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For a long time we gazed in silent specu­lation at this queer, green world. At last Banuff broke the silence.

“I think we'll risk a landing there, Zat,” he said, indi­ca­ting a smooth, open space.

“You don't think it might be liquid,” I suggested, “it looks curiously level.”

“No,” he replied, “I fancy it's a kind of close vege­tation. Anyway, we can risk it.”

A touch on the lever sent the machine sinking rapidly towards a green rectangle, so regular as to suggest the work of sentient crea­tures. On one of its sides lay a large stone out­crop, riddled with holes and smoking from the top like the rest, while on the other three sides, thick vege­tation rose high and swayed in the wind.

“An atmo­sphere which can cause such commo­tion must be very dense,” commen­ced Banuff.

“That rock is pecu­liarly regular,” I said, “and the smoking points are evenly spaced. Do you suppose...?”

The slight jar of our landing inter­rupted me.

“Get ready, Zat,” Banuff ordered.

I was ready. I opened the inner door and stepped into the air-lock. Banuff would have to remain inside until I could find out whether it was possible for him to adjust. Men may have more power of origi­nality than we, and they do possess a greater degree of adapt­ability than any other form of life, but their limi­ta­tions are, never­the­less, severe. It might require a deal of ponde­rous apparatus to enable Banuff to with­stand the condi­tions, but for me, a machine, adapt­ation was simple.

The density of the atmo­sphere made no differ­ence save slightly to slow my move­ments. The tempe­rature, within very wide limits, had no effect upon me.

“The gravity will be stronger,” Banuff had warned me, “this is a much larger planet than ours.”

It had been easy to prepare for that by the addition of a fourth pair of legs.

Now, as I walked out of the air-lock, I was glad of them; the pull of the planet was immense.

After a moment or so of minor adjust­ment, I passed around our machine to the window where Banuff stood, and held up the instru­ments for him to see. As he read the air-pressure meter, the gravity indi­cator and the gas propor­tion scale, he shook his head. He might slowly adapt himself part­way to the condi­tions, but an imme­diate venture was out of the question.

It had been agreed between us that in such an event I should perform the explo­ration and speci­men collecting while he exa­mined the neigh­bour­hood from the machine.

He waved his arm as a signal and, in response, I set off at a good pace for the surround­ing green and brown growths. I looked back as I reached them to see our silvery craft floating slowly up into the air.

A second later, there came a stunning explo­sion; a wave of sound so strong in this thick atmo­sphere that it almost shattered my receiv­ing dia­phragm.

The cause of the disaster must always remain a mystery: I only know that when I looked up, the vessel was no­where to be seen – only a ram of metal parts dropping to earth all about me.

Cries of alarm came from the large stone out­crop and simul­ta­neously human figures appeared at the lowest of its many openings.

They began to run towards the wreck, but my speed was far greater than theirs. They can have made but half the distance while I com­pleted it. As I flashed across, I could see them falter and stop with ludi­crous expressions of dismay on their faces.

“Lord, did you see that?” cried one of them.

“What the devil was it?” called another.

“Looked like a coffin on legs,” somebody said. “Moving some, too.”

FLIGHT

Banuff lay in a ring of scattered debris.

Gently I raised him on my fore-rods. A very little exami­nation showed that it was use­less to attempt any assis­tance: he was too badly broken. He managed to smile faintly at me and then slid into uncon­scious­ness.

I was sorry. Though Banuff was not of my own kind, yet he was of my own world and on the long trip I had grown to know him well. These humans are so fragile. Some little thing here or there breaks — they stop working and then, in a short time, they are decom­posing. Had he been a machine, like myself, I could have mended him, replaced the broken parts and made him as good as new, but with these animal struc­tures one is almost help­less.

I became aware, while I gazed at him, that the crowd of men and women had drawn closer and I began to suffer for the first time from what has been my most severe disa­bility on the third planet — I could not commu­nicate with them.

Their thoughts were under­stand­able, for my sensi­tive plate was tuned to receive human mental waves, but I could not make myself under­stood. My language was unin­telli­gible to them, and their minds, either from lack of develop­ment or some other cause, were unrecep­tive of my thought-radia­tions.

As they approached, huddled into a group, I made an astonish­ing discovery – they were afraid of me.

Men afraid of a machine.

It was incompre­hensible. Why should they be afraid? Surely man and machine are natural comple­ments: they assist one another. For a moment I thought I must have mis­read their minds — it was possible that thoughts registered diffe­rently on this planet, but it was a possi­bility I soon dismissed.

There were only two reasons for this appre­hen­sion. The one, that they had never seen a machine or, the other, that third planet machines had pursued a line of develop­ment inimical to them.

I turned to show Banuff lying inert on my fore-rods. Then, slowly, so as not to alarm them, I approached. I laid him down softly on the ground near by and retired a short distance. Expe­rience has taught me that men like their own broken forms to be dealt with by their own kind. Some stepped forward to exa­mine him, the rest held their ground, their eyes fixed upon me.

Banuff’s dark colour­ing appeared to excite them not a little. Their own skins were pallid from lack of ultra-violet rays in their dense atmo­sphere.

“Dead?” asked one.

“Quite dead,” another one nodded. “Curious-looking fellow,” he conti­nued. “Can't place him ethno­logic­ally at all. Just look at the frontal form­ation of the skull – very odd. And the size of his ears, too, huge: the whole head is abnor­mally large.”

“Never mind him now,” one of the group broke in, “he'll keep. That's the thing that puzzles me,” he went on, looking in my direction. “What the devil do you suppose it is?”

They all turned wonder­ing faces towards me. I stood motion­less and waited while they summed me up.

“About six feet long,” ran the thoughts of one of them. “Two feet broad and two deep. White metal, might be – (his thought con­veyed noth­ing to me). Four legs to a side, fixed about half­way up – jointed rather like a crab's, so are the arm-like things in front: but all metal. Wonder what the array of instru­ments and lenses on this end are? Anyhow, whatever kind of power it uses, it seems to have run down now...”

Hesitatingly he began to advance.

I tried a word of encourage­ment.

The whole group froze rigid.

“Did you hear that?” some­body whisp­ered. “It – it spoke.”

“Loud­speaker,” replied the one who had been making an inven­tory of me. Suddenly his expression brightened.

“I've got it,” he cried. “Remote control – a telep­hony and tele­vision machine worked by remote control.”

So these people did know some­thing of machi­nery, after all. He was far wrong in his guess, but in my relief I took a step for­ward.