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.
An explosion roared: something thudded on my body case and whirred away. I saw that one of the men was pointing a hollow rod at me and I knew that he was about to make another explosion.
The first had done no injury but another might crack one of my lenses.
I turned and made top speed for the high, green vegetation. Two or three more bursts roared behind, but nothing touched me. The weapon was very primitive and grossly inaccurate.