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- Monday, February 2, 1976. James Riggerford, 42, happily
- married with three children, walked from his beachside home
- south-west of Houston, Texas, sometime shortly after 3:00
- a.m. - two days after resigning as the Operations
- Administrator with NASA. His body, found clad in pajamas, was
- later recovered from the Gulf of Mexico.
- Tuesday, September 7, 1976. Roger Marshall-Smith, a 31-
- year-old physicist who had recently returned from temporary
- attachment to NASA in America, was living with his parents in
- Winchester, Hampshire. They found him just after 1:00 a.m. -
- two hours after they had all gone to sleep - in flames at the
- bottom of the stairs. He had apparently, while still asleep,
- doused his clothing with turpentine and then set fire to
- himself. The agony of burning had awakened him but it was
- then too late to save his life.
- Saturday, January 15, 1977. James Arthur Carmichael,
- 35, aerospace technician, hurtled inexplicably to his death
- at 4:35 a.m. from a sixteenth-floor hotel bedroom window in
- Washington. Friends said that he had seemed happy and in
- normal spirits the previous evening and had gone to bed alone
- at about midnight. He, too, was wearing pajamas.
- Were these three men victims of "telepathic sleep-jobs"?
- We do not claim to know but we consider it reasonable to
- suggest that the possibility cannot now be discounted. And
- what of the "regional officer" mentioned in the transcript?
- The answer to that question was to come, eventually, in the
- most unexpected way.
- Benson returned to the production office and Simon
- Butler joined Clements in the little room behind Studio B.
- "How were things with Fergus?" he asked.
- "Not good," said Clements miserably. "He wants to junk
- Colin's interview with Grodin. Quite frankly, Simon, the
- whole thing looks like it's getting screwed up...unless,
- maybe, you can squeeze more out of Gerstein."
- "You mean Alternative 3?"
- Clements nodded. "That's what it all seems to hinge
- on," he said. "Gerstein obviously knows about it. Or,
- at least, he knows the theory..."
- "There's a big difference between knowing and talking."
- Butler was remembering how he's been given a sherry when what
- he's really wanted was an answer. "When I say him in March
- he was quite definite. He simply didn't want to know..."
- "Try him again," urged Clements. "Tell him everything
- you know ... what we've got from Grodin and Broadbent ...
- tell him the lot ... and then see if you can't persuade him."
- "Well," said Butler. "I'm prepared to try..."
- Two days later he was back in that book-lined study in
- Cambridge. And, to his surprise, Gerstein eventually
- agreed to talk about Alternative 3. At first Gerstein
- was very much on his guard, very reluctant to be drawn,
-
-
-
- 127
- but he listened courteously to all Butler had to say.
- "You people have done your homework pretty thoroughly,"
- he acknowledged. He re-lit his dead pipe and stared
- thoughtfully at the desk. "There doesn't seem any point now
- in me not telling you what I know..."
- Here is a transcript of the interview which followed --
- as it was presented on television:
-
-
- GERSTEIN: You already know about Alternatives 1 and 2 -
- and why they were rejected. Well ... Alternative 3
- offered a more limited option -- an attempt to
- ensure the survival of at least a small proportion
- of the human race. We were theorists, remember,
- not technicians ... but we realized we were talking
- about the kind of space travel that - twenty years
- ago - seemed no more than science fiction.
- BUTLER: You mean...go to some other planet?
- GERSTEIN: I mean get the hell off this one - while
- there was still time! I had no idea whether it
- would, or could, be done. And I still don't.
- BUTLER: Did you have any ideas about who might go?
- GERSTEIN: I remember we discussed the kind of cross-
- section we'd like to see get away ... a balance
- of the sciences and the arts, of course, and,
- indeed, all aspects, as far as possible, f human
- culture ... The list would never be complete - but
- it would be better than nothing.
- BUTLER: And these people ... where was it visualized
- they might go?
- GERSTEIN: Ah, now that was the big question. There are
- about 100,000 million stars in the Milky Way -about
- equal to the number of people who have ever walked
- this earth - and as long ago as 1950 Fred Hoyle was
- estimating that more than a million of those stars
- had planets which could support human life...
- BUTLER: So it really was as vague and theoretical as
- that?
- GERSTEIN: In 1957 ... at the time of the Huntsville
- Conference ... yes. But the situation has changed
- quite considerably since then. Now the most
- distinct possibility seems to be Mars..."
- BUTLER: Mars!
- GERSTEIN: Yes, I can imagine your viewers raising their
- eyebrows because most people think of Mars in terms
- of little green men with aerials sticking
- out of their heads ... but, scientifically, our
- attitude to Mars has had to be amended more than
- once.
-
-
-
- 128
-
- In the early days of astronomy, Mars was
- believed to have artificially-constructed canals -
- which was taken as evidence of intelligent life on
- the planet. Later this theory was discredited. In
- its place we had a picture of a barren,
- inhospitable planet, inimical to the survival of
- any form of life.
- Then, more recently, an interesting idea was
- put forward: Suppose life did at one time exist on
- Mars...
- As the climate and conditions worsened, any
- surviving life may have evolved into a state of
- hibernation, awaiting the return of more favorable
- conditions. It has even been suggested that the
- actual atmosphere which used to support life may
- have become locked up in the planet's surface soil.
- There was an occurrence several years ago
- which made this theory very persuasive. Mars has
- always had a covering of cloud, varying in density
- at different times, until the time of which I
- speak, when the cloud thickened to a degree never
- previously observed. This happened, and was
- scientifically recorded, in 1961.
- It was obvious that storms of colossal
- proportions were taking place on Mars. Now...this
- is the really interesting bit ... when the clouds
- eventually cleared, some remarkable changes were
- seen. The polar ice caps had substantially
- decreased in size, and around the equatorial
- regions a broad band of darker coloring had
- appeared. This, it has been suggested, was
- vegetation.
- BUTLER: Has anyone explained this happening?
- GERSTEIN: At a conference shortly before it happened,
- I put forward a theoretical suggestion. I said
- that if the atmosphere of Mars was in fact locked
- into the surface soil, then a controlled nuclear
- explosion might be able to release it - and, of
- course, revive whatever life was in hibernation...
- the only problem was about how to deliver the
- explosion well in advance of arriving there
- ourselves. That same year the Russians had a great
- space disaster. Yes, that was in 1959. Only the
- barest facts are recorded, the rest was kept
- secret. A rocket blew up at its launching.
- Numbers of people were killed and the area was
- devastated ... what were they trying to launch?
- And did they finally succeed?
- Was that rocket carrying a nuclear device
- which accounted for the devastation it caused? A
- nuclear device which, on a second attempt, could
-
-
- 129
- have reached the surface of Mars to cause the
- dynamic changes recorded in 1961?
- The sudden outbreaks of storms on Mars, the
- dwindling of the ice caps, the growth of what
- appears to be vegetation in the tropical zone ...
- all that is recorded scientific fact.
-
-
- The interview, as transmitted, ended at that point. The
- original version, before being edited, contained this
- additional exchange:
-
-
- BUTLER: But I don't understand ... the pictures relayed
- from Viking 2 on Mars ... they showed little more
- than a plateau of red rock ... the sort of terrain
- that seemed to offer little prospect of survival...
- GERSTEIN: I don't pretend to understand that either.
- But, as you've already told me, there does seem to
- be some sort of cover-up going on. Maybe you
- should take that up with someone more up-to-date in
- these matters ... someone who is abreast of modern
- developments in aerospace ...
- BUTLER: Yes...maybe Charles Welbourne can help us
- there. But there's one other aspect I'd like to
- discuss with you, Dr. Gerstein, and that's to do
- with animals, birds, insects and so on. It's all
- very well talking about transporting man off to a
- new life on a different planet but how much of his
- environment could he, or should he, take with him?
- GERSTEIN: That's one you ought to put to a biologist.
- Stephen Manderson ... Professor Stephen Manderson
- ...was also at Huntsville and he's a singularly
- pleasant man...very approachable.
-
-
- Butler telephoned Clements from Cambridge and Clements
- instructed Terry Dickson to make the necessary arrangements
- with Manderson. Kate White interviewed him the following day
- at his home in Reigate, Surrey. The interview went well but,
- as you may remember, it was not included in the transmitted
- program. Clements has explained that he was forced to omit
- it because, despite his pleas, his screen time was severely
- limited. ITN's News at Ten, scheduled to follow that edition
- of Science Report, could not be delayed. And, Harman had
- told him, he could not continue after the news because the
- rest of the evening had been allocated to programs from other
- companies.
- We consider that, in this instance, an exception should
- have been made to the rigid pattern of ITV's program-
- planning. Manderson's views were fascinating. They were
- also extremely pertinent.
-
- 130
- "The Bible concept of taking two of every type of
- creature into the ark ... that, in this context, would be
- impossible and quite irrational," he said. "Man, basically,
- is a selfish creature. There's nothing much wrong in that
- because a certain degree of selfishness is necessary for
- survival.
- "We wear other creatures and make cloths and cosmetics
- out of them and, in fact, we use them in all sorts of ways.
- So in this Alternative 3 operation - if, indeed, there is
- such an operation - it would surely be logical to select only
- those we wanted to take with us.
- "Would we want to take rats and mosquitoes, for
- instance? Of course not! We'd be given the opportunity to
- create the ideal environment for ourselves and, for the very
- first time, we'd be able to choose which creatures should
- share that environment. It would be a most marvellous
- opportunity.
- "But think of the species we could happily do without.
- Starlings ... rooks ... pea-moths ... eelworms which do such
- damage to crops like potatoes and sugar-beet ... what
- possible use are any of them to us?
- "Do you realize that three million species of insects
- have already been taxonomically classified and that, because
- of the present rate of insect evolution, the total
- classification will never be completed!
- "And consider the damage they do! In India alone
- insects consume more food every year that nine million human
- beings - and that's in a country where there's widespread
- starvation.
- "No ... leave them here and let them perish. Man
- doesn't need them ..."
- Kate White interrupted: "But surely some of the most
- humble creatures are useful to man. Earthworms, for
- instance, aerate the soil and ..:
- "Earthworms, like every other species, would have to be
- properly assessed for usefulness," said Manderson briskly.
- "Gophers, for example, might prove to be more efficient. In
- the Canadian plains they perform exactly the same function as
- earthworms. Vast tracts there have no worms and it's the
- gopher which turns vegetable mould into rich loam ... no, as
- I said, each case would have to be scientifically assessed."
- "But what about the sort of creatures we now keep in
- zoos? Creatures like lions and giraffes and elephants?"
- Manderson seemed surprised by her naivety. "Well, what
- about them? It wouldn't be good economics to shuttle them
- off to another planet - even if sufficient transport were
- available. They'd have to die and, quite frankly, it
- wouldn't make one iota of difference.
- I beg you, Miss White, not to get bogged down in
- sentimentality. It's fashionable but it really is quite
- pointless.
-
-
- 131
-
-
- "The dinosaurs lasted on this earth for a hundred
- million years - fifty times as long as man has been around --
- but the world goes on very well without them. And it's been
- the same with so many other creatures. How many people,
- would you say, have ever been in mourning for the dinomys?"
- "Dinomys? I'm sorry...I don't quite follow..."
- "Precisely! You're an educated young lady but you've
- never even heard of them, have you? Dinomys ... rat-like
- creatures which grew as big as calves ... used to flourish
- in South America. Polar bears and ostriches ... they'll be
- the same one day ... people will look blank, just as you did
- a moment ago, when their names are mentioned."
- He smiled, and ruffled his finger through his hair. "I
- could give you example after example - just to show how
- narrow the conventional view-point really is..."
- "But creatures like bears ... they seem so, well, so
- permanent..."
- "So did the onactornis."
- "Onactornis?"
- "Carnivorous bird...eight feet tall...couldn't fly but
- terrorized smaller creatures for millions of years."
- Kate White was anxious to divert the interview into more
- positive channels. Clements, she knew, would hardly thank
- her for wasting so much film footage on a philosophical
- discussion about prehistoric monsters. That, in her
- experience, was one of the troubles with experts. They often
- got carried away with their own cleverness. They liked, in
- fact, to show off. "But if on assumes that the basic premise
- is correct, that men are colonizing Mars, wouldn't they have
- to start from scratch with stocking an entire new world? And
- wouldn't that be a almost unsuperable task?"
