Crabs On The Island
by Anatoly Dneprov
"Hey, you there! Be careful!" shouted Cookling
at the sailors, who, standing up to their waists in the water,
were trying to drag a small wooden case along the gunwale of
the boat. It was the last of ten crates the engineer had brought
to the island.
"Phew! Isn't it hot! Like a furnace," he groaned,
wiping his thick red neck with a bandana handkerchief. He
pulled off his sweat-soaked shirt and threw it on the sand. "Take
your things off, Tov. There's no civilization here."
Dejectedly I watched the light schooner rocking gently on
the waves at a distance of a mile or so from the shore. It
would come back for us in three weeks' time.
"Why the devil did we have to come to this sun-hell with
your machines?" I demanded of Cookling as I undressed. "With
a sun like this we'll be peeling like cucumbers tomorrow."
"Never mind. The sun will come in useful. Incidentally,
it's exactly noon, and it's just above our heads."
"It's always like that at the equator," I muttered,
not taking my eyes off the distant schooner. "All
the geography books tell you that."
The sailors had come over to us and were standing in silence
before the engineer. Unhurriedly he put his hand in his trouser
pocket and took out a wad of notes.
"Is that enough?" he asked, giving them several.
One of them nodded.
"In that case you can return to the ship. Remind Captain
Gale we shall expect him in twenty days' time."
Then Cookling turned to me. "Let's get busy, Tov," he
said. "I'm impatient to begin." I stared at him.
"To tell you the truth, I don't know why we've come here.
I understand that it may not have been convenient at the Admiralty
for you to tell me about it. But I think you can now."
Cookling grimaced and looked down at the sand.
"Of course I can. I would have told you all about it
even then but there was no time."
I felt he was lying, but said nothing. Cookling stood rubbing
his purple neck with his greasy palm. He always did that when
he was going to tell a lie, I knew, and now that was quite
sufficient for me.
"You see, Tov, we're going to perform an interesting
experiment to test the theories of that. . . what's his name.
. .?" He hesitated and looked searchingly at me.
"That English scientist. Damn it, I've clean forgotten
his name. No, I've got it— Charles Darwin."
I went over to him and put my hand on his bare shoulder.
"Look here, Cookling. You seem to think I'm a brainless
idiot who doesn't know who Darwin was. Stop lying and tell
me straight why we've landed on this blazing scrap of land
in the middle of the ocean. And please don't mention Darwin
to me again."
Cookling burst out laughing, displaying a mouthful of false
teeth. Backing away a few paces, he said, "You're an ass,
Tov, all the same. Because it is Darwin we're going to test
here."
"And that's what you've dragged ten crates of old iron
here for?" I demanded, moving close to him again. Hatred
for this fat sweating man began to well up inside me.
"Yes," he said, and his smile vanished. "As
for your duties, the first thing you have to do is to open
crate No. 1 and get out the tent, water, tinned stuff and the
tools to open the others."
Cookling spoke in the same tones he had used when I had first
met him at the firing-ground. He had been in military uniform
then, and so had I.
"Very good," I muttered and went over to case numbered
one.
Within two hours we had pitched a tent on the beach, and put
a spade, crowbar, hammer, chisel, several screw-drivers, and
other tools into it. In addition we stowed away about a hundred
tins of different foods and containers of fresh water.
In spite of being the boss, Cookling worked like a bull and
was, indeed, burning to get started. With all the work, we
did not notice that the "Dove" had weighed anchor
and disappeared behind the horizon.
After supper we started on crate No. 2. It contained an ordinary
two-wheeled barrow of the kind used at railway stations to
carry luggage.
I was turning to the third crate when Cookling stopped me.
"Let's look at the map first. We've got to distribute
the things at different places."
I looked at him in amazement.
"It's for the experiment," he explained.
The island was round, like a plate turned upside down, with
a small bay in the north—where we had landed. It was ringed
by a sandy beach about fifty yards wide. Behind the beach stretched
a low plateau overgrown with stunted shrubs of some kind, parched
by the heat.
The diameter of the island did not exceed two miles.
A number of places on the map had been marked in red pencil—some
along the shore, others inland.
"We've got to take the things we're going to unpack now
to all these places," said Cookling.
"What are they—measuring
instruments of some sort?"
"No," said the engineer and chuckled. He had the
obnoxious habit of laughing when it happened that someone didn't
know what he did.
The third case was incredibly heavy. It seemed to me it must
contain some massive machine. But when I knocked the first
boards off, I nearly gasped with astonishment. Metal bars and
slabs of metal of every size and shape fell out. The case was
crammed with metal billets.
