The decision to keep on burning the smoke signal and thereby to call in as many recruits as possible was never voted on; it formed itself. The next morning Rod intended to bring the matter up but Jimmy and Bob rebuilt the smoke fire from its embers while down to fetch fresh water. Rod let the accomplished fact stand; two girls drifted in separately that day.
Nor was there any formal contract to team nor any selection of a team captain; Rod continued to direct operations and Bob Baxter accepted the arrangement. Rod did not think about it as he was too busy. The problems of food, shelter, and safety for their growing population left him no time to worry about it
The arrival of Bob and Carmen cleaned out the larder; it was necessary to hunt the next day. Bob Baxter offered to go, but Rod decided to take Jackie as usual. "You rest today. Don't let Carmen put her weight on that bad ankle and don't let Jimmy go down alone to tend the fire. He thinks he is well again but he is not."
"I see that."
Jack and Rod went out, made their kill quickly. But Rod failed to kill clean and when Jacqueline moved in to help finish the thrashing, wounded buck she was kicked in the ribs. She insisted that she was not hurt; nevertheless her side was sore the following morning and Bob Baxter expressed the opinion that she had cracked a rib.
In the meantime two new mouths to feed had been added, just as Rod found himself with three on the sick list. But one of the new mouths was a big, grinning one belonging to Caroline Mshiyeni; Rod picked her as his hunting partner.
Jackie looked sour. She got Rod aside and whispered, 'You haven't any reason to do this to me. I can hunt. My side is all right, just a little stiff."
"It is, huh? So it slows you down when I need you. I can't chance it, Jack."
She glanced at Caroline, stuck out her lip and looked stubborn. Rod said urgently, "Jack, remember what I said about petty jealousies? So help me, you make trouble and I'll paddle you."
"You aren't big enough!"
"I'll get help. Now, look- are we partners?"
"Well, I thought so."
"Then be one and don't cause trouble."
She shrugged. "All right. Don't rub it in- I'll stay home."
"I want you to do more than that. Take that old bandage of mine- it's around somewhere- and let Bob Baxter strap your ribs."
"No!"
"Then let Carmen do it. They're both quack doctors, sort of." He raised his voice. "Ready, Carol?"
"Quiverin' and bristlin'."
Rod told Caroline how he and Jacqueline hunted, explained what he expected of her. They located, and avoided, two family herds; old bulls were tough and poor eating and attempting to kill anything but the bull was foolishly dangerous. About noon they found a yearling herd upwind; they split and placed themselves cross wind for the kill. Rod waited for Caroline to flush the game, drive it to him.
He continued to wait. He was getting fidgets when Caroline showed up, moving silently. She motioned for him to follow. He did so, hard put to keep up with her and still move quietly. Presently she stopped; he caught up and saw that she had already made a kill. He looked at it and fought down the anger he felt.
Caroline spoke. "Nice tender one, I think. Suit you, Rod?"
He nodded. "Couldn't be better. A clean kill, too. Carol?"
"Huh?"
"I think you are better at this than I am.
"Oh, shucks, it was just luck." She grinned and looked sheepish.
"I don't believe in luck. Any time you want to lead the hunt, let me know. But be darn sure you let me know."
She looked at his unsmiling face, said slowly, "By any chance are you bawling me out?"
"You could call it that. I'm saying that any time you want to lead the hunt, you tell me. Don't switch in the middle. Don't ever. I mean it."
"What's the matter with you, Rod? Getting your feelings hurt just because I got there first- that's silly!"
Rod sighed. "Maybe that's it. Or maybe I don't like having a girl take the kill away from me. But I'm dead sure about one thing: I don't like having a partner on a hunt who can't be depended on. Too many ways to get hurt. I'd rather hunt alone."
"Maybe I'd rather hunt alone! I don't need any help."
"I'm sure you don't. Let's forget it, huh, and get this carcass back to camp."
Caroline did not say anything while they butchered. When they had the waste trimmed away and were ready to pack as much as possible back to the others Rod said, "You lead off. I'll watch behind."
"Rod?"
"Huh?"
"I'm sorry"
"What? Oh, forget it."
"I won't ever do it again. Look, I'll tell everybody you made the kill."
He stopped and put a hand on her arm. "Why tell anybody anything? It's nobody's business how we organize our hunt as long as we bring home the meat."
"You're still angry with me."
"I never was angry," he lied. "I just don't want us to get each other crossed up."
"Roddie, I'll never cross you up again! Promise."
