A. Bertram Chandler - Moonflowers and Mary.pdf

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moonflowers
and
mary
by . . . George Whitley
The man with a green thumb is always valuable—especially on the moon.
But at times, like our Adam, he can be just a little too green.
The age-long speculation as to whether there is or ever was life on Earth's
single satellite seems in a fair way to be answered shortly. Bat until the drab
truths, whatever they may be, are actually recorded, science fiction writers like
George Whitley can continue to concoct such delightful Luny fantasies as this little
gem.
HIS NAME WAS Adam Ormandy and he was a gardener. He was a big man, a fraction of an inch
over six feet tall, and broad to match. His hair was yellow and he usually had at least one day's stubble
softening the strong lines of his not unhandsome jaw. His eyes were of that mild blue so often, in this' case
so erroneously, associated with men who work in the open air. His face and his hands were deeply
tanned—he, as well as his plants, derived benefit from the ultra-violet lamps so essential to vegetable
wellbeing.
When his shift was over he liked nothing so much as a long walk. After his walk he would make for
the Colony's bar—the one reserved for the use of minor technicians—and there drink two, never more
nor less, glasses of fruit squash undiluted by any form of alcohol. He did not approve of drinking but he
liked occasional company. He would play one game or darts with Delchev and Gruen, both tractor
drivers, and Dombey, one of the junior cartographers.
Ormandy would then retire to his little room in the single men's quarters and, before sleeping, browse
through the pages of the latest seed catalogues and dream wistfully of the plants that he would grow if
only Ferson, Head Gardener and Air Conditioning Engineer, would allow him lights and tanks for his own
use and just a few ounces of personal mass in the next ship.
His meals he ate in the tank rooms during his shift—packets of thick sandwiches cut and wrapped by
Mary Blair, one of the waitresses in the canteen. He was sorry he was no longer able to repay her
kindness—but Ferson, that hard practical man, more engineer than gardener, had been so unpleasant
when Miss Hume, the Stewardess, had reported to him that one of her staff had been seen wearing a tiny
spray of tomato and pumpkin flowers, presumably given her by one of Ferson's men, that Adam had
never dared to repeat the gesture. And Ferson, he was sure, kept a personal tally of every fruit grown in
the tanks.
Once or twice, when her free hours coincided with his, Mary Blair had accompanied him on his
walks. But she had not really enjoyed them. Adam saw the plains and craters as they must have been
eons ago, before air and water had broken the weak hold of gravity and escaped into empty space,
during the pitifully brief efflorescence of Lunar life.
Mary saw only harsh sunlight and black shadow and the death that must, sooner or later, overtake all
the worlds. And at night, in spite of the heating unit in her spacesuit, she shivered—with fear of the stars
and the cold and the darkness, even of the great globe of Earth, hanging high in the Southern sky, that
seemed to her always about to fall and to crush its satellite.
Had Adam been able to take her into his arms and comfort her, as she wished to be comforted, she
would have found the walks at least bearable. But it is hard to comfort a girl properly when both you and
she are attired in thick rubberized asbestos-and-metal-mesh fabric, when a metal-and-plastic helmet
prevents even the most innocent kiss.
 
So it was that she preferred the life inside the domes. Adam would see her, as he paused briefly
outside the recreation-room door on his way from the bar to his own room, playing table tennis, perhaps,
with some junior technician or gliding around the floor to the strains of the Colony's own dance band.
He would wonder then why she ever bothered with such a dull fellow as himself, would feel a vague
surprise that she should still trouble to make up his sandwiches for him. And he would be sorry, he knew,
when, in six months' time, her contract having expired, she would return to Earth.
His own contract still had two years to run and, conscious that he was doing useful and important
work, he had every intention of renewing it. He wished that a shift to the married quarters were
possible—but, Mary having announced her intention of returning to Earth as soon as possible, he had
never asked her to marry him.
He was thinking of Mary as he trudged at a steady pace over the surface of the crater floor. He was
wishing he were capable of entering more into the social life of the colony or, conversely, that she could
take a greater interest in hydroponics.
"But it's not the same," she had told him once. "It's not the same as a garden with good black earth,
smelling sweet after the rain, where you can grow what you want to grow, not what old Ferson tells
you."
"But this is the only way that we can do it here," he had said.