"You might think we were going to play bricks!" I
exclaimed, unpacking heavy rectangular, cubic, round, and spherical
ingots.
"Hardly," replied Cookling, and went on to the next
crate.
Case No. 4, and all the rest up to and including the ninth,
were filled with similar ingots.
There were three kinds—grey, red, and silvery, and I could
easily tell that they were iron, copper, and zinc.
When I was about to open the last box, Cookling said "We'll
open this one when we've distributed these ingots."
We spent three days pushing them in the barrow over the island.
We dumped them out in small heaps, and left some on the sand.
Others, on Cookling's instructions, I buried. Some of the heaps
consisted of ingots of every kind, others of only one. When
it was all done, we returned to the tent for the tenth crate.
"Open it," Cookling ordered, "but be careful."
This case was much lighter and smaller than the others. It
was packed tight with sawdust which covered a package wrapped
in felt and oiled paper. We opened the package, and uncovered
a most strange-looking apparatus.
At first glance it looked like a large metal child's toy shaped
like a crab. But it was no ordinary crab. In addition to six
large articulated claws, it had in front two pairs of slender
tentacles whose ends were tucked into the gaping protuberant "mouth" of
the hideous beast. In a depression on its back gleamed a small
parabolic mirror of polished metal with a dark-red crystal
in its centre. Unlike an ordinary toy crab, this one had two
pairs of eyes, in front and behind.
For a long time I stared in bewilderment at this object.
"Like it?" asked Cookling after a long silence.
I shrugged my shoulders.
"It looks more as though we've come to play with bricks
and kid's toys."
"This is a dangerous toy," said Cookling smugly. "You'll
see in a minute. Take it up and put it on the sand."
The crab was light, not weighing more than ten pounds.
"And now what?" I asked the engineer in irony. "Let's
wait a bit until it warms up." We sat down and watched
the little metal monster. After a couple of minutes I noticed
that the mirror on its back was slowly turning towards the
sun.
"Oh, it's coming to life, it seems!" I exclaimed,
and stood up.
As I rose my shadow accidentally fell across the mechanism.
The crab's feet suddenly began to move and it made for the
sun again. I was so taken aback that I jumped to one side.
Cockling burst out laughing. "There's your toy! Gave
you a fright, did it?" I wiped my damp forehead.
"For God's sake, Cockling, tell me—what are we going
to do with it? Why have we come here?"
He got up, came
over me, and said in tones that were now serious.
"To
test Darwin's theory."
"But that's a biological theory, a theory of natural
selection, evolution, and so on..," I muttered.
"Exactly. Ah, look -- our hero's gone to get a drink."
I was astounded. The toy had crawled up to the water's edge
and, lowering its proboscis, was quite evidently drinking.
Having sucked up its fill, it crawled back into the sunshine
and stopped motionless.
I stared at the little machine and was conscious of a strange
feeling of revulsion, mingled with fear, toward it. For an
instant the clumsy toy crab reminded me somehow of Cookling
himself.
"Did you invent it?" I asked the engineer after
a pause.
"Uh-huh," he mumbled, and stretched himself out
on the sand.
I lay down too and watched the strange machine in silence.
It seemed now to be quite lifeless.
I crawled over to it on my belly and began to scrutinize it.
The crab's back could be described as a semi-cylinder with
flat depression's in front and behind. In each of these there
were two openings resembling eyes. This impression was strengthened
by the fact that the gleam of crystals deep in the interior
could be seen through them. Underneath there was a flat surface
for a belly. From just above this platform three pairs of large
jointed pincers and two pairs of small ones protruded. I was
unable to see inside the crab.
As I looked at the toy, I tried to understand why the Admiralty
should attach so much importance to it that it had equipped
a special ship for the expedition to the island.
Cookling and I lay on the sand until the sun had sunk so low
on the horizon that the shadow cast by the bushes growing some
distance away fell on the metal crab. As soon as this happened,
it moved slightly and crawled out again into the sunlight.
But the shadow overtook it and then our crab started crawling
along the shore, coming closer and closer to the water, which
was still lit by the sun. The warmth of the sun's rays was
quite indispensable to it, it seemed.
We got to our feet and slowly followed the machine.
In this way we gradually circled the island, until we finally
came to its western shore.
There, almost at the water's edge, lay one of the heaps of
metal. When the crab got within some ten paces of the heap,
it suddenly made a rush for it as if it had forgotten all about
the sun and stopped dead by one of the copper bars.
Cookling touched my arm. "Let's get back to the tent
now," he said. "We'll see something interesting tomorrow
morning."