Girls stayed in the majority to the end of the week. The cave, comfortable for three, adequate for twice that number, was crowded for the number that was daily accumulating. Rod decided to make it a girls' dormitory and moved the males out into the open on the field at the foot of the path up the shale. The spot was unprotected against weather and animals but it did guard the only access to the cave. Weather was no problem; protection against animals was set up as well as could be managed by organizing a night watch whose duty it was to keep fires burning between the bluff and the creek on the upstream side and in the bottleneck downstream. Rod did not like the arrangements, but they were the best he could do at the time. He sent Bob Baxter and Roy Kilroy downstream to scout for caves and Caroline and Margery Chung upstream for the same purpose. Neither party was successful in the one-day limit he had imposed; the two girls brought back another straggler.
A group of four boys came in a week after Jim's shirt had been requisitioned; it brought the number up to twenty-five and shifted the balance to more boys than girls. The four newcomers could have been classed as men rather than boys, since they were two or three years older than the average. Three of the four classes in this survival-test area had been about to graduate from secondary schools; the fourth class, which included these four, came from Outlands Arts College of Teller University.
"Adult" is a slippery term. Some cultures have placed adult age as low as eleven years, others as high as thirty-five-and some have not recognized any such age as long as an ancestor remamed alive. Rod did not think of these new arrivals as senior to him. There were already a few from Teller U. in the group, but Rod was only vaguely aware Which ones they were- they fitted in. He was too busy with the snowballing problems of his growing colony to worry about their backgrounds on remote Terra.
The four were Jock McGowan, a brawny youth who seemed all hands and feet, his younger brother Bruce, and Chad Ames and Dick Burke. They had arrived late in the day and Rod had not had time to get acquainted, nor was there time the following morning, as a group of four girls and five boys poured in on them unexpectedly. This had increased his administrative problems almost to the breaking point; the cave would hardly sleep four more females. It was necessary to find, or build, more shelter.
Rod went over to the four young men lounging near the cooking fire. He squatted on his heels and asked, "Any of you know anything about building?"
He addressed them all, but the others waited for Jock McGowan to speak. "Some," Jock admitted. "I reckon I could build anything I wanted to."
"Nothing hard," Rod explained. "Just stone walls. Ever tried your hand at masonry?"
"Sure. What of it?"
"Well, here's the idea. We've got to have better living arrangements right away- we've got people pouring out of our ears. The first thing we are going to do is to throw a wall from the bluff to the creek across this flat area. After that we will build huts, but the first thing is a kraal to stop dangerous animals."
McGowan laughed. "That will be some wall. Have you seen this dingus that looks like an elongated cougar?
One of those babies would go over your wall before you could say 'scat.'"
"I know about them," Rod admitted, "and I don't like them." He rubbed the long white scars on his left arm. "They probably could go over any wall we could build. So we'll rig a surprise for them." He picked up a twig and started drawing in the dirt. "We build the wall and bring it around to here. Then, inside for about six meters, we set up sharpened poles. Anything comes over the wall splits its gut on the poles."
Jock McGowan looked at the diagram. "Futile."
"Silly," agreed his brother.
Rod flushed but answered, "Got a better idea?"
"That's beside the point."
"Well," Rod answered slowly, "unless somebody comes down with a better scheme, or unless we find really good caves, we've got to fortify this spot the best we can... so we'll do this. I'm going to set the girls to cutting and sharpening stakes. The rest of us will start on the wall. If we tear into it we ought to have a lot of it built before dark. Do you four want to work together? There will be one party collecting rock and another digging clay and making clay mortar. Take your choice."
Again three of them waited. Jock McGowan lay back and laced his hands under his head. "Sorry. I've got a date to hunt today."
Rod felt himself turning red. "We don't need a kill today," he said carefully.
"Nobody asked you, youngster."
Rod felt the cold tenseness he always felt in a hunt He was uncomfortably aware that an audience had gathered. He tried to keep his voice steady and said, "Maybe I've made a mistake. I-"
"You have."
"I thought you four had teamed with the rest of us. Well?"
"Maybe. Maybe not."
"You'll have to fish or cut bait. If you join, you work like anybody else. If not- well, you're welcome to breakfast and stop in again some time. But be on your way. I won't have you lounging around while everybody else, is working."
Jock McGowan sucked his teeth, dug at a crevice with his tongue. His hands were still locked back of his head. "What you don't understand, sonny boy, is that nobody gives the McGowans orders. Nobody. Right, Bruce?"
"Right, Jock."
"Right, Chad? Dick?"
The other two grunted approval. McGowan continued to stare up at the sky. "So," he said softly, "I go where I want to go and stay as long as I like. The question is not whether we are going to join up with you, but what ones am going to let team with us. But not you, sonny boy; you are still wet behind your ears.