- "Not when you understand the facts or life," said
- Manderson. "You've heard, of course, about the
- experiments which have resulted in the creation of test-tube
- babies..."
- "Yes, but..."
- "But do you realize that enough female eggs to produce
- the entire next generation of the human race could be
- packed into the shell of a single chicken's egg?"
- "Goodness! I' no idea."
- "And the same convenient compactness, Miss White,
- applies to other creatures. A mother cod, for example,
- can lay up to six million eggs at a single spawning.
- Fortunately most of those eggs are destroyed before they
- develop into fish...or else there'd be no room for
- people to paddle off our beaches. If they all survived
- the seas of our world would be solid masses of cod by
- now - and they could all survive if nurtured in the
- right conditions.
-
-
- 132
- "There was a ling caught, not so long ago, which
- was carrying more that 28 million eggs! So you can see
- right away how easy it would be to stock any seas there
- may be on Mars..."
- "That's assuming there's nothing already in those
- seas."
- "Granted - and there may well be for all we know."
- "But what if tiny things in the Martian seas - or on the
- Martian land for that matter - were harmful to man or
- were a nuisance to man?"
- "Then we'd have to use our initiative to balance the
- ecology in our favor. It's been done often enough
- before, y'know. Sparrows, for instance, were first
- imported into New York in the middle of the nineteenth
- century - simply to attack tree-worms..."
- "But wouldn't that automatically bring other
- problems? What about the creatures that live on the
- creatures you'd have to introduce to strike this ecological
- balance?" She paused, trying to grasp for a good example.
- Manderson, she'd decided by this time, was a cold and
- unlikeable man. He seemed to lack soul and she couldn't
- resist the temptation to bait him just a little. "Like
- hedgehogs?" she said triumphantly.
- "I beg your pardon?"
- "Hedgehogs," she repeated. "I heard somewhere that they
- get withdrawal symptoms and become quite neurotic if they are
- deprived of their fleas..."
- Manderson smiled indulgently. "I'm sorry," he said. "I
- don't pretend to be an authority on neurotic hedgehogs and I
- do feel we're starting to get in rather deep. Can I help you
- in any other way?"
- "Just on last question. In this new world - as you see
- it, Professor Manderson - is there any room for creatures
- that people simply enjoy ... creatures like squirrels and
- nightingales?"
- "Not unless their productivity value were proved," said
- Manderson. "No room at all."
- "You know something," said Kate. "I find that very,
- very sad."
-
-
-
- Charles Welbourne, interviewed on screen by Colin
- Benson, agreed that there was an obvious conflict between the
- description of Mars offered by Gerstein and the pictures
- which had been released by NASA.
- "Many people have also wondered why NASA should
- apparently have been so stingy on its photographic budget,"
- he said. "Particularly when you consider how important the
- pictures are supposed to be."
- "Why should people wonder in that way?" prompted Benson.
-
-
- 133
- Welbourne pointed to a blow-up photograph of "familiar"
- Martian terrain which was mounted on a board in the studio.
- "That picture there almost says it for me," he said. "We're
- told that they spent all that money putting that probe on
- Mars and then what do they do? They equip it, if you please,
- with a camera which can focus only up to one hundred meters.
- And that, as somebody observed, is about the size of a large
- film studio.
- "It doesn't start to add up. If they'd really wanted
- good pictures of Mars they would have fitted a vastly
- superior camera system Better cameras are available - make
- no mistake about that - but the one they used ... well, it
- was almost as if they'd deliberately fitted blinkers to the
- whole mission."
- "You mean they were determined that we should see only
- what they wanted us to see?"
- "That could well be. You've got to remember that all
- these pictures we get come in through NASA - they're simply
- passed on to the rest of us. So if they tell us it's Mars
- ... well, we have to believe them.
- "It's exactly the same soundwise, of course. I mean, we
- don't hear everything that's said between Mission Control and
- the spacecraft. There's a second channel. They call it the
- biological channel ... "
- "We did learn a little about that from Otto Binder,"
- said Benson.
- "Sure, Binder the former NASA man ... I remember he did
- blow the gaff on that after Apollo 13 ... well, this
- biological channel is officially just for reporting on
- medical details. In fact, though, they switch to it whenever
- they have something to say they don't want the whole world
- listening in on ..."
- Welbourne paused, looked thoughtfully at the Martian
- picture. "I've just had a crazy thought," he said. "How
- about if that picture wasn't taken on Mars? Look at it
- closely ... don't you agree that could have been shot in some
- studio in Burbank?"
- We should stress that Welbourne had been told nothing of
- the other pictures which we know were "dummied-up" in a
- studio - the ones of people like Brian Pendlebury which were
- an integral part of The Smoother Plan.
- He had no idea then how near the mark he was with his
- "crazy thought".
- The proof came unexpectedly. It came from Harry
- Carmell's girlfriend Wendy - the one who had ordered Benson
- and his crew out of that derelict house in Lambeth.
- And Wendy was very frightened.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 134
- SECTION ELEVEN
-
-
-
- Wendy had not gone back to that house in Lambeth - not
- since the day Harry had disappeared. She had returned on
- that morning with the bandage and antiseptic and, realizing
- that Harry had gone, she had panicked and fled. He couldn't
- have managed to get out on his own, not in the state he was
- in, so someone must have taken him.
- Obviously he had been found by them - those mysterious
- men he'd sworn were determined to kill him - and she knew
- then, deep down, that she'd never see him again.
- She had to get away. Far away. She had to hide. Or
- they might find her and kill her too. An hour later she was
- thumbing a lift to Birmingham. There was no special
- attraction in Birmingham. It just so happened that that's
- where the lorry was going. And it seemed a long way from
- London. They would not find her in Birmingham.
- However, she had taken no chances there. She had kept
- on the move, rarely staying in one place for more than a
- couple of nights, for she had a frightening feeling that,
- somehow< they might catch her just as they had caught Harry.
- She also, as she has since told us, felt guilty. She felt
- she had let Harry down. For she kept remembering that small
- box which he had considered so important, the one he had
- hidden under floorboards in the derelict house, and she knew
- that she should have retrieved it. She'd forgotten all about
- it in the flurry of leaving but Harry had wanted so
- desperately to get it to the television people. It held the
- key, he'd told her, to something important ... to some tape
- which had been made by the dead man Ballantine. She felt she
- ought to get that box to that colored chap Benson. She ought
- to do that because Harry had been good to her and she owed
- him that much. But now it would mean going back to the
- house. And she dreaded stepping back into danger ...
- She finally made up her mind on Thursday, June 9. She
- took a train to London and travelled by bus across the city.
- And by 3:30 p.m. she was at number 88 - walking between the
- posts where the front gate had once been.
- Now there was no rubbish in the front garden and the
- boarding at the windows had been replaced by glass. Other
- attempts had been made to brighten and improve the terraced
- house. The steps at the end of the cleared path were freshly
- scrubbed and the door, slightly ajar, had recently been
- painted in bright canary yellow.
- All the neighboring houses looked just as she remember
- them but number 88 had been dramatically transformed. It was
- a building which had been snatched back from decay.
-
-
-
-
- 135
- Through the windows of the front ground-floor room she
- could see a group of young people - all in their late teens
- or early twenties - who were kneeling silently, with their
- eyes shut, in a circle.
- Wendy hesitated, anxious and disappointed. She had
- expected the house to be empty, just as it had been when she
- and Harry had first found it in February. She had
- anticipated merely walking in, of going quietly to the first-
- floor room where the floorboards were loose, of hurrying
- away, unseen, with the box. Now it couldn't be like that at
- all... The youngsters were still kneeling, trance-like,
- apparently lost in some communal meditation. They might not
- notice her, she thought, if she were stealthy enough and fast
- enough. But, on the other hand, there might be more of them
- in other rooms. There might be some in the room where Harry
- had hidden the box...
- She tapped with her knuckles at the door - tentatively,
- at first, and then harder.
- Footsteps approached across the bare boards of the hall.
- Then the door was opened wide by a tall and immensely scrawny
- man with long hair and an unkempt ginger beard. His feet
- were bare and he was wearing tattered blue jeans patched with
- bits of floral curtaining. His eyes - dark and deep-set and
- staring with fierce intensity - were oddly disconcerting and
- he was older than the people in the front room. In his mid-
- thirties, maybe, or even nudging forty.
- "Good afternoon sister," he said. "Jesus loves you."
- His voice was deeply resonant and his accent was strongly
- east London.
- "Who are you?" asked Wendy.
- "Eliphaz," he replied solemnly. "Eliphaz the Temanite."
- "Look ... I used to live here ... a few months ago I was
- living here and I left something important behind ..."
- "The only thing that is truly important is Jesus. Has
- He entered your heart? He is waiting - waiting for you to
- invite Him in ..."
- "So I was wondering if I could just pop in and collect
- it ..."
- The man stepped back, gestured for her to follow, and
- Wendy noticed for the first time that he was holding a small
- Bible. "Here in the Temple everyone is welcome," he said.
- Could this, Wendy wondered, be a trap? Harry had never
- told her what they looked like. Could this bizarre character
- - this Eliphaz or whatever he called himself - be one of
- them? Questions raced through her mind. Would she, if she
- went inside, disappear like Harry?
- She had a great urge to run away, to forget the whole
- thing. Why should she go further into danger ... it really
- wasn't her responsibility ...
- "Come on in ... Jesus is here," said the man
- encouragingly. "And you need Jesus."
-
-
- 136
- Wendy pointed to the youngsters who were still kneeling
- in their silent circle. "What are they doing in there?" she
- asked. 'All you people ... who exactly are you?"
- "We are the Children of Heavenly Love," said the man.
- "We were sinners and we lived in the bondage of the flesh but
- Jesus Christ, the greatest revolutionary of them all, has
- entered our hearts and saved us from sin." He closed his
- eyes, screwed up his face in apparent anguish, held his Bible
- high. "Thank you, oh thank you, Lord Jesus," he said. He
- opened his eyes, smiled, extended a hand in invitation.
- "Eliphaz ..." said Wendy. "Is that your real name?"
- "It became my name when I entered into the love of
- Christ," he said. "Before I found the Lord I was called Jack
- - Jack Perkins. But now I am saved and the old me, the
- wicked me, has gone for ever ..."
- No, she decided, he wasn't acting. No-one could act
- like that. Not unless he was someone like Michael Caine.
- This one just had to be a genuine Jesus freak ...
- "That thing I mentioned," she said. "I left it upstairs
- ...under the floorboards for safety..."
- "You are more than welcome to come in," said the man.
- "Here in the Temple we do not wish to keep things which are
- the possessions of others."
- She followed him through the hall and up the stairs.
- And she was amazed by the transformation. The place had been
- cleaned and the walls had been painted. And the entire
- building had a curious atmosphere of tranquillity.
- All three doors on the landing were open. Wendy
- indicated the front room. "In there," she said.
- The man stopped, put a hand on her arm. "I forgot to
- ask your name."
- Instant suspicion. "Why do you need to know it?"
- He smiled, shook his head sadly. "There is fear in you,
- sister. You should accept the Lord and let Him help you..."
-
- "Why is my name important?" persisted Wendy.
- Another smile. "So that I can introduce you to my
- brothers," he said. "They will expect me to introduce you."
- Then Wendy noticed there were two young men in the room.
- Both, she would have guessed, were about eighteen and both
- were dressed in the style of the man called Eliphaz. There
- was no furniture, not even the old sofa which had been there,
- and the two of them were seated on the bare boards. They
- were studying Bibles, mouthing words silently as if trying to
- memorize them.
- "Wendy," she said quietly. "My name is Wendy."
- Both youngsters immediately looked up and scrambled to
- their feet. They were smiling broadly and welcomingly.
- "This is Wendy," said Eliphaz.
- He took Wendy's elbow, eased her firmly into the room.
-
-
-
- 137
- "This here is Lazarus, one of our brothers from America," he
- said. "And our friend over here used to be called Arthur.
- But now he's filled with the Spirit and he's become Canaan.
- Canaan the Rechabite."
- "Jesus loves you, Wendy," said Lazarus politely.
- "Praise the Lord!" He spoke with the warm and homely drawl
- of the Deep South. On the knuckles of his right hand was
- tattooed the word "love". A matching tattoo on his left
- knuckles said "hate".
