Fritz Leiber - The Green Millennium

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The Green Millennium
The Green Millennium
Fritz Leiber
An [e - reads ] Book
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The Green Millennium
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic,
or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, scanning or any information storage retrieval system,
without explicit permission in writing from the Author.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author's
imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locals or persons, living or
dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright 1953 by Fritz Leiber
First e-reads publication 1999
www.e-reads.com
ISBN 0-7592-0062-9
Author Biography
The author of many novels and short stories, including GATHER DARKNESS and The Lankhmar
series, Fritz Leiber won many awards, including the Hugo and Nebula, and a Life Award for his
contribution to his field, presented at the Second World Fantasy Convention. He died in 1992.
Other works by Fritz Leiber also available in e-reads editions
Gather, Darkness!
The Knight and Knave of Swords
Swords Against the Shadowlands
Swords Against Death
Swords and Deviltry
Swords in the Mist
Swords Against Wizardry
The Wanderer
For BOB, FRANK, HANK, GERT, and WENDELL
Table of Contents
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
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The Green Millennium
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
The Green Millennium
I
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The Green Millennium
PHILGISHwoke up feeling as good as if all his previous life had happened to two other guys — poor,
miserable clunks!
Usually his whip-cracking reflexes had him out of bed in a flash and jerking on his shorts and sockasins
while he frantically hunted around for the jar of beard-dissolving cream. But this time he was able to
outsmart all tyrannous nerve-impulses and keep his eyes closed in order to enjoy the unprecedented
sensation all to himself, not even sharing it with the advertisement-covered walls of his tiny bachelor
apartment.
Why, it was simply wonderful, he decided after a bit. Outrageously, impossibly wonderful!
He actually felt as if this were not a world in which hot and cold wars had been gushing unpredictably
for fifty years like temperamental faucets, in which the Federal Bureau of Loyalty and Fun Incorporated
ruled the U.S.A. in the name of that drunken, hymn-singing farmer, President Robert T. Barnes, and in
which (according to the Kremlin Newsmoon, located on an earth-circling satellite vehicle) a new plan
was being considered for exchanging the descendants of prisoners taken in the half-century-old Korean
War.
And as if he, Phil Gish, weren’t a luck-forsaken little guy who on waking at eight o’clock this morning
hadn’t taken four sleeping pills in order to kill the day and temporarily forget that he had just lost
another job to a robot who did it five times as fast and twice as accurately, and that he’d had a blow-up
because of it and been coldly advised to see a psychiatrist.
He took a long, luxurious breath. Even the air smelt and felt different, as if dusted with some golden
chemical that banished care.
He opened his eyes and looked down at his pale chest with the two lone hairs that were a sardonic last
farewell from glorious jungle ape-hood. But this time the word that came to him was “slim,” not
“scrawny.” He rather liked his body, he decided — a neat and compact, if not exactly outsize, bit of
tissue. He yawned, stretched, scratched where the two hairs were, and looked around. The green cat sat
on the sill of the large open circular window, smiling at him.
“Hey, am I dreaming?”
The sound of his own voice, with its hint of a morning croak, answered that question.
Or have I really blasted off from behind the hair line?The second question, thought not spoken, was
quickly suppressed. He felt too good to let it worry him. If this was insanity, then three cheers for
paranoia!
Besides, there were all sorts of natural explanations of the cat’s somewhat unconventional color. Just
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The Green Millennium
yesterday Phil had seen a young matron leading two rose-colored poodles. A flash of what might be an
off-the-bosom dress under her cloak had moved him to pass close enough to hear her assure her
companion, “They aren’t dye-jobs, you mood-mad man. They’re mutations!”
Also, weren’t some animals naturally green, like the tree-sloth? Though he seemed to recall that the tree-
sloth’s hue was due to a fungus or mold, and there certainly wasn’t any mold on the burnished bundle of
benignity on his window sill.
“Hiya, Lucky,” he greeted softly. From the very first he had decided to connect the cat with his
newborn, incredible sense of well-being. If there was going to be a new era in his life, it was a good idea
to have a symbol for it — a symbol green as spring itself. Besides, it felt that way.
“C’mere, Lucky,” he called without lifting his head from the spongy pillow. “Here, Kitty.”
The second invitation, which sounded a trifle silly to Phil as soon as he said it, wasn’t necessary. The cat
at once dropped its plump-tummied body from the window sill and trotted toward him like a soft-shod
fat little horse. Phil felt an odd increase, almost frightening, in the calm joy inside him. The cat
disappeared momentarily under the angle of the bedside. Then a little green face came over the edge and
two tiny green paws placed themselves beside it, and two coppery eyes inspected him.
