But he had not conquered himself. There had been many setbacks to his progress
because he had to go out and kill others of his kind. And now, the memory of
his past called again, and he went out in battle against himself. Cities
crumbled to dust, the plains to the south became barren deserts again, Chicago
lay covered in a green mist. That death killed slowly, so that Man fled from
the city and died, leav-
ing it an empty place. The mist hung there, clinging days, months, years—after
Man had ceased to be.
I, too, went out to war, driving a plane built for my people, over the cities
of the Rising Star Empire. The tiny atomic bombs fell from my ship on houses,
on farms, on all that was Man's, who had made my race what it was. For my Men
had told me I must fight.
Somehow, I was not killed. And after the last Great Drive, when hnlf of Man
was already dead, I gathered my people about me, and we followed to the North,
where some of my Men had turned to find a sanctuary from the war. Of Man's
work, three cities still stood— wrapped in the green mist, and useless. And
Man huddled around little fires and hid himself in the forest, hunting his
food in small clans. Yet hardly a year of the war had passed.
For a time, the Men and my people lived in peace, planning to rebuild what had
been, once the war finally ceased. Then came the Plague. The anti-toxin which
had been developed was ineffective as the Plague increased in its virulency.
It spread over land and sea, gripped Man who had invented it, and killed him.
It was like a strong dose of strychnine, leaving Man to die in violent cramps
and retchings.
For a brief time, Man united against it, but there was no control.
Remorselessly it spread, even into the little settlement they had founded in
the north. And I watched in sorrow as my Men around me were seized with its
agony. Then we of the Dog-People were left alone in a shattered world from
whence Man had vanished. For weeks we labored at the little radio we could
operate, but there was no answer; and we knew that Man was dead.
There was little we could do. We had to forage our food as of old, and
cultivate our crops in such small way as our somewhat modified forepaws
permitted. And the barren north country was not suited to us.
I gathered my scattered tribes about me, and we began the long trek' south. We
moved from season to season, stopping to plant our food in the spring, hunting
in the fall. As our sleds grew old and broke down, we could not replace them,
and our travel became even slower. Sometimes we came upon our kind in smaller
packs. Most of them had gone back to savagery, and these we had to mold to us
by force. But little by little, growing in size, we drew south. We sought Men;
for fifty thousand years we of the Dog-People had lived with and for Man, and
we knew no other life.
In the wilds of what had once been Washington State we came
upon another group who had not fallen back to the law of tooth and fang. They
had horses to work for them, even crude harnesses and machines which they
could operate. There we stayed for some ten years, setting up a government and
building ourselves a crude city. Where Man had his hands, we had to invent
what could be used with our poor feet and our teeth. But we had found a sort