slender as his daughter. She looked at him, and he seemed almost as young as
their eldest son.
     "I don't know," she said.
     "We'll  go  back  to  town  maybe next year, or the year after, or the year
after that," he said, calmly. "Now - I'm warm. How about taking a swim?"
     They turned their backs to the valley. Arm in arm they walked silently down
a path of clear running spring water.
     Five  years  later,  a  rocket  fell out of the sky. It lay steaming in the
valley. Men leaped out of it, shouting.
     "We won the war on Earth! We're here to rescue you! Hey!"
     But  the  American-built  town  of  cottages, peach trees, and theatres was
silent. They found a half-finished rocket frame, rusting in an empty shop.
     The  rocket men searched the hills. The captain established headquarters in
an abandoned bar. His lieutenant came back to report.
     "The town's empty, but we found native life in the hills, sir. Dark people.
Yellow  eyes.  Martians.  Very  friendly.  We talked a bit, not much. They learn
English fast. I'm sure our relations will be most friendly with them, sir."
     "Dark, eh?" mused the captain. "How many?"
     "Six,  eight  hundred,  I'd say, living in those marble ruins in the hills,
sir. Tall, healthy. Beautiful women."
     "Did  they  tell  you what became of the men and women who built this Earth
settlement, Lieutenant?"
     "They  hadn't  the  foggiest  notion  of  what happened to this town or its
people."
     "Strange. You think those Martians killed them?"
     "They  look  surprisingly  peaceful. Chances are a plague did this town in,
sir."
     "Perhaps.  I  suppose this is one of those mysteries we'll never solve. One
of those mysteries you read about."
     The  captain  looked  at  the  room,  the dusty windows, the blue mountains
rising beyond, the canals moving in the light, and he heard the soft wind in the
air.  He  shivered.  Then,  recovering,  he  tapped  a  large  fresh  map he had
thumb-tacked to the top of an empty table.
     "Lots  to  be  done, Lieutenant." His voice droned on and quietly on as the
sun  sank  behind the blue hills. "New settlements. Mining sites, minerals to be
looked for. Bacteriological specimens taken. The work, all the work. And the old
records  were  lost. We'll have a job of remapping to do, renaming the mountains
and rivers and such. Calls for a little imagination."
     "What  do  you  think of naming those mountains the Lincoln Mountains, this
canal  the  Washington  Canal,  those  hills  - we can name those hills for you,
Lieutenant.  Diplomacy.  And  you,  for  a  favour,  might  name  a town for me.
Polishing  the  apple.  And  why  not make this the Einstein Valley, and further
over... are you listening, Lieutenant?"
     The  lieutenant snapped his gaze from the blue colour and the quiet mist of
the hills far beyond the town.
     "What? Oh, yes, sir!"