"Get up and get Qut of here!" Rod started to stand up. He was wearing Colonel Bowie, as always, but he did not reach for it. He began to straighten up from squatting.
Jock McGowan's eyes flicked toward his brother. Rod was hit low... and found himself flat on his face with his breath knocked out. He felt the sharp kiss of a knife against his ribs; he held still. Bruce called out, "How about it, Jock?"
Rod could not see Jock McGowan. But he heard him answer, "Just keep him there."
"Right, Jock."
Jock McGowan was wearing both gun and knife. Rod now heard him say, "Anybody want to dance? Any trouble out of the rest of you lugs?"
Rod still could not see Jock, but he could figure from the naked, startled expressions of a dozen others that McGowan must have rolled to his feet and covered them with his gun. Everybody in camp carried knives; most had guns as well and Rod could see that Roy Kilroy was wearing his- although most guns were kept when not in use in the cave in a little arsenal which Carmen superintended.
But neither guns nor knives were of use; it had happened too fast, shifting from wordy wrangling to violence with no warning. Rod could see none of his special friends from where he was; those whom he could see did not seem disposed to risk death to rescue him.
Jock McGowan said briskly, "Chad- Dick- got 'em all covered?"
"Right, Skipper."
"Keep 'em that way while I take care of this cholo." His hairy legs appeared in front of Rod's face. "Pulled his teeth, Bruce?"
"Not yet."
"I'll do it. Roll over, sonny boy, and let me at your knife. Let him turn over, Bruce."
Bruce McGowan eased up on Rod and Jock bent down. As he reached for Rod's knife a tiny steel flower blossomed in Jock's side below his ribs. Rod heard nothing, not even the small sound it must have made when it struck. Jock straightened up with a shriek, clutched at his side.
Bruce yelled, Jock! What's the matter?"
"They got me." He crumpled to the ground like loose clothing.
Rod still had a man with a knife on his back but the moment was enough; he rolled and grabbed in one violent movement and the situation was reversed, with Bruce's right wrist locked in Rod's fist, with Colonel Bowie threatening Bruce's face.
A loud contralto voice sang out, "Take it easy down there! We got you covered."
Rod glanced up. Caroline stood on the shelf at the top of the path to the cave, with a rifle at her shoulder. At the downstream end of the shelf Jacqueline sat with her little dart gun in her lap; she was frantically pumping up again. She raised it, drew a bead on some one past Rod's shoulder.
Rod called out, "Don't shoot!" He looked around. "Drop it, you two!"
Chad Ames and Dick Burke dropped their guns. Rod added, "Roy! Grant Cowper! Gather up their toys. Get their knives, too." He turned back to Bruce McGowan, pricked him under the chin. "Let's have your knife." Bruce turned it loose; Rod took it and got to his feet.
Everyone who had been up in the cave was swarming down, Caroline in the lead. Jock McGowan was writhing on the ground, face turned blue and gasping in the sort of paralysis induced by the poison used on darts. Bob Baxter hurried up, glanced at him, then said to Rod, "I'll take care of that cut in your ribs in a moment." He bent over Jock McGowan.
Caroline said indignantly, "You aren't going to try to save him?"
"Of course."
"Why? Let's chuck him in the stream."
Baxter glanced at Rod. Rod felt a strong urge to order Caroline's suggestion carried out. But he answered, "Do what you can for him, Bob. Where's Jack? Jack- you've got antidote for your darts, haven't you? Get it."
Jacqueline looked scornfully at the figure on the ground. "What for? He's not hurt."
"Huh?"
"Just a pin prick. A practice dart- that's all I keep in Betsey. My hunting darts are put away so that nobody can hurt themselves- and I didn't have time to get them."
She prodded Jock with a toe. "He's not poisoned. He's scaring himself to death."
Caroline chortled and waved the rifle she carried. "And this one is empty. Not even a good club."
Baxter said to Jackie, "Are you sure? The reactions look typical."
"Sure I'm sure! See the mark on the end sticking out? A target dart."
Baxter leaned over his patient, started slapping his face. "Snap out of it, McGowan! Stand up. I want to get that dart out of you."
McGowan groaned and managed to stand. Baxter took the dart between thumb and forefinger, jerked it free; Jock yelled. Baxter slapped him again. "Don't you faint on me," he growled. 'you're lucky. Let it drain and you'll be all right." He turned to Rod. "You're next."
"Huh? There's nothing the matter with me."
"That stuff on your ribs is paint, I suppose." He looked around. "Carmen, get my kit."