- "Yes, Jesus surely loves you," said Arthur who had
- become Canaan. Wendy could immediately identify his
- Birmingham origins.
- They stared at her, now waiting for her to take the
- initiative, and their solemn sincerity made her feel oddly
- uncomfortable. "Thank you," she said. It sounded
- ridiculously inadequate and there was an awkward silence.
- She indicated the section of the floor where the sofa had
- been and turned to Eliphaz the Temanite. "It should be just
- there," she said. "Under the loose boards."
- He nodded. "You need help?"
- "No...no, thank you...I can manage."
- They watched while she went down on her knees and
- started trying to prise up one of the boards.
- "Wendy...do you know Jesus?" Lazarus put the question
- casually. He might almost have been asking about the
- weather.
- "Sure." She has pre-occupied with her work and she did
- not look up. "Sure I know Him." The board was fixed more
- firmly than she'd expected.
- "I mean really know Him." said Lazarus more vehemently.
- "There's a whole heap of dudes out there in the systemite
- world, in all them fine churches an' all, who reckon they
- know Jesus but they wouldn't even recognize Him if He stopped
- them in the street..."
- The board was now rising from the floor. Wendy wormed
- her fingers under it and started to tug.
- "I tell ya...He was an unwashed hairy hippy from the
- slums of Galilee...but, ya gotta believe me, that cat was for
- real," said Lazarus. "And he still is today..."
- Loud creaks as the bit of wood bent and finally burst
- away from the retaining nails. Wendy peered down into the
- darkness, put a hand down to grope around. Nothing. She
- must have picked the wrong board.
- "...yes, He's here with us today...He's right here in
- this room...and, I tell ya, He's here with us today...He's
- right here in this room...and, I tell ya, He's a mind blower.
- Maybe it was a bit nearer the window. Yes, now she came
- to think of it, the board had been just behind the sofa. She
- moved across, started again.
-
-
-
-
- 138
- "He's the ultimate trip, Wendy...and you wanna get right
- there with Him because there ain't much time left..."
- This board was much looser. She jiggled it a little to
- get a better grip and then lifted it.
- "...it's all right here in the Bible...how the
- seven vials of the wrath of God will be poured over the
- nations..."
- There it was! She snatched up the box, got to her feet.
- "Thank you," she said. "I'm sorry to have interrupted you."
- Eliphaz, she now realized, had placed himself squarely
- between her and the door. His face was coldly resolute and
- his arms were folded across his chest. "That box is yours
- and whatever is in it is yours...but I have to ask you one
- question," he said. "Does it contain drugs?"
- Suddenly he seemed bigger than before. Bigger and more
- powerful. And her old fears about them came flooding back.
- She had been a fool to return to this house...
- Lazarus and Canaan the Rechabite seemed to be closing in
- on her, one on either side, and her stomach was churning with
- panic. "I've got to go now." She was struggling to control
- her voice, to stop it going all squeaky. "Please let me go."
- "It's all here in the Book of Revelation." Lazarus
- appeared to be unaware of what was happening in the room. He
- was preoccupied entirely with his own thoughts, with his
- convictions about the imminent End of Time. "Listen to
- this...the Bible gaves facts and details...it don't mess
- about..."and the fourth angel poured out his vial upon the
- sun...and power was given unto him to scorch men with
- fire..." "
- Eliphaz held out his hand. "Give the box to me," and
- blasphemed the name of God..."
- "No!" she shouted. "It's nothing like that!"
- He stood aside to let her pass. "Please forgive me for
- being suspicious." Now his manner was contritely apologetic.
- "We would have taken them if they had been drugs. We would
- have taken them and destroyed them. You have to realize that
- many of our brothers and sisters here were damaged by
- drugs...in their days of fleshly bondage."
- "Then you're letting me go?"
- "Of course - but please come back to see us again," said
- Eliphaz. "All God's children are welcome here in the
- Temple."
- "Let Jesus into your heart, Wendy," said Lazarus as she
- walked to the landing. "He loves you real good."
- "Hallelujah!" added Canaan the Birmingham Rechabite.
- Eliphaz escorted her to the front door. "Don't forget,
- sister, that you do need Jesus," he said. "God be with you."
- She ran from the house, along the street around a corner
- to a telephone box. She dialled the number for Sceptre
- Television. "Please may I speak with Colin Benson?"
- "Hold on," said the operator. "I'm just putting you
- through..."
-
- 139
- Terry Dickson had prepared a background-information
- sheet about Mars for Clements so that some of the details
- could be fed into the program's links. It said:
-
-
- Mars has a diameter about half that of Earth and is
- officially classified, together with Mercury and Venus,
- as one of the inferior planets in our sun's family of
- planets.
- It is our nearest neighbor among the planets -
- being 12.6 light minutes away from the sun, compared
- with our 8.3 light minutes. You will see this in
- perspective when I point out that Neptune and Pluto are
- 250 and 327 light minutes from the sun respectively.
- The principal significance of this is that Neptune
- and Pluto, together with the other giant planets, Saturn
- and Uranus, would be far too cold to support life as we
- understand it.
- Conversely, Mercury and Venus - 3.2 and 6 light
- minutes from the sun respectively - would be too hot.
- Mars is appreciably cooler than Earth, of course,
- but scientists have long been agreed that temperatures
- there could be endured by man: the problems, while
- serious, should not prove insurmountable.
- The actual distance between Earth and Mars varies
- considerably - being anything from 35 million miles to
- 60 million miles. This is because Earth moves in an
- almost circular orbit while the orbit of Mars is much
- more eccentric.
- The predominant red color which has given Mars its
- popular name comes from regions very similar to many of
- the deserts known on Earth. Like, or instance, the
- Painted Desert of Arizona.
- Green patches which vary in size and shape from
- season to season are believed to be caused by the growth
- of plants similar to rock lichens. I am advised that
- lichens can survive at lower temperatures than most
- terrestrial plants and require very little moisture.
- However, pioneering work in the deserts of the Middle
- East has proved that more valuable crops can be grown if
- a region is properly irrigated and tended. That could
- apply equally well to the desert regions of Mars so
- making it possible, at least in theory, for man to
- become self-supporting there.
- ere is no shortage of water or potential water.
- It has been known for thirty years, as a result of work
- done at Yerkes Observatory near Chicago, that the polar
- caps of Mars are composed of snow. This snow could be
- converted into water which could then be channelled as
- required.
-
-
-
- 140
- The one question which has apparently still not
- been satisfactorily resolved is that of atmosphere.
- Does Mars have air which we could breathe? The
- answer, quite frankly, is that no-one really seems to
- know. I've now spoken to a number of scientists who are
- confident that appreciable quantities of free oxygen
- probably did exist there at one time. It may well be
- that, as Gerstein has suggested, life supporting
- atmosphere has been locked in the surface soil but I
- have been unable to find any other expert who is
- prepared to publicly endorse that suggestion.
- Obviously the whole question of the possible
- colonization of Mars, the central question you asked me
- to investigate, depends on the certainty that the planet
- has an atmosphere similar to Earth's. There appears to
- be no such certainty. Gerstein is being decried by most
- of his contemporaries in Britain and abroad and, without
- wishing to be rude about the man, I wouldn't fancy
- sticking my neck out professionally on his say-so.
- In short, Chris, it's a fascinating theory but it
- doesn't quite add up.
-
-
- Clements read the last few paragraphs through for the
- second time and snorted impatiently. "Well, Terry love, it's
- my neck that'll be sticking out - not your," he said.
- "Gerstein's got me convinced and I'm prepared to gamble on
- him."
- But he didn't need to gamble, not as it turned out.
- For, at that moment, Wendy was waiting to talk to Colin
- Benson...
-
- Memo dated June 13, 1977, from Leonard Harman to Mr.
- Fergus Godwin, Controller of Programs:
-
-
- I have returned to the studios today after a week's
- sick leave and I am astonished to learn that it is
- apparently your intention to allow the screening of that
- interview with the former astronaut Grodin.
- We have already discussed at length the unethical
- circumstances under which the interview was conducted
- and which resulted in Grodin expressing extravagant
- views. We agreed, I thought, that Grodin's statements
- could not possibly be substantiated and that, if
- dignified by being included in a program purporting to
- be serious, they could do considerable harm.
- The whole of this particular Science Report
- program, as I have told you on numerous occasions, is a
- blatant example of irresponsible sensationalism which
- will reflect adversely on the company's image.
-
-
- 141
- Are companies in the rest of the ITV network and
- those abroad aware of the troublesome and, indeed,
- unsavory background to this production? I can only
- assume not for, otherwise, I am certain they would not
- be prepared to buy it.
- Once again, I urge you most strongly to withdraw
- this program from the schedules.
-
- Memo dated June 14, 1977, from Fergus Godwin to Leonard
- Harman:
-
- I can no longer agree with you over the remarkable
- "brain-drain" investigation which has been mounted by
- Clements and his team.
- I grant that it is highly controversial and even
- frightening. It will also cause embarrassment in
- certain high places.
- However, I have assessed the evidence which is now
- in the program - the product, I might add, of diligent
- research and impressive dedication - and I feel we would
- be failing in our public duty if we were to suppress
- what appears to be the unpalatable truth.
- Since we last spoke I have had the opportunity of
- studying Simon Butler's interview with Dr. Gerstein.
- Gerstein is a man for whom I have the greatest respect
- and no-one of his stature would lend his name to
- anything which, in your words, savoured of
- "irresponsible sensationalism".
- Three have been times, as you know, when I have
- been perturbed by the unexpected directions in which
- this investigation has moved. I now feel able to set
- all my reservations aside. Clements has my unqualified
- support.
- I do not propose to reply in more detail to your
- query relating to networking and overseas sales for I
- consider that to be irrelevant in light of my present
- feelings.
-
- Memo dated June 15, 1977, from Leonard Harman to
- Mr. Anthony Derwent-Smith, Managing Director.
-
- You are already aware of my severe misgivings in
- relation to the Science Report program, scheduled for
- network transmission on June 20, in which it is
- suggested that there is an international conspiracy to
- transport intellectuals and others to life on another
- planet.
- I have made my opinions known on many occasions and
- I commend your attention, in particular, to the minutes
- of the Senior Executives' Meeting held on April 8. I
- warned then against what I recognized as a policy of
- expensive folly.
-
- 142
- I am taking the unusual step of enclosing herewith
- copies of all correspondence between the Controller of
- Programs and myself on the subject for I feel that, in
- view of the damage this production could do to the
- reputation of the company, this is a matter in which
- you might see fit to intervene.
- I cannot urge too strongly that under no
- circumstances should this program be screened.
-
-
- Memo dated June 15, 1977, from Anthony Derwent-Smith to
- Fergus Godwin:
-
-
- See the attached note and pile of bumph which
- reached me by hand today from Mr. Harman.
- It is not my practice to become entangled in
- differences of opinion between my Controller of Programs
- and any of his subordinates - particularly when I am
- approached in what I consider to be an underhand manner,
- with no copy of the note having apparently been sent to
- you. Nor did I intend to start intervening on this
- aspect of program policy which I consider to be entirely
- your territory.
- Please deal.
-
-
- Godwin re-read the note and the one sent to Derwent-
- Smith by Harman.."Cheeky bastard!" he said. He dialled on
- his internal telephone. "Harman...be in my office within two
- minutes. I'm going to mark your bloody card!"
-
- Katherine White took the call in the Science Report
- office. "No...Colin Benson's popped out for a coffee...who's
- this calling, please"
- "I must speak to him quickly," said Wendy. "It's
- urgent."
- "Can I take a message? Ask him to call you back?"
- All Wendy wanted now was to get rid of the box. She
- anxiously scanned the faces of people loitering near the
- telephone box. Every wasted minute, she felt, put her in
- greater danger. If only she knew what they looked
- like..."Could you find him? It is desperately important."
- "I'll see if I can catch him in the canteen. Can I give
- him a name?"
- "Tell him it's the girl who was with Harry," said Wendy.
- "Tell him I've got what Harry wanted to give him."
- "Hold on..."
- "Look...I'm in a pay-box and I'm right out of change..."
- ""Give me the number of the box and then replace the
- receiver," said Kate. "I'll call you right back."
-
-
- 143
- Wendy obeyed. She waited, her back to the door of the
- booth. And she was unaware of the man until he jerked the
- door open. He looked angry and beefily pugnacious. She gave
- a small scream, cowering away from him. He glowered at her
- with distaste. "You planning on spending the day in here?"