“How are you, fellow?” Phil asked. “Glad to make your acquaintance. You’re a cool little cuss, all right.
Where did you come from?”
The little face tipped upward.
“From upstairs?” Phil asked and instantly chuckled at himself for interpreting the movement as a
gesture. “Why not stay with me for a while? I like your looks and I admire your color. Often wished I
were green myself. Anything for variety — begging your pardon.”
It was a strange and curiously attractive cat face. The ears were large, the forehead high, the nose-button
lost in furry down, the whiskers hardly apparent, and the mouth had a suggestion of a pucker or pout.
For a fleeting instant Phil had the notion Lucky might look rather different, rather less like a cat, if
caught unawares. And he was really very green — the green of tarnished copper, only brighter.
Thinking the word “he,” Phil wondered for a fleeting instant about Lucky’s sex. The fat tummy was
suggestive. Yet he was somehow sure the cat was a male.
Then Lucky smiled again and Phil was aware only of feelings. He reached out a tentative hand, jerked it
back when a little paw flicked out at it, then shamefacedly corrected the gesture. The little paw touched
his middle finger. Phil stroked the silken paw in turn. Neither time could he feel a hint of claws. They
must all be tucked inside their smooth sheathes.
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The Green Millennium
“Now we’re friends,” Phil said huskily. The cat sprang fearlessly onto the bed. Coppery eyes came
close. A furry cheek briefly brushed Phil’s with casual masculine friendliness. Sudden tears smarted in
Phil’s eyes, enough to brim the lids but not to run over.
What a lonely, empty-lifed fool he must be, he told himself, that a cat could make him cry. Yet it was
true enough. All his life had been a fading. His parents had seemed warm and wonderful at first, but then
he had begun to sense their gray uncertainties and boredoms. School had been full of breathtaking
promise at one point, with infinite vistas of knowledge and idealistic brotherhood opening up; but too
many of the vistas had ended in signs saying “restricted” or “subversive” or the even more maddening
blank signs of calculated silence — just as man had promised himself he’d reach the planets soon, but
hadn’t. Phil had had friends, too, at one time, and had really been in love with girls; but even that had
somehow become washed out and worthless. And then the endless business of being beaten out of jobs
by white-collar robots, beginning with the mail-sorting robots who fed envelopes into the proper slots by
scanning their addresses photoelectrically. The only thing robots couldn’t do, it seemed, was sit in
foxholes. That was one place where Phil recalled no mechanical competition.
Yes, it had been a very empty, purposeless life indeed, Phil told himself, at the same time wondering
why even that thought could not mar his present happiness.
He came out of his reverie and saw that the cat was marching down the bed, closely inspecting his naked
body.
“Hey, we’re friends, but that’s going too far. Leave mesome privacy!” Chuckling, he swung out of bed,
grabbing up a light robe as his body left the cone of radiant heat projected from the ceiling fixture.
While shuddering into the robe he hummed a couple of bars from “Kiss Me, Darling, in Free-Fall” and
did a shuffling step that brought the cat hurrying over to play tag with his toes.
“Wheredid you come from, Lucky?” Phil repeated and turned toward the window. In the three steps it
took him to reach it, his gaze lit on the near-empty dispenser of sleeping pills and for a moment the eerie
doubt came back: mightn’t this morning’s overdose have triggered off or paralleled a really big change
in his mind? After all, this cat wasn’t normal (and neither were hallucinations!) and his crazy,
inexplicable happiness was altogether too much like the inner world of godlike perfection into which the
paranoiac is supposed to retreat.
But then he was at the window experiencing a new twist in his mood and the doubt was forgotten.
The window opened on a deep, very narrow bay in the remodeled monster hotel in which Phil roomed.
If he risked his neck by leaning out very far, he could just manage to look out of the bay and glimpse an
advertisement-encrusted corner of Fun Incorporated’s wrestling center and the helicopter field on its
roof. The hotel had been built as a luxury palace for the new war-rich of the 1970’s but during the great
housing shortage of the 1980’s its vast rooms had been cut up into tiny sleeping cells. It retained,
however, at least one feature from its lordly days: the large circular windows formed of two sheets of
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The Green Millennium
polarizing glass, the inner of which could be rotated, allowing a person to blacken his window or have it
fully transparent or enjoy any shade of twilight. One other very unusual luxury touch was that the
windows could actually be opened, swinging on pivots at top and bottom. Nowadays, with radiant sleep-
heating general throughout the hotel and the air-conditioning system anything but trustworthy, this last
feature was put to real use more often than might have been expected, though windows were still kept
closed most of the daytime.