We ate our supper in silence in the tent and then wrapped
ourselves in light flannel blankets. It seemed to me that Cookling
was pleased that I hadn't asked him any questions. Before falling
asleep, I heard him tossing from side to side and chuckling
now and again, which meant he knew something nobody else did.
Early next morning I went to bathe. The water was warm
and I had a long swim, enjoying the sight, to the east, of
the crimson rays of the sun just rising above the water whose
mirror-like surface was scarcely ruffled by the long slow swell.
When I returned and entered the tent, the engineer was no
longer there.
"Gone to feast his eyes on his mechanical monster," I
thought, and opened a tin of pineapple.
But I had no more than swallowed three slices when I heard
his voice, from a distance at first, and then getting louder
and louder.
"Lieutenant, come here quick!" he was
shouting. "It's begun! Hurry! Quick!"
I went out of the tent and saw Cookling standing among the
bushes on a hillock and waving to me.
"Come on," he said, puffing like a steam engine. "Be
quick!"
"Where to?"
"Where we left our little beauty yesterday."
The sun was already high in the sky when, running all the
way, we reached the heap of metal. The ingots were shining
so brightly I could make out nothing at first.
It was only when we were a couple of steps away that I noticed
two thin streams of bluish smoke rising above the heap, and
then—I stopped as if paralysed. I rubbed my eyes, but the apparition
did not vanish. By the heap of metal stood two crabs, exactly
like the one we had unpacked yesterday.
"Could one of them have been buried in that heap of scrap?" I
exclaimed.
Cookling doubled up several times, chuckling and rubbing his
hands.
"Stop playing the fool!" I shouted. "Where
did the second crab come from?"
"It was born! It was born last night."
I bit my lip and without saying a word went right up to the
crabs, above whose backs the thin wisps of smoke were rising.
At first I thought I was suffering from hallucinations: both
crabs were hard at work!
Exactly, they were at work, their slender front tentacles
moving rapidly up and down. The tentacles were in contact with
the bars and, producing an electric arc on their surface, as
in electric welding, they were cutting off bits of metal. The
crabs quickly pushed the metal into their wide mouths. Inside
these mechanical creatures could be heard a humming noise.
At times a shower of hissing sparks was ejected from their
mouths, and then the second pair of tentacles extracted finished
components.
These components were put together in definite order on a
little flat platform that gradually moved out from under the
crab.
An almost complete copy of a third crab had been created on
the platform of one of the crabs, while only the outlines of
one had appeared on that of the other. I was astounded by the
sight.
"But these awful things are creating others in their
own image!" I exclaimed.
"Quite so. The whole purpose of this machine is to create
machines in its own image," said Cockling.
"But is that possible?" I asked, in utter perplexity.
"Why not? Any machine tool, a lathe, for example, makes
parts for lathes like itself. So I conceived the notion of
making an automatic machine that would manufacture copies of
itself from start to finish. My crab is the model of such a
machine."
I thought over the engineer's words, trying to grasp their
import. Just then the first crab's mouth opened and a wide
ribbon of metal issued from it, covering the entire mechanism
on the platform and thus forming the back of the third automaton.
When the back was properly in place, the nimble front legs
welded on metal ends with openings at front and back, and the
new crab was ready. As with its brothers, one could see the
gleam of a metal mirror with a red crystal in the depression
on its back.
The crab manufacturer pulled the platform in under its belly
and its 'baby' got down on to the sand. I noted how
the mirror on its back began slowly to turn toward the sun.
After a while, the crab crawled to the water's edge and had
a drink. Then it crawled into the sunshine and stood motionless,
warming itself. I thought I was dreaming.
As I watched the new-born creature, I heard Cockling say: "And
here's the fourth."
A turned my head and saw that a fourth crab had been born.
The first two, quite unconcerned, continued to stand by the
heap of metal, cutting off bits and shoving them inside them—repeating
what they had done before.
The fourth crab also went for a drink of sea-water.
"Why the hell do they swill water?" I demanded.
"They're filling the battery. While the sun shines, its
energy is transformed into electricity by means of the mirror
on their back and a silicon battery. It's enough for all their
day-time work and to charge the accumulator. At night the robot
is fed by the power stored in the accumulator."
"So these creatures work day and night?"
"Yes, day and night, without a break."
The third crab stirred and crawled over to the heap of metal.
Now three robots were working, while the fourth was charging
itself with solar energy.
"But there's no material for silicon batteries in these
heaps of metal," I remarked, trying to grasp the technology
of this monstrous self-production of machines.
"There's no need. There's plenty of it here."
Cockling clumsily kicked up the sand. "Sand is an oxide
of silicon. It is reduced to pure silicon inside the crab by
an electric arc."