- "I won't be more than a minute...I'm waiting for a
- call."
- "Yeah?" He grabbed her arm, started to pull her.
- "Well, I'm waiting to make one. So come on...out of it."
- ...Please, this won't take long, really..."
- "Lady, this is a public box and I'm not hanging around
- all day while..."
- "At that moment the bell rang. Wendy shook away the
- man's hand, snatched up the receiver, heard Benson's voice.
- "Yes, that's right...I was the girl with Harry," she said.
- The man muttered aggressively, stepped out of the box and
- positioned himself immediately outside. Wendy spoke quietly,
- convinced that the man was trying to eavesdrop. "I must meet
- you," she said. "Harry had something he wanted to give you
- and now I've got it. But I've got to be careful in case they
- are looking for me..."
- They met an hour later at the spot where Benson had
- first seen Harry Carmell - outside the fruiterer's in the
- street market near the studios.
- "You said they might be looking for you," said Benson.
- "Who are they?"
- Wendy shrugged, pulled a face. "Who knows?" she said.
- "Goons, heavies ... Russians, Americans, Germans, Outer
- Bloody Mongolians ... what difference does it make?" She
- discreetly gave him the box. "That's what Harry wanted you
- to have - he said something about it helping you see what was
- on some tape made by Ballantine. That make sense to you?"
- "Not much," said Benson. "Wait here ... I'll have a
- shufti inside the box." He hurried to the nearby men's
- lavatory, locked himself in a cubicle and opened the box. It
- contained a square printed circuit and he gave a low whistle
- of surprise. "Well, I'll be..."He put it back in the box,
- re-joined Wendy.
- "I've just remembered," she said. "Harry said you fit
- it to an IC40 of something and then you get a juke-box. Does
- that mean anything to you?"
- "I must get back to the studios right away," said
- Benson. "See what sort of tune we can get out of the juke-
- box."
- "You don't need me any more?"
- "Where'll you be?"
- "Not sure - but not in London. There's too much heat in
- London."
- Benson tapped the box. "Surely you'll want to know what
- all this adds up to...where can I contact you?"
-
-
-
- 144
- "I'll contact you," she said. And, as Harry Carmell had
- done months earlier, she hurried away and disappeared in the
- crowds.
- Technicians at the studios had never before been
- presented with such a problem. They puzzled and experimented
- for the best part of an hour before finally getting it right.
- And then, in the darkness of the preview theater, Clements
- and Benson watched in amazement as the pictures suddenly
- started spilling across the large screen.
- "I don't believe it! said Clements. "Good God...I
- simply don't believe it!"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 145
- SECTION TWELVE
-
-
-
- Every seat in the preview theater was filled. All
- members of the Science Report team had been summoned there -
- to see what Clements and Benson had been watching only a
- little earlier. Fergus Godwin was also there, sitting next
- to Clements, and so were many other executives of the
- company.
- Clement's eyes were sparkling with excitement when the
- house lights eventually came up. "Well, Fergus?" he asked.
- "What d'you think?"
- Godwin frowned and nibbled at his bottom lip, baffled
- and reluctant to commit himself. "What the hell can I
- possibly think?" he countered. "If what we've just seen is
- authentic, if it isn't just an elaborate fake, then the human
- race has been conned rotten and we've got the most incredible
- television scoop ever. But...I mean...that can't have
- happened - it can't possibly be true!"
- "But it fits in, doesn't it?" persisted Clements. "It
- fits with everything else we've got..."
- "Have you checked with Jodrell Bank? With people who
- worked with Ballantine?"
- "Well, no..."
- "Then do it. Do it now. And put the whole thing to
- NASA as well. If we used that in the program and it turned
- out to be a stumer ... there'd be the most God-awful blow-
- back. And, I give you fair warning, Chris, I'm not prepared
- to carry the can."
- "But NASA are certain to deny it," protested Clements.
- "That stands to reason..."
- "Let me know when you've spoken to them." Godwin got
- up, started to leave the theater. "And I also want to hear
- what Jodrell Bank have to say."
- Hendlemann, the man at Jodrell Bank, was friendly and
- eager to be helpful. But, when he heard Benson's description
- of what was on the tape, he was utterly sceptical. "Sir
- William never mentioned a word about it," he said. "And
- something of that magnitude ... he'd never have kept it to
- himself."
- Benson tried to smother his disappointment. "But did he
- ever say anything to you, or to anyone else, about meeting a
- man called Harry something-or-other when he was at NASA last
- year?"
- Hendlemann was apologetic. "Not a thing. I'm afraid
- I'm not being much use to you, Mr. Benson..."
- "Would you ask around? Maybe he did mention this Harry
- to someone else at Jodrell Bank. I assure you, Mr.
- Hendlemann, it really is important."
- "You said earlier you thought it might throw some fresh
- light on Sir William's death..."
-
- 146
- "It's just possible.'
- "Hm, in that case I'll do all I can. There was
- something about that crash which didn't quite add up, as far
- as I was concerned. Now I'm not promising anything , mark
- you, but I will ask around."
- "And if you do discover anything..."
- "I'll call you back either way. That is a promise."
- The NASA official, who refused to give his name, took a
- very different attitude. "I heard some freaky notions in my
- time but this one sure caps the lot," he said. "You better
- face it, son...someone's been pulling your leg."
- "Then you are stating categorically that the tape must
- be a forgery?"
- "How could it be anything else? That must be the most
- stupid question I've heard this year."
- "And the information on it is not accurate?"
- "Son, do me a favor, will you? I've been very patient
- but I'm a busy man and I really think this joke's gone on
- long enough..."
- "I'm taping this conversation and I want you on record
- as saying that the information is inaccurate - if it really
- is."
- "I'm sorry...I've wasted more than enough time on this
- already. There's absolutely nothing more to say."
- Benson was left with the dialling tone. The anonymous
- man in Houston had replaced his receiver.
- "Blast! said Benson. He was tempted to dial again, to
- try speaking to someone different at NASA. Not that it would
- be likely to make any difference. All the official spokesmen
- had presumably been briefed to trot out the same sort of
- line. Laugh the idea right out of court - that seemed to be
- the tactic. And Benson was sure it was no more than a
- tactic.
- He felt he had detected some hint of uncertainty under
- the man's brash derision. And he felt, more strongly than
- ever, that the tape was genuine. But proving it - or, at
- least, proving it enough to satisfy Goodwin - that was
- another matter.
- He put the receiver back in its rest and was
- contemplating going for a canteen coffee when the bell rang.
- Hendlemann again. And this time with excitement in his
- voice.
- "I've discovered something quite astonishing, Mr.
- Benson," he said. "Sir William did meet somebody called
- Harry at NASA. He made a note about it in his diary while he
- was in America. I've been checking through that diary and it
- really is quite remarkable. He doesn't mention this Harry's
- surname but, listen, I'll read you the extract:
-
-
-
-
-
- 147
- " "Harry gave promised help but is now frightened. Told
- me today - These bastards would kill us if they knew what
- we've just seen. Take a word of advice, friend, and destroy
- that damned tape." "
-
- "There! added Hendlemann. "Now what are we to make of
- that?"
- "Anything else in the diary?"
- "Nothing that appears to be relevant."
- Benson thought fast. "The tapes you use at Jodrell
- Bank...is there anything distinctive about them?"
- "In what way?"
- "Could you, by studying this tape, establish if it
- belonged to Jodrell Bank?"
- "No...but I might well be able to establish that it did
- not belong to us."
- "And if you couldn't do that ... it would, at least,
- reduce the chances of it being a fake..."
- "Most certainly."
- "Is it possible, Mr. Hendlemann, for you to come to
- London?"
- "I'll leave immediately," said Hendlemann. "I'm very
- anxious to see exactly what is on that tape."
- Benson met Hendlemann at reception and took him to the
- preview theater where Clements was waiting. The tape was
- laced-up ready for viewing once again. They sat in silence,
- watching and listening.
- "Incredible!" said Hendlemann eventually. "Absolutely
- incredible!"
- "You think that might have originated at Jodrell Bank?
- asked Clements.
- "Let me examine the actual tape," said Hendlemann.
- Clements led the way to the projection box and
- Hendlemann produced an eye-glass through which he minutely
- studied the tape. He became so absorbed in his examination
- that he appeared to be oblivious of the men with him. "Why?"
- he asked. "Why didn't he tell me?"
- Clements signalled to Benson not to interrupt. They
- waited while Hendlemann checked frame after frame. Then he
- closely scrutinized the leader section of the tape and
- finally he nodded his head emphatically and put his eye-glass
- back in his waistcoat pocket.
- "Well?" asked Clements. "What do you think?"
- "I'm almost afraid to tell you this - but I have to,"
- said Hendlemann. "I do believe, Mr. Clements, that this is
- the genuine article."
- They hurried him across to Godwin's office where he
- repeated his belief - and the reasons for it.
- "Give me just one minute," said Godwin. "I'd like to
- have the Managing Director in on this one." He dialled
- Derwent-Smith's internal number, briefly explained the
- situation, replaced the receiver. "He's joining us," he
- said.
- 148
- Derwent-Smith listened while Hendlemann again repeated
- all he had said. "Fascinating," he said. "And this diary of
- Sir William's - may we see it?"
- Hendlemann nodded. "It's outside in my car."
- "Well, Fergus," said Derwent-Smith. "You're Controller
- of Programs..."
-
-
- "Yes, but this is different," protested Godwin. "This
- is one where I want your help - because if we put one foot
- wrong here there's going to be such a stink..."
- "You mean you might want me to share the blame."
- "No, I just..."
- Derwent-Smith stopped him. "I think we should talk
- a little more to this mysterious girl," he said. "The one
- who so conveniently supplied us with the printed circuit."
- "But we don't know where she's gone," said Benson.
- "She refused to tell me."
- "And you just let her walk away. That doesn't sound too
- clever, does it?" Derwent-Smith turned to Clements. "And
- what's you opinion?"
- "Well, the girl...the tape. Are you still keen on using
- it?"
- "Absolutely," said Clements.
- "Good," said Derwent-Smith. "Fergus?"
- "In view of what Mr. Hendlemann says, I'm for going
- ahead."
- "Fine," said Derwent-Smith. "I'm with you all the way."
-
-
-
- That particular week, although the Sceptre Television
- team did not then realize it, was an extraordinary one for
- disappearances - the sort of disappearances which might have
- been linked with Batch Consignments.
- New Zealand - Monday, June 13, 1977. At 10:30 a.m.
- accountant Miles Thornton drove into the caravan-park near
- Tauranga in the North Island's Bay of Plenty. With him were
- his wife and two young sons - all looking forward to a break
- of a few days. This was one of their favorite spots, a place
- where they'd spent many holidays.
- Thornton found, to his surprise, that there was no-one
- on duty in the prefabricated building which served as
- a reception center. And, even more surprising, there was no
- sign of anyone in the park. There were cars there. Plenty
- of cars. But the whole place was completely deserted.
- Normally there'd have been people sprawled out on loungers,
- children playing ball-games between the rows of caravans.
- "But the only living thing to be seen was a dog," he said
- later. "It was weird."
-
-
-
- 149
- More weird, in fact, than he realized at the time.
- Records later found in the abandoned reception center shower
- that more than 200 people should have been there that
- morning, including twelve employees of the caravan park.
- There were no signs of violence, no signs of any struggle.
- But not one of those people has been seen since.
- America - Tuesday, June 14. At 3:00 p.m. two coach-
- loads of young trippers - average age 19 - set off on a sigh-
- seeing tour from Casper, Wyoming. They were last seen
- heading in the direction of Cheyenne. Seven hours later the
- vehicles were found empty by the side of a lonely road.
- In the sand around the coaches there was a confusion of
- footprints. But they seemed to lead nowhere. A camera, a
- pair of binoculars and a girl's handkerchief were found.
- But, like the people in New Zealand's Bay of Plenty, those
- seventy-six youngsters were never seen again.
- At 4:30 p.m. that same day a small passenger-cargo
- vessel, the Amelio, left Barcelona with 165 people on board.
- Intended destination: Tunis. The Amelio was last seen
- steaming into a light sea mist south of the Balearic Islands.
- There was virtually no wind and the water was calm.