"I brought it down."
"Good. Rod, sit down and lean forward. This is going to hurt a little."
It did hurt. Rod tried to chat to avoid showing that he minded it. "Carol," he asked, "I don't see how you and Jackie worked out a plan so fast. That was smooth."
"Huh? We didn't work out a plan; we both just did what we could and did it fast." She turned to Jacqueline and gave her a clap on the shoulder that nearly knocked her over. "This kid is solid, Roddie, solid!"
Jacqueline recovered, looked pleased and tried not to show it. "Aw, Carol!"
"Anyway I thank you both."
"A pleasure. I wish that pea shooter had been loaded. Rod, what are you going to do with them?"
"Well... ummph!"
"Whoops!" said Baxter, behind him. "I said it was going to hurt. I had better put one more clip in. I'd like to put a dressing on that, but we can't, so you lay off heavy work for a while and sleep on your stomach."
"Unh!" said Rod.
"That's the last. You can get up now. Take it easy and give it a chance to scab."
"I still think," Caroline insisted, "that we ought to make them swim the creek. We could make bets on whether or not any of 'em make it across."
"Carol, you're uncivilized."
"I never claimed to be civilized. But I know which end wags and which end bites."
Rod ignored her and went to look at the prisoners. Roy Kilroy had caused them to lie down one on top of the other; it rendered them undignified and helpless. "Let them sit up."
Kilroy and Grant Cowper had been guarding them. Cowper said, "You heard the Captain. Sit up." They unsnarled and sat up, looking glum.
Rod looked at Jock McGowan. "What do you think we ought to do with you?"
McGowan said nothing. The puncture in his side was oozing blood and he was pale. Rod said slowly, "Some think we ought to chuck you in the stream. That's the same as condemning you to death- but if we are going to, we ought to shoot you or hang you. I don't favor letting anybody be eaten alive. Should we hang you?"
Bruce McGowan blurted out, "We haven't done anything."
"No. But you sure tried. You aren't safe to have around other people."
Somebody called out, "Oh, let's shoot them and get it over with!" Rod ignored it. Grant Cowper came close to Rod and said, "We ought to vote on this. They ought to have a trial."
Rod shook his head. "No." He went on to the prisoners,
I don't favor punishing you- this is personal. But we can't risk having you around either." He turned to Cowper. "Give them their knives."
"Rod? You're not going to fight them?"
"Of course not." He turned back. "You can have your knives; we're keeping your guns. When we turn you loose, head downstream and keep going. Keep going for at least a week. If you ever show your faces again, you won't get a chance to explain. Understand me?'
Jock McGowan nodded. Dick Burke gulped and said, "But turning us out with just knives is the same as killing us.
"Nonsense! No guns. And remember, if you turn back this way, even to hunt, it's once too many. There may be somebody trailing you- with a gun.
"Loaded this time!" added Caroline. "Hey, Roddie, I want that job. Can I? Please?"
"Shut up, Carol. Roy, you and Grant start them on their way."
As exiles and guards, plus sightseers, moved off they ran into Jimmy Throxton coming back into camp. He stopped and stared. "What's the procession? Rod what have you done to your ribs, boy? Scratching yourself again?"
Several people tried to tell him at once. He got the gist of it and shook his head mournfully. "And there I was, good as gold, looking for pretty rocks for our garden wall. Every time there's a party people forget to ask me. Discrimination."
"Stow it, Jim. It's not funny."
"That's what I said. It's discrimination."
Rod got the group started on the wall with an hour or more of daylight wasted. He tried to work on the wall despite Bob Baxter's medical orders, but found that he was not up to it; not only was his wound painful but also he felt shaky with reaction.
Grant Cowper looked him up during the noon break. "Skipper, can I talk with you? Privately?"
Rod moved aside with him. "What's on your mind?"
"Mmm... Rod, you were lucky this morning. You know that, don't you? No offense intended."
"Sure, I know. What about it?"
"Uh, do you know why you had trouble?"
"What? Of course I know- now. I trusted somebody when I should not have."
Cowper shook his head. "Not at all. Rod, what do you know about theory of government?"
Rod looked surprised. "I've had the usual civics courses. Why?"
"I doubt if I've mentioned it, but the course I'm majoring in at Teller U. is colonial administration. One thing we study is how authority comes about in human society and how it is maintained. I'm not criticizing but to be blunt, you almost lost your life because you've never studied such things."
Rod felt annoyed. "What are you driving at?"