"Who's talking about doing it here?" she had flared in reply.
He thought, After all, there's still a market for dirt-grown stuff on Earth. But will she wait for
me until my contract rims out?
He tripped, and almost fell, as the toe of his heavy boot crashed into an obstruction. It was a small
mound, almost a tiny dome, made apparently of some cement-like substance. These formations, he
knew, were fairly common—freaks of the Moon's long-past-and-finished volcanic activity.
But this one was somehow different. He was on the point of walking on when he realized wherein the
difference lay. On the floor of the tiny dome, jet black and glistening in the strong sunlight, was a
scattering of what could have been beads—or seeds.
Adam fell to his knees, staring at his discovery. He saw then that the broken shards of the dome
were covered with markings of a- regular character which could have been, might have been, written
characters in some unknown language. And the more he looked at the tiny black spheroids the more he
was sure they were seeds.
He should, he knew well, report this find on his return to the dome. And yet ... Too often he had seen
departmental seniors taking the credit for work done or discoveries made by members of their staffs.
Stirring vaguely in his mind was the thought that if he, Adam Ormandy, could claim the honor of having
grown the first Moonflowers —for so he already thought of them —he would be a person of some
consequence in the Colony and Mary Blair might even reconsider her decision to return to Earth.
Too—he could name the flower after Mary. But if he did things according to regulations and if the
seeds survived Ferson's bungling, the plant would inevitably be named after the Head Gardener.
"I wouldn't wish that on to a cabbage," he muttered. Then, "Flora Lunaris Blairensis . . ."
He scooped up the seeds with his clumsy, gloved hands, managed to drop them into the pouch on
the front of his suit designed for such purposes. Somehow he was quite sure that they would grow.
He acted then with the cunning of the simple. He walked on until the elapsed time was that usually
taken for his outward walk, then turned as always and started his trudge back to the gaily-colored
scarlet-and-blue dome. He was halfway back when one of the big tractors, returning from some errand,
drew up alongside and the driver, grinning within his airtight cabin, indicated that Adam should climb on
board and ride for the rest of the way. Adam wanted to accept the offer—but to have done so would
have been out of character.
He managed, after he had stripped off his spacesuit in the locker room, to transfer the seeds from his
pouch to the pocket of his shorts. Then, still acting cautiously, he went to the bar for his usual
drinks—two glasses of squash, no more and no less—and his usual game of darts.
When the ritual that marked the dosing of his day was over he walked slowly as usual to his own
cabin, pausing, again according to routine, at the door of the recreation room to watch Mary playing
 
table tennis. She waved to him briefly, then went on with her game. For a few seconds he watched her
slight, graceful form, her mane of straw-colored hair, then continued on his way.
For the first time since he had come to the Moon his seed catalogues remained undisturbed in their
drawer.
This was Adam Ormandy's first exercise in duplicity and he was surprised and more than a little
worried by the ease with which his scheme progressed. True, luck was with him. Ferson had cracked an
ankle during one of his walks outside and was making of his semi-immobilization an opportunity to catch
up with his paper work. Grant, his First Assistant, was easygoing and did not worry much about methods
used as long as results were satisfactory.
Adam was able to slip a half dozen of his seeds into a new tank of pineapples, reasoning that any
Lunar plant must have been used to a somewhat larger ration of ultraviolet radiation than most Terrain
organisms. He did not dare alter the chemical make-up of the nutrient solution—but in any case he could
not say with any certainty what it should be in the case of the Moonflowers.
At the end of two days—Earthtime—he was surprised and delighted to find that the round black
seeds had split and were sending tiny rootlets down into the water and fragile feathery shoots stretching
up towards the U-V lamps. At the end of four days the six Moon-flowers were making themselves
conspicuous, their fragile stems towering high above the prosaic pineapples.
Praying that Grant would not notice anything amiss—he rarely came into the tank room in which
tropical fruits were grown—Adam shifted his lights so that most of them were to the side of rather than
above the tank. The Moon-flowers adjusted themselves to the new conditions and, after a lapse of only
two hours, assumed an inconspicuous and horizontal position. At the end of six days the first buds had
appeared.
At the end of six days, too, the men of the other two shifts discovered the intruders in the pineapple
tank. Howell, whom Adam relieved, was first to broach the subject. "Look at this!" he said. "Whoever
made up this shipment of seeds wants his backside kicked! A tank full of weeds!" Then, "But this is
funny. These were our own seeds."