- The mist was a comparatively small patch, covering
- little more than about two square miles, but there is no
- record of the Amelio ever having come out of it. And
- of the area resulted in a complete blank. Not even a bit of
- wreckage has ever been found. As one coastguard official put
- ` it: "This is on of the absolute mysteries. It is just as
- if the sea had opened up its mouth and swallowed her."
- So there it was. More than 440 people disappeared in
- the oddest combination of circumstances during those two
- days in June.
- It would be irresponsible for us to state that those
- people have now become "Batch Consignment Components" for we
- have no absolute proof. We do suggest that, however, as a
- distinct possibility.
-
-
- The Ballantine tape was, of course, the most astounding
- feature of that television production. It was authentic.
- Absolutely and startlingly authentic. But, as Godwin had
- feared, it did bring the most "God-awful blow-back."
- Simon Butler introduced it and, as viewers will recall,
- all that could be seen at first was a haze of colors and
- uncertain shapes. There was a whirling blur of confusion -
- multi-colored dust dervishes glimpsed crazily through a
- tumbling kaleidoscope-and nothing, nothing more.
- Then the picture cleared and the camera seemed to be
- skimming low over a wild and barren landscape. No
- vegetation, no suggestion of life. Just mile after mile of
- wilderness and brown-red desolation.
-
-
-
- 150
- Sounds of static. Then, faintly, of men cheering. And
- finally there were the American voices - from the Space
- Control Room at NASA:
-
- FIRST VOICE: Okay...try to scan.
- SECOND VOICE: Scanning now.
- FIRST VOICE: The readings...where are the readings?
-
-
- At that moment, superimposed over the scanning of the
- alien landscape, viewers saw the computer-printed word
- "temperature." And, almost instantaneously, that word was
- duplicated in Russian. Now there was a great outburst of
- Russian voices. Excited, jubilant. And then, once again,
- the second American voice came through with great clarity:
- "Wait for it...w-a-i-t for it...Come on, baby, don't fail us
- now...not after all this way..."
- Computer figures appeared alongside the words on the
- screen. The temperature, they showed, was four degrees
- Centigrade. More printed words - "Wind Speed" - in American
- and then Russian. And the first American voice was shouting
- triumphantly: "It's okay...it's good, it's good." A russian
- voice, equally ecstatic, carried the same message.
- Then the computer print-out started giving the most
- vital information of all - information, in English and
- Russian, about the atmosphere of that strange and distant
- territory.
- The words and letters were appearing with agonizing,
- nerve-shredding slowness. As though they were being formed,
- uncertainly, by some retarded, mechanical child. There was a
- great silence of anticipation and of dread. Then from the
- screen came the shrieks and whoops of joy. The first
- American voice could be heard shouting over the din: "On the
- nose! Hallelujah! We got air, boys...we're home!
- Jesus...we've done it...we got air!
- His yells of excitement, and similar ones from his
- Russian counterpart, were drowned by the crescendo of
- cheering. And, during a lull in that cheering, the second
- American voice could be heard saying: "That's it! We got
- it...we got it! Boy, if they ever take the wraps off this
- thing, it's going to be the biggest date in history! May 22,
- 1962. We're on the planet Mars - and we have air!"
-
- That was it. The end of the Ballantine tape. And
- millions of viewers, in many parts of the world, briefly
- wondered if they had misheard. Man on Mars in 1962? No,
- surely, that was not possible...
- Simon Butler, his face sombre, assured them that it was
- more than possible. Here, from a transcript of the program,
- are his actual words:
-
-
-
- 151
- We believe that to be an authentic record of the
- first - and secret - landing on Mars by an unmanned
- space probe from Earth. We also believe the date given
- - May 22, 1962 - to be accurate.
- Clearly, the blanket of total security by which this
- information has been covered could have been maintained
- only through the active participation of governments at
- a very high level.
- Equally clearly, there must have been some powerful
- reason why the true conditions on Mars< suitable as they
- appear to be for human habitation, have been kept
- secret. Indeed, the effort which has gone into
- persuading the world at large that the opposite is true
- argues that some operation of supreme importance has
- been going on beneath this security cover.
- We believe that operation to be Dr. Carl Gerstein's
- Alternative 3.
- Whether a human survival colony has by now been
- established on Mars, or whether preparations are still
- in hand for its transportation from the Moon to Mars, we
- do not know. But we put out this program tonight as a
- challenge to those who do know to tell us the truth.
-
- He paused after spelling out that challenge, one hand
- resting on a model of the Earth and the other on a model of
- Mars, to underline its significance. The program was over
- and the gauntlet had been thrown down. The next move was up
- to the government. And the governments of other countries -
- particularly those of the super powers.
- Butler knew, of course, about the behind-the-screen
- doubts and anxieties. He knew how Harman had tried to neuter
- the program and, indeed, how he had come close to
- succeeding. He was only too aware that the company had taken
- a calculated risk in persisting with this program, that what
- had been revealed would very likely be emphatically denied,
- that there could be ugly repercussions for Clements and
- Fergus Godwin. And, of course, for himself.
- He was the anchorman, the man who - as far as the public
- was concerned - was right at the center of the entire
- investigation. He was well-known and well-respected and
- that, from the official viewpoint, made him doubly dangerous.
- It would be remarkable if attempts were not made to discredit
- him, to prove that, far from being a responsible commentator,
- he had been party to an ill-conceived hoax.
- At no time, however, had he considered opting out. He
- has always believed in the truth. He had always presented it
- professionally. And this particular truth was far too
- important to be suppressed.
- He concluded with these words:
-
-
-
-
- 152
- We regret if the implications of what you have seen
- are less than optimistic for the future of life on this
- planet. It has been our task, however, merely to bring
- you the facts as we understand them - and await the
- response.
-
-
- The response started almost before he finished speaking.
- Switchboards at newspaper offices and regional television
- stations were flooded with calls from frightened people, from
- people desperate for reassurance.
- Those people got their reassurance. They got it because
- of the statement drafted by Harman. But that statement was a
- lie.
-
-
-
-
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-
- 153
- SECTION THIRTEEN
-
-
-
- There is nothing new, of course, in the concept of men
- using the moon as a launch-pad for a new life on Mars. H.G.
- Wells, who correctly anticipated so many technical triumphs
- which seemed ludicrous to most people in his day - was
- expounding it back in 1901.
- Here, from his classic The First Men In The Moon, is a
- segment of dialogue between two space travellers:
-
- "It isn't as though we were confined to the moon."
- "You mean -?"
- "There's Mars - clear atmosphere, novel
- surroundings, exhilarating sense of lightness. It might
- be pleasant to go there."
- "Is there air on Mars?"
- "Oh, yes!"
- "Seems as though you might run it as a
- sanatorium..."
-
-
- So Wells, once again, has been proved right.
- A number of leading journalists, maybe remembering Wells and
- his track-record as a prophet, did not automatically believe
- the Harman denial. They were puzzled by it, and were
- possibly thrown a little by it, for it had the ring of
- authenticity. And after all, they reasoned, what possible
- motive could a reputable television company have for claiming
- they had just presented a tissue of untruths? And yet...Alan
- Coren, writing in The Times of June 21, was one of the first
- to throw doubts on the validity of the Harman statement:
-
-
- The seeming preposterousness of the story, on the
- other hand, was totally acceptable. The
- preposterousness of the times have seen to that. Why
- should the madness of the NASA program not be linked to
- the madness of Watergate, to create a Nasagate in which
- life is discovered on Mars, but the information is
- suppressed for governmental ends?
-
-
- That was a shot in the dark by Coren - a shot guided by
- instinct as much as by insight. But, as he will realize
- today, it was uncannily on target.
- But, in the final analysis, it was all to make little
- difference to Harman. Remember what was said at the meeting
- of the Policy Committee on August 4, 1977:
-
-
-
- 154
-
- A TWO: But what about the regional officer concerned?
- A Eight: You're right there. He should have stopped
- that television crap. He's proved himself to be
- utterly unreliable. He failed and failed badly
- and, what's worse, he could let us down again. The
- man, without any question, is a liability and I
- propose an Expediency.
- R TWO: Seconded.
- R EIGHT: Those in favor? ... Then that is unanimous.
- The method?
- A THREE: How about a telepathic sleep-job ... maybe
- with a gun...
- R EIGHT: That seems sensible ... it's too soon after
- Ballantine for another hot-job...
-
-
-
- Harman, on that day in August, was being sentenced to
- death. The date of his death, however, was not so easily
- settled. That, as Dr. Hugo Danningham has now explained,
- would depend on Harman's biorhythmic sensitivity cycle-on
- the unseen assault being synchronized with his moments of
- extreme vulnerability.
- James Murray of the Daily Express is another level-
- headed and highly-experienced writer who does not readily
- accept the obvious - particularly when it is given to him in
- the form of an official Press statement. He has a reputation
- for seeking the facts behind the statement. And so, despite
- the "Knock-down" treatment being given to the program on the
- front page of his own newspaper, he courageously stuck to his
- assessment of Butler, Benson and the others:
-
- They plausibly linked natural phenomena and real
- events in space to come to the inevitable conclusion
- that there was a monumental international conspiracy to
- save the best human minds by establishing a new colony
- on Mars...So all these scientists and intellectuals
- slipping abroad to the "Brain Drain" were really being
- shipped to Mars on rockets via the dark side of the
- moon.
-
-
- Murray, in other words, recognized the truth even though
- he did not have the facts completely to substantiate that
- truth.
- Men like Coren and Murray worried Harman. They were
- helping to perpetuate the doubts and suspicions he had tried
- to smother. And he was frightened that they might start
- digging deeper, that they might eventually be able to present
- the full and horrendous truth. Just as we are now doing in
- this book.
-
- 155
- The men of the Policy Committee had put no great
- priority on this particular murder. Alternative 3's chief
- executive officer in Britain had already been instructed to
- suspend Harman from his secret regional duties - and to
- recruit is successor. Harman would die. They knew that with
- certainty. He would die without revealing what he knew. And
- that was all that really mattered.
- Other men, for other reasons, were disturbed by the
- realization that the Alternative 3 sensation was not to be
- swiftly buried. They were particularly unhappy about Philip
- Purser's Sunday Telegraph suggestion that the investigation
- might have been a Fiendish double bluff inspired by the very
- agencies identified in the program".
- They were among the Members of Parliament, the
- overwhelming majority, who were not privy to the facts about
- Alternative 3. Some have since claimed that they suspected
- the truth but they certainly did not know it. Yet they had
- the task of coping with much of the terror which spread so
- insidiously after that television transmission.
- Most people, as we have said, were only too eager to
- believe Harman's denial. But a sizable minority appreciated
- the full significance of what had been revealed. These were
- people, in the main, who had already been uncomfortably aware
- of the sort of people who were only too aware of the mammoth
- cover-up which the 1968 Condon report had provided for so-
- called Flying Saucers.
- There were those who vaguely remembered what the Evening
- Standard had said about the $500,000 Condon study:
-
- It is losing some of its outstanding members, under
- circumstances which are mysterious to say the least.
- Sinister rumors are circulating...at least four key
- people have vanished from the Condon team without
- offering a satisfactory reason for their departure. The
- complete story behind the strange events in Colorado is
- hard to decipher...
-
- The validity of the suspicions in that Evening Standard
- article suddenly seemed to be confirmed by other statements
- later made public - quite apart from President Carter's
- apparently remarkable about- turn on the subject of Flying
- Saucers.
- Professor G. Gordon Broadbent: "At the very highest
- levels of East-West diplomacy there has been operating a
- factor of which we know nothing."
- Would a man of Broadbent's caliber make a statement of
- that nature lightly?
- Apollo veteran Bob Grodin: "The later Apollos were a
- smoke-screen...to cover up what's really going on out
- there...and the bastards didn't even tell us!"
- Why, if there was nothing to hide, should he make such a
- curious statement?
-
- 156
- More and more snippets of information started being
- remembered and re-quoted - some from old newspaper files,
- some from records leaked from NASA.
- Here, for instance, is a verbatim transcript from a
- taped conversation which Scott and Irwin had with Mission
- Control during their moon-walk in August, 1971:
-
-
- SCOTT: Arrowhead really runs east to west.
- MISSION CONTROL: Roger, we copy.