"Take it easy. But the fact remains that you didn't have any authority. McGowan knew it and wouldn't take orders. Everybody else knew it, too. When it came to a showdown, nobody knew whether to back you up or not. Because you don't have a milligram of real authority."
"Just a moment! Are you saying I'm not leader of this team?"
"You are de facto leader, no doubt about it. But you've never been elected to the job. That's your weakness."
Rod chewed this over. "I know," he said slowly. "It's just that we have been so confounded busy."
"Sure, I know. I'd be the last person to criticize. But a captain ought to be properly elected."
Rod sighed. "I meant to hold an election but I thought getting the wall built was more urgent. All right, let's call them together."
"Oh, you don't need to do it this minute."
"Why not? The sooner the better, apparently."
"Tonight, when it's too dark to work, is soon enough."
"Well... okay."
When they stopped for supper Rod announced that there would be an organization and planning meeting. No one seemed surprised, although he himself had mentioned it to no one. He felt annoyed and had to remind himself that there was nothing secret about it; Grant had been under no obligation to keep it quiet. He set guards and fire tenders, then came back into the circle of firelight and called out, "Quiet, everybody! Let's get started. If you guys on watch can't hear, be sure to speak up" He hesitated. "We're going to hold an election. Somebody pointed out that I never have been elected captain of this survival team. Well, if any of you have your noses out of joint, I'm sorry. I was doing the best I could. But you are entitled to elect a captain. All right, any nominations?"
Jiminy Throxton shouted, "I nominate Rod Walker!" Caroline's voice answered, "I second it! Move the nominations be closed."
Rod said hastily, "Carol, your motion is out of order."
"Why?"
Before he could answer Roy Kilroy spoke up. "Rod, can I have the floor a moment? Privileged question."
Rod turned, saw that Roy was squatting beside Grant Cowper. "Sure. State your question."
"Matter of procedure. The first thing is to elect a temporary chairman."
Rod thought quickly. "I guess you're right. Jimmy, your nomination is thrown out. Nominations for temporary chairman are in order."
"Rod Walker for temporary chairman!"
"Oh, shut up, Jimmy! I don't want to be temporary chairman."
Roy Kilroy was elected. He took the imaginary gavel and announced, "The chair recognizes Brother Cowper for a statement of aims and purposes of this meeting."
Jimmy Throxton called out, "What do we want any speeches for? Let's elect Rod and go to bed. I'm tired- and I've got a two-hour watch coming up."
"Out of order. The chair recognizes Grant Cowper." Cowper stood up. The firelight caught his handsome features and curly, short beard. Rod rubbed the scraggly growth on his own chin and wished that he looked like Cowper. The young man was dressed only in walking shorts and soft bush shoes but he carried himself with the easy dignity of a distinguished speaker before some important body. "Friends," he said, "brothers and sisters, we are gathered here tonight not to elect a survival-team captain, but to found a new nation."
He paused to let the idea sink in. "You know the situation we are in. We fervently hope to be rescued, none more so than I. I will even go so far as to say that I think we will be rescued... eventually. But we have no way of knowing, we have no data on which to base an intelligent guess, as to when we will be rescued.
"It might be tomorrow... it might be our descendants a thousand years from now." He said the last very solemnly.
"But when the main body of our great race re-establishes contact with us, it is up to us, this little group here tonight, whether they find a civilized society or flea-bitten animals without language, without arts, with the light of reason grown dim... or no survivors at all, nothing but bones picked clean."
"Not mine!" called out Caroline. Kilroy gave her a dirty look and called for order.
"Not yours, Caroline," Cowper agreed gravely. "Nor mine. Not any of us. Because tonight we will take the step that will keep this colony alive. We are poor in things; we will make what we need. We are rich in knowledge; among us we hold the basic knowledge of our great race. We must preserve it... we will!"
Caroline cut through Cowper's dramatic pause with a stage whisper. "Talks pretty, doesn't he? Maybe I'll marry him."
He did not try to fit this heckling into his speech. "What is the prime knowledge acquired by our race? That without which the rest is useless? What flame must we guard like vestal virgins?"
Some one called out, "Fire." Cowper shook his head.
"Writing!"
"The decimal system."
"Atomics!"
"The wheel, of course.
"No, none of those. They are all important, but they are not the keystone. The greatest invention of mankind is government. It is also the hardest of all. More individualistic than cats, nevertheless we have learned to cooperate more efficiently than ants or bees or termites. Wilder, bloodier, and more deadly than sharks, we have learned to live together as peacefully as lambs. But these things are not easy. That is why that which we do tonight will decide our future... and perhaps the future of our children, our children's children, our descendants far into the womb of time. We are not picking a temporary survival leader; we are setting up a government. We must do it with care. We must pick a chief executive for our new nation, a mayor of our city-state. But we must draw up a constitution, sign articles binding us together. We must organize and plan."