"It's an experiment," replied Adam truthfully. Then, less truthfully, "The Old Man wants it kept a
secret."
"But what are they? Nasturtiums? No—hardly . . ."
"Some fancy plant from South America, I think. He said something about some new drug . . ."
"He might have told us. You might have told us."
"I meant to," lied Adam. The way to keep Howell quiet was suddenly obvious. "But you'd better say
nothing about it. He'll go off the deep end if he finds out that you've only just noticed them."
The same tactics served to silence Potter on the other shift.
But, Adam realized, he could not maintain his deception much longer. At any moment Ferson—his
ankle mended, the back of his clerical work broken—might take it into his head to indulge in one of his
whirlwind tours of the tank rooms. And on these occasions, as all the gardeners well knew, he saw
everything and approved of nothing.
If only those buds would open! With a bouquet of Moonflowers in his hand Adam would march
straight into the office of Dr. Welton, Head of Research, and blurt out his story. The doctor was a fair
man, and would see that credit went where credit was due. There would be no risk that the name Flora
Lanaris Fersonis would ever appear in any standard work on botany.
On the tenth day the buds opened.
It was Adam's shift and he was working on a tank of lemons, inspecting the leaves and stems of the
dwarf bushes carefully for any signs of malnutrition or disease. He became aware that he was being
watched. He sighed and thought, Ferson! Now I'm for it. Deliberately he did not straighten his back, did
not turn around until every one of the plants had been examined. Then, slowly, he stood erect and turned
round.
The tank room was empty. "I could have sworn . . ."
A flicker of movement caught his eye, a flash of color. It, whatever it was, was in the pineapple tank.
But there seemed nothing amiss. Then, as he stared, incredulous, he saw one of the Moon-flowers slowly
 
raise itself erect. There were four blossoms on the stalk, facing him, and they were all of six inches
across. The single circular petal was brown and in the centre of it was a smaller disc, shining with the
disconcerting blueness of the eyes of a large Siamese cat. In his haste Adam forgot the weak Lunar
gravity and his dash to the tank brought him into painful contact with the metal side of it. When he
recovered his breath he saw that the plant was still staring at him.
Staring? Plants don't stare, he told himself. Plant can't stare. He looked closer, saw that the
structure of the blossoms was utterly unfamiliar. There was a faint suggestion of stamen and pistils—yet
the impression he received was of organs of sense rather than of sex.
He put out a hand to touch one of the flowers. The stem bent back away from him, with a motion
that was animal rather than vegetable. Adam persisted, and the stem of the Moonflower writhed beneath
his touch almost like the tentacle of some marine monster.
Adam was afraid—afraid of damaging the plant. He was not altogether surprised by its powers of
movement—after all there are plants on Earth, with its relatively heavy gravity, such as the Venus Fly
Trap, capable of far from sluggish motion.
He was excited—too excited, he realized, to deal with the situation. He knew that it would not be
long before one of the other gardeners or Grant or even Ferson himself would visit the tropical fruits tank
room, and then his secret would be out for fair.
But he had been the first to see a living Moonflower, the first man to see a life-form indigenous to any
world but his own. It was very important to him that Mary Blair should be the first woman to share his
experience.
He released the writhing stem and walked reluctantly away from the tank to the telephone in the
corner of the room. He picked up the instrument and dialed the number of the Canteen. To the woman
who answered he said, "Is Miss Blair in? May I speak to her?"
"Personal calls are not allowed."
"But please, this is urgent."
"I'm sorry, but Miss Blair has just gone off duty. Oh, hang on, will you? There she is! Mary!" he
heard faintly. "Mary! Somebody here wants to talk to you. Says it's urgent!"
"Yes?" said Mary into the instrument.
"Mary, this is Adam here. Will you come to the tank rooms? At once?"
"But, Adam, it's not allowed."
"I know it's not. But come!"
"But how will—"
"That's all right, meet you at the door. Hurry, please!"
"All right," she said.
He slammed the instrument back into its rest, looked once more at the Moonflower, saw that whilst
he had been talking the other five plants had bloomed. Like the eyes of Siamese cats the great flowers
stared back at him.
