The first blow of the hammer shook the door in its frame. The second blow made the thin wood boom like a drum. Benedict Vernall threw the door open before a third stroke could fall and pushed the muzzle of his gun into the stomach of the man with the hammer.
“Get going. Get out of here,” Benedict said, in a much shriller voice than he had planned to use.
“Don’t be foolish,” the bailiff said quietly, stepping aside so that the two guards behind him in the hall were clearly visible. “I am the bailiff and I am doing my duty. If I am attacked these men have orders to shoot you and everyone else in your apartment. Be intelligent. Yours is not the first case like this. Such things are planned for.”
One of the guards clicked off the safety catch on his submachine gun, smirking at Benedict as he did it. Benedict let the pistol fall slowly to his side.
“Much better,” the bailiff told him and struck the nail once more with the hammer so that the notice was fixed firmly to the door.
“Take that filthy thing down,” Benedict said, choking over the words.
“Benedict Vernall,” the bailiff said, adjusting his glasses on his nose as he read from the proclamation he had just posted. “This is to inform you that pursuant to the Criminal Birth Act of 1998 you are guilty of the crime of criminal birth and are hereby proscribed and no longer protected from bodily injury by the forces of this sovereign state ….”
“You’re going to let some madman kill me! What kind of a dirty law is that?”
The bailiff removed his glasses and gazed coldly along his nose at Benedict. “Mr. Vernall,” he said, “have the decency to accept the results of our own actions. Did you or did you not have an illegal baby?”
“Illegal, never! A harmless infant ….”
“Do you or do you not already have the legal maximum of two children?”
“We have two, but ….”
“You refused advice or aid from your local birth-control clinic. You expelled, with force, the birth guidance officer who called upon you. You rejected the offer of the abortion clinic ….”
“Murderers!”
“… and the advice of the Family Planning Board. The statutory six months have elasped without any action on your part. You have had the three advance warnings and have ignored them. Your family still contains one consumer more than is prescribed by law, therefore the proclamation has been posted. You alone are responsible, Mr. Vernall, you can blame no one else.”
“I can blame this foul law.”
“It is the law of the land,” the bailiff said, drawing himself up sternly. “It is not for you or me to question.”
He took a whistle from his pocket and raised it to his mouth. “It is my legal duty to remind you that you still have one course open, even at this last moment, and may still avail yourself of the services of the Euthanasia Clinic.”
“Go straight to hell.”
“Indeed. I’ve been told that before.”
The bailiff snapped the whistle to his lips and blew a shrill blast. He almost smiled as Benedict slammed shut the apartment door.
There was an animal-throated roar from the stairwell as the policemen who were blocking it stepped aside. A knot of fiercely tangled men burst out, running and fighting at the same time. One of them surged ahead of the pack but fell as a fist caught him on the side of the head; the others trampled him underfoot. Shouting and cursing the mob came on and it looked as though it would be a draw, but a few yards short of the door one of the leaders tripped and brought two others down. A short fat man in the second rank leaped their bodies and crashed headlong into Vernall’s door with such force that the ballpoint pen he extended pierced the paper of the notice and sank into the wood beneath.
“A volunteer has been selected,” the bailiff shouted and the waiting police and guards closed in on the wailing men and began to force them back toward the stairs. One of the men remained behind on the floor, saliva running down his cheeks as he chewed hysterically at a strip of the threadbare carpet. Two white-garbed hospital attendants were looking out for this sort of thing and one of them jabbed the man expertly in the neck with a hypodermic needle while the other unrolled the stretcher.
Under the bailiff’s watchful eye the volunteer painstakingly wrote his name in the correct space on the proclamation, then carefully put the pen back in his vest pocket.
“Very glad to accept you as a volunteer for this important public duty, Mr …”
The bailiff leaned forward to peer at the paper. “Mr. Mortimer,” he said.
“Mortimer is my first name,” the man said in a crisply dry voice as he dabbed lightly at his forehead with his breast-pocket handkerchief.