We returned to the tent in the evening to eat, by which time
six robot-crabs were working by the heap of metal and two were
warming themselves in the sun.
"What's it all for?" I asked Cookling during supper.
"War. What else? These crabs are a superb means of
sabotage," he
said bluntly.
"I don't get it."
Cookling went on chewing his stewed beef and then, without
haste, explained: "Imagine what would happen if these
things were secretly introduced into enemy territory."
"Well?" I said, and stopped eating.
"You know what progression means?"
"Of course."
"Yesterday we began with one crab. Now there are eight.
Tomorrow there will be sixty-four, the day after tomorrow—five
hundred and twelve, and so on. In ten days' time there would
be over ten million. And that would require thirty thousand
tons of metal."
I was struck dumb when I heard these figures.
"Yes, but. . ."
"In a short time these crabs could devour all the enemy's
metal—all his tanks, guns, and aircrafts. All his machine tools,
plant, and equipment. All the metal on his territory. Within
a month not a scrap of metal would remain on the face of the
earth. It would all have gone to reproduce these crabs. And
in wartime, don't forget, metal is the most important strategic
material."
"So that's why the Admiralty was so interested in your
toy!" I whispered.
"Exactly. But this is only the first model. I'm going
to simplify it considerably in order to speed up the process
of reproduction. Speed it up two or three times. Make the construction
stronger and firmer. Make them more mobile. Increase the sensitivity
of the indicators to metal deposits. Then my robots will be
more dangerous in wartime than the plague. I want the enemy
to be deprived of his metal potential within two or three days."
"Yes, but when they've eaten up all the metal on the
enemy's territory, they'll move over to their own," I
exclaimed.
"That's another question. We can code their work and
knowing this code, stop them working the moment they appear
on our territory. And incidentally, we can get hold of the
enemy's whole metal supply this way."
All that night I had nightmares. Swarms of metal crabs were
crawling over me, their feelers rustling, thin columns of blue
smoke rising from their metal bodies.
Within four days the whole island was covered with Cookling's
robots.
According to his calculations, there were over four thousand
of them now. Shining in the sunlight, they could be seen everywhere.
When the metal in one heap came to an end, they began to search
all over the island and found others.
Just before sunset on the fifth day I witnessed terrible scene:
two crabs fighting over a piece of zinc.
This was on the south side of the island where we had buried
a number of zinc bars in the sand.
The crabs working in other parts of the island came here from
time to time to make a certain zinc component. It so happened
that about a score of crabs had all scuttled at the same time
to the zinc cache, and a real scramble resulted. The machines
got into each other's way. One crab particularly distinguished
itself: it was nimbler than the others and, it seemed to me,
stronger and more aggressive.
It pushed its brothers aside and climbed over their backs
in its endeavour to get a bit of metal from the bottom of the
hole. But just as it was achieving its purpose, another crab
seized the same piece with its pincers. The two machines tugged
at the bar in opposite directions. Finally, the crab that seemed
to me the more agile, tore the bar away from its rival. But
the latter, unwilling to give up its prey, came up from behind,
got on the robot's back, and thrust its pincers into the other's
mouth. The pincers of both twisted together and they began
to tear at each other with terrible force.
None of the other machines took the slightest notice of all
this; but for these two it was a life and death struggle. I
saw the crab that had mounted the other suddenly fell over
on its back, belly uppermost while its iron platform slipped
down, exposing its metal insides. In a flash its enemy had
begun to cut it up with a rapid succession of electric sparks.
When the victim's body finally broke into pieces, the conqueror
started tearing out levers, gear wheels and wires, and shoving
them quickly into its mouth.
As the components thus acquired entered the body of the predator,
its platform began to move out rapidly and the feverish assembly
of a new machine began on it.
Some minutes later, a new crab had fallen from the platform
on to the sand.
When I told Cookling what I had seen, he just chuckled.
"That's exactly what I wanted," he said.
"Why?"
"Surely I told you I want to improve my robots."
"Well, so what? Take your blue prints and work out how
to do it. Why this civil war? If this goes on, they will devour
each other."
"Just so. And the most perfect ones will survive."
I thought for a moment and then said : "What does that
mean, the most perfect? They're all alike, aren't they? As
far as I understand it, they are reproducing themselves."
"But do you think it's ever possible to make an absolutely
exact copy? As you surely know even in the manufacture of ball-bearings
it's impossible to make two exactly similar balls. And there
are simpler things. Here the robot-reproducer has a copying
mechanism that compares the copy it is making with its own
construction. Can you imagine what will happen if each subsequent
copy is made, not according to the original model, but copying
one immediately preceding it? Ultimately, a mechanism may result
that bears no resemblance at all to the original."
