Cover of The Far Side of Evil

Excerpt from
The Far Side of Evil

A young adult science fiction novel

by Sylvia Engdahl

The wind is howling through the trees outside, a cold, hateful wind. By standing on the bunk I can just barely reach the window. It's quite dark now, and the stars are brilliant, though they seem terribly far away. They, at least, are familiar and comforting, a reminder of home.

There is no use pretending that I am not scared. I am in prison, and I do not think that I shall get out. Oh, I'm not guilty of the charges against me; I'm not at all what my captors think I am. They know nothing of my real identity beyond my first name, Elana, and the fact that I seem surprisingly young to be involved in a sabotage plot. They would be even more surprised if they knew the truth.

It is very funny, really. They think that I'm a foreign agent, and I am. Only I'm the agent not of their political enemies but of a civilization far in advance of theirs, an interstellar federation. I am not a native of this planet.

If they knew that I wasn't born here on Toris, they would probably be more certain than ever that I have hostile intentions; and that is ironic. After all, we of the Federation visit the worlds of Younglings--peoples who are not yet fully mature--simply to study them; and as an agent of the Anthropological Service, I am bound by the Oath to hold those peoples' best interests above all other considerations. Furthermore, I am a prisoner not for having harmed anyone but because I'm trying to prevent a horrible disaster that's threatening this world as the result of our presence. What I'm doing may not work, and if it doesn't--well, if it doesn't, a whole Youngling civilization may be wiped out. And if it were not for the surveillance camera that is hidden in the ventilator, I'm sure I would break down and sob, for I have never felt so alone. I cannot reach any other agent, even telepathically; they are all too far from me. There is no one to help, and the responsibility is all mine.

My cell is a cubicle no wider than it is high, absolutely bare of anything but the rigid bunk and the heavily-barred slot of a window above it. (There is another bunk, but it's folded back against the wall, for I am in solitary confinement; I see no one except when I am taken out for questioning. ) The metal door is solid and has an electrically-controlled panel through which my food is passed--when I'm given food, that is, which isn't often. In the center of the ceiling is a huge naked bulb that burns day and night without respite. It doesn't have the intended effect on me any more than my interrogator's harsh spotlights do, since the sun of my home solar system is brighter than this one's and my eyes are relatively insensitive to glare. To see the stars, however, I must cup my hands around my face and press close to the window.

Out there, out beyond this isolated and sorely troubled planet, lies a universe of countless worlds: fascinating worlds with their own civilizations, their own heart-lifting beauties, their own sorts of terrors, griefs, and joys. I may never visit them again. But they are there, and somehow knowing that gives me courage. Life is not all evil and ugliness, even here on the planet Toris! Though the men who have imprisoned me are a rather sorry lot, they are not really representative of their race, which is, like all Youngling races, a promising one. And as I stand here looking out at those glittering stars, I can't help wishing that the Torisian people knew of the universe that is waiting to be explored. It's harmful to Younglings, of course, to find out that there are human beings more advanced than themselves; I am sworn to keep that secret even at the cost of my life. So I cannot tell them how things are. But what would I say to them, if I were free to speak?

I would tell them that they are a good people, better than they know. They have a big future ahead of them, a future among the stars, which I shall not jeopardize by revealing anything to my captors. At least we of the Service hope they have a future. The disaster I am trying to prevent is not their only peril; they face a larger danger, and from that we are powerless to save them. Our science has discovered much that they have not yet dreamed of; still, we don't have enough knowledge. That is why we have come. If--well, if things go badly for them (and they look bad now), we hope at least to learn something that will help to save other worlds.

But our work here may be all for nothing--worse, it may backfire. If I fail to fool my captors, if they guess that I am not the saboteur I'm pretending to be, then the Torisians will be in trouble for which we are to blame. That's a chilling prospect. I can't stop shivering, and it's not merely because this cell is kept so miserably cold.

They have been trying to make me answer their questions by a method that, from my study of the ways of Younglings, I judge to be the traditional one. (There was a time, before I was fully trained, when such barbarism would have shocked me; I am older and wiser now.) Their failure to obtain any information is a matter not of heroics on my part but of defenses they don't know I have. I did tell them that much, because I just couldn't resist the temptation and I knew that they would not believe me. “You can't force me to cooperate,” I warned. “The human mind can't be forced. You can't even hurt me if I decide not to be hurt.” My interrogator laughed and declared that I would shortly learn otherwise. But he is ignorant; the human mind has all sorts of powers that he would scoff at. I'm aided by those powers: telepathy and psychokinesis, plus some other skills that are very useful when it comes to dealing with pain. What has been done to me so far has been a bit scary, but it has not posed any serious problem.

However, I think that fairly soon I shall swallow my pride and start putting on a good act for them. If they were to discover that I really am impervious to their present techniques, they might experiment further, and I am not at all eager to have that happen. Up till now they have shown restraint because they want to keep me in good shape for a public trial. But if they should abandon that idea, well, there are things they could try that I would find disconcerting, to say the least. I have some impressive powers, but I'm not free to use them all. I am sworn; I cannot use any form of self-protection that would reveal that I am alien.

I try not to think about that. I try not to look ahead at all, for the thing that frightens me most is the likelihood that if my ruse succeeds I will be stuck in this prison for years and years, for the rest of my life, maybe. I know that I shall not tell them anything; I know that they will not kill me until I do, except perhaps by accident. Even if they do threaten to kill me, death is something I have faced before. I am experienced in such matters, and I know that facing it is a kind of terror I can handle. But to be locked up here forever on a Youngling planet, when I have been trained for the stars…

Of course, it may not come to that. This planet may be doomed in any case by the natural laws I was sent to learn about.

There is a small chance that my own people will eventually be able to help me. They will try. Only they cannot do it if it means harming any Younglings, either through violence--which is contrary to our principles--or through disclosure. So I may be in for a long ordeal, and if I am to withstand it, I must find something to occupy these dismal hours between interrogations. I shall record the whole story of this ill-fated mission, I think. The only way open to me is through a rather difficult mental discipline, one in which I was recently trained; it's a real challenge. (You “store” the words in your subconscious mind so that you can “read” them back later, quickly, without thinking them through--a little like memorizing long passages under hypnosis, except that you have full control over what you're doing.) I need that kind of a challenge! I need it to keep my mind off other things. Things like the fact that I may never again see my home or the man I'm to marry … that disaster may hit Toris at any moment and that if it does, it may be partly my fault … that my interrogator may come up with some ghastly new tactic tomorrow…

And I have another need. The current game they are playing is having its effect on me. Confession, they tell me, is the best route to peace of mind; and that is less ridiculous than most of their assertions, though I'm certainly not about to buy peace of mind for myself at the cost of harm to this world. They have an unbelievably far-fetched statement written out for me to sign; they have shown it to me a number of times, and my laughter has been not forced but genuine, because the list of my alleged “crimes against humanity” is hilarious in the light of my true mission. But each time, back in my cell, that laughter has turned to silent tears. While their ideas about the human mind are primitive, they are right, I suppose, in their conviction that everybody feels guilty about something. In my case it is true, anyway.

I tried, not long ago, to do a very dreadful thing. My attempt did not succeed, but if it had I would have a terrible load on my conscience; I would deserve whatever punishment fell my way. Yet if by some miracle it becomes possible, I shall try the thing again, for if it is not done, the people of Toris will have little chance to survive.