It had always seemed to Phil that the great gray wall just ten feet from his window, with its rows of
ominous portholes, many of them blackened, was the grimmest sight in the world — a symbol of the
way he was walled off from life and people.
But now, as he stood leaning out just a little, his cropped hair brushing the tarnished circular rim, it
seemed to him that he could imagine his way through that wall as if it were made of some material that
conducted emotion as copper conducts electricity. Not see or think through it, butfeel through it to the
multiple texture of warm, pitiful, admirable, ridiculous human lives in the cubicles behind: the two-fifths
happy ones, the nine-tenths sad ones, the ones who nursed fears and frustrations because you had to
nurse something, the ones who hammered fears and frustrations into a painful armor, the old man
apprehensively sorting his limp ration stamps from three communo-capitalist wars, the boy playing
spaceship and pretending the blacked-out window was the porthole of a comic-book intergalactic liner,
the three unemployed secretaries — one of them pacing — the lovers whose rendezvous was tainted
with worries about the Federal Bureau of Morality, the fat man feeling a girl’s caress by radio handie
and thinking of something long ago, the old woman coddling her dread of war-germs and atomic ashes
by constantly dusting, dusting, dusting …
Well, his new self certainly had a vivid imagination, Phil decided with a smile.
An old hand came out of a porthole three floors down and shook something — or nothing — from a
dustpan.
Coincidence, of course, or else he’d once watched the woman without thinking about it — nevertheless,
Phil chose to interpret the event as an encouraging confirmation of his new feeling of outgoingness.
Then the smile left his lips as he thought of another aspect of the opposite wall.
This window was the vantage point where he had spent countless drearily excited hours spying on the
activities of all the young women whose cubicles were even remotely within range. Not the new girl —
the one who wore her black hair in old-fashioned pony style — in the room straight across, although she
was quite beautiful in a sprightly, animal way, and he sometimes heard her practicing tap-dancing. No,
she was a bit too close and besides, he was vaguely frightened of her. There was something eerily dryad-
like about her and, in any case, she blacked out her porthole religiously. It was blacked out now, though
slightly ajar.
But all the other girls were recipients of his untiring, sterile interest. The cute green-blonde just below
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The Green Millennium
and to the left, for instance, Miss Phoebe Filmer (he’d once taken the unprecedentedly realistic step of
finding out her name), why, he’d sacrificed a sizable chunk of his leisure time to that tantalizing minx.
There she was at this very moment dithering around in a short play robe, inspecting an assortment of
wispy lingerie — a very promising situation that normally would have held Phil helpless for twenty
minutes or more. But now he found he could look at her and then look away without the faintest
gnawing worry he might miss something. Good Lord, if he wanted to see more, in any sense, of Miss
Phoebe Filmer, he’d scrape up an acquaintance with her.
“Prrrt!” A feathery, furry ball came into his hand and he looked down at Lucky’s apple-green face
framed by his curving forefinger and thumb.
“What d’ya want, cat?”
Lucky ducked out of the cupped hand with a twist that let his forehead and ear be rubbed, and put his
front paws on the window rim. Phil quickly advanced his hand so that it lightly circled the cat’s chest.
He didn’t want Lucky to get back out on the little ledge that led to either side of the window. In fact, as
Phil now definitely realized, he didn’t want Lucky to leave him at all, though something told him he
wouldn’t be able to stop Lucky if the green cat really wanted to go.
It occurred to Phil, with a certain shamefaced satisfaction, that all pets were strictly forbidden in the
Skyway Towers (cats and dogs were pretty rare since the germ war days when they’d been slaughtered
as possible carriers) and so Lucky’s owner wouldn’t be able to do anything openly about getting him
back.
But Lucky seemed to have no intention of leaving. He hopped to the floor and looked eagerly at Phil.
“Prrrt!”
“Do you want something to eat? Is that it?”
“Prrrt-prt!”
Phil took mental inventory of his snack box and found himself thinking of the cranberry concentrate.
Wildly inappropriate — and yet something assured him that it would be just right for Lucky.
It was done quickly: a dark-red marble that swelled to a glistening ruby golf ball at the touch of water,
and then, another sudden inward prompting, the syrupy contents of a vitamino capsule poured over it.
The last ingredient smelled rather rank and by the time he set the odd sundae on the floor, Phil was
feeling quite doubtful. However, Lucky examined it with all signs of approval, mewing in eagerness.