"But if it doesn't resemble the original, that means
it won't be fulfilling its main function—of reproducing itself," I
objected.
"Well, what of it? That's very good. Better copies will
make another robot from its corpse, and the better copies will
be precisely those in which will be accumulated, quite fortuitously,
those details in their construction that make them more viable.
So stronger, faster, simpler copies must come into being. That's
why I don't intend to worry about rny blue prints. All I've
got to do is to wait until the robots have eaten up all the
metal on the island and begin an internecine war, devouring
each other and reproducing themselves anew. That's how the
robots I need will come about."
That night I sat for a 'long time on the sand in front of
the tent, watching the sea and smoking. Had Cockling really
started something that might have grave consequences for humanity?
Had we started an appalling plague on this godforsaken little
island in the middle of the ocean that could eat up all the
metal in the world?
As I sat thinking about all this, several of the metal creatures
ran past me. They continued to work, their mechanisms creaking,
even as they ran. One of the crabs knocked against me, and
I kicked it away in disgust. It fell over helplessly on its
back. Almost immediately two other crabs pounced upon it and
dazzling electric sparks flashed in the dark. The wretched
thing was being cut to pieces by sparks! It was too much for
me. I rushed into the tent and got a crowbar from the tool
box. Cockling was already snoring.
Noiselessly approaching the crowd of crabs, I struck one of
them with all my might. I'd imagined for some reason that this
would frighten off the others, but nothing of the sort. The
crabs fell on the one I had smashed, and sparks began to fly
again.
I hit out several times more but this only increased the quantity
of sparks; and more of the creatures come rushing to the spot
from the interior of the island.
In the darkness I could only make out the outlines of the
machines, and it seemed to me that one of the swarm looked
exceptionally big. I aimed a blow at this crab. But no sooner
had my crowbar come into contact with its back than I gave
a scream and jumped aside: the crowbar had given me an electric
shock! Somehow or other the body of this monster had been charged
with electricity.
"Defence as a result of evolution," crossed
my mind.
Trembling all over, I approached the droning mass of machines
in order to retrieve my weapon, but it was out of the question.
By the flickering light of many electric arcs I saw my crowbar
being cut up and the very big robot that I had intended to
smash was working hardest of all.
I went back to the tent and lay down.
I soon fell into a heavy sleep, but not for long, apparently.
I was suddenly wakened, feeling something cold and heavy crawling
over my body.
I jumped up. A crab—I had not realized at first
what it was—disappeared in the back of the tent.
A few seconds
later I saw a bright electric spark. The damned crab had
come into our tent in its search for metal and its electrode
was cutting up the tin containing our drinking water.
I quickly shook Cookling awake and stammered an account of
what had happened.
"All tins into the sea. All the grub and water into the
sea!" he ordered.
We took all the tins down to the shore and laid them on the
sandy bottom at a waist-deep in the water. Our tools were put
in the same place.
Wet and exhausted, we sat on the beach till morning without
closing our eyes. Cookling was breathing heavily, and down
deep I was glad he was also suffering from his venture, for
now I hated him and wished even heavier punishment for him.
I no longer remembered how much time had passed since our
arrival on the island, but one fine day Cookling announced
triumphantly: "Now
the most interesting moment has arrived. All the metal's been
eaten up."
In fact, we looked at all the spots where metal billets had
been lying, and nothing was left. Along the shore and among
the bushes could be seen empty holes.
The metal pigs, bars and rods had been turned into machines
that were rushing about the island in huge numbers. Their movements
had become rapid and spasmodic. Their batteries had been charged
to the limit and they were not using their power for work,
but were wandering aimlessly about the beach, crawling through
the bushes on the plateau, running into each other, and often
into us.
As I studied them I realized Cockling had been right. The
crabs really were varied. They differed from each other in
size, the length of their pincers, the capacity of their workshop
maws. Some were more active, others less. There were probably
even more profound differences in their internal structure.
"Well," said Cockling. "It's time for them
to start fighting."
"Are you serious?" I asked.
"Of course I am.
It will be quite enough to give them a taste of cobalt. The
mechanism is so constructed that the slightest admixture of
this metal will suppress, if that is the right expression for
it, their mutual respect for each other."
Next morning we went to our 'ocean storeroom'. From
the sea-bottom we fished up the usual number of tins of food
and water, and four heavy grey bars of cobalt, which Cockling
had kept specially for the decisive stage of the experiment.
