Kornbluth, CM What Sorghum Says v1 0







WHAT SORGHUM SAYS










WHAT SORGHUM SAYS

 

UP IN THE FOOTHILLS of the
Cumberlands they have something new in the way of folk-lore. If you're lucky
and haven't got the professorial gleam in your eye, the tale is unfolded
something like this:

Sorghum Hackett lived by himself
up by Sowbelly Crag, not because he was afraid for his still but because when
he was a young man some girl blighted his life by running off to Nashville with
a railroad man. Ever since that he's been bitter against most people.

So this spring morning, when the
scientific man came climbing up to his house he got out his squirrel-gun and
asked him like the mountain people do: "Will you make tracks or your peace
with God?"

"Shut up!" said the
scientific man, not even looking at him. Then he went pacing off the ground and
writing down figures in a book. At last he turned to Sorghum.

"How much do you want for
your property?" he asked. "I suppose it's yours."

"Anyone in his right mind
wouldn't be eager to dispute it," said Sorghum dryly. "But it ain't
for sale."

"Don't be stubborn,"
said the scientific man. "I haven't any time to waste on benighted
peasants."

Sorghum dropped his gun in real
admiration for the bravery of the man, whoever he was. He held out a hand
saying: "I'm Sorghum Hackett, and I've killed men for less than what you
said."

The man shook his hand
absentmindedly. "I'm Wayne Baily, and I've got to have the use of your
land for about a month."

Hackett nearly fell in love with
the man; he didn't know there was anyone who could stand up to him that way,
and he liked it. "I'm willing," he said at last. "But I won't
take your moneyit ain't clean."

So Baily just laughed and then
went down to the village and came back up with a Nord truck loaded to the gills
with junk. "Hackett," he said, "first thing we do is run this
penstock down from that springhead."

And by the next morning they had
forty yards of big piping down from Chittling Spring, and the water gushing out
of the end of the pipe would have irrigated a whole farm. Baily rigged up a
metal globe that he bolted to the pipes' end; a globe with a small-gage turbine
wheel in it, and he hooked that up to a little dynamo that stayed on the truck.

When a week was up there was
precious little room in Sorghum's house for him and Baily, because it was
cluttered up with the junk from towninsides of radios, big coils of wire,
aerials, rods stuck into the ground so deep that they were cold from
underground water they touchedeverything crazy you could think of, and all lit
up every now and then whenever Baily turned on his dynamo in the truck.

Finally Baily said to Sorghum:
"It's been a pleasure knowing you, Hackett. Now there's only one
stipulation I'm putting on you, and that is to knock all my machinery into
pieces as soon as I'm gone."

"Gone?" asked Sorghum,
because Baily didn't say it as though he was going down to town for another
storage battery.

"Yesfor good, Hackett,"
said Baily, puttering with the wires and finally turning a switch. The things
lit up and glowed even brighter than ever before.

"Goodbye, Hackett," said
Baily. Then he grabbed at his chest and his face twisted. "Heart!" he
gasped faintly, and even fainter he cut loose with a string of curses that made
Sorghum blush.

Baily hit the floor, and Sorghum
listened for his breath, but there wasn't any.

He scratched his head, wondering
how he'd explain things to the coroner, and reached automatically for his jug
to help him think.

But one of the things he didn't think
of was that his jug had been moved outside to make room for what the late Mr.
Baily had called a condenser. Sorghum got a shock that sent him crashing back
on his heels into some of the deep-driven rods. The last thing he knew the
lights were still sparkling and glowing, but he never could tell what hit him.

 

THERE WAS a dizzying splash and
Sorghum found himself floundering in water up to his knees. He looked around
and wasn't in any place he knew, because he didn't know any places that were
all marble and tile. Overhead a hot sun was beating down on him.

"Well!" said someone.
And right there Sorghum knew that something was wrong, because though what he
heard was "Well!" the sound he heard wasn't anything like thatmore
like "Ahoo!"

He looked up and saw a man facing
him, dressed in sandals and a shirt that fell to his knees. And the man said,
still talking so that Sorghum could understand him but not making a single
sound in English, "It's a blundering assassin that falls into his victim's
fishpond. Tiberius chooses unwisely."

"Are you calling me a
bushwhacker, mister?" demanded Sorghum, who never killed except fairly.

The man, who had been grinning
proudly, looked surprised then. Not frightened, surprised. "I don't know
what language you speak, assassin," he said, "but it's a damnably
strange one that confounds and is clear at the same time." He looked
closer at Sorghum. "And you don't seem altogether real. Are you always as
ghostly when you're sent on the Caesar's errands?"

