invincibility. The only hope was to attack him unawares ...
and if that hope was a fraction less than a certainty it could only mean
final and absolute catastrophe.
The lawyer looked at his watch. It was four in the morning.
He went into the kitchenette and then shrugged himself into his coat.
He walked through the silent streets, past the city hospital where the
Chief Justice lay in agony while the motor impulses from his nerve
centers wrenched and twisted his body. He entered the foyer of the
luxury hotel where the race betrayer was held prisoner and took the
elevator to the sixth floor.
Two sleepy guards jerked erect outside the unlocked door. He put his
finger to his lips, enjoining them to silence. Then he entered the room
and stood for a moment over the man who was invincible and
immortal--and human. Human, and subject to the involuntary
unconsciousness which nature demands from all men. He slept.
The eyelids fluttered. The lawyer took the steel meat skewer from his
pocket. He thrust it through a half-opened eye and rotated it,
methodically reducing the soft brain to formless mush.
After that the trial proceeded normally.
The prisoner stared vacantly in front of him and all his movements had
to be directed. But he was alive and his thumb was full grown again.
It was the lawyer that noticed this and pointed out the implications. The
thumb had grown to full size in less than six weeks. They must regard
that as their maximum period of immunity.
They ruminated over it for another four days. The question was a tricky
one, for malignant immortality was beyond human solution. It was not
just a matter of dealing out punishment. The problem now was the
protection of the race from sudden annihilation. An insolvable problem,
but one that must be solved. They could only do their best.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment, with a special feature.
It was decided he should be guillotined once a month as long as he
lived.
END
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