When he waded out on to the sand, holding the cobalt bars
high in the air, he was immediately surrounded by a number
of crabs. They did not cross into his shadow, but one could
see that the appearance of the new metal had greatly disturbed
them. I was standing at a few paces away and I observed with
astonishment how some of the machines were clumsily trying
to jump.
"See that! What a variety of movements! How unlike they
all are! And in the civil war, we'll make them wage, the strongest
and fittest will survive. And they will have even more perfect
progeny."
With these words Cockling threw one bar after another into
the bushes.
It is difficult to describe what followed. Several machines
fell simultaneously on the bars and, jostling each other, started
cutting them up with electric sparks. Others crowded behind,
also trying to get hold of a scrap of metal. Some climbed on
to the backs of their fellows striving to get into the middle.
"Look, there's the first battle!" exclaimed Cookling
happily, clapping his hands.
Within a few minutes the place where he had thrown the metal
had become the arena of a terrible battle, which more and more
robots came running to join.
As parts of broken up machines and bits of cobalt entered
the maws of more and more machines, they turned into savage
and fearless predators that immediately attacked their fellows.
During the first stage of this war the attackers were those
that had tasted cobalt. It was they that cut up the robots
that had come here running from all over the island in the
hope of getting the metal they needed. But as more and more
crabs got a taste of cobalt, the war became fiercer. And now
the new-born ones, produced in the course of the battle, joined
in.
This was a remarkable generation of robots— smaller in size
and extraordinarily fast moving. And I was surprised that they
were able to dispense with the usual process of charging their
accumulators. The solar energy absorbed by the much bigger
mirrors on their backs amply sufficed. They were remarkably
aggressive, and attacked several crabs simultaneously cutting
up two or three at a time with their sparks.
Cookling stood in the water with an expression of infinite
self-satisfaction on his face, rubbing his hands and exclaiming: "Good,
good! I can just imagine what's going to happen next!"
As for me, I watched this battle of machines with deep disgust
and fear. What would be born as a result of this struggle?
By midday the whole beach around our tent had become a vast
battlefield. Robots had come from all over the island and fought
in silence, without cries or screams, without shots or gunfire.
Only the crackle of innumerable electric sparks and the clanking
of the metal bodies of the machines gave this strange fight
a peculiar rustling and grinding accompaniment.
Although most of the new generation now coming into being
were squat and very mobile, other new types were nevertheless
beginning to appear. These were very much larger than any of
the rest. Their movements were slow, but one sensed their power,
and they had no difficulty in coping with their dwarfish attackers.
As the sun began to set, a sudden change took place in the
movements of the small machines; they all crowded together
on the west side and began to move more slowly.
"The devil take it! That lot's doomed!" Cookling
said in a hoarse voice. "They've got no accumulators.
As soon as the sun sets, they'll be finished."
And so it was. As soon as the shadows cast by the bushes lengthened
out sufficiently to cover the huge crowd of small robots, they
stopped dead. They were no longer an army of aggressive predators,
but a vast collection of lifeless metal boxes.
Colossal crabs, nearly half a man's height, came crawling
slowly up to them and began to eat them up one by one. The
outlines of even more enormous progeny could be seen on the
platforms of their gigantic parents.
Cookling frowned. This was not the evolution he had wanted,
that was clear. Slow-moving crab-robots of great size would
be much too poor a weapon for sabotage behind enemy's lines!
While the giants were exterminating the dwarf generation,
there was a temporary lull on the beach. I waded out of the
water and Cookling followed me in silence. We made for the
eastern side of the island in order to get some rest.
I was very tired and fell asleep almost as soon as I had stretched
out on the warm soft sand.
I was awakened in the middle of the night by a terrible shriek.
I could see nothing when I jumped up but the greyish strip
of sand and the sea, which had merged with the black starry
sky.
The cry was repeated, but not so loudly, from the direction
of the shrubbery. Only then did I noticed that Cookling was
not with me. I rushed towards the spot from which, as I thought,
his voice had come.
The sea, as usual, was very calm, and the ripples breaking
on the sand were few and far between. But it seemed to me that
the surface of the water was ruffled at the spot where we had
deposited our food and water containers. Something was splashing
and squelching there. I decided that Cookling must be there.
"What are you doing here, engineer?" I cried, approaching
our underwater store.
"I'm over here!" I suddenly heard his voice calling
from the right.
"Where are you, for God's sake?"
"Here," I heard him say again. "I'm up to my
chin in the water; come here."
I entered the water and stumbled against something hard. It
was an immense crab standing deep down in the water on its
long pincers.
"Why have you got in so deep? What are you doing there?" I
asked.
"They were chasing me and drove me right out here!" the
fat man squeaked pitiably.
"Chasing you? Who?"
"The crabs!"