“Understandable, sir, your anonymity will be respected as is the right of all volunteers. Might I presume that you are acquainted with the rest of the regulations?”
“You may. Paragraph forty-six of the Criminal Birth Act of 1998, subsection fourteen, governing the selection of volunteers. Firstly, I have volunteered for the maximum period of twenty-four hours. Secondly, I will neither attempt nor commit violence of any form upon any other members of the public during this time, and if I do so I will be held responsible by law for all of my acts.”
“Very good. But isn’t there more?”
Mortimer folded the handkerchief precisely and tucked it back into his pocket. “Thirdly,” he said, and patted it smooth, “I shall not be liable to prosecution by law if I take the life of the proscribed individual, one Benedict Vernall.”
“Perfectly correct.”
The bailiff nodded and pointed to a large suitcase that a policeman had set down on the floor and was now opening. The hall had been cleared. “If you would step over here and take your choice.”
They both gazed down into the suitcase that was filled to overflowing with instruments of death. “I hope you also understand that your own life will be in jeopardy during this period and if you are injured or killed you will not be protected by law?”
“Don’t take me for a fool,” Mortimer said curtly, then pointed into the suitcase. “I want one of those concussion grenades.”
“You cannot have it,” the bailiff told him in a cutting voice, injured by the other’s manner. There was a correct way to do these things. “Those are only for use in open districts where the innocent cannot be injured. Not in an apartment building. You have your choice of all the short-range weapons, however.”
Mortimer laced his fingers together and stood with his head bowed, almost in an attitude of prayer, as he examined the contents. Machine pistols, grenades, automatics, knives, knuckle dusters, vials of acid, whips, straight razors, broken glass, poison darts, morning stars, maces, gas bombs, and teargas pens.
“Is there any limit?” he asked.
“Take what you feel you will need. Just remember that it must all be accounted for and returned.”
“I want the Uzi machine pistol with five of the twenty cartridge magazines, and the commando knife with the spikes on the hand guard and a fountain-pen teargas gun.”
The bailiff was making quick check marks on a mimeographed form attached to his clipboard while Mortimer spoke.
“Is that all?” he asked.
Mortimer nodded and took the extended board and scrawled his name on the bottom of the sheet without examining it, then began at once to fill his pockets with the weapons and ammunition.
“Twenty-four hours,” the bailiff said, looking at his watch and filling in one more space in the form. “You have until 1745 hours tomorrow.”
“Get away from the door, please, Ben,” Maria begged.
“Quiet,” Benedict whispered, his ear pressed to the panel. “I want to hear what they are saying.”
His face screwed up as he struggled to understand the muffled voices. “It’s no good,” he said, turning away. “I can’t make it out. Not that it makes any difference. I know what’s happening ….”
“There’s a man coming to kill you,” Maria said in her delicate, little girl’s voice. The baby started to whimper and she hugged him to her.
“Please, Maria, go back into the bathroom like we agreed. You have the bed in there, and the food, and there aren’t any windows. As long as you stay along the wall away from the door nothing can possibly happen to you. Do that for me, darling, so I won’t have to worry about either of you.”
“Then you will be out here alone.”
Benedict squared his narrow shoulders and clutched the pistol firmly. “That is where I belong, out in front, defending my family. That is as old as the history of man.”
“Family,” she said and looked around worriedly. “What about Matthew and Agnes?”
“They’ll be all right with your mother. She promised to look after them until we got in touch with her again. You can still be there with them; I wish you would.”
“No, I couldn’t. I couldn’t bear being anywhere else now. And I couldn’t leave the baby there; he would be so hungry.”
She looked down at the infant, who was still whimpering, then began to unbutton the top of her dress.
“Please, darling,” Benedict said, edging back from the door. “I want you to go into the bathroom with baby and stay there. You must. He could be coming at any time now.”