"Hear, hear!"
"Bravo!"
"We must establish law, appoint judges, arrange for orderly administration of our code. Take for example, this morning-" Cowper turned to Rod and gave him a friendly smile. "Nothing personal, Rod, you understand that. I think you acted with wisdom and I was happy that you tempered justice with mercy. Yet no one could have criticized if you had yielded to your impulse and killed all four of those, uh... anti-social individuals. But justice should not be subject to the whims of a dictator. We can't stake our lives on your temper... good or bad. You see that, don't you?"
Rod did not answer He felt that he was being accused of bad temper, of being a tyrant and dictator, of being a danger to the group. But he could not put his finger on it. Grant Cowper's remarks had been friendly... yet they felt intensely personal and critical.
Cowper insisted on an answer. "You do see that, Rod? Don't you? You don't want to continue to have absolute power over the lives and persons of our community? You don't want that? Do you?" He waited.
"Huh? Oh, yeah, sure! I mean, I agree with you."
"Good! I was sure you would understand. And I must ay that I think you have done a very good job in getting us together. I don't agree with any who have criticized you. You were doing your best and we should let bygones be bygones." Cowper grinned that friendly grin and Rod felt as if he were being smothered with kisses.
Cowper turned to Kilroy. "That's all I have to say, Mr. Chairman." He flashed his grin and added as he sat down, "Sorry I talked so long, folks. I had to get it off my chest."
Kilroy clapped his hands once. "The chair will entertam nominations for- Hey, Grant, if we don't call it 'captain,' then what should we call it?"
"Mmm..." Cowper said judicially. "'President' seems a little pompous. I think 'mayor' would be about right-mayor of our city-state, our village."
"The chair will entertain nominations for mayor.
"Hey!" demanded Jimmy Throxton. "Doesn't anybody else get to shoot off his face?"
"Out of order."
"No," Cowper objected, "I don't think you should rule Jimmy out of order, Roy. Anyone who has something to contribute should be encouraged to speak. We mustn't act hastily."
"Okay, Throxton, speak your piece."
"Oh, I didn't want to sound off. I just didn't like the squeeze play."
"All right, the chair stands corrected. Anybody else? If not, we will entertain-"
"One moment, Mr. Chairman!"
Rod saw that it was Arthur Nielsen, one of the Teller University group. He managed to look neat even in these circumstances but he had strayed into camp bereft of all equipment, without even a knife. He had been quite hungry.
Kilroy looked at him. "You want to talk, Waxie?"
"Nielsen is the name. Or Arthur. As you know. Yes."
"Okay. Keep it short."
"I shall keep it as short as circumstances permit. Fellow associates, we have here a unique opportunity, probably one which has not occurred before in history. As Cowper pointed out, we must proceed with care. But, already we have set out on the wrong foot. Our object should be to found the first truly scientific community. Yet what do I find? You are proposing to select an executive by counting noses! Leaders should not be chosen by popular whim; they should be determined by rigorous scientific criteria. Once selected, those leaders must have full scientific freedom to direct the bio-group in accordance with natural law, unhampered by such artificial anachronisms as statutes, constitutions, and courts of law. We have here an adequate supply of healthy females; we have the means to breed scientifically a new race, a super race, a race which, if I may say so-"
A handful of mud struck Nielsen in the chest; he stopped suddenly. "I saw who did that!" he said angrily. Just the sort of nincompoop who always-"
"Order, order, please!" Kilroy shouted. "No mudsling or I'll appoint a squad of sergeants-at-arms. Are you through, Waxie?"
"I was just getting started."
"Just a moment," put in Cowper. "Point of order Mr. Chairman. Arthur has a right to be heard. But I think he speaking before the wrong body. We're going to have a constitutional committee, I'm sure. He should present his arguments to them. Then, if we like them, we can adopt his ideas."
"You're right, Grant. Sit down, Waxie."
"Huh? I appeal!"
Roy Kilroy said briskly, "The chair has ruled this out of order at this time and the speaker has appealed to the house, a priority motion not debatable. All in favor of supporting the chair's ruling, which is for Waxie to shut up, make it known by saying 'Aye.'"
There was a shouted chorus of assent. "Opposed: 'No.' Sit down, Waxie."
Kilroy looked around. "Anybody else?"
"Yes"
"I can't see. Who is it?"