But then instead of beginning to eat, he looked up at Phil. Phil thought he understood: cats have their
special proprieties and delicacies. The little chap wanted to eat in private.
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The Green Millennium
“Okay, fellow, I’ll go shower. And I won’t peek.”
Stepping inside the bathroom, he set the shower control to alternate tepid and very warm. Instead it
chose irresponsibly to alternate icy and steaming, so that he leaped out with a yell. But the incident
didn’t even scratch his mood. As he toweled himself (he didn’t like the air drier and toweling robots
made him uneasy) he sang:
We’re out in space, they’ve cut the jet,
There isn’t any ceiling, floor, or wall.
Let’s dance on air, or better yet —
Hug me, love me, darling, in free-fall!
He came out of the bathroom feeling like an emperor and fully determined to inspect the world he
owned, the world that was any man’s for the asking and a little courage. As he slipped on singlet,
trousers, sockasins and jacket, he explained his feelings to Lucky, who had cleaned up every bit of his
colorful meal.
“You see, it’s this way, fellow: I’ve always been three-quarters dead. But not any more. I’m through
with being scared and stand-offish and bored. No more filing, dial-watching, and tape-cutting jobs, with
some about-to-be-invented robot breathing down my neck. I’m just going out and look things over, talk
to people, find out what it’s all about. I’m going to have adventures, really live. Some program, eh? And
you know who’s responsible for it, fellow? You are.”
Lucky seemed fairly to fluoresce in appreciation. He fluffed his gleaming green fur.
Phil wondered what time it was. His wrist-watch had gone dead yesterday, the cranky thing, only five
months after having the battery replaced. He stuck his head out the window and looked up the dizzy gray
crack to where the portholes were tiny dots and the slit ended in a ribbon of blue sky. Only the top floor
to the east was yellow with true sunlight, though the false sunlight from the sodium mirror circling the
earth to make evening light for this city was beginning to show about eight stories down.
He scooped up Lucky without a thought of leaving him behind or a worry as to the attention he might
attract. But the verdant cat sprang from his arms and made for the hall door, looking back as if to say,
“I’m right there with you and game for any adventure, too, but I don’t need a nurse.”
Side by side they walked to the stairs and down to twenty-eight — the overworked elevator stopped only
at even-numbered floors. And there he ran into Phoebe Filmer, play robe swishing and apparently
headed for the snack bar on twenty-eight.
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The Green Millennium
“Hello, Miss Filmer,” he heard himself say. “I’ve admired you for a long time.”
“You have?” she said, glancing at him sideways. “How did you know my name?”
“Just asked the desk robot who the beautiful girl was in 28-303a.”
She tittered with a faintly flirtatious contempt. “You don’t talk to the desk robot. You just punch buttons
and it won’t give out names when you punch room numbers, unless you have a government key.”
“I have a way with robots,” Phil explained. “I win their confidence with small talk.”
“Well,” Miss Filmer observed, turning her head and running her hand through her green-gold hair.
“Say, how do you like my green cat?” Phil inquired.
“A green cat!” Miss Filmer exclaimed excitedly. She looked down quickly and then up skeptically.
“Where?”
Phil looked down too. Lucky wasn’t anywhere in sight. A hunk of ice materialized inside his chest.
“Excuse me,” he said. “I hope I’ll see you again.”
He raced to the stub corridor. Lucky was standing in front of the elevator.
“Gee, fellow,” Phil told him. “Don’t give me heart failure.”
|Go to Table of Contents |
II
THEstreet snarled at Phil. The snarl came chiefly from a charged-up electric hot rod that swerved close
to the curb to remove a triangular chunk from the rump of a fat man who had been too slow in skittering
to safety. A second look showed he was not a fat man, but a thin man in a balloon suit. It deflated
rapidly, and he sat down in its limp folds on the curb and began to sob. Balloon suits were of no real
protection to pedestrians, except by increasing the apparent target, but they continued as a fad. During
the last war they had been pumped full of hydrogen as a shield against neutrons until a couple of small
but unpleasant explosions in crowded shelters had caused the government to crack down.
After snarling, the street continued to growl deep in its throat — it had two lower levels. The growl was
composed of the hum of electrics, the subterranean rumble of heavier traffic, the yak-yak of competing
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摘要:

TheGreenMillenniumTheGreenMillenniumFritzLeiberAn[e-reads]Bookfile:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/harry%20kruisw...r/Fritz%20Leiber%20-%20The%20Green%20Millennium.html(1of141)19-2-200620:28:04TheGreenMillenniumNopartofthispublicationmaybereproducedortransmittedinanyformorbyanymeans,electronic,or...

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