She reluctantly obeyed him; he stood and waited until the door had closed and he heard the lock being turned. Then he tried to force their presence from his mind because they were only a distraction that could interfere with what must be done. He had worked out the details of his plan of defense long before and he went slowly around the apartment making sure that everything was as it should be. First the front door, the only door into the apartment. It was locked and bolted and the night chain was attached. All that remained was to push the big wardrobe up against it. The killer could not enter now without a noisy struggle and if he tried Benedict would be there waiting with his gun. That took care of the door.
There were no windows in either the kitchen or the bathroom, so he could forget about these rooms. The bedroom was a possibility since its window looked out onto the fire escape, but he had a plan for this too. The window was locked and the only way it could be opened from the outside was by breaking the glass. He would hear that and would have time to push the couch in the hall up against the bedroom door. He didn’t want to block it now in case he had to retreat into the bedroom himself.
Only one room remained, the living room, and this was where he was going to make his stand. There were two windows in the living room and the far one could be entered from the fire escape, as could the bedroom window. The killer might come this way. The other window could not be reached from the fire escape, though shots could still be fired through it from the windows across the court. But the corner was out of the line of fire, and this was where he would be. He had pushed the big armchair right up against the wall and, after checking once more that both windows were locked, he dropped into it.
His gun rested on his lap and was pointed at the far window by the fire escape. He would shoot if anyone tried to come through it. The other window was close by, but no harm could come that way unless he stood in front of it. The thin fabric curtains were drawn and once it was dark he would be able to see through them without being seen himself. By shifting the gun barrel a few degrees he could cover the door into the hall. If there were any disturbance at the front door he could be there in a few steps. He had done everything he could. He settled back into the chair.
Once the daylight faded the room was quite. dark, yet he could see well enough by the light of the city sky which filtered in through the drawn curtains. It was very quiet and whenever he shifted position he could hear the new chair springs twang beneath him. After only a few hours he realized one slight flaw in his plan. He was thirsty.
At first he could ignore it, but by nine o’clock his mouth was as dry as cotton wool. He knew he couldn’t last the night like this; it was too distracting. He should have brought a jug of water in with him. The wisest thing would be to go and get it as soon as possible, yet he did not want to leave the protection of the corner. He had heard nothing of the killer and this only made him more concerned about his unseen presence.
Then he heard Maria calling to him. Very softly at first, then louder and louder. She was worried. Was he all right? He dared not answer her, not from here. The only thing to do was to go to her, whisper through the door that everything was fine and that she should be quiet. Perhaps then she would go to sleep. And he could get some water in the kitchen and bring it back.
As quietly as he could he rose and stretched his stiff legs, keeping his eyes on the gray square of the second window. Putting the toe of one foot against the heel of the other he pulled his shoes off, then went on silent tiptoe across the room. Maria was calling louder now, rattling at the bathroom door, and he had to silence her. Why couldn’t she realize the danger she was putting him in? As he passed through the door the hall light above him came on.
“What are you doing?” he screamed at Maria who stood by the switch, blinking in the sudden glare.
“I was so worried ….”
The crash of breaking glass from the living room was punctuated by the hammering boom of the machine pistol. Arrows of pain tore at Benedict and he hurled himself sprawling into the hall.
“Into the bathroom!” he screamed and fired his own revolver back through the dark doorway.
He was only half aware of Maria’s muffled squeal as she slammed the door and, for the moment, he forgot the pain of the wounds. There was the metallic smell of burnt gunpowder, and a blue haze hung in the air. Something scraped in the living room and he fired again into the darkness. He winced as the answering fire crashed thunder and flame toward him and the bullets tore holes in the plaster of the hall opposite the door.
The firing stopped but he kept his gun pointed as he realized that the killer’s fire couldn’t reach him where he lay, against the wall away from the open doorway. The man would have to come into the hall to shoot him, and if he did that Benedict would fire first and kill him. More shots slammed into the wall but he did not bother to answer them. When the silence stretched out for more than a minute he took a chance and silently broke the revolver and pulled out the empty shells, putting five cartridges in their place. There was a pool of blood under his leg.
