A Trace of Memory. Keith Laumer

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A Trace of Memory - Keith  Laumer


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civilized in a hurry. They figured he was a god and he set them to work building roads and cutting stone and learning mathematics and so on. He was doing all he could to set things up so this stranger who was to follow him would know the score, and carry on the good work.”

      Foster’s eyes were on my face. “What is the nature of the Change he speaks of?”

      “He never says—but I suppose he’s talking about death,” I said. “I don’t know where the stranger is supposed to come from.”

      “Listen to me, Legion,” Foster said. There was a hint of the old anxious look in his eyes. “I think I know what the Change was. I think he knew he would forget—”

      “You’ve got amnesia on the brain, old buddy,” I said.

      “—and the stranger is—himself. A man without a memory.”

      I sat frowning at Foster. “Yeah, maybe,” I said. “Go on.”

      “And he says that all that the stranger needs to know is there—in the book.”

      “Not in the part I decoded,” I said. “He describes how they’re coming along with the road-building job, and how the new mine panned out—but there’s nothing about what the Hunters are, or what had gone on before he tangled with them the first time.”

      “It must be there, Legion; but in the first section, the part written in alien symbols.”

      “Maybe,” I said. “But why the hell didn’t he give us a key to that part?”

      “I think he assumed that the stranger—himself—would remember the old writing,” Foster said. “How could he know that it would be forgotten with the rest?”

      “Your guess is as good as any,” I said. “Maybe better; you know how it feels to lose your memory.”

      “But we’ve learned a few things,” Foster said. “The pit of the Hunters—we have the location.”

      “If you call this ‘ten thousand parts to the west of chalk face’ a location,” I said.

      “We know more than that,” Foster said. “He mentions a plain; and it must lie on a continent to the east—”

      “If you assume that he sailed from Europe to America, then the continent to the east would be Europe,” I said. “But maybe he went from Africa to South America, or—”

      “The mention of Northern sailors—that suggests the Vikings—”

      “You seem to know a little history, Foster,” I said. “You’ve got a lot of odd facts tucked away.”

      “We need maps,” Foster said. “We’ll look for a plain near the sea—”

      “Not necessarily.”

      “—and with a formation called a chalk face to the east.”

      “What’s this ‘median line’ business?” I said. “And the bit about ten thousand parts of something?”

      “I don’t know. But we must have maps.”

      “I bought some this afternoon,” I said. “I also got a dime-store globe. I figured we might need them. Let’s get out of this and back to the room, where we can spread out. I know it’s a grim prospect, but....” I got to my feet, dropped some coins on the oilcloth-covered table, and led the way out.

      It was a short half block to the flea trap we called home. We kept out of it as much as we could, holding our long daily conferences across the street at the Novedades. The roaches scurried as we passed up the dark stairway to our not much brighter room. I crossed to the bureau and opened a drawer.

      “The globe,” Foster said, taking it in his hands. “I wonder if perhaps he meant a ten-thousandth part of the circumference of the earth?”

      “What would he know about—”

      “Disregard the anachronistic aspect of it,” Foster said. “The man who wrote the book knew many things. We’ll have to start with some assumptions. Let’s make the obvious ones: that we’re looking for a plain on the west coast of Europe, lying—” He pulled a chair up to the scabrous table and riffled through to one of my scribbled sheets: “50/10,000s of the circumference of the earth—that would be about 125 miles—west of a chalk formation, and 3675 miles north of a median line....”

      “Maybe,” I said, “he means the Equator.”

      “Certainly. Why not? That would mean our plain lies on a line through—” he studied the small globe “—Warsaw, and south of Amsterdam.”

      “But this part about a rock outcropping,” I said. “How do we find out if there’s any conspicuous chalk formation around there?”

      “We can consult a geology text. There may be a library in this neighborhood.”

      “The only chalk deposits I ever heard about,” I said, “are the White cliffs of Dover.”

      “White cliffs....”

      We both reached for the globe at once.

      “One hundred twenty-five miles west of the chalk cliffs,” said Foster. He ran a finger over the globe. “North of London, but south of Birmingham. That puts us reasonably near the sea—”

      “Where’s the atlas?” I said. I rummaged, came up with a cheap tourists’ edition, flipped the pages.

      “Here’s England,” I said. “Now we look for a plain.”

      Foster put a finger on the map. “Here,” he said. “A large plain—called Salisbury.”

      “Large is right,” I said. “It would take years to find a stone cairn on that. We’re getting excited about nothing. We’re looking for a hole in the ground, hundreds of years old—if this lousy notebook means anything—maybe marked with a few stones—in the middle of miles of plain. And it’s all guesswork anyway....” I took the atlas, turned the page.

      “I don’t know what I expected to get out of decoding those pages,” I said. “But I was hoping for more than this.”

      “I think we should try, Legion,” Foster said. “We can go there, search over the ground. It would be costly, but not impossible. We can start by gathering capital—”

      “Wait a minute, Foster,” I said. I was staring at a larger-scale map showing southern England. Suddenly my heart was thudding. I put a finger on a tiny dot in the center of Salisbury Plain.

      “Six, two and even,” I said. “There’s your Pit of the Hunters....”

      Foster leaned over, read the fine print.

      “Stonehenge.”

      *

      I read from the encyclopedia page:

      —this great stone structure, lying on the Plain of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, is pre-eminent among megalithic monuments of the ancient world. Within a circular ditch 300' in diameter, stones up to 22' in height are arranged in concentric circles. The central altar stone, over 16' long, is approached from the northeast by a broad roadway called the Avenue

      “It is not an altar,” said Foster.

      “How do you know?”

      “Because—” Foster frowned. “I know, that’s all.”

      “The journal said the stones were arranged in the sign of the Two Worlds,” I said. “That means the concentric circles, I suppose; the same thing that’s stamped on the cover of the notebook.”

      “And the ring,” Foster said.

      “Let me read the rest: A great sarsen stone stands upright in the Avenue; the axis through the two stones, when erected, pointed directly to the rising of the sun on Midsummer Day. Calculations based on this observation indicate


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