"It can't be! They're not chasing me!"
Again I
stumbled against a robot in the water, but moved away from
it, and finally got to the engineer. He was, indeed, chin-deep
in the water.
"Tell me, what happened?"
"I don't understand it myself," he said in a quavering
voice. "While I was asleep, suddenly one of the robots
attacked me.. . I thought it was an accident and moved away,
but it came near me again and touched my face with its claw.
. . Then I got up and moved away to one side. It followed me.
I started running. So did the crab. Then another crab joined
in. And another. A whole crowd of them. And they drove me out
here..."
"If
they've developed a man-hating instinct as a result
of evolution, they wouldn't have spared me."
"I don't understand," said Cookling in a hoarse
voice. "But
I'm afraid to come out on the beach."
"Nonsense," I said, and took his arm. "Walk
along the shore to the east. I'll protect you."
"But how?"
"We'll come soon to our food dump and I'll get some heavy
tool. A hammer or something."
"Only not a metal one," groaned the engineer. "Better
take a board from one of the boxes or something made of wood."
Slowly we made our way along the shore. When we reached our
dump, I left Cookling alone and waded towards the beach.
I could hear loud splashes and the familiar drone of the machines.
The metal creatures had broken into the tinned stuff. They
had found their way to our under-water storehouse.
"Cookling, we're lost!" I yelled. "They've
eaten up all our tins!"
"Have they?" he said, plaintively. "What are
we to do now?"
"It's up to you to think what to do. You're responsible
for this stupid venture. You've evolved the type of sabotage
instrument you wanted. Now you sort out the mess."
I went round the crowd of robots and came out on the beach.
There, crawling in the dark among the crabs I groped about
picking up bits of meat and tinned pineapple, apples, and other
things from the sand, and took them up on to the plateau. Judging
by the amount of stuff lying on the beach, the creatures had
worked pretty hard while we slept. I didn't find a single whole
tin.
While I was occupied collecting the remnants of our provisions,
Cookling remained standing up to his chin in the water about
twenty paces from the shore. I was so engrossed in what I was
doing and so upset by what had happened, that I had quite forgotten
about him, but very soon a piercing shriek reminded me of his
existence.
"For God's sake, Tov, help me, they're after me!"
I dashed into the water, and, stumbling over the metal monsters,
hurried to Cookling. About five paces from him, I stumbled
against another crab. It took no notice of me.
"Why the devil do they dislike you so much? Surely you
can claim to be their daddy," I said.
"I don't know," gurgled the engineer hoarsely. "But
do something, Tov, to drive it away. If a taller crab than
this one is born, I'm done for."
"Well, that's evolution for you. Incidentally, which
part of the crab is most vulnerable? How can the mechanism
be wrecked?"
"Before, it would have been enough to smash the parabolic
mirror or to extract the accumulator from inside. But now I
don't know. . . It'll take some special research."
"To hell with your research," I muttered through
clenched teeth, and seized the crab's slender front claw that
was reaching out in the direction of the engineer's face.
The robot moved back. I found the second leg and bent it as
well—the tentacles twisted easily, like copper wire.
The metal creature clearly didn't like this procedure and
it began to wade slowly out of the water. Cookling and I moved
further along the shore.
At sunrise all the robots crawled out of the water and began
sunning themselves on the beach. I succeeded in smashing the
mirrors on the backs of at least fifty of the monsters with
stones, and all these ceased moving.
But unfortunately that did not improve matters; they immediately
fell victim to other creatures and new robots were manufactured
from them with amazing speed. I hadn't the strength to smash
the silicon batteries on the backs of all the machines. Several
times I came into contact with electrified robots, and that
weakened my resolve to try and fight them.
All this time Cookling remained standing in the sea.
Soon the war of the monsters started all over again and it
seemed as though they had forgotten all about Cookling.
We left the battlefield and moved over to the other side of
the island. Cookling was so numb after his long bath, which
had lasted for hours, that he lay down on the sand, stretched
out and asked me, with chattering teeth, to cover him over
with hot sand.
After that I returned to our original camp site to fetch our
clothes and what was left of our provisions. There I discovered
that the tent had been destroyed; the metal pegs that had been
driven into the sand had disappeared, and so had the metal
rings where the guy ropes had been fastened to the tent.
Under the tarpaulin I found our clothes, but even here again
one could see the traces of the crabs' search for metal. Every
metal hook, button and buckle had disappeared, leaving behind
shreds of scorched cloth.
Meanwhile the battle of the robots had shifted from the shore
to the interior of the island. From the plateau I could see,
more or less in the center of the island, several monsters
almost as tall as men standing on their pincers among the bushes.