Sorghum looked at himself and saw
that the man wasn't lying. His own flesh seemed to have got a funny trick of
being half here and half there, like a column of smoke that's always ready to
break. "I reckon you're right, mister," said Sorghum, cracking one of
his icy smiles. "I seem to be in a predicament. But I ain't what you take
me for. I'm Sorghum Hackett of Tennessee."

"Never heard of the
town," said the man. "I'm Asinius Gallo. Need I explain that this is
Rome?"

Now Sorghum had heard that
foreigners were peculiar, but he didn't expect anything as peculiar as this,
and he said so.

"Foreigners!" yelled the
man. "I don't know what barbarous land you're from, stranger, but bear in
mind that when you're in the City you're the foreigner until and unless
naturalized. Though," he added, calmer, "what with that avaricious
slut the Lady Livia raising the prices on the roll week after week, soon a
Julio-Claudian himself won't be able to stay in his place."

"I don't get your talk, Mr.
Gallo," said Sorghum. "I'm here by accident, and I'd like mightily to
get back to Tennessee. How can I earn some passage money? I reckon it's
overseas."

"Work, eh?" asked
Asinius Gallo. "What can you do?"

Sorghum considered. "I can do
a little carpentering," he said. "And I can make the best white mule
in the Cumberlands."

"Carpentry's out of the
question," said Asinius Gallo. "The Joiners' Guild has it tight as a
drum. But I don't know of any guild covering the manufacture of white
mulesdoubt that it can be done."

"Do ye?" asked Sorghum,
grinning again. "Just give me some corn, some copper and a few days and
I'll show you."

Asinius Gallo abruptly nodded.
"It might be worth trying," he said. "Certainly I can't raise my
own. And if they're really good they can be resold at a profit. Sorghum
Hackett, I'll finance you."

 

SO, WORKING in privacy, the way
that the mountain folks like to, it took him a few days before he got a good
run. He had to fool around a lot because they used a funny, stunted kind of
grain, but finally it came out all right.

"Here, Mr. Gallo," he
called to his backer. "It's finished."

"Will it kick?" asked
Asinius Gallo cautiously.

Sorghum laughed. "Like the
devil with a porky quill in him, I promise you that much. Best you ever
saw."

"Well," said Asinius
Gallo uncertainly as he entered. Sorghum held up the big jug he'd caught the
run in. "What's that?"

"The white mule," said
Sorghum, a little hurt.

His backer was downright
bewildered. "I expected an animal," he explained. "What you've
got in there I can't imagine."

"Oh," said Sorghum.
"Well, if you don't agree with me, Mr. Gallo, that this is better than any
animal you ever tasted I'll make you an animal." And he said this because
he felt pretty sure that the benighted idolater wouldn't take him up. Sorghum
had asked the terrified servants, and they told him that they didn't have
anything stronger than the sticky red wine they drank at supper. And that,
Sorghum judged by the body, was no more than twenty proof, while this run of
his would prove at least a hundred and twenty. He poured a medium slugfour
fingersfor his host, who smelled it cautiously.

"Don't put your eyes over it,
Mr. Gallo," cautioned Sorghum. "Just drink it right down the way we
do in Tennessee." He filled a glass of his own with a man-sized drink.

"Feliciter," said
Asinius Gallo, which sounded like "good luck," to Sorghum.

"Confusion to Tories,"
he replied, downing his. His host immediately after swallowed his own shot
convulsively. Almost immediately he screamed shrilly and clutched at his
throat. Sorghum held a water-pitcher out to him, grinning. The pitcher was
empty when he took it back.

"That," said his host
hoarsely, "was a potion worthy of Livia herself. Are you sure it won't
kill me?"

"Sartin," replied
Sorghum, enjoying the backwash of the home-brew. "That was almost the
smoothest I've ever made."

"Then," said Asinius
Gallo, "let's have another."

 

THE TENNESSEE MAN had a few more
runs, each better than the last as his equipment improved and settled, and with
Asinius Gallo as his agent he had amassed quite a bit of the coinage of these
foreigners. Altogether things were looking up when a slave appeared with a
message.

Sorghum's host read from it:
"The Lady Livia will be pleased to see Sorghum Hackett, the guest of the
Senator Asinius Gallo. She believes that there are many mutual interests which
it will be profitable to discuss."

"Right kind of her,"
said Sorghum.

"Hah!" groaned his
backer. "You don't know the old hag. Sorghum Hackett, you're as good as
dead, and it's no use hoping otherwise. She's always been down on me, but she
never dared to strike at me direct because of my family. Now you're going to
get it. Oh, I'm sorry, friend. And I thought I'd kept you a pretty close
secret. Well, go onno use postponing fate."

Sorghum grinned slowly.
"We'll see," he said. He picked up two bottles of the latest brew and
rammed them into his boot-tops. "Goodbye, Mr. Gallo," he said,
entering the sedan-chair that was waiting for him. The bearers let him off at
the Augustan Palace and conducted him to a side-entrance. He waited only a
moment before the door opened and a cracked voice bade him enter. "Come
in, young man; come in!" it shrilled.