- IRWIN: Right...we're (garble)...we know that's a
- fairly good run. We're bearing 320, hitting range
- for 413...I can't get over those lineations, that
- layering on Mount Hadley.
- SCOTT: I can't either. That's really spectacular.
- IRWIN: They sure look beautiful.
- SCOTT: Talk about organization!
- IRWIN: That's the most organized structure I've ever
- seen!
- SCOTT: It's (garble)...so uniform in width...
- IRWIN: Nothing we've seen before this has shown such
- uniform thickness from the top of the tracks to
- the bottom.
-
-
- NASA has never explained those tracks - or who made them
- - although there are now grounds for the belief that they
- were left by a giant Moon-Rover vehicle of American-Russian
- design.
- That is just one more example of how information about
- real space progress is being kept strictly secret. Dr. James
- E. McDonald, professor of meteorology at the University of
- Arizona and senior physicist at its Institute of Atmospheric
- Physics, has been a vociferous critic of this secrecy.
- In The Enquirer on February 19, 1967, he said: "The
- U.S. Air Force has been scandalously blinding the public as
- to what is really going on in the skies. The Air Force
- investigations have been absurd, superficial and
- incompetent...and scientists all over the world had better
- stop accepting the ridiculous Air Force reports and start
- investigating the problem themselves at once...it's a problem
- demanding truly international investigation."
- So, with that sort of background to this latest
- television investigation, is it surprising that there were
- people not impressed by the denial? Or that those people
- should start demanding information from their Members of
- Parliament?
- Michael Harrington-Brice is typical of those M.P.s. He
- says: "I was put in an impossible position. For weeks after
- that program went out I was getting deputations at the House,
- demanding that the government should issue a formal denial.
-
-
- 157
- I tried to bring pressure for that to be done, for a
- government denial would have helped alleviate the
- understandable anxieties of my constituents. However, it was
- not possible to pin down anyone in authority.
- "I tried to put down questions about Alternative 3 but
- they were invariably blocked and what is particularly odd is
- that there now appears to be no official record of those
- questions.
- "I also tried to raise the matter privately with
- Ministers but I was invariably told that Alternative 3 was a
- subject they were not prepared to discuss."
- What, at that stage, was Harrington-Brice's personal
- opinion?
- "I formed the distinct impression that something really
- unusual was happening behind the scenes, that we in Britain
- were on the periphery of some secret venture being controlled
- by the super-powers.
- "Nothing specific was said, you understand, but hints
- were dropped. I was obliquely given the message that it
- would be sensible for me to stop probing.
- "It would be quite wrong, however, for me to pretend
- that, at that time, I had any information to confirm the
- accuracy of otherwise of the allegations made in that
- program."
- Another Member of Parliament, Bruce Kinslade, was also
- seeking an official investigation into the statements made
- during the television program - according to his private
- secretary.
- On Wednesday, July 6, Mr. Kinslade, as you may recall,
- was hit by a lorry while crossing a side street near his home
- in Kensington. The lorry did not stop and has never been
- traced. And Mr. Kinslade died almost instantaneously. The
- inquest verdict was "Accidental death". That verdict, for
- all we know, may have been accurate...
- Letters continued to arrive at Television Center.
- Letters which confirmed that more people, having had time to
- reflect, had reservations about the denial - or flatly
- refused to accept it.
- The President of the prestigious Hampstead H.G. Wells
- Society wrote: "In my experience I would estimate that there
- was a lot more truth in your program than the majority of the
- public realize."
- A woman living in Southcroft Road, London S.W.16, summed
- up the attitude of many in her thoughtful letter:
-
-
- With reference to your "Alternative 3" program
- which was shown on Monday, 20th June, several newspapers
- the following day declared the program to be a hoax, and
- your spokesman was quoted as saying, "Everything was
- based on what could happen."
-
-
- 158
- I and many other people feel strongly that this was
- is ridiculous claim is just another attempt by the
- government to hush things up (as seems to be the case
- with UFOs and the Bermuda Triangle). Everyone has a
- right to know what is going on; we all have to live on
- this planet, and space exploration should benefit us
- all.
- It greatly incenses me to be continually kept in
- the dark when any discovery is made. Pressure was
- obviously put on you, but it does you no credit to show
- up the production team as charlatans. No, I cannot
- believe it was a hoax for the following reasons:
- 1. Would you really have included references to
- Ballantine's death as a hoax - at the expense
- of his family's feelings?
- 2. The ex-astronaut was obviously a highly
- intelligent man and well-educated. He had seen
- something that caused the dreadful deterioration we
- had to witness.
- Please realize that the majority of your
- viewers are discriminating adults who can think for
- themselves. Let us have the truth of the matter.
-
-
-
- That July also brought evidence of other aspects of the
- disaster looming inevitably nearer for this world. The
- Times, July 26:
-
-
- A frightening picture of the accelerating world
- population is given in the 1977 World Population Report,
- published this week by Population Concern.
- The report points out that if the present rate of
- population growth had existed since the birth of Christ
- there would now be 900 people for every square yard of
- Earth.
- Half the fuel ever used by man has been burnt in
- the past 50 years.
- The world's population is now more than 4,000
- million and increasing by 200,000 every day.
-
-
-
- Two hundred thousand extra people on this crowded planet
- every single day! That is 73,000,000 a year. And that will
- result, in only three years, in more additional people than
- the entire present population of America!
- Those figures emphasize the magnitude of just one of the
- survival problems facing mankind - with this planet's water
- and other natural resources becoming progressively more
- scarce.
-
- 159
- And that is in addition to the inevitable "Greenhouse
- Armageddon" described by Gerstein.
- Is it, then, any wonder that the men behind Alternative
- 3 were anxious to accelerate their operation? Was it not
- obvious to them that time was running out - possibly even
- faster than they had earlier anticipated?
- During the autumn of 1977 the subject of Alternative 3
- began to drop out of the headlines. We know from Trojan that
- there was mounting activity behind the scenes - and that
- there was talk of attempts being made to sabotage the
- Alternative 3 operation. But the public, for a while, was
- allowed to forget.
- Then, on Thursday, September 29, Dr. Gerard O'Neill -
- the Princeton professor who had given that astonishing
- interview to the Los Angeles Times in July - again came
- boldly into public prominence. This time he had been
- interviewed by Angus Macpherson, space correspondent of the
- Daily Mail, and the headline said: THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF
- 2001 IS OUT THERE WAITING.
- Macpherson, respected as one of the world's most
- authoritative science-fact specialists, wrote:
-
- Flying to London today is another scientist who is
- perfectly serious about his prediction of what faces the
- human race as we approach the start of the 21st century.
- But American physicist Dr. Gerard O'Neill holds out the
- promise of a totally different future...a brave new
- world in space. The choice, as he sees it, is between
- George Orwell's 1984 and Arthur Clarke's 2001.
- "Tell humanity there's no hope and everyone
- applauds you. But tell them there is a way out and they
- get furious," say Dr. O'Neill, who has worked for seven
- years on a mind-stretching scheme for the emigration of
- most of us into artificial colonies in outer space.
- He has been brusquely dismissed as a pedlar of
- nonsense by Jacques Cousteau, whom he greatly admires,
- and there was hurt as well as humor on the lean face
- under its trendy Roman fringe as he told me: "Jaques is
- terribly worried about the pollution of the ocean and
- the destruction of its life.
- "He thinks we ought to be doing more about it. So
- do I. Environmentalists are really very negative.
- They're so obsessed with Earth's problems they don't
- want to hear about answers."
- O'Neill's own answers are that we not only can
- colonize the solar system - but must, if human life a
- few generations from now is to remain civilized or even
- bearable.
- O'Neill's colonists would get away from the start
- from the space suits and cell-like space stations of
- science fiction...
-
-
- 160
- O'Neill is coming to London to present his
- prediction of space colonization to the British
- Interplanetary Society.
- The BIS is a legendary forum for glimpses of the
- future. Its members have seen a Moon-landing ship
- unveiled, looking eerily like the Apollo LEM, but some
- thirty years before it.
- And they were the first to hear Arthur Clarke
- outline a visionary scheme for a global chain of
- communication satellites.
- This could be a similar bit of history making...
- For most of the generation that gaped at the first
- Moon landings it has become a madly expensive
- confidence trick - a game of golf on a useless rockpile
- that only two could play and that cost £500 a second.
- All this is desperately myopic, declares O'Neill,
- for the denizens of a planet whose 4,000 million
- inhabitants fact the prospect of being two to three
- times as crowded by the early years of the next century.
-
- "In fact, we found in space precisely the things we
- are most in need of - unlimited solar energy, rocks
- containing high concentrations of metals and, above all,
- room for Man to continue his growth and expansion...
- "A static society, which is what Earth would have
- to become, would need to regulate not only the bodies
- but the minds of its people." he told me. "I refuse to
- believe man has come to the end of change and experiment
- and I want to preserve his freedom to live in different
- ways.
- "I see no hope of saving it if we remain imprisoned on
- the Earth."
-
-
- Macpherson pointed out that O'Neill is "consulted
- respectfully - if a shade warily - by Government officials,
- Senate committees and State governors."
- The article showed that O'Neill was visualizing the
- future along slightly different lines to those approved by
- the men of Alternative 3. It also indicated that O'Neill was
- not aware - and possibly is still not aware - that the
- Alternative 3 "future" had already arrived.
- Macpherson wrote:
-
- His colonies are planned as vast cylindrical metal
- islands drifting in orbit, holding inside a natural
- atmosphere, trees, grass, rivers and animals - a capsule
- of a warm Earthlike environment.
- He see them reaching half the size of Switzerland,
- ultimately, housing 20 to 30 million people and
- sustained by the inexhaustible energy of space sunshine.
-
-
- 161
- Yet their construction, he insists, would need only
- the technology we already have...
-
- The article finished with these thoughts:
-
- For most people of the pre-space generation,
- probably, the moment when the magic finally went out of
- the adventure came a year ago when the dream of life on
- Mars was dispelled by the Viking spacecraft.
- But for O'Neill that was another plus for space.
- The best thing we could have found was nobody there.
- The colonization of the new frontier can take place
- without. repeating the shaming history of the Indian
- nation - or even the bison.
- "Perhaps nobody's there, anywhere, after all.
- Perhaps there isn't a Daddy to show us how to do things.
- "It's a bit frightening...but it gives us a lot of
- scope."
-
-
- We discussed the content of that article with M.P.
- Michael Harrington-Brice. What, in view of his own
- researches, was his opinion?
- He said: "Dr. O'Neill is arguably the most brilliant
- man in his own line in the Western world and I am certain he
- is right in saying the technology is already available for a
- project such as he envisages.
- "However, he is apparently working on the assumption
- that the information officially released about conditions on
- Mars is true and I would certainly hesitate before making
- that assumption.
- "If what was shown on the Ballantine tape was the real
- truth - and I have seen no evidence which convinces me it was
- not - then the whole situation changes dramatically.
- "Obviously it would be far easier and cheaper to
- colonize a suitable and empty planet, to which we have got
- comparatively ready access, than to build gigantic,
- artificial islands in the sky.
- "It would be grossly impertinent of me to say that Dr.
- O'Neill is wrong for he is a Pan of immense international
- stature. However, I can't help wondering if the political
- facts, the facts of East-West co-operation, have not been
- kept from him. There is certainly nothing in what he says
- which convinces me that Mars is not the venue for Alternative
- 3."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 162
- Harman, we learned later, read that article in the Daily
- Mail. He read it on the morning of publication - on
- September 29. He did not know then, of course, that he had
- exactly 48 days left to live.
-
-
-
- A cryptic message from Trojan. Brief, typed, unsigned:
- "Surprise development rumored. Sabotage possible. Will
- send details if and when available."
- We puzzled over the message but we did not try to
- contact Trojan. That was the arrangement. He always took
- the initiative. It was safer that way.
-
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-
- 163
- SECTION FOURTEEN
-
-
-
- They call it Archimedes Base. And that's where the
- trouble, the really big trouble, flared so violently.
- Archimedes is a walled crater-plain on the western
- border of the Mare Imbrium, the Moon's "Sea of Shadows:. It
- has a diameter of about 50 miles and, unlike the nearby
- Aristillus crater, it has a relatively smooth ground surface.
- That is why, according t. information from Trojan, it was
- developed as the principal transit camp on the Moon -the
- place from where people were normally lifted for the final
- leg of their journey to Mars.