Slowly, two by two, they moved to opposite sides, and then
rushed at each other with terrific speed. A metallic clanging
accompanied the encounter. Behind the slow movements of these
giants, there was obviously immense power and weight.
Before my eyes several machines were knocked over and forthwith
cut to pieces.
But I was sick to death of watching these battle scenes between
mad machines; so, loading myself with everything I could find
on our old camp site, I slowly made my way back to Cookling.
The sun was beating down mercilessly and before reaching the
spot where I'd buried him in the sand, I took several dips
in the sea.
I was just approaching the mound under which Cookling, exhausted
after his nocturnal bathing, was sleeping, when an enormous
crab appeared from behind the shrubs on the plateau.
It was taller than me. Its claws were long and massive, and
it moved in a series of awkward hops, with its body leaning
bent forward in a peculiar way. Its front, working, tentacles
were incredibly long and trailed on the sand. The maw of its
workshop was particularly hypertrophied, and took up nearly
half the body.
The 'ichthyosaurus', as I called it to myself, slid
clumsily down on to the beach, and began to sway slowly in
all directions, as if scanning the locality.
Automatically
I brandished the tent at it, as one does at a cow that gets
in one's way. But it took no notice of me whatsoever, and
in a strange oblique way, describing a wide detour, it approached
the mound of sand under which Cookling lay sleeping.
If I had realized the monster was making for him, I would
have rushed to his aid immediately; but the direction in which
the machine was moving seemed so vague that I thought at first
it was going into the sea. And it was only when, having just
touched the water with its feet, it turned abruptly and moved
rapidly towards Cookling that I dropped the things I was carrying
and ran forward.
The 'ichthyosaurus' stopped by him and squatted
slightly. I saw the ends of its long tentacles working in the
sand just by his face.
The next moment the heap had become a great sand cloud. Cookling
had jumped up as though stung and, panic-stricken, was trying
to break away from the monster.
But it was too late.
The slender tentacles had wound themselves tightly round his
thick neck and were lifting him up, towards the mouth of the
machine. Cookling hung helplessly in the air, his arms and
legs dangling grotesquely.
Though I detested him with all my heart, nevertheless I could
not allow him to perish in a fight with an irrational metal
freak. Without thinking I seized the tall claws of the crab
and pulled with all my strength. But I might as well have tried
to pull over a steel post driven deep into the ground. The
'ichthyosaurus' did
not even Tovge.
I reached up and got on its back. For an instant Cookling's
distorted face came level with mine.
"His teeth!" suddenly
crossed my mind. "His stainless steel false teeth!"
I struck the parabolic mirror, shining in the sunlight, as
hard as I could with my fist.
The crab spun round as it stood. Cookling's livid face and
bulging eyes were now level with the thing's working mouth.
Then something horrible happened. An electric spark struck
his forehead and temples. And then crab's tentacles suddenly
relaxed, and the heavy lifeless body of the creator of this
iron plague crashed down on the sand.
As I was burying him, several huge metallic crabs chased
each other over the island, taking absolutely no notice either
of me or the corpse.
I wrapped it in the canvas of the tent and buried him in a
shallow grave in the sand in the middle of the island. I did
so with no feeling whatsoever of regret. My parched mouth was
gritty with sand and I was inwardly cursing the dead man for
his horrible invention. From the point of view of Christian
ethics, I had committed a terrible sacrilege.
After that I lay motionless on the beach for several days
on end, watching the horizon where the "Dove" was
expected eventually to appear.
Time dragged with agonizing
slowness and the pitiless sun seemed to have stopped above
my head. From time to time I crawled down to the water and
dipped my scorched face in it.
To forget my hunger and terrible thirst I tried to think of
abstract things. I thought of how many able people in our days
had used the powers of reason to do harm to others. Cookling's
invention, for instance. I was sure it could have been used
to good purpose—in metal-mining, possibly. The evolution of
these creatures could have been so directed that they might
have performed that function with the utmost proficiency. I
came to the conclusion that if the machine had been perfected
properly it would not have degenerated into a gigantic clumsy
monster.
One day a great round shadow fell across me. I raised my head
with difficulty and looked to see what had come between me
and the sun. I found that I was lying between the tentacles
of an enormous giant of a crab which had come down to the water's
edge and seemed to be watching the horizon and waiting for
something.
Then I began to have hallucinations. In my fevered brain the
gigantic crab became a vat of fresh water raised so high that
I couldn't reach the top.
I came to on board the schooner. When Captain Gale asked me
whether they should take aboard the huge, strange-looking mechanism
gazing at us from the beach, I replied that it would not be
necessary.