The Martian Chronicles

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Authors: Ray Bradbury
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town from my mind, they populated it with the most-loved people from all the minds of the people on the rocket!
    And suppose those two people in the next room, asleep, are not my mother and father at all, But two Martians, incredibly brilliant, with the ability to keep me under this dreaming hypnosis all of the time.
    And that brass band today? What a startlingly wonderful plan it would be. First, fool Lustig, then Hinkston, then gather a crowd; and all the men in the rocket, seeing mothers, aunts, uncles, sweethearts, dead ten, twenty wears ago, naturally, disregarding orders, rush out and abandon ship. What more natural? What more unsuspecting? What more simple? A man doesn’t ask too many questions when his mother is soddenly brought back to life; he’s much too happy. And here we all are tonight, in various houses, in various beds, with no weapons to protect us, and the rocket lies in the moonlight, empty. And wouldn’t it be horrible and terrifying to discover that all of this was part of some great clever plan by the Martians to divide and conquer us, and kill us? Sometime during the night, perhaps, my brother here on this bed will change form, melt, shift, and become another thing, a terrible thing, a Martian. It would be very simple for him just to turn over in bed and put a knife into my heart. And in all those other houses down the street, a dozen other brothers or fathers suddenly melting away and taking knives and doing things to the unsuspecting, sleeping men of Earth ...
    His hands were shaking under the covers. His body was cold. Suddenly it was not a theory. Suddenly he was very afraid.
    He lifted himself in bed and listened. The night was very quiet The music had stopped. The wind had died. His brother lay sleeping beside him.
    Carefully he lifted the covers, rolled them back. He slipped from bed and was walking softly across the room when his brother’s voice said, “Where are you going?”
    “What?”
    His brother’s voice was quite cold. “I said, where do you think you’re going?”
    “For a drink of water.”
    “But you’re not thirsty.”
    “Yes, yes, I am.”
    “No, you’re not.”
    Captain John Black broke and ran across the room. He screamed. He screamed twice.
    He never reached the door.
     
    In the morning the brass band played a mournful dirge. From every house in the street came little solemn processions bearing long boxes, and along the sun-filled street, weeping, came the grandmas and mothers and sisters and brothers and uncles and fathers, walking to the churchyard, where there were new holes freshly dug and new tombstones installed. Sixteen holes in all, and sixteen tombstones.
    The mayor made a little sad speech, his face sometimes looking like the mayor, sometimes looking like something else.
    Mother and Father Black were there, with Brother Edward, and they cried, their faces melting now from a familiar face into something else.
    Grandpa and Grandma Lustig were there, weeping, their faces shifting like wax, shimmering as all things shimmer on a hot day.
    The coffins were lowered. Someone murmured about “the unexpected and sudden deaths of sixteen fine men during the night—“
    Earth pounded down on the coffin lids.
    The brass band, playing “Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean,” marched and slammed back into town, and everyone took the day off.
     

June 2001:   --AND THE MOON BE STILL AS BRIGHT
    It was so cold when they first came from the rocket into the night that Spender began to gather the dry Martian wood and build a small fire. He didn’t say anything about a celebration; he merely gathered the wood, set fire to it, and watched it burn.
    In the flare that lighted the thin air of this dried-up sea of Mars he looked over his shoulder and saw the rocket that had brought them all, Captain Wilder and Cheroke and Hathaway and Sam Parkhill and himself, across a silent black space of stars to land upon a dead, dreaming world.
    Jeff Spender waited for the noise. He watched

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