Keeping the gun pointed at the doorway he clumsily rolled up his pants leg with his left hand, then took a quick glimpse. There was more blood running down his ankle and sopping his sock. A bullet had torn through his calf muscle and made two round, dark holes from which the thick blood pumped. It made him dizzy to look at; then he remembered and pointed the wavering pistol back at the doorway. The living room was silent. His side hurt too, but when he pulled his shirt out of his trousers and looked he realized that although this wound was painful it was not as bad as the one in his leg. A second bullet had burned along his side, glancing off the ribs and leaving a shallow wound. It wasn’t bleeding badly. Something would have to be done about his leg.
“You moved fast, Benedict, I must congratulate you.”
Benedict’s finger contracted with shock and he pumped two bullets into the room, toward the sound of the man’s voice. The man laughed.
“Nerves, Benedict, nerves. Just because I am here to kill you doesn’t mean that we can’t talk.”
“You’re a filthy beast, a foul, filthy beast!”
Benedict splattered the words from his lips and followed them with a string of obscenities, expressions he hadn’t used or even heard since his school days. He stopped suddenly as he realized that Maria could hear him. She had never heard him curse before.
“Nerves, Benedict?”
The dry laugh sounded again. “Calling me insulting names won’t alter this situation.”
“Why don’t you leave — I won’t try to stop you,” Benedict said as he slowly pulled his left arm out of his shirt. “I don’t want to see you or know you. Why don’t you go away?”
“I’m afraid that it is not that easy, Ben. You have created this situation; in one sense you have called me here. Like a sorcerer summoning some evil genie. That’s a pleasant simile, isn’t it? May I introduce myself. My name is Mortimer.”
“I don’t want to know your name, you … piece of filth.”
Benedict half-mumbled, his attention concentrated on the silent removal of his shirt. It hung now from his right wrist and he shifted the gun to his left hand for a moment while he draped the shirt over the wound in his calf and he gasped, then spoke quickly to disguise the sound. “You came here because you wanted to, and I’m going to kill you for that.”
“Very good, Benedict, that is much more the type of spirit I expected from you. After all, you are the closest we can come to a dedicated law-breaker these days. The antisocial individualist who stands alone, who will carry on the traditions of the Dillingers and the James Brothers. Though of course they brought death and you brought life, and your weapon is far humbler than their guns …”
The words ended with a dry chuckle.
“You have a warped mind, Mortimer, just what I would suspect of a man who accepts a free license to kill. You’re sick.”
Benedict wanted to keep the other man talking, at least for a few minutes more until he could bandage his leg. The shirt was sticky with blood and he couldn’t knot it in place with his left hand. “You must be sick to come here,” he said. “What other reason could you possibly have?”
He laid the gun down silently, then fumbled with haste to bandage the wound.
“Sickness is relative,” the voice in the darkness said, “as is crime. Man invents societies and the rules of his invented societies determine the crimes. O tempora! O mores! Homosexuals in Periclean Greece were honored men, respected for their love. Homosexuals in industrial England were shunned and prosecuted for a criminal act. Who commits the crime? Society or the man? Which of them is the criminal? You may attempt to argue a higher authority than man, but that would be on an abstract predication and what are we discussing here are realities. The law states that you are a criminal. I am here to enforce the law.”
The thunder of his gun added punctuation to his words, and long splinters of wood flew from the doorframe. Benedict jerked the knot tight and grabbed up his pistol again.
“Then I invoke a higher authority,” he said. “Natural law, the sanctity of life, the inviolability of marriage. Under this authority I wed and love, and my children are the blessing of this union.”
“Your blessings, and the blessings of the rest of mankind, are consuming this world like locusts,” Mortimer said. “But that is an observation. First I must deal with your arguments.
“Primus. The only natural law is written in the sedimentary rocks and the spectra of suns. What you call natural law is man-made law and varies with the varieties of religion. Argument invalid.
“Secundis. Life is prolific and today’s generations must die so that tomorrow’s may live. All religions have the faces of Janus. They frown at killing and at the same time smile at war and capital punishment. Argument invalid.