- Man cannot survive in the natural atmosphere of the
- Moon. NASA said so years ago and NASA, in that instance, was
- telling the truth. So most of Archemedes Base was
- hermetically sealed under a transparent bubble inside which
- air and temperature was controlled to the levels usual on
- Earth. The construction had taken two years and had been a
- fantastic triumph of space engineering.
- Conditions under the bubble were similar to those
- visualized by Dr. O'Neill for his artificial worlds of the
- future. Men and women could live there comfortably for
- indefinite periods - secure inside a domed and gigantic
- greenhouse.
- There were two huge airlocks in the southern section of
- the bubble. Shuttle craft arriving from Earth and from Mars
- entered through these locks before taxiing to the centrally-
- sited Arrival Terminal. A series of roads the centrally-
- sited Arrival Terminal. A series of roads ran from the
- terminal to the stores and service areas and to the three
- separate "living-quarter villages" - one for pilots and
- resident personnel, one for "designated movers", and one for
- "batch-consignment components". And over it all was a spread
- of camouflage, reminiscent of that used during World War Two,
- to ensure that Archimedes Base could never be seen by
- unauthorized observers on Earth.
- There was another transit camp, the original one on the
- Moon, in the crater known as Cassini but that was now
- considered too small. Most of its equipment and furnishings
- had been moved to Archimedes. For Archimedes was the
- bustling center of activity...
- Trojan's cryptic message about possible sabotage was
- soon followed by this report:
-
- Stringent security ensures the complete segregation
- of Designated Movers from Batch-Consignment Components
- until after disembarkation in the new territory.
- They are transported in separate craft and, while
- awaiting transportation, they are quartered in different
- areas of Archimedes Base. This is as a result of an
-
- 164
- order from the Policy Committee.
- It is felt that among the Designated Movers there
- may be those who initially harbor reservations about the
- morality of the mental and physical processing
- considered necessary for Components.
-
-
- "Components"! Let us not be confused by the jargon
- euphemisms. Trojan uses them. Trojan, like most others in
- Alternative 3, has been brain-washed into accepting such
- words as normal. He is revolted by what has been done, by
- what is being done, but he has unwittingly absorbed the
- obscene distortion of language. So, just for a moment,
- forget "components". Trojan means people. He is writing
- about slaves, about men and women who have been mutilated
- mentally and physically, who have been programed to obey
- orders. And who have been condemned to a life of sub-human
- degradation.
- His report continued:
- These Designated Movers can have their doubts put
- into "proper perspective", after they have become
- acclimatized to life in the new territory, by
- representatives of the Committee in Residence. They
- can, according to official reasoning, be persuaded to
- recognize that the ultimate survival of the human race
- must take precedence over the fate of a limited number
- of low-grade individuals.
-
-
- Consider the appalling significance of that paragraph!
- It means, if "official reasoning" is right, that Ann Clark
- and Brian Pendelebury and others like them can be taught to
- regard fellow humans as expendable beasts of burden. It
- means, surely, that natural compassion must be systematically
- eradicated, that the minds of "designated movers" are also
- moulded to match the needs of Alternative 3. Orwell's vision
- of 1984, it seems, has already come to fruition - millions of
- miles from Earth.
- Trojans report then went on to detail the curious
- circumstances which resulted in Earthly efforts to undermine
- Alternative 3. And which eventually culminated in carnage at
- Archimedes Base ...
- Bacteria are far more tenacious than humans when it
- comes to clinging to life. They survive the seemingly
- impossible. They can apparently retreat into a form of
- hibernation for centuries. For millennia even. Then, when
- conditions are right, they wake up, as it were, and they
- flourish. That is apparently what happened on Mars.
- The "dynamic changes" recorded in 1961 and described by
- Gerstein provided the ideal conditions. And across the
- silent wastes of the empty planet there was a great awakening
-
-
- 165
- of the minute unicellular living organisms. They developed
- and they spread. they were too small to be seen but they
- were there, waiting, when Man first arrived...
- These were alien strains of bacteria, pernicious and
- voracious strains never before encountered by humans, but
- they were not numerous enough noticeably to damage the
- imported and carefully-cultivated crops. Not until late
- 1976. That, as we now know, was the time of the great
- blight...
- Attempts were made to fight them with bactericides and
- even by bacteriophages which involved the introduction of
- ultra-microscopic organisms normally parasitic to bacteria.
- But the Committee in Residence realized it was a losing
- battle. And that was when the super-powers decided they
- needed The German.
- The German, whose name we have agreed to withhold, is
- possibly the most imaginatively successful bacteriologist in
- the world. That is accepted by his contemporaries in the
- East and the West. He has probably achieved more than any
- other man in his sphere - not only in combating bacteria but
- in harnessing them into the service of man. That was why he
- was needed so urgently in the new territory...
- But he refused to go. He was seen by the Alternative 3
- regional officer and, eventually, by the West German Chief
- Executive Officer. They argued with him, offered him every
- possible inducement, but he remained adamant. Certainly he
- would respect the confidences he had entrusted to him but he
- had work to do, work on Earth, and he had absolutely no
- inclination to become involved in Alternative 3.
- They did recruit his principal assistant, an American in
- his mid-thirties, who travelled as a designated mover in
- February, 1977. He went willingly, enthusiastically even.
- But he is another man whose identity it would be unfair to
- reveal for, if he is still alive, he is today being hunted.
- He is being hunted by agents of the East and the West.
- He will certainly have changed his name by now, and
- probably his appearance as well, but he must know that for
- him there can be no permanent hiding place. He is the man
- chiefly responsible for founding the guerilla group known as
- Anti-Alternative. He was also responsible for the eventual
- disaster at Archimedes Base. We call his The Instigator.
- It soon became apparent to the Committee in Residence
- that The Instigator, although competent and experienced,
- lacked the intuitive flair needed for the new-territory task.
- they still needed The German. But The German was still
- refusing...
- Urgent meetings were convended in the Hall of the
- Committee in Residence. there were consultations with the
- Policy Committee on Earth, with key men in Department Seven.
- And eventually a decision was reached. The German liked and
- respected The Instigator. He had confidence in his
- judgement. And if any man could persuade The German to
-
- 166
- become a designated mover it was The Instigator. He should
- go back to Earth, they decided. He should go back to talk to
- The German. That, as it turned out, was their biggest and
- most disastrous mistake...
- They had made one serious miscalculation over The
- Instigator. they had failed to realize that he still had not
- got the plight of the Components into "proper perspective".
- Maybe that would have changed if he had been allowed more
- time for there had been others, many others, who had needed
- months to become completely accustomed to living with an
- enslaved sub-species. All of them had eventually accepted
- that this was part of the essential balance. But The
- Instigator had not been allowed time, not enough time, and he
- was tormented with secret guilt. What right, he wondered,
- did he have to be one of the Chosen, on of the Superior
- Select? He was racked with disgust and with doubts and he
- knew then that, somehow, he had to shatter the component
- system...
- And then they told him they were returning him to Earth.
- There was a stop-over at Archimedes Base on his return
- journey and he was temporarily housed with a new group of
- designated movers awaiting transportation to the new
- territory. They knew nothing, these people, about the
- components - quartered, as usual, in a different "village"
- -who were being condemned to spend the rest of their lives as
- slaves. He told them. He told them exactly what was
- happening and exactly what to expect. He described the
- kidnappings and the mutilations being carried out on Earth-
- for their benefit and comfort. And they were not ready for
- such horrendous information. They were normal people, highly
- intelligent and sensitive, and they had not yet been exposed
- to the skilled and persuasive arguments of the Committee in
- Residence. They were uncertain about whether to believe him.
- It all sounded so lunatically outrageous. Yet this man was
- strangely convincing...
- the truth. They decided surreptitiously to visit the
- village he'd described. And that is what sparked the
- holocaust at Archimedes Base...
- The Instigator did not contact The German when he
- returned to Earth. He fled into hiding. And then, with a
- small group of trusted collaborators, he founded his action
- group, Anti-Alternative. This group, unlike organizations
- such as the IRA of the PLO, could make no public statements
- for such statements could lead to them being rooted out and
- destroyed. They dedicated themselves to disrupting, by
- guerilla tactics, all work connected with the exploration and
- exploitation of space. Their actions, they felt, might force
- an eventual re-think on Alternative 3.
- On October 1, 1977, the Daily Telegraph carried a story,
- written by Ian Ball in New York, which was headlined:
- SATELLITE ROCKET No.2 BLOWS UP. It said:
-
-
- 167
- A second communications satellite was reduced to
- debris over the Atlantic yesterday after another
- spectacular rocket failure at the Cape Canaveral space
- center in Florida.
- Within two and a half weeks, the failures have
- destroyed communications satellite projects, one
- European, the other American, worth a total of $91.4
- million (about £54 million).
- An Atlas Centaur rocket, carrying a $49.4 million
- Intelsat 1V-A satellite built by Hughes Aircraft, was
- destroyed minutes after its launching late on Thursday.
- The failure was similar to the September 13 explosion of
- a Delta rocket carrying a $42 million European Space
- Agency orbital test satellite.
- "We had indications of trouble in the engine area
- within seconds after lift-off," said the Atlas Centaur
- launch director, Mr. Andrew Stofan. "At 55 seconds the
- Atlas lost control and broke up. It flipped, broke
- apart, and then the Atlas blew up."
- The remainder of the Centaur stage was destroyed by
- an Air Force range safety officer, ending the mission
- four miles high and four miles down the range. The
- debris from rocket and satellite fell into the ocean.
- The next Intelsat 1V - a launch scheduled for
- November 10 - and other Atlas Centaur launches have been
- postponed until an investigation into the latest failure
- is completed.
-
-
- Similar problems were being experienced by Russian
- space-teams. On October 11, 1977, the Guardian carried this
- Reuter report from Moscow:
-
-
- Two Soviet Cosmonauts failed yesterday to dock
- their Soyuz-25 craft with the Salyut-6 orbiting
- laboratory.
- Mission commander Vladimir Kovalyonok and flight
- engineer Valery Ryumin, thought to be planning a long
- stay aboard the new space station, were ordered back to
- Earth after abandoning the link-up.
-
- Tass, announcing the latest in a series of troubles
- to affect the Salyut series, said there had been
- "deviations from a planned docking regime" during the
- approach while the Cosmonauts' Soyuz-25 capsule was 120
- yards from the station. The Soyuz-25 failure has come
- as a blow to Soviet space chiefs...
-
-
-
-
-
- 168
- So that is what happened. Did it happen because of The
- Instigator? That is a question we cannot answer. We simply
- do not know. We do know, however, that the catastrophe at
- Archimedes Base can be traced back directly to The
- Instigator. And that was incomparably more devastating.
-
-
- Leonard Harman died at ten minutes past two in the
- morning on Wednesday, November 16, 1977. He died, wearing
- his pyjamas, in the dining-room at his home.
- His widow, Mrs. Sarah Harman, gave this evidence at the
- inquest:
-
- My husband had been depressed and rather withdrawn
- for some time, possibly for six months or more, but he
- never confided any reason to me.
- I knew there had been some friction between him and
- Mr. Godwin, Mr. Fergus Godwin, at the studios and at
- first I thought that was possibly making him feel the
- way he did. But the trouble at the studios, whatever it
- was, seemed to pass over and still my husband was no
- better. I urged him on several occasions to see a
- doctor but he told me that it was nothing serious and
- that I was not to fuss.
- I never, at any time, thought he might be likely to
- take his own life.
- On the Tuesday evening, I mean the evening o the
- 15th of November, we watched television and then went to
- bed as usual just before midnight. I didn't notice
- anything particularly unusual about him. He behaved
- just as he normally did.
- We read in bed for a while and it must have been
- nearly one o'clock before we settled down for sleep.
- Just before two o'clock I was disturbed by him
- getting out of bed. I assumed he was going to the
- bathroom. But then he seemed to be gone a long time and
- I can't really explain why but I began to get rather
- worried. I had a feeling that something wasn't quite
- right.
- I called out to him but there was no reply so I got
- out of bed. The bathroom door was open and, because of
- the street lights outside, I could see that he was not
- in there.
- Then I heard a movement from downstairs. I called
- out to him again but still there was no reply. By this
- time I thought that he must be feeling unwell and that
- he'd probably gone down to the kitchen to make himself a
- hot drink. He'd done this once or twice before and it
- had always soothed his stomach.