Sorghum closed the door behind him
and faced the notorious Livia, mother of the Emperor Tiberius, poisoner supreme
and unquestioned ruler of Rome. "Pleased t'meetcha, ma'am," he said.

"You're the Hackett they tell
me about?" she demanded. He studied her wispy white hair and the bony,
hooked nose as he answered: "I'm the only Hackett in these parts."

"It's true!" she
shrilled. "You are a magicianyour body waves like a flame, and your
language is strange, but I can understand it. Everything they said is
true!"

"I reckon so, ma'am,"
admitted Sorghum.

"Then you're condemned,"
she said promptly. "I won't have any magicians going about in my empire.
Can't tax the brutesthey're unfair. You're condemned, young man!"

"To what?" asked the
Tennesseean.

"Amphitheater," she
snapped. "Wild beasts. Take him away, you fools!"

Sorghum's arms were grabbed by two
of the biggest, ugliest people he had ever seen in his born days and he was
hustled down flights of stairs and hurled into something of a dungeon with
other condemned magicians.

"You got in just under the
wire," one of them informed him helpfully. "We're going to get chased
out into the arena in a few minutes."

"What can I do?" asked
Sorghum.

"Don't struggle. Don't shield
your throatlet the animals tear it out as soon as possible. That way it's over
with at once and you cheat the mob of watching you squirm."

"I reckon so," said
Sorghum thoughtfully. He remembered his courtesy and the bottles in his boots.
"Have a drink?" he asked, producing them. The magicians clustered
around him like flies around honey.

 

THE AFTERNOON GAMES were to
consist of such little things as a pack of craven magicians and fortune-tellers
being killed in a mess by leopards. Consensus favored the leopards; odds were
quoted as something like eighty to one against the magicians.

Tiberius waved his hand from the
President's box in one end of the colossal amphitheater, and the gate which
admitted the beasts opened. There was a buzz from the audience as the
magnificent animals came streaming through like a river of tawny fur.

The emperor waved again, and the
public prepared to be amused by the customary sight of unwilling victims being
prodded out into the arena by long-handled tridents. But something must have
gone wrong, for the craven magicians came striding boldly out, roaring some
song or other. At their head was a curiously shimmering figure, who was beating
time with two enormous bottles in either hand, both empty.

It roared in a titanic voice, as
it sighted the animals: "Look out, ye hell-fired pussy-cats! I'm
a-grapplin'!" The magicians charged in a body to the excited screams of
the mob.

Roughly there was one cat to every
man, and that was the sensible way that the men went about eliminating the
cats. The favorite grip seemed to be the taila magician would pick up the
leopard and swing it around heftily two or three times, then dash its head to
the sand of the arena. The rest would be done with the feet.

In a surprisingly short time the
magicians were sitting on the carcasses of the cats and resuming their song.

"Let out the lion!"
shrilled Tiberius. "They can't do this to me!" The second gate
opened, and the king of the jungle himself stalked through, his muscles
rippling beneath his golden skin, tossing his huge mane. He sighted the
magicians, who weren't paying him any attention at all, and roared savagely.

The shimmering figure looked up in
annoyance. "Another one!" it was heard to declare. The song broke off
again as the grim, purposeful body of men went for the lion. He eyed them
coldly and roared again. They kept coming. The king of the jungle grew somewhat
apprehensive, lashing his tail and crouching as for a spring. The bluff didn't
work, he realized a second later, for the men were on him and all over him,
gouging his face cruelly and kicking him in the ribs. He tumbled to the sand
rather than suffer a broken leg and grunted convulsively as the magicians sat
heavily on his flanks and continued their song.

"It was dow-wen in Raid River
Vail-lee" mournfully chanted the leaderhe with the empty bottles.

Tiberius stamped his feet and burst
into tears of rage. "My lion!" he wailed. "They're sitting on my
lion!"

The leader dropped his bottles and
sauntered absently about the arena. One of the deep-driven, iron posts of the
inside wall caught his eye. He reached out to touch it andwas gone, with a
shimmer of purple light.

 

SORGHUM'S REAPPEARANCE was as
unchronicled as his disappearance. He didn't tell anybody until they asked him,
and then he told them from beginning to end, substantially as I have told it
here.

But every once in a while he
remarks: "Foreigners are sartinly peculiar people. I knowI've lived among
them. But some day I'm going to get me some money and take a boat back there
and see that Mr. Gallo to find out if he ever did get the hang of running the
mash. Foreigners are sartinly peculiarbehind the times, I call 'em."

That's what Sorghum says.

 

 








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