“Ultimus. The forms of male and female union are as varied as the societies that harbor them. Argument invalid. Your higher authority does not apply to the world of facts and law. Believe in it if you wish, if it gives you satisfaction, but do not invoke it to condone your criminal acts.”
“Criminal!” Benedict shouted, and fired two shots through the doorway, then cringed as an answering storm of bullets crackled by. Dimly, through the bathroom door, he heard the baby crying, awakened by the noise. He dropped out the empty shells and angrily pulled live cartridges from his pocket and jammed them into the cylinder. “You’re the criminal, who is trying to murder me,” he said. “You are the tool of the criminals who invade my house with their unholy laws and tell me I can have no more children. You cannot give me orders about this.”
“What a fool you are,” Mortimer sighed. “You are a social animal and do not hesitate to accept the benefits of your society. You accept medicine, so your children live now as they would have died in the past, and you accept a ration of food to feed them, food you do not even work for. This suits you, so you accept. But you do not accept planning for your family and you attempt to reject it. It is impossible. You must accept all or reject all. You must leave your society or abide by its rules. You eat the food, you must pay the price.”
“I don’t ask for more food. The baby has its mother’s milk; we will share our food ration ….”
“Don’t be fatuous. You and your irresponsible kind have filled this world to bursting with your get, and still you will not stop. You have been reasoned with, railed against, cajoled, bribed and threatened, all to no avail. Now you must be stopped. You have refused all aid to prevent your bringing one more mouth into this hungry world. Since you have done so anyway, you are to’ be held responsible for closing another mouth and removing it from this same world. The law is a humane one, rising out of our history of individualism and the frontier spirit, and gives you a chance to defend your ideals with a gun. And your life.”
“The law is not humane,” Benedict said. “How can you possibly suggest that? It is harsh, cruel, and pointless.”
“Quite the contrary, the system makes very good sense. Try to step outside yourself for a moment, forget your prejudices and look at the problem that faces our race. The universe is cruel but it’s not ruthless. The conservation of mass is one of the universe’s most firmly enforced laws. We have been insane to ignore it so long, and it is sanity that now forces us to limit the sheer mass of human flesh on this globe. Appeals to reason have never succeeded in slowing the population growth, so, with great reluctance, laws have been passed. Love, marriage, and the family are not affected up to a reasonable maximum of children. After that a man voluntarily forsakes the protection of society, and must take the consequences of his own acts. If he is insanely selfish, his death will benefit society by ridding it of his presence. If he is not insane and has determination and enough guts to win-well then he is the sort of man that society needs and he represents a noble contribution to the gene pool. Good and law-abiding citizens are not menaced by these laws.”
“How dare you!” Benedict shouted. “Is a poor, helpless mother of an illegimate baby a criminal?”
“No, only if she refuses all aid. She is even allowed a single child without endangering herself. If she persists in her folly, she must pay for her acts. There are countless frustrated women willing to volunteer for battle to even the score. They, like myself, are on the side of the law and eager to enforce it. So close my mouth, if you can, Benedict, because I look forward with pleasure to closing your incredibly selfish one.”
“Madman!” Benedict hissed and felt his teeth grate together with the intensity of his passion. “Scum of society. This obscene law brings forth the insane dregs of humanity and arms them and gives them license to kill.”
“It does that, and a useful device it is, too. The maladjusted expose themselves and can be watched. Better the insane killer coming publicly and boldly forth-instead of trapping and butchering your child in the park. Now he risks his life and whoever is killed serves humanity with his death.”
“You admit you are a madman, a licensed killer?” Benedict started to stand but the hall began to spin dizzily and grow dark: he dropped back heavily.
“Not I,” Mortimer said tonelessly. “I am a man who wishes to aid the law and wipe out your vile, proliferating kind.”
“You’re an invert then, hating the love of man and woman.”
The only answer was a cold laugh that infuriated Benedict.