-
-
-
-
- 169
- I decided then to go down and make the drink for
- him. But he wasn't in the kitchen. The house was
- completely silent. I called out to him again but there
- was still no reply. I was a bit frightened by this time
- because I couldn't possibly imagine what he could be
- doing.
- There weren't any lights on, not until I switched
- on the one in the hall, and my husband had never done
- anything like this before. He'd never walked in
- his sleep or anything.
- Then there was a sort of scuffling noise from the
- dining-room. I went in and he was standing there in the
- darkness in the middle of the room. I switched the
- light on and spoke to him but he didn't seem to hear.
- His eyes were open - they were staring straight at me -
- but he didn't seem to be aware of me or of anything
- else. It was as if he was in a trance.
- He had a gun in his hand, a little pistol, and he
- put the barrel to his head and pulled the trigger. And
- that's all that happened. The next second he was dead.
-
-
- Mrs. Harman also told the coroner that her husband had
- not owned a gun, that he'd never had one in the house.
- But the coroner reached his own conclusion. Wives, in
- his experience, didn't necessarily know everything about
- their husbands.
- The verdict was "suicide".
-
-
- Disaster hit Archimedes Base on a cataclysmic scale.
- The Arrival Terminal ... the service centres ... the
- buildings of the three villages ... they were all ravaged and
- wrenched from their foundations by the sudden and cyclopean
- clash of uncountable tornados. They crumbled and
- disintegrated, these buildings, as they juddered and
- somersaulted high in the air. And people spilled from them.
- The living and 'he dead - they all looked the same in that
- great spasm of destruction. They were all flailing limbs and
- buckled, distorted bodies. Many of them exploded far above
- the ground and bits of them whirled around in the dust and
- the debris before being sucked out into the eternal blackness
- of space.
- And all of it, we now know, had been sparked by a gentle
- and compassionate marine biologist called Matt Anderson. He
- had meant well. He had been inspired by the highest motives.
- By consideration and humanity, by raw and spontaneous pity.
- And he had unleashed a nightmare.
- That is clear from documents analyzed by Trojan. Very
- little else, however, is certain. there were few survivors
- and their accounts were so disjointed and confused. The full
- facts, now, will probably never be known.
-
- 170
- Here, however, is what we have been able to piece
- together:
-
- Anderson, a thirty-three-year-old single man from Miami,
- Florida, was one of the designated movers at Archimedes Base
- who listened to The Instigator. He was one of the small
- group who secretly visited the segregated Components Village.
- He talked to the people there, heard enough to realize that
- The Instigator had been telling the truth. It was grotesque
- and barbaric but it was, unquestionably, the truth.
- That whole party of designated movers was scheduled for
- transportation to the new territory that night. And
- everything would have been different if they had all gone.
- there would have been no disaster.
- They would certainly have posed a bigger "conscience
- problem" to the Committee in Residence but, in time, the
- Committee would have converted them into accepting the
- necessary realities of Alternative 3.
- But Anderson did not travel with the others. He
- stumbled on the return journey from the village of the
- slaves. He stumbled and hurt his spine. And it was decided
- that he was not fit to travel, that he should stay for a
- while at Archimedes Base.
- Ten days later he slipped unseen from his room and again
- visited that village. It was not difficult for there were no
- guards. There was no need for guards around the village.
- The people temporarily there had been instructed to remain
- their quarters. And they had been programed to obey,
- unquestioningly, every order they received.
- Anderson wanted to talk to them at length, to understand
- them, to see if he could possibly help. And that was when he
- got his great shock. By then there was a new Batch
- consignment in the village and in that Batch was a man he
- knew, a man who, years earlier, had been a colleague at
- school.
- The man recognized him, could obviously think fluently
- and intelligently, but all the vital personality had been
- gouged out of him. His bearing and his attitude showed that
- he knew and accepted his position. He was a slave. That was
- when Anderson knew he had to take action...
-
- Trojan's report says:
-
- Two of the Components who did survive have revealed
- under interrogation that they heard Anderson talking to
- the man of two occasions, on that first day and later
- when he returned with details of the plan for the
- intended evacuation. This is principally how Department
- Seven has been able to establish much of what did happen
- before the disaster...
-
-
-
- 171
- There was an aerospace technician in the latest group of
- designated movers, a highly-qualified man who had been
- trained by NASA, and Anderson, it seems, sought him out and
- explained the whole situation. He told this man of the
- atrocities to which they were all, unwittingly, a party.
- He elaborated on how they had been lured towards a debased
- and de-humanized future, on how they would be battening for
- the rest of their lives on the misery of the mutilated
- slaves. He convinced him it was their duty to rescue the
- people from the village, to return them to their families on
- Earth - and to ensure that this traffic in human life was
- stopped for ever.
-
- Trojan's report continues:
-
- The main depot for craft on the Earth-run was south
- of Archimedes Base on the far side of the mountain range
- known as Spitzbergen. Most long range vehicles were
- maintained and parked there and smaller craft were used
- to convey passengers to and from Archimedes, rather in
- the style of airport buses on Earth.
- There were invariably a number of these smaller
- craft on the tarmac at the Archimedes Arrival Terminal
- and the plan was for Anderson and Gowers, the aerospace
- technician, to steal one of these craft and use it to
- evacuate as many of the Components as possible.
- Another sympathetic designated mover, briefed on
- the technicalities by Gowers, would operate one of the
- airlocks in the southern section of the bubble to allow
- them through. They would then travel to the main depot
- where by force if necessary, they would commandeer a
- vessel in which to make the journey back to Earth.
-
-
- So that, apparently, was what was meant to happen. But
- it all went wrong. Horribly and hideously wrong. Gowers
- found a suitable craft and he checked it, established that it
- was fuelled and ready for flight. And Anderson was in charge
- of discreetly marshalling the people in the village of
- slaves, of supervising their march to the Terminal.
- Everything went well at first. There were a hundred and
- fifty-five slaves in the village at that time and the small
- craft could accommodate only eighty-four of them, so Anderson
- selected the youngest, including his former schoolmate, for
- in his opinion they ought to have priority. When he returned
- to Earth and publicly exposed this sick side if Alternative 3
- there would be such an international outcry that the other
- slaves would also be returned to their homes. Yes, and those
- who had already been taken to the new territory. The vast
- majority of human beings would never tolerate the obscenities
- being committed in their name. That, according to the
- evidence from Trojan, is what Anderson really thought.
-
- 172
- There was no problem in sifting aside those who were not
- to immediately saved, although all the people in the village
- now knew exactly what was being planned, for, of course, the
- slaves had been programed into automatic obedience.
-
- Trojan's report went on:
-
- One of the surviving Components later interrogated
- said that Anderson told them: "There are few guards and
- so it is unlikely that any serious attempt will be made
- to prevent us leaving this Base or, indeed, this planet.
- "However, those of you chosen for repatriation must
- remember that, in these circumstances, it is better to
- kill than be captured. The lives and freedom of many
- people depend on us getting back to Earth and so you
- must be prepared to kill anyone who tries to stop you.
- that is an order."
-
-
-
- In fact, six of Alternative 3's resident personnel were
- soon killed. They were trampled down and kicked to death by
- the slaves, near or in the Terminal, when they tried to stop
- the party reaching the craft. They were left broken and
- bleeding on the ground and the slaves, with no show of
- emotion, walked over them and climbed on board. Then the
- engines fired into life and Gowers, seeing the opening-lights
- winking around the airlock on the left, eased them upwards.
- The craft hovered briefly in the still air, thirty or
- forty feet above the tarmac, and then the inner lip of the
- airlock rolled aside like a transparent stage curtain.
- their path was now clear and Gowers depressed a switch to
- start the forward thrust. the horror, at that moment, was
- just seven seconds away...
-
- Trojan's report picks up the story:
-
- A senior technician at Archimedes Central Control,
- one of the permanent staff who did survive, has made a
- statement in which he describes how he was alerted by
- shouting and screaming from the direction of the
- Terminal. the angle of his view prevented him from
- observing what was happening there but then he did
- notice the unexpected opening of the airlock door. He
- knew that if the outer door were also to open, possibly
- because of some malfunction in the equipment, the Base
- would be subjected immediately to acute decompression.
- He saw no traffic and no traffic was scheduled for
- departure. So, assuming there was a serious fault and
- that the shouts were probably ones of warning, he
-
-
-
- 173
- pressed a master-control button. This was on a board
- designed to activate a fail-safe system, over-riding all
- other, and his action resulted in the airlock door
- snapping instantly back into position.
- An experienced pilot could have coped with the
- problem by taking avoiding action and returning his
- craft to the Terminal but Gowers was not an experienced
- pilot...
-
-
- Gowers, in fact, was almost at the door when it closed.
- Suddenly, straight ahead of him and all around him, there
- was a transparent domed wall. He felt trapped like a fly
- under an upturned tumbler, and he panicked. He swerved the
- craft violently upwards to the left and then, in desperation,
- he over-compensated and jerked it into a fast and erratic
- zig-zag course. the craft, now bucking viciously, surged
- towards the roof. Gowers, hopelessly out of control,
- snatched wildly at the control stick, sending the craft into
- a lethal whiplash dive. It exploded into one of the walls of
- the dome, spewing fire and wreckage and blazing bodies, and
- it smashed a devastating hole in the transparent surface.
- The entire base, where the air was artificially
- maintained at Earth pressure, immediately decompressed. It
- was as if some mammoth and malignant vacuum-cleaner was
- greedily sucking everything into its mouth. Litter-cans and
- small vehicles and the six men who'd been trampled to death.
- And the savagery of the maelstrom shattered heavy objects
- against the dome, rattling them and bouncing them until they
- too punched their way through and were swirled out into the
- outer blackness. And the new holes brought new snatching
- whirlwinds. And the buildings groaned and surrendered and
- shot up, disintegrating, in that monstrous cannonade of
- havoc. That day brought death to every Designated
- Mover at Archimedes Base. There were twenty-nine of
- them -scientists, technicians and medical specialists -
- mainly from America and Russia. And not one survived.
- They were brilliant men. Carefully selected men. Today
- they are mere particles of dust. Drifting through the
- uncharted wastes of eternity.
- However, as we have indicated, there were survivors.
- Two of the people known as components lived through the
- holocaust and so did five of the resident staff. If they had
- perished the events of that terrible day at Archimedes would
- probably have remained a mystery for ever. There would
- possibly have been reports from observatories of a strange
- and momentary flare of activity on the moon - activity which
- might have been presumed to be the result of some unknown
- natural phenomena. And that would have been all. But
- because of these seven survivors, because of the information
- they gave to Department Seven and which Trojan has passed to
- us, the truth can be recognized.
-
- 174
- These seven lived because at the time of the devastation
- they happened to be insulated in rooms where the atmosphere
- was independently maintained - and they escaped to the
- obsolete base at Cassini.
- Cassini Base, we understand, is now being redeveloped.
- It will once again become the principal transit camp on the
- moon. The Alternative 3 operation suffered a serious set-
- back at Archimedes but it has certainly not been abandoned.
- No voyages are being made from Earth at the moment for
- there is much work to be done at Cassini but people are still
- being watched and assessed as potential Designated Movers.
- And, according to Trojan, plans are being made for the
- imminent round-up of more Components.
- Maybe there are men and women in your town, possibly on
- your street, who will disappear, suddenly and inexplicably,
- in the near future...men and women already ear-marked for an
- astonishingly different existence on that far-distant plan-t.
- They would already have gone, those people, if it had
- not been for the obstinacy of The German. And for the
- concerned compassion of The Instigator. They would already
- have joined those who, if biologist Stephen Manderson is
- right, are now on a planet where no squirrel will ever
- scamper. And where no nightingale will ever sing.
- There is just one final point for us to make. On the
- back cover of this book you will note one word which you may
- consider puzzling: "speculation".
- Why "Speculation"? That is a valid question ...
- especially in view of the fact that so much of our evidence,
- particularly that quoted from newspapers, was already a
- matter of public record. Well ... we did mention that
- politicians tried to suppress this book, that two in Britain
- sought injunctions to prevent its publication. And we did
- explain that we were forced into a "reluctant compromise".
- Need we say more?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- E N D
-
-
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-
-
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-
- 175