He left the tank room, carefully shutting the door behind him. He hung a DO NOT OPEN notice on
it. He hurried along the alleyway between the rooms, arrived at the gate in time to hear the watchman
explaining, very slowly and carefully, that visitors were not, repeat, not allowed in the Hydroponics
Department.
"That's all right, Sam," he said. "Miss Blair is a friend of mine."
"I don't care if she's a friend of Adam the first gardener, she's not coming in here."
He saw Mary standing behind the burly form of the watchman. She looked hostile.
"I told you so, Adam," she said, "but you wouldn't listen!"
"I'm sorry, Sam," said Adam. He brought his huge right fist up from knee level and Sam saw it
coming, but not in time. The force of the blow lifted him a foot from the floor and he drifted slowly down
like some ungainly puppet, collapsing in an untidy heap.
"Adam!" screamed Mary. "Have you gone mad?"
"No!" He grabbed her arm, pulled her through the open door. "I want to show you something,
something that will make you famous! Something that will make us both famous!"
 
"Let go, Adam! Please!"
He ignored her protests, dragged her along the alleyways. By the time he got to the door, the door
marked DO NOT OPEN, a crowd of gardeners had gathered, among them Grant. The First Assistant
strode forward angrily.
"Ormandy! What is the meaning of this?" he asked.
"The first public showing of the Moonflowers, sir! Of Flora Lasnaris Blairensis!"
"He's off his head. Grab him, you men!"
In the short fight that followed Adam found, to his pleased surprise, that Mary was with him. She
kicked the First Assistant's shins, clawed the faces of the two gardeners who were trying to hold Adam.
Thanks to her intervention he was able to break free, was able to floor three of his assailants before the
arrival of Ferson.
The Head Gardener was furious. He said, his voice icy but with a slight quiver. "This is the finish for
you, Ormandy. You return to Earth by the next rocket. And this woman with you."
"Let me open the door, Mr. Person. That's all. Let me show Miss Blair my Moonflowers."
"Moonflowers? What is this?
"It's some queer plant he's got in there, sir—along with the pineapples," volunteered one of the men.
"Why was I not informed?"
"I thought ..."
"You thought? I'm the only one round here that's paid for thinking. What is this, Ormandy?"
"Some seeds, sir, that I found Outside. I planted them?
"You planted them?"
A man came running along the alleyway. He skidded to a halt as he approached the group outside
the tropical fruits tank room, the leaden soles of his boots leaving bright smears on the floor.
"Mr. Person!" he gasped. "The pumps! We've had to stop the pumps!"
"What pumps?" demanded Person.
"The air pumps. The dome's infested with flying insects and they come from in here!"
Grant swore suddenly, beat with his hand at something that had settled on the back of his neck. It
was too fast for him and drifted up and away—a long thin spindle of a body supported by gauzy purple
wings. The First Assistant stared after the creature and muttered in a thick voice, "They sting. They ..."
His voice trailed away. He sat down with elaborate caution and announced, "I shall now skiing you a
comic shong ...
"It wash the good ship Venush,
You really should have sheen ush,
The figurehead wash a shtrawberry bed . . .
"Fooled you that time, Fershon, you old sho an' sho .. .
"And the masht a . . ."
Adam did not see Ferson kick Grant contemptuously with his heavy boot, did not hear him say,
"You're drunk!" He had caught Mary by the arm, half-dragged, half-led her to the door. He flung it open.
Before he could shut it a cloud of the flying things surged out—and after the first sharp cries of pain had
subsided the voice of Ferson could be heard leading the company in "The Ball of Kerriemuir" …
"Both male and female gametes are motile," said Dr. Welton. He took one of his hands from his
brow, used it to shake two little tablets from a small bottle on to the surface of his desk. He picked them
up, swallowed them, washed them down with a hasty gulp from his water bottle.
"Both male and female gametes are motile," he said again.
Adam reached out for the bottle of tablets. "Doctor," he asked pleadingly, "may I . . .?"
"No. That effort of yours has just about exhausted the Colony's supplies." He continued, "It is
doubtful if such motility would be possible on Earth, with its heavier gravity. However, possibly the
denser atmosphere would compensate for that.
"But we will leave the resolution of such problems to the experts on aerodynamics, who doubtless
will be able to determine from this evidence the density of the Lunar atmosphere in the days when life
flourished here.
 
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