“Sick!” he screamed. “Or mad. Or sterile, incapable of fathering children of your own and hating all those who can ….
“That’s enough! I’ve talked to you far long enough, Benedict. Now I shall kill you.”
Benedict could hear anger for the first time in the other’s voice and knew that he had goaded the man with the prod of truth. He lay silent, sick and weak, the blood still seeping through his rough bandage and widening in a pool upon the floor. He had to save what little strength he had to aim and fire when the killer came through the doorway. Behind him he heard the almost silent opening of the bathroom door and the rustle of footsteps. He looked helplessly into Maria’s tearstained face.
“Who’s there with you?” Mortimer shouted, from where he crouched behind the armchair. “I hear you whispering. If your wife is there with you, Benedict, send her away. I won’t be responsible for the cow’s safety. You’ve brought this upon yourself, Benedict, and the time has now come to pay the price of your errors, and I shall be the instrumentality of that payment.”
Mortimer stood and emptied the remainder of the magazine bullets through the doorway, then pressed the button to release the magazine and hurled it after the bullets, clicking a new one instantly into place. With a quick pull he worked the slide to shove a live cartridge into the chamber and crouched, ready to attack.
This was it. He wouldn’t need the knife. Walk a few feet forward. Fire through the doorway, then throw in the teargas pen. It would either blind the man or spoil his aim. Then walk through firing with the trigger jammed down and the bullets spraying like water and the enemy would be dead. Mortimer took a deep, shuddering breath — then stopped and gasped as Benedict’s hand snaked through the doorway and felt its way up the wall.
It was so unexpected that for a moment he didn’t fire and when he did fire he missed. A hand is a difficult target for an automatic weapon. The hand jerked down over the light switch and vanished as the ceiling lights came on.
Mortimer cursed and fired after the hand and fired into the wall and through the doorway, hitting nothing except insensate plaster and feeling terribly exposed beneath the glare of light.
The first shot from the pistol went unheard in the roar of his gun and he did not realize that he was under fire until the second bullet ripped into the floor close to his foot. He stopped shooting, spun around, and gaped.
On the fire escape outside the broken window stood a woman. Slight and wide-eyed and swaying as though a strong wind tore at her, she pointed the gun at him with both hands and jerked the trigger spasmodically. The bullets came close but did not hit him. In panic he pulled the machine pistol up, spraying bullets towards the window.
“Don’t! I don’t want to hurt you!” he shouted as he fired.
The last of his bullets hit the wall and his gun clicked and locked out of battery as the magazine emptied. He hurled the barren metal magazine away and tried to jam a full one in. The pistol banged again and the bullet hit him in the side and spun him about. When he fell the weapon fell from his hand. Benedict, who had been crawling slowly and painfully across the floor, reached him at the same moment and clutched his throat with hungry fingers.
“Don’t …” Mortimer croaked and thrashed about. He had never learned to fight and did not know what else to do.
“Please Benedict, don’t,” Maria said, climbing through the window and running to them. “You’re killing him.”
“No — I’m not,” Benedict gasped. “No strength. My fingers are too weak.”
Looking up, he saw the pistol near his head and he reached and tore it from her.
“One less mouth now!” he shouted and pressed the hot muzzle against Mortimer’s chest. The muffled shot tore into the man, who kicked violently once and died.
“Darling, you’re all right?” Maria wailed, kneeling and clutching him to her.
“Yes … all right. Weak, but that’s from losing the blood, I imagine. But the bleeding has stopped now. It’s all over. We’ve won. We’ll have the food ration, and they won’t bother us anymore and everyone will be satisfied.”
“I’m so glad,” she said, and actually managed to smile through her tears. “I really didn’t want to tell you before, not bother you with all this other trouble going on. But there’s going to be …” She dropped her eyes.
“What?” he asked incredulously. “You can’t possibly mean ….”
“But I do.”
She patted the rounded mound of her midriff. “Aren’t we lucky?”
All he could do was look up at her, his mouth wide and gaping like some helpless fish cast up upon the shore.