"Bill Kennedy, Ponce de Leon class. I don't agree with Nielsen except on one point: we are fiddling around with the wrong things. Sure, we need a group captain but, aside from whatever it takes to eat, we shouldn't think about anything but how to get back. I don't want a scientific society; I'd settle for a hot bath and decent food."
There was scattered applause. The chairman said, "I'd like a bath, too... and I'd fight anybody for a dish of cornflakes. But, Bill, how do you suggest that we go about it?"
"Huh? We set up a crash-priority project and build a gate. Everybody works on it."
There was silence, then several talked at once: "Crazy! No uranium." - "We might find uranium." - "Where do we get the tools? Shucks, I don't even have a screwdriver." - "But where are we?" - "It is just a matter of-"
"Quiet!" yelled Kilroy. "Bill, do you know how to build a gate?"
"No"
"I doubt if anybody does."
"That's a defeatist attitude. Surely some of you educated blokes from Teller have studied the subject. You should get together, pool what you know, and put us to work. Sure, it may take a long time. But that's what we ought to do."
Cowper said, just a minute, Roy. Bill, I don't dispute what you say; every idea should be explored. We're bound to set up a planning committee. Maybe we had better elect a mayor, or a captain, or whatever you want to call him-and then dig into your scheme when we can discuss it in detail. I think it has merit and should be discussed at length. What do you think?"
"Why, sure, Grant. Let's get on with the election. I just didn't want that silly stuff about breeding a superman to be the last word."
"Mr. Chairman! I protest-"
"Shut up, Waxie. Are you ready with nominations for mayor? If there is no objection, the chair rules debate closed and will entertain nominations."
"I nominate Grant Cowper!"
"Second!"
"I second the nomination."
"Okay, I third it!"
"Let's make it unanimous! Question, question!"
Jimmy Throxton's voice cut through the shouting, "I NOMINATE ROD WALKER!"
Bob Baxter stood up. "Mr. Chairman?"
"Quiet, everybody. Mr. Baxter."
"I second Rod Walker."
"Okay. Two nominations, Grant Cowper and Rod Walker. Are there any more?"
There was a brief silence. Then Rod spoke up. "Just a second, Roy." He found that his voice was trembling and he took two deep breaths before he went on. "I don't want it. I've had all the grief I want for a while and I'd like a rest. Thanks anyhow, Bob. Thanks, Jimmy."
"Any further nominations?"
"Just a sec, Roy... point of personal privilege." Grant Cowper stood up. "Rod, I know how you feel. Nobody in his right mind seeks public office... except as a duty, willingness to serve. If you withdraw, I'm going to exercise the same privilege; I don't want the headaches any more than you do."
"Now wait a minute, Grant. You-"
"You wait a minute. I don't think either one of us should withdraw; we ought to perform any duty that is handed to us, just as we stand a night watch when it's our turn. But I think we ought to have more nominations." He looked around. "Since that mix-up this morning we have as many girls as men . . yet both of the candidates are male. That's not right. Uh, Mr. Chairman, I nominate Caroline Mshiyeni."
"Huh? Hey, Grant, don't be silly. I'd look good as a lady mayoress, wouldn't I? Anyhow, I'm for Roddie."
"That's your privilege, Caroline. But you ought to let yourself be placed before the body, just like Rod and myself."
"Nobody's going to vote for me!"
"That's where you're wrong. I'm going to vote for you. But we still ought to have more candidates."
"Three nominations before the house," Kilroy announced. "Any more? If not, I declare the-"
"Mr. Chairman!"
"Huh? Okay, Waxie, you want to nominate somebody?"
"Yes."
"Who?"
"Me"
"You want to nominate yourself?"
"I certainly do. What's funny about that? I am running on a platform of strict scientific government. I want the rational minds in this group to have someone to vote for."
Kilroy looked puzzled. "I'm not sure that is correct parliamentary procedure. I'm afraid I'll have to over-"
"Never mind, never mind!" Caroline chortled. "I nominate him. But I'm going to vote for Roddie," she added.
Kilroy sighed. "Okay, four candidates. I guess we'll have to have a show of hands. We don't have anything for ballots."
Bob Baxter stood up. "Objection, Mr. Chairman. I call for a secret ballot. We can find some way to do it."
A way was found. Pebbles would signify Rod, a bare twig was a note for Cowper, a green leaf meant Caroline, while one of Jimmy's ceramic attempts was offered as a ballot box. "How about Nielsen?" Kilroy asked.
Jimmy spoke up. "Uh, maybe this would do: I made another pot the same time I made this one, only it busted. Ill get chunks of it and all the crackpots are votes for Waxie."
"Mr. Chairman, I resent the insinua-"
"Save it, Waxie. Pieces of baked clay for you, pebbles for Walker, twigs for Grant, leaves for Carol. Get your votes, folks, then file past and drop them in the ballot box. Shorty, you and Margery act as tellers."
The tellers solemnly counted the ballots by firelight. There were five votes for Rod, one for Nielsen, none for Caroline, and twenty-two for Cowper. Rod shook hands with Cowper and faded back into the darkness so that no one would see his face. Caroline looked at the results and said, "Hey, Grant! You promised to vote for me. What happened? Did you vote for yourself? Huh? How about that?"
Rod said nothing. He had voted for Cowper and was certain that the new mayor had not returned the compliment... he was sure who his five friends were. Dog take it!-he had seen it coming; why hadn't Grant let him bow out?
Grant ignored Caroline's comment. He briskly assumed the chair and said, "Thank you. Thank you all. know you want to get to sleep, so I will limit myself tonight to appointing a few committees-"
Rod did not get to sleep at once. He told himself that there was no disgrace in losing an election- shucks, hadn't his old man lost the time he had run for community corporation board? He told himself, too, that trying to ride herd on those apes was enough to drive a man crazy and he was well out of it- he had never wanted the job! Nevertheless there was a lump in his middle and a deep sense of personal failure.
It seemed that he had just gone to sleep... his father was looking at him saying, "You know we are proud of you, son. Still, if you had had the foresight to-" when someone touched his arm.
He was awake, alert, and had Colonel Bowie out at once.
"Put away that toothpick," Jimmy whispered, "before you hurt somebody. Me, I mean."
"What's up?"
"I'm up, I've. got the fire watch. You're about to be, because we are holding a session of the inner sanctum."
"Huh?"
"Shut up and come along. Keep quiet, people are asleep."
The inner sanctum turned out to be Jimmy, Caroline, Jacqueline, Bob Baxter, and Carmen Garcia. They gathered inside the ring of fire but as far from the sleepers as possible. Rod looked around at his friends.
"What's this all about?"
"It's about this," Jimmy said seriously. "You're our Captain. And we like that election as much as I like a crooked deck of cards."
"That's right," agreed Caroline. "All that fancy talk!"
"Huh? Everybody got to talk. Everybody got to vote."
"Yes," agreed Baxter. "Yes... and no."
"It was all proper. I have no kick."
"I didn't expect you to kick, Rod. Nevertheless well, I don't know how much politicking you've seen, Rod. I haven't seen much myself, except in church matters and we Quakers don't do things that way; we wait until the Spirit moves. But, despite all the rigamarole, that was a slick piece of railroading. This morning you would have been elected overwhelmingly; tonight you did not stand a chance."
"The point is," Jimmy put in, "do we stand for it?"
"What can we do?"
"What can we do? We don't have to stay here. We've still got our own group; we can walk out and find another place... a bigger cave maybe."
'Yes, sir!" agreed Caroline. "Right tonight."
Rod thought about it. The idea was tempting; they didn't need the others... guys like Nielsen- and Cowper. The discovery that his friends were loyal to him, loyal to the extent that they would consider exile rather than let him down choked him up. He turned to Jacqueline. "How about you, Jackie?"
"We're partners, Rod. Always."
"Bob- do you want to do this? You and Carmen?"
"Yes. Well . .
"'Well' what?"
"Rod, we're sticking with you. This election is all very well- but you took us in when we needed it and teamed with us. We'll never forget it. Furthermore I think that you make a sounder team captain than Cowper is likely to make. But there is one thing."
"Yes."
"If you decide that we leave, Carmen and I will appreciate it if you put it off a day."
"Why?" demanded Caroline. "Now is the time."
"Well- they've set this up as a formal colony, a village with a mayor. Everybody knows that a regularly elected mayor can perform weddings."
"Oh!" said Caroline. "Pardon my big mouth."
"Carmen and I can take care of the religious end- it's not very complicated in our church. But, just in case we ever are rescued, we would like it better and our folks would like it if the civil requirements were all perfectly regular and legal. You see?"
Rod nodded. "I see."
"But if you say to leave tonight..."
"I don't," Rod answered with sudden decision. "We'll stay and get you two properly married. Then-"
"Then we all shove off in a shower of rice," Caroline finished.
"Then we'll see. Cowper may turn out to be a good mayor. We won't leave just because I lost an election." He looked around at their faces. "But... but I certainly do thank you. I-"
He could not go on. Carmen stepped forward and kissed him quickly. "Goodnight